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I use a negative index in replacement fields to output a formatted list,but it raises a TypeError.The codes are as follows:

>>> a=[1,2,3]
>>> a[2]
3
>>> a[-1]
3
>>> 'The last:{0[2]}'.format(a)
'The last:3'
>>> 'The last:{0[-1]}'.format(a)
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "", line 1, in 
TypeError: list indices must be integers, not str
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sounds like an oversight in the format functions definition – barkmadley Oct 25 at 7:18

3 Answers

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It's what I would call a design glitch in the format string specs. Per the docs,

element_index     ::=  integer

but, alas, -1 is not "an integer" -- it's an expression. The unary-minus operator doesn't even have particularly high priority, so that for example print(-2**2) emits -4 -- another common issue and arguably a design glitch (the ** operator has higher priority, so the raise-to-power happens first, then the change-sign requested by the lower priority unary -).

Anything in that position in the format string that's not an integer (but, for example, an expression) is treated as a string, to index a dict argument -- for example:

$ python3 -c "print('The last:{0[2+2]}'.format({'2+2': 23}))"
The last:23

Not sure whether this is worth raising an issue in the Python trac, but it's certainly a somewhat surprising behavior:-(.

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Interesting! As for -2**2 being equal to -4, I think this is a very good thing, as this is the convention used in mathematics. Would something like element_index ::= "signed_integer" make sense? – EOL Oct 25 at 8:23
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There are a few problems here, once you start digging:

The item in question is called "element_index" which is defined to be an integer.

Problem 1: unless users follow the link from "integer" to the language reference manual, they won't know that -1 is deemed to be an expression, not an integer. By the way, anyone tempted to say "works as documented" should see proplem 7 first :-)

Preferred solution: change the definition so that "element_index" can have an optional '-' before the integer.

It's an integer, right? Not so fast ... later the docs say that "an expression of the form '[index]' does an index lookup using __getitem__()"

Problem 3: Should say '[element_index]' (index is not defined).

Problem 4: Not everybody knows off the top of their heads what __getitem__() does. Needs clearer docs.

So we can use a dict here as well as an integer, can we? Yes, with a problem or two:

The element_index is a integer? Yes, that works with a dict:

>>> "{0[2]}".format({2: 'int2'})
'int2'

It seems that we can also use non-integer strings, but this needs more explicit documentation (Problem 5):

>>> "{0[foo]}".format({'foo': 'bar'})
'bar'

But we can't use a dict with a key like '2' (Problem 6):

>>> "{0[2]}".format({'2': 'str2'})
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
KeyError: 2
>>> "{0['2']}".format({'2': 'str2'})
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
KeyError: "'2'"

Problem 7: That "integer" should really be documented to be "decimalinteger" ... 0x22 and 0b11 are treated as str, and 010 (an "octalinteger") is treated as 10, not 8:

>>> "{0[010]}".format('0123456789abcdef')
'a'

Update: PEP 3101 tells the true story:
"""
The rules for parsing an item key are very simple. If it starts with a digit, then it is treated as a number, otherwise it is used as a string.

Because keys are not quote-delimited, it is not possible to specify arbitrary dictionary keys (e.g., the strings "10" or ":-]") from within a format string.
"""

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Thanks. (at least 15 characters) – Explogit Oct 27 at 15:54
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Correct, it does not work. solution:

>>> 'The last:{0}'.format(a[-1])
'The last:3'
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Which begs the question: so why bother with designing restricted sequence indexing, restricted dict lookup, and attribute lookup facilities in the format strings, when all that and more can be done in the args? – John Machin Oct 25 at 13:02
Yeah, beats me. – Lennart Regebro Oct 25 at 15:48

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