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I'm working on this problem, but I cannot figure out the second part. I tried using reverse list but it did not work out how I planned it.

Given a list L (e.g. [1,2,3,4]), write a program that generates the following nested lists:

  1. L1 = [[1],[1,2],[1,2,3],[1,2,3,4]],
  2. L2 = [[4],[3,4],[2,3,4],[1,2,3,4]].

My code that I have so far:

mylist=[,1,2,3,4] 
print("Orginal list L=",mylist) 
n=len(mylist) 
l1=[] 
l2=[] 


for x in range(1,n+1,1):
    l1.append(mylist[0:x]) 
print("L1=",l1) #prints final product of l1


mylist.reverse() #this is where i get messed up
for x in range(1,n+1,1): 
    l2.append(mylist[0:x]) 
print("L2=",l2) 
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4 Answers 4

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You can use negative indexes in python:

mylist[-1] -> 4

Given that, this will work:

mylist=[1,2,3,4] 
print("Orginal list L=", mylist)
n=len(mylist) 
l1=[] 
l2=[] 

for i in range(1, n+1):
    l1.append(mylist[0:i])
    l2.append(mylist[-i:])
print("L1=", l1)
print("L2=", l2)
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  • You could just use list comprehension.
    – arshajii
    Oct 2, 2012 at 3:32
  • wouldnt it take 2 LC's? vs 1 for loop? Oct 2, 2012 at 3:37
  • Yes, but the LCs are usually more easily comprehended. Plus they eliminate the need for l1=[]; l2=[] at the start.
    – nneonneo
    Oct 2, 2012 at 3:38
1

Man, I love list comprehension.

L1 = [L[:i+1] for i in xrange(len(L))]
L2 = [L[-i-1:] for i in xrange(len(L))]

You can think of list comprehension as an easy way to build a list. Usually, if you see yourself doing for x in y: ... list.append(z), a list comprehension may be a shorter and more elegant solution.

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1
lst = [1,2,3,4]
[lst[0:i] for i in range(1,5)]
[lst[-i:] for i in range(1,5)]
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dont reverse your list and change second loop

for x in range(n-1,-1,-1): 
    l2.append(mylist[x:]) 

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