32

Following on my previous question How to group list items into tuple?

If I have a list of tuples, for example

a = [(1,3),(5,4)]

How can I unpack the tuples and reformat it into one single list

b = [1,3,5,4]

I think this also has to do with the iter function, but I really don't know how to do this. Please enlighten me.

3

5 Answers 5

68
b = [i for sub in a for i in sub]

That will do the trick.

6
  • 6
    oh yeah, that was easy, what was I thinking...
    – LWZ
    Mar 7, 2013 at 10:55
  • 1
    Nice one. I had to think about it for a second - "where did sub come from at the end?"
    – emmeowzing
    Nov 8, 2016 at 21:05
  • 1
    Why/how does this work?
    – ruief
    Nov 10, 2017 at 23:12
  • 3
    Please explain how that works, I am also confused by the double loop
    – Asara
    Nov 29, 2017 at 12:30
  • 5
    @ruief @Asara the double loop works exactly as if you wrote it out as a nested for-loop: for sub in a picks out each sublist (or in this case, each tuple) of a, and then for i in sub picks out each element in each sublist, which is put together to form the resultant list. Hope that makes it a bit clearer.
    – Volatility
    Nov 29, 2017 at 20:49
15
In [11]: list(itertools.chain(*a))
Out[11]: [1, 3, 5, 4]

If you just need to iterate over 1, 3, 5, 4, you can get rid of the list() call.

2
  • What's the point of itertools.chain.from_iterable then if you can just do that?
    – Volatility
    Mar 7, 2013 at 10:57
  • 3
    @Volatility: Lazy evaluation?
    – NPE
    Mar 7, 2013 at 10:58
3

Just iterate over the list a and unpack the tuples:

l = []
for x,y in a:
   l.append(x)
   l.append(y)
3

Another way:

a = [(1,3),(5,4)]
b = []

for i in a:
    for j in i:
        b.append(j)

print b

This will only handle the tuples inside the list (a) tho. You need to add if-else statements if you want to parse in loose variables too, like;

a = [(1,3),(5,4), 23, [21, 22], {'somevalue'}]
b = []

for i in a:
    if type(i) == (tuple) or type(i) == (list) or type(i) == (set):
        for j in i:
            b.append(j)
    else:
        b.append(i)

print b
1
  • Use isinstance(i, collections.Iterable) instead of the type checking (assuming collections has already been imported)
    – Volatility
    Mar 7, 2013 at 11:15
1
import itertools
b = [i for i in itertools.chain(*[(1,3),(5,4)])]

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.