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I was trying to write an answer to this question and was quite surprised to find out that there is no find method for lists, lists have only the index method (strings have find and index).

Can anyone tell me the rationale behind that? Why strings have both?

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  • This question is about the list equivalent of this: "112131".find("1213") => 1 ie [1,1,2,1,3,1].find([1,2,1,3]) => 1 -- If you want to do this in linear time you need to implement one of the string matching algorithms yourself, which is not that easy. Oct 3, 2010 at 16:26

3 Answers 3

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I don't know why or maybe is buried in some PEP somewhere, but i do know 2 very basic "find" method for lists, and they are array.index() and the in operator. You can always make use of these 2 to find your items. (Also, re module, etc)

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    index method and in operator can look for single items in lists (Somebody please tell me if I can call them atomic). OP wants to know if he can find whether a list is a sub-list of another with items appearing in the same order.
    – dheerosaur
    Oct 3, 2010 at 7:35
  • But the basic principle behind is also iteration through the list, whether its nested or not, and finding them with these operators. OP is also free to develop own method/classes/generators etc for that.
    – ghostdog74
    Oct 3, 2010 at 7:37
  • The standard find method for arrays is to search for a single item. Nobody would be surprised to learn that an array implementation doesn't do substring searches. Oct 3, 2010 at 7:37
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    @Glenn Maynard: With Python's otherwise very thorough treatment of lists, and its insistence on strings being treated similar to lists, I do find it surprising.
    – Tim Yates
    Oct 3, 2010 at 16:52
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I think the rationale for not having separate 'find' and 'index' methods is they're not different enough. Both would return the same thing in the case the sought item exists in the list (this is true of the two string methods); they differ in case the sought item is not in the list/string; however you can trivially build either one of find/index from the other. If you're coming from other languages, it may seem bad manners to raise and catch exceptions for a non-error condition that you could easily test for, but in Python, it's often considered more pythonic to shoot first and ask questions later, er, to use exception handling instead of tests like this (example: Better to 'try' something and catch the exception or test if its possible first to avoid an exception?).

I don't think it's a good idea to build 'find' out of 'index' and 'in', like

if foo in my_list:
   foo_index = my_list.index(foo)
else:
    foo_index = -1 # or do whatever else you want

because both in and index will require an O(n) pass over the list.

Better to build 'find' out of 'index' and try/catch, like:

try:
    foo_index = my_list.index(foo)
catch ValueError:
    foo_index = -1 # or do whatever else you want

Now, as to why list was built this way (with only index), and string was built the other way (with separate index and find)... I can't say.

2

The "find" method for lists is index.

I do consider the inconsistency between string.find and list.index to be unfortunate, both in name and behavior: string.find returns -1 when no match is found, where list.index raises ValueError. This could have been designed more consistently. The only irreconcilable difference between these operations is that string.find searches for a string of items, where list.index searches for exactly one item (which, alone, doesn't justify using different names).

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  • 5
    try "asdfasdf".index('z') next time your in an REPL. Oct 3, 2010 at 7:50
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    @AaronMcSmooth: It highlights the absurdity of the oft-parroted "one obvious way to do something", when they can't even hold to it for core string methods. Oct 3, 2010 at 8:18
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    but the point of my example is that they do hold to it. list and string both have an index method that behaves exactly the same. it's just that string adds a find method on top of that. I'm not sure why they don't do it for list as well but there is no equivalence between list.index and string.find. Oct 3, 2010 at 8:33
  • @AaronMcSmooth: The inconsistency is just shifted a little, with the underlying cause being the redundant search functions. (getattr handles this properly, allowing both a sentinel or an exception depending on what's needed.) Oct 3, 2010 at 9:22
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    @AaronMcSmooth, although string and list both have an .index() method, it doesn't do quite the same thing. For strings it will find substring, but a sublist of a list -- which to me is another example of the inconsistency.
    – martineau
    Oct 3, 2010 at 12:38

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