In C/C++, I can have the following loop
for(int k = 1; k <= c; k += 2)
How do the same thing in Python?
I can do this
for k in range(1, c):
In Python, which would be identical to
for(int k = 1; k <= c; k++)
in C/C++.
Try using this:
for k in range(1,c+1,2):
for i in xrange(1)
is faster than for i in range(1)
significantly enough to never use range
unless you actually want to construct a list. The increase in speed only increases as the size of the sequence increases.
Nov 13, 2010 at 3:13
You should also know that in Python, iterating over integer indices is bad style, and also slower than the alternative. If you just want to look at each of the items in a list or dict, loop directly through the list or dict.
mylist = [1,2,3]
for item in mylist:
print item
mydict = {1:'one', 2:'two', 3:'three'}
for key in mydict:
print key, mydict[key]
This is actually faster than using the above code with range(), and removes the extraneous i
variable.
If you need to edit items of a list in-place, then you do need the index, but there's still a better way:
for i, item in enumerate(mylist):
mylist[i] = item**2
Again, this is both faster and considered more readable. This one of the main shifts in thinking you need to make when coming from C++ to Python.
range
". My two suggestions start with "if". Iterating "directly" rather than via an integer variable is one of the things everyone has to un-learn when coming to Python. At least 90% of the time I see a junior programmer write for i in range
, the correct refactoring is to get rid of range. The accepted answer makes me believe that was true here, as well. It's also interesting to note that the idiomatic way to do "just counting" in python (for i in range(x):
) is actually iterating through a list of integers, rather than incrementing a counter.
The answer is good, but for the people that want this with range()
, the form to do is:
range(end)
:
>>> list(range(10))
[0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
range(start,end)
:
>>> list(range(1, 11))
[1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]
range(start,end, step)
:
>>> list(range(0, 30, 5))
[0, 5, 10, 15, 20, 25]
If you want to write a loop in Python which prints some integer no etc, then just copy and paste this code, it'll work a lot
# Display Value from 1 TO 3
for i in range(1,4):
print "",i,"value of loop"
# Loop for dictionary data type
mydata = {"Fahim":"Pakistan", "Vedon":"China", "Bill":"USA" }
for user, country in mydata.iteritems():
print user, "belongs to " ,country
In Python you generally have for in loops instead of general for loops like C/C++, but you can achieve the same thing with the following code.
for k in range(1, c+1, 2):
do something with k
Reference Loop in Python.
In C/C++, we can do the following, as you mentioned
for(int k = 1; k <= c ; k++)
for(int k = 1; k <= c ; k +=2)
We know that here k
starts with 1 and go till (predefined) c
with step value 1 or 2 gradually. We can do this in Python by following,
for k in range(1,c+1):
for k in range(1,c+1,2):
Check this for more in depth.
The range()
function in python is a way to generate a sequence. Sequences are objects that can be indexed, like lists, strings, and tuples. An easy way to check for a sequence is to try retrieve indexed elements from them. It can also be checked using the Sequence Abstract Base Class(ABC)
from the collections module.
from collections import Sequence as sq
isinstance(foo, sq)
The range()
takes three arguments start
, stop
and step
.
start
: The staring element of the required sequencestop
: (n+1)th element of the required sequencestep
: The required gap between the elements of the sequence. It is an optional parameter that defaults to 1.To get your desired result you can make use of the below syntax.
range(1,c+1,2)
You can use the below format.
for i in range(0, 10, 2):
print(i,' ', end='')
print('')
and this will print;
0 2 4 6 8
Despite asking a FOR STATEMENT, just for the record as bonus, alternatively with WHILE, it'd be:
k=1
while k<c:
#
# your loop block here
#
k+=2
Here are some example to iterate over integer range and string:
#(initial,final but not included,gap)
for i in range(1,10,2):
print(i);
1,3,5,7,9
# (initial, final but not included)
# note: 4 not included
for i in range (1,4):
print(i);
1,2,3
#note: 5 not included
for i in range (5):
print (i);
0,1,2,3,4
# you can also iterate over strings
myList = ["ml","ai","dl"];
for i in myList:
print(i);
output: ml,ai,dl
for k in range(1,c + 1):