6

I have a 2D list of characters in this fashion:

a = [['1','2','3'],
     ['4','5','6'],
     ['7','8','9']]

What's the most pythonic way to print the list as a whole block? I.e. no commas or brackets:

123
456
789

4 Answers 4

10

There are a lot of ways. Probably a str.join of a mapping of str.joins:

>>> a = [['1','2','3'],
...          ['4','5','6'],
...          ['7','8','9']]
>>> print('\n'.join(map(''.join, a)))
123
456
789
>>>
12
  • Oh right! Arrays, lists and arraylists... always screwing me up!
    – Graviton
    Commented Jul 11, 2017 at 7:12
  • 2
    Always here to try to improve an already good answer :) could be worth a bench to compare join(map('' vs join([''.join(x) for x in a]). In the latter, the outer join knows the size of the list and the items and allocates the output string in one go. Commented Jul 11, 2017 at 7:22
  • @Jean-FrançoisFabre yeah, if performance really were an issue, probably materializing into a list will be faster. Likely, this code won't be performance critical. From the point of view of style and ease, I would be OK with this. Commented Jul 11, 2017 at 7:24
  • compiled map makes up for the speed loss of the listcomp. A generator comprehension would be the slowest. Commented Jul 11, 2017 at 7:25
  • 1
    If memory isn't a concern, the either the above or maybe print('\n'.join(list(map(''.join, a)))) if you are on Python 3. In any event, you can just benchmark with a couple large lists using the timeit module. Indeed, the "Basic examples" in the docs are very similar to your situation... Commented Jul 11, 2017 at 7:45
3

Best way in my opinion would be to use print function. With print function you won't require any type of joining and conversion(if all the objects are not strings).

>>> a = [['1','2','3'],
...      ['4', 5, 6],   # Contains integers as well.
...      ['7','8','9']]
...

>>> for x in a:
...     print(*x, sep='')
...
...
123
456
789

If you're on Python 2 then print function can be imported using from __future__ import print_function.

0

Like this:

import os

array = [['1','2','3'],
         ['4','5','6'],
         ['7','8','9']]
print(os.linesep.join(map(''.join, array)))
0

If you're looking for Pythonic then you surely need a generator comprehension:

print('\n'.join(''.join(i) for i in array))
3
  • 5
    in the case of join, passing a list comprehension instead is faster because join creates one anyway (needs that to pre-compute the size): '\n'.join([''.join(i) for i in array]) even if it's uglier :) Commented Jul 11, 2017 at 7:24
  • @Jean-FrançoisFabre Yup, here's where the conversion happens.
    – Chris
    Commented Jul 11, 2017 at 7:35
  • Thanks for that @Jean-FrançoisFabre, I didn't know that. OTOH, the OP didn't ask for the fastest method. ;-)
    – Turn
    Commented Nov 2, 2017 at 22:02

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