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Currently, I fetch "list" data from my storage, "deque" it to work with that data.

After processing the fetched data, I have to put them back into the storage. This won't be a problem as long as I am not forced to use Python's standard "list" object to save this data.

Storage Service: Google Appengine.

My work-around would be:

dequeObj = deque(myData)
my_list = list()
for obj in dequeObj:
    my_list.append(obj)

but this seems not very optimal.

2 Answers 2

118
>>> list(collections.deque((1, 2, 3)))
[1, 2, 3]
1
  • 2
    nb. This works because a deque is iterable, and list() will make list from an iterable. (eg. list(range(5)))
    – pjz
    Commented Mar 15, 2021 at 21:16
1

Since deques are iterables, you can also unpack it inside a list.

dq = collections.deque([1, 2, 3])
lst = [*dq]
lst             # [1, 2, 3]

To create a new list object, you can even pack the deque into a variable as well.

*lst, = dq
lst             # [1, 2, 3]

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