Why should the slice factor in the length in this format, but not in z[20:30]?
I don't think it strange that the values I get from range(27, 5, -3) would be the same as the indexes of the values you would get from z[27:5:-3]
But this is already known behavior??? I looked for a doc reference, but all the ones I found were fairly introductory, and did not include this corner case
I would find it more intuitive if the indices themselves were clipped, rather than the start/end indices of the slice. But the behaviour is understandable in terms of the latter
Pick a step that is not -1, and pick a starting value that is not in range. I would expect the indices to be computed based on the start, stop and step, and then clipped to the actual range of indicies for the list.
I would find it more intuitive if the indices themselves were clipped, rather than the start/end indices of the slice. But the behaviour is understandable in terms of the latter
:P
@PaulMcG passing on the behaviour of slice seems fair enough
@wim These are the kind of examples that you find in tutorials, and they certainly make sense. I'm looking for the document that says, "But if the start of the slice is greater than the size of the list, then it is ignored, and the last element of the sequence is used as the starting element, followed by each element in step until the stop value is reached."
> indices() handles omitted and out-of-bounds indices in a manner consistent with regular slices (and this innocuous phrase hides a welter of confusing details!)
feature request: new users should have to search their question title before posting.
kinda like those captcha where you have to pick out the squares with road signs, but in this case you have to pick out the posts where your question has already been answered. a CAPTVHA.