hello all, just a basic question regarding loops in python , what is advised to use , for i in some_list vs [func(i) for i in some_list]. , they are syntactically different but , i'm not sure if there is any performance difference in these writing styles
@Peilonrayz - thanks . learning python these days. is there a name for this type of loop . also, i want to pass an index as well , to the func(i), along with i in the second option
You have a for loop: "for i in range(10):" and list comprehension: [func(i) for i in range(10)]. You can also find dictionary comprehensions, set comprehensions and generator expressions which can be a little more complicated. You can use enumerate e.g. print(", ".join(f"{i}: {v}" for i, v in enumerate("ABCDEF")))
@XavierCombelle probably because o["member"] is "get item" and an attribute is not an item, and the syntax would be ambiguous for mappings (what is d["keys"]?), and there should be preferably one obvious way to do something.
Almost the reverse of that is true with pandas where you can access columns with both sets of syntax (barring some restrictions like spaces in the names) and it's a mess, exactly as Andras alludes to. Column access and methods/attributes should be clearly separated
@XavierCombelle Even if Python does not enforce it (though it does optimise for it) the set of attributes of an object are generally considered static (even if Python isn’t statically typed, everything has a type). Attribute references are syntactically always code, I.e. static, whereas string keys are data, I.e. dynamic.
Heh, I didn't get to change YouTube before it went on to the billionth black hole documentary but I got a great line from its opener - "Today, we know more about black holes than ever before!". Err... I'm not quite sure that message packs the punch the enthusiastic delivery tried to give it. I suppose there's things like Starlite (appropriately named) that we've forgotten about
Indeed. I got a strong vibe of one of the classic drunk-relative-at-xmas situations in which my aunt tied up her story with "If I knew now what I knew then, I'd never have done it" or one of my favourite comedy panel show moments
it doesn't properly specify a result (a list of bytes? a bytearray? Something else?); it conflates ordinary strings with "byte strings" (outdated term for bytes) while not being labelled as a 2.x question; the answers don't explain anything properly; one of them shotgun-guesses two completely different input formats; there's no actual mention of the fact that OP might not need to do anything at all depending on what was really meant (and one of the answers includes a do-nothing)
@paul23 In languages where I'm familiar with appending to an array usually means creating a new array with larger size. Even if it's done under the hood e.g. by MATLAB. Although Python does something similar, there's preallocation causing append() to be efficient when amortized.
@paul23 This may be a language thingy, but at least for me "a list" is pretty well-defined from day-to-day usage. Python's list is actually pretty close to that.
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні Sure you shouldn't rename it, but that doesn't mean you should ignore mistakes in the past and not name htem. Just like countries shouldn't forget their mistakes and have to remember those, languages should also keep track of things that need to be done "different in the future".
Not a big issue
but so isn't the problem of people mixing up arrays and lists in SO questions....