10.17. Lists and for
loopsΒΆ
It is also possible to perform list traversal using iteration by item as well as iteration by index.
It almost reads like natural language: For (every) fruit in (the list of) fruits, print (the name of the) fruit.
We can also use the indices to access the items in an iterative fashion.
In this example, each time through the loop, the variable position
is used as an index into the
list, printing the position
-eth element. Note that we used len
as the upper bound on the range
so that we can iterate correctly no matter how many items are in the list.
Any sequence expression can be used in a for
loop. For example, the range
function returns a sequence of integers.
This example prints all the multiples of 3 between 0 and 19.
Since lists are mutable, it is often desirable to traverse a list, modifying
each of its elements as you go. The following code squares all the numbers from 1
to
5
using iteration by position.
Take a moment to think about range(len(numbers))
until you understand how
it works. We are interested here in both the value and its index within the
list, so that we can assign a new value to it.
Check your understanding
- [4, 2, 8, 6, 5]
- 5 is added to each item before the append is peformed.
- [4, 2, 8, 6, 5, 5]
- There are too many items in this list. Only 5 append operations are performed.
- [9, 7, 13, 11, 10]
- Yes, the for loop processes each item of the list. 5 is added before it is appended to blist.
- Error, you cannot concatenate inside an append.
- 5 is added to each item before the append is performed.
What is printed by the following statements?
alist = [4, 2, 8, 6, 5]
blist = [ ]
for item in alist:
blist.append(item+5)
print(blist)