Powerful zip
1. Code guide
First look at this code:
>>> name=('jack','beginman','sony','pcky') >>> age=(2001,2003,2005,2000) >>> for a,n in zip(name,age): print a,n
Output:
jack 2001
beginman 2003
sony 2005
pcky 2000
Look at this piece of code again:
all={"jack":2001,"beginman":2003,"sony":2005,"pcky":2000} for i in all.keys(): print i,all[i]
Output:
sony 2005
pcky 2000
jack 2001
beginman 2003
Find the difference between them?
The most obvious one is: the first one is simple, flexible, and can be input sequentially.
2. zip() function
It is a built-in function of Python, (built-in functions related to sequences are: sorted(), reversed(), enumerate(), zip()), among which sorted() and zip() returns a sequence (list) object, reversed(), enumerate() returns an iterator (similar to a sequence)
>>> type(sorted(s)) <type 'list'> >>> type(zip(s)) <type 'list'> >>> type(reversed(s)) <type 'listreverseiterator'> >>> type(enumerate(s)) <type 'enumerate'>
So what is the zip() function?
Let’s help(zip) take a look:
>>> help(zip)
Help on built-in function zip in module __builtin__:
zip(...)
zip( seq1 [, seq2 [...]]) -> [(seq1[0], seq2[0] ...), (...)]
Return a list of tuples, where each tuple contains the i-th element
from each of the argument sequences. The returned list is truncated
in length to the length of the shortest argument sequence. [seql, ...]) accepts a series of iterable objects as parameters, packs the corresponding elements in the objects into tuples, and then returns a list composed of these tuples. If the lengths of the parameters passed in are not equal, the length of the returned list will be the same as the object with the shortest length among the parameters.
>>> z1=[1,2,3] >>> z2=[4,5,6] >>> result=zip(z1,z2) >>> result [(1, 4), (2, 5), (3, 6)] >>> z3=[4,5,6,7] >>> result=zip(z1,z3) >>> result [(1, 4), (2, 5), (3, 6)] >>>
zip function accepts any number of sequences as parameters, and combines all sequences into one element according to the same index. The tuple formed by merging each sequence New sequence, the length of the new sequence shall be based on the shortest sequence in the parameters. In addition, the (*) operator combined with the zip function can achieve the opposite function of zip, that is, split the merged sequence into multiple tuples.
①New sequence of tuples
>>>>x=[1,2,3],y=['a','b','c']
②The length of the new sequence is based on the shortest sequence among the parameters.
>>> >x=[1,2],y=['a','b','c']
>>>zip(x,y)
③(*) operator combined with the zip function can achieve the opposite function of zip, that is, split the merged sequence into multiple tuples.
>>>>x=[1,2,3],y=['a','b','c']
>>>>zip(*zip(x,y))

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