Possible Duplicate:
A Transpose/Unzip Function in Python
I have a list that looks like this:
list = (('1','a'),('2','b'),('3','c'),('4','d'))
I want to separate the list in 2 lists.
list1 = ('1','2','3','4')
list2 = ('a','b','c','d')
I can do it for example with:
list1 = [] list2 = [] for i in list: list1.append(i[0]) list2.append(i[1])
But I want to know if there is a more elegant solution.
Answers:
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Method 1
>>> source_list = [('1','a'),('2','b'),('3','c'),('4','d')]
>>> list1, list2 = zip(*source_list)
>>> list1
('1', '2', '3', '4')
>>> list2
('a', 'b', 'c', 'd')
Edit: Note that zip(*iterable) is its own inverse:
>>> list(source_list) == zip(*zip(*source_list)) True
When unpacking into two lists, this becomes:
>>> list1, list2 = zip(*source_list) >>> list(source_list) == zip(list1, list2) True
Addition suggested by rocksportrocker.
Method 2
list1 = (x[0] for x in source_list) list2 = (x[1] for x in source_list)
All methods was sourced from stackoverflow.com or stackexchange.com, is licensed under cc by-sa 2.5, cc by-sa 3.0 and cc by-sa 4.0