I’m new to programming a bit, and am learning python so I can learn flask, using the python crash course book. I was learning about list comprehension but it briefly talks about it. If I do

list[list.append(value) for value in range(1, 20)]

it doesn’t work. Would this be some sort of recursive expression that is not possible?

  • librejoe@lemmy.worldOP
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    5 months ago

    So you cannot use methods inside a list comprehension, only binary operators and the function range?

    • bitfucker@programming.dev
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      5 months ago

      You can. Whatever the method returns will be the element of that list. So if for example I do this:

      def mul(x):
        return x*2
      
      list = [mul(value) for value in range(1,20)]
      

      It will have the same effect. But this:

      def mul(x):
        return
      
      list = [mul(value) for value in range(1,20)]
      

      Will just makes the list element all None

      • decivex@yiffit.net
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        5 months ago

        I know I’m being somewhat pedantic but range() returns an iterable range type, not a list, in python 3.

        • bitfucker@programming.dev
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          5 months ago

          Not at all. It is indeed helpful to differentiate between an iterable and literal list. After all, sometimes it will bite you in the ass when you don’t differentiate between the two.

      • librejoe@lemmy.worldOP
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        5 months ago

        Thanks for the response.

        I am aware somewhat of what an array is, as i’ve dabbled with them in C, and know they can be multi-dimensional. Sorry if I’m being blind, but all I see are function calls in that list comprehension. I think what im asking is stupid, as the range function is returning a list populated.

        • bitfucker@programming.dev
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          5 months ago

          No problems. Learning a new concept is not stupid. So you are familiar with C. In C term, you are likely to do something like this:

          int a[10] = {0}; // Just imagine this is 0,1,2,etc...
          int b[10] = {0};
          for (int i=0; i < 10; i++) {
            b[i] = a[i]*2;
          }
          

          A 1 to 1 correspondent might looks like ths:

          a = range(10) # 0,1,2,etc...
          b = []
          for x in a:
            b.append(x*2)
          

          However in python, you can then simplify to this:

          a = range(10) # Same as before, 0,1,2,etc...
          b = [x*2 for x in a]
          
          # This is also works
          b = [x*2 for x in [0,1,2,...]]
          

          Remember that list comprehension is used to make a new list, not just iteration. If you want to do something other than making a list from another list, it is better to use iteration. List comprehension is just “syntactic sugar” so to speak. The concept comes from functional programming paradigm.

          • librejoe@lemmy.worldOP
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            5 months ago

            Great explanation! I don’t know too much C, just a bit here and there, and my dad’s copy of K&R C he gave to me.

    • onlinepersona@programming.dev
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      5 months ago

      Sure you can. As others have said, a list comprehension returns a new list. See the documentation.

      What are you trying to do though? Append a list comprehension to an existing list?

      See a modified version of @eager_eagle@lemmy.world’s code from their comment.

      def double(x):
        return 2 * x
      a = list(range(10))
      a.extend(double(value) for value in range(5))
      
      # a has 15 elements
      print(a)
      

      Anti Commercial-AI license