Answers for "appending a list in python"

0

append to lists python

  list = ['larry', 'curly', 'moe']
  list.append('shemp')         ## append elem at end
  list.insert(0, 'xxx')        ## insert elem at index 0
  list.extend(['yyy', 'zzz'])  ## add list of elems at end
  print list  ## ['xxx', 'larry', 'curly', 'moe', 'shemp', 'yyy', 'zzz']
  print list.index('curly')    ## 2

  list.remove('curly')         ## search and remove that element
  list.pop(1)                  ## removes and returns 'larry'
  print list  ## ['xxx', 'moe', 'shemp', 'yyy', 'zzz']
Posted by: Guest on August-24-2020
0

append to lists python

list = []          ## Start as the empty list
  list.append('a')   ## Use append() to add elements
  list.append('b')
Posted by: Guest on August-24-2020
1

add a list in python

list_of_names=["Bill", "John", "Susan", "Bob", "Emma","Katherine"]
new_name="James"
list_of_names.append(new_name)
# The list is now ["Bill", "John", "Susan", "Bob", "Emma","Katherine", "James"]
Posted by: Guest on April-19-2021
1

python append to list

stuff = ["apple", "banana"]
stuff.append("carrot")
# Print to see if it worked
print(stuff)
# You can do it with a variable too
whatever = "pineapple"
stuff.append(whatever)
# Print it again
print(stuff)
Posted by: Guest on July-30-2020
2

python list append

# Python list mutation, adding elements
history = ["when"]

# adds item to the end of a list
history.append("how")
# ["when", "how"]

# combine lists
history.extend( ["what", "why"] ) # works with tuples too
# or
history = history + ["what", "why"]
# ["when", "how", "what", "why"]

# insert at target position
history.insert(3, "where")
# ["when", "how, "what", "where", "why"]
#
Posted by: Guest on December-01-2020
0

python list append

# Add to List
my_list * 2                # [1, 2, '3', True, 1, 2, '3', True]
my_list + [100]            # [1, 2, '3', True, 100] --> doesn't mutate original list, creates new one
my_list.append(100)        # None --> Mutates original list to [1, 2, '3', True, 100]          # Or: <list> += [<el>]
my_list.extend([100, 200]) # None --> Mutates original list to [1, 2, '3', True, 100, 200]
my_list.insert(2, '!!!')   # None -->  [1, 2, '!!!', '3', True] - Inserts item at index and moves the rest to the right.

' '.join(['Hello','There'])# 'Hello There' --> Joins elements using string as separator.
Posted by: Guest on November-21-2021

Code answers related to "appending a list in python"

Code answers related to "TypeScript"

Browse Popular Code Answers by Language