The Python Oracle

Is it possible to implement a Python for range loop without an iterator variable?

Become part of the top 3% of the developers by applying to Toptal https://topt.al/25cXVn

--

Track title: CC E Schuberts Piano Sonata D 784 in A

--

Chapters
00:00 Question
00:24 Accepted answer (Score 137)
01:28 Answer 2 (Score 80)
01:47 Answer 3 (Score 70)
02:02 Answer 4 (Score 20)
02:32 Thank you

--

Full question
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/8188...

Accepted answer links:
[Python grammar]: https://docs.python.org/2/reference/lexi...

Answer 4 links:
[gettext]: http://docs.python.org/library/gettext.h...

--

Content licensed under CC BY-SA
https://meta.stackexchange.com/help/lice...

--

Tags
#python #loops #forloop #range

#avk47



ACCEPTED ANSWER

Score 143


Off the top of my head, no.

I think the best you could do is something like this:

def loop(f,n):
    for i in xrange(n): f()

loop(lambda: <insert expression here>, 5)

But I think you can just live with the extra i variable.

Here is the option to use the _ variable, which in reality, is just another variable.

for _ in range(n):
    do_something()

Note that _ is assigned the last result that returned in an interactive python session:

>>> 1+2
3
>>> _
3

For this reason, I would not use it in this manner. I am unaware of any idiom as mentioned by Ryan. It can mess up your interpreter.

>>> for _ in xrange(10): pass
...
>>> _
9
>>> 1+2
3
>>> _
9

And according to Python grammar, it is an acceptable variable name:

identifier ::= (letter|"_") (letter | digit | "_")*



ANSWER 2

Score 84


You may be looking for

for _ in itertools.repeat(None, times): ...

this is THE fastest way to iterate times times in Python.




ANSWER 3

Score 78


The general idiom for assigning to a value that isn't used is to name it _.

for _ in range(times):
    do_stuff()



ANSWER 4

Score 21


What everyone suggesting you to use _ isn't saying is that _ is frequently used as a shortcut to one of the gettext functions, so if you want your software to be available in more than one language then you're best off avoiding using it for other purposes.

import gettext
gettext.bindtextdomain('myapplication', '/path/to/my/language/directory')
gettext.textdomain('myapplication')
_ = gettext.gettext
# ...
print _('This is a translatable string.')