The Python Oracle

Create an empty list with certain size in Python

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Chapters
00:00 Create An Empty List With Certain Size In Python
01:04 Answer 1 Score 23
01:20 Answer 2 Score 228
01:55 Accepted Answer Score 1358
03:05 Answer 4 Score 160
04:09 Thank you

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Full question
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1071...

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

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Tags
#python #list

#avk47



ACCEPTED ANSWER

Score 1358


You cannot assign to a list like xs[i] = value, unless the list already is initialized with at least i+1 elements (because the first index is 0). Instead, use xs.append(value) to add elements to the end of the list. (Though you could use the assignment notation if you were using a dictionary instead of a list.)

Creating an empty list:

>>> xs = [None] * 10
>>> xs
[None, None, None, None, None, None, None, None, None, None]

Assigning a value to an existing element of the above list:

>>> xs[1] = 5
>>> xs
[None, 5, None, None, None, None, None, None, None, None]

Keep in mind that something like xs[15] = 5 would still fail, as our list has only 10 elements.

range(x) creates a list from [0, 1, 2, ... x-1]

# 2.X only. Use list(range(10)) in 3.X.
>>> xs = range(10)
>>> xs
[0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]

Using a function to create a list:

>>> def display():
...     xs = []
...     for i in range(9): # This is just to tell you how to create a list.
...         xs.append(i)
...     return xs
... 
>>> print display()
[0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8]

List comprehension (Using the squares because for range you don't need to do all this, you can just return range(0,9) ):

>>> def display():
...     return [x**2 for x in range(9)]
... 
>>> print display()
[0, 1, 4, 9, 16, 25, 36, 49, 64]



ANSWER 2

Score 228


Try this instead:

lst = [None] * 10

The above will create a list of size 10, where each position is initialized to None. After that, you can add elements to it:

lst = [None] * 10
for i in range(10):
    lst[i] = i

Admittedly, that's not the Pythonic way to do things. Better do this:

lst = []
for i in range(10):
    lst.append(i)

Or even simpler, in Python 2.x you can do this to initialize a list with values from 0 to 9:

lst = range(10)

And in Python 3.x:

lst = list(range(10))



ANSWER 3

Score 160


varunl's currently accepted answer

 >>> l = [None] * 10
 >>> l
 [None, None, None, None, None, None, None, None, None, None]

Works well for non-reference types like numbers. Unfortunately if you want to create a list-of-lists you will run into referencing errors. Example in Python 2.7.6:

>>> a = [[]]*10
>>> a
[[], [], [], [], [], [], [], [], [], []]
>>> a[0].append(0)
>>> a
[[0], [0], [0], [0], [0], [0], [0], [0], [0], [0]]
>>> 

As you can see, each element is pointing to the same list object. To get around this, you can create a method that will initialize each position to a different object reference.

def init_list_of_objects(size):
    list_of_objects = list()
    for i in range(0,size):
        list_of_objects.append( list() ) #different object reference each time
    return list_of_objects


>>> a = init_list_of_objects(10)
>>> a
[[], [], [], [], [], [], [], [], [], []]
>>> a[0].append(0)
>>> a
[[0], [], [], [], [], [], [], [], [], []]
>>> 

There is likely a default, built-in python way of doing this (instead of writing a function), but I'm not sure what it is. Would be happy to be corrected!

Edit: It's [ [] for _ in range(10)]

Example :

>>> [ [random.random() for _ in range(2) ] for _ in range(5)]
>>> [[0.7528051908943816, 0.4325669600055032], [0.510983236521753, 0.7789949902294716], [0.09475179523690558, 0.30216475640534635], [0.3996890132468158, 0.6374322093017013], [0.3374204010027543, 0.4514925173253973]]



ANSWER 4

Score 23


You can .append(element) to the list, e.g.:

s1.append(i)

What you are currently trying to do is access an element (s1[i]) that does not exist.