The Python Oracle

Add Variables to Tuple

--------------------------------------------------
Hire the world's top talent on demand or became one of them at Toptal: https://topt.al/25cXVn
and get $2,000 discount on your first invoice
--------------------------------------------------

Take control of your privacy with Proton's trusted, Swiss-based, secure services.
Choose what you need and safeguard your digital life:
Mail: https://go.getproton.me/SH1CU
VPN: https://go.getproton.me/SH1DI
Password Manager: https://go.getproton.me/SH1DJ
Drive: https://go.getproton.me/SH1CT


Music by Eric Matyas
https://www.soundimage.org
Track title: Riding Sky Waves v001

--

Chapters
00:00 Add Variables To Tuple
00:44 Answer 1 Score 10
00:59 Accepted Answer Score 509
01:22 Answer 3 Score 277
01:50 Answer 4 Score 52
02:11 Thank you

--

Full question
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1380...

--

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

--

Tags
#python #tuples

#avk47



ACCEPTED ANSWER

Score 509


Tuples are immutable; you can't change which variables they contain after construction. However, you can concatenate or slice them to form new tuples:

a = (1, 2, 3)
b = a + (4, 5, 6)  # (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6)
c = b[1:]  # (2, 3, 4, 5, 6)

And, of course, build them from existing values:

name = "Joe"
age = 40
location = "New York"
joe = (name, age, location)



ANSWER 2

Score 277


You can start with a blank tuple with something like t = (). You can add with +, but you have to add another tuple. If you want to add a single element, make it a singleton: t = t + (element,). You can add a tuple of multiple elements with or without that trailing comma.

>>> t = ()
>>> t = t + (1,)
>>> t
(1,)
>>> t = t + (2,)
>>> t
(1, 2)
>>> t = t + (3, 4, 5)
>>> t
(1, 2, 3, 4, 5)
>>> t = t + (6, 7, 8,)
>>> t
(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8)



ANSWER 3

Score 52


Another tactic not yet mentioned is using appending to a list, and then converting the list to a tuple at the end:

mylist = []
for x in range(5):
    mylist.append(x)
mytuple = tuple(mylist)
print mytuple

returns

(0, 1, 2, 3, 4)

I sometimes use this when I have to pass a tuple as a function argument, which is often necessary for the numpy functions.




ANSWER 4

Score 10


It's as easy as the following:

info_1 = "one piece of info"
info_2 = "another piece"
vars = (info_1, info_2)
# 'vars' is now a tuple with the values ("info_1", "info_2")

However, tuples in Python are immutable, so you cannot append variables to a tuple once it is created.