How do I traverse a list in reverse order in Python? So I can start from collection[len(collection)-1]
and end in collection[0]
.
I also want to be able to access the loop index.
How do I traverse a list in reverse order in Python? So I can start from collection[len(collection)-1]
and end in collection[0]
.
I also want to be able to access the loop index.
Use the built-in reversed()
function:
>>> a = ["foo", "bar", "baz"]
>>> for i in reversed(a):
... print(i)
...
baz
bar
foo
To also access the original index, use enumerate()
on your list before passing it to reversed()
:
>>> for i, e in reversed(list(enumerate(a))):
... print(i, e)
...
2 baz
1 bar
0 foo
Since enumerate()
returns a generator and generators can't be reversed, you need to convert it to a list
first.
You can do:
for item in my_list[::-1]:
print item
(Or whatever you want to do in the for loop.)
The [::-1]
slice reverses the list in the for loop (but won't actually modify your list "permanently").
It can be done like this:
for i in range(len(collection)-1, -1, -1):
print collection[i]
# print(collection[i]) for python 3. +
So your guess was pretty close :) A little awkward but it's basically saying: start with 1 less than len(collection)
, keep going until you get to just before -1, by steps of -1.
Fyi, the help
function is very useful as it lets you view the docs for something from the Python console, eg:
help(range)
If you need the loop index, and don't want to traverse the entire list twice, or use extra memory, I'd write a generator.
def reverse_enum(L):
for index in reversed(xrange(len(L))):
yield index, L[index]
L = ['foo', 'bar', 'bas']
for index, item in reverse_enum(L):
print index, item
An approach with no imports:
for i in range(1,len(arr)+1):
print(arr[-i])
Time complexity O(n) and space complexity O(1).
An approach that creates a new list in memory, be careful with large lists:
for i in arr[::-1]:
print(i)
Time complexity O(n) and space complexity O(n).
The reversed
builtin function is handy:
for item in reversed(sequence):
The documentation for reversed explains its limitations.
For the cases where I have to walk a sequence in reverse along with the index (e.g. for in-place modifications changing the sequence length), I have this function defined an my codeutil module:
from six.moves import zip as izip, range as xrange
def reversed_enumerate(sequence):
return izip(
reversed(xrange(len(sequence))),
reversed(sequence),
)
This one avoids creating a copy of the sequence. Obviously, the reversed
limitations still apply.
Also, you could use either "range" or "count" functions. As follows:
a = ["foo", "bar", "baz"]
for i in range(len(a)-1, -1, -1):
print(i, a[i])
3 baz
2 bar
1 foo
You could also use "count" from itertools as following:
a = ["foo", "bar", "baz"]
from itertools import count, takewhile
def larger_than_0(x):
return x > 0
for x in takewhile(larger_than_0, count(3, -1)):
print(x, a[x-1])
3 baz
2 bar
1 foo
In python 3, list creates a copy, so reversed(list(enumerate(collection))
could be inefficient, generating yet an other list is not optimized away.
If collection is a list for sure, then it may be best to hide the complexity behind an iterator
def reversed_enumerate(collection: list):
for i in range(len(collection)-1, -1, -1):
yield i, collection[i]
so, the cleanest is:
for i, elem in reversed_enumerate(['foo', 'bar', 'baz']):
print(i, elem)
How about without recreating a new list, you can do by indexing:
>>> foo = ['1a','2b','3c','4d']
>>> for i in range(len(foo)):
... print foo[-(i+1)]
...
4d
3c
2b
1a
>>>
OR
>>> length = len(foo)
>>> for i in range(length):
... print foo[length-i-1]
...
4d
3c
2b
1a
>>>
>>> l = ["a","b","c","d"]
>>> l.reverse()
>>> l
['d', 'c', 'b', 'a']
OR
>>> print l[::-1]
['d', 'c', 'b', 'a']
I like the one-liner generator approach:
((i, sequence[i]) for i in reversed(xrange(len(sequence))))
for what ever it's worth you can do it like this too. very simple.
a = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7]
for x in xrange(len(a)):
x += 1
print a[-x]
Use list.reverse()
and then iterate as you normally would.
def reverse(spam):
k = []
for i in spam:
k.insert(0,i)
return "".join(k)
If you need the index and your list is small, the most readable way is to do reversed(list(enumerate(your_list)))
like the accepted answer says. But this creates a copy of your list, so if your list is taking up a large portion of your memory you'll have to subtract the index returned by enumerate(reversed())
from len()-1
.
If you just need to do it once:
a = ['b', 'd', 'c', 'a']
for index, value in enumerate(reversed(a)):
index = len(a)-1 - index
do_something(index, value)
or if you need to do this multiple times you should use a generator:
def enumerate_reversed(lyst):
for index, value in enumerate(reversed(lyst)):
index = len(lyst)-1 - index
yield index, value
for index, value in enumerate_reversed(a):
do_something(index, value)
Assuming task is to find last element that satisfies some condition in a list (i.e. first when looking backwards), I'm getting following numbers.
Python 2:
>>> min(timeit.repeat('for i in xrange(len(xs)-1,-1,-1):\n if 128 == xs[i]: break', setup='xs, n = range(256), 0', repeat=8))
4.6937971115112305
>>> min(timeit.repeat('for i in reversed(xrange(0, len(xs))):\n if 128 == xs[i]: break', setup='xs, n = range(256), 0', repeat=8))
4.809093952178955
>>> min(timeit.repeat('for i, x in enumerate(reversed(xs), 1):\n if 128 == x: break', setup='xs, n = range(256), 0', repeat=8))
4.931743860244751
>>> min(timeit.repeat('for i, x in enumerate(xs[::-1]):\n if 128 == x: break', setup='xs, n = range(256), 0', repeat=8))
5.548468112945557
>>> min(timeit.repeat('for i in xrange(len(xs), 0, -1):\n if 128 == xs[i - 1]: break', setup='xs, n = range(256), 0', repeat=8))
6.286104917526245
>>> min(timeit.repeat('i = len(xs)\nwhile 0 < i:\n i -= 1\n if 128 == xs[i]: break', setup='xs, n = range(256), 0', repeat=8))
8.384078979492188
So, the ugliest option xrange(len(xs)-1,-1,-1)
is the fastest.
Python 3 (different machine):
>>> timeit.timeit('for i in range(len(xs)-1,-1,-1):\n if 128 == xs[i]: break', setup='xs, n = range(256), 0', number=400000)
4.48873088900001
>>> timeit.timeit('for i in reversed(range(0, len(xs))):\n if 128 == xs[i]: break', setup='xs, n = range(256), 0', number=400000)
4.540959084000008
>>> timeit.timeit('for i, x in enumerate(reversed(xs), 1):\n if 128 == x: break', setup='xs, n = range(256), 0', number=400000)
1.9069805409999958
>>> timeit.timeit('for i, x in enumerate(xs[::-1]):\n if 128 == x: break', setup='xs, n = range(256), 0', number=400000)
2.960720073999994
>>> timeit.timeit('for i in range(len(xs), 0, -1):\n if 128 == xs[i - 1]: break', setup='xs, n = range(256), 0', number=400000)
5.316207007999992
>>> timeit.timeit('i = len(xs)\nwhile 0 < i:\n i -= 1\n if 128 == xs[i]: break', setup='xs, n = range(256), 0', number=400000)
5.802550058999998
Here, enumerate(reversed(xs), 1)
is the fastest.
If you don't mind the index being negative, you can do:
>>> a = ["foo", "bar", "baz"]
>>> for i in range(len(a)):
... print(~i, a[~i]))
-1 baz
-2 bar
-3 foo
I think the most elegant way is to transform enumerate
and reversed
using the following generator
(-(ri+1), val) for ri, val in enumerate(reversed(foo))
which generates a the reverse of the enumerate
iterator
Example:
foo = [1,2,3]
bar = [3,6,9]
[
bar[i] - val
for i, val in ((-(ri+1), val) for ri, val in enumerate(reversed(foo)))
]
Result:
[6, 4, 2]
the reverse function comes in handy here:
myArray = [1,2,3,4]
myArray.reverse()
for x in myArray:
print x
To use negative indices: start at -1 and step back by -1 at each iteration.
>>> a = ["foo", "bar", "baz"]
>>> for i in range(-1, -1*(len(a)+1), -1):
... print i, a[i]
...
-1 baz
-2 bar
-3 foo
You can also use a while
loop:
i = len(collection)-1
while i>=0:
value = collection[i]
index = i
i-=1
You can use a negative index in an ordinary for loop:
>>> collection = ["ham", "spam", "eggs", "baked beans"]
>>> for i in range(1, len(collection) + 1):
... print(collection[-i])
...
baked beans
eggs
spam
ham
To access the index as though you were iterating forward over a reversed copy of the collection, use i - 1
:
>>> for i in range(1, len(collection) + 1):
... print(i-1, collection[-i])
...
0 baked beans
1 eggs
2 spam
3 ham
To access the original, un-reversed index, use len(collection) - i
:
>>> for i in range(1, len(collection) + 1):
... print(len(collection)-i, collection[-i])
...
3 baked beans
2 eggs
1 spam
0 ham
The other answers are good, but if you want to do as List comprehension style
collection = ['a','b','c']
[item for item in reversed( collection ) ]
input_list = ['foo','bar','baz']
for i in range(-1,-len(input_list)-1,-1)
print(input_list[i])
i think this one is also simple way to do it... read from end and keep decrementing till the length of list, since we never execute the "end" index hence added -1 also
I'm confused why the obvious choice did not pop up so far:
If reversed()
is not working because you have a generator (as the case with enumerate()
), just use sorted()
:
>>> l = list( 'abcdef' )
>>> sorted( enumerate(l), reverse=True )
[(5, 'f'), (4, 'e'), (3, 'd'), (2, 'c'), (1, 'b'), (0, 'a')]
As a beginner in python, I found this way more easy to understand and reverses a list.
say numlst = [1, 2, 3, 4]
for i in range(len(numlst)-1,-1,-1):
ie., for i in range(3,-1,-1), where 3 is length of list minus 1,
second -1 means list starts from last element and
third -1 signifies it will traverse in reverse order.
print( numlst[ i ] )
o/p = 4, 3, 2, 1
A simple way :
n = int(input())
arr = list(map(int, input().split()))
for i in reversed(range(0, n)):
print("%d %d" %(i, arr[i]))