I would like to only allow lists where the first contiguous group of elements are True
and then all of the remaining elements are False
. I want lists like these examples to return True
:
[True]
[False]
[True, False]
[True, False, False]
[True, True, True, False]
And lists like these to return False
:
[False, True]
[True, False, True]
I am currently using this function, but I feel like there is probably a better way of doing this:
def my_function(x):
n_trues = sum(x)
should_be_true = x[:n_trues] # get the first n items
should_be_false = x[n_trues:len(x)] # get the remaining items
# return True only if all of the first n elements are True and the remaining
# elements are all False
return all(should_be_true) and all([not element for element in should_be_false])
Testing:
test_cases = [[True], [False],
[True, False],
[True, False, False],
[True, True, True, False],
[False, True],
[True, False, True]]
print([my_function(test_case) for test_case in test_cases])
# expected output: [True, True, True, True, True, False, False]
Is it possible to use a comprehension instead to make this a one/two line function? I know I could not define the two temporary lists and instead put their definitions in place of their names on the return line, but I think that would be too messy.