+ 6
Why the last '-1' isn't removed?
arr = [-1,-1,2,3,4,-1,6,7,8,9,-1] for i in arr: if i==-1: arr.remove(i) print(arr) After i print(arr)..i get >>[2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, -1] My question is that, why the last '-1' isn't removed?
19 Respostas
+ 10
When you remove an item from a list, the counter in the next step jumps by one:
At the first iteration i is -1 and you remove it. At the next iteration i is 2 (probably you think it should be -1, but as I said it jumps by one. Because the counter now should be on the second place of arr and now it's 2, and -1 is at the first place). It goes on until it reaches at the third -1. Then it removes the first occurrence of -1 which is at the first position but the current -1 remains unremoved and become the 4th element. Finally it reaches at the last -1 and when it wants to remove the first occurrence of -1, it's now on 4th position and the last -1 remains unremoved.
+ 11
Removing item while traversing the container is tricky. For that purpose you can remove -1 while the the container still contains a value -1.
while arr.count(-1):
arr.remove(-1)
+ 8
The reason why there are not all desired elements are removed, is because removing during an iteration on the list "changes" the indexes following a deletion position.
But you can do the job like shown in the following samples
# using reversed direction for iterating
lst = [-1,4,3,-1,7,1,-1]
for i in reversed(lst):
if i == -1:
lst.remove(i)
print(lst)
# using reversed direction for iterating
lst = [-1,4,3,-1,7,1,-1]
x = len(lst)-1
while x >= 0:
if lst[x] == -1:
del lst[x]
x -= 1
print(lst)
# using filter
lst = [-1,4,3,-1,7,1,-1]
print(list(filter(lambda x: x != -1, lst)))
# using list comprehension
lst = [-1,4,3,-1,7,1,-1]
print([i for i in lst if i != -1])
+ 6
You can always see what the code does. Add print(arr) after "for i in arr:" and "arr.remove(i)".
Another version of code may be:
while -1 in arr:
arr.remove(-1)
+ 4
The Golden Rule
Never ever delete from a list that you are iterating.
+ 4
Loop over a copy of the iterable if there is any chance the iterable might change in size.
arr = [-1, -1, 2, 3, 4, -1, 6, 7, 8, 9, -1]
for i in arr[:]: # <-- this is a copy of "arr"
if i == -1:
arr.remove(i)
print(arr)
+ 3
you might also use this
arr[:] = (x for x in arr if x !=-1)
+ 3
Tarun that's because of jumping counter in each iteration. For example:
Arr=[0,1,2,3,4]
For i in Arr:
Arr.remove(i)
Print(Arr)
>>> [1,3]
+ 2
At this point it seems that EVERYTHING I HAVE LEARNT SO FAR IS WRONG.
plz let me know the answer
+ 2
Change the if condition to
if -1 in arr:
This way you can remove the -1 even if it is all over the list
+ 1
Amit Dubey you can't delete the last item by the structure you've mentioned. The easiest is what Ipang has said.
+ 1
The reply with a 'green tick' is the reason behind it...Tarun
+ 1
I have altered the expression and found that i is not iterating to last of the list.
arr=[-1,-1,-1,-1,-1,-1,-1,-1,-1,-1,-1,-1,-1]
for i in arr:
If i==-1:
arr.remove(i)
print(i)
Excecute this code and u ll find lots of -1
Although you can simply remove this problem by i+=1 but still unable to find whats going on
+ 1
I Need debugging.
+ 1
amit avinoam Thanks for telling me that, but i just wanted to know why it doesn't work..
0
Qasem so, should i decrease the counter by 1 as to get it removed?
0
finally i got it why this is happening....
it took me three days to figure out but it was a lesson worth learning.
- 1
Use del a[-1] to remove last element
- 2
it should be position i so for your if statement it sould be
if arr[i] == 1:
arr.remove(i)