>>> row = [1,2,3,4,"--"]
>>> row = [cell.replace("--","hello") for cell in row if cell == "--"]
>>> row
['hello']
How can I get [1,2,3,4,"hello"]
with a list comprehension?
>>> row = [1,2,3,4,"--"]
>>> row = [cell.replace("--","hello") for cell in row if cell == "--"]
>>> row
['hello']
How can I get [1,2,3,4,"hello"]
with a list comprehension?
[cell.replace("--","hello") if cell=="--" else cell for cell in row]
When using the
if
at the end of thefor
, it restricts which items are considered, so that version will only return one item, since only one item in the source list matches the condition.Also in this case you don't need to use
replace
, you could just use"hello" if cell=="--"
instead, but you would use this form if you had multiple items you wanted to manipulate.You'd use a conditional expression instead:
This is part of the left-hand element-producing expression, not the list comprehension syntax itself, where
if
statements act as a filter.The conditional expression uses the form true_expression if test_expression else false_expression; it always produces a value.
I simplified the expression a little; if you are replacing
"--"
with"hello"
you may as well just return"hello"
.