How to slice middle element from list

2019-06-17 05:50发布

Rather simple question. Say I have a list like:

a = [3, 4, 54, 8, 96, 2]

Can I use slicing to leave out an element around the middle of the list to produce something like this?

a[some_slicing]
[3, 4, 8, 96, 2]

were the element 54 was left out. I would've guessed this would do the trick:

a[:2:]

but the result is not what I expected:

[3, 4]

标签: python slice
4条回答
Anthone
2楼-- · 2019-06-17 05:59

To remove an item in-place call:

your_list.pop(index)

It will return the removed item and change your_list.

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Viruses.
3楼-- · 2019-06-17 06:05

Slice the two parts separately and add those lists

a[:2] + a[3:]
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ら.Afraid
4楼-- · 2019-06-17 06:16

To work on any size list:

a.pop((len(a)-1)//2)
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贪生不怕死
5楼-- · 2019-06-17 06:18

You cannot emulate pop with a single slice, since a slice only gives you a single start and end index.

You can, however, use two slices:

>>> a = [3, 4, 54, 8, 96, 2]
>>> a[:2] + a[3:]
[3, 4, 8, 96, 2]

You could wrap this into a function:

>>> def cutout(seq, idx):
        """
        Remove element at `idx` from `seq`.
        TODO: error checks.
        """
        return seq[:idx] + seq[idx + 1:]

>>> cutout([3, 4, 54, 8, 96, 2], 2)
[3, 4, 8, 96, 2]

However, pop will be faster. The list pop function is defined in listobject.c.

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