Roel Schroeven a écrit : > Sacred Heart schreef: >> On Jan 17, 1:35 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: >>> for i in zip(array1, array2): >>> print i >>> >>> Although I take it you meant four d, the issue with this method is >>> that once you hit the end of one array the rest of the other one is >>> ignored. >> >> Yes, small typo there. >> >> Okey, so if my array1 is has 4 elements, and array2 has 6, it won't >> loop trough the last 2 in array2? How do I make it do that? > > One solution is with map() instead if zip(). map() with None as the > first argument works much like zip(), but it keeps looping if one of the > lists is exhausted. When that happens, it uses None for those values:
Yek ! Should have read the doc more carefully. Height years of Python, and I didn't knew this one :( -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list