Arnaud Delobelle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > jzakiya <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > >> I looked online and in books, but couldn't find a definitive answer to >> this. >> >> I have an array and set multiple elements to either True or False at >> one time. >> >> Question: Which way is faster (or does it matter)? >> >> 1) >> >> array[x1]=array[x2]=........= array[x10] = \ >> array[x11]=array[x12]=... = array[x20] = \ >> ...... >> ...... >> array[x40]=array[x41]=....= array[x50] = False (or True) >> >> >> 2) >> >> array[x1]=array[x2]=........= array[x10] = False >> array[x11]=array[x12]=... = array[x20] = False >> ...... >> ...... >> array[x40]=array[x41]=....= array[x50] = False > > It doesn't matter as none of this is valid Python. In Python you have to > write > > array[x1] = False > array[x2] = False > > Etc...
Sorry, I don't know what came over me then, some kind of brain short-circuit... No doubt plenty of people will correct me before this is posted! Of course it's valid Python, but it's not very stylish. Assuming your array is a list, you could put all your indices that are meant to be True in a list: indices = [x1, x2, x3, ..., x50] Then loop over them: for i in indices: array[i] = True It might not be as fast of course -- Arnaud -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list