On Thu, Apr 30, 2009 at 5:56 PM, Ross <ross.j...@gmail.com> wrote: > If I have a list of tuples a = [(1,2), (3,4), (5,6)], and I want to > return a new list of each individual element in these tuples, I can do > it with a nested for loop but when I try to do it using the list > comprehension b = [j for j in i for i in a], my output is b = > [5,5,5,6,6,6] instead of the correct b = [1,2,3,4,5,6]. What am I > doing wrong?
Your comprehension is the identity comprehension (i.e. it effectively just copies the list as-is). What you're trying to do is difficult if not impossible to do as a comprehension. Here's another approach: b = list(itertools.chain.from_iterable(a)) And without using a library function: b = [] for pair in a: for item in pair: b.append(item) Cheers, Chris -- http://blog.rebertia.com -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list