On 7/13/2009 9:33 AM Tim Chase said...
For example: if my values are ['a', 'b', 'c'], then all possible lists
of length 2 would be: aa, ab, ac, ba, bb, bc, ca, cb, cc.
I created a recursive program to do it, but I was wondering if there
was a better way of doing it (possibly with list comprehensions).
Here's my recursive version:
vals = ['a', 'b', 'c']
def foo(length):
if length <=0:
return []
if length == 1:
return [[x] for x in vals]
else:
return [x + [y] for x in foo(length - 1) for y in vals]
Sounds like you want one of the combinitoric generators found in
itertools[1] -- in this case, the itertools.product() does what you
describe. According to the docs, it was added in 2.6 so if you're
running an older version, you'd have to back-port it
Or on systems with list comps try:
>>> V='abc'
>>> ['%s%s'%(ii,jj) for ii in V for jj in V]
['aa', 'ab', 'ac', 'ba', 'bb', 'bc', 'ca', 'cb', 'cc']
>>>
Emile
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list