On 24-Oct-2012 00:36, David Hutto wrote:
Don't forget to use timeit for an average OS utilization.I'd suggest two list comprehensions for now, until I've reviewed it some more: forward = ["%i = %s" % (i,chr(i)) for i in range(33,126)] backward = ["%i = %s" % (i,chr(i)) for i in range(126,32,-1)] for var in forward: print var for var in backward: print var You could also use a dict, and iterate through a straight loop that assigned a front and back to a dict_one = {0 : [0.100], 1 : [1.99]} and the iterate through the loop, and call the first or second in the dict's var list for frontwards , or backwards calls. But there might be faster implementations, depending on other function's usage of certain lower level functions.Missed the part about it being a file. Use: forward = ["%i = %s" % (i,chr(i)) for i in range(33,126)] backward = ["%i = %s" % (i,chr(i)) for i in range(126,32,-1)] print forward,backward
Interesting approach for small data sets (or blocks from a much larger data set). Thanks David :-) -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
