Extended slice that goes to beginning of sequence with negative stride

Posted by recursive on Stack Overflow See other posts from Stack Overflow or by recursive
Published on 2008-12-29T23:26:41Z Indexed on 2011/01/04 23:53 UTC
Read the original article Hit count: 209

Filed under:
|
|

Bear with me while I explain my question. Skip down to the bold heading if you already understand extended slice list indexing.

In python, you can index lists using slice notation. Here's an example:

>>> A = list(range(10))
>>> A[0:5]
[0, 1, 2, 3, 4]

You can also include a stride, which acts like a "step":

>>> A[0:5:2]
[0, 2, 4]

The stride is also allowed to be negative, meaning the elements are retrieved in reverse order:

>>> A[5:0:-1]
[5, 4, 3, 2, 1]

But wait! I wanted to see [4, 3, 2, 1, 0]. Oh, I see, I need to decrement the start and end indices:

>>> A[4:-1:-1]
[]

What happened? It's interpreting -1 as being at the end of the array, not the beginning. I know you can achieve this as follows:

>>> A[4::-1]
[4, 3, 2, 1, 0]

But you can't use this in all cases. For example, in a method that's been passed indices.

My question is:

Is there any good pythonic way of using extended slices with negative strides and explicit start and end indices that include the first element of a sequence?

This is what I've come up with so far, but it seems unsatisfying.

>>> A[0:5][::-1]
[4, 3, 2, 1, 0]

© Stack Overflow or respective owner

Related posts about python

Related posts about list