On Dec 14, 5:01 pm, Neil Cerutti <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On 2007-12-14, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > > I was wondering how and if it's possible to write a loop in python > > which updates two or more variables at a time. For instance, something > > like this in C: > > > for (i = 0, j = 10; i < 10 && j < 20; i++, j++) { > > printf("i = %d, j = %d\n", i, j); > > } > > > So that I would get: > > > i = 0, j = 0 > > i = 1, j = 1 > > i = 2, j = 2 > > ... > > ... > > ... > > i = 9, j = 19 > > > Can this be done in Python? > > Yes, assuming you meant to say: > > i = 0, j = 10 > i = 0, j = 11 > ... > i = 9, j = 19 > > import sys > from itertools import izip > > for i, j in izip(xrange(10), xrange(10, 20)): > sys.stdout.write("i = %d, j = %d\n", (i, j)) > > -- > Neil Cerutti > To succeed in the world it is not enough to be stupid, you must also be well- > mannered. --Voltaire
Yeah, that's what I meant ... ooops :) Thanks a lot to everyone for the useful info. In the meantime I had found out about zip and that way of doing it. But I really appreciated all the different alternative solutions that were illustrated, especially the more "functional" ones with map ... very cool, I'm also a big Lisp fan, and I really dig those. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list