On Jun 5, 3:49 pm, Ivan Illarionov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On 5 ÉÀÎ, 01:57, "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > wrote: > > > > > Hi Everyone, > > > i have another question. What if i wanted to make n tuples, each with > > a list of coordinates. For example : > > > coords = list() > > for h in xrange(1,11,1): > > for i in xrange(1, 5, 1) : > > for j in xrange(1, 5, 1) : > > for k in xrange(1,2,1) : > > coords.append((i,j,k)) > > lista+str(h)= tuple coords > > print tuple(coords) > > > so that i will have tuple1, tuple2,..., tupleN, etc. I am trying to do > > it the way i show you above but it is not working properly. I wish you > > could help me with that. Thanks again, > >>> from itertools import repeat, izip > >>> coords = tuple((i,j,k) for i in xrange(1,5) for j in xrange(1,5) for k in > >>> xrange(1,2)) > >>> locals().update(("tuple%s" % i, coord) for i, coord in > >>> izip(xrange(1,11), repeat(coords))) > >>> tuple1 > > ((1, 1, 1), (1, 2, 1), (1, 3, 1), (1, 4, 1), (2, 1, 1), (2, 2, 1), (2, > 3, 1), (2 > , 4, 1), (3, 1, 1), (3, 2, 1), (3, 3, 1), (3, 4, 1), (4, 1, 1), (4, 2, > 1), (4, 3 > , 1), (4, 4, 1)) > > Does this help? > > But I don't understand why you need this? > > Ivan
Hi, What i need is, for example: tuple 1=((1, 1, 1), (1, 2, 1), (1, 3, 1), (1, 4, 1)) tuple 2=((2, 1, 1), (2, 2, 1), (2, 3, 1), (2, 4, 1)) tuple 3=((3, 1, 1), (3, 2, 1), (3, 3, 1), (3, 4, 1)) and so on. Please help me and sorry for not taking the time to post my questions properly. Victor -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list