2015-06-03 10:19 GMT+02:00 David Aldrich <david.aldr...@emea.nec.com>: > Hi > > > > I have written a Python utility that performs a certain activity on some > predefined sets of files. Here is the outline of what I have written: > > > > # File Set A > > pathA = ‘pathA’ > > fileListA = [‘fileA1.txt’, ‘fileA2.txt’] > > > > # File Set B > > pathB = ‘pathB’ > > fileListB = [‘fileB1.txt’, ‘fileB2.txt’, ‘fileB3.txt’] > > > > myFunc1(pathA, fileListA) > > myFunc2(pathA, fileListA) > > > > myFunc1(pathB, fileListB) > > myFunc2(pathB, fileListB) > > > > I want to add more file sets, so I really want to add the sets to a list and > iterate over the list, calling myFunc1 & myFunc2 for each item. > > > > My question is: what sort of data structure could I use to organise this, > given that I want to associate a set of files with each path and that, for > each set, there is an arbitrary number of files? > > > > Best regards > > > > David > > > > > -- > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list >
Hi, What about a for loop? paths = [pathA, pathB, pathC] functions = (myFunc1, myFunc2) file_lists = [fileListA, fileListB,fileListC] for path, file_list in zip(paths, file_lists): for f in functions: f(path, file_list) Best -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list