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Start your free trialHiren Mistry
1,138 PointsConfused on the mechanics of slicing
I don't quite understand when you have: my_list = ('a', 'b', 'c' 'd', 5, 6, 7, 'f') my_list[4:7] and you get 5, 6, 7 I don't get why you call for 4 elements and only recieve 3, why isn't 'f' not listed as well?
I understand Python counts from 0.
If I were to do the same thing in R my_list = c('a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 5, 6, 7, 'f') mylist[4:7] I would get 'd',5,6,7
Besides that R starts at 1, I asked for 4 things and it gave me 4 things.
Why does Python not do the same? What is the purpose behind it?
1 Answer
Gavin Ralston
28,770 PointsIn Python, the ending position in a range or a list isn't inclusive.
This language is not alone in doing that, but it does vary from language to language.
So what you're literally asking in Python is "Give me items from element 4 up to, but not including 7" -- or three elements.