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Start your free trialderekverrilli
8,841 PointsI don't understand why this doesn't remove the nested list.
When I test the code in workspaces with
print(type(messy_list[-1]))
after the loop, it says it is <class 'list'>
I don't see why it doesn't get removed. It works for the string and Boolean values.
messy_list = ["a", 2, 3, 1, False, [1, 2, 3]]
# Your code goes below here
messy_list.insert(0, messy_list.pop(3))
for item in messy_list:
if type(item) != int:
messy_list.remove(item)
1 Answer
Christopher Shaw
Python Web Development Techdegree Graduate 58,248 PointsIt is a bad idea to remove items from the list you are iterating as this leads to unpredictable results. Rather just remove the items one at a time: messy_list.remove([1,2,3])
derekverrilli
8,841 Pointsderekverrilli
8,841 PointsThat seems very inefficient. What if it's a list containing 2000 items?