Understanding Python's slice notation
Python slice notation
- Understanding Python's slice notation (this blog post)
- Understanding Python's slice assignment
Basic syntax
Python's slice notation is used to return a list or a portion of a list. The basic syntax is as follows:
[start_at:stop_before:step]
Where start_at
is the index of the first item to be returned (included), stop_before
is the index of the element before which to stop (not included) and step
is the stride between any two items.
All three of the arguments are optional, meaning you can omit any of them. For example:
nums = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] nums[1:4] # [2, 3, 4] (start at 0, stop before 4) nums[2:] # [3, 4, 5] (start at 0, stop at end of list) nums[:3] # [1, 2, 3] (start at 0, stop before 3) nums[1:4:2] # [2, 4] (start at 1, stop before 4, every 2nd element) nums[2::2] # [3, 5] (start at 2, stop at end of list, every 2nd element) nums[:3:2] # [1, 3] (start at 0, stop before 3, every 2nd element) nums[::2] # [1, 3, 5] (start at 0, stop at end of list, every 2nd element) nums[::] # [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] (start at 0, stop at end of list)
As you can probably tell from the examples above, the default values are start_at = 0
, stop_before = len(nums)
, step = 1
.
An idiomatic way to shallow clone a list would be using
[:]
(e.g.nums_clone = nums[:]
).
Negative values
All three of the arguments also accept negative values. For start_at
and stop_before
, a negative value means counting from the end of the list instead of counting from the start. For example -1
would represent the last element, -2
the second last element etc. For example:
nums = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] nums[1:-2] # [2, 3] (start at 1, stop before 2nd to last) nums[-3:-1] # [3, 4] (start at 3rd to last, stop before last)
A negative step
means that the list is sliced in reverse (from end to start). This also means that start_at
should be greater than stop_before
and that stop_before
in the context of a reverse stride is more like stop_after
if you are looking at the list non-reversed. For example:
nums = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] nums[::-1] # [5, 4, 3, 2, 1] (reversed) nums[4:1:-1] # [5, 4, 3] (reversed, start at 4, stop after 1) nums[-1:1:-2] # [5, 3] (reversed, start at last, stop after 1, every 2nd)
Empty slices
Bear in mind that slice notation is very forgiving, so you'll get an empty list if the arguments' values are out of the list's range. For example:
nums = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] nums[6:8] # [] nums[:-10] # []