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iterator - what is meaning of [iter(list)]*2 in python?

I have found below code in web, result is tuple of two elements in list, how to understand [iter(list)]*2?

lst = [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8]
b=zip(*[iter(lst)]*2)
list(b)

[(1, 2), (3, 4), (5, 6), (7, 8)]

------------
[iter(lst)]*2
[<list_iterator at 0x1aff33917f0>, <list_iterator at 0x1aff33917f0>]

I check [iter(lst)]*2, same iterator above, so meaning iter repeat double, so, if i check num from 2 to 3, result should be [(1, 2, 3), (4, 5, 6),(7,8,NaN)] but delete 7,8

lst = [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8]
b=zip(*[iter(lst)]*3)
list(b)
--------------
[(1, 2, 3), (4, 5, 6)]
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Quite a tricky construct to explain. I'll give it a shot:

with [iter(lst)] you create a list with with one item. The item is an iterator over a list.

whenever python tries to get an element from this iterator, then the next element of lst is returned until no more element is available.

Just try following:

i = iter(lst)
next(i)
next(i)

the output should look like:

>>> lst = [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8]  
>>> i = iter(lst)
>>> next(i)
1
>>> next(i)
2
>>> next(i)
3
>>> next(i)
4
>>> next(i)
5
>>> next(i)
6
>>> next(i)
7
>>> next(i)
8
>>> next(i)
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
StopIteration

Now you create a list that contains twice exactly the same iterator. You do this with itlst = [iter(lst)] * 2

try out following:

itlst1 = [iter(lst)] * 2
itlst2 = [iter(lst), iter(lst)]
print(itlst1)
print(itlst2)

The result will look something like:

>>> itlst1 = [iter(lst)] * 2
>>> itlst2 = [iter(lst), iter(lst)]
>>> print(itlst1)
[<list_iterator object at 0x7f9251172b00>, <list_iterator object at 0x7f9251172b00>]
>>> print(itlst2)
[<list_iterator object at 0x7f9251172b70>, <list_iterator object at 0x7f9251172ba8>]

What is important to notice is, that itlst1 is a list containing twice the same iterator, whereas itlst2 contains two different iterators.

to illustrate try to type:

next(itlst1[0])
next(itlst1[1])
next(itlst1[0])
next(itlst1[1])

and compare it with:

next(itlst2[0])
next(itlst2[1])
next(itlst2[0])
next(itlst2[1])

The result is:

>>> next(itlst1[0])
1
>>> next(itlst1[1])
2
>>> next(itlst1[0])
3
>>> next(itlst1[1])
4
>>> 
>>> next(itlst2[0])
1
>>> next(itlst2[1])
1
>>> next(itlst2[0])
2
>>> next(itlst2[1])
2

Now to the zip() function ( https://docs.python.org/3/library/functions.html#zip ):

Try following:

i = iter(lst)
list(zip(i, i))

zip() with two parameters. Whenver you try to get the next element from zip it will do following:

  • get one value from the iterable that is the first parameter
  • get one value from the iterable that is the second parameter
  • return a tuple with these two values.

list(zip(xxx)) will do this repeatedly and store the result in a list.

The result will be:

>>> i = iter(lst)
>>> list(zip(i, i))
[(1, 2), (3, 4), (5, 6), (7, 8)]

The next trick being used is the * that is used to use the first element as first parameter to a function call, the second element as second parameter and so forth) What does ** (double star/asterisk) and * (star/asterisk) do for parameters?

so writing:

itlst1 = [iter(lst)] * 2
list(zip(*itlst1))

is in this case identical to

i = iter(lst)
itlst1 = [i] * 2
list(zip(itlst1[0], itlst1[1]))

which is identical to

list(zip(i, i))

which I explained already.

Hope this explains most of the above tricks.


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