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Slicing Insert Question, L[1:1]

practising some python, which is a pretty easy language to grab up. I have >>> L = [1,2,3,4] >>> L[1:1] = [1,2,3] >>> L [1, 1, 2, 3, 2, 3, 4] so on line

Solution 1:

L[1:1] means the slice of the list L starting at index 1 (the second element), up to but not including index 1. So it is an empty list. On the right-hand side of an assignment, it is simply an anonymous empty list. But on the left-hand side, the assignment knows where the slice has been made, and can splice in the new list value into the proper place.

Solution 2:

Slicing behaves differently depending on whether it's on the left- or right-hand side of an expression. When it's on the left side, it doesn't return a list - instead, it behaves as a slice object, which knows more about slices and has assignment specifically overridden to operate as insertion.

Solution 3:

The official Python Tutorial explains it best, in my opinion. The end of Chapter 3.1.2 has the following diagram:

 +---+---+---+---+---+
 | H | e | l | p | A |
 +---+---+---+---+---+
 012345

What this illustrates is that you can think of the indices as pointing BETWEEN the elements. So in this illustration, if specifying a slice [1:1], you are actually referring to the space between H and e, but not including them.

If you wanted to overwrite H and e, you would specify the slice [0:2].

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