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Andreas
Andreas

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10 Awesome Pythonic One-Liners Explained

Since I wrote my first lines of code in Python, I was fascinated by its simplicity, excellent readability and its popular one-liners in particular. In the following, I want to present and explain some of these one-liners - maybe there are a few you didn't already know and are useful for your next Python project.

1. Swap two variables

# a = 1; b = 2
a, b = b, a
# print(a,b) >> 2 1
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Let's start with a classic: swapping the values of variables by simply swapping positions on assignment - the most intuitive way in my opinion. No need to use a temporary variable. It even works with more than two variables.

2. Multiple variable assignment

a, b, *c = [1,2,3,4,5]
# print(a,b,c) >> 1 2 [3, 4, 5]
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Swapping variables is actually a special case of Pythons ability to assign multiple variables at once. Here you can use it to assign list elements to the given variables, which is also called unpacking. The * will do packing the remaining values again, which results in a sublist for c. It even works for every other position of * (e.g. the beginning or middle part of the list).

3. Sum over every second element of a list

# a = [1,2,3,4,5,6]
s = sum(a[1::2])
# print(s) >> 12
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No need for a special reduce function here, sum just adds the items of every given iterable. The extended slicing syntax [::] is used here to return every second element. You can read it as [start : stop : step], so [1::2] translates to start with the element of index 1 (second element), don't stop until the list ends (no argument given for second parameter) and always take 2 steps.

4. Delete multiple elements

# a = [1,2,3,4,5]
del a[::2]
# print(a) >> [2, 4]
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The extended slicing syntax can also be used to delete multiple list elements at once.

5. Read file into array of lines

c = [line.strip() for line in open('file.txt')]
# print(c) >> ['test1', 'test2', 'test3', 'test4']
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With Pythons inline for loop you can easily read a file into an array of lines. The strip() is needed to remove the trailing line breaks. If you want to keep them or they don't matter to you, you can use an even shorter one-liner:

c = list(open('file.txt'))
# print(c) >> ['test1\n', 'test2\n', 'test3\n', 'test4\n']
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It's really that simple to read a file in Python. Side note: you can also use the readlines() method if you like.

6. Write string to file

with open('file.txt', 'a') as f: f.write('hello world')
# print(list(open('file.txt'))) >> ['test1\n', 'test2\n', 'test3\n', 'test4\n', 'hello world']
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With the help of the with statement, you can directly write content to a file. Make sure to use the correct mode to open the file (here 'a' for appending content).

7. List creation

l = [('Hi ' + x) for x in ['Alice', 'Bob', 'Pete']]
# print(l) >> ['Hi Alice', 'Hi Bob', 'Hi Pete']
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Lists can be dynamically created from other lists with the inline for loop. You can directly modify the values, like string concatenation in this example.

8. List mapping

l = list(map(int, ['1', '2', '3']))
# print(l) >> [1, 2, 3]
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You can also use Pythons map() function to cast every list element to another type.

9. Set creation

squares = { x**2 for x in range(6) if x < 4 }
# print(squares) >> {0, 1, 4, 9}
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It's similar with sets. In addition to the inline for loop, you can even directly append a condition!

10. Palindrome check

# phrase = 'deleveled'
isPalindrome = phrase == phrase[::-1]
# print(isPalindrome) >> true
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A palindrome is a series of characters that read the same both forwards and backwards. Normally you would need some looping and conditions to check, if a given string is a palindrome. In Python, you just compare the string with its reverse string. Instead of using the slicing operator [::-1], you can also use the reverse() function to reverse the string.

Bonus: The Zen of Python

import this
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Well, this one needs no explanation. Just try it yourself by simply entering it in your Python shell 😊🎉

Wrap it up

We've seen some (admittedly simple) examples of Python one-liners, that are powerful and well readable at the same time. Maybe you know another helpful one-liner? Share it with us in the comments!


Published: 29th July 2020

Top comments (32)

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waylonwalker profile image
Waylon Walker

Great article, I really like the idea of the easily consumable content. I may think of how I can do something like this in my own way 😉


I am surprised that you made it through 10 one-liners with no ternary statement.

>>> 'Hi ' if 'Bob' in ['Alice', 'Bob', 'Pete'] else 'Goodbye'
'Hi'
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devmount profile image
Andreas

My pleasure 😊

I didn't cover everything on purpose, but I totally forgot about the ternary statement 😅 So thank you for this addition! 👍🏻

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Sloan, the sloth mascot
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devmount profile image
Andreas

Good point, thank you for this clarification!

PS: For the sake of correctness: it's readlines() without the underscore, isn't it?

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bulletmark profile image
Mark Blakeney

Sorry, I was actually incorrect. I thought readlines() was a generator but apparently it isn't so I deleted my comment.

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dimensionjohns profile image
norway subway

That is great one. I want to translate it into Urdu and Hindi for my users at techlarapoint.com/bombitup-apk/. Can I please?

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devmount profile image
Andreas

Of course, that would be great! Just provide links to the original article, my Twitter and Github.

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pylixm profile image
DeanWu

Very good article, can I translate it into Chinese and publish it on my WeChat official account? I will specify the source and author. Hope to get your authorization.

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devmount profile image
Andreas

Hey there, I'm glad you like my article! You are welcome to translate it into Chinese. Please set links to the article, my dev.to profile and my Twitter profile at the beginning and let me know, when you published it ✔️

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pylixm profile image
DeanWu

Thank you for your authorization. This is the link to the translated article. Thanks again!
mp.weixin.qq.com/s/_K40z0t_z-sSNDC...

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devmount profile image
Andreas

Wow that was fast! 👏🏻 Thanks for the translation and credits. Can you create actual links or are you limited to only show urls as text?

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pylixm profile image
DeanWu

The WeChat link is restricted. This should be a temporary link, which can only be accessed from WeChat. The link will become invalid after a period of time. I put the article on my blog so that everyone can check it at any time. Thank you again for your authorization.
pylixm.cc/posts/2020-08-05-10-One-...

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devmount profile image
Andreas

I see, thank you! 😎

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paddy3118 profile image
Paddy3118
  1. Read file into array of lines

Needs to use rstrip rather than strip if you want to preserve left-hand whitespace in lines.

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devmount profile image
Andreas

Thank you for this addition. In this example I just wanted to strip both ends. To only remove the linebreaks, you have to specify the linebreak character:

c = [line.rstrip('\n') for line in open('file.txt')]
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anharrington profile image
Andrew N. Harrington

If you know the last line of the file does have a '\n', then line[:-1] is shorter.

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devmount profile image
Andreas

Indeed, thank you!

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paddy3118 profile image
Paddy3118

That's a big if. rstrip('\n') or simple rstrip() i find easier to read and less error prone.

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devmount profile image
Andreas

Thanks a lot for encouraging me 🤗

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mikaelho profile image
mikaelho

This one I sort of learned today:

' '.join([v for v in [first, middle, last] if v])

Concatenate space-separated full name out of parts, where any of the parts may be an empty string or None.

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paddy3118 profile image
Paddy3118
  1. List mapping

Best to use list comprehensions instead of map in most cases. For your example:

l = [int(x) for x in ['1', '2', '3']]
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devmount profile image
Andreas

I agree, this increases readability even more! Thank you. Is there any other benefit in using list comprehensions instead of the (specially made for this purpose) map() function?

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paddy3118 profile image
Paddy3118

map returns a map object that you then turn into a list. Readability. There are other comprehensions that follow naturally from list comprehensions to generate, for example, dicts, sets and iterators.

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veganaise profile image
Antoine • Edited

I didn't know most of these tricks. Good article and great clarity 😁

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devmount profile image
Andreas

Awesome, thank you! I'm glad it was helpful 😊

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jingxue profile image
Jing Xue

Nice tips. Although wouldn't you want to use with when reading a file as well? I know it doesn't really matter for short scripts, but it's still a good habit to get into.

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zodman profile image
Andres 🐍 in 🇨🇦

My favs:

python -m json.tool

python3 -m http.server

xD

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devmount profile image
Andreas

Nice, thanks for this addition!
Can you add some explanation for those who don't know, what these one-liners do?

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bartszy profile image
bartszy

Great little article, list/set comprehensions are really awesome !

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devmount profile image
Andreas

Indeed they are! Thanks a lot 😊

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ravikeshare profile image
Ravi

Nice Article. 10th one is enough to explain you why people love Python so much, for doing similar thing in other languages would require you to write a numerous lines of code :)

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devmount profile image
Andreas

I'm glad you like it 😊 and it's true: I love Python, because its concepts are so well thought through 👌🏻

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