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Tuple In Python Part-1




Tuple Data Type In Python:

§  Tuple data type is exactly same as list data type except that it is immutable, we cannot change values.

§  It is fixed-length and immutable.

§  The values in the tuple cannot be changed nor the values be added to or removed from the tuple

§  Tuple elements can be represented within parenthesis.

§  Tuple Can be made using the parentheses.

§  Lists are enclosed in brackets [ ] and their elements and size can be changed, while tuples are enclosed in parentheses ( ) and cannot be updated. Tuples are immutable.

Difference Between List and Tuple

List
Tuple
List is used for holding multiple element.
Tuple is also used for holding multiple element.
heterogeneous objects are allowed in List

heterogeneous objects also are allowed in Tuple.

duplicates are allowed in List.

duplicates are allowed In Tuple.

List is Growable in nature

Tuple is fixed-length in nature

List is a mutable type object
Tuple is an immutable type object
In List, values should be enclosed within square brackets [].

In Tuple, values should be enclosed within parentheses ().




Different Ways to Creating a Tuple in Python

§  tuple Can be made using the parentheses.

§  We can create a tuple by placing values with-in parentheses and values should be separated by comma.

my_tuple=(value1,value2,value3,.....valuen)

my_tuple=(10,20,30)
print(my_tuple)


v We can create empty tuple object as follows.

§  We can create an empty tuple with-out placing any value with-in parentheses.

# Empty tuple
my_tuple = ()
   print(my_tuple)  # Output: ()

v We can create tuple object with some element as follows.

# Tuple having integers
my_tuple = (10, 20, 30,40,50)
print(my_tuple)  # Output: (10, 20, 30, 40, 50)

# tuple with mixed datatypes
my_tuple = (10, "Hello", 5.6)
print(my_tuple)  # Output: (10, 'Hello', 5.6)


v We can create tuple object with-out parentheses also as follows.

Packing Tuples

§  Tuple can be made without using brackets also This is known as tuple packing.

§  We can say that a tuple is a comma-separated list of values:

my_tuple=value1, value2, value3, valuen

§  The assignment a = 1, 2, 3 is also called packing because it packs values together in a tuple.

my_tuple=10,20,30
print(my_tuple)#The Output (10, 20, 30)

Unpacking Tuples

§  To unpack values from a tuple and do multiple assignments use

# tuple unpacking is also possible
a,b,c=(10,20,30)
print(a)#The Output 10
print(b)#The Output 20
print(c)#The Output 30

Note:-

§  The symbol _ can be used as a disposable variable name if one only needs some elements of a tuple, acting as a placeholder.

a = 1, 2, 3, 4 
_, x, y, _ = a 
print(_)# The output 4
print(x)# The output 2
print(y)# The output 3
print(_)# The output 4


Can we create a tuple with single element?

§  It is a bit tricky to make a tuple with a single element.

my_tuple=(10)
print(my_tuple)#The Output 10
print(type(my_tuple))#The Output <class 'int'>

my_tuple=('hello')
print(my_tuple)#The Output hello
print(type(my_tuple))#The Output <class 'str'>

Note:-

§  A single value in parentheses is not a tuple

§  Keeping only one value is not enough within the tuple We will need a trailing comma to indicate tuple.

§  you have to include a final comma

my_tuple=(10,)
print(my_tuple)#The Output (10,)
print(type(my_tuple))#The Output <class 'tuple'>


my_tuple=('hello',)
print(my_tuple)#The Output ('hello',)
print(type(my_tuple))#The Output <class 'tuple'>

Single element tuples:

x, =1,
print(x) #The Output 1
print(type(x)) #The Output <class 'int'>

y=1,
print(y)#The Output (1,)
print(type(y)) #The Output <class 'tuple'>

v We can create tuple object with tuple() function as follows.

§  The tuple() function creates a tuple from an iterable object.

§  An iterable may be either a sequence, a container that supports iteration.

my_tuple=tuple()
print(my_tuple)#The Output ()


#Create an tuple by passing string as a sequence
my_tuple=tuple('hello')
print(my_tuple)#The Output ('h', 'e', 'l', 'l', 'o')



How to access Element from the Tuple

§  The elements of a tuple can be accessed via an index, or numeric representation of their position. Lists in Python are zero-indexed meaning that the first element in the list is at index 0, the second element is at index 1 and so on:

§  Accessing tuple elements using positive indexes

nums=(10,20,30,40,50)
print(nums[0])#The Output 10
print(nums[1])#The Output 20
print(nums[2])#The Output 30
print(nums[3])#The Output 40
print(nums[4])#The Output 50

Note:

§  TypeError:

If you do not use integer indexes in the tuple. For example my_data[2.0] will raise this error. The index must always be an integer.

§  IndexError:

Index out of range. This error occurs when we mention the index which is not in the range. For example, if a tuple has 5 elements and we try to access the 7th element then this error would occurr.

§  Accessing tuple elements using negative indexes
§  Indices can also be negative which means counting from the end of the list (-1 being the index of the last element).

nums=(10,20,30,40,50)
print(nums[-1])#The Output 50
print(nums[-2])#The Output 40
print(nums[-3])#The Output 30
print(nums[-4])#The Output 20
print(nums[-5])#The Output 10

Iterating Through a Tuple

§  Using a for loop we can iterate through each item in a tuple.

nums=(10,20,30,40,50)
for n in nums:
    print(n)

§  You can also get the position of each item at the same time Using enumerate function:

nums=(10,20,30,40,50)
for (index, item) in enumerate(nums):
    print('The item in position {} is: {}'.format(index, item))

Output:

The item in position 0 is: 1
The item in position 1 is: 2
The item in position 2 is: 3
The item in position 3 is: 4
The item in position 4 is: 5
The item in position 5 is: 6

§  The other way of iterating a tuple based on the index value:

nums=(10,20,30,40,50)
for i in range(0,len(nums)):
 print(i,'->',nums[i])
Output:   
0 -> 1
1 -> 2
2 -> 3
3 -> 4
4 -> 5
5 -> 6

Tuple  Operators In Python

The + Operator

§  The + operator is Used to concatenating to tuple.

§  The simplest way to concatenate tuple1 and tuple2

merged = tuple1 + tuple2
tuple1=(10,20,30)
tuple2=(40,50)
merge_tuple=tuple1+tuple2
print('tuple1 =',tuple1)
print('tuple2 =',tuple2)
print('merge_tuple= ',merge_tuple)

Output:

tuple1 = (10, 20, 30)
tuple2 = (40, 50)
merge_tuple=  (10, 20, 30, 40, 50)



tuple1=(10,20,30)
tuple2=(40,50,60)
for a, b in zip(tuple1, tuple2):
    print(a, b)

The * Operator

§  The * operator creates multiple copies of a string.

§  Replication – multiplying an existing tuple by an integer will produce a larger tuple consisting of that many copies of the original.


tuple1=(10,20,30)
print(tuple1*3)
tuple2=('a','b','c')
print(tuple2*3)

Output:

(10, 20, 30, 10, 20, 30, 10, 20, 30)
('a', 'b', 'c', 'a', 'b', 'c', 'a', 'b', 'c')


The in Operator

Checking Membership(Tuple Contains):

§  By using in operator, we can check whether an item is in a tuple or not.

tuple1=(10,20,30)
print(10 in tuple1)# The Output True
print(10 not in tuple1)# The Output False
print(40 not in tuple1)# The Output True
tuple2=('a','b','c')
print('a' in tuple2)# The Output True
print('a' not in tuple2)# The Output False
print('d' not in tuple2)# The Output True
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