Python Tuples
The key difference is mutability: lists can be modified, while tuples cannot. The methods like .extend()
and .append()
works on lists but not on tuples, because once created, a tuple's contents cannot be changed without creating new one. Tuples are also faster and more memory-efficient, making them ideal for fixed or sensitive data.
123456# Create a tuple with fixed data: coordinates of a location location = (37.7749, -122.4194) # Print the tuple type print("Location:", location) print("Type of location:", type(location))
You can also transform an iterable object into a tuple with the tuple()
function.
1234567# Convert a list to a tuple list_location = [37.7749, -122.4194] tuple_location = tuple(list_location) # Print the converted tuple print("Location:", tuple_location) print("Converted type:", type(tuple_location))
Tak for dine kommentarer!
Spørg AI
Spørg AI
Spørg om hvad som helst eller prøv et af de foreslåede spørgsmål for at starte vores chat
Spørg mig spørgsmål om dette emne
Opsummér dette kapitel
Vis virkelige eksempler
Awesome!
Completion rate improved to 1.67
Python Tuples
Stryg for at vise menuen
The key difference is mutability: lists can be modified, while tuples cannot. The methods like .extend()
and .append()
works on lists but not on tuples, because once created, a tuple's contents cannot be changed without creating new one. Tuples are also faster and more memory-efficient, making them ideal for fixed or sensitive data.
123456# Create a tuple with fixed data: coordinates of a location location = (37.7749, -122.4194) # Print the tuple type print("Location:", location) print("Type of location:", type(location))
You can also transform an iterable object into a tuple with the tuple()
function.
1234567# Convert a list to a tuple list_location = [37.7749, -122.4194] tuple_location = tuple(list_location) # Print the converted tuple print("Location:", tuple_location) print("Converted type:", type(tuple_location))
Tak for dine kommentarer!