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Why python language is had a negtive index????

2nd Sep 2018, 11:19 AM
Mari Raja.S
Mari Raja.S - avatar
4 Answers
+ 3
If you have a list in python, the first element has the index [0], the second element has the index[1] etc. Negative indices start counting from the last element. [-1] is the last element, [-2] is the second last element etc. So in a list l = ['a', 'b', 'c'] you can address the element 'c' both as l[2] (because it is the third element of the list) or as l[-1] (because it is also the last element of the list).
2nd Sep 2018, 11:43 AM
Anna
Anna - avatar
+ 2
If you mean something like this: >> a = [1,2,3,4,5] >> a[-1] 5 It's used to refer to an iterator from its last element. In our example, >> a[-2] 4 If you desire a whole range, you can use [:] aside of the index. Lets say from 2nd element until the end of the array >>a[1:] [2,3,4,5] Or lets say you want the last 2 items of the array: >> a[-2:] [4,5] Or lets say you want from the beggining until the last-second element of the array: >> a[:-1] [1,2,3,4]
2nd Sep 2018, 11:42 AM
Seymour_ARM
Seymour_ARM - avatar
+ 1
A negative index means that it counts backwards from the end (of a list for example). So, my_list[-1] is the last item in the list, my_list[-2] is the second last, and so on...
2nd Sep 2018, 11:39 AM
Russ
Russ - avatar
0
That's easier : for example, you have a file name: file="D:/Python/p1.py" and you want the extension of the file... So, you write : extension=file.split("/")[-1].split(".")[-1]
2nd Sep 2018, 11:41 AM
Théophile
Théophile - avatar