How to reverse tuples in Python? [duplicate]
Solution 1:
There are two idiomatic ways to do this:
reversed(x) # returns an iterator
or
x[::-1] # returns a new tuple
Since tuples are immutable, there is no way to reverse a tuple in-place.
Edit:
Building on @lvc's comment, the iterator returned by reversed
would be equivalent to
def myreversed(seq):
for i in range(len(x) - 1, -1, -1):
yield seq[i]
i.e. it relies on the sequence having a known length to avoid having to actually reverse the tuple.
As to which is more efficient, i'd suspect it'd be the seq[::-1]
if you are using all of it and the tuple is small, and reversed
when the tuple is large, but performance in python is often surprising so measure it!
Solution 2:
You can use the reversed
builtin function.
>>> x = (1, 2, 3, 4)
>>> x = tuple(reversed(x))
>>> x
(4, 3, 2, 1)
If you just want to iterate over the tuple, you can just use the iterator returned by reversed
directly without converting it into a tuple again.
>>> for k in reversed(x):
... print(k)
...
4 3 2 1