Using an index to get an item

Solution 1:

What you show, ('A','B','C','D','E'), is not a list, it's a tuple (the round parentheses instead of square brackets show that). Nevertheless, whether it to index a list or a tuple (for getting one item at an index), in either case you append the index in square brackets.

So:

thetuple = ('A','B','C','D','E')
print thetuple[0]

prints A, and so forth.

Tuples (differently from lists) are immutable, so you couldn't assign to thetuple[0] etc (as you could assign to an indexing of a list). However you can definitely just access ("get") the item by indexing in either case.

Solution 2:

values = ['A', 'B', 'C', 'D', 'E']
values[0] # returns 'A'
values[2] # returns 'C'
# etc.

Solution 3:

You can use _ _getitem__(key) function.

>>> iterable = ('A', 'B', 'C', 'D', 'E')
>>> key = 4
>>> iterable.__getitem__(key)
'E'