Add another tuple to a tuple of tuples

Solution 1:

Build another tuple-of-tuples out of another_choice, then concatenate:

final_choices = (another_choice,) + my_choices

Alternately, consider making my_choices a list-of-tuples instead of a tuple-of-tuples by using square brackets instead of parenthesis:

my_choices=[
     ('1','first choice'),
     ('2','second choice'),
     ('3','third choice')
]

Then you could simply do:

my_choices.insert(0, another_choice)

Solution 2:

Don't convert to a list and back, it's needless overhead. + concatenates tuples.

>>> foo = ((1,),(2,),(3,))
>>> foo = ((0,),) + foo
>>> foo
((0,), (1,), (2,), (3,))

Solution 3:

Alternatively, use the tuple concatenation

i.e.


final_choices = (another_choice,) + my_choices

Solution 4:

What you have is a tuple of tuples, not a list of tuples. Tuples are read only. Start with a list instead.

>>> my_choices=[
...          ('1','first choice'),
...          ('2','second choice'),
...          ('3','third choice')
... ]
>>> my_choices.insert(0,(0,"another choice"))
>>> my_choices
[(0, 'another choice'), ('1', 'first choice'), ('2', 'second choice'), ('3', 'third choice')]

list.insert(ind,obj) inserts obj at the provided index within a list... allowing you to shove any arbitrary object in any position within the list.