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Try shuffle
method in random
module.
shuffle()
modifies the original sequence. In other words, shuffling happens in place and the function returns None
.
To shuffle an immutable sequence -or- to save the shuffled sequence in a different object without disrupting original object holding the sequence, rely on random.sample()
which returns a new shuffled list.
>>> from random import shuffle, sample >>> x = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] >>> y = shuffle(x) >>> y >>> x [3, 2, 5, 4, 1] >>> y = sample(x, len(x)) >>> y [5, 3, 2, 1, 4] >>> x [3, 2, 5, 4, 1]
Try sys.modules.keys()
>>> import sys >>> sys.modules.keys() ['copy_reg', 'sre_compile', '_sre', 'encodings', 'site', '__builtin__', 'sysconfig', '__main__', 'encodings.encodings', 'abc', 'posixpath', '_weakrefset', 'errno', 'encodings.codecs', 'sre_constants', 're', '_abcoll', 'types', '_codecs', 'encodings.__builtin__', '_warnings', 'genericpath', 'stat', 'zipimport', '_sysconfigdata', 'warnings', 'UserDict', 'encodings.utf_8', 'sys', '_osx_support', 'codecs', 'readline', 'os.path', '_locale', 'signal', 'traceback', 'linecache', 'posix', 'encodings.aliases', 'exceptions', 'sre_parse', 'os', '_weakref'] >>> import random >>> sys.modules.keys() ['__future__', 'copy_reg', 'sre_compile', '_hashlib', '_sre', 'encodings', 'site', '__builtin__', 'sysconfig', '__main__', 'encodings.encodings', 'hashlib', 'abc', 'posixpath', '_random', '_weakrefset', 'errno', 'binascii', 'encodings.codecs', 'sre_constants', 're', '_abcoll', 'types', '_codecs', 'encodings.__builtin__', '_warnings', 'math', 'genericpath', 'stat', 'zipimport', '_sysconfigdata', 'warnings', 'UserDict', 'encodings.utf_8', 'sys', '_osx_support', 'codecs', 'readline', 'os.path', '_locale', 'signal', 'traceback', 'random', 'linecache', 'posix', 'encodings.aliases', 'exceptions', 'sre_parse', 'os', '_weakref']
Try object.__dict__
__dict__
attribute contains all the attributes that describe the object. Helpful while debugging. It can be used to alter object's attributes too though I'm not sure if it is a recommended practice.
>>> class A: ... def __init__(self): ... self.a = 100 ... self.b = 200 ... >>> a = A() >>> a.__dict__ {'a': 100, 'b': 200}
When dealing with complex objects, __dict__
may falter with errors such as TypeError: Object of type xxx is not JSON serializable
.
Labels: Python Tips
2004-2019 |