for loops are the bread and butter of imperative programming and Python has some really nice tools to work with them. If you want to traverse several structures in parallel, have you considered using zip?

A Python code snippet showing a basic use of `zip`

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Introduction

One of the things I appreciate most about Python, when compared to other programming languages, is its for loops. Python allows you to write very expressive loops, and part of that is because of the built-in zip function.

In this article you will

  • see what zip does;
  • get to know a new feature of zip that is coming in Python 3.10;
  • learn how to use zip to create dictionaries; and
  • see some nice usage examples of zip.

How zip works

In a simple for loop, you generally have an iterator it and you just write something like

for elem in it:
    # Do something with elem
    print(elem)

An โ€œiteratorโ€ is something that can be traversed linearly, of which a list is the simplest example. Another very common iterator used in Python's for loops is a range:

for n in range(10):
    print(n**2)

Sometimes you will have two or more iterators that contain related information, and you need to loop over those iterators to do something with the different bits of information you got.

In the example below, we have a list of first and last names of people and we want to print the full names. The naรฏve solution would be to use a range to traverse all the indices and then index into the lists:

>>> firsts = ["Anna", "Bob", "Charles"]
>>> lasts = ["Smith", "Doe", "Evans"]
>>> for i in range(len(firsts)):
...     print(f"'{firsts[i]} {lasts[i]}'")
...
'Anna Smith'
'Bob Doe'
'Charles Evans'

This does the job, but a for loop like this only hints at the fact that you are probably going to access the values in firsts, because you wrote

range(len(firsts))

but turns out you also want to access the items in lasts. This is what zip is for: you use it to pair up iterables that you wanted to traverse at the same time:

>>> firsts = ["Anna", "Bob", "Charles"]
>>> lasts = ["Smith", "Doe", "Evans"]
>>> for first, last in zip(firsts, lasts):
...     print(f"'{first} {last}'")
... 
'Anna Smith'
'Bob Doe'
'Charles Evans'

Notice that you can specify two iterating variables in the for loop, in our case first and last, and each variable will take the successive values of the respective iterator.

This is a special case of an unpacking assignment, because zip is actually producing tuples with the names in them:

>>> firsts = ["Anna", "Bob", "Charles"]
>>> lasts = ["Smith", "Doe", "Evans"]
>>> for z in zip(firsts, lasts):
...     print(z)
...
('Anna', 'Smith')
('Bob', 'Doe')
('Charles', 'Evans')

What we are doing is taking that tuple and assigning each portion:

>>> firsts = ["Anna", "Bob", "Charles"]
>>> lasts = ["Smith", "Doe", "Evans"]
>>> for z in zip(firsts, lasts):
...     first, last = z
...     print(f"'{first} {last}'")
...
'Anna Smith'
'Bob Doe'
'Charles Evans'

But instead of the intermediate step, we unpack right in the for statement. This unpacking, tied with good naming of variables, allows for loops to be read in plain English.

For example, the loop from before was

for first, last in zip(firsts, lasts):

and that can be read as

โ€œFor each first and last [name] in the lists firsts and lasts...โ€

Zip is lazy

One thing to keep in mind is that zip doesn't create the tuples immediately. zip is lazy, and that means it will only compute the tuples when you ask for them, for example when you iterate over them in a for loop (like in the examples above) or when you convert the zip object into a list:

>>> firsts = ["Anna", "Bob", "Charles"]
>>> lasts = ["Smith", "Doe", "Evans", "Rivers"]
>>> z = zip(firsts, lasts)
>>> z
<zip object at 0x0000019F56702680>
>>> list(z)
[('Anna', 'Smith'), ('Bob', 'Doe'), ('Charles', 'Evans')]

zip being lazy also means that zip by itself isn't that similar to a list. For example, you cannot ask what is the length of a zip object:

>>> len(z)
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: object of type 'zip' has no len()

Three is a crowd

We have seen zip with two arguments, but zip can take an arbitrary number of iterators and will produce a tuple of the appropriate size:

>>> firsts = ["Anna", "Bob", "Charles"]
>>> middles = ["Z.", "A.", "G."]
>>> lasts = ["Smith", "Doe", "Evans"]
>>> for z in zip(firsts, middles, lasts):
...     print(z)
...
('Anna', 'Z.', 'Smith')
('Bob', 'A.', 'Doe')
('Charles', 'G.', 'Evans')

>>> prefixes = ["Dr.", "Mr.", "Sir"]
>>> for z in zip(prefixes, firsts, middles, lasts):
...     print(z)
...
('Dr.', 'Anna', 'Z.', 'Smith')
('Mr.', 'Bob', 'A.', 'Doe')
('Sir', 'Charles', 'G.', 'Evans')

Mismatched lengths

zip will always return a tuple with as many elements as the arguments it received, so what happens if one of the iterators is shorter than the others?

If zip's arguments have unequal lengths, then zip will keep going until it exhausts one of the iterators. As soon as one iterator ends, zip stops producing tuples:

>>> firsts = ["Anna", "Bob", "Charles"]
>>> lasts = ["Smith", "Doe", "Evans", "Rivers"]
>>> for z in zip(firsts, lasts):
...     print(z)
...
('Anna', 'Smith')
('Bob', 'Doe')
('Charles', 'Evans')

Starting with Python 3.10, zip will be able to receive a keyword argument named strict that you can use to tell zip to error if the lengths of the iterators do not match:

>>> firsts = ["Anna", "Bob", "Charles"]
>>> lasts = ["Smith", "Doe", "Evans", "Rivers"]
>>> for z in zip(firsts, lasts, strict=True):   # strict=True available in Python >= 3.10
...     print(z)
...
('Anna', 'Smith')
('Bob', 'Doe')
('Charles', 'Evans')
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
ValueError: zip() argument 2 is longer than argument 1

Notice that zip only errors when it finds the length mismatch, it doesn't do the check in the beginning: this is because the arguments to zip may themselves be lazy iterators.

(Lazy) iterators will be covered in further Pydon'ts, so be sure to subscribe to the Pydon't newsletter to stay tuned!

In general, zip is used with iterators that are expected to have the same length. If that is the case โ€“ if you expect your iterators to have the same length โ€“ then it is a good idea to always set strict=True, because that will help you catch bugs in your code.

Create a dictionary with zip

You can create dictionaries in Python by feeding key-value pairs to the dict function, which means zip is a prime way of creating dictionaries when you have all the keys in an iterator and all the values in another iterator:

>>> firsts = ["Anna", "Bob", "Charles"]
>>> lasts = ["Smith", "Doe", "Evans"]
>>> dict(zip(firsts, lasts))
{'Anna': 'Smith', 'Bob': 'Doe', 'Charles': 'Evans'}

Examples in code

Now you will see some usages of zip in actual Python code.

Snake game

A friend of mine is learning Python and he started creating a replica of the game of Snake. There is a certain point in the game where he has a menu and he wants to display thumbnails of the โ€œmapsโ€ that that can be played on, and he has those images in a list called lvlpictures. At the same time, he has the positions of where those images should go in a list called self.buttons. In order to display the thumbnails in the correct positions, he has to call a function called blit, which expects the image and the position the image should go to.

Here are the loops he wrote before and after knowing about zip.

# Before:
for i in range(len(lvlpictures)):
    self.surface.blit(lvlpictures[i], (self.buttons[i][0]+2,self.buttons[i][1]+2))

# Then he learned about `zip`:
for pic, btn in zip(lvlpictures, self.buttons):
    self.surface.blit(pic, (btn[0] + 2, btn[1] + 2))

Notice that using zip makes your code shorter and it also makes more clear the intent of processing the pictures and the buttons together. Finally, when Python 3.10 is released, he may even add the strict=True keyword argument, because he expects lvlpictures and self.buttons to have the same length.

Matching paths

If you are not aware of it, then you might be interested in knowing that Python has a module named pathlib that provides facilities to deal with filesystem paths.

When you create a path, you can then check if it matches a given pattern:

>>> from pathlib import PurePath
>>> PurePath('a/b.py').match('*.py')
True
>>> PurePath('/a/b/c.py').match('b/*.py')
True
>>> PurePath('/a/b/c.py').match('a/*.py')
False

If you take a look at this match function, you find this:

class PurePath(object):
    # ...

    def match(self, path_pattern):
        """
        Return True if this path matches the given pattern.
        """
        # code omitted for brevity
        for part, pat in zip(reversed(parts), reversed(pat_parts)):
            if not fnmatch.fnmatchcase(part, pat):
                return False
        return True

The code omitted does some checks that allow the function to tell right away that there is no match. The for loop that I am showing you makes use of zip to pair each part of the path with each part of the pattern, and then we check if those match with fnmatch.fnmatchcase.

Try adding a couple of prints here:

class PurePath(object):
    # ...

    def match(self, path_pattern):
        """
        Return True if this path matches the given pattern.
        """
        # code omitted for brevity

        print(parts)      # added by hand to check what is going on.
        print(pat_parts)  # same here.
        for part, pat in zip(reversed(parts), reversed(pat_parts)):
            if not fnmatch.fnmatchcase(part, pat):
                return False
        return True

And then rerun the examples from the documentation:

>>> from pathlib import PurePath
>>> PurePath('a/b.py').match('*.py')
['a', 'b.py']   # parts
['*.py']        # pat_parts
True
>>> PurePath('/a/b/c.py').match('b/*.py')
['\\', 'a', 'b', 'c.py']
['b', '*.py']
True
>>> PurePath('/a/b/c.py').match('a/*.py')
['\\', 'a', 'b', 'c.py']
['a', '*.py']
False

It should become clearer what parts and pat_parts actually do, and it should become clearer why we zip them up together.

This is a nice example of when using strict=True makes no sense, because it may happen that the path and the pattern have a different number of parts, and that is perfectly fine.

Writing a CSV file

The Python Standard Library comes with a module, csv , to read and write CSV files. Among other things, it provides you with the classes DictReader and DictWriter for when you want to use the header of the CSV file to read the data rows like dictionaries or for when you have the data rows as dictionaries.

Here is an example of how you might take several dictionaries and write them as a CSV file:

import csv

with open('names.csv', 'w', newline='') as csvfile:
    fieldnames = ['first_name', 'last_name']
    writer = csv.DictWriter(csvfile, fieldnames=fieldnames)

    writer.writeheader()
    writer.writerow({'first_name': 'Baked', 'last_name': 'Beans'})
    writer.writerow({'first_name': 'Lovely', 'last_name': 'Spam'})
    writer.writerow({'first_name': 'Wonderful', 'last_name': 'Spam'})

The fieldnames variable will establish the header of the CSV file and is then used by the writerow method to know the order in which the values of the dictionary should be written in the file.

The writeheader function is the function that writes the header of the CSV file, and here is what it looks like:

class DictWriter:
    # ...

    def writeheader(self):
        header = dict(zip(self.fieldnames, self.fieldnames))
        return self.writerow(header)

Basically, what this function is doing is using zip to transform the header names into a dictionary where the keys and the values are the same, pretending that the header is just a regular data row:

>>> fieldnames = ['first_name', 'last_name']
>>> dict(zip(fieldnames, fieldnames))
{'first_name': 'first_name', 'last_name': 'last_name'}

Therefore, the writeheader function just needs to create this dictionary and can then defer the actual writing to the writerow function.

Conclusion

Here's the main takeaway of this article, for you, on a silver platter:

โ€œzip is your friend whenever you need to traverse two or more iterables at the same time.โ€

This Pydon't showed you that:

  • zip can be used to traverse several iterables at the same time;
  • zip by itself returns a zip object which must then be iterated or converted explicitly to a list if you want the tuples it produces;
  • if the arguments to zip have uneven lengths, zip will stop as soon as one of the iterators is exhausted;
  • starting with Python 3.10, you can use the keyword argument strict=True to tell zip to error if the arguments to zip have different lengths; and
  • zip can provide for a really simple way to create dictionaries.

If you liked this Pydon't be sure to leave a reaction below and share this with your friends and fellow Pythonistas. Also, don't forget to subscribe to the newsletter so you don't miss a single Pydon't!

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