Get the first element of each tuple in a list in Python

Use a list comprehension:

res_list = [x[0] for x in rows]

Below is a demonstration:

>>> rows = [(1, 2), (3, 4), (5, 6)]
>>> [x[0] for x in rows]
[1, 3, 5]
>>>

Alternately, you could use unpacking instead of x[0]:

res_list = [x for x,_ in rows]

Below is a demonstration:

>>> lst = [(1, 2), (3, 4), (5, 6)]
>>> [x for x,_ in lst]
[1, 3, 5]
>>>

Both methods practically do the same thing, so you can choose whichever you like.


The functional way of achieving this is to unzip the list using:

sample = [(2, 9), (2, 9), (8, 9), (10, 9), (23, 26), (1, 9), (43, 44)]
first,snd = zip(*sample)
print(first,snd)

(2, 2, 8, 10, 23, 1, 43) (9, 9, 9, 9, 26, 9, 44)


You can use list comprehension:

res_list = [i[0] for i in rows]

This should make the trick


If you don't want to use list comprehension by some reasons, you can use map and operator.itemgetter:

>>> from operator import itemgetter
>>> rows = [(1, 2), (3, 4), (5, 6)]
>>> map(itemgetter(1), rows)
[2, 4, 6]
>>>