Read over this http://docs.python.org/2/library/itertools.html#itertools.product, it explains everything.
itertools
is a package that has a bunch of useful functionality for iterating over collections. One useful feature is the product
function which creates a generator that will iterate over the cartesian product of any number of iterable collections you give it.
The result of itertools.product
is not a list, it is a generator. A python generator is similar to a coroutine in other languages. This means it will compute your combinations on an as needed basis. If you compute the product of three iterables that each have size 100, but you only use the first 10 or so, itertools.product
will only compute 10 combinations instead of computing all 100^3 combinations.
If you actually want a list object instead of a generator (maybe you want to compute slices or something) call the list
function and pass your generator object as an argument.
The following code produces all combinations and prints the results.
Code:
import itertools
uk_rock_stars=[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]
uk_pop_stars=[10,11,12,13,1,4,6,22,81]
us_stars=[22,34,44,7,33,99,22,77,99]
for combination in itertools.product(uk_rock_stars, uk_pop_stars, us_stars):
print combination
Outputs:
(1, 10, 22)
(1, 10, 34)
(1, 10, 44)
(1, 10, 7)
(1, 10, 33)
(1, 10, 99)
(1, 10, 22)
(1, 10, 77)
(1, 10, 99)
(1, 11, 22)
(1, 11, 34)
(1, 11, 44)
(1, 11, 7)
(1, 11, 33)
(1, 11, 99)
(1, 11, 22)
(1, 11, 77)
(1, 11, 99)
...
etc.