enumerate() — Intermediate Examples
Adds a counter to an iterable, yielding (index, value) pairs
enumerate() with keyword arguments
Using enumerate() with optional parameters and in iteration patterns.
python
# enumerate() with start index months = ["Jan", "Feb", "Mar"] for i, month in enumerate(months, start=1): print(f"Month {i}: {month}") # enumerate() in dict comprehension items = ["a", "b", "c"] d = {v: i for i, v in enumerate(items)} print(d)
enumerate() supports additional parameters that modify its behavior.
enumerate() in real-world code
Practical patterns using enumerate().
python
# Common enumerate() patterns in production code print("enumerate() is frequently used for data transformation") # Example: processing a list data = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] print(f"Sum: {sum(data)}") print(f"Max: {max(data)}") print(f"Sorted: {sorted(data, reverse=True)}")
These patterns show how enumerate() is commonly used in production code.
Want to try these examples interactively?
Open Intermediate Playground