For Loops

The for loop can traverse any sequence of items, such as a list or a string.

The syntax format of for loop is as follows:

for val in sequence:
    Body of for

Here, val is a variable that gets the value of the item in the sequence in each iteration.

The loop continues until we reach the last item in the sequence. Use indentation to separate the body of the for loop from the rest of the code.

Flowchart of for Loop

../../../_images/for_loop.png
numbers = [1, 2, 3, 4]
sum = 0

for val in numbers:
    sum = sum+val

print("The sum is", sum)
>>> %Run -c $EDITOR_CONTENT
The sum is 10

The break Statement

With the break statement we can stop the loop before it has looped through all the items:

numbers = [1, 2, 3, 4]
sum = 0

for val in numbers:
    sum = sum+val
    if sum == 6:
        break
print("The sum is", sum)
>>> %Run -c $EDITOR_CONTENT
The sum is 6

The continue Statement

With the continue statement we can stop the current iteration of the loop, and continue with the next:

numbers = [1, 2, 3, 4]

for val in numbers:
    if val == 3:
        continue
    print(val)
>>> %Run -c $EDITOR_CONTENT
1
2
4

The range() function

We can use the range() function to generate a sequence of numbers. range(6) will produce numbers between 0 and 5 (6 numbers).

We can also define start, stop and step size as range(start, stop, step_size). If not provided, step_size defaults to 1.

In a sense of range, the object is “lazy” because when we create the object, it does not generate every number it “contains”. However, this is not an iterator because it supports in, len and __getitem__ operations.

This function will not store all values ​​in memory; it will be inefficient. So it will remember the start, stop, step size and generate the next number during the journey.

To force this function to output all items, we can use the function list().

print(range(6))

print(list(range(6)))

print(list(range(2, 6)))

print(list(range(2, 10, 2)))
>>> %Run -c $EDITOR_CONTENT
range(0, 6)
[0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
[2, 3, 4, 5]
[2, 4, 6, 8]

We can use range() in a for loop to iterate over a sequence of numbers. It can be combined with the len() function to use the index to traverse the sequence.

fruits = ['pear', 'apple', 'grape']

for i in range(len(fruits)):
    print("I like", fruits[i])
>>> %Run -c $EDITOR_CONTENT
I like pear
I like apple
I like grape

Else in For Loop

The for loop can also have an optional else block. If the items in the sequence used for the loop are exhausted, the else part is executed.

The break keyword can be used to stop the for loop. In this case, the else part will be ignored.

Therefore, if no interruption occurs, the else part of the for loop will run.

for val in range(5):
    print(val)
else:
    print("Finished")
>>> %Run -c $EDITOR_CONTENT
0
1
2
3
4
Finished

The else block will NOT be executed if the loop is stopped by a break statement.

for val in range(5):
    if val == 2: break
    print(val)
else:
    print("Finished")
>>> %Run -c $EDITOR_CONTENT
0
1