Example 1: python array append
my_list = ['a','b']
my_list.append('c')
print(my_list) # ['a','b','c']
other_list = [1,2]
my_list.append(other_list)
print(my_list) # ['a','b','c',[1,2]]
my_list.extend(other_list)
print(my_list) # ['a','b','c',[1,2],1,2]
Example 2: how to add an item to a list in python
myList = [1, 2, 3]
myList.append(4)
Example 3: add item to list python
list.append(item)
Example 4: append to lists python
list = ['larry', 'curly', 'moe']
list.append('shemp') ## append elem at end
list.insert(0, 'xxx') ## insert elem at index 0
list.extend(['yyy', 'zzz']) ## add list of elems at end
print list ## ['xxx', 'larry', 'curly', 'moe', 'shemp', 'yyy', 'zzz']
print list.index('curly') ## 2
list.remove('curly') ## search and remove that element
list.pop(1) ## removes and returns 'larry'
print list ## ['xxx', 'moe', 'shemp', 'yyy', 'zzz']
Example 5: append to list python
list = ["a"]
list.append("b")
print(list)
["a","b"]
Example 6: python how to append to a list
# Basic syntax:
your_list.append('element_to_append')
# Example usage:
your_list = ['a', 'b']
your_list.append('c')
print(your_list)
--> ['a', 'b', 'c']
# Note, .append() changes the list directly and doesn’t require an
# assignment operation. In fact, the following would produce an error:
your_list = your_list.append('c')