How to check if an element of a list is a list (in Python)?

  1. Work out what specific properties of a list you want the items to have. Do they need to be indexable? Sliceable? Do they need an .append() method?

  2. Look up the abstract base class which describes that particular type in the collections module.

  3. Use isinstance:

    isinstance(x, collections.MutableSequence)
    

You might ask "why not just use type(x) == list?" You shouldn't do that, because then you won't support things that look like lists. And part of the Python mentality is duck typing:

I see a bird that walks like a duck and swims like a duck and quacks like a duck, I call that bird a duck

In other words, you shouldn't require that the objects are lists, just that they have the methods you will need. The collections module provides a bunch of abstract base classes, which are a bit like Java interfaces. Any type that is an instance of collections.Sequence, for example, will support indexing.


Use isinstance:

if isinstance(e, list):

If you want to check that an object is a list or a tuple, pass several classes to isinstance:

if isinstance(e, (list, tuple)):

Expression you are looking for may be:

...
return any( isinstance(e, list) for e in my_list )

Testing:

>>> my_list = [1,2]
>>> any( isinstance(e, list) for e in my_list )
False
>>> my_list = [1,2, [3,4,5]]
>>> any( isinstance(e, list) for e in my_list )
True
>>> 

Tags:

Python