Check if all elements of a list are of the same type Check if all elements of a list are of the same type python-3.x python-3.x

Check if all elements of a list are of the same type


Try using all in conjunction with isinstance:

all(isinstance(x, int) for x in lst)

You can even check for multiple types with isinstance if that is desireable:

all(isinstance(x, (int, long)) for x in lst)

Not that this will pick up inherited classes as well. e.g.:

class MyInt(int):     passprint(isinstance(MyInt('3'),int)) #True

If you need to restrict yourself to just integers, you could use all(type(x) is int for x in lst). But that is a VERY rare scenario.


A fun function you could write with this is one which would return the type of the first element in a sequence if all the other elements are the same type:

def homogeneous_type(seq):    iseq = iter(seq)    first_type = type(next(iseq))    return first_type if all( (type(x) is first_type) for x in iseq ) else False

This will work for any arbitrary iterable, but it will consume "iterators" in the process.

Another fun function in the same vein which returns the set of common bases:

import inspectdef common_bases(seq):    iseq = iter(seq)    bases = set(inspect.getmro(type(next(iseq))))    for item in iseq:        bases = bases.intersection(inspect.getmro(type(item)))        if not bases:           break    return bases


Using any(), no need to traverse whole list. Just break as soon as object which is not int or long is found:

>>> not any(not isinstance(y,(int,long)) for y in [1,2,3])True>>> not any(not isinstance(y,(int,long)) for y in [1,'a',2,3])False


>>> def checkInt(l):    return all(isinstance(i, (int, long)) for i in l)>>> checkInt([1,2,3])True>>> checkInt(['a',1,2,3])False>>> checkInt([1,2,3,238762384762364892364])True