Students can read the important questions given below for List Manipulation Class 11 Computer Science. All List Manipulation Class 11 Notes and questions with solutions have been prepared based on the latest syllabus and examination guidelines issued by CBSE, NCERT and KVS. You should read all notes provided by us and Class 11 Computer Science Important Questions provided for all chapters to get better marks in examinations. Computer Science Question Bank Class 11 is available on our website for free download in PDF.
Important Questions of List Manipulation Class 11
Very Short answer Type Questions
Question: If a is [1, 2, 3], what is the meaning of a [1:1] = 9?
Answer: This will generate an error ―TypeError: can only assign an iterable‖.
Question: If a is [1, 2, 3], is a *3 equivalent to a + a + a?
Answer: Yes, Both a*3 and a+a+a will produce same result.
Question: What do you understand by mutability?
Answer: Mutable means changeable. In Python, mutable types are those whose values can be changed
in place. Only three types are mutable in python – Lists, Dictionaries and Sets.
Question: Start with the list[8,9,10]. Do the following using list functions
(a) Set the second entry (index 1) to 17
(b) Add 4, 5 and 6 to the end of the list.
(c) Remove the first entry from the list.
(d) Sort the list.
(e) Double the list.
(f) Insert 25 at index 3
Answer: (a) list[1]=17
(b) list.append(4)
list.append(5)
list.append(6)
(c) list.pop(0)
(d) list.sort()
(e) list=list*2
(f) list.insert(3,25)
Question: What are list slices?
Answer: List slices are the sub-part of a list extracted out. You can use indexes of the list elements to
create list slices as per following format. Syntax is as follows –
Seq=ListName[start:stop]
Prepared By: Sanjeev Bhadauria & Neha Tyagi
Question: If a is [1, 2, 3], what is the meaning of a [1:2] = 4 and a [1:1] = 4?
Answer: These will generate an error ―TypeError: can only assign an iterable‖.
Question: If a is [1, 2, 3], what is the difference (if any) between a*3 and [a, a, a]?
Answer: a*3 will produce [1,2,3,1,2,3,1,2,3], means a list of integers and
[a, a, a] will produce [[1,2,3],[1,2,3],[1,2,3]], means list of lists
Question: Does a slice operator always produce a new list?
Answer: Yes, this will create a new list.
Short Answer Type Questions
Question: Predict the output –
Answer:
Question: What are nested Lists?
Answer: A list can have an element in it, which itself is a list. Such a list is called nested list. e.g.
L = [1,2,3,4,[5,6,7],8]
Question: What are list slices?
Answer: List slices, like string slices are the sub part of a list extracted out. Indexes can be used to create list slices as per following format:
seq = L[start:stop]
Question: Discuss the utility and significance of Lists.
Answer: The list is a most versatile datatype available in Python which can be written as a list of commaseparated
values (items) between square brackets. Important thing about a list is that items in
a list need not be of the same type. List is majorly used with dictionaries when there is large
number of data.
Question: What is the purpose of the del operator and pop method? Try deleting a slice.
Answer: del operator is used to remove an individual item, or to remove all items identified by a slice.
It is to be used as per syntax given below –
>>>del List[index]
>>>del List[start:stop]
pop method is used to remove single element, not list slices. The pop() method removes an
individual item and returns it. Its syntax is –
>>>a=List.pop() #this will remove last item and deleted item will be assigned to a.
>>>a=List[10] # this will remove the ite at index 10 and deleted item will be assigned to a.
Question: What do you understand by true copy of a list? How is it different from shallow copy?
Answer: A shallow copy means constructing a new collection object and then populating it with
references to the child objects found in the original. In essence, a shallow copy is only one level
deep. The copying process does not recurse and therefore won‘t create copies of the child
objects themselves.
True Copy means you can create a copy of a list using New_list=My_list. The assignment just
copies the reference to the list, not the actual list, so both new_list and my_list refer to the
same list after the assignment.
Question: How are lists different from strings when both are sequences?
Answer: Lists are similar to strings in many ways like indexing, slicing, and accessing individual elements
but they are different in the sense that
(i) Lists are mutable while strings are immutable.
(ii) In consecutive locations, strings store the individual characters while list stores the
references of its elements.
(iii) Strings store single type of elements-all characters while lists can store elements
belonging to different types.
Question: Predict the output –
Answer:
Skill Based Questions
Question: WAP to calculate mean of a given list of numbers.
Answer:
Question: WAP that creates a third list after adding two lists.
Answer:
Question: WAP to search for an element in a given list of numbers.
Answer:
Question: WAP to calculate the sum of integers of the list.
Answer:
Question: WAP to find minimum element from a list of elements along with its index in the list.
Answer:
Question: WAP to count frequency of a given element in a list of numbers.
Answer:
Question: WAP that reverses an array of integers (in place)
Answer:
Question: WAP a program to generate a list of elements of Fibonacci Series.
Answer: