Apply the same zfill
function in a list comprehension, like this
>>> [str(item).zfill(6) for item in data]
['000001', '000010', '000313', '004000', '051234', '123456']
Alternatively, you can use the string's format
method, with format specifiers, like this
>>> ["{:06d}".format(item) for item in data]
['000001', '000010', '000313', '004000', '051234', '123456']
If you are going to do the formatting more often, then you can store that in a variable, like this
>>> formatter = "{:06d}".format
>>> [formatter(item) for item in data]
['000001', '000010', '000313', '004000', '051234', '123456']
If you are using Python 2.x, then you can use map
and the formatter
function, like this
>>> map(formatter, data)
['000001', '000010', '000313', '004000', '051234', '123456']
If you are using Python 3.x, map
returns an iterable map
object. So, you need to explicitly create a list, like this
>>> list(map(formatter, data))
['000001', '000010', '000313', '004000', '051234', '123456']