# Splitting a list using SplitBy, by comparing adjacent elements [duplicate]

Suppose that I have the following list called mylist:

mylist = {80.2, 80.3, 80.4, 327.6, 327.7, 327.8};


I would like to split mylist so that "runs of consecutive elements" are placed in the same sublist. Here, I will define two "consecutive elements" as real numbers that differ by 0.1. The second element can be either 0.1 greater than or 0.1 less than the first element, although in reality it makes more sense if the second element can only be 0.1 greater than the first element. (In my actual application, mylist is a list of times [i.e., elapsed time], in seconds, for example. My system is sampled every 0.1 seconds. Time never moves backwards, at least in my world!)

So the result I would like is:

{{80.2, 80.3, 80.4}, {327.6, 327.7, 327.8}}


I am thinking that SplitBy would be appropriate for this application:

SplitBy[list, f] splits list into sublists consisting of runs of successive elements that give the same value when f is applied.

However, in looking in the documentation, it is not clear to me how "adjacent elements" are defined. In Mathematica 7, "More Information" says:

SplitBy performs comparisons only on adjacent pairs elements.

Thus, what f do I use? I have tried:

SplitBy[mylist, #[[2]] - #[[1]] == 0.1 &]


and

SplitBy[mylist, #2 - #1 == 0.1 &]


but neither work. Does SplitBy define separate "slots" for the first and second element of a pair? Thanks for your time.

## marked as duplicate by Mr.Wizard♦Apr 27 '14 at 23:44

• Possible duplicate: mathematica.stackexchange.com/q/4191/5 (only the test function is different) – rm -rf Oct 2 '12 at 21:55
• @rm-rf I think is not a dupe in the sense that while SplitBy is mentioned in the question, it can not be used for cases such as this, and this question (or rather answers to it) will emphasize that. – Leonid Shifrin Oct 2 '12 at 22:03
• @LeonidShifrin You make a very good point. I never understood (or realized, rather) the difference between Split and SplitBy, and your answer helps me to learn this. Thanks. – Andrew Oct 2 '12 at 22:05
• @LeonidShifrin Fair enough. I agree this is a useful question for why SplitBy cannot be used. – rm -rf Oct 2 '12 at 22:06

SplitBy is a wrong tool for the job here, because the condition you need couples adjacent elements in a way which can not be decoupled by applying some function to them. I would use
Split[mylist, Chop[#2 - #1 -  0.1] == 0 &]

• Unfortunately, when I execute mylist = {80.2, 80.3, 80.4, 327.6, 327.7, 327.8}; SplitBy[mylist, Chop[#2 - #1 - 0.1] == 0 &], I get errors: Function::slotn: Slot number 2 in Chop[#2-#1-0.1]==0& cannot be filled from (Chop[#2-#1-0.1]==0&)[80.2] and so on for 80.3, 80.4, etc. Do you have any ideas? Thanks. – Andrew Oct 2 '12 at 21:57
• @Andrew Please look carefully at the answer: I use Split, not SplitBy. SplitBy is a wrong tool for the job here, because the condition you need couples adjacent elements in a way which can not be decoupled by applying some function to them. – Leonid Shifrin Oct 2 '12 at 22:00