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python - Most elegant way to modify elements of nested lists in place

I have a 2D list that looks like this:

table = [['donkey', '2', '1', '0'], ['goat', '5', '3', '2']]

I want to change the last three elements to integers, but the code below feels very ugly:

for row in table:
    for i in range(len(row)-1):
        row[i+1] = int(row[i+1])

But I'd rather have something that looks like:

for row in table:
    for col in row[1:]:
        col = int(col)

I think there should be a way to write the code above, but the slice creates an iterator/new list that's separate from the original, so the references don't carry over.

Is there some way to get a more Pythonic solution?

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for row in table:
    row[1:] = [int(c) for c in row[1:]]

Does above look more pythonic?


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