--- layout: "language" page_title: "flatten - Functions - Configuration Language" sidebar_current: "docs-funcs-collection-flatten" description: |- The flatten function eliminates nested lists from a list. --- # `flatten` Function `flatten` takes a list and replaces any elements that are lists with a flattened sequence of the list contents. ## Examples ``` > flatten([["a", "b"], [], ["c"]]) ["a", "b", "c"] ``` If any of the nested lists also contain directly-nested lists, these too are flattened recursively: ``` > flatten([[["a", "b"], []], ["c"]]) ["a", "b", "c"] ``` Indirectly-nested lists, such as those in maps, are _not_ flattened. ## Flattening nested structures for `for_each` The [resource `for_each`](/docs/configuration/meta-arguments/for_each.html) and [`dynamic` block](/docs/configuration/expressions/dynamic-blocks.html) language features both require a collection value that has one element for each repetition. Sometimes your input data structure isn't naturally in a suitable shape for use in a `for_each` argument, and `flatten` can be a useful helper function when reducing a nested data structure into a flat one. For example, consider a module that declares a variable like the following: ```hcl variable "networks" { type = map(object({ cidr_block = string subnets = map(object({ cidr_block = string })) })) } ``` The above is a reasonable way to model objects that naturally form a tree, such as top-level networks and their subnets. The repetition for the top-level networks can use this variable directly, because it's already in a form where the resulting instances match one-to-one with map elements: ```hcl resource "aws_vpc" "example" { for_each = var.networks cidr_block = each.value.cidr_block } ``` However, in order to declare all of the _subnets_ with a single `resource` block, we must first flatten the structure to produce a collection where each top-level element represents a single subnet: ```hcl locals { # flatten ensures that this local value is a flat list of objects, rather # than a list of lists of objects. network_subnets = flatten([ for network_key, network in var.networks : [ for subnet_key, subnet in network.subnets : { network_key = network_key subnet_key = subnet_key network_id = aws_vpc.example[network_key].id cidr_block = subnet.cidr_block } ] ]) } resource "aws_subnet" "example" { # local.network_subnets is a list, so we must now project it into a map # where each key is unique. We'll combine the network and subnet keys to # produce a single unique key per instance. for_each = { for subnet in local.network_subnets : "${subnet.network_key}.${subnet.subnet_key}" => subnet } vpc_id = each.value.network_id availability_zone = each.value.subnet_key cidr_block = each.value.cidr_block } ``` The above results in one subnet instance per subnet object, while retaining the associations between the subnets and their containing networks. ## Related Functions * [`setproduct`](./setproduct.html) finds all of the combinations of multiple lists or sets of values, which can also be useful when preparing collections for use with `for_each` constructs.