Python Language Dictionary: Difference between revisions

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<code>get()</code> can also be used:
<code>get()</code> can also be used:
<syntaxhighlight lang='py'>
if d.get('some-key') is not None:
if d.get('some-key') is not None:
   print("key exists")
   print("key exists")

Revision as of 20:14, 16 February 2022

Internal

Overview

A dictionary is a mutable collection of key-value pairs. The pairs can be accessed and modified. Each key is unique within the key set, and can be an instance of any immutable type: boolean, integer, float, tuple, string, etc. In other programming languages, the same data structure is referred to as "associative array" or "hash tables" or "hash maps".

Key Discussion

The keys 1 and True are equivalent. Why?

Create a Dictionary

A new dictionary instance is declared using the {...} syntax. The curly braces are placed around comma-separated key: value pairs. The dictionary can be empty

d = {}

or it can be populated with values:

d = {'a': 'b', 1: 2}

It is good form to insert a space after :. A comma is tolerated after the last pair.

Access a Dictionary

Access Individual Elements

Individual dictionary elements can be accessed with the [] syntax or with the get() function.

Access with [] Syntax

The [] syntax can only be used with keys that exist in the dictionary:

d = {'a': 'b'}
print(d['a'])

An attempt to access an inexistent key will throw a KeyError exception. To avoid the exception, use get() instead.

get() Function

d = {'a': 'b'}
print(d.get('a')) # will display 'a'
print(d.get('no-such-key')) # will display None

Test the Existence of a Key

The existence of the key can be tested with in:

if 'some-key' in d:
  print("key exists")

get() can also be used:

if d.get('some-key') is not None:
  print("key exists")

Get All Keys

Get All Values

Modify a Dictionary

Modify Individual Elements

Add, modify, delete.

Modification with [] Syntax

Combine Dictionaries