7 intp but only after years of java without knowing dicts were a frequent sleep talker, could that be considered astral projection?
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7 intp but only after years of java without knowing dicts were a frequent sleep talker, could that be considered astral projection?
Everyone's life is someone's lesson. #dicts @jenkinsfearn #ealdenglisc #englisc #oldenglish #anglosaxon
(via JavaScript Arrays and Objects Are Just Like Books and Newspapers)
python list of dicts how to merge key:value where values are same?
python list of dicts how to merge key:value where values are same?
Python newb here looking for some assistance…
For a variable number of dicts in a python list like:
list_dicts = [ {'id':'001', 'name':'jim', 'item':'pencil', 'price':'0.99'}, {'id':'002', 'name':'mary', 'item':'book', 'price':'15.49'}, {'id':'002', 'name':'mary', 'item':'tape', 'price':'7.99'}, {'id':'003', 'name':'john', 'item':'pen', 'price':'3.49'}, {'id':'003', 'name':'john',…
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Day 11: Dictionary Direction
Tonight I did a bunch of poking around and reading about dicts or dictionaries (following along with LPTHW).
Dicts are handy storage containers which take multiple entries of a key and a value. Curly brackets tell Python that you're heading out of list territory and into the dictionary zone.
neighborhoods = { 'Brooklyn': 'Greenpoint', 'Queens': 'Astoria', 'Manhattan': 'Tribeca', } print neighborhoods
Python - lists, dicts, tuples, files, sets, type & class types
This post is the fifth of many that attempts to document everything I have been learning about Python.
Lists
Lists are mutable (objects that can be changed in place) sequences in Python. They are a collection of arbitrary objects ordered by position.
Lists can contain objects of any type and do not have a fixed size.
You can add and remove items to a list by using the append and pop methods of the list object.
>>> >>> list_of_names = ['John von Neumann', 'Niels Bohr', 'Nikola Tesla'] >>> >>> # add an item to the list >>> list_of_names.append('John Nash') >>> list_of_names ['John von Neumann', 'Niels Bohr', 'Nikola Tesla', 'John Nash'] >>> >>> # remove an item from the list >>> list_of_names.pop() 'John Nash' >>> >>> list_of_names ['John von Neumann', 'Niels Bohr', 'Nikola Tesla'] >>>
You cannot use an index that does not exist as a positional offset nor can you assign to it.
>>> # this list has 3 values. >>> # assigning a value to a 4th offset will >>> # result in an error >>> list_of_names[3] = "John Nash" Traceback (most recent call last): File "", line 1, in list_of_names[3] = "John Nash" IndexError: list assignment index out of range >>>
You can nest lists arbitrarily.
>>> list_of_names ['John von Neumann', 'Niels Bohr', 'Nikola Tesla'] >>> a_sub_list = ['Albert Einstein', 'Alan Turing'] >>> >>> list_of_names.append(a_sub_list) >>> list_of_names ['John von Neumann', 'Niels Bohr', 'Nikola Tesla', ['Albert Einstein', 'Alan Turing']] >>>
Comprehensions.
List Comprehensions are expressions that iterate over any sequence and run a expression over each value in the sequence and return the result in a list
A list comprehension consists of any sequence, a variable that takes on the values of the sequence one at a time and an expression that acts on that variable
>>> a_list_comprehension = [x ** 2 for x in [1,2,3]] >>> a_list_comprehension [1, 4, 9] >>>
By enclosing the comprehension in () you can create generators:
>>> >>> a_generator = (x ** 2 for x in [1,2,3]) >>> next(a_generator) 1 >>> next(a_generator) 4 >>>
You can use this comprehension syntax to generate lists, dictionaries and sets.
Dictionaries
Dictionaries are a mutable type. They are used to map keys to values.
You create a dictionary by wrapping key value pairs in { }
You index a Dictionary type with its key to get to its value.
>>> >>> testdict = {"languages" : ["Python", "C#", "R"], "math" : "Algebra"} >>> testdict["languages"] ['Python', 'C#', 'R'] >>>
When you assign a value to a key that does not exist, that key and value are added to the dictionary, this is unlike the list where adding a value to a index that does not exist results in an error.
>>> >>> testdict["field_of_study"] = "HFT" >>> testdict {'languages': ['Python', 'C#', 'R'], 'field_of_study': 'HFT', 'math': 'Algebra'} >>>
Dictionaries are not sequences, so they do not maintain any left to right order.
You can sort dictionaries by getting their keys in a list, sorting the list, using a for loop to move through the list OR you can use the built-in sorted function call that can sort a variety of objects.
>>> >>> unsorted_dict = {"a" : 1, "b" : 2, "c" : 3} >>> # no left to right order >>> unsorted_dict {'a': 1, 'c': 3, 'b': 2} >>> sorted(unsorted_dict) ['a', 'b', 'c'] >>> >>> keys_in_dict = list(unsorted_dict.keys()) >>> keys_in_dict ['a', 'c', 'b'] >>> # sort the list >>> keys_in_dict.sort() >>> keys_in_dict ['a', 'b', 'c'] >>>
The in membership expression allows us to check if a key we are trying to retrieve in a dictionary exists. It is an error to index and fetch a non-existent key from a dictionary type.
>>> # Using the 'in' membership operator >>> unsorted_dict {'a': 1, 'c': 3, 'b': 2} >>> 'a' in unsorted_dict True >>> >>> # Accessing a key that does not exist >>> unsorted_dict["test"] Traceback (most recent call last): File "", line 1, in unsorted_dict["test"] KeyError: 'test' >>>
You can also call the get method of the dictionary type, this accepts the key name and a default value that will be returned if the key does not exist.
>>> unsorted_dict {'a': 1, 'c': 3, 'b': 2} >>> >>> unsorted_dict.get('a') 1 >>> unsorted_dict.get('m', 9) 9 >>>
Tuple
A tuple is like a list, in that it is a sequence, but unlike a list, it cannot be changed, it is immutable.
You create a tuple by enclosing a set of values in () separated by commas.
>>> wooo_a_tuple = ('what', 'me', 'pragmatic', 'huh') >>>
Files
This type represents external files. Unlike other types, you cannot use a literal to create it, rather, you need to call the built-in open function by passing in the external file name and a access type as parameters.
>>> >>> file_name = open('testfile.txt','w') >>> file_name.write("this is a test string") 21 >>> file_name.close() >>> file_name_to_read = open('testfile.txt', 'r').read() >>> file_name_to_read 'this is a test string' >>>
Sets
Sets are collections of unordered, unique immutable objects. You can think of them as valueless dictionaries. They are created using {}
>>> title_town = {"Celtics", "Patriots", "Red Sox", "Bruins"} >>>
Decimals and Fractions
Decimals and Fractions are the 2 new types added, they are not part of the core built-in types and have to be imported.
>>> >>> from fractions import Fraction >>> var = Fraction(3, 4) >>> var Fraction(3, 4) >>> var1 = Fraction(1, 4) >>> var1 Fraction(1, 4) >>> var + var1 Fraction(1, 1) >>> >>> from decimal import Decimal >>> dec1 = Decimal("1.0") >>> dec2 = Decimal("33.3") >>> dec1 + dec2 Decimal('34.3') >>>
Bool
The Boolean type is essentially a numeric type, it represents values 1 and 0, prints them out as True and False.
>>> bool_var = True >>> # it really is an integer >>> bool_var + 1 2 >>>
Type
The type built in function returns the type of the object being passed to it.
>>> type(bool_var) >>> type(unsorted_dict) >>>
Class
The class keyword allows you to declare your own types that model real world entities.
>>> class Author(object): def __init__(self, first, last): self.first = first self.last = last def print_name(self): print(self.first, self.last) >>> wealth_of_nations = Author("Adam", "Smith") >>> wealth_of_nations.print_name() Adam Smith >>>