Dictionary .keys() and .values() should return a set [withPython3000 in mind]
Paul Rubin
http
Mon Jul 3 01:47:14 EDT 2006
"Delaney, Timothy (Tim)" <tdelaney at avaya.com> writes:
> If you want an independent data set, you have to take a snapshot. For
> the above, that's doing:
>
> k0 = list(d.keys())
I don't understand. Why have .keys() at all, if it doesn't get you
an independent data set? If all you want is to iterate through the
dict, you can already do that:
for k in d: ....
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