NEWBIE: Extending a For Statement.
Larry Bates
larry.bates at websafe.com
Mon May 21 09:13:54 EDT 2007
mosscliffe wrote:
> I keep seeing examples of statements where it seems conditionals are
> appended to a for statement, but I do not understand them.
>
> I would like to use one in the following scenario.
>
> I have a dictionary of
>
> mydict = { 1: 500, 2:700, 3: 800, 60: 456, 62: 543, 58: 6789}
>
> for key in mydict:
> if key in xrange (60,69) or key == 3:
> print key,mydict[key]
>
> I would like to have the 'if' statement as part of the 'for'
> statement.
>
> I realise it is purely cosmetic, but it would help me understand
> python syntax a little better.
>
> Thanks
>
> Richard
>
I find something like the following easy to read and easy to
extend the contents of searchkeys in the future.
searchkeys=range(60, 69) + [3]
goodlist=[(k, v) for k, v in mydict.items() if k in searchkeys]
for key, value in goodlist:
print k,v
-Larry
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