Not this one the other one, from a dictionary
Ross
rossgk at gmail.com
Fri Sep 18 14:48:12 EDT 2009
Thanks Tim (and Ishwor) for the suggestions, those are structures
that somewhat new to me - looks good! I'll play with those. At
this rate I may soon almost know what I'm doing.
Rgds
Ross.
On 18-Sep-09, at 1:19 PM, Tim Chase wrote:
>> Learning my way around list comprehension a bit. I wonder if
>> someone has a better way to solve this issue. I have a two
>> element dictionary, and I know one of the keys but not the other,
>> and I want to look up the other one.
>
> Several ways occur to me. Of the various solutions I played with,
> this was my favorite (requires Python2.4+ for generator expressions):
>
> d = {'a': 'alice', 'b':'bob'}
> known = 'a'
> other_key, other_value = (
> (k,v)
> for k,v
> in d.iteritems()
> if k != known
> ).next()
>
> If you just want one or the other, you can simplify that a bit:
>
> other_key = (k for k in d.iterkeys() if k != known).next()
> other_key = (k for k in d if k != known).next()
>
> or
>
> other_value = (v for k,v in d.iteritems() if k != known).next()
>
> If you're using pre-2.4, you might tweak the above to something like
>
> other_key, other_value = [
> (k,v)
> for k,v
> in d.iteritems()
> if k != known
> ][0]
> other_key = [k for k in d if k != known)[0]
> other_value = [k for k in d.iteritems if k != known][0]
>
> Hope this helps,
>
> -tkc
>
>
>
>
>
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