[Tutor] Dictionary Format
Bryce Embry
bembry@bembry.org
Tue, 05 Mar 2002 16:47:33 -0600
Howdy,
I'm working on a script to help with some Windows 2000 administration and
have run into a little dictionary glitch that confuses me. If any of you
folks can help, I'd really appreciate it. I've been reading the list for a
couple months now, but this one is new to me.
I'm using the win32 extensions to get a list of all the users in a windows
group. My desire is to then find out if a certain user is a faculty member
or a student, and make adjustments to the script accordingly. I get a list
of users fine, but the format is odd, and I'm not able to then search the
list to see if a user is part of the given group.
The win32net.NetGroupGetUsers() yields a list with the following dictionaries:
{'name': u'auser'}
{'name': u'buser'}
{'name': u'cuser'}
{'name': u'duser'}
{'name': u'euser'}
auser, buser, cuser, etc. are all the login user names.
I'm trying to extract just the usernames from these dictionaries, but they
aren't exactly strings (see that goofy little u in front of the
apostrophe). If I use a print statement, they work fine.
for item in listofdictionaries:
print item['name']
>>>auser
>>>buser
>>>cuser
But, if I try to create a new list with just the user names I get the
following:
[u'auser', u'buser', u'cuser', u'duser']
If I then try to ask if "auser" is in the list, the answer is no. If I
slice it, it just cuts off the first letter of the name:
list = []
for item in listofdictionaries:
list.append(item['name'][1:])
>>>[u'user', u'user', u'user']
So, what is that extra u before the string markers? And how do I get past
it?
Thanks for the help.
Bryce Embry
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All that we have accomplished
you have done for us" -- Isaiah 26:12