Few mistakes when using Python dictionary
Last Updated :
06 Mar, 2019
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Usually, A dictionary is a collection which is unordered, changeable and indexed. In Python, dictionaries are written with curly brackets, and they have keys and values. Each key-value pair in a Dictionary is separated by a 'colon', whereas each key is separated by a ‘comma’.
Python3 1==
Python3 1==
my_dict = {1: 'Geeks', 2: 'For', 3:'Geeks'}
print(my_dict)
Output:
We generally use dictionaries to access the items with its key value, inside square brackets.
{1: 'Geeks', 2: 'For', 3: 'Geeks'}
my_dict = {1: 'Geeks', 2: 'For', 3:'Geeks'}
print(my_dict[1])
print(my_dict[2])
print(my_dict[3])
Output:
The common operations of dictionaries are:
Geeks For Geeks
- To get the values of the dictionary we use values() method.
Python3 1== my_dict = {1: 'Geeks', 2: 'For', 3:'Geeks'} print(my_dict.values())
Output:dict_values(['Geeks', 'For', 'Geeks'])
- To get the keys of the dictionary we use keys() method.
Python3 1== my_dict = {1: 'Geeks', 2: 'For', 3:'Geeks'} print(my_dict.keys())
Output:dict_keys([1, 2, 3])
- To add a new entry into the dictionary
Python3 1== my_dict = {1: 'Geeks', 2: 'For', 3:'Geeks'} my_dict[4]='Python' print(my_dict)
Output:{1: 'Geeks', 2: 'For', 3: 'Geeks', 4: 'Python'}
- To change the value of the entry
Python3 1== my_dict = {1: 'Geeks', 2: 'For', 3:'Geeks'} my_dict[3]='Python' print(my_dict)
Output:{1: 'Geeks', 2: 'For', 3: 'Python'}
- To delete an entry from dictionary
Python3 1== my_dict = {1: 'Geeks', 2: 'For', 3:'Geeks'} del my_dict[3] print(my_dict)
Output:{1: 'Geeks', 2: 'For'}
- To copy the dictionary
Python3 1== my_dict = {1: 'Geeks', 2: 'For', 3:'Geeks'} my_dict1 = my_dict print(my_dict1)
Output:{1: 'Geeks', 2: 'For', 3: 'Geeks'}
- To remove all entries.
Python3 1== my_dict = {1: 'Geeks', 2: 'For', 3:'Geeks'} my_dict.clear() print(my_dict)
Output:{}
- To find the number of entries.
Python3 1== my_dict = {1: 'Geeks', 2: 'For', 3:'Geeks'} z = len(my_dict) print(z)
Output:3
- To access the value of the key, we generally use dict_name[key_name] instead we should use get() method to get rid of the exceptions thrown all throughout your code.
- To update the value of the key, we generally use dict_name[key_name]='new_value' instead we should update(key=value) method to get rid of the exceptions thrown all throughout your code.
- To copy the dictionary, we generally use dict_name = new_dict_name instead we should use copy() method to get rid of the exceptions thrown all throughout your code.
- Dicts are useful but they're not the only associative array structure in Python. Often there is a more specialised container type like set, tuple etc.
- Numeric values with different types can be equal (e.g. 1 == 1.0), in which case they represent the same key.