I have a dictionary d = {1:-0.3246, 2:-0.9185, 3:-3985, ...}
.
How do I extract all of the values of d
into a list l
?
I have a dictionary d = {1:-0.3246, 2:-0.9185, 3:-3985, ...}
.
How do I extract all of the values of d
into a list l
?
If you only need the dictionary keys 1
, 2
, and 3
use: your_dict.keys()
.
If you only need the dictionary values -0.3246
, -0.9185
, and -3985
use: your_dict.values()
.
If you want both keys and values use: your_dict.items()
which returns a list of tuples [(key1, value1), (key2, value2), ...]
.
Use values()
>>> d = {1:-0.3246, 2:-0.9185, 3:-3985}
>>> d.values()
<<< [-0.3246, -0.9185, -3985]
If you want all of the values, use this:
dict_name_goes_here.values()
If you want all of the keys, use this:
dict_name_goes_here.keys()
IF you want all of the items (both keys and values), I would use this:
dict_name_goes_here.items()
Call the values()
method on the dict.
d = <dict>
values = d.values()
If you want all of the values, use this:
dict_name_goes_here.values()
To see the keys:
for key in d.keys():
print(key)
To get the values that each key is referencing:
for key in d.keys():
print(d[key])
Add to a list:
for key in d.keys():
mylist.append(d[key])
Pythonic duck-typing should in principle determine what an object can do, i.e., its properties and methods. By looking at a dictionary object one may try to guess it has at least one of the following: dict.keys()
or dict.values()
methods. You should try to use this approach for future work with programming languages whose type checking occurs at runtime, especially those with the duck-typing nature.