I am a bit puzzled by the following code:
d = {'x': 1, 'y': 2, 'z': 3}
for key in d:
print key, 'corresponds to', d[key]
What I don't understand is the key
portion. How does Python recognize that it needs only to read the key from the dictionary? Is key
a special word in Python? Or is it simply a variable?
key
is just a variable name.
for key in d:
will simply loop over the keys in the dictionary, rather than the keys and values. To loop over both key and value you can use the following:
For Python 3.x:
for key, value in d.items():
For Python 2.x:
for key, value in d.iteritems():
To test for yourself, change the word key
to poop
.
In Python 3.x, iteritems()
was replaced with simply items()
, which returns a set-like view backed by the dict, like iteritems()
but even better.
This is also available in 2.7 as viewitems()
.
The operation items()
will work for both 2 and 3, but in 2 it will return a list of the dictionary's (key, value)
pairs, which will not reflect changes to the dict that happen after the items()
call. If you want the 2.x behavior in 3.x, you can call list(d.items())
.