dictionary python3 code example
Example 1: python 3.7 insert at place in dict
# Insert dictionary item into a dictionary at specified position:
def insert_item(dic, item={}, pos=None):
"""
Insert a key, value pair into an ordered dictionary.
Insert before the specified position.
"""
from collections import OrderedDict
d = OrderedDict()
# abort early if not a dictionary:
if not item or not isinstance(item, dict):
print('Aborting. Argument item must be a dictionary.')
return dic
# insert anywhere if argument pos not given:
if not pos:
dic.update(item)
return dic
for item_k, item_v in item.items():
for k, v in dic.items():
# insert key at stated position:
if k == pos:
d[item_k] = item_v
d[k] = v
return d
d = {'A':'letter A', 'C': 'letter C'}
insert_item(['A', 'C'], item={'B'})
## Aborting. Argument item must be a dictionary.
insert_item(d, item={'B': 'letter B'})
## {'A': 'letter A', 'C': 'letter C', 'B': 'letter B'}
insert_item(d, pos='C', item={'B': 'letter B'})
# OrderedDict([('A', 'letter A'), ('B', 'letter B'), ('C', 'letter C')])
Example 2: how to use dictionaries in python 3
dict = {'Name': 'Zara', 'Age': 7, 'Class': 'First'}
print ("dict['Name']: ", dict['Name'])
print ("dict['Age']: ", dict['Age'])
Example 3: py3 dict values
Yes it's the exact same thing in Python 2:
d.values()
In Python 3 (where dict.values returns a view of the dictionary’s values instead):
list(d.values())