Python Dictionaries







googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display('div-gpt-ad-1422003450156-2'); });



Python Dictionaries



❮ Previous
Next ❯



Dictionary



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.




Example


Create and print a dictionary:



thisdict = {
  "apple": "green",
  "banana": "yellow",
  "cherry": "red"
}
print(thisdict)

Run example »



Example


Change the apple color to "red":



thisdict = {
  "apple": "green",
  "banana": "yellow",
  "cherry": "red"
}
thisdict["apple"] = "red"
print(thisdict)

Run example »








googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display('div-gpt-ad-1493883843099-0'); });






The dict() Constructor



It is also possible to use the dict() constructor to make a dictionary:




Example



thisdict = dict(apple="green", banana="yellow", cherry="red")
# note that keywords are not string literals
# note the use of equals rather than colon for the assignment
print(thisdict)

Run example »


Adding Items



Adding an item to the dictionary is done by using a new index key and assigning a value to it:




Example



thisdict = dict(apple="green", banana="yellow", cherry="red")
thisdict["damson"] = "purple"
print(thisdict)

Run example »


Removing Items



Removing a dictionary item must be done using the del() function in python:



Example



thisdict = dict(apple="green", banana="yellow", cherry="red")
del(thisdict["banana"])
print(thisdict)

Run example »


Get the Length of a Dictionary


The len() function returns the size of the dictionary:



Example



thisdict = dict(apple="green", banana="yellow", cherry="red")
print(len(thisdict))

Run example »




❮ Previous
Next ❯

Popular posts from this blog

Python Lists

Aion

JavaScript Array Iteration Methods