10

I am using mysqldb to connect to mysql database and I get the metadata/columns in a variable and data/row in another. Now I have to consolidate the list and tuple into a dict and also preserve the order. I know that dicts are orderless but is there any alternative to this?

cursor.description = ['userid', 'cid', 'mid', 'did', 'msid']
data = (29L, 35L, None, '', None)

result = {}
for i in data:
    result.update = dict(zip(cols, i))

Expected result

result = {'userid': 29L, 'cid': 35L, 'mid': None, 'did': '', 'msid': None}
2
  • "I know that dicts are orderless..." What problem are you hoping to solve by creating the dict? Mar 12, 2013 at 21:57
  • Note that you can get dicts with a custom Cursor: geert.vanderkelen.org/…. You can combine that with OrderedDict to get ordered dictionaries from .fetch operations and cursor iteration.
    – nneonneo
    Mar 12, 2013 at 22:00

2 Answers 2

16

Use an OrderedDict:

from collections import OrderedDict

result = OrderedDict(zip(cursor.description, data))

Example:

>>> from collections import OrderedDict
>>> cols = ['userid', 'cid', 'mid', 'did', 'msid']
>>> data = (29L, 35L, None, '', None)
>>> result = OrderedDict(zip(cols, data))
>>> result
OrderedDict([('userid', 29L), ('cid', 35L), ('mid', None), ('did', ''), ('msid', None)])
>>> result['userid']
29L
>>> result['cid']
35L
>>> list(result)
['userid', 'cid', 'mid', 'did', 'msid']

From CPython 3.6 onwards, and Python 3.7 onwards, regular dicts are sorted by insertion order, so you can use dict here instead of OrderedDict if you know your code will run under a suitable version.

Python 3.7+ only (or Python 3.6 under CPython):

>>> cols = ['userid', 'cid', 'mid', 'did', 'msid']
>>> data = (29, 35, None, '', None)
>>> result = dict(zip(cols, data))
>>> result
{'userid': 29, 'cid': 35, 'mid': None, 'did': '', 'msid': None}
>>> result['userid']
29
>>> result['cid']
35
>>> list(result)
['userid', 'cid', 'mid', 'did', 'msid']
3
  • 1
    For versions of Python older than 2.7, you'll need to install it. pip install ordereddict
    – Carl Smith
    Mar 12, 2013 at 22:38
  • how can I make a dictionary of the result? [[('userid', 32L), ('cid', 40L), ('mid', None), ('did', ''), ('msid', None)]]
    – ronak
    Mar 12, 2013 at 23:02
  • 1
    result is a dictionary (OrderedDict is a subclass of dict). It is also ordered, unlike plain dict. For example, you can access result['userid'] and basically treat it like a dict.
    – nneonneo
    Mar 12, 2013 at 23:04
1

forget the dict

>>> cols=['userid', 'cid', 'mid', 'did', 'msid']
>>> data = (29L, 35L, None, '', None)
>>> zip(cols,data)
[('userid', 29L), ('cid', 35L), ('mid', None), ('did', ''), ('msid', None)]

If you have lots of result sets then set up an array first and append to it

>>> myarray.append(zip(cols,data))
1
  • 1
    Good, but it makes looking for a specific column cumbersome. Maybe I just want to write row['userid'].
    – nneonneo
    Mar 12, 2013 at 22:02

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.