dict.fromkeys
directly solves the problem:
>>> dict.fromkeys([1, 2, 3, 4])
{1: None, 2: None, 3: None, 4: None}
This is actually a classmethod, so it works for dict-subclasses (like collections.defaultdict
) as well.
The optional second argument, which defaults to None
, specifies the value to use for the keys. Note that the same object will be used for each key, which can cause problems with mutable values:
>>> x = dict.fromkeys([1, 2, 3, 4], [])
>>> x[1].append('test')
>>> x
{1: ['test'], 2: ['test'], 3: ['test'], 4: ['test']}
If this is unacceptable, see How can I initialize a dictionary whose values are distinct empty lists? for a workaround.
None
values for all keys? If so, why not use aset
instead? The only reason that comes to mind for using adict
instead ofset
in this case is if you want to iterate the structure in insertion order.