Let's say I have two list of dicts:
dates = [{'created':'2010-12-01'},{'created':'2010-12-02'},....]
elts = [{'created':'2010-12-01', 'key1':'val1', 'key2':'val2'}, {'created':'2010-12-05','key1':'val1'}]
The dates list is a bunch of contiguous dates.
The elts list can be anywhere from 1 to len(dates), and what I want to do is basically pad elts so that it has a dict for a date regardless if there're other keys.
This is my naive solution:
for d in dates:
for e in elts:
if d['created'] == e['created']:
d.update(dict(key1=e['key1']))
Thus I will have a final array d
with all dates in each dict
, but there may/may not be other key/vals.
What's a good 'pythonic' solution?
d.update(dict(key1=e['key1']))
is a weird way to writed['key1']=e['key1']