Let's say I have a list of characters and I want to map each to the number of times it occurs in the list. The following code accomplishes this:
characters = ['a','b','c','a']
d = {}
for ch in characters:
d[ch] = d.get(ch,0) + 1
return d
Now let's say, instead of having each character mapped to the number of times it occurs in the list, I want to map it to a list of 1's, where each 1 represents an occurance in the list. So for example, something like {a:[1,1], b:[1], c:[1]}. I use the same format but it doesn't work. Can someone explain why not?
characters = ['a','b','c','a']
d = {}
for ch in characters:
d[ch] = d.get(ch,[]).append(1)
#print type(d['a'])
return d
I get AttributeError: 'NoneType' object has no attribute 'append', even though a print type(d['a']) returns "list" if I remove the .append() in the for loop. Thanks!