0

Is there a good way to handle non-existing dictionary keys?

I have a database based on dictionaries with keys that looks something like this

ID
   ver
      sub_ver
           A
           B
           C

I want to compare the values for the A, B, C-keys for each ID/ver/sub_ver to assure that:

 (A==B and C==None) or (A==C and B==None) or (A==B==C)

However not all "IDs" have A and B and C-keys/values

My not very nice code:

**loops outside of this for ID/ver/sub_ver** 
try:
    A = data_structure[ID][ver][sub_ver]['A']
    B = data_structure[ID][ver][sub_ver]['B']
    C = data_structure[ID][ver][sub_ver]['C']
except KeyError:
    try:
        A = data_structure[ID][ver][sub_ver]['A']
        B = data_structure[ID][ver][sub_ver]['B']
        C = None

    except KeyError: 
        try:
            A = data_structure[ID][ver][sub_ver]['A']
            B = None
            C = data_structure[ID][ver][sub_ver]['C']                    

Next i check if all values match

I use set() just in case the A/B/C-lists aren't in order

if not any((set(A)==set(B) and C==None, \
            set(A)==set(C) and B==None, \
            set(A)==set(B)==set(C))):
    set_of_problems.append([ID, ver, sub_ver, [A, B, C])

Is there a better way to do the nested try/except when it comes to non-existing keys in dictionaries?

1

1 Answer 1

5

You have too many try's; use dict.get() to get optional elements:

try:
    A = data_structure[ID][ver][sub_ver]['A']
except KeyError:
    # no A so error, next iteration of your loop
    continue

# we know ID, ver, and sub_ver all are present
B = data_structure[ID][ver][sub_ver].get('B')
C = data_structure[ID][ver][sub_ver].get('C')

if (C is None and A == B) or (B is None and A == C) or (A == B == C):
2
  • Ahh .get() that works! In addition, in order to handle the values being lists i added default values to the get-functions .get('B', [None]) and changed C is None to C==[None] Sep 26, 2014 at 14:58
  • 1
    @user2987193: that you need to use set() here is a separate issue really; it doesn't have an impact on the original problem and the solution for that problem.
    – Martijn Pieters
    Sep 26, 2014 at 14:59

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.