The default behavior for python dictionary is to create a new key in the dictionary if that key does not already exist. For example:
d = {}
d['did not exist before'] = 'now it does'
this is all well and good for most purposes, but what if I'd like python to do nothing if the key isn't already in the dictionary. In my situation:
for x in exceptions:
if masterlist.has_key(x):
masterlist[x] = False
in other words, i don't want some incorrect elements in exceptions to corrupt my masterlist. Is this as simple as it gets? it FEELS like I should be able to do this in one line inside the for loop (i.e., without explicitly checking that x is a key of masterlist)
UPDATE: To me, my question is asking about the lack of a parallel between a list and a dict. For example:
l = []
l[0] = 2 #fails
l.append(2) #works
with the subclassing answer, you could modify the dictionary (maybe "safe_dict" or "explicit_dict" to do something similar:
d = {}
d['a'] = '1' #would fail in my world
d.insert('a','1') #what my world is missing
foo = "bar"in Python can mean initialization or modification of the variable (or rather: re-initialization) - Other languages require you to define a variable, in that case you know that it is new. Why should a dict be any more strict? I'm sure that that is an aspect you like about python. A one-liner for a single value would be:d[k] = v if k not in d else d[k]-- but it's not very nice ;) – phant0m Jun 23 '11 at 16:03