I have any string. like 'buffalo',
x='buffalo'
I want to convert this string to some variable name like,
buffalo=4
not only this example, I want to convert any input string to some variable name. How should I do that (in python)?
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I have any string. like 'buffalo',
x='buffalo'
I want to convert this string to some variable name like,
buffalo=4
not only this example, I want to convert any input string to some variable name. How should I do that (in python)?
x='buffalo'
exec("%s = %d" % (x,2))
After that you can check it by:
print buffalo
As an output you will see:
2
setattr
. And even when setattr
is inappropriate for whatever reason, being explicit and modifying locals
or globals
as appropriate is still better than exec
.
– abarnert
Oct 1 '13 at 17:57
exec()
is not dangerous: what is dangerous is the on how and in which context you use it.
– Billal Begueradj
Apr 27 '17 at 7:20
This is the best way, I know of to create dynamic variables in python.
my_dict = {}
x = "Buffalo"
my_dict[x] = 4
I found a similar, but not the same question here Creating dynamically named variables from user input
x
, not the string literal.
– Martijn Pieters♦
Oct 1 '13 at 17:31
You can use a Dictionary to keep track of the keys and values.
For instance...
dictOfStuff = {} ##Make a Dictionary
x = "Buffalo" ##OR it can equal the input of something, up to you.
dictOfStuff[x] = 4 ##Get the dict spot that has the same key ("name") as what X is equal to. In this case "Buffalo". and set it to 4. Or you can set it to what ever you like
print(dictOfStuff[x]) ##print out the value of the spot in the dict that same key ("name") as the dictionary.
A dictionary is very similar to a real life dictionary. You have a word and you have a definition. You can look up the word and get the definition. So in this case, you have the word "Buffalo" and it's definition is 4. It can work with any other word and definition. Just make sure you put them into the dictionary first.