265

I want to output my key value pairs from a python dictionary as such:

key1 \t value1
key2 \t value2

I thought I could maybe do it like this:

for i in d:
    print d.keys(i), d.values(i)

but obviously that's not how it goes as the keys() and values() don't take an argument.

1

12 Answers 12

506

Python 2 and Python 3

i is the key, so you would just need to use it:

for i in d:
    print i, d[i]

Python 3

d.items() returns the iterator; to get a list, you need to pass the iterator to list() yourself.

for k, v in d.items():
    print(k, v)

Python 2

You can get an iterator that contains both keys and values. d.items() returns a list of (key, value) tuples, while d.iteritems() returns an iterator that provides the same:

for k, v in d.iteritems():
    print k, v
0
94

A little intro to dictionary

d={'a':'apple','b':'ball'}
d.keys()  # displays all keys in list
['a','b']
d.values() # displays your values in list
['apple','ball']
d.items() # displays your pair tuple of key and value
[('a','apple'),('b','ball')

Print keys,values method one

for x in d.keys():
    print(x +" => " + d[x])

Another method

for key,value in d.items():
    print(key + " => " + value)

You can get keys using iter

>>> list(iter(d))
['a', 'b']

You can get value of key of dictionary using get(key, [value]):

d.get('a')
'apple'

If key is not present in dictionary,when default value given, will return value.

d.get('c', 'Cat')
'Cat'
1
  • 2
    Absolutely fantastic succinct overview of dictionaries. Mar 3 at 4:53
36

Or, for Python 3:

for k,v in dict.items():
    print(k, v)
30

The dictionary:

d={'key1':'value1','key2':'value2','key3':'value3'}

Another one line solution:

print(*d.items(), sep='\n')

Output:

('key1', 'value1')
('key2', 'value2')
('key3', 'value3')

(but, since no one has suggested something like this before, I suspect it is not good practice)

3
  • 6
    i think this should definitely be a more accepted answer! ... i feel this answer demos the type of power in python that is mostly ignored... you can also do the follow to get rid of the '()' ... print(*[f"{': '.join(map(str,v))}" for i,v in enumerate(list(d.items()))], sep='\n') .... or you can do the following to conveniently print index #'s as well print(*[f"[{i}] {': '.join(map(str,v))}" for i,v in enumerate(list(d.items()))], sep='\n')
    – greenhouse
    Jul 16, 2019 at 11:03
  • Can somebody explain why the * is needed and how it converts dict_values to actual values. Thank you.
    – MichaelE
    Jan 20, 2021 at 22:28
  • 4
    The * operator also works as an "unpacker" (besides multiplying). So what happens is that it unpacks the dictionary items. It doesn't convert, I would say it "opens" the box that d.items() is, and print receives the contents. "unpacking operator python" is the keyword for a more technical explanation. Jan 22, 2021 at 1:04
7
for key, value in d.iteritems():
    print key, '\t', value

For Python 3.x

for key, value in d.iteritems():
    print(f'{key}\t{value}') 
0
6

You can access your keys and/or values by calling items() on your dictionary.

for key, value in d.iteritems():
    print(key, value)
1
  • 2
    you said items() in the first line of your text and in the code you put iteritems(). In python3x the correct way is the dict.items() as you said first. Dec 21, 2018 at 10:18
5

If you want to sort the output by dict key you can use the collection package.

import collections
for k, v in collections.OrderedDict(sorted(d.items())).items():
    print(k, v)

It works on python 3

4
>>> d={'a':1,'b':2,'c':3}
>>> for kv in d.items():
...     print kv[0],'\t',kv[1]
... 
a   1
c   3
b   2
2

In addition to ways already mentioned.. can use 'viewitems', 'viewkeys', 'viewvalues'

>>> d = {320: 1, 321: 0, 322: 3}
>>> list(d.viewitems())
[(320, 1), (321, 0), (322, 3)]
>>> list(d.viewkeys())
[320, 321, 322]
>>> list(d.viewvalues())
[1, 0, 3]

Or

>>> list(d.iteritems())
[(320, 1), (321, 0), (322, 3)]
>>> list(d.iterkeys())
[320, 321, 322]
>>> list(d.itervalues())
[1, 0, 3]

or using itemgetter

>>> from operator import itemgetter
>>> map(itemgetter(0), dd.items())     ####  for keys
['323', '332']
>>> map(itemgetter(1), dd.items())     ####  for values
['3323', 232]
1
  • It appears these methods have been deprecated in later releases of Python 3. 3.10 does not have those methods.
    – Nathan
    Feb 28, 2022 at 21:46
0

A simple dictionary:

x = {'X':"yes", 'Y':"no", 'Z':"ok"}

To print a specific (key, value) pair in Python 3 (pair at index 1 in this example):

for e in range(len(x)):
    print(([x for x in x.keys()][e], [x for x in x.values()][e]))

Output:

('X', 'yes')
('Y', 'no')
('Z', 'ok')

Here is a one liner solution to print all pairs in a tuple:

print(tuple(([x for x in x.keys()][i], [x for x in x.values()][i]) for i in range(len(x))))

Output:

(('X', 'yes'), ('Y', 'no'), ('Z', 'ok'))
0

To Print key-value pair, for example:

players = {
     'lebron': 'lakers',
     'giannis':   'milwakee bucks',
     'durant':  'brooklyn nets',
     'kawhi':   'clippers',    
}

for player,club in players.items():

print(f"\n{player.title()} is the leader of {club}")

The above code, key-value pair:

 'lebron': 'lakers', - Lebron is key and lakers is value

for loop - specify key, value in dictionary.item():

Now Print (Player Name is the leader of club).

the Output is:

#Lebron is the leader of lakers
#Giannis is the leader of milwakee bucks
#Durant is the leader of brooklyn nets
#Kawhi is the leader of clippers
0

If you're looking for pretty-printing a dictionary, check out Rich:

from rich import print

prices = {
    "banana": 4,
    "apple": 2,
    "orange": 1.5,
    "pear": 3,
    "strawberry": 1,
    "blueberry": 0.5,
    "mango": 4.5
}

print(prices)

enter image description here

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.