So I have a dictionary of lists like so:
dct = {'1': ['hello','goodbye'], '2': ['not here','definitely not here']}
What's the fastest way to check if 'hello' is in one of my lists in my dictionary
As Willem Van Onsem commented, the easiest way to achieve this is:
any('hello' in val for val in dct.values())
any
returns True if any of the values in the given iterable are truthy.
dct.values()
returns a dict_values
iterable that yields all the values in a dictionary.
'hello' in val for val in dct.values()
is a generator expression that yields True
for each value of dct
that 'hello'
is in.
If you want to know the keys the string is in, you can do:
keys = [key for key, value in dct.items() if 'hello' in value]
In your case, keys
will be ['1']
. If you do this anyways, you can then just call use that list in a boolean context, e.g. if keys: ...
.
any('hello' in val for val in dct.values())
.dct = { 'hello': 1, 'goodbye': 1, 'not here': 2, 'definitely not here': 2 }
-- that way it's a constant-time search, not one that takes longer based on how many items the dictionary has.