What's the difference between () vs [] vs {} in Python?
They're collections? How can I tell when to use which?
() - tuple
A tuple is a sequence of items that can't be changed (immutable).
[] - list
A list is a sequence of items that can be changed (mutable).
{} - dictionary or set
A dictionary is a list of key-value pairs, with unique keys (mutable). From Python 2.7/3.1, {} can also represent a set of unique values (mutable).
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3N.B. From 2.7/3.1, {} is either a dictionary (
{"a":"1","b":"2"}) or a set ({"a","b","c"}). A set is an unordered collection of unique values, which can be changed (although each item in it can't). – Thomas K Dec 10 '10 at 11:26 -
In general: a tuple is heterogeneous while a list is homogeneous. Of course the distinction/enforcement is blurred with dynamic typing. See the link in Mark Byers's answer. – user166390 Dec 10 '10 at 20:33
- () is a tuple: An immutable collection of values, usually (but not necessarily) of different types.
- [] is a list: A mutable collection of values, usually (but not necessarily) of the same type.
- {} is a dict: Use a dictionary for key value pairs.
For the difference between lists and tuples see here. See also:
() - tuple
[] - list
{} - dictionary
All Python tutorials should cover this. Here is a good place to start.
In addition to the tuple, list and dict given by the other answers, {} also denotes a set literal in python 2.7 and python 3.1. (This makes sense because set elements act like the keys of a dict).
type([])will result in "<type 'list'>". Happy coding. – user166390 Dec 10 '10 at 20:30