44

This is pretty simple but I'd love a pretty, pythonic way of doing it. Basically, given a dictionary, return the subdictionary that contains only those keys that start with a certain string.

» d = {'Apple': 1, 'Banana': 9, 'Carrot': 6, 'Baboon': 3, 'Duck': 8, 'Baby': 2}
» print slice(d, 'Ba')
{'Banana': 9, 'Baby': 2, 'Baboon': 3}

This is fairly simple to do with a function:

def slice(sourcedict, string):
    newdict = {}
    for key in sourcedict.keys():
        if key.startswith(string):
            newdict[key] = sourcedict[key]
    return newdict

But surely there is a nicer, cleverer, more readable solution? Could a generator help here? (I never have enough opportunities to use those).

2

3 Answers 3

79

How about this:

in python 2.x :

def slicedict(d, s):
    return {k:v for k,v in d.iteritems() if k.startswith(s)}

In python 3.x :

def slicedict(d, s):
    return {k:v for k,v in d.items() if k.startswith(s)}
5
  • 3
    Don't shadow the slice built-in (even though almost no one uses it). Dec 30, 2010 at 0:12
  • That dict comprehension is delicious. And I had no idea slice was a builtin, wtf?
    – Aphex
    Dec 30, 2010 at 0:19
  • 4
    @Ignacio: When you're in a tiny, local function, it really isn't always worth worrying about stepping on builtins--there are too many of them, with far too common names. Better just to worry about it for nontrivial functions (if that) and globals. Builtins aren't keywords, after all. Dec 30, 2010 at 0:24
  • 8
    No dictionary comprehension way dict((k, v) for k,v in d.iteritems() if k.startswith(s))
    – razpeitia
    Dec 30, 2010 at 1:46
  • 2
    in 2017: python can comprehension a dict purely using in: {k:d[k] for k in d if k.startswith(s)}, no more need to invoke a function call.
    – cowbert
    Sep 27, 2017 at 18:14
9

In functional style:

dict(filter(lambda item: item[0].startswith(string),sourcedict.iteritems()))

2
  • 8
    In Python, functional style is usually just what you don't want. Dec 30, 2010 at 0:25
  • 13
    Eh? The dict-comprehension approach certainly falls under my definition of "functional style". Dec 30, 2010 at 3:09
3

In Python 3 use items() instead:

def slicedict(d, s):
    return {k:v for k,v in d.items() if k.startswith(s)}

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