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sample input in place of separate_function:

separate_function = [('primary_1', 'val_1'), ('primary_1', 'val_2'), ('primary_3', 'val_2')] 

Expected output i.e. my_dictionary:

{
    "main": {
        "primary_1": [
            "val_1",
            "val_2"
        ],
        "primary_3": [
            "val_2"
        ]
    }
}

I want to create a dictionary, my_dictionary like above.

There are multiple keys like "main" in the expected output. To reduce the complexity of the problem, I have hard-coded it. There is a generator function on which I need to iterate over to create this format. Again for simplicity, I have shown that as a list of tuples. I have tried so far:

from collections import defaultdict
my_dictionary = defaultdict(dict)
for primary_var, value in separate_function:
    my_dictionary['main'][primary_var].append(value)
    # This would have worked if I have expected values as string 
    # rather than a list in that case I can write the above line like this:
    my_dictionary['main'][primary_var] = value

try, except can be used and if KeyError then assign first else append can be done, However, I am looking for a better clean solution. Please suggest. Thanks.

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2 Answers 2

1

You can use dict.setdefault to initialize a new dict key with a new list:

my_dictionary = {'main': {}}
for k, v in separate_function:
    my_dictionary['main'].setdefault(k, []).append(v)

my_dictionary would become:

{'main': {'primary_1': ['val_1', 'val_2'], 'primary_3': ['val_2']}}
1

This is one approach using collections.defaultdict.

Demo:

from collections import defaultdict
separate_function = [('primary_1', 'val_1'), ('primary_1', 'val_2'), ('primary_3', 'val_2')] 
result = defaultdict(list)
for k, v in separate_function:
    result[k].append(v)


my_dictionary = {"main": result}
print(my_dictionary)

Output:

{'main': defaultdict(<type 'list'>, {'primary_3': ['val_2'], 'primary_1': ['val_1', 'val_2']})}

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