2

How can I create a key:value pair in a first loop and then just append values in subsequent loops? For example:

a = [1,2,3]
b = [8,9,10]
c = [4,6,5]

myList= [a,b,c]
positions= ['first_position', 'second_position', 'third_position']

I would like to create a dictionary which records the position values for each letter so:

mydict = {'first_position':[1,8,4], 'second_position':[2,9,6], 'third_position':[3,10,5]}

Imagine that instead of 3 letters with 3 values each, I had millions. How could I loop through each letter and:

  1. In the first loop create the key:value pair 'first_position':[1]
  2. In subsequent loops append values to the corresponding key: 'first_position':[1,8,4]

Thanks!

1
  • Which part are you struggling with, specifically?
    – AMC
    Mar 20, 2020 at 22:15

3 Answers 3

5

Try this code:

mydict = {}
for i in range(len(positions)):
    mydict[positions[i]] = [each[i] for each in myList]

Output:

{'first_position': [1, 8, 4],
 'second_position': [2, 9, 6],
 'third_position': [3, 10, 5]}
1

dictionary.get('key') will return None if the key doesn't exist. So, you can check if the value is None and then append it if it isn't.

dict = {}
for list in myList: 
  for position, val in enumerate(list):
    this_position = positions[position]
    if dict.get(this_position) is not None:
      dict[this_position].append(val)
    else:
      dict[this_position] = [val]
1

The zip function will iterate the i'th values of positions, a, b and c in order. So,

a = [1,2,3]
b = [8,9,10]
c = [4,6,5]

positions= ['first_position', 'second_position', 'third_position']
sources = [positions, a, b, c]

mydict = {vals[0]:vals[1:] for vals in zip(*sources)}
print(mydict)

This created tuples which is usually fine if the lists are read only. Otherwise do

mydict = {vals[0]:list(vals[1:]) for vals in zip(*sources)}

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge that you have read and understand our privacy policy and code of conduct.

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