-2

I have following dictionary,

     result = 
    [{'Img Entropy': 0.4759365334486925,
      'Avg Row Entropy': 0.4756050513785311,
      'Comp Size, B': 9675063,
      'COMP RATIO, out/in': 0.10262087228128054,
      'Stack Pos': 3},
     {'Img Entropy': 0.4759365334486925,
      'Avg Row Entropy': 0.4756050513785311,
      'Comp Size, B': 9675063,
      'COMP RATIO, out/in': 0.10262087228128054,
      'Stack Pos': 3},
     {'Img Entropy': 0.4759365334486925,
      'Avg Row Entropy': 0.4756050513785311,
      'Comp Size, B': 9675063,
      'COMP RATIO, out/in': 0.10262087228128054,
      'Stack Pos': 3}]

I would like to update the value for 2nd last 'Stack Pos'. When I run the following command, all the 'Stack Pos' keys get updated with value 10.

result[-2]['Stack Pos'] = 10

How can I update/add to only the specific key in the list?

The following function creates the list of dictionaries -

def get_compression_stats(img):
    result = []
    meta = {}
    r = range(0,len(img))
    i_e, r_avg_e, r_median_e = get_entropy(img,r)
    #iterate over all combinations for each file
    comp_parameters = {'typesize':4}
    filter_names = ['NONE','SHUFFLE','BITSHUFFLE','BYTEDELTA','SHUFFLE+BYTEDELTA','BITSHUFFLE+BYTEDELTA','SHUFFLE+BITSHUFFLE+BYTEDELTA']
    rows_for_blocksize = [0,1,64]
    for c in blosc2.compressor_list():
        print("Codec: "+str(c))
        comp_parameters['codec'] = c
        for f in filter_names:
            print("Filter: "+f)
            comp_parameters['filters'] = get_filter_array(f)
            for r in rows_for_blocksize:
                comp_parameters['blocksize'] = r*img.shape[1]*img[0][0].nbytes
                print("Blocksize: "+ str(comp_parameters['blocksize']))
                i_u8 = get_ubyte_img(img)
                c_img = blosc2.compress2(i_u8,**comp_parameters)
                orig_len, comp_len, blk_size = blosc2.get_cbuffer_sizes(c_img)
                c_ratio = comp_len/orig_len
                meta['Img Entropy'] = i_e
                meta['Avg Row Entropy'] = r_avg_e
                meta['Comp Size, B'] = comp_len
                meta['COMP RATIO, out/in'] = c_ratio
                print("Comp Ratio, out/in: "+ str(c_ratio))
                result.append(meta)
    return(result)

Thank you.

7
  • 1
    Seems like the problem happens when you create the variable result. You are creating three references to the same object, so modifying one of them will modify all of them.
    – rafaelc
    May 9, 2023 at 0:10
  • 1
    If they all get updated, then it must be that all three entries in the list are actually the same object, so of course updating one of them will update all of them. May 9, 2023 at 0:11
  • Show us how you are creating result in the first place. May 9, 2023 at 0:12
  • Updated the question to show how the list of dictionaries is created.
    – shparekh
    May 9, 2023 at 0:19
  • Does this answer your question? Changing one dict value changes all values
    – pho
    May 9, 2023 at 0:21

2 Answers 2

0

This is caused because dictionaries in Python are pass-by-reference, not pass-by-value, and Python never implicitly copies objects. What happens is Python is given multiple copies of the location to the same dictionary meaning when you change one, it changes all of them.

You need to "recreate" meta each time you run through the for loop. If you put meta = {} at the top of the for loop it will fix it as it is recreating meta as a new empty dictionary.

Additionally, at the bottom of the for loop you can do:

meta = {
  'Img Entropy': i_e,
  'Avg Row Entropy': r_avg_e,
  'Comp Size, B': comp_len,
  'COMP RATIO, out/in': c_ratio,
}
6
  • 1
    Neither dict1 nor dict2 are mentioned in the question. This answer is, at best, quite incomplete. May 9, 2023 at 0:14
  • 1
    pass-by-reference or value seems nothing to do with this question. What he needs is to traverse, get dict, modify.
    – Bob liao
    May 9, 2023 at 8:05
  • Your answer could be improved with additional supporting information. Please edit to add further details, such as citations or documentation, so that others can confirm that your answer is correct. You can find more information on how to write good answers in the help center.
    – Community Bot
    May 9, 2023 at 10:44
  • @Bobliao if the dictionaries were pass by value they wouldn't need to be copied in the same way an int passes by value so if I do int x = 0; a = x; x = 2; doesn't change a.
    – ajgrinds
    May 9, 2023 at 19:04
  • Okay I significantly improved the answer.
    – ajgrinds
    May 9, 2023 at 19:11
0

If that happens, your list just contains multiple references to the very same dictionary - and not a list of copies.

So, you need to copy the dict when you make the list, instead of adding it multiple times. The copy module helps.

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