currently I'm displaying keys only, each in new line:
'<br/>'.join(mydict)
how do I display them like key:: value, each in the new line?
Go through the dict.items()
iterator that will yield a key, value tuple:
'<br/>'.join(['%s:: %s' % (key, value) for (key, value) in d.items()])
Updated with modern f-string
notation:
'<br/>'.join([f'{key}:: {value}' for key, value in d.items()])
'<br/>'.join(['%s:: %s' % kv for kv in d.items()])
Dec 29, 2018 at 2:15
That, or an even cooler solution using join
to join both items and the (key,value) pairs, avoiding the now-obsolete %
interpolation, using only a single dummy variable _
, and dropping the redundant list comprehension:
"<br/>".join(":: ".join(_) for _ in mydict.items())
Be aware that dicts have no ordering, so without sorted()
you might not get what you want:
>>> mydict = dict(a="A", b="B", c="C")
>>> ", ".join("=".join(_) for _ in mydict.items())
'a=A, c=C, b=B'
This also only work when all keys and values are strings, otherwise join
will complain. A more robust solution would be:
", ".join("=".join((str(k),str(v))) for k,v in mydict.items())
Now it works great, even for keys and values of mixed types:
>>> mydict = {'1':1, 2:'2', 3:3}
>>> ", ".join("=".join((str(k),str(v))) for k,v in mydict.items())
'2=2, 3=3, 1=1'
Of course, for mixed types a plain sorted()
will not work as expected. Use it only if you know all keys are strings (or all numeric, etc). In the former case, you can drop the first str()
too:
>>> mydict = dict(a=1, b=2, c=2)
>>> ", ".join("=".join((k,str(v))) for k,v in sorted(mydict.items()))
'a=1, b=2, c=3'
sorted()
, and the last one expects uniform data (and string keys). It all depends on your data format.
Apr 21, 2021 at 8:11
str
, shadowing the builtin str
class. Don't use builtin names to name your objects!
Apr 21, 2021 at 8:22
In python 3.6 I prefer this syntax, which makes the code even more readable:
'<br/>'.join([f'{key}: {value}' for key, value in d.items()])
If you wanted to be more pythonic, we can remove the for
-comprehension altogether.
'<br/>'.join(map(':: '.join, mydict.items()))
)
is missing in the end: '<br/>'.join(map(':: '.join, mydict.items()))
I liked what Filip Dupanović did above. I modified this to be python3-ish using str.format
method.
'<br/>'.join(['{0}:: {1}'.format(key, value) for (key, value) in d.items()])
I modified the above to generate a string I could feed to a SQL table create statement.
fieldpairs = ','.join(['{0} {1}'.format(key, value) for (key, value) in HiveTypes.items()])