- 📘 Day 8
- Dictionaries
- Creating a Dictionary
- Dictionary Length
- Accessing Dictionary Items
- Adding Items to a Dictionary
- Modifying Items in a Dictionary
- Checking Keys in a Dictionary
- Removing Key and Value Pairs from a Dictionary
- Changing Dictionary to a List of Items
- Clearing a Dictionary
- Deleting a Dictionary
- Copy a Dictionary
- Getting Dictionary Keys as a List
- Getting Dictionary Values as a List
- 💻 Exercises: Day 8
- Dictionaries
A dictionary is a collection of unordered, modifiable(mutable) paired (key: value) data type.
To create a dictionary we use curly brackets, {} or the dict() built-in function.
# syntax
empty_dict = {}
# Dictionary with data values
dct = {'key1':'value1', 'key2':'value2', 'key3':'value3', 'key4':'value4'}
Example:
person = {
'first_name':'Asabeneh',
'last_name':'Yetayeh',
'age':250,
'country':'Finland',
'is_marred':True,
'skills':['JavaScript', 'React', 'Node', 'MongoDB', 'Python'],
'address':{
'street':'Space street',
'zipcode':'02210'
}
}
The dictionary above shows that a value could be any data types:string, boolean, list, tuple, set or a dictionary.
It checks the number of 'key: value' pairs in the dictionary.
# syntax
dct = {'key1':'value1', 'key2':'value2', 'key3':'value3', 'key4':'value4'}
print(len(dct)) # 4
Example:
person = {
'first_name':'Asabeneh',
'last_name':'Yetayeh',
'age':250,
'country':'Finland',
'is_married':True,
'skills':['JavaScript', 'React', 'Node', 'MongoDB', 'Python'],
'address':{
'street':'Space street',
'zipcode':'02210'
}
}
print(len(person)) # 7
We can access Dictionary items by referring to its key name.
# syntax
dct = {'key1':'value1', 'key2':'value2', 'key3':'value3', 'key4':'value4'}
print(dct['key1']) # value1
print(dct['key4']) # value4
Example:
person = {
'first_name':'Asabeneh',
'last_name':'Yetayeh',
'age':250,
'country':'Finland',
'is_marred':True,
'skills':['JavaScript', 'React', 'Node', 'MongoDB', 'Python'],
'address':{
'street':'Space street',
'zipcode':'02210'
}
}
print(person['first_name']) # Asabeneh
print(person['country']) # Finland
print(person['skills']) # ['JavaScript', 'React', 'Node', 'MongoDB', 'Python']
print(person['skills'][0]) # JavaScript
print(person['address']['street']) # Space street
print(person['city']) # Error
Accessing an item by key name raises an error if the key does not exist. To avoid this error first we have to check if a key exist or we can use the get method. The get method returns None, which is a NoneType object data type, if the key does not exist.
person = {
'first_name':'Asabeneh',
'last_name':'Yetayeh',
'age':250,
'country':'Finland',
'is_marred':True,
'skills':['JavaScript', 'React', 'Node', 'MongoDB', 'Python'],
'address':{
'street':'Space street',
'zipcode':'02210'
}
}
print(person.get('first_name')) # Asabeneh
print(person.get('country')) # Finland
print(person.get('skills')) #['HTML','CSS','JavaScript', 'React', 'Node', 'MongoDB', 'Python']
print(person.get('city')) # None
We can add new key and value pairs to a dictionary
# syntax
dct = {'key1':'value1', 'key2':'value2', 'key3':'value3', 'key4':'value4'}
dct['key5'] = 'value5'
Example:
person = {
'first_name':'Asabeneh',
'last_name':'Yetayeh',
'age':250,
'country':'Finland',
'is_marred':True,
'skills':['JavaScript', 'React', 'Node', 'MongoDB', 'Python'],
'address':{
'street':'Space street',
'zipcode':'02210'
}
}
person['job_title'] = 'Instructor'
person['skills'].append('HTML')
print(person)
We can modify items in a dictionary
# syntax
dct = {'key1':'value1', 'key2':'value2', 'key3':'value3', 'key4':'value4'}
dct['key1'] = 'value-one'
Example:
person = {
'first_name':'Asabeneh',
'last_name':'Yetayeh',
'age':250,
'country':'Finland',
'is_marred':True,
'skills':['JavaScript', 'React', 'Node', 'MongoDB', 'Python'],
'address':{
'street':'Space street',
'zipcode':'02210'
}
}
person['first_name'] = 'Eyob'
person['age'] = 252
We use the in operator to check if a key exist in a dictionary
# syntax
dct = {'key1':'value1', 'key2':'value2', 'key3':'value3', 'key4':'value4'}
print('key2' in dct) # True
print('key5' in dct) # False
- pop(key): removes the item with the specified key name:
- popitem(): removes the last item
- del: removes an item with specified key name
# syntax
dct = {'key1':'value1', 'key2':'value2', 'key3':'value3', 'key4':'value4'}
dct.pop('key1') # removes key1 item
dct = {'key1':'value1', 'key2':'value2', 'key3':'value3', 'key4':'value4'}
dct.popitem() # removes the last item
del dct['key2'] # removes key2 item
Example:
person = {
'first_name':'Asabeneh',
'last_name':'Yetayeh',
'age':250,
'country':'Finland',
'is_marred':True,
'skills':['JavaScript', 'React', 'Node', 'MongoDB', 'Python'],
'address':{
'street':'Space street',
'zipcode':'02210'
}
}
person.pop('first_name') # Removes the firstname item
person.popitem() # Removes the address item
del person['is_married'] # Removes the is_married item
The items() method changes dictionary to a list of tuples.
# syntax
dct = {'key1':'value1', 'key2':'value2', 'key3':'value3', 'key4':'value4'}
print(dct.items()) # dict_items([('key1', 'value1'), ('key2', 'value2'), ('key3', 'value3'), ('key4', 'value4')])
If we don't want the items in a dictionary we can clear them using clear() method
# syntax
dct = {'key1':'value1', 'key2':'value2', 'key3':'value3', 'key4':'value4'}
print(dct.clear()) # None
If we do not use the dictionary we can delete it completely
# syntax
dct = {'key1':'value1', 'key2':'value2', 'key3':'value3', 'key4':'value4'}
del dct
We can copy a dictionary using a copy() method. Using copy we can avoid mutation of the original dictionary.
# syntax
dct = {'key1':'value1', 'key2':'value2', 'key3':'value3', 'key4':'value4'}
dct_copy = dct.copy() # {'key1':'value1', 'key2':'value2', 'key3':'value3', 'key4':'value4'}
The keys() method gives us all the keys of a a dictionary as a list.
# syntax
dct = {'key1':'value1', 'key2':'value2', 'key3':'value3', 'key4':'value4'}
keys = dct.keys()
print(keys) # dict_keys(['key1', 'key2', 'key3', 'key4'])
The values method gives us all the values of a a dictionary as a list.
# syntax
dct = {'key1':'value1', 'key2':'value2', 'key3':'value3', 'key4':'value4'}
values = dct.values()
print(values) # dict_values(['value1', 'value2', 'value3', 'value4'])
🌕 You are astonishing. Now, you are super charged with the power of dictionaries. You have just completed day 8 challenges and you are 8 steps a head in to your way to greatness. Now do some exercises for your brain and muscles.
- Create an empty dictionary called dog
- Add name, color, breed, legs, age to the dog dictionary
- Create a student dictionary and add first_name, last_name, gender, age, marital status, skills, country, city and address as keys for the dictionary
- Get the length of the student dictionary
- Get the value of skills and check the data type, it should be a list
- Modify the skills values by adding one or two skills
- Get the dictionary keys as a list
- Get the dictionary values as a list
- Change the dictionary to a list of tuples using items() method
- Delete one of the items in the dictionary
- Delete one of the dictionaries
🎉 CONGRATULATIONS ! 🎉