Sure you can; it's called a dictionary:
d = {}
for x in range(1, 10):
d["string{0}".format(x)] = "Hello"
>>> d["string5"]
'Hello'
>>> d
{'string1': 'Hello',
'string2': 'Hello',
'string3': 'Hello',
'string4': 'Hello',
'string5': 'Hello',
'string6': 'Hello',
'string7': 'Hello',
'string8': 'Hello',
'string9': 'Hello'}
I said this somewhat tongue in check, but really the best way to associate one value with another value is a dictionary. That is what it was designed for!
Answer from the wolf on Stack OverflowSure you can; it's called a dictionary:
d = {}
for x in range(1, 10):
d["string{0}".format(x)] = "Hello"
>>> d["string5"]
'Hello'
>>> d
{'string1': 'Hello',
'string2': 'Hello',
'string3': 'Hello',
'string4': 'Hello',
'string5': 'Hello',
'string6': 'Hello',
'string7': 'Hello',
'string8': 'Hello',
'string9': 'Hello'}
I said this somewhat tongue in check, but really the best way to associate one value with another value is a dictionary. That is what it was designed for!
It is really bad idea, but...
for x in range(0, 9):
globals()['string%s' % x] = 'Hello'
and then for example:
print(string3)
will give you:
Hello
However this is bad practice. You should use dictionaries or lists instead, as others propose. Unless, of course, you really wanted to know how to do it, but did not want to use it.
Hi, I think I understand how to do this high level, but was hoping for help that was a little more specific.
From my understanding, creating dynamic variables goes like this:
for i in range(0, 9):
globals()[f"my_variable{i}"] = f"Hello from variable number {i}!
However, what if I want to make a variable that says server1, server2...server9- how do i attach the word to the beginning?
Dynamic variable name
python - How can you dynamically create variables? - Stack Overflow
Is it possible to create variables in a loop?
How to creating different variable name and through for loop?
Videos
Unless there is an overwhelming need to create a mess of variable names, I would just use a dictionary, where you can dynamically create the key names and associate a value to each.
a = {}
k = 0
while k < 10:
# dynamically create key
key = ...
# calculate value
value = ...
a[key] = value
k += 1
There are also some interesting data structures in the collections module that might be applicable.
globals() returns a dictionary of the module's variables. You can create a new variable by creating a key on that dictionary:
# By default, a module has some hidden variables defined
print({k: v for k, v in globals().items() if not k.startswith("__")})
for i in range(1, 11):
globals()[f"my_variable_{i}"] = i
print()
print(my_variable_1)
print(my_variable_2)
# and so on
print()
print({k: v for k, v in globals().items() if not k.startswith("__")})
Result:
{}
1
2
{'i': 10, 'my_variable_1': 1, 'my_variable_2': 2, 'my_variable_3': 3, 'my_variable_4': 4, 'my_variable_5': 5, 'my_variable_6': 6, 'my_variable_7': 7, 'my_variable_8': 8, 'my_variable_9': 9, 'my_variable_10': 10}
I need to create a large number of variable. Currently what I have is:
var1 = 0 var2 = 0 ... var1000 = 0
Is it possible to create these variables in some sort of loop instead of writing each one?
#Pseudocode
for i in range(1000):
var_i = 0Update:
Thanks a lot for all the comments! The list idea worked!