You create a new key/value pair on a dictionary by assigning a value to that key
d = {'key': 'value'}
print(d) # {'key': 'value'}
d['mynewkey'] = 'mynewvalue'
print(d) # {'key': 'value', 'mynewkey': 'mynewvalue'}
If the key doesn't exist, it's added and points to that value. If it exists, the current value it points to is overwritten.
Answer from Paolo Bergantino on Stack OverflowVideos
You create a new key/value pair on a dictionary by assigning a value to that key
d = {'key': 'value'}
print(d) # {'key': 'value'}
d['mynewkey'] = 'mynewvalue'
print(d) # {'key': 'value', 'mynewkey': 'mynewvalue'}
If the key doesn't exist, it's added and points to that value. If it exists, the current value it points to is overwritten.
I feel like consolidating info about Python dictionaries:
Creating an empty dictionary
data = {}
# OR
data = dict()
Creating a dictionary with initial values
data = {'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'c': 3}
# OR
data = dict(a=1, b=2, c=3)
# OR
data = {k: v for k, v in (('a', 1), ('b',2), ('c',3))}
Inserting/Updating a single value
data['a'] = 1 # Updates if 'a' exists, else adds 'a'
# OR
data.update({'a': 1})
# OR
data.update(dict(a=1))
# OR
data.update(a=1)
Inserting/Updating multiple values
data.update({'c':3,'d':4}) # Updates 'c' and adds 'd'
Python 3.9+:
The update operator |= now works for dictionaries:
data |= {'c':3,'d':4}
Creating a merged dictionary without modifying originals
data3 = {}
data3.update(data) # Modifies data3, not data
data3.update(data2) # Modifies data3, not data2
Python 3.5+:
This uses a new feature called dictionary unpacking.
data = {**data1, **data2, **data3}
Python 3.9+:
The merge operator | now works for dictionaries:
data = data1 | {'c':3,'d':4}
Deleting items in dictionary
del data[key] # Removes specific element in a dictionary
data.pop(key) # Removes the key & returns the value
data.clear() # Clears entire dictionary
Check if a key is already in dictionary
key in data
Iterate through pairs in a dictionary
for key in data: # Iterates just through the keys, ignoring the values
for key, value in d.items(): # Iterates through the pairs
for key in d.keys(): # Iterates just through key, ignoring the values
for value in d.values(): # Iterates just through value, ignoring the keys
Create a dictionary from two lists
data = dict(zip(list_with_keys, list_with_values))
Add a key, value pair to dictionary
aDict = {}
aDict[key] = value
What do you mean by dynamic addition.
For quick reference, all the following methods will add a new key 'a' if it does not exist already or it will update the existing key value pair with the new value offered:
data['a']=1
data.update({'a':1})
data.update(dict(a=1))
data.update(a=1)
You can also mixing them up, for example, if key 'c' is in data but 'd' is not, the following method will updates 'c' and adds 'd'
data.update({'c':3,'d':4})
I know how to update values in a dictionary. That's easy, and there are multiple ways to do it. However, what I'm looking for is how to add to a value in a dictionary. For example:
def frequency_dictionary(words):
new_dict = {}
for word in words:
if word not in new_dict:
new_dict[word] = 1
else:
#?????
return new_dictI want this function to add 1 to the value of a word for each time it is featured in the words list. For example, print(frequency_dictionary(["apple", "apple", "cat", 1])) should return {"apple":2, "cat":1, 1:1}. The comment in the function with question marks is the part I am stuck on. What are some options to do this?
I tried looking this up, but all I got was info on how to update values, not add to them.