<LameJoke> Thanks Captain Obvious! </LameJoke> Daniel Nogradi wrote: > > I have a program that keeps some of its data in a list of tuples. > > Sometimes, I want to be able to find that data out of the list. Here is > > the list in question: > > > > [('password01', 'unk'), ('host', 'dragonstone.org'), ('port', '1234'), > > ('character01', 'Thessalus')] > > > > For a regular list, I could do something like x.index('host') and find > > the index of it, but I don't know how to do this for a tuple where the > > data item isn't known in advance. For example, I want to get the "host" > > entry from the list above; but I can only retrieve it if I know what it > > contains (e.g., x.index(('host', 'dragonstone.org'))). > > > > Is there a better way to do this than a construct similar the following? > > > > for key, value in x: > > if key == 'host': > > print value > > > > If I were you I would use a dictionary for such a thing: > > mydict = dict( password01='unk', host='dragonstone.org', port='1234', > character01='Thessalus' ) > > And then you would look up host by: > > mydict[ 'host' ] > > HTH, > Daniel
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