> > Since it isn't practical to iterate over Eagle_Power_Nets and test for > presence in your Nets dict, you have to iterate over at least the keys > of Nets. You could just iterate over the keys rather than the whole > table, though: > > for net in Nets.keys(): > # Nets.iterkeys() would avoid building the list > # but that runs the same risks as your original > if net.upper() in in Eagle_Power_Nets : > del Nets[net] > thanks Steve, that does the job.
> Watch that spacing, by the way: Python is easy to keep readable if you > follow the style guidelines of PEP 8. Yeah, that's my great sin, in all languages I always 2 spaces, so that's the "best readable" for me. I still must write a beautifier, that doubles spaces when a Python file leaves my computer ;-) cheers, Stef Mientki -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list