On Feb 24, 7:58 pm, Jeff Schwab <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > Can someone explain this? > > >>>> a= {} > > Create an empty dict and bind it to the name a. > > >>>> a[(3,)]= 0 > > Set the key/value pair (3,):0 to the dict. > > >>>> (3,) in a > > Is (3,) one of the keys in the dict? > > > True > > Yes, it is. > > >>>> (3,) is (3,) > > Create two separate tuples (that happen to be equivalent). Are they the > same object? > > > False > > No, they are not. > > Every time you write (3,), you are potentially creating a new object. > These objects have equal values (and hash codes), so they are > interchangeable for purposes of keying a dict.
I see. You stated, > Is (3,) one of the keys in the dict? > > > True > > Yes, it is. It isn't, but it does equal a key that's already in the dict. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list