On Fri, 2009-06-12 at 04:51 -0700, khem...@gmail.com wrote: > Hi. > As the subject says, I'm a newbie trying to learn python and now > dictionaries. I can create a dict, understand it and use it for simple > tasks. But the thing is that I don't really get the point on how to > use these in real life programing. > > For example I tryed to create a very simple phonebook > > code: > > d = {'fname': [], 'ename': []} > name1 = 'ricky' > name2 = 'martin' > d['fname'].append(name1) > d['ename'].append(name2) > > name1 = 'britney' > name2 = 'spears' > d['fname'].append(name1) > d['ename'].append(name2) > > > This gives me: > {'ename': ['martin', 'spears'], 'fname': ['ricky', 'britney']} > > I wonder if this is a correct usage and thinking about dictioaries in > python. > Everything in my example is based on a serval lists in a dictionary, > and person 1 is == ename[0] & fname[0] > and person 2 is == ename[1] & fname[1], it's based on position and > indexing. > > Is this correct if no, how would you do it? > if yes, how can I print the result out in a nice way? I need a for- > loop that prints: > all [0] in all lists > all [0] in all lists and so on.
That's probably not the data model I'd use for a phone book. The following isn't either, but is better: d = dict() d[('martin', 'ricky')] = '555-1212' d[('spears', 'britney')] = '555-1213' for last, first in d: phone_number = d[(last, first)] print ... -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list