Hi all, I'd like to ask for comments or advice on a simple code for testing a "subdict", i.e. check whether all items of a given dictionary are present in a reference dictionary. Sofar I have:
def is_subdict(test_dct, base_dct): """Test whether all the items of test_dct are present in base_dct.""" unique_obj = object() for key, value in test_dct.items(): if not base_dct.get(key, unique_obj) == value: return False return True I'd like to ask for possibly more idiomatic solutions, or more obvious ways to do this. Did I maybe missed some builtin possibility? I am unsure whether the check against an unique object() or the negated comparison are usual.? (The builtin exceptions are ok, in case anything not dict-like is passed. A cornercase like >>> is_subdict({}, 4) >>> True doesen't seem to be worth a special check just now.) Thanks in advance for the suggestions, regards, vbr -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list