On Mon, Jun 20, 2011 at 12:32 AM, TheSaint <nob...@nowhere.net.no> wrote: > Hello > > Trying to pop some key from a dict while is iterating over it will cause an > exception. > How I can remove items when the search result is true. > > Example: > > while len(dict): > for key in dict.keys(): > if dict[key] is not my_result: > dict.pop(key) > else: > condition_to_break > print('Dictionary is over')
One way is to iterate over an explicitly formed list of the keys. for key in list(dict.keys()): That creates an entirely new list with a snapshot copy of the keys. If you then remove elements from the dictionary, the list will still iterate correctly. I'm not sure what you're trying to do, but you may find it easier to use the 'filter' function (which takes an iterable, so possibly use dict.iteritems() for that).It'll keep some and not others, and then you can make use of just the ones you get back. Chris Angelico -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list