Ok Sorry!! Sorry the noise!!
def func(object): print "%s" % object Regards On Nov 11, 2:33 pm, macm <moura.ma...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi > > Sorry ! My mistake. > > >>> myDict = {} > >>> myDict['foo'] = {} > >>> myDict['foo']['bar'] = 'works' > > ----- > > >>> def myFunction( MyObj ): > > ... # MyObj is a nested dicionary (normaly 2 steps like myDict['foo'] > ['bar']) > ... # I want inspect this MyObj > ... # what keys was pass > ... print MyObj.keys() ## WRONG > ... # So What I want is : > ... # return foo bar > > ---------------- > > >>> result = myFunction( myDict['foo']['bar'] ) > >>> result > > Should print : > > ... foo bar > > Best Regards > > macm > > On Nov 11, 2:09 pm, Jon Clements <jon...@googlemail.com> wrote: > > > > > > > > > On Nov 11, 1:31 pm, macm <moura.ma...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > Hi Folks > > > > I pass a nested dictionary to a function. > > > > def Dicty( dict[k1][k2] ): > > > print k1 > > > print k2 > > > > There is a fast way (trick) to get k1 and k2 as string. > > > > Whithout loop all dict. Just it! > > > > Regards > > > > macm > > > I've tried to understand this, but can't tell if it's a question or > > statement, and even then can't tell what the question or statement > > is... > > > Care to eloborate? -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list