On 03/05/2013 01:48 AM, Lowly Minion wrote:
For a typical dict:

i.e.
d = { '1': 'a', '2', 'b' }

I might use something like:

d.get('1', None)

To get the value of 1.

What would be the most pythonic way of getting a nested value of a dictionary 
within a list:

some_list = [{ 'item': { 'letter': 'b',
                                   'word': 'bar' }},
                     { 'item': { 'letter': 'c',
                                   'word': 'charcoal' }}]

Currently I am looping through the list as such:

for item in some_list:
   print item['item']['letter']

One other method explored was:
item.get('item').get('letter')

Is a double get the best way? Doesn't seem right to me.

Thank you in advance for your help



I'm not sure what the puzzle is. Use [key] if you know the key exists, and use get( key, default) if you don't. But be aware that if the first key doesn't exist, then the default had better be a dict (rather than something like None), or the second lookup will throw an exception, even if you use get.

One other possibility, depending on just what you're doing with the data, is to wrap it in a try/catch.

However, if you know exactly what the keys are, perhaps you should use a namedtuple instead of a dict.

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DaveA
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