On Thu, Jul 31, 2014 at 1:17 PM, Terry Reedy <tjre...@udel.edu> wrote: > On 7/31/2014 7:24 AM, Dilu Sasidharan wrote: > >> I am wondering why the dictionary in python not returning multi value >> key error when i define something like >> >> p = {'k':"value0",'k':"value1"} > > > This is documented behavior: "you can specify the same key multiple times in > the key/datum list, and the final dictionary’s value for that key will be > the last one given." I am not sure whether this is an accident of the > initial design, never changed since, or intended for certain uses. It may > partly be because this choice is slightly simpler or, since keys are > expressions, not constants, that the check can only come at runtime.
I don't know either, but I think that it's generally expected that the above would be equivalent to: p = dict() p['k'] = "value0" p['k'] = "value1" which of course will not throw an error since you're just updating the value in that case. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list