"Ian Kelly" <ian.g.ke...@gmail.com> wrote in message news:CALwzidnTUifj_L=DSH_8s+z0L44pxVvdpG1+pfz1Tzm=ect...@mail.gmail.com... > On Sun, Mar 15, 2015 at 11:25 PM, Frank Millman <fr...@chagford.com> > wrote: >> Hi all >> >> I like dict comprehensions, but I don't use them very often, so when I do >> I >> need to look up the format. > [...] > > Dict comprehensions aren't covered in the library reference because > they're a language feature, not a part of the standard library. The > syntax is defined at: > > https://docs.python.org/3/reference/expressions.html#dictionary-displays >
This is what the library reference says about lists - """ Lists may be constructed in several ways: Using a pair of square brackets to denote the empty list: [] Using square brackets, separating items with commas: [a], [a, b, c] Using a list comprehension: [x for x in iterable] Using the type constructor: list() or list(iterable) """ This is what it says about dictionaries - """ Dictionaries can be created by placing a comma-separated list of key: value pairs within braces, for example: {'jack': 4098, 'sjoerd': 4127} or {4098: 'jack', 4127: 'sjoerd'}, or by the dict constructor. class dict(**kwarg) class dict(mapping, **kwarg) class dict(iterable, **kwarg) Return a new dictionary initialized from an optional positional argument and a possibly empty set of keyword arguments. """ If you did not know about dict comprehensions, there is nothing to tell you that they even exist. I feel that it should be mentioned. Frank -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list