On Saturday, March 31, 2018 at 4:30:04 PM UTC+5:30, bartc wrote: > On 30/03/2018 21:13, C W wrote: > > Hello all, > > > > I want to create a dictionary. > > > > The keys are 26 lowercase letters. The values are 26 uppercase letters. > > > > The output should look like: > > {'a': 'A', 'b': 'B',...,'z':'Z' } > > > I know I can use string.ascii_lowercase and string.ascii_uppercase, but how > > do I use it exactly? > > I have tried the following to create the keys: > > myDict = {} > > for e in string.ascii_lowercase: > > myDict[e]=0 > > If the input string S is "cat" and the desired output is {'c':'C', > 'a':'A', 't':'T'}, then the loop might look like this: > > D = {} > for c in S: > D[c] = c.upper() > > print (D) > > Output: > > {'c': 'C', 'a': 'A', 't': 'T'}
As does… >>> {c: c.upper() for c in s} {'a': 'A', 'c': 'C', 't': 'T'} : dict [Recent pythons; not sure when dict-comprehensions appeared] -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list