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Groups > comp.lang.python > #71237
| From | Peter Otten <__peter__@web.de> |
|---|---|
| Subject | Re: How to implement key of key in python? |
| Date | 2014-05-10 10:21 +0200 |
| Organization | None |
| References | <1ba8744e-943b-4c71-abd7-9dea12db8780@googlegroups.com> <mailman.9840.1399689009.18130.python-list@python.org> <85c11614-b1a3-4021-b071-ffa1e0e5d3a7@googlegroups.com> |
| Newsgroups | comp.lang.python |
| Message-ID | <mailman.9845.1399710131.18130.python-list@python.org> (permalink) |
eckhleung@gmail.com wrote:
> On Saturday, May 10, 2014 10:30:06 AM UTC+8, MRAB wrote:
>> On 2014-05-10 02:22, I wrote:
>>
>> > I'm migrating from Perl to Python and unable to identify the equivalent
>> > of key of key concept. The following codes run well,
>>
>> > import csv
>>
>> > attr = {}
>>
>> > with open('test.txt','rb') as tsvin:
>>
>> > tsvin = csv.reader(tsvin, delimiter='\t')
>>
>> > for row in tsvin:
>>
>> > ID = row[1]
>>
>> > until:
>>
>> > attr[ID]['adm3'] = row[2]
>>
>> > I then try:
>>
>> > attr[ID].adm3 = row[2]
>>
>> > still doesn't work. Some posts suggest using module dict but some do
>> > not. I'm a bit confused now. Any suggestions?
>>
>> Python doesn't have Perl's autovivication feature. If you want the
>>
>> value to be a dict then you need to create that dict first:
>>
>> attr[ID] = {}
>>
>> attr[ID]['adm3'] = row[2]
>>
>> You could also have a look at the 'defaultdict' class in the
>>
>> 'collections' module.
>
> I identify the information below:
> s = [('yellow', 1), ('blue', 2), ('yellow', 3), ('blue', 4), ('red', 1)]
> d = defaultdict(list)
> for k, v in s:
> d[k].append(v)
>
> While it is fine for a small dataset, I need a more generic way to do so.
> Indeed the "test.txt" in my example contains more columns of attributes
> like:
>
> ID address age gender phone-number race education ...
> ABC123 Ohio, USA 18 F 800-123-456 european university
> ACC499 London 33 M 800-111-400 african university
> ...
>
> so later I can retrieve the information in python by:
>
> attr['ABC123'].address (containing 'Ohio, USA')
> attr['ABC123'].race (containing 'european')
> attr['ACC499'].age (containing '33')
Using a csv.DictReader comes close with minimal effort:
# write demo data to make the example self-contained
with open("tmp.csv", "w") as f:
f.write("""\
ID,address,age,gender,phone-number,race,education
ABC123,"Ohio, USA",18,F,800-123-456,european,university
ACC499,London,33,M,800-111-400,african,university
""")
import csv
import pprint
with open("tmp.csv") as f:
attr = {row["ID"]: row for row in csv.DictReader(f)}
pprint.pprint(attr)
print(attr["ACC499"]["age"])
The "dict comprehension"
attr = {row["ID"]: row for row in csv.DictReader(f)}
is a shortcut for
attr = {}
for row in csv.DictReader(f):
attr[row["ID"]] = row
If you insist on attribute access (row.age instead of row["age"]) you can
use a namedtuple. This is a bit more involved:
import csv
import pprint
from collections import namedtuple
with open("tmp.csv") as f:
rows = csv.reader(f)
header = next(rows)
# make sure column names are valid Python identifiers
header = [column.replace("-", "_") for column in header]
RowType = namedtuple("RowType", header)
key_index = header.index("ID")
attr = {row[key_index]: RowType(*row) for row in rows}
pprint.pprint(attr)
print(attr["ABC123"].race)
> The following links mention something similar,
Too many, so I checked none of them ;)
Back to comp.lang.python | Previous | Next — Previous in thread | Find similar | Unroll thread
How to implement key of key in python? eckhleung@gmail.com - 2014-05-09 18:22 -0700
Re: How to implement key of key in python? CHIN Dihedral <dihedral88888@gmail.com> - 2014-05-09 19:21 -0700
Re: How to implement key of key in python? MRAB <python@mrabarnett.plus.com> - 2014-05-10 03:30 +0100
Re: How to implement key of key in python? eckhleung@gmail.com - 2014-05-09 20:28 -0700
Re: How to implement key of key in python? Andrea D'Amore <anddamNOALPASTICCIODICARNE+gruppi@brapi.net> - 2014-05-10 09:07 +0200
Re: How to implement key of key in python? Peter Otten <__peter__@web.de> - 2014-05-10 10:21 +0200
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