On May 7, 10:59 pm, Carsten Haese <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Mon, 2007-05-07 at 04:03 -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > Hi, > > I have a dictionary which is something like this: > > id_lookup={ > > 16:'subfunction', > > 26:'dataId', > > 34:'parameterId', > > 39:'subfunction', > > 44:'dataPackageId', > > 45:'parameterId', > > 54:'subfunction', > > 59:'dataId', > > 165:'subfunction', > > 169:'subfunction', > > 170:'dataPackageId', > > 174:'controlParameterId' > > } > > How do i assign multiple values to the key here.Like i want the > > key 170 to take either the name 'dataPackageID' or the name > > 'LocalId'.I use this in my code,and hence if either comes it should > > work . > > That sounds to me like you're translating names to numbers. If that is > true, you're much better off turning your dictionary around, making the > name the key and the corresponding number the value. That way you'll > have two keys pointing to the same value, which is perfectly legal, > whereas having one key pointing to two values is not really possible. > You could have one key pointing to a list or tuple of two values, but > it's not obvious whether that would solve your problem. > > Hope this helps,
Unlikely. "Turning it around" produces one key ('subfunction') with *FIVE* different values. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list