> I'd just keep the interesting runners, along with their race numbers, in a
> dict. The enumerate function is handy here. Something like (untested):
>
> runner_lists = {}
> for n, item in enumerate(result):
> if this one is interested/not-filtered:
> runner_lists[n] = result["RacingFormGuide"]["Event"]["Runners"]
>
> and just return runner_lists. That way you know what the race numbers were
> for
> each list of runners.
>
>
> Cheers,
> Cameron Simpson
The main issue is that enumerate doesn't enumerate on the lists when trying to
filter.
result = meeting_id["Races"]
so yes enumerating this works, showing just printing n and item.
runner_lists = {}
for n, item in enumerate(result):
# if this one is interested / not -filtered:
print(n, item)
0 {'FeatureRaceBonusActive': 'Disabled', 'FixedPriceSummary': {'FixedPrices':
[{'SportId': 8, 'LeagueId': 102, 'MeetingId': 1218, 'MainEventId': 650350,
'SubEventId': 3601361, 'Status': 'F', 'StatusDescription': 'FINALISED',
'BetTypeName': 'Win', 'EnablePlaceBetting': True}]}, 'RacingFormGuide':
{'Copyright': .....
and so on it goes through the 7 items in this file.
but including
runner_lists = {}
for n, item in enumerate(result):
# if this one is interested / not -filtered:
print(n, item)
runner_lists[n] = result["RacingFormGuide"]["Event"]["Runners"]
## Produces
Traceback (most recent call last):
dict_keys(['RaceDay', 'ErrorInfo', 'Success'])
File "/home/sayth/PycharmProjects/ubet_api_mongo/parse_json.py", line 31, in
<module>
runner_lists[n] = result["RacingFormGuide"]["Event"]["Runners"]
TypeError: list indices must be integers or slices, not str
Cheers
Sayth
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