On 29/08/07, Trey Keown <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > attrs={u'title': u'example window title', u'name': u'SELF', u'icon': > u'e.ico'} > keys = ['name','title','icon'] > for (tag, val) in attrs.iteritems(): > for key in keys: > print val > > the first "for" tag causes the dictionary (attrs) to have its keys called > "tag" and its value called "val". The second "for" loop causes the > dictionary keys to be read in a certain order. How could I take away the > first "for" loop and replace it with something else to do the same general > function?
for key in keys: print 'Attribute %s has value %s' % (key, attrs[key]) -- John. _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor