On Thu, May 15, 2008 at 12:58 PM, GTXY20 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I suspect that I need > to get a better handle on the difference between items() and iteritems() and > what situations would call for them respectively.
items() returns a list, iteritems() returns an iterator. If you don't actually need an explicit list, iteritems() saves the cost of creating it. > Having said that, Kent I am not 100 percent sure of what you menat when you > mention a two-level dict. Can you give me a very brief example? Your dict d would look like this: d={ 1: {23A:[a,b,c,d], 24A:[b,c,d]}, 2: {23A:[a,b], 24A:[a,b,c,d]} } The top level would just use the first element of the current key; the value would be another dict whose keys are the second element of the current key. This makes it easy to find all the values whose first key element is '1', for example. (You could also have the second element be a list of tuples, that might be better if you just need to iterate over it.) Kent _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor