On Thu, Aug 19, 2010 at 10:02 AM, Vince Spicer <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hey you can use list comprehension here
>
>
> age_dict = { 'pete': 42, 'ann': 25, 'carl': 30, 'amanda': 64 }
>
> you can create a dict from a list of tuples and you can access the dict as
> a
> list of tuples by accessing its items
>
> Example:
>
> age_dict = dict([(key.upper(), value) for key,value in age_dict.items()])
>
This is a bad place to use a list comprehension. This will create a list of
values first and then create a dict from that list, so now you have a list
floating around that you didn't need.
Generator expressions, OTOH, generate the values on the fly, only as they're
needed, so there's no extra list left over once the dict is created.
Sure it will eventually be garbage collected, but "waste not, want not", as
my grandmother used to say.
-Wayne
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