1.1 KiB
1.1 KiB
title, shortTitle, type, tags, expertise, author, cover, excerpt, firstSeen, lastUpdated
| title | shortTitle | type | tags | expertise | author | cover | excerpt | firstSeen | lastUpdated |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tip: You should use dict.get(key) instead of dict[key] | dict.get(key) vs dict[key] | tip | python,dictionary | intermediate | maciv | blog_images/fruit-feast.jpg | Learn the difference between two common ways to access values in Python dictionaries and level up your code today. | 2021-01-07T11:00:00+02:00 | 2021-06-12T19:30:41+03:00 |
A common debate among Python developers seems to stem from the retrieval of dictionary values, which can be accomplished using either dict[key] or dict.get(key).
Although you can achieve the same result using either one, dict.get() is usually preferred, as it accepts a second argument which acts as the default value shall the key not exist in the given dictionary. Due to this property, dict.get() will always return a value, whereas dict[key] will raise a KeyError if the given key is missing.
a = { 'max': 200 }
b = { 'min': 100, 'max': 250 }
c = { 'min': 50 }
a['min'] + b['min'] + c['min'] # throws KeyError
a.get('min', 0) + b.get('min', 0) + c.get('min', 0) # 150