I am trying to format a string using an item from a nested dictionary (below)
people = {
'Alice': {
'phone': '2341',
'addr': '87 Eastlake Court'
},
'Beth': {
'phone': '9102',
'addr': '563 Hartford Drive'
},
'Randy': {
'phone': '4563',
'addr': '93 SW 43rd'
}
}
From the above (simple) dictionary, I want to format a string to print out Randy's phone extension.
I am able to access all of his details using:
print("Randy's phone # is %(Randy)s" % people)
But I'm not sure on how to go deeper into the dictionary to single out just the phone number from the dictionary.
I am using Python 3.3, by the way.
Use the new string formatting:
print("Randy's phone # is {0[Randy][phone]}".format(people))
or
print("Randy's phone # is {Randy[phone]}".format(**people))
There's no point in passing the entire dictionary if you only use one value.
print("Randy's phone # is {}".format(people['Randy']['phone']))
or
print("Randy's phone # is %s" % people['Randy']['phone'])
will also work.
Passing the dict makes sense if you have a lot of these format strings and do not know which values they use, and want them to be able to access any value.
Or if you use many values in the format string and passing them individually is just too verbose.
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With