Hi Maria, This is exactly what I was looking for. I (as others have asked me to) cleared my head of the other languages, but was mearly giving perl as an example indicating the compactness I was after.
Thanks Maria!! MaR wrote: > rh0dium wrote: > > Hi all, > > > > So I have this simple little routine.. say like this.. > > > > > > def foo() > > return {"a":"b", "b":"c"} > > > > if foo(): > > print "Have foo" > > > > > > Now I want the dictionary item a (ie. b) > > > > How can I do it the above way or do I still have to go like this.. > > > > def foo() > > return {"a":"b", "b":"c"} > > > > z = foo() > > if z: > > print "Have foo" > > print z['a'] > > > > This is where $_ in perl is awesome - There must be a default variable > > in python right? > > As said in earlier response, such a default variable is *dangerous* at > best! > Not knowing much about Perl and guessing that the $_ is a global > storage space, my immediate thought is; What happens if you have > multiple threads? > > The example is too simplified to give any clues as to what you are > needing the feature for. > Guessing that you want to generate some dict() and use the result once > and then discard, write: > > foo_default = 1 > def foo(): return(generate_some_dict()) > > you can further write > > foo().get('a', foo_default) > > giving compact code and ensuring that you get a well defined result > regardless what dictionary keys there are. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list