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I know you can use setdefault(key, value) to set default value for a given key, but is there a way to set default values of all keys to some value after creating a dict ?

Put it another way, I want the dict to return the specified default value for every key I didn't yet set.

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1  
What's this set of "all keys" you are talking about? There's an infinite amount of potential keys, even if you restrict yourself to e.g. strings. Could you give an example? – delnan Feb 4 '12 at 9:44
you can use get method, a.get(k[, x]) a[k] if k in a, else x – Anycorn Feb 4 '12 at 9:46
Some help in the inverse direction: stackoverflow.com/questions/7688453/… – aitchnyu Feb 4 '12 at 10:27
@delnan What I want is to get a default value for every key I didn't set yet. – Spirit Zhang Feb 4 '12 at 12:20

6 Answers

up vote 10 down vote accepted

You can replace your old dictionary with a defaultdict:

>>> from collections import defaultdict
>>> d = {'foo': 123, 'bar': 456}
>>> d['baz']
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
KeyError: 'baz'
>>> d = defaultdict(lambda: -1, d)
>>> d['baz']
-1

The "trick" here is that a defaultdict can be initialized with another dict. This means that you preserve the existing values in your normal dict:

>>> d['foo']
123
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+1 for lambda key, I was stuck there. – Droogans Feb 23 '12 at 22:30

Is this what you want:

>>> d={'a':1,'b':2,'c':3}
>>> default_val=99
>>> for k in d:
...     d[k]=default_val
...     
>>> d
{'a': 99, 'b': 99, 'c': 99}
>>> 

>>> d={'a':1,'b':2,'c':3}
>>> from collections import defaultdict
>>> d=defaultdict(lambda:99,d)
>>> d
defaultdict(<function <lambda> at 0x03D21630>, {'a': 1, 'c': 3, 'b': 2})
>>> d[3]
99
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+1 for lambda key, I was stuck there. – Droogans Feb 23 '12 at 22:29

Not after creating it, no. But you could use a defaultdict in the first place, which sets default values when you initialize it.

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In case you actually mean what you seem to ask, I'll provide this alternative answer.

You say you want the dict to return a specified value, you do not say you want to set that value at the same time, like defaultdict does. This will do so:

class DictWithDefault(dict):
    def __init__(self, default, **kwargs):
        self.default = default
        super(DictWithDefault, self).__init__(**kwargs)

    def __getitem__(self, key):
        if key in self:
            return super(DictWithDefault, self).__getitem__(key)
        return self.default

Use like this:

d = DictWIthDefault(99, x=5, y=3)
print d["x"]   # 5
print d[42]    # 99
42 in d        # False
d[42] = 3
42 in d        # True

Alternatively, you can use a standard dict like this:

d = {3: 9, 4: 2}
default = 99
print d.get(3, default)  # 9
print d.get(42, default) # 99
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Use defaultdict

from collections import defaultdict
a = {} 
a = defaultdict(lambda:0,a)
a["anything"] # => 0

This is very useful for case like this,where default values for every key is set as 0:

results ={ 'pre-access' : {'count': 4, 'pass_count': 2},'no-access' : {'count': 55, 'pass_count': 19}
for k,v in results.iteritems():
  a['count'] += v['count']
  a['pass_count'] += v['pass_count']
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defaultdict can do something like that for you.

Example:

>>> from collections import defaultdict
>>> d = defaultdict(list)
>>> d
defaultdict(<class 'list'>, {})
>>> d['new'].append(10)
>>> d
defaultdict(<class 'list'>, {'new': [10]})
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