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Home/ Questions/Q 79825
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T21:12:23+00:00 2026-05-10T21:12:23+00:00

In C++ often do something like this: typedef map<int, vector<int> > MyIndexType; Where I

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In C++ often do something like this:

typedef map<int, vector<int> > MyIndexType; 

Where I then use it like this:

MyIndexType myIndex; for( ... some loop ...) {   myIndex[someId].push_back(someVal); } 

If there was no entry in the map the code will insert a new empty vector and then append to it.

In Python it would look like this:

myIndex = {}  for (someId,someVal) in collection:    try:       myIndex[someId].append(someVal)    except KeyError:       myIndex[someId] = [someVal] 

The try except is a bit ugly here. Is there a way to tell the dictionary an object type to insert when a KeyError is encountered at dictionary declaration time?

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  1. 2026-05-10T21:12:24+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 9:12 pm

    You want to use:

    from collections import defaultdict myIndex = defaultdict(list) myIndex[someId].append(someVal) 

    Standard Library defaultdict objects.

    Example usage from the Python documentation:

    >>> s = [('yellow', 1), ('blue', 2), ('yellow', 3), ('blue', 4), ('red', 1)] >>> d = defaultdict(list) >>> for k, v in s:         d[k].append(v)  >>> d.items() [('blue', [2, 4]), ('red', [1]), ('yellow', [1, 3])] 
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