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Home/ Questions/Q 3324466
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T23:25:29+00:00 2026-05-17T23:25:29+00:00

[Python 3.1] Edit: mistake in the original code. I need to print a table.

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[Python 3.1]

Edit: mistake in the original code.

I need to print a table. The first row should be a header, which consists of column names separated by tabs. The following rows should contain the data (also tab-separated).

To clarify, let’s say I have columns “speed”, “power”, “weight”. I originally wrote the following code, with the help from a related question I asked earlier:

column_names = ['speed', 'power', 'weight']

def f(row_number):
  # some calculations here to populate variables speed, power, weight
  # e.g., power = retrieve_avg_power(row_number) * 2.5
  # e.g., speed = math.sqrt(power) / 2
  # etc.
  locals_ = locals()
  return {x : locals_[x] for x in column_names}

def print_table(rows):
  print(*column_names, sep = '\t')
  for row_number in range(rows):
    row = f(row_number)
    print(*[row[x] for x in component_names], sep = '\t')

But then I learned that I should avoid using locals() if possible.

Now I’m stuck. I don’t want to type the list of all the column names more than once. I don’t want to rely on the fact that every dictionary I create inside f() is likely to iterate through its keys in the same order. And I don’t want to use locals().

Note that the functions print_table() and f() do a lot of other stuff; so I have to keep them separate.

How should I write the code?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T23:25:30+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 11:25 pm
    class Columns:
        pass
    
    def f(row_number):
        c = Columns()
        c.power = retrieve_avg_power(row_number) * 2.5
        c.speed = math.sqrt(power) / 2
        return c.__dict__
    

    This also lets you specify which of the variables are meant as columns, instead of rather being temporary in the function.

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