Short Version:
In Python is there a way to (cleanly/elegantly) say “Give me these 5 (or however many) properties of an object, and nothing else, as a dictionary”?
Longer Version:
Using the Javascript Underscore library, I can reduce an bunch of objects/dictionaries (in JS they’re the same thing) to a bunch of subsets of their properties like so:
var subsets = _(someObjects).map(function(someObject) {
_(someObject).pick(['a', 'd']);
});
If I want to do the same thing with a Python object (not a dictionary) however it seems like the best I can do is use a list comprehension and manually set each property:
subsets = [{"a": x.a, "d": x.d} for x in someObjects]
That doesn’t look so bad when there’s only two properties, and they’re both one letter, but it gets uglier fast if I start having more/longer properties (plus I feel wrong whenever I write a multi-line list comprehension). I could turn the whole thing in to a function that uses a for loop, but before I do that, is there any cool built-in Python utility thing that I can use to do this as cleanly (or even more cleanly) than the JS version?
This can be done simply by combining a list comprehension with a dictionary comprehension.
Naturally, you could distill out that comprehension if you wanted to: