What I’m trying to do is get 3 values from a key into separate variables. Currently I’m doing it like this:
for key in names:
posX = names[key][0]
posY = names[key][1]
posZ = names[key][2]
This doesn’t seem very intuitive to me even though it works. I’ve also tried doing this:
for key, value in names:
location = value
Unfortunately, this gives me a single object (which is what I expected), but I need the individual values assigned to the key. Thanks and apologize for my newness to Python.
Update
Apologies for not specifying where I was getting my values from. Here is how I’m doing it for the first example.
names = {}
for name in objectNames:
cmds.select(name)
location = cmds.xform(q=True, ws=True, t=True)
names[name] = location
It’s not unintuitive at all.
The only way to store “multiple values” for a given key in a dictionary is to store some sort of container object as the value, such as a list or tuple. You can access a list or tuple by subscripting it, as you do in your first example.
The only problem with your example is that it’s the ugly and inconvenient way to access such a container when it’s being used in this way. Try it like this, and you’ll probably be much happier:
Thus your second example could instead be:
As FabienAndre points out in a comment below, there’s also the more convenient syntax I’d entirely forgotten about,
for key,(posX,posY,posZ) in names.items():.You don’t specify where you’re getting these values from, but if they’re coming from code you have control over, and you can depend on using Python 2.6 or later, you might also look into named tuples. Then you could provide a named tuple as the dict value, and use the syntax
pos.x,pos.y, etc. to access the values: