enumerate() for dictionary in Python

Solution 1:

On top of the already provided answers there is a very nice pattern in Python that allows you to enumerate both keys and values of a dictionary.

The normal case you enumerate the keys of the dictionary:

example_dict = {1:'a', 2:'b', 3:'c', 4:'d'}

for i, k in enumerate(example_dict):
    print(i, k)

Which outputs:

0 1
1 2
2 3
3 4

But if you want to enumerate through both keys and values this is the way:

for i, (k, v) in enumerate(example_dict.items()):
    print(i, k, v)

Which outputs:

0 1 a
1 2 b
2 3 c
3 4 d

Solution 2:

The first column of output is the index of each item in enumm and the second one is its keys. If you want to iterate your dictionary then use .items():

for k, v in enumm.items():
    print(k, v)

And the output should look like:

0 1
1 2
2 3
4 4 
5 5
6 6
7 7

Solution 3:

Just thought I'd add, if you'd like to enumerate over the index, key, and values of a dictionary, your for loop should look like this:

for index, (key, value) in enumerate(your_dict.items()):
    print(index, key, value)

Solution 4:

dict1={'a':1, 'b':'banana'}

To list the dictionary in Python 2.x:

for k,v in dict1.iteritems():
        print k,v 

In Python 3.x use:

for k,v in dict1.items():
        print(k,v)
# a 1
# b banana

Finally, as others have indicated, if you want a running index, you can have that too:

for i  in enumerate(dict1.items()):
   print(i)  

 # (0, ('a', 1))
 # (1, ('b', 'banana'))

But this defeats the purpose of a dictionary (map, associative array) , which is an efficient data structure for telephone-book-style look-up. Dictionary ordering could be incidental to the implementation and should not be relied upon. If you need the order, use OrderedDict instead.

Solution 5:

Since you are using enumerate hence your i is actually the index of the key rather than the key itself.

So, you are getting 3 in the first column of the row 3 4even though there is no key 3.

enumerate iterates through a data structure(be it list or a dictionary) while also providing the current iteration number.

Hence, the columns here are the iteration number followed by the key in dictionary enum

Others Solutions have already shown how to iterate over key and value pair so I won't repeat the same in mine.