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Measure the Elapsed Time in PythonRepresent enumCreate a Countdown TimerConvert Bytes to a StringIntroduction
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Check if a Number is Positive, Negative or 0Check if a Number is Odd or EvenCheck Leap YearFind the Largest Among Three NumbersCheck Prime NumberPrint all Prime Numbers in an IntervalFind the Factorial of a NumberDisplay the multiplication TablePrint the Fibonacci sequenceCheck Armstrong NumberFind Armstrong Number in an IntervalFind the Sum of Natural NumbersCreate Pyramid PatternsIterate Over Dictionaries Using for LoopReverse a NumberCompute the Power of a NumberFunctions
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Add Two MatricesTranspose a MatrixMultiply Two MatricesCheck Whether a String is Palindrome or NotRemove Punctuations From a StringSort Words in Alphabetic OrderIllustrate Different Set OperationsCount the Number of Each VowelMerge Two DictionariesAccess Index of a List Using for LoopFlatten a Nested ListSlice ListsSort a Dictionary by ValueCheck If a List is EmptyConcatenate Two ListsCheck if a Key is Already Present in a DictionarySplit a List Into Evenly Sized ChunksParse a String to a Float or IntPrint Colored Text to the TerminalConvert String to DatetimeGet the Last Element of the ListGet a Substring of a StringRandomly Select an Element From the ListCheck If a String Is a Number (Float)Count the Occurrence of an Item in a ListDelete an Element From a DictionaryCreate a Long Multiline StringConvert Two Lists Into a DictionaryTrim Whitespace From a StringIterate Through Two Lists in ParallelCount the Number of Digits Present In a NumberCheck If Two Strings are AnagramCapitalize the First Character of a StringCompute all the Permutation of the StringCount the Number of Occurrence of a Character in StringRemove Duplicate Element From a ListFiles
Merge MailsFind the Size (Resolution) of an ImageFind Hash of FileSafely Create a Nested DirectoryCatch Multiple Exceptions in One LineCopy a FilePython Program Read a File Line by Line Into a ListAppend to a FileExtract Extension From the File NameGet the File Name From the File PathGet Line Count of a FileFind All File with .txt Extension Present Inside a DirectoryGet File Creation and Modification DateGet the Full Path of the Current Working DirectoryCheck the File SizePython Program to Convert Two Lists Into a Dictionary
To understand this example, you should have the knowledge of the following Python programming topics:
Example 1: Using zip and dict methods
index = [1, 2, 3]
languages = ['python', 'c', 'c++']
dictionary = dict(zip(index, languages))
print(dictionary)
Output
{1: 'python', 2: 'c', 3: 'c++'}
We have two lists: index
and languages
. They are first zipped and then converted into a dictionary.
- The
zip()
function takes iterables (can be zero or more), aggregates them in a tuple, and returns it. - Likewise, dict() gives the dictionary.
Example 2: Using list comprehension
index = [1, 2, 3]
languages = ['python', 'c', 'c++']
dictionary = {k: v for k, v in zip(index, languages)}
print(dictionary)
Output
{1: 'python', 2: 'c', 3: 'c++'}
This example is similar to Example 1; the only difference is that list comprehension is being used for first zipping and then { }
for converting into a dictionary.
Learn more about list comprehension at Python List Comprehension.