Looping over a dictionary only yields the keys. Use d.items()
to loop over both keys and values:
{key: value for key, value in d.items()}
The ValueError
exception you see is not a dict comprehension problem, nor is it limited to Python 3; you’d see the same problem in Python 2 or with a regular for
loop:
>>> d = {'a':1, 'b':2, 'c':3, 'd':4}
>>> for key, value in d:
... print key, value
...
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
ValueError: need more than 1 value to unpack
because each iteration there is only one item being yielded.
Without a transformation, {k: v for k, v in d.items()}
is just a verbose and costly d.copy()
; use a dict comprehension only when you do a little more with the keys or values, or use conditions or a more complex loop construct.