256

I have a dictionary d = {1:-0.3246, 2:-0.9185, 3:-3985, ...}.

How do I extract all of the values of d into a list l?

Super Kai - Kazuya Ito
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Naveen C.
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15 Answers15

439

If you only need the dictionary keys 1, 2, and 3 use: your_dict.keys().

If you only need the dictionary values -0.3246, -0.9185, and -3985 use: your_dict.values().

If you want both keys and values use: your_dict.items() which returns a list of tuples [(key1, value1), (key2, value2), ...].

Erik Giberti
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Pierre Bourdon
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67

Use values()

>>> d = {1:-0.3246, 2:-0.9185, 3:-3985}

>>> d.values()
<<< [-0.3246, -0.9185, -3985]
Zach Kelling
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59

For Python 3, you need:

list_of_dict_values = list(dict_name.values())
Freddie
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17

For nested dicts, lists of dicts, and dicts of listed dicts, ... you can use

from typing import Iterable

def get_all_values(d):
    if isinstance(d, dict):
        for v in d.values():
            yield from get_all_values(v)
    elif isinstance(d, Iterable) and not isinstance(d, str): # or list, set, ... only
        for v in d:
            yield from get_all_values(v)
    else:
        yield d 

An example:

d = {'a': 1, 'b': {'c': 2, 'd': [3, 4]}, 'e': [{'f': 5}, {'g': set([6, 7])}], 'f': 'string'}
list(get_all_values(d)) # returns [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 'string']

Big thanks to @vicent for pointing out that strings are also Iterable! I updated my answer accordingly.

PS: Yes, I love yield. ;-)

Michael Dorner
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    This is pretty much exactly what I was looking for. Note that strings are also iterable. In my use case the values in my dictionary were also string so I would run into an error about recursive depth reached. To fix, I did ``` def get_all_values(d): if isinstance(d, dict): for v in d.values(): yield from get_all_values(v) elif isinstance(d, typing.Iterable) and not isinstance(d, str): # or list, set, ... only for v in d: yield from get_all_values(v) else: yield d ``` – Vincent Nov 28 '22 at 21:06
  • Thanks a lot for pointing out that issue. You are completely right! I updated my answer! – Michael Dorner Nov 29 '22 at 08:22
17

If you want all of the values, use this:

dict_name_goes_here.values()

If you want all of the keys, use this:

dict_name_goes_here.keys()

IF you want all of the items (both keys and values), I would use this:

dict_name_goes_here.items()
Tyler Crompton
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15

Call the values() method on the dict.

David Heffernan
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7

I know this question been asked years ago but its quite relevant even today.

>>> d = {1:-0.3246, 2:-0.9185, 3:-3985}
>>> l = list(d.values())
>>> l
[-0.3246, -0.9185, -3985]
Chandragupta Borkotoky
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6

If you want all of the values, use this:

dict_name_goes_here.values()
Stephen Rauch
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Govind Sagar
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5

Code of python file containing dictionary

dict={"Car":"Lamborghini","Mobile":"iPhone"}
print(dict)

If you want to print only values (instead of key) then you can use :

dict={"Car":"Lamborghini","Mobile":"iPhone"}
for thevalue in dict.values():
    print(thevalue)

This will print only values instead of key from dictionary

Bonus : If there is a dictionary in which values are stored in list and if you want to print values only on new line , then you can use :

dict={"Car":["Lamborghini","BMW","Mercedes"],"Mobile":["Iphone","OnePlus","Samsung"]}
nd = [value[i] for value in dict.values()
         for i in range(2)]
print(*nd,sep="\n")

Reference - Narendra Dwivedi - Extract Only Values From Dictionary

Markrum
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3

To see the keys:

for key in d.keys():
    print(key)

To get the values that each key is referencing:

for key in d.keys():
    print(d[key])

Add to a list:

for key in d.keys():
    mylist.append(d[key])
3
d = <dict>
values = d.values()
Gabriel Ross
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0

Pythonic duck-typing should in principle determine what an object can do, i.e., its properties and methods. By looking at a dictionary object one may try to guess it has at least one of the following: dict.keys() or dict.values() methods. You should try to use this approach for future work with programming languages whose type checking occurs at runtime, especially those with the duck-typing nature.

dr_dronych
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0
dictionary_name={key1:value1,key2:value2,key3:value3}
dictionary_name.values()
Shriyans
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  • as pointed in the answer by Faaiz Qadri, you need to wrap you solution inside `list()` otherwise it returns `dict_values` – BCArg Dec 30 '20 at 18:53
0

You can use items(), keys() and values() to get both the keys and values, only the keys and only the values in a dictionary respectively as shown below:

person = {'name':'John', 'age':35, 'gender':'Male'}

print(person.items()) # dict_items([('name', 'John'), ('age', 35)])
print(person.keys()) # dict_keys(['name', 'age'])
print(person.values()) # dict_values(['John', 35])

And, you can iterate items(), keys() and values() with for loop as shown below:

person = {'name':'John', 'age':35}

for key, value in person.items(): # name John
    print(key, value)             # age 35
    
for key in person.keys(): # name
    print(key)            # age
    
for value in person.values(): # John
    print(value)              # 35

But, you cannot access items(), keys() and values() with [] as shown below because there are errors:

person = {'name':'John', 'age':35}

print(person.items()[0]) # Error
print(person.keys()[0]) # Error
print(person.values()[0]) # Error

But, if using list(), you can access them with [] as shown below:

person = {'name':'John', 'age':35}

print(list(person.items())[0]) # ('name', 'John')
print(list(person.keys())[0]) # name
print(list(person.values())[0]) # John
Super Kai - Kazuya Ito
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-1

Normal Dict.values()

will return something like this

dict_values(['value1'])

dict_values(['value2'])

If you want only Values use

  • Use this

list(Dict.values())[0] # Under the List

rajat prakash
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