Curly braces create dictionaries or sets. Square brackets create lists.
They are called literals; a set literal:
aset = {'foo', 'bar'}
or a dictionary literal:
adict = {'foo': 42, 'bar': 81}
empty_dict = {}
or a list literal:
alist = ['foo', 'bar', 'bar']
empty_list = []
To create an empty set, you can only use set()
.
Sets are collections of unique elements and you cannot order them. Lists are ordered sequences of elements, and values can be repeated. Dictionaries map keys to values, keys must be unique. Set and dictionary keys must meet other restrictions as well, so that Python can actually keep track of them efficiently and know they are and will remain unique.
There is also the tuple
type, using a comma for 1 or more elements, with parenthesis being optional in many contexts:
atuple = ('foo', 'bar')
another_tuple = 'spam',
empty_tuple = ()
WARNING_not_a_tuple = ('eggs')
Note the comma in the another_tuple
definition; it is that comma that makes it a tuple
, not the parenthesis. WARNING_not_a_tuple
is not a tuple, it has no comma. Without the parentheses all you have left is a string, instead.
See the data structures chapter of the Python tutorial for more details; lists are introduced in the introduction chapter.
Literals for containers such as these are also called displays and the syntax allows for procedural creation of the contents based of looping, called comprehensions.
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