@SaltyHelpVampire What's IDLE got to do with it? IDLE is an environment for coders, it's not intended for normal users to run Python scripts. FWIW, plenty of coders don't use IDLE either.
Let's vote: Who's in favor of a generic "Why does assigning the result of a list/set/dict operation back to the variable turn it into None?" canonical to replace all the annoying "Why does list.append/list.remove/list.reverse/random.shuffle turn my list into None" questions?
If the OP wanted a list, we'd now have a nice Q&A for "how do I parse a space-separated list", but of course since OPs always have special nonsensical requirements, it's now a wasted Q&A instead
@PM2Ring I am sorry for the late reply. I meant "not many computers have IDLE" as "not many computers have a python interpreter", but I didn't know that IDLE wasn't so widespread, neither that it wasn't required to run python. My bad
@JonClements I guess so. But so is hacking the C source of bin. :) FWIW, on a random million bit int, gmpy.popcount is around 30 times faster than using bin.
so is hacking the C source of bin... yeah... as soon as I'd typed that, that thought occurred to me... was kind of hoping no one would notice though... alas not :)
@SaltyHelpVampire No worries. Yeah you don't need IDLE to run Python, but it is a standard part of the Python installation. I tried using it once or twice, but I found it too annoying.
hi friends....browser saves session-id in cookies that lets u login automatically next time u visit website. does it happen entirely from web-browser's side or u hav to code something about it while developing the app?
And answerers. Half the time I don't even need to downvote. I post a constructive suggestion, but instead of fixing their answer, they just delete it. But I guess that's mostly because they realise that if they implement my fix it'll turn their answer into a clone of an existing one.
I must have the touch of death today. Almost every question or answer I've commented on has been self-deleted. But I think the last one is just temporary while he figures out how to make his answer work properly.
@Vader defaultdict is just an enhanced version of dict which automatically creates items for you if you attempt to access keys that don't exist yet. It's cute, but I generally prefer to use a plain dict.
Why should it? You're explicitly creating a new item with key 'clouds'.
the problem in your original is that you're trying to create a new key 2 levels deep, i.e. referring to the key 'clouds' (by trying to mutate the corresponding value) when it doesn't exist yet
dct[key] = val means "create an item with key:val or overwrite an existing one". dct[key1][key2] = val means "take the item at key1, and set its key2 to val" which assumes that key1 exists and its value can be indexed with key2