Eric
Eric

Reputation: 5101

How to check an object has the type 'dict_items'?

In Python 3, I need to test whether my variable has the type 'dict_items', so I tried something like that :

>>> d={'a':1,'b':2}
>>> d.items()
dict_items([('a', 1), ('b', 2)])
>>> isinstance(d.items(),dict_items)
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
NameError: name 'dict_items' is not defined

But dict_items is not a known type. it is not defined in types module neither. How can I test an object has the type dict_items (without consuming data) ?

Upvotes: 12

Views: 2577

Answers (2)

NotoriousPyro
NotoriousPyro

Reputation: 647

I prefer this approach

d={'a':1,'b':2}
d.items()

assert type(d.items()).__name__ == 'dict_items', 'Not dict_items!!!!'
assert d.items().__class__.__name__ == 'dict_items', 'Not dict_items!!!!'

Upvotes: 0

jpp
jpp

Reputation: 164693

You can use collections.abc:

from collections import abc

isinstance(d.items(), abc.ItemsView)  # True

Note dict_items is a subclass of abc.ItemsView, rather than the same class. For greater precision, you can use:

isinstance(d.items(), type({}.items()))

To clarify the above, you can use issubclass:

issubclass(type(d.items()), abc.ItemsView)  # True
issubclass(abc.ItemsView, type(d.items()))  # False

Upvotes: 15

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