Let's assume we have a dictionary with two keys and known values:
dictionary = {'first_name': 'Jennifer', 'last_name': 'Lawrence'}
However, since I retrieve the information from an API that cannot guarantee that all keys are returned, I have to test whether the keys exist.
If I want to assign the value of this key "first_name" to the variable new_object, I intended to use the following expression:
new_object = dictionary['first_name'] **or None**
However, if the key 'first_name' is not in the dictionary, I receive a key error. Apparently, it seems that I cannot use Swift's principle of optionals here.
Does Python support any kind of inline test to verify that a variable exists/is declared, and if it doesn't instead assigns the value None to the new variable? In the case above, with a dictionary with only the key 'last_name' would, therefore, result in the assignment of the value None to new_object.