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Getting 'int' Object Is Not Iterable

cat_sums[cat] += value TypeError: 'int' object is not iterable My input is this: defaultdict(, {'composed': [0], 'elated': [0], 'unsure': [0], 'hostile': [0

Solution 1:

Each of your values is a list. The + operator, when applied to lists adds an iterable to a list. It doesn't append a single value:

>>> [1,2] + [3,4][1, 2, 3, 4]
>>> [1,2] + 3
TypeError: can only concatenate list (not "int") to list

It looks like you want to do cat_sums[cat].append(value).

Solution 2:

+, when applied to lists, is concatenation. As BrenBarn said, [1, 2] + [3, 4] == [1, 2, 3, 4].

But if you are actually trying to add numbers, as implied by your statement "I'm trying to add a value to another value inside catnums," then append will not do what you want.

If this is the case then the dictionary you show is probably incorrect. It's not a mapping of words to numbers; it's a mapping of words to lists of numbers (namely the list [0]). If you're trying to maintain a count of words, this is not what you want; you want {'composed': 0, 'elated': 0, ...} (note the lack of square brackets). Then the += statement will work as expected.

If you cannot change the dictionary but simply want to change the number in the list, you can say cat_sums[cat][0] += value. However, it would make far more sense (if this is what you're after) to simply convert the "lists of zero" into plain old zeroes.

Solution 3:

If anyone is getting this error inside a Django template …

When you do:

{% forcin cat_sums.keys %}

then, behind the scenes, the Django template language first tries a cat_sums['keys'] lookup. Normally this would fail and Django would next look for a method. But since this is a defaultdict, the default value gets stored instead.

If the dict was created with

cat_sums = defaultdict(int)

What gets executed is:

for c in cat_sums['keys']:

i.e.,

forcin0:

which quite rightly throws an error as the value 0 is not iterable.

Resolution? Pass dict(cat_sums) inside the context so the view gets a regular dict.

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