A dict comprehension has its own namespace, and locals()
in that namespace has no a
. Technically speaking, everything but the initial iterable for the outermost iterable (here ["a"]
) is run almost as a nested function with the outermost iterable passed in as an argument.
Your code works if you used globals()
instead, or created a reference to the locals()
dictionary outside of the dict comprehension:
l = locals()
print { key: l[key] for key in ["a"] }
Demo:
>>> a = 1
>>> l = locals()
>>> { key: l[key] for key in ["a"] }
{'a': 1}
>>> { key: globals()[key] for key in ["a"] }
{'a': 1}
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