firecrown.metadata.two_point.TwoPointXiThetaIndex

firecrown.metadata.two_point.TwoPointXiThetaIndex#

class firecrown.metadata.two_point.TwoPointXiThetaIndex#

Bases: TypedDict

Public Methods:

Inherited from dict

__repr__()

Return repr(self).

__getattribute__(name, /)

Return getattr(self, name).

__lt__(value, /)

Return self<value.

__le__(value, /)

Return self<=value.

__eq__(value, /)

Return self==value.

__ne__(value, /)

Return self!=value.

__gt__(value, /)

Return self>value.

__ge__(value, /)

Return self>=value.

__iter__()

Implement iter(self).

__init__(*args, **kwargs)

__or__(value, /)

Return self|value.

__ror__(value, /)

Return value|self.

__ior__(value, /)

Return self|=value.

__len__()

Return len(self).

__getitem__(key, /)

Return self[key].

__setitem__(key, value, /)

Set self[key] to value.

__delitem__(key, /)

Delete self[key].

__contains__(key, /)

True if the dictionary has the specified key, else False.

__sizeof__()

get(key[, default])

Return the value for key if key is in the dictionary, else default.

setdefault(key[, default])

Insert key with a value of default if key is not in the dictionary.

pop(k[,d])

If the key is not found, return the default if given; otherwise, raise a KeyError.

popitem()

Remove and return a (key, value) pair as a 2-tuple.

keys()

items()

values()

update([E, ]**F)

If E is present and has a .keys() method, then does: for k in E: D[k] = E[k] If E is present and lacks a .keys() method, then does: for k, v in E: D[k] = v In either case, this is followed by: for k in F: D[k] = F[k]

fromkeys([value])

Create a new dictionary with keys from iterable and values set to value.

clear()

copy()

__reversed__()

Return a reverse iterator over the dict keys.

__class_getitem__

See PEP 585