I am having some trouble using the collections.OrderedDict
class. I am using Python 2.7 on Raspbian, the Debian distro for Raspberry Pi. I am trying to print two dictionaries in order for comparison (side-by-side) for a text-adventure. The order is essential to compare accurately.
No matter what I try the dictionaries print in their usual unordered way.
Here's what I get when I do it on my RPi:
import collections
ship = {"NAME": "Albatross",
"HP":50,
"BLASTERS":13,
"THRUSTERS":18,
"PRICE":250}
ship = collections.OrderedDict(ship)
print ship
# OrderedDict([('PRICE', 250), ('HP', 50), ('NAME', 'Albatross'), ('BLASTERS', 13), ('THRUSTERS', 18)])
Obviously there is something not right because it is printing the function call and putting the keys and value groups into a nested list...
This is what I got by running something similar on my PC:
import collections
Joe = {"Age": 28, "Race": "Latino", "Job": "Nurse"}
Bob = {"Age": 25, "Race": "White", "Job": "Mechanic", "Random": "stuff"}
#Just for clarity:
Joe = collections.OrderedDict(Joe)
Bob = collections.OrderedDict(Bob)
print Joe
# OrderedDict([('Age', 28), ('Race', 'Latino'), ('Job', 'Nurse')])
print Bob
# OrderedDict([('Age', 25), ('Race', 'White'), ('Job', 'Mechanic'), ('Random', 'stuff')])
This time, it is in order, but it shouldn't be printing the other things though right? (The putting it into list and showing function call.)
Where am I making my error? It shouldn't be anything to do with the pi version of Python because it is just the Linux version.
OrderedDict
is sorted by insertion order, not alphanumeric key order.