From the Python 3.7 changelog:

the insertion-order preservation nature of dict objects has been declared to be an official part of the Python language spec.

Would this mean that OrderedDict will become redundant? The only use I can think of it will be to maintain backwards compatibility with older versions of Python which don't preserve insertion-order for normal dictionaries.

up vote 14 down vote accepted

No it won't become redundant because OrderedDict is not just a dict that retains insertion order, it also offers order dependent methods like OrderedDict.move_to_end() and supports reversed() iteration. Moreover, equality comparisons with OrderedDict are order sensitive and this is still not the case for dict in Python 3.7, for example:

>>> OrderedDict([(1,1), (2,2)]) == OrderedDict([(2,2), (1,1)]) 
False
>>> dict([(1,1), (2,2)]) == dict([(2,2), (1,1)]) 
True

Two relevant questions here and here.

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