> On Feb 13, 2017, at 12:34, SIJIA CHEN <schen...@wisc.edu> wrote: > > I find out that the outcome for using .join() on a dictionary is totally > different than it using on list or string. for example, > >>>> seq4 = {'hello':1,'good':2,'boy':3,'doiido':4} >>>> print ':'.join(seq4) > boy:good:doiido:hello > So my question is why the outcome doesn't show sequentially as the same > sequence of the original seq4? What pattern do those "keys" of the > dictionary in the outcome show ?
Dictionaries (in particular, their keys) are unordered. You can not rely on them to be in a particular sequence. The reason for this, from a practical perspective, is you are expected to ask for the specific key; you should not care about the ordering. Lists, on the other hand, have a specific order by design so will always be in the order they were created. What are you trying to do with join() on a dictionary in the first place? Is there a specific outcome you are trying to get? It’s unlikely that using join on a dictionary is what you actually want. — David Rock da...@graniteweb.com
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