bpo-34083: Update dict order in Functional HOWTO (GH-8230)
(cherry picked from commit 5e5bbbec46
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Co-authored-by: Stig Johan Berggren <stigjb@gmail.com>
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@ -273,23 +273,24 @@ dictionary's keys::
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>>> m = {'Jan': 1, 'Feb': 2, 'Mar': 3, 'Apr': 4, 'May': 5, 'Jun': 6,
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... 'Jul': 7, 'Aug': 8, 'Sep': 9, 'Oct': 10, 'Nov': 11, 'Dec': 12}
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>>> for key in m: #doctest: +SKIP
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>>> for key in m:
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... print(key, m[key])
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Mar 3
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Jan 1
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Feb 2
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Aug 8
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Sep 9
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Mar 3
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Apr 4
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May 5
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Jun 6
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Jul 7
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Jan 1
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May 5
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Aug 8
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Sep 9
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Oct 10
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Nov 11
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Dec 12
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Oct 10
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Note that the order is essentially random, because it's based on the hash
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ordering of the objects in the dictionary.
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Note that starting with Python 3.7, dictionary iteration order is guaranteed
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to be the same as the insertion order. In earlier versions, the behaviour was
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unspecified and could vary between implementations.
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Applying :func:`iter` to a dictionary always loops over the keys, but
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dictionaries have methods that return other iterators. If you want to iterate
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@ -301,8 +302,8 @@ The :func:`dict` constructor can accept an iterator that returns a finite stream
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of ``(key, value)`` tuples:
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>>> L = [('Italy', 'Rome'), ('France', 'Paris'), ('US', 'Washington DC')]
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>>> dict(iter(L)) #doctest: +SKIP
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{'Italy': 'Rome', 'US': 'Washington DC', 'France': 'Paris'}
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>>> dict(iter(L))
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{'Italy': 'Rome', 'France': 'Paris', 'US': 'Washington DC'}
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Files also support iteration by calling the :meth:`~io.TextIOBase.readline`
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method until there are no more lines in the file. This means you can read each
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