Collections.OrderedDict()

collections.OrderedDict

An OrderedDict is a dictionary that remembers the order of the keys that were inserted first. If a new entry overwrites an existing entry, the original insertion position is left unchanged.

Example

Code

>>> from collections import OrderedDict
>>> 
>>> ordinary_dictionary = {}
>>> ordinary_dictionary['a'] = 1
>>> ordinary_dictionary['b'] = 2
>>> ordinary_dictionary['c'] = 3
>>> ordinary_dictionary['d'] = 4
>>> ordinary_dictionary['e'] = 5
>>> 
>>> print ordinary_dictionary
{'a': 1, 'c': 3, 'b': 2, 'e': 5, 'd': 4}
>>> 
>>> ordered_dictionary = OrderedDict()
>>> ordered_dictionary['a'] = 1
>>> ordered_dictionary['b'] = 2
>>> ordered_dictionary['c'] = 3
>>> ordered_dictionary['d'] = 4
>>> ordered_dictionary['e'] = 5
>>> 
>>> print ordered_dictionary
OrderedDict([('a', 1), ('b', 2), ('c', 3), ('d', 4), ('e', 5)])

Task

You are the manager of a supermarket.
You have a list of N items together with their prices that consumers bought on a particular day.
Your task is to print each item_name and net_price in order of its first occurrence.

item_name = Name of the item.
net_price = Quantity of the item sold multiplied by the price of each item.

Input Format

The first line contains the number of items, N.
The next N lines contains the item’s name and price, separated by a space.

Constraints

0 < N ≤ 100

Output Format

Print the item_name and net_price in order of its first occurrence.

Sample Input

9
BANANA FRIES 12
POTATO CHIPS 30
APPLE JUICE 10
CANDY 5
APPLE JUICE 10
CANDY 5
CANDY 5
CANDY 5
POTATO CHIPS 30

Sample Output

BANANA FRIES 12
POTATO CHIPS 60
APPLE JUICE 20
CANDY 20

Explanation

BANANA FRIES: Quantity bought: 1, Price: 12
Net Price: 12
POTATO CHIPS: Quantity bought: 2, Price: 30
Net Price: 60
APPLE JUICE: Quantity bought: 2, Price: 10
Net Price: 20
CANDY: Quantity bought: 4, Price: 5
Net Price: 20

Solution Implementation


# ========================
#       Information
# ========================
# Direct Link: https://www.hackerrank.com/challenges/py-collections-ordereddict/problem
# Difficulty: Easy
# Max Score: 20
# Language: Python
# ========================
#         Solution
# ========================
from collections import OrderedDict
A_LIST = OrderedDict()
N = int(input())
for i in range(N):
    inp = input()
    if type(inp) != int:
        isplit = inp.split()
        cost = isplit[-1]
        item = isplit[:-1]
        item = " ".join(item)
        cost = "".join(cost)
        cost = int(cost)
        if item in A_LIST:
            current = A_LIST[item]
            current += cost
            A_LIST[item] = current
        else:
            A_LIST[item] = cost
for key, value in A_LIST.items():
    print(key, value)
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