Lets say I have the following code:
import collections
d = collections.OrderedDict()
d['foo'] = 'python'
d['bar'] = 'spam'
Is there a way I can access the items in a numbered manner, like:
d(0) #foo's Output
d(1) #bar's Output
If its an OrderedDict()
you can easily access the elements by indexing by getting the tuples of (key,value) pairs as follows
>>> import collections
>>> d = collections.OrderedDict()
>>> d['foo'] = 'python'
>>> d['bar'] = 'spam'
>>> d.items()
[('foo', 'python'), ('bar', 'spam')]
>>> d.items()[0]
('foo', 'python')
>>> d.items()[1]
('bar', 'spam')
Note for Python 3.X
dict.items
would return an iterable dict view object rather than a list. We need to wrap the call onto a list in order to make the indexing possible
>>> items = list(d.items())
>>> items
[('foo', 'python'), ('bar', 'spam')]
>>> items[0]
('foo', 'python')
>>> items[1]
('bar', 'spam')