def test_reverse_dict(): d = {"a": (1, 2), "b": (2, 3), "c": ()} # Python 3.3 enable by default random hash for dict. # This change the order of traversal, so this can give 2 outputs assert reverse_dict(d) == { 1: ("a", ), 2: ("a", "b"), 3: ("b", ) } or reverse_dict(d) == { 1: ("a", ), 2: ("b", "a"), 3: ("b", ) }
def test_reverse_dict(): d = {'a': (1, 2), 'b': (2, 3), 'c': ()} # Python 3.3 enable by default random hash for dict. # This change the order of traversal, so this can give 2 outputs assert (reverse_dict(d) == { 1: ('a', ), 2: ('a', 'b'), 3: ('b', ) } or reverse_dict(d) == { 1: ('a', ), 2: ('b', 'a'), 3: ('b', ) })
def test_reverse_dict(): d = {'a': (1, 2), 'b': (2, 3), 'c': ()} # Python 3.3 enable by default random hash for dict. # This change the order of traversal, so this can give 2 outputs assert (reverse_dict(d) == {1: ('a',), 2: ('a', 'b'), 3: ('b',)} or reverse_dict(d) == {1: ('a',), 2: ('b', 'a'), 3: ('b',)})
def test_reverse_dict(): d = {'a': (1, 2), 'b': (2, 3), 'c': ()} assert reverse_dict(d) == {1: ('a',), 2: ('a', 'b'), 3: ('b',)}
def test_reverse_dict(): d = {"a": (1, 2), "b": (2, 3), "c": ()} assert reverse_dict(d) == {1: ("a",), 2: ("a", "b"), 3: ("b",)}