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First solution in Uncategorized category for Bigger Price by hamidardouz
def bigger_price(limit: int, data: list) -> list:
a=[]
for i in range(len(data)):
a.append(data[i]["price"])
a.sort(reverse=True)
b=[]
for i in range(limit):
for d in data:
if d['price']==a[i]:
b.append(d)
else:
return(b)
if __name__ == '__main__':
from pprint import pprint
print('Example:')
pprint(bigger_price(2, [
{"name": "bread", "price": 100},
{"name": "wine", "price": 138},
{"name": "meat", "price": 15},
{"name": "water", "price": 1}
]))
# These "asserts" using for self-checking and not for auto-testing
assert bigger_price(2, [
{"name": "bread", "price": 100},
{"name": "wine", "price": 138},
{"name": "meat", "price": 15},
{"name": "water", "price": 1}
]) == [
{"name": "wine", "price": 138},
{"name": "bread", "price": 100}
], "First"
assert bigger_price(1, [
{"name": "pen", "price": 5},
{"name": "whiteboard", "price": 170}
]) == [{"name": "whiteboard", "price": 170}], "Second"
print('Done! Looks like it is fine. Go and check it')
June 19, 2020