Is there a difference between "Wrong or Right" and "Right or Wrong" [duplicate]
Solution 1:
Grammatically, wrong and right is equivalent to right and wrong, but right and wrong is by far the more common construction, to the point where it is idiomatic, like sweet and sour or bow and arrow.
Wrong and right would be unusual, and if used at all, probably chosen for some literary effect or other meaning, as John Lawler notes in his comment. I might jokingly praise the writing and reading skills of bloggers— suggesting they start to write before they bother to read, and denying praise of their reading and writing skills. An old Simpsons line has the narrator of a video describing the do's and do-not-do's of foundation repair, instead of the do's and don'ts, for humorous effect.
Wiktionary has a list of "Siamese twins"— a more politically correct term would be binomial expression or irreversible binomial— which includes similar phrases which follow a conventional order, from good and evil to fish and chips.