Okay. I'll run a quick find-and-replace to set all my identifiers to
use underscores instead of hyphens. I'm not that familiar with Python,
so I assumed that it would recognize hyphens as a seperator and not a
minus sign.

Regards,
Leaf

On Jul 4, 10:27 pm, Malcolm Tredinnick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> On Fri, 2008-07-04 at 19:24 -0700, Leaf wrote:
> > I'm still working on the models.py for Dj Styles. I'm trying to create
> > a "Style" class, and the part of my code in question looks something
> > like this:
>
> > class Style(models.Model):
> >     Style-Name = models.CharField("Style Name", Max_length = 32,
> > Default = "Styles Upon Styles", Help_text = "A user-friendly name for
> > the style.")
>
> > Before resyncing the database, I hit the "Check Syntax" button in
> > PythonWin, and it returned "syntax error - can't assign to operator
> > (models.py, line 37)". Line 37 is the one beginning with Style-Name. I
> > tried searching the Internet for the syntax error, but couldn't find
> > anything that was particularly helpful. Does anyone know what's wrong
> > with my code that could be causing this error?
>
> Python thinks "Style-Name" is "Style - Name". You cannot use hyphens in
> identifiers. Looks like you need to slow down and take care that your
> Python is valid when you see these sorts of error messages.
>
> Malcolm
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