On 15 Jun, 21:05, "Terry Reedy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message > > news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > | Hi, > | > | > | I've created a method where the script defines twenty variables and > | several of them should be random having a maximum and a minimum value. > | > | What I did was this: > | > | from random import randrange as rr, random > | > | self.tr2_vezes = self.rr(self.d_tr2_vezes[0],self.d_tr2_vezes[-1], > | 1) # just an example, others are similar > > Are we to presume that self.rr is rr? > > | The minimum and maximum limits are never lower than -50 and higher > | than 250 and are integer. > | > | Many times, not always, the problem is that the script just loops > | forever and no value is chosen for the variable. > | > | What's happening here? What am I doing wrong? > > On what line does it 'loop forever'? > Are you saying that the same code with same input sometimes works and > sometimes does not? In any case, try to reduce it to the minumum that > either always or sometimes fails. And post that. > > tjr
I tried to reproduce the error in a small script. Python's error message always returned this kind of error: Traceback (most recent call last): File "individuo.py", line 584, in <module> ind.criarAleatorio() File "individuo.py", line 247, in criarAleatorio self.criarTr2_vezes() File "individuo.py", line 185, in criarTr2_vezes self.tr2_vezes = self.rr(self.d_tr2_vezes[0],self.d_tr2_vezes[-1], 1) File "/usr/lib/python2.5/random.py", line 158, in randrange istart = int(start) KeyboardInterrupt I got mislead by this. The loop was about a while statement that compared values from two of the random variables. It was a '>=' and it should be a '>'. Thank you for your messages. Luis -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list