On Jul 28, 10:26 am, NiklasRTZ <nikla...@gmail.com> wrote: > Newbie hello onwards to the .py manual asks meantime how the longest > word gets determined? > First word, ok > 'a aa aaa aa'[:'a aa aaa aa'.find(' ',1,10)]
Your language is not easy to understand, but I think you want to find the longest word in a string. If this is the input string: txt = "a aa aaa aa" There are several ways to do it, I'll show a simple one. You can split it into its parts (not having Python a built-in lazy split yet, you can split it all at once). You can do it with the string split method. It produces a list of the words, more or less (but you may have words like "gone,", you may have to take care of them too, this requires some code. Once you have a list of words, you have to take the longest. A simple way is to replace each word with a tuple that contains the length of the word and the word itself, then pick the tuple with the highest length value. But Python allows you to do such operation in a faster way: you can use the max() function, it has a "key" function that allows you to remap on the fly what you mean by "max". So you just have to give it a function (reference) that given the word spits its length, such function is "len" itself. If you instead want to find the position of the longest word the program gets a little longer. Ask if you need something different. Bye, bearophile -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list