Harry wrote: > Hi All, (snip) > I have the following object which is like a list of tuples
> row= [('name', 'x1'), ('min', 15.449041129349528), ('max', > 991.6337818245629), ('range', 976.18474069521335), ('mean', > 496.82174193958127), ('stddev', 304.78275004920454), ('variance', > 92892.524727555894), ('mode', '46.5818482111'), ('unique_count', '99'), > ('count', 99.0), ('count_missing', 0.0), ('sum_weight', 99.0)] FWIW, it *is* a list of tuples. > What command <ot> What's a 'command' ? </ot> > do I use to get the value corresponding to 'min'? (see below...) > This object seems to be non-indexable It is - just like any other list. Try : print row[0] print row[1] # etc... Now if you want keyword access, try this: print dict(row)['min'] -- bruno desthuilliers python -c "print '@'.join(['.'.join([w[::-1] for w in p.split('.')]) for p in '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'.split('@')])" -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list