On 07/03/15 15:39, elie khairallah wrote:
hello , I would like to know if theres a way to change a variable's name
after every iteration for example I want to make a function that stores a
number in x_1 if i=1 and in x_2 if i=2.
To be more precise:
i=1
def f(n):
while i
Others have alrea
> You could certainly use I as an index into a list called x. This
> doesn't look like a good idea though
Can you explain more what's problematic with a list?
My best understanding so far of the problem is that the original
questioner is trying to compute a tabulation of results. For example,
On Sat, Mar 7, 2015 at 7:39 AM, elie khairallah
wrote:
> hello , I would like to know if theres a way to change a variable's name
> after every iteration for example I want to make a function that stores a
> number in x_1 if i=1 and in x_2 if i=2.
Conceptually, I think you're looking for a list.
On Sat, Mar 7, 2015 at 1:28 PM, Danny Yoo wrote:
>> You could certainly use I as an index into a list called x. This
>> doesn't look like a good idea though
>
>
> Can you explain more what's problematic with a list?
>
> My best understanding so far of the problem is that the original
> questioner
On Sat, Mar 7, 2015 at 10:39 AM, elie khairallah
wrote:
> hello , I would like to know if theres a way to change a variable's name
> after every iteration for example I want to make a function that stores a
> number in x_1 if i=1 and in x_2 if i=2.
> To be more precise:
> i=1
> def f(n):
>
hello , I would like to know if theres a way to change a variable's name
after every iteration for example I want to make a function that stores a
number in x_1 if i=1 and in x_2 if i=2.
To be more precise:
i=1
def f(n):
while ihttps://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor
On 27Feb2015 02:16, Barbara Heliodora G. Rodrigues
wrote:
I'd like to ask for help with an issue I have with python. My MAC is with OS
10-6.8, darwin kernel, 64 bits. For some reason I updated macports and it
automatically updated python to 2.7 with a 32 bits library, and it is giving me
lot
On 27/02/15 02:16, Barbara Heliodora G. Rodrigues wrote:
Dear tutor,
I'd like to ask for help with an issue I have with python. My MAC is with OS
10-6.8,
I'm not a MacOs expert but I know MacOS uses Python in some of its tools
so do not mess with the standard version, you might break somethin
Dear tutor,
I'd like to ask for help with an issue I have with python. My MAC is with OS
10-6.8, darwin kernel, 64 bits. For some reason I updated macports and it
automatically updated python to 2.7 with a 32 bits library, and it is giving me
lots of trouble. I can't install any new software tha
On 02/16/2015 11:27 AM, Courtney Skinner wrote:
Hello,
I am trying to build a program that approximates the value of cosine - this is
my program so far. It is not returning the right values. Could you tell me what
I am doing wrong?
You've got several answers that point out several problems
Courtney Skinner wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I am trying to build a program that approximates the value of cosine -
> this is my program so far. It is not returning the right values. Could you
> tell me what I am doing wrong?
>
>
> def main():
>
> import math
>
> print("This program appro
On 16/02/15 16:27, Courtney Skinner wrote:
Hello,
I am trying to build a program that approximates the value of cosine
def main():
import math
Its usual to do the imports outside the function at the tyop of the
file. Python doesn't actually care much but its 'standard practice'.
On 16/02/2015 16:27, Courtney Skinner wrote:
Hello,
I am trying to build a program that approximates the value of cosine - this is
my program so far. It is not returning the right values. Could you tell me what
I am doing wrong?
def main():
import math
Not that it matters but imports
Hello,
I am trying to build a program that approximates the value of cosine - this is
my program so far. It is not returning the right values. Could you tell me what
I am doing wrong?
def main():
import math
print("This program approximates the cosine of x by summing")
print(
On 31/12/14 13:49, Tammy Miller wrote:
I need help on the
following: I have a created a project from a csv file to calculate the
mean and standard deviation.
I assume that means you read the data from the CSV file
and display the stats?
However, I would like to
create a drop-down list and d
What is the user interface that your program is using, currently? IE:
QT, GTK, Tkinter, Curses, Kivy, Pygame, Or None?
What is the target system on which your program runs?
How are you currently viewing the mean and standard deviation results?
What version of Python are you using and what is your
Hello All,
I need help on the
following: I have a created a project from a csv file to calculate the
mean and standard deviation.
However, I would like to
create a drop-down list and display the mean and standard deviation? Is there
a module
for that?
Thank you,
Tammy
If I understand what you're asking you need to write the current
gameboard and the info you get in 'gameBoard' is the current state of
the game.
There are several ways of doing this (with different degrees of
cleverness) but to keep it simple:
Start by printing out the current state, different wa
On Sun, Nov 16, 2014 at 1:52 PM, Andrew McReynolds
wrote:
> The section of the assignment that I'm working on states:
> 2) Write a function called loadGameBoard (player_marks) where player_marks
> is a dictionary that
> contains the players’ marks. This function creates a 3x3 array with the
> play
The section of the assignment that I'm working on states: 2) Write a function
called loadGameBoard (player_marks) where player_marks is a dictionary that
contains the players’ marks. This function creates a 3x3 array with the
players’ marks populated in the correct row/column indices using the f
On Sat, Nov 15, 2014 at 06:19:56PM +, Bo Morris wrote:
> Thank you Alan and Danny. It amazes me at the lengths you guys, as well as
> everyone else who contributes, will go to to help explain things to us; it
> is greatly appreciated!
>
> Alan, I decided to dumb down the learning classes ju
On 15/11/14 18:19, Bo Morris wrote:
With the first part…
class Message:
def __init__(self, aString):
self.text = aString
Will I always use “_init_” when defining the first function in a class?
It can go anywhere in the class definition. it is just another method of
the class. Bu
Thank you Alan and Danny. It amazes me at the lengths you guys, as well as
everyone else who contributes, will go to to help explain things to us; it is
greatly appreciated!
Alan, I decided to dumb down the learning classes just a little. By this I
mean, I am not using Tkinter to learn classes
On Fri, Nov 14, 2014 at 4:29 PM, Bo wrote:
> Hello everyone, hope all is well. Was just wondering if I could get some
> help understanding classes and how they work. What is the point in OOP if I
> don’t understand classes, are classes not the heart and soul of OOP? I have
> been trying to learn c
On 15/11/14 00:29, Bo wrote:
help understanding classes and how they work. What is the point in OOP
if I don’t understand classes, are classes not the heart and soul of
OOP?
Actually not necessarily. There are OOP languages where classes
are not included or little used. Javascript is a good exa
Hello everyone, hope all is well. Was just wondering if I could get some
help understanding classes and how they work. What is the point in OOP if I
don¹t understand classes, are classes not the heart and soul of OOP? I have
been trying to learn classes by practicing with Tkinter building GUIs. Bel
Wrote in message:
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Hello, I can not for the life of me figure out where I have gone wrong. I
> wrote the following code as a simulation for the table top game x-wing. It
> basically simulates dice rolls but the issue is the fact that every time I
> choose a number of dice t
I am not familiar with the game, but maybe using "offense += 1" and
"defense += 1" to replace the corresponding "continue" would help?
On Mon, Nov 10, 2014 at 2:57 PM, wrote:
> Hello, I can not for the life of me figure out where I have gone wrong.
> I wrote the following code as a simulation f
On 10/11/14 20:57, corylog...@yahoo.com.dmarc.invalid wrote:
I wrote the following code as a simulation for the table top game
x-wing.
I don;t know it so can only give some general comments below...
import random
print("X-wing dice simulator")
x = int(input("How many dice will the offensive
Hello, I can not for the life of me figure out where I have gone wrong. I
wrote the following code as a simulation for the table top game x-wing. It
basically simulates dice rolls but the issue is the fact that every time I
choose a number of dice to roll, they all hit. None of them ever miss
The usage of the api as documented here - https://github.com/zachwill/fred
- suggests :
>>> import fred
# Save your FRED API key.
>>> fred.key('my_fred_api_key')
# Interact with economic data categories.
>>> fred.category()
...
Cheers,
Anish Tambe
On 26 Oct 2014 00:23, "Joel Goldstick" wrote:
On Sat, Oct 25, 2014 at 12:08 PM, Mark Meanwell wrote:
> Hi Folks - new to python and trying to run an API. Running version 2.7.3. on
> Windows 7 machine.
>
> Here is the scenario for the given API (FRED API in this case):
>
> easy_install Fred from C:\ - this installs to C:\site packages
>
> the
On 25/10/14 17:08, Mark Meanwell wrote:
Hi Folks - new to python and trying to run an API. Running version
2.7.3. on Windows 7 machine.
Here is the scenario for the given API (FRED API in this case):
easy_install Fred from C:\ - this installs to C:\site packages
then I fire up the python she
Hi Folks - new to python and trying to run an API. Running version 2.7.3.
on Windows 7 machine.
Here is the scenario for the given API (FRED API in this case):
easy_install Fred from C:\ - this installs to C:\site packages
then I fire up the python shell and run file created for fred api:
from
On 13/10/14 11:40, אופיר לירון wrote:
# set the initial values
the_number = random.randint(1, 100)
guess = int(input("Take a guess: "))
tries = 1
# guessing loop
while guess != the_number:
if guess > the_number:
print("Lower...")
else:
print("Higher...")
guess
>
> if guess != the_number:
>
> print ("you failed, the number was", the_number)
>
> elif guess==the_number:
>
> print("You guessed it! The number was", the_number)
>
> print("And it only took you", tries, "tries!\n")
This block of code appears to be applied for e
Hi,I am new into Python, and using the bookPython Programming for the Absolute Beginner by Michael Dawson.One of the taks in chapte 3 is to change the "guess my number game" to include only 5 gusses and give appropriate messege at the end (in case no sucssesful guess was done).I have tried to add b
http://cscircles.cemc.uwaterloo.ca/run-at-home/
On Fri, Sep 19, 2014 at 11:04 AM, Danny Yoo wrote:
> On Wed, Sep 17, 2014 at 4:36 PM, Art Pelletier wrote:
> >
> > I am a beginner with pythons programming I would like to see if their
> is a site that has samples programs that I can practice on
On Wed, Sep 17, 2014 at 4:36 PM, Art Pelletier wrote:
>
> I am a beginner with pythons programming I would like to see if their is a
> site that has samples programs that I can practice on.
Hi Art,
Yes, there are some good resources you can check out. Here's a link
to some of them:
htt
Check this guy's youtube channel. He has very basic examples. His
username is thenewboston
On Wed, Sep 17, 2014 at 4:36 PM, Art Pelletier wrote:
>
> I am a beginner with pythons programming I would like to see if their is a
> site that has samples programs that I can practice on.
> Sent from m
I am a beginner with pythons programming I would like to see if their is a
site that has samples programs that I can practice on.
Sent from my iPad
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jarod...@libero.it wrote:
> Dear All
>
> clubA= ["mary","luke","amyr","marco","franco","lucia", "sally","genevra","
> electra"]
> clubB= ["mary","rebecca","jane","jessica","judit","sharon","lucia",
> "sally"," Castiel","Sam"]
>
> I have a list of names that I would to annotate in function of pr
On Tue, May 27, 2014 at 10:05:30AM +0200, jarod...@libero.it wrote:
[...]
> with open("file.in") as p:
> mit = []
You have lost the indentation, which makes this code incorrect.
But the rest of the code is too complicated.
> for i in p:
>lines =i.strip("\n").split("\t")
>if (lines[0] in
"jarod...@libero.it" Wrote in message:
> Dear All
>
> clubA= ["mary","luke","amyr","marco","franco","lucia", "sally","genevra","
> electra"]
> clubB= ["mary","rebecca","jane","jessica","judit","sharon","lucia", "sally","
> Castiel","Sam"]
>
> I have a list of names that I would to annotate in f
On 27/05/2014 09:05, jarod...@libero.it wrote:
Dear All
clubA= ["mary","luke","amyr","marco","franco","lucia", "sally","genevra","
electra"]
clubB= ["mary","rebecca","jane","jessica","judit","sharon","lucia", "sally","
Castiel","Sam"]
I have a list of names that I would to annotate in function
Dear All
clubA= ["mary","luke","amyr","marco","franco","lucia", "sally","genevra","
electra"]
clubB= ["mary","rebecca","jane","jessica","judit","sharon","lucia", "sally","
Castiel","Sam"]
I have a list of names that I would to annotate in function of presence in
different clubs:
my input files
Hi Glen, and welcome! My responses below.
On Thu, May 15, 2014 at 09:58:07PM -0400, Glen Chan wrote:
> Hello, I am student trying to fugure out why when I enter any number
> it says error. It's only suppose to do that if it's out the 1-10
> range. Please help. Thank you.
You've made an mistake
On 16/05/14 02:58, Glen Chan wrote:
Hello, I am student trying to fugure out why when I enter any number it
says error.
Because that's what you programmed it to do.
Almost. If you enter 1 or 10 you won't get an error.
Look at your logic:
number = input('Enter a number between 1 and 10: ')
wh
Hello, I am student trying to fugure out why when I enter any number it says
error. It's only suppose to do that if it's out the 1-10 range. Please help.
Thank you.
number = input('Enter a number between 1 and 10: ')
while number < 1 or number > 10:
print 'Please enter a number between 1
Hi
This will solve your purpose:
Yes we can write in better way also :
--
#The Dice Game
#add libraries needed
import random
#the main function
def main():
print
#initialize variables
playerOne = 'No Name'
playerTwo = 'No Name'
endProgram ="no"
On 05/10/2014 11:16 PM, Glen Chan wrote:
Hello, I am a student trying to figure out Python. I am getting errors that I
don't know how to fix. What do you do after you get the error message and
something is highlighted? Does that have to be deleted? Anyway, here is what I
mean...
def main():
On 11/05/14 04:16, Glen Chan wrote:
Hello, I am a student trying to figure out Python. I am getting errors
that I don't know how to fix. What do you do after you get the error
message and something is highlighted? Does that have to be deleted?
The error doesn't need to be deleted because it app
Hey Glen, include the error you are getting. It will make answering
your question easier. How are you running this program, in an IDE?
On Sat, May 10, 2014 at 11:16 PM, Glen Chan wrote:
> Hello, I am a student trying to figure out Python. I am getting errors that
> I don't know how to fix. What d
Hello, I am a student trying to figure out Python. I am getting errors that I
don't know how to fix. What do you do after you get the error message and
something is highlighted? Does that have to be deleted? Anyway, here is what I
mean...
#>>> The Dice Game
#add libraries needed
import rando
Hello "1 2", and welcome!
(By the way, I feel quite silly calling you by the name you show in your
email address. Do you have another name you would prefer to be known
by?)
My response below.
On Sat, May 10, 2014 at 02:35:07PM +0800, 1 2 wrote:
> In the result it shows "s= 8" pls tell me how
On 10/05/14 07:35, 1 2 wrote:
In the result it shows "s= 8" pls tell me how to remove the blank?
s,t,n = 0,0,1
while t <= s:
s,t,n = s+2,t+n,n+1
else:
print('s=',s,n)
Assuming you are using Python version 3 you need to specify the sep
option to print:
print('s=',s,n,sep='')
>>> h
On Sat, May 10, 2014 at 8:35 AM, 1 2 wrote:
> In the result it shows "s= 8" pls tell me how to remove the blank?
>
> s,t,n = 0,0,1
> while t <= s:
> s,t,n = s+2,t+n,n+1
> else:
> print('s=',s,n)
You must use something else. For example:
print('s={0} {1}'.format(s, n))
This will pro
In the result it shows "s= 8" pls tell me how to remove the blank?
s,t,n = 0,0,1
while t <= s:
s,t,n = s+2,t+n,n+1
else:
print('s=',s,n)
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jordan smallwood Wrote in
message:
>
> want to have the user try again if they enter in a non integer. What am I
> missing:
Do you perhaps mean float?
If so, see the other response.
--
DaveA
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On 01/05/14 01:18, jordan smallwood wrote:
Hey there,
I have this code below (in to cm conversion) and I want to have the user
try again if they enter in a non integer. What am I missing:
A loop.
There is a common pattern or idiom in Pytthon:
while True:
get input
if input ok:
Hey there,
I have this code below (in to cm conversion) and I want to have the user try
again if they enter in a non integer. What am I missing:
ConversionConstant = 2.54
def CalculateCentimeters(inches):
return ConversionConstant * inches
def CalculateInches(centimeters):
return centi
As others have pointed out, a mapping/dictionary or just a list of lists
seems like how you would want to organize the data for input. I think your
problem is insistence on using sets. I am no Python guru, but I think this
list is more for exploratory learning of Python. I think people are trying
t
Thanks for the response Smith, I was thinking make be I have done something
incorrect and if there is some other function that can be used to display
the output in desired order but don't see it possible thats why was
wondering if any of you Python gurus have any inputs for me :-)
On Sat, Apr 26
err, set also is unordered. I can see you are using set for a reason, but
has no concept of order.
On Sat, Apr 26, 2014 at 3:20 PM, C Smith wrote:
> Just glancing at your work, I see you have curly braces around what looks
> like it should be a list. If you are concerned with the order of your
>
Just glancing at your work, I see you have curly braces around what looks
like it should be a list. If you are concerned with the order of your
output, dictionaries do not have a concept of order.
On Sat, Apr 26, 2014 at 3:16 PM, Suhana Vidyarthi wrote:
> Hi Danny,
>
> Let me give you a high le
Hi Danny,
Let me give you a high level brief of what I am doing:
I am working on doing "disaster aware routing" considering the 24-node US
network where I will be setting up connection between two any two nodes (I
will select the source and destination nodes randomly). Also I have some
links whose
>>> I want to create two arrays using the above file (Links array and Prob
>>> array) that should give following output:
>>>
>>> *Links *= { [3,5] [5,4] [5,8] [7,8] [14,10] [14,13] [17,13] [14,18]
>>> [10,13] [14,13] [17,13] [12,13] [11,6] [11,9][11,12] [11,19] [19,20]
>>> [15,20] [21,20] [20,21] [
Thanks for the response Alan. my clarifications are below:
On Sat, Apr 26, 2014 at 1:41 AM, Alan Gauld wrote:
> On 26/04/14 01:46, Suhana Vidyarthi wrote:
>
> I have this file:
>>
>> 1,3,5,0.03
>>
>> 2,3,5,5,4,0.11
>>
>> 3,3,5,5,4,5,8,0.04
>>
>
>
>> And each line is interpreted as:
>>
>>
Hi,
The reason I opened a link is because there are changes in the code. Does
it make sense? Else I can definitely go back to the thread.
On Sat, Apr 26, 2014 at 9:05 AM, Danny Yoo wrote:
> Hi Suhana,
>
> Also note that you asked this question just a few days ago.
>
> https://mail.pytho
Hi Suhana,
Also note that you asked this question just a few days ago.
https://mail.python.org/pipermail/tutor/2014-April/101019.html
We're not robots. We don't like repetition unless there's a reason
for it, and in this case, you got responses to the earlier question.
For example:
htt
On 26/04/14 01:46, Suhana Vidyarthi wrote:
I have this file:
1,3,5,0.03
2,3,5,5,4,0.11
3,3,5,5,4,5,8,0.04
And each line is interpreted as:
* 1,3,5,0.03-> This line means 1 link can be down i.e. between 3—5
with a probability of failure *0.03*
* 2,3,5,5,4,0.11 -> This line mean
Hi,
I need help with coding for the problem below. I am new in this area, so
needed help. If anyone can help me program the below scenario, I will be
thankful.
I have this file:
1,3,5,0.03
2,3,5,5,4,0.11
3,3,5,5,4,5,8,0.04
2,5,8,7,8,0.04
3,14,10,14,13,17,13,0.04
1,14,18,0.06
4,10,13,
jordan smallwood Wrote in
message:
Do you know what a module is? Can you use a text editor to create one?
Do you know what a function looks like? Try writing the first one
they asked. Post it here, along with some test code showing it
works, or describe what goes wrong.
And while you're
On 25/04/14 20:52, jordan smallwood wrote:
Hello,
I am new to Python. I mean completely new and we're working on this
problem set where they give us specs and we have to build something
based off these specs. I have no idea what they're asking.
Its pretty clear.
They want you to build a module
Hello,
I am new to Python. I mean completely new and we're working on this problem set
where they give us specs and we have to build something based off these specs.
I have no idea what they're asking. Could someone help get me started on the
path to figuring this out?
Below is the question:
Unfortunately, we can't give too much specific help on your particular
problem because it's homework.
You should use the knowledge you learned in your introductory
programming class about designing programs. In particular, give a
name to the function or functions your are designing. Be rigorous
On 22/04/2014 12:41, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
On Mon, Apr 21, 2014 at 06:16:20PM -0700, Suhana Vidyarthi wrote:
[...]
# on Windows either of these will be okay
filename = "C:/path/to/file.txt"
filename = "C:\\path\\to\\file.txt"
Or a raw string r'C:\path\to\file.txt'
--
My fellow Pythonis
On Mon, Apr 21, 2014 at 06:16:20PM -0700, Suhana Vidyarthi wrote:
[...]
> I have a python code that shows a set of shortest paths between nodes A and
> B. Now I have to select the least risky path among them. To do that I have
> to consider the risk values of each link. I know how to calculate the
On 22/04/14 02:16, Suhana Vidyarthi wrote:
I have a python code that shows a set of shortest paths between nodes A
and B.
It would help if you showed us this code. Otherwise we are
just making wild guesses about how you are modelling this.
Also knowing which Python version you are using would
My knowledge of coding is fairly limited and I am having a hard time
writing a Python code which might be pretty simple for you :-)
Here is what I am doing and I need help with:
I have a python code that shows a set of shortest paths between nodes A and
B. Now I have to select the least risky pat
On 28/03/14 15:27, Chris “Kwpolska” Warrick wrote:
On Fri, Mar 28, 2014 at 2:17 AM, Alan Gauld wrote:
Because the desktop is hardly ever anywhere near where the cmd prompt lands
you.
I just tested on my Windows 7 box. It got me to C:\Users\Kwpolska.
`cd Desktop` is enough.
I also tested on
* Chris “Kwpolska” Warrick [2014-03-28 16:27]:
>
> Create a folder on the desktop, or even in the home directory. A much
> nicer place than the drive root — and a much modern way to store it
> (drive root sounds DOS-y)
I'll have to disagree with this statement. Dropping all your files in
you De
Hi Leo,
On 27 March 2014 08:43, Leo Nardo wrote:
> Im on windows 8 and i need to open a file called string1.py that is on my
> desktop, in both the interpreter and notepad++, so that i can work on it. I
> already have it open in notepad, but for the life of me cannot figure out
> how to open it i
On Fri, Mar 28, 2014 at 2:17 AM, Alan Gauld wrote:
> On 27/03/14 21:01, Chris “Kwpolska” Warrick wrote:
>> Painful? How painful can `cd Desktop` be? Certainly less than `D:`
>> followed by `cd PythonProjects`…
>
>
> Because the desktop is hardly ever anywhere near where the cmd prompt lands
> you.
On 28/03/14 09:28, spir wrote:
On 03/28/2014 02:17 AM, Alan Gauld wrote:
you have to remember where it is. There is no ~ shortcut in Windows.
On my system that means typing something like:
C:\Documents and Settings\alang\Desktop
Can't you make a symlink pointing to Desktop? (in C:\ or anywh
On 28/03/2014 01:17, Alan Gauld wrote:
On 27/03/14 21:01, Chris “Kwpolska” Warrick wrote:
On Mar 27, 2014 8:58 PM, "Alan Gauld" mailto:alan.ga...@btinternet.com>> wrote:
>
> On 27/03/14 06:43, Leo Nardo wrote:
>>
>> Im on windows 8 and i need to open a file called string1.py that
is on
>> m
On 03/28/2014 02:17 AM, Alan Gauld wrote:
On 27/03/14 21:01, Chris “Kwpolska” Warrick wrote:
On Mar 27, 2014 8:58 PM, "Alan Gauld" mailto:alan.ga...@btinternet.com>> wrote:
>
> On 27/03/14 06:43, Leo Nardo wrote:
>>
>> Im on windows 8 and i need to open a file called string1.py that is on
>
On 27/03/14 21:01, Chris “Kwpolska” Warrick wrote:
On Mar 27, 2014 8:58 PM, "Alan Gauld" mailto:alan.ga...@btinternet.com>> wrote:
>
> On 27/03/14 06:43, Leo Nardo wrote:
>>
>> Im on windows 8 and i need to open a file called string1.py that is on
>> my desktop,
>
>
> Thats your first pro
On 27/03/2014 19:56, Alan Gauld wrote:
On 27/03/14 06:43, Leo Nardo wrote:
Im on windows 8 and i need to open a file called string1.py that is on
my desktop,
Thats your first problem. Its usually a bad idea to store your python
code on the desktop, because the desktop is a pain to find from a
On Mar 27, 2014 8:58 PM, "Alan Gauld" wrote:
>
> On 27/03/14 06:43, Leo Nardo wrote:
>>
>> Im on windows 8 and i need to open a file called string1.py that is on
>> my desktop,
>
>
> Thats your first problem. Its usually a bad idea to store your python
code on the desktop, because the desktop is a
On 27/03/14 06:43, Leo Nardo wrote:
Im on windows 8 and i need to open a file called string1.py that is on
my desktop,
Thats your first problem. Its usually a bad idea to store your python
code on the desktop, because the desktop is a pain to find from a
command line.
Instead create a folde
Leo Nardo Wrote in message
>
>
Im on windows 8 and i need to open a file called string1.py that is on my
desktop, in both the interpreter and notepad++, so that i can work on it. I
already have it open in notepad, but for the life of me cannot figure out how
to open it in the interpreter. In
Leo Nardo writes:
> Im on windows 8 and i need to open a file called string1.py that is on
> my desktop, in both the interpreter and notepad++, so that i can work
> on it.
It's not clear what you want. What does it mean to you for a Python
program to be “open in the interpreter”?
You have opene
On 27/03/2014 08:55, David Palao wrote:
Hello,
What do you mean by "open it in the interpreter"?
Do you want to open it and read from it its content? or do you want to
execute its python code within the interpreter?
Best
2014-03-27 7:43 GMT+01:00 Leo Nardo :
Im on windows 8 and i need to open a
Hello,
What do you mean by "open it in the interpreter"?
Do you want to open it and read from it its content? or do you want to
execute its python code within the interpreter?
Best
2014-03-27 7:43 GMT+01:00 Leo Nardo :
> Im on windows 8 and i need to open a file called string1.py that is on my
> d
Im on windows 8 and i need to open a file called string1.py that is on my
desktop, in both the interpreter and notepad++, so that i can work on it. I
already have it open in notepad, but for the life of me cannot figure out
how to open it in the interpreter. Invalid syntax is the error message when
On 18/03/14 18:21, Joel Goldstick wrote:
List
On Mar 18, 2014 11:08 AM, "y j" mailto:yashp...@gmail.com>> wrote:
how can i split a word into letters in python 2.7.6?
or more specifically list(aString) - lowercase and with params.
That will give you a list of the individual letters.
Assum
List
On Mar 18, 2014 11:08 AM, "y j" wrote:
> how can i split a word into letters in python 2.7.6?
>
> --
> Y D Jain
>
>
> ___
> Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org
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* y j [2014-03-18 16:41]:
> how can i split a word into letters in python 2.7.6?
Strings can already be accessed as arrays:
>>> s='foobar'
>>> print s[2]
o
>>> print s[4]
a
>>> print s[7]
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "", line 1, in
IndexError: string index out of range
>>>
Can
how can i split a word into letters in python 2.7.6?
--
Y D Jain
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