Thanks, Steven. I think you are right about those mistake. But you could
tell that the code was incomplete so the interact() was not defined. I have
updated some parts (basically writing from the scratch). I am busy with a
new project and learning how to create GUI app in python, although there
On 06/05/15 15:01, Dave Angel wrote:
def adding_all(x):
total = 0
for num in x:
total +=num
return total
Good function.
Except for the fact that the built-in sum() function
does the same thing with a lot less typing...
--
Alan G
Author of the Learn to Program web
Forwarded Message
Subject: Re: [Tutor] Adding consecutive numbers
Date: Wed, 6 May 2015 21:13:15 +1000
From: Whom Isac wombing...@gmail.com
To: Alan Gauld alan.ga...@btinternet.com
I am actually using the latest version of python (3.5) in windows 7 operating
for what ever it's worth I'd like to share the code below with you.
I got the code to do what I wanted. Object falls onto a rotating platform
and stays there without falling off.
video is here - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I6c5cKhLuo4
import sys, os, pygame
from pygame.locals import *
from
Thanks all for the very informative responses especially to Alan for being
descriptive.
I am now going to make my movement linear and move away from my current
circular one.
I hope a little bit of fun and Thank you emails fall into the order of
the day..
:)
On Thu, Apr 30, 2015 at 9:13 AM,
Sure, but let me include the full working program after fixup
On 29 April 2015 at 19:09, Cameron Simpson c...@zip.com.au wrote:
These could all do with docstrings. add() is pretty obvious, but the
distinction between minus() and subtract() could do with elaboration.
etc, etc.
Thanks.
Thanks all for the responses.
Charles Cossé - yes I can write a simple pygame program that makes a
sprite move in a circle but it may not be the style and order that many may
approve or accept. I consider myself a student. :)
No one has pointed out why the object moves in a circle properly in the
On 29/04/15 08:15, diliup gabadamudalige wrote:
1. x = some code
That is what I used and it worked. I was trying to find how we can do the
same thing by updating the current position by doing
2. x += some code
Above 1 works. 2 does not. Why is that?
Because they do completely different
On 29/04/15 09:03, diliup gabadamudalige wrote:
Thank you Alan. Understood. I already knew that. My question is
How to to do it the second way.
some code = what?
The point is you cannot do it.
The second approach always uses the current value of x.
The first approach may or may not use the
On 29/04/15 10:15, diliup gabadamudalige wrote:
x=42 good
x += 42 -x ?
That does not go by a mile of what I asked.
You've asked three different things:
1) Why the += form gives different results from the assignment form,
2) Why some code you apparently wriotre worked outside a class
but
I do not understand how Alan does not get the code that is in this thread.
Anyway I can conclude by saying that a friend of mine who is not in this
thread solved the problem and I would like to share it with you. He has
changed only a very smal portion in the original code that i posted in this
On Wed, Apr 29, 2015 at 11:37 AM, diliup gabadamudalige
dili...@gmail.com wrote:
I do not understand how Alan does not get the code that is in this thread.
Hi Dilliup,
Please try to avoid using the phrase, I don't understand how X does
not get Y
You might not realize it, but it's
Thanks Alan.
It is partly due to curiosity but I also wanted to have a common update
method. And as I almost always use the x+= some code, y+=some code for
animation stuff I wanted to know how it could be done using this method
rather than finding each position separately and assigning with x=
On 29/04/15 21:19, diliup gabadamudalige wrote:
It is partly due to curiosity but I also wanted to have a common update
method. And as I almost always use the x+= some code, y+=some code for
animation stuff I wanted to know how it could be done using this method
rather than finding each
On 29Apr2015 08:34, Jim Mooney Py3.4.3winXP cybervigila...@gmail.com wrote:
On 28 April 2015 at 22:40, Cameron Simpson c...@zip.com.au wrote:
We can pick over your code as well if you like. Should we?
Sure, but let me include the full working program after fixup. Although I
still have to
question to Lucas.
Not sure if this is what you're looking for, but I would also use cos for
the x coordinate as suggested. If:
self.rect.x = self.radius * math.cos(self.angle) + self.center_x
self.rect.y = self.radius * math.sin(self.angle) + self.center_y
Take a derivative (assume: angle +=
Thank you Alan. Understood. I already knew that. My question is
How to to do it the second way.
some code = what?
My question is, how does one arrive at the code to put in place of some
code? The code I used does not work correctly.
The code is in this chain of email.
I hope I am clear in what I
x=42 good
x += 42 -x ?
That does not go by a mile of what I asked.
Alan, are you telling me that there is no way that one can arrive at X2
which is the NEXT place that X1 will be after some increment?
old x position = X1
new x position= X1 + some increment value
which can be written as :new X =
On 04/29/2015 02:37 PM, diliup gabadamudalige wrote:
I do not understand how Alan does not get the code that is in this thread.
There are at least 3 ways of posting to this thread:
A) email
B) newsgroup
C) googlegroups
and at least 5 ways of looking at this thread
A) email
B)
On 04/28/2015 02:37 PM, diliup gabadamudalige wrote:
I thank all those who responded to my question
Here is the code that I had written.
When updating is applied to a surface object the rotation works but when it
is applied through a class to an object it goes wrong in about 3 rotations.
As
I thank all those who responded to my question
Here is the code that I had written.
When updating is applied to a surface object the rotation works but when it
is applied through a class to an object it goes wrong in about 3 rotations.
As far as I can see the code is the same. What is wrong? If
On 28/04/15 16:38, diliup gabadamudalige wrote:
-- Forwarded message --
From: diliup gabadamudalige dili...@gmail.com
Date: Tue, Apr 28, 2015 at 6:22 PM
Subject: circular movement in pygame
To: pygame-us...@seul.org
It's good that you tried the python-game list for a
pygame
On 28 April 2015 at 16:38, diliup gabadamudalige dili...@gmail.com wrote:
Looking at the code on this page lines 47 48
http://programarcadegames.com/python_examples/show_file.php?file=sprite_circle_movement.py
is there a way to do
self.rect.x +*= some value*
self.rect.y += some value
On 28 April 2015 at 19:37, diliup gabadamudalige dili...@gmail.com wrote:
I thank all those who responded to my question
Here is the code that I had written.
When updating is applied to a surface object the rotation works but when it
is applied through a class to an object it goes wrong in
2015-02-18 8:25 GMT+02:00 Danny Yoo d...@hashcollision.org:
I do not have time to help you right now. Please continue correspondence
with the main tutor list.
On Wed, Feb 18, 2015 at 11:34 AM, Андрей Пугачев
pugachov.and...@gmail.com wrote:
ok, thanks, I will
Following up: have you been
On 01/02/2015 14:28, Alan Gauld wrote:
This was the problematic serial question.
*From:*Doug Basberg [mailto:dbasb...@comcast.net]
*Sent:* Friday, January 30, 2015 5:29 PM
*To:* 'tu...@python.org'
*Subject:* doing rs232 serial with binary data ?? with pyserial??
Hello group;
I am new to
On 01/02/15 14:28, Alan Gauld wrote:
So, in Python I found pyserial and wish to use it to send binary to
controlled devices (in this case to a Modbus protocol solar charge
controller (TriStar TS-60).
In C++ I would setup ‘structs’ or class attributes to hold the byte
oriented commands and
On 02/01/2015 18:21, Rohan Ds wrote:
-- Forwarded message --
From: Rohan Ds rohan0...@gmail.com
Date: 2 Jan 2015 23:46
Subject: Newbie
To: tut...@python.org
Cc:
Hello everybody :)
I am Rohan from India. I'm new to Python. I have a basic understanding as
to how Python works. I
Forwarded to list for info.
Please use ReplyAll in responses to the tutor list.
And please do not quote the entire digest,
delete any irrelevant parts.
On 03/01/15 16:00, pramod gowda wrote:
Hello ,
I have chaged the code as per your input, except port number.
If i change the port number it
On 03/01/15 18:07, Alan Gauld wrote:
Forwarded to list for info.
Please use ReplyAll in responses to the tutor list.
Apologies, you did. It was stuck in the moderation queue.
I've now taken you off moderation.
--
Alan G
Author of the Learn to Program web site
http://www.alan-g.me.uk/
On Fri, Jan 02, 2015 at 11:51:04PM +0530, Rohan Ds wrote:
Hello everybody :)
I am Rohan from India. I'm new to Python. I have a basic understanding as
to how Python works. I want to contribute to PSF. The information available
on the site didn't really answer my questions.
What sort of
On 02/01/15 18:21, Rohan Ds wrote:
Hello everybody :)
Hi, welcome.
I am Rohan from India. I'm new to Python. I have a basic understanding as
to how Python works. I want to contribute to PSF. The information available
on the site didn't really answer my questions.
It will help if you tell
On 01/01/15 14:06, Vedhi Shreya Marwaha wrote:
Hi! My name is Shreya Marwaha. I’m class 12th student in India. I’m using
2.7.5 python version [MSC v.1500 64 bit (AMD64)] on win32 as instructed by
CBSE (central board of secondary education). I’ve been having problem in
using pickle module.
OK,
You're still using html mail, and still top-posting.
But my curiosity is still begging me for an answer regarding my original
approach. Is there a way to manage the functionality of be round function
such that it does not strip any data to the right of the decimal point?
That's the
From: Felisha Lawrence felisha.lawre...@gmail.com
Date: Tue, Sep 9, 2014 at 8:53 AM
Subject: Re: [Tutor] Fwd: Re: Output 'Strings' to directory
To: Danny Yoo d...@hashcollision.org
Also,
I had this code working
import os
path = '/Users/felishalawrence/testswps/vol1'
for file in os.listdir
Thanks! Thats exactly what my problem was. I fixed it
On Tue, Sep 9, 2014 at 12:57 PM, Alan Gauld alan.ga...@btinternet.com
wrote:
From: Felisha Lawrence felisha.lawre...@gmail.com
Date: Tue, Sep 9, 2014 at 8:53 AM
Subject: Re: [Tutor] Fwd: Re: Output 'Strings' to directory
To: Danny Yoo d
On Wed, Aug 20, 2014 at 6:45 AM, diliup gabadamudalige
dili...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Danny!
The routine works fine and so does this one.
http://www.pygame.org/pcr/zipshow/index.php
The only problem with all these are that that the time taken to read these
files and to either make a list or
On Sat, Aug 09, 2014 at 12:39:37PM +0200, Chris “Kwpolska” Warrick wrote:
It looks ilke this WONDERFUL mailing list which does not do something
as basic as a sane Reply-to header made me send a response to the OP
only. Here it is again:
[...]
Although I personally agree with you that setting
On 21/06/14 01:45, Alex Kleider wrote:
The only applicability that fits in with anything I've experienced has
to do with the necessity of globals to represent command line parameters
That's not a necessity and I hardly ever do that... :-)
But it is one pattern for handling CL args.
Other
On 21/06/2014 18:23, Alan Gauld wrote:
On 21/06/14 01:45, Alex Kleider wrote:
The only applicability that fits in with anything I've experienced has
to do with the necessity of globals to represent command line parameters
That's not a necessity and I hardly ever do that... :-)
But it is one
Mirage Web Studio wrote:
I am new to python programming. while trying it out i find that in my
code file io.read is not reading large files particularly over 1 gb. my
code is posted below. i am working on python 3.3 on windows with ntfs
partition and intel corei3 ram 3gb. the execution
Gabriele Brambilla wrote:
2014-06-05 22:10 GMT-04:00 Peter Romfeld peter.romfeld...@gmail.com:
On Friday, June 06, 2014 10:04 AM, Gabriele Brambilla wrote:
fiLUMOname = 'Lsum_' + period + '_' + parts[2] + '_' + parts[3] + '_'
+ parts[4] + '_*.dat'
aaa = glob.glob(fiLUMOname)
print(aaa)
oh yes! I had a problem inside the file name! (I had a lot of file to open
and I changed the one I was looking at!the one I was trying to open has a
wrong filename...)
Sorry for the misunderstanding.
Gabriele
2014-06-06 3:05 GMT-04:00 Peter Otten __pete...@web.de:
Gabriele Brambilla wrote:
thanks guys for the replies,
Danny, your explanation helped alot, i'll have a go on Alan Gaud's
tutorial. super thanks
On Mon, May 26, 2014 at 9:04 AM, Danny Yoo d...@hashcollision.org wrote:
-- Forwarded message --
From: diliup gabadamudalige dili...@gmail.com
Date: Sunday,
On Mon, May 26, 2014 at 12:27 AM, rahmad akbar matbioi...@gmail.com wrote:
thanks guys for the replies,
Danny, your explanation helped alot, i'll have a go on Alan Gaud's
tutorial. super thanks
You should probably thank Diliup Gabadamudalige instead; I just
forwarded his message.
Best of
i have
{'extreme_fajita': [*{5: 4.0}*, *{6: 6.0}*],
'fancy_european_water': [*{5: 8.0}*, *{6: 5.0}*]}
if the keys of the dictionaries(bold italic) are equal. I want to add
bold dict values, italic dict values.
result should some thing like this
[{5:12.0},{6:11.5}]
i tried to do...
but
Hi Sunil,
Try a simpler but related problem first.
Say that you have two lists of numbers, like:
##
nums1 = [3, 1, 4]
nums2 = [2, 7, 1]
##
Can you design a function addLists() that takes two lists of numbers
of equal length, and adds them together? For example,
addLists(nums1,
nums1 = [3, 1, 4]
nums2 = [2, 7, 1]
[ sum(i) for i in zip(nums1, nums2)]
[5, 8, 5]
On Wed, Apr 23, 2014 at 1:12 PM, Danny Yoo d...@hashcollision.org wrote:
Hi Sunil,
Try a simpler but related problem first.
Say that you have two lists of numbers, like:
##
nums1 = [3, 1, 4]
Hi Brian,
I would suggest not providing homework solutions.
Look at the beginning of this thread to see why just giving homework
solutions is not helpful for the questioner.
___
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My Bad
On Wed, Apr 23, 2014 at 1:53 PM, Danny Yoo d...@hashcollision.org wrote:
Hi Brian,
I would suggest not providing homework solutions.
Look at the beginning of this thread to see why just giving homework
solutions is not helpful for the questioner.
Hi Brian,
No problem. Just be more careful next time. In particular, look at
the context. The homework question I'm posing to Sunil is fairly
basic, intentionally so, but is designed so that if he solves it with
basic, standard tools (fresh list construction, list iteration, list
appending),
So, what is your question?
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Hi Danny,
Thank you for replying..
I need the python program which takes the attached csv on running the
program which will give me the results as
Data File data.csv
1, 4.00, burger
1, 8.00, tofu_log
2, 5.00, burger
2, 6.50, tofu_log
Program Input
program
Hi,
On 15 April 2014 15:49, Sunil Tech sunil.tech...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Danny,
Thank you for replying..
I need the python program which takes the attached csv on running the
program which will give me the results as
snip
That is still not a question. It's a requirements statement. I
Sunil Tech sunil.tech...@gmail.com writes:
I need the python program
This is a resource for tutoring, not for others to write your program.
Please approach this as an opportunity to do the work yourself *while*
learning. It's still you that needs to write the program.
--
\ “If I held
matrix = [
... [1, 2, 5, 7, 9],
... [25, 67, 78, 23, 34],
... [33, 22, 66, 88, 98],
... [32, 31, 41, 56, 78],
... [21, 34, 58, 99, 76],
... ]
for item in [[row[i] for row in matrix] for i in range(5)]:
... print item
...
[1, 25, 33, 32, 21]
[2,
Can some one help me with displaying a matrix vertically.
For example my output matrix is:-
[1 2 5 7 9]
[25 67 78 23 34]
[33 22 66 88 98]
[32 31 41 56 78]
[21 34 58 99 76]
And i want my matrix to look like this:-
[1 25 33 32 21]
[2 67 22 31 34]
[5 78 66 41 58]
[7 23 88 56 99]
[9 34
What difficulty are you having? I need to be straightforward so that
you understand, without ambiguity: we do not do your homework. We
will not violate the honor code of your institution. To do so is
anathema to why folks here volunteer to help beginners.
I do want to apologize if the
Hi,
Sorry for delay in reply(as internet was very slow from past two
days), I tried this code which you suggested (by saving it in a file):
import csv
with open('19162.csv') as f:
reader = csv.reader(f)
for row in reader:
print(row)
row[0] = int(row[0])
key,value =
First, the error message means 'item' is missing. You will need to assign
your row as the item.
And if you want nil where there is no value, then use if statement to check
there is something otherwise make that empty value 'nil'.
Sorry, gotta run my train just arrived.
On Thu, 9 Jan 2014 14:51:21 +0800, Amrita Kumari
amrita@gmail.com wrote:
days), I tried this code which you suggested (by saving it in a
file):
import csv
with open('19162.csv') as f:
reader = csv.reader(f)
for row in reader:
print(row)
row[0] = int(row[0])
On Mon, Jan 06, 2014 at 04:57:38PM +0800, Amrita Kumari wrote:
Hi Steven,
I tried this code:
import csv
with open('file.csv') as f:
reader = csv.reader(f)
for row in reader:
print(row)
row[0] = int(row[0])
up to this extent it is ok; it is ok it is giving
Hi Amrita: I tried to figure out, for kicks, how to do what I THINK is what
you're trying to do... I've never even opened a .txt file in Python before,
so you can take all this with a big grain of salt... Anyway, if you take
your example of your original database:
1 GLY HA2=3.7850 HA3=3.9130
2
oops, I see Steven pointed out a much cleaner approach. Oh well. Shock
surprise ;)
Keith
On Mon, Jan 6, 2014 at 3:27 AM, Keith Winston keithw...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Amrita: I tried to figure out, for kicks, how to do what I THINK is
what you're trying to do... I've never even opened a .txt
Hi Steven,
I tried this code:
import csv
with open('file.csv') as f:
reader = csv.reader(f)
for row in reader:
print(row)
row[0] = int(row[0])
up to this extent it is ok; it is ok it is giving the output as:
['1' , ' GLY' , 'HA2=3.7850' , 'HA3=3.9130' , ' ' , ' '
Amrita, it doesn't seem like the code you are providing is the code you are
running. I wonder if you are running it all at the Python command line or
something, and have to type it in every time? You should put it in a file,
and save run that file, and then cut and paste it directly into your
On 06/01/14 08:57, Amrita Kumari wrote:
up to this extent it is ok; it is ok it is giving the output as:
['1' , ' GLY' , 'HA2=3.7850' , 'HA3=3.9130' , ' ' , ' ' , ' ' , ' ']
[ '2' , 'SER' , 'H=8.8500' , 'HA=4.3370' , 'N=115.7570' , ' ' , ' '
, ' ']
--
Hi Amrita, I'm just a beginner but I notice that, after the first two
entries on each line (i.e. 10,ALA), the rest might fit nicely into a dict,
like this {H: 8.388, HB1: 1.389, ...}. That would give you a lot of
flexibility in getting at the values later. It would be easy enough to
replace the =
I should have included an example. If you can, and if it doesn't make your
file too long, and if I'm right that this is easy to do in the output
module of wherever this is coming from, add some white space so you can
read/debug easier, though it's not at all necessary (strings have to be
quoted
Hi Amrita,
On Sun, Jan 05, 2014 at 10:01:16AM +0800, Amrita Kumari wrote:
I have saved my data in csv format now it is looking like this:
If you have a file in CSV format, you should use the csv module to read
the file.
http://docs.python.org/3/library/csv.html
If you're still using Python
Amrita, on a closer read of your very first post I (think I) see you
already successfully read your data into a series of dicts (mylist in your
example), so if you still want the output you posted in the first post,
then you can do some version of the loops that I described. That said, I'm
sure
On 01/04/2014 06:36 AM, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
Now, it's true that when *debugging code*, being able to see the name of
the variable and the contents of the variable is useful. But in ordinary
code, why would you care to print the name of the variable and its
contents. Who cares what the
On Fri, Jan 03, 2014 at 02:45:04AM -0500, Keith Winston wrote:
And to beat that poor horse in the same example, my current way of doing
that would be:
for alist in lista, listb:
print(alist, eval(alist))
Since you know both pieces, namely the name of the entity alist and its
actual
On Fri, Jan 03, 2014 at 01:55:29AM -0500, Keith Winston wrote:
[...]
I want to iterate through a bunch of lists, subsequently printing both list
members (via indexing, for example) and the name of the list I'm on.
Why? What does this gain you?
Now, it's true that when *debugging code*, being
On 03/01/2014 06:18, Keith Winston wrote:
Shoot: I sent this response directly to Mark, without even trimming.
Here it is to the list...
Hi Mark: sorry for unclarity. I am probably going to make a hash of
explaining this, but here goes:
I want to iterate a variable across a list of objects,
Mark wrote: You enjoy making life difficult for yourself :) You've
assigned strings to the name func, just assign the functions themselves?
Like.
for func in max, min:
print(func.__name__, func(range(5)))
Output.
max 4
min 0
I wouldn't say I enjoy making life difficult for myself,
On 03/01/2014 06:55, Keith Winston wrote:
Mark wrote: You enjoy making life difficult for yourself :) You've
assigned strings to the name func, just assign the functions themselves?
Like.
for func in max, min:
print(func.__name__, func(range(5)))
Output.
max 4
min
I spoke about iterating through a bunch of lists in my last post, but in
fact I'm iterating through a bunch of dicts in the example I gave. Sorry.
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And to beat that poor horse in the same example, my current way of doing
that would be:
for alist in lista, listb:
print(alist, eval(alist))
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On 23/12/2013 16:26, Steven D'Aprano wrote:
With permission of the author, I have been asked to forward this to the
list. I trust that those vigilantees on the warpath against gmail are
happy now, as there is one fewer gmail user using Python.
what excellent news. With any luck we'll soon be
Would everyone mind dropping this thread, at least for a few days?
As far as I can tell, there's zero Python content in it, so I'm not
getting much information from it. More than that, it's affecting my
morale in a fairly negative manner. Thanks.
___
* Danny Yoo d...@hashcollision.org [131223 07:48]:
Would everyone mind dropping this thread, at least for a few days?
As far as I can tell, there's zero Python content in it, so I'm not
getting much information from it. More than that, it's affecting my
morale in a fairly negative manner.
Yikes, as the progenitor of the antecedent of this screed... I'm sorry! I
have found, by and large, this to be a very helpful list, there's no
question it has kept me moving forward at times that I might not have in
python. Lots of generosity and knowledge. And when someone suggested a way
of
On Wed, 4 Dec 2013 10:35:46 +0100, Ismar Sehic i.she...@gmail.com
wrote:
so please, i need some pointers in how to get these lists related,
regarding i cannot use indexing, because i don't always have the
same
number of items in list.
First question is whether the data is assumed to be self
On 12/04/2013 10:35 AM, Ismar Sehic wrote:
[...]
Your presentation is a bit abscure (to me, at least): it is hard to help you.
Maybe you could explain better, and progressively:
* what is the purpose of your software, and its context
* what are your input data and what they mean, and whether
On Wed, Dec 04, 2013 at 10:35:46AM +0100, Ismar Sehic wrote:
hello, good people.
i have a pretty urgent question.the situation is like this, i have
following lists, as results of numerous psycopg2 queries, here are two
examples :
Ismar, the following don't look like Python lists to me. It's
Thank you all for your help with this program. Each of your answers helped
me piece together an understanding of the assignment. After several days
and clearly over-thinking the entire process, I ended up using the
following code:
def main ():
name = input(Please enter the name of the
On 22/10/13 03:23, Jenny Allar wrote:
I ended up using the following code:
One wee improvement you could consider:
def cal_shiprate(product_name, product_weight):
if product_weight 10:
ship_rate = 1.5
elif product_weight = 10 and product_weight 25:
ship_rate =
- Did you notice your assignment specifically asks for a while loop
for validation? That means you are expected to validate input. Run your
program and when the program asks Please enter the weight of the
product in pounds: answer 123...this is a mistake, what does it
happen? Your program
On 22/10/13 14:21, Ricardo Aráoz wrote:
- Did you notice your assignment specifically asks for a while loop
for validation? ... (tip: you should be using while and on
error)
on error?
You're not thinking of VB by any chance? :-)
In Python it would be a try/except block or maybe a straight
El 22/10/13 10:44, Alan Gauld escribió:
On 22/10/13 14:21, Ricardo Aráoz wrote:
- Did you notice your assignment specifically asks for a while loop
for validation? ... (tip: you should be using while and on
error)
on error?
You're not thinking of VB by any chance? :-)
In Python it would be a
On 22/10/2013 03:23, Jenny Allar wrote:
Plenty of sound advice as always so I'll just point out that...
elif product_weight = 10 and product_weight 25:
can be written as
elif 10 = product_weight 25:
--
Python is the second best programming language in the world.
But the best has yet
On 22/10/13 14:55, Ricardo Aráoz wrote:
Sorry, meant try/except (I was thinking VFP).
Wouldn't if/else be more difficult when validating if an input is a
valid float? I find try/except easier.
Maybe, but typical programming classes don't teach try/except
till much later in the course.
Since
Hi Okechukwu,
I would recommend to use Khan Academy. It is free resource of use.
He covers python basic plus they built sophisticated system that track
performance of each student. That would help you a lot and see weak sides of
your students.
https://www.khanacademy.org/cs
For more
On 14/10/13 11:54, Okechukwu Nkaronye wrote:
Hi my name is okechukwu . I teaches computer at a low grade of 8, 9, 10, 12
years ages .
Please I would be pleased if you could assist us in helping our children to
get to know programming skills
I am not very vast in programming and know little in
This looks like a very fun way to teach programming at an early age
http://scratch.mit.edu/
On Mon, Oct 14, 2013 at 6:54 AM, Okechukwu Nkaronye okero...@gmail.comwrote:
-- Forwarded message --
From: Okechukwu Nkaronye okero...@gmail.com
Date: Fri, 11 Oct 2013 13:04:10 +
On 27/8/2013 22:41, Robyn Perry wrote:
part2 = (fragA[-7:-5] + '')
But it asks me to use a string, not a blank space. part2 needs begin with
'da' so I can produce 'Udacity' in Test Case 2, but needs to somehow end
with a null kind of value so I can produce 'Ucity' in Test Case 3. See
On 07/29/2013 10:42 PM, Kirk Bailey wrote:
ok, I read linked article, then copied the perl script text, which bombs.
The TEXT:
* #!/usr/local/bin/perl -w**
** use strict;**
**
** while (STDIN) {**
** s/\r\n/\n/;**
** print;**
** }*
This works nicely, and all problems are solved.
originally edited on a windows box, then copied over with a usb stick.
I suppose I better open it, copy it to mouse then paste it to a nw file-
or what? Please advise.
On 7/25/2013 3:45 PM, Walter Prins wrote:
Hi,
On 25 July 2013 19:45, Kirk Bailey kbai...@howlermonkey.net
ok, I read linked article, then copied the perl script text, which bombs.
The TEXT:
* #!/usr/local/bin/perl -w**
** use strict;**
**
** while (STDIN) {**
** s/\r\n/\n/;**
** print;**
** }*
This works nicely, and all problems are solved. I tried to download the
program using
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