You're doing a good job getting started with programming here, keep getting the fundamentals and then learn to refine those concepts over time.
But for future reference, here are some finer points for you to keep in mind to improve your style and get a more Pythonic approach: On Thu, Oct 02, 2008 at 09:41:37PM +0000, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Grades = [ ] Usually we capitalize class and module names, but not variables and functions/methods. > for a in range (10): > temp_string = my_file_object.readline() > Grades = Grades + [ float (temp_string)] Might be more clear here to say Grades.append(float(temp_string)) instead of constructing a new list just to use + You might also want to just read each line in the file right in the for loop, which allows you to take ANY number of lines, not just 10, and makes the code more concise at the same time: for grade in my_file_object: Grades.append(float(grade)) > for a in range (len(Grades)): > print "Grade", str (a + 1) + ":", Grades [a] If all you're going to do is to deal with each element of a list in turn, instead of using an index over the range of the number of elements, just directly iterate over the list: for a in Grades: print "Grade:", a And one GREAT habit to get into is to always be checking if Python's built in functions and standard library already offer something you're doing manually: > total = 0 > for a in range (len(Grades)): > total = total + Grades[a] > > average = total/float (len(Grades)) average = sum(Grades) / len(Grades) > fname= raw_input("Please enter 'grade_file_2.txt' to write to new file: ") > grades_file_2 = open("grade_file_2.txt", "w") I'm not sure why you're asking them to type in a file name which you're ignoring and opening grade_file_2.txt anyway? > for count in range (len(Grades)): > grades_file_2.write(str("%.2f"% (len(Grades))) + "\n") > grades_file_2.close() No need to explicitly call str() here, and I suspect print would be clearer anyway. And again, note the direct iteration over Grades: for grade in Grades: print >>grades_file_2, "%.2f" % grade grades_file_2.close() -- Steve Willoughby | Using billion-dollar satellites [EMAIL PROTECTED] | to hunt for Tupperware. _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor