Hello, Not sure if this is what you're trying to solve, although it sounds like it based on your leading statement. I think what you have is more complicated than it needs to be for something that simple: Why not something like this?
* paragraph = """I have been learning Python and trying little bits of coding for a while. Recently I tried to have a paragraph and create a list of its words, then counting those words. Here is the code:"""* * splitParagraph = paragraph.strip().split(' ') print len(splitParagraph) # yields 36 print splitParagraph # yields a list [] of each word separated by split()* ** -Mario On Wed, Jun 20, 2012 at 8:53 AM, Oğuzhan Öğreden <ogre...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi, > > I have been learning Python and trying little bits of coding for a while. > Recently I tried to have a paragraph and create a list of its words, then > counting those words. Here is the code: > > import re >> >> >>> a = """Performs the template substitution, returning a new string. >>> mapping is any dictionary-like \ >> >> object with keys that match the placeholders in the template. >>> Alternatively, you can provide keyword \ >> >> arguments, where the keywords are the placeholders. When both mapping and >>> kws are given and there \ >> >> are duplicates, the placeholders from kws take precedence.""" >> >> >>> b = [] >> >> c = 0 >> >> >>> for y in a.split(" "): >> >> b.append(y.lower()) >> >> if re.search(",", y) != None: >> >> c = b.index(y.lower()) >> >> b.remove(y.lower()) >> >> b.insert(c, y.strip(",").lower()) >> >> b.sort() >> >> b.extend(["you"]) >> >> count = 0 >> >> >>> for x in b: >> >> count = b.count(x) >> >> if count > 1: >> >> c = b.index(x) >> >> if b[c+1] != x is True: >> >> print "%s listede %d tane var." % (x, count) >> >> else: >> >> print "%s listede %d tane var." % (x, count) >> >> >>> > And here are the questions: > > > - This code doesn't print for the items that occur more than one time. > Why? > - And actually as I was writing, I realized that "if b[c+1]" may > return an error if the last item on the list occured more than one, > however, it didn't even if a manually made the last item occur two times. > Was my initial expectation a false one? If not, how could I turn it into a > b[c-1] so that it will not fail in first item? > > Thanks, > Oğuzhan > > _______________________________________________ > Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org > To unsubscribe or change subscription options: > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor > >
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