Hi Emma,
As well as everything else others have said, remember that we're scattered all over the world, so you can ask a question at any time of the day or night and chances are good that *someone* will read it soon. When you joined this mailing list, you had a choice of whether to receive individual messages, or a daily digest. Make sure you pick individual messages, otherwise you will have to wait anything up to 24 hours before seeing all the replies at once, instead of as them come in. You can change your settings here: https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor When asking questions, the more detail you can provide, the better our answers will be. E.g: "I need help with my homework!" (Our answer: Yes, you probably do. Next.) "I need help with my homework. I have to write a guess-the-number game." (Our answer: Okay, at least now we know what your homework is. How far have you got? What are you having trouble with?) "I'm writing a guess-the-number game using Python version 3.3. I'm stuck at writing this loop, I expect it to ask the user for Yes or No repeatedly, but it just loops forever even if the user types No. Here is a copy of my code. Oh, and this is homework, so I'm just looking for direction and explanation, please don't write my code for me." (Our answer: Great! That's just about the perfect question, now we can answer it.) If you're unsure about something ("how do I find out what version of Python I'm running?") please ask. That includes basic questions like "what's a function?". No question about Python is too simple for us to answer (although for advanced users, sometimes questions can be too specialized for us). There are no stupid questions although sometimes people ask good questions in a stupid manner. Ask questions well and we'll try very hard to answer them well. -- Steven _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor