Juan Christian wrote: > Let's say I have the following list: my_list = ['76561198048214059', > '76561198065852182', '76561198067017670', '76561198077080978', > '76561198077257977', '7656119807971 > 7745', '76561198088368223', '76561198144945778'] > > and I have a function with the following signature: def > fetch_users(*steamids) > > Usage: fetch_users("76561198048214059", "76561198065852182", > "76561198067017670", [...]) > > > Inside the 'fetch_users' function I have a call to the API using this > approach: req = urllib.request.urlopen('API_URL_HERE&steamids=' + > ','.join(steamids)) > > This way I call the API with the following URL (example): > > API_URL_HERE&steamids=76561198048214059,76561198065852182 > > And everything works. > > The problem is that when I give the 'my_list' directly to 'fetch_users' > function it gives me "TypeError: sequence item 0: expected str instance, > list found". > > How can I convert it to something like "fetch_users("76561198048214059", > "76561198065852182", "76561198067017670", [...])" > > I tried with " ''.join(my_list) " but didn't work. I think it's a very > simple question but I'm struggling to find the answer.
You can explode the list by invoking the function with fetch_users(*my_list) # prepend the list with a star but I recommend that you change the function's signature to def fetch_users(steamids): ... and invoke it in the common way with fetch_users(my_list) That of course means that even to invoke the function with a single user you have to wrap the user's id in a list: fetch_users(["76561198048214059"]) _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor