On Fri, May 15, 2015 at 07:35:30PM -0400, Fredrick Barrett wrote:
> print ("Lets play a game") > > import random > > # Generate random number from 1-10 > rand_value = random.randint(1,10) > guess = input("Guess a number from 1-10 ") Here you guess once. > if guess == rand_value: > print ("Congratulations! You guessed it!") If you guessed correctly, the game ends. > while guess != rand_value: > input ("try again") > else: > print ("Sorry, you're wrong.") You ask the user to try again, but you pay no attention to their reply. You just completely ignore their guesses, apart from the very first one. Also, and by the way, although Python does have a "while...else" construct, it's a bit misleading and I don't think it is useful in this case. Experiment with something like this instead: rand_value = random.randint(1,10) guess = 0 # Guaranteed not to match. while guess != rand_value: guess = input("Guess a number between one and ten: ") print("Congratulations!") Notice that each time through the loop, I set guess to a new value? -- Steve _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor