Wrapping statements in Python in SPSS
Mitya Sirenef
msirenef at lightbird.net
Fri Dec 28 12:55:03 EST 2012
On 12/28/2012 12:33 PM, alankrinsky at gmail.com wrote:
> I think 396 just comes from the end of the Python loop, without indicating which line in the loop is
at issue.
>
> Here is the full code from this section of the loop:
>
>
> for (
> msr, brk, dmn, src, dspd1, dspd2, dspd3, dspd4, dspd5, dspd6, dspd7,
dspd8, dspd9, dspd10, dspd11, dspd12,
> period1, period2, period3, period4, period5, period6, period7,
period8, period9, period10, period11, period12
> ) in zip(
> Measure, BreakVariable, Dimension, Sources,
DimensionSourceTimeFrame1, DimensionSourceTimeFrame2,
DimensionSourceTimeFrame3, DimensionSourceTimeFrame4,
> DimensionSourceTimeFrame5, DimensionSourceTimeFrame6,
DimensionSourceTimeFrame7, DimensionSourceTimeFrame8,
DimensionSourceTimeFrame9,
> DimensionSourceTimeFrame10, DimensionSourceTimeFrame11,
DimensionSourceTimeFrame12,
> TimeFrame1, TimeFrame2, TimeFrame3, TimeFrame4, TimeFrame5,
TimeFrame6, TimeFrame7, TimeFrame8, TimeFrame9, TimeFrame10,
TimeFrame11, TimeFrame12
> ):
>
>
> spss.Submit(r"""
>
>
> Alan
>
>
By the way, when lines run so long they can get hard to manage, edit,
understand, et cetera. You should consider setting things up cleanly
before doing the loop and using a list of names for columns like so:
def main():
l1, l2 = [1,2], [3,4]
zipped = zip(l1, l2)
colnames = "first second".split()
for columns in zipped:
coldict = dict(zip(colnames, columns))
print("coldict", coldict)
main()
This produces output:
coldict {'second': 3, 'first': 1}
coldict {'second': 4, 'first': 2}
.. and then you can pass the coldict on to your string.
- mitya
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