Question on for loop
Matt Jones
matt.walker.jones at gmail.com
Thu Jan 3 15:28:06 EST 2013
Yeah, this seems like a bad idea. What exactly are you trying to do here?
Maybe using a dictionary is what you want?
d = {
'first' : 'banana',
'second' : 'apple',
'third' : 'mango'
}
for key, value in d.items():
print key, value
However I'm still not sure why you'd want to do this.
*Matt Jones*
On Thu, Jan 3, 2013 at 2:21 PM, MRAB <python at mrabarnett.plus.com> wrote:
> On 2013-01-03 20:04, subhabangalore at gmail.com wrote:
>
>> Dear Group,
>> If I take a list like the following:
>>
>> fruits = ['banana', 'apple', 'mango']
>> for fruit in fruits:
>> print 'Current fruit :', fruit
>>
>> Now,
>> if I want variables like var1,var2,var3 be assigned to them, we may take,
>> var1=banana,
>> var2=apple,
>> var3=mango
>>
>> but can we do something to assign the variables dynamically I was thinking
>> of
>> var_series=['var1','var2','**var3']
>> for var in var_series:
>> for fruit in fruits:
>> print var,fruits
>>
>> If any one can kindly suggest.
>>
>> Regards,
>> Subhabrata
>>
>> NB: Apology for some alignment mistakes,etc.
>>
>> Why would you want to do that? Creating names dynamically like that is
> a bad idea. Just keep them in a list, like they are already.
> --
> http://mail.python.org/**mailman/listinfo/python-list<http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list>
>
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