I am out of trial and error again Lists
Seymore4Head
Seymore4Head at Hotmail.invalid
Fri Oct 24 10:38:31 EDT 2014
On Thu, 23 Oct 2014 21:56:31 -0700 (PDT), Rustom Mody
<rustompmody at gmail.com> wrote:
>On Thursday, October 23, 2014 10:33:57 PM UTC+5:30, Seymore4Head wrote:
>> On Thu, 23 Oct 2014 15:55:35 +0000 (UTC), Denis McMahon wrote:
>>
>> >On Thu, 23 Oct 2014 10:04:56 -0400, Seymore4Head wrote:
>> >
>> >> On Thu, 23 Oct 2014 09:15:16 +0000 (UTC), Denis McMahon wrote:
>> >
>> >>>Try the following 3 commands at the console:
>> >
>> >You obviously didn't, so I'll try again. Try each of the following three
>> >commands in the python console at the ">>>" prompt.
>> >
>> >1) 10
>> 10
>>
>> >2) range(10)
>> range(0, 10)
>>
>> >3) str(range(10))
>> 'range(0, 10)'
>> [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
>> >
>> >Show *and* describe the output in each case. Describing the output that
>> >you see is actually the key here, as it will allow us to assess whether
>> >you understand what you are actually seeing or not, and if you don't
>> >understand the output you see in the console, then we need to fix that
>> >very fundamental and basic issue before moving on to more complex stuff!
>> >
>> >> Ok Thanks
>> >
>> >You were expected to answer the question in the original. I have now set
>> >it as a clearer and more specific task.
>> >
>> >If you're not going to do these things that are intended to help you
>> >learn some of the basic features of the language, then I and everyone
>> >else here that has so far been attempting to help you are wasting our
>> >time.
>>
>> I did try them. I may have missed replying your to your specific
>> comment, but I tried them.
>>
>> BTW str(range (10)) does work with Python 2 which is where I may have
>> got the idea. I happened to be using Python 3 at the time I tried to
>> implement it. It is a little confusing jumping back and forth, but
>> for the moment, I am going to tough it out.
>>
>> I do appreciate all the help too.
>
>Hi Seymore!
>
>Happy to see that you are moving on from
>"reading much; understanding nothing; thrashing"
>
>to
>
>"reading a bit; understanding a bit"
>[And thanks to Denis to getting you out of your confusion-hole]
>
>So heres a small additional question set that I promise will more than repay
>you your time.
>
>Better done in python 2. But if you use python3, below replace
>range(10)
>with
>list(range(10))
>
>So now in the python console, please try
>
>a.
>>>> range(10)
>
>and
>
>b.
>>>> print (range(10))
>
>And then post back (without consulting google!!)¹
>
>1. Are they same or different?
>
>2. If same, how come different expressions are same?
>
>3. If different whats the difference?
>
>4. [Most important]: When would you prefer which?
>
>=================
>¹ Actually its ok to consult google AFTER you try
I do get the difference. I don't actually use Python 2. I use
CodeSkulptor. I do have Python 3 installed. Actually I have Python 2
installed but IDLE defaults to Python 3. So it is a pain to actually
load Python 2.
Range(10) stores the min max values and loads each number in between
when needed. Ian explained that very clearly.
I tried list(range(10) I thought that would work in Python 3. It
didn't. I spent quite a bit of time last night trying to come up with
the right combination of str and int commands to make range(10) work
with my simple example. It didn't. I am pretty frustrated. I am
just skipping that little bit of code for the moment.
Thanks everyone for your suggestions.
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