On 20/06/16 09:25, Sopan Shewale wrote:
> check it here - http://textsnip.com/6bd6jh
Tried it and it worked fine in v2.7.
To run in v3 I added a few parens after the prints
and put the line
raw_input = input
at the top.
I also removed the annoying prompt at the end of the loop.
But basically
Yup! His problem must be indentation. Apart from him, everybody from
mailing list is worried about his problem ;)
Regards,
On Mon, Jun 20, 2016 at 7:08 AM, boB Stepp wrote:
> On Mon, Jun 20, 2016 at 2:59 AM, Sopan Shewale
> wrote:
> > You need to worry about indentation ;) & spells (.. you
On Mon, Jun 20, 2016 at 2:59 AM, Sopan Shewale wrote:
> You need to worry about indentation ;) & spells (.. you seriously want to
> use input instead of raw_input? )
The book the OP is using is Python 3-based. He should be using
"input()" as he did. Otherwise, it does look like a lack of
inden
check it here - http://textsnip.com/6bd6jh
On Mon, Jun 20, 2016 at 1:01 AM, Alan Gauld via Tutor
wrote:
> On 20/06/16 08:16, Minhaj Ahmed via Tutor wrote:
> > Hi,I'm studying Michael Dawsons 'Python programming for absolute
> > beginners',in chapter 5,page 129,the author writes a program that
On 20/06/16 08:16, Minhaj Ahmed via Tutor wrote:
> Hi,I'm studying Michael Dawsons 'Python programming for absolute
> beginners',in chapter 5,page 129,the author writes a program that records
> high scores in a game. I have done exactly as the author has set out and
> yet my code isn't doing what t
You need to worry about indentation ;) & spells (.. you seriously want to
use input instead of raw_input? )
See if following works for you?
--
#!/usr/bin/python
scores = []
choice = None
while choice !="0":
print \
"""
High scores
0-Exit
1-Show score
Hi,I'm studying Michael Dawsons 'Python programming for absolute
beginners',in chapter 5,page 129,the author writes a program that records
high scores in a game. I have done exactly as the author has set out and
yet my code isn't doing what the author says it should be doing. The code
is printed be