Hi all, I've tried a lot of experimenting and searching through various tutorials, and I haven't been able to come up with a solution to this, ostensibly simple, problem.
I'm writing a simple game (run in command line) in which narrative text is printed in response to a user's decisions. The problem I'm running into is that triple quotes used in an indented block preserves the indentation when it prints. I'm writing code like this: if userInput == 1: some stuff print """ texttexttexttexttexttexttexttext """ question within a question if userInput == 1: print """ texttexttexttexttexttexttexttext texttexttexttexttexttexttexttext """ elif userInput == 2: print """ owowowowowowowowowowow """ to preserve the text's position at left when I run it in the command-line. The blocks get distorted and it becomes painful to read. Is there a way to preserve the readability of the code and have printed text from indented blocks, say, nested conditionals, appear flush at left, not printed exactly where I've written them in the script? I know I can accomplish this using single quotes instead of triple quotes, but I'm holding out hope that I can avoid putting each sentence in a separate print statement. if userInput == 1: print "here's 80 characters" print "now another 80" etc. Also, I've tried string.ljust(), but either I'm doing it wrong or it isn't the trick I'm looking for. Thanks for the help. Luke -- "If you think that was good, wait 'til you taste the antidote!" _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor