my apologize to Alberto - instead of replying to the whole list, I accidentally replied only to him! Here are my replies, for anyone else who might be reading/interested:
This is what I have so far: high_scorelist = [(1000,"Denise"), (945,"Denise"), (883,"Denise"), (823,"Grant"), (779,"Aaron"), (702,"Pete"), (555,"Tom"), (443,"Tom"), (442,"Robin"), (404,"Pete")] userscore = (441,"Joe") def add_score(userscore): if userscore[0] > high_scorelist[len(high_scorelist)-1][0]: print "You made the high score list!" high_scorelist.append(userscore) high_scorelist.sort(reverse=True) del high_scorelist[len(high_scorelist)-1] return high_scorelist else: print high_scorelist I had to enter in the variable for "userscore" like that, when I add a tuple directly into the add_score function, it seems to delete the last item in the list (i.e., the one I just added) BEFORE it sorts it (i.e., removing the lowest score). I have no idea why this is. But if I define userscore = (465,"Jane"), for instance, and then run add_score(userscore), it'll change and print my 10-person high score list, just like I want it to. But the problem remains both how I could display this (if even just in the python window), and how I could get my program to create the tuple to plug in there. (I also just ended up writing the list like [score,user] because I couldnt figure out how to get it to sort by the second half of the tuple. I need a better tutorial book, I think!) Thanks again for any suggestions/pointers! ~Denise and a question about sorting (either way): I am trying it out with a list of tuples right now. The first problem I ran into is that when i sort it (scorelist.sort(reverse=True)), it sorts by the person's name (the first entry), and not by the score. plus I'm not quite sure yet how I'd get the user's name or score *into* the list - without manually adding it as a tuple? Since I can't do something like ... ("John", 100) .... username = "John", userscore = 100, if userscore > lowestuserscore etc. With a dictionary, could I point something like username to key and something like userscore to value? But then the problem with dictionaries comes back around to sorting too: Can I sort (and then display) a dictionary? Also, thanks for the idea about the pickle module - where can I get that and documentation for it? Thank you guys for your suggestions, and I apologize for the "newbie" level of my questions. I am trying to answer as much as I can from the tutorial materials I have here, but they don't always explain everything (such as what the "cmp=None, key=None" means in the ( ) helper of the .sort function. I figured reverse=True/False out by playing with it). I really appreciate all this help! I'm trying to make this game for a birthday joke for the person who is teaching me programming, so obviously I cant ask him for help! :) Denise > On 4/14/05, Alberto Troiano <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > > > Hi > > > > I've read somewhere that the appropiate way to make a best score list is > > with a dictionarie > > > > So you'll have something like this: > > > > best_score={"Peter":100,"Jhon":23} > > > > Best Regards > > > > Alberto > > > > > > > > > > Gaucho>From: Kent Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >CC: Python tutor > > <tutor@python.org> >Subject: Re: [Tutor] high score lists >Date: Thu, 14 Apr > > 2005 18:24:55 -0400 > >R. Alan Monroe wrote: >>>Anyone have some good > > beginning ideas/references to creating a >>>high >>>score list and storing > > scores in a simple python game? (if there's >>>something in the pygames > > module, or a simpler python way). I'm >>>mod'ing a space invaders-type game > > and would like to add a high >>>score >>>list :) >> >> >>Quick and dirty > > approach: make a list of tuples >>[ (40000, 'John Doe'), >> (30000, 'Steve > > Austin') ] >> >>You can append new ones to the end of the list, sort it, > > reverse >>it, >>etc. > >And you can use the pickle module to save and > > restore the list. > >Kent > > > >_______________________________________________ >Tutor > > maillist - Tutor@python.org > > >http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor > > _______________________________________________ > > Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org > > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor > > > > > > > _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor