On 4/18/07, Guba <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hello, > > I am trying to do the exercises in Michael Dawson's "Absolute Beginner" > book. In chapter four ("for Loops, Strings, and Tuples") one of the > challenges is: "Write a program that counts for the user. Let the user > enter the starting number, the ending number, and the amount by which to > count." > > The code I have come up with so far is further below; basically my > problem is that I don't know how to feed the range() function with the > user-input numbers it expects. > > Your help is highly appreciated! > > Guba > > > # Counting Program > # 2007-04-18 > > # Welcoming the player > print "Hello, let me do some counting for you!" > > # Telling the player what to do & assigning that info to variables. > start_num = int(raw_input("Please give me a starting number. ")) > end_num = int(raw_input("Please give me an ending number. ")) > interval = int(raw_input("By which amount am I to count? ")) > > start_num == 0 > end_num == 1 > interval == 2 > > print "Counting:" > for i in range(0, 1, 2): > print i > > > raw_input("\n\nHit Enter to exit.")
Your attempt to read input is never used, and your variable assignments are not correct. You are using the test operator '==' instead of the assignment operator '='. The lines: """ start_num == 0 end_num == 1 interval == 2 """ do something you aren't trying to do here. Those lines are testing to see if start_num equals zero, and then ignoring what the test result is. They don't actually *do* anything. Your code should look like this: print "Hello, let me do some counting for you!" start_num = int(raw_input("Please give me a starting number. ")) end_num = int(raw_input("Please give me an ending number. ")) interval = int(raw_input("By which amount am I to count? ")) print "Counting:" for i in range(start_num, end_num, interval): print i _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor