"Bryan Fodness" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote >I cannot get this to work either.
Brian, when you post please tell us exactly what does not work. If there is an error message send the whole error there is a lot of useful information in them. Otherwise we have to read your code and guess what might be happening. We need both code and error text. The easier you make it for the tutors the more likely you are to get a response! > woffaxis = 7 > > if woffaxis != 0: > woaf_pos = input("What is Wedge Direction (N/A, Lateral, Towards > Heal, > Towards Toe)?") Use raw_input() and convert the result rather than input(). Especially when the input is a string anyhow. Otherwise you are leaving yourself open to scurity breaches and even accidental damage to your data due to mistyping. This is because input() tries to interpret its value as a Python expression. Thus if the user enters a string Pyhon tries to evaluate that string. Unless the usser has put quotes around their input it will probably fail. I suspect that is your problem but without an error message I can't be sure. > if woaf_pos == 'Towards Toe': > woffaxis = woffaxis > elif woaf_pos == 'Towards Heal': > woffaxis = (woffaxis * -1) > else: > woffaxis = 0 Incidentally, you could replace this set of if statements with a dictionary lookup: responses = {"Towards Toe": 1, "Towards Head": -1} woffaxis *= responses.get(woaf_pos,0) Another tip is that when comparing user input to a string its usually better to have the master strings as all uppercase or all lowercase and then convert the input string to all lower case or all upper case as appropriate, and then compare. It reduces user frustration over simple typos. HTH, -- Alan Gauld Author of the Learn to Program web site http://www.freenetpages.co.uk/hp/alan.gauld _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor