On 18/11/11 08:16, Mic wrote:

What if I don’t write the same line of code more than once, but I write
similiar lines more than once. Is that okay? Ler
For example:
value="green”
value_1=”green”

If you had a lot of these you could shorten it with a loop (BTW the English term in programming terminology is "loop" not "sling" ;-)

for var in [value,value_1]:
    var = "green"

But you need to have already created the variables somewhere and unless there is a big list its not usually worth while.

One other trick you can use for this specific type of assignment is

value = value_1 = "green"

But it gets a bit unreadable for long lists of names.

click=-1
click1=-1
click2=-1

Same here, but imagine it had been:

click=-1
click1= 2
click2=-1


And here you are changing both name and value.
The best abbreviation here is probably tuple
expansion:

click, click1, click2 = -1,2,-1

> Do you have any general tips on how to make
your code shorter?

Shorter is not necessarily better. Clarity is far more important and you should always consider whether tricks like those above are helping or hindering clarity. Only use them if they make your code easier to read. (Also they all make debugging slightly harder so you should think about that too)

HTH,
--
Alan G
Author of the Learn to Program web site
http://www.alan-g.me.uk/

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