On 19 December 2012 01:19, Brandon Merritt <merrit...@gmail.com> wrote: > Sorry, I am just so confused and aggravated as to why this won't work - why > doesn't it print out the whole list? : > > number = raw_input('Enter a 7-unit number: ') > > for i in number: > count = [] > count.append(i) > > print count > >>>> Enter a 7-unit number: 78953298 > ['8'] > > -- > Brandon Merritt > (707) 481-1744
Brandon, Others have pointed out the problem here and in your counter thread. I have a bit of meta-advice that will help you to resolve these sorts of problems on your own. When confronted by a small chunk of code that is not behaving as you expect, it can help to grab a pen and paper and interpret the code by hand, going through it and updating the various data values as you run through the program step by step. Often, this will force you to see the point at which your mental model of what you have written diverges from what you have actually written. Less work, and often sufficient to expose the problem is to put in some print statements. Had you tried: for i in number: count = [] count.append(i) print count I suspect the problem would have become much more clear. If I am doing print statement debugging where I've multiple print statements exposing the same data structure, I will often tag them like so for i in number: print count, 11111111111111 count = [] count.append(i) print count, 222222222222 That helps figure out just where each printed instance of count came from. In the case at hand, this version would almost certainly have sorted you out; the first print will fail with a NameError, and this might have suggested to you that you have to define count before the loop. HTH, Brian vdB _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org To unsubscribe or change subscription options: http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor