for loop

shiva upreti katewinslet626 at gmail.com
Sun Sep 20 04:39:47 EDT 2015


On Sunday, September 20, 2015 at 1:34:32 PM UTC+5:30, paul.ant... at gmail.com wrote:
> On Sunday, September 20, 2015 at 9:56:06 AM UTC+2, shiva upreti wrote:
> > https://ideone.com/BPflPk
> > 
> > Please tell me why 'print s' statement is being executed inside loop, though I put it outside.
> > Please help. I am new to python.
> 
> Hi!
> 
> Welcome to python, the most awesome programming language!
> 
> The code you pasted used both spaces and tabs for indentation. The thing is that python, by default, interprets one tab character as 8 spaces, but the editor you've used shows it as 4 spaces. To avoid these kinds of headaches, I always 1) set my editor to show tabs, so I can detect them, and 2) never use tabs when I write code myself. I set my editor to insert 4 spaces whenever I hit the "tab" key on my keyboard. If you post the name of your editor, maybe someone knows how to do that in yours. You can also detect mixed space/tab issues by running "python -t" instead of just "python".
> 
> So, your "print s" is in fact inside the loop, since the for loop is indented with 4 spaces, and "print s" is indented with 1 tab = 8 spaces. It just doesn't look like that to you.
> 
> It looks like you're coding in python 2. If you're new to python, I'd recommend using a python 3 version, maybe 3.4 or 3.5. You can easily pick up python 2 later if you need to maintain old code. Of course, it's not a big deal learning python 3 if you know python 2 either, but why spend energy on it?
> 
> Cheers
> Paul

Thanks.:) I use gedit in ubuntu 1



More information about the Python-list mailing list