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Groups > comp.lang.python > #43704
| Date | 2013-04-16 16:48 -0400 |
|---|---|
| From | Dave Angel <davea@davea.name> |
| Subject | Re: a couple of things I don't understand wrt lists |
| References | <20130416153701.GA18377@gmail.com> |
| Newsgroups | comp.lang.python |
| Message-ID | <mailman.690.1366145320.3114.python-list@python.org> (permalink) |
On 04/16/2013 11:37 AM, aaB wrote: > hello, > > I am a beginner programmer. I started learning programming about a year and a > half ago, using C. I picked up python a few months ago, but only wrote very few > scripts. > > I am currently trying to learn more about the python way of doing things by > writing a script that generates png images using a 1D cellular automaton. > > While writing preliminary code for that project, I ran into a behaviour that I > don't understand. > I am using python 2.7 on a linux system. > > I represent the CA's rule with a list of integers, of value 1 or 0. > Here is the function I use to generate the list: > > def get_rule(rulenum): > rule = [] > while rulenum > 0: > rule.append(rulenume % 2) > rulenum /= 2 > while len(rule) < 8: > rule.append(0) > rule.reverse() > return rule > > if i call it by writing: > > rule = getrule(int(8)) > > and then call: > > print rule > > the output is good: > > [0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 0, 0, 0] > > > I then tried to print each item of the list using a for loop: > There are copy/paste errors in your following pieces. Did you retype them instead of using the clipboard? > for i in range(rule): > print rule[i] > > the output is, as expected: > 0 > 0 > 0 > 0 > 1 > 0 > 0 > 0 > Here's what I get, and how I fix it: >>> rule = [0,0,0,0,1,0,0,0] >>> for i in range(rule): ... print i ... Traceback (most recent call last): File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> TypeError: range() integer end argument expected, got list. >>> for i in range(len(rule)): ... print rule[i] ... 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 > but when I do: > > for i in rule: > print rule[i] You should be printing i here, not rule[i] > > I get the "complement": > 1 > 1 > 1 > 1 > 0 > 1 > 1 > 1 I don't. And don't expect to. It's nothing like the complement. >>> for i in rule: ... print rule[i] ... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Anyway, to fix it, just print the value, don't try to use it as a subscript. >>> for value in rule: ... print value ... 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 > > There must be something I didn't understand correctly in the for statement, but > I really can't think of a reason why the output is what it is. > I tried this using the interactive console, and the results are the same, > whatever the length of the list, i always get the complement of my bit pattern. You should never get the complement of the bit pattern with any code you've shown above. > Hope that helps. -- DaveA
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Re: a couple of things I don't understand wrt lists Dave Angel <davea@davea.name> - 2013-04-16 16:48 -0400
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