On Apr 13, 8:53 am, Steve Holden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Jia Lu wrote: > >> for m in test: > >> for n in test: > >> for o in test: > >> for p in test: > >> print m+n+o+p > > > Thanx for your anwser. > > But if I consider about a combination of over 26 letter's list just > > like: > > "abcdefssdzxcvzxcvzcv" > > "asllxcvxcbbedfgdfgdg" > > ..... > > > Need I write 26 for loops to do this? > > > Thanx > > > Jia LU > > Your new example uses 20-byte strings anyway, so to produce those using > the specified method you would need 20 nested for loops, not 26. > > I'm pretty sure you could give a separate name to each atom ont he known > universe with a scheme like this. Do you really need 20-byte strings? > > regards > Steve > -- > Steve Holden +44 150 684 7255 +1 800 494 3119 > Holden Web LLC/Ltd http://www.holdenweb.com > Skype: holdenweb http://del.icio.us/steve.holden > Recent Ramblings http://holdenweb.blogspot.com- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text -
If you just expand the length to five million* or so, one of those strings will contain all the works of Shakespeare. -- Paul * ref: Project Gutenberg - http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/100 - unzipped plaintext is ~5.3Mb -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list