En Tue, 05 Jun 2007 03:41:19 -0300, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> escribió: > On 5 Jun., 01:32, "Gabriel Genellina" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Yes, it appears that you are building a plain list but your code is >> expecting another kind of object. I'm unfamiliar with Numeric arrays, if >> that is what you need; perhaps someone else can help, or ask again in a >> Numeric-specific list. >> > yeah, i was looking at am array full of numbers. import numpy,scipy, > maybe pylab too while i was testing out the function over at a python > shell, make a linspace, sin it, and then call the function (which also > is from the scipy cookbook). Is numeric arrays (or ndarray) unlike > normal listing then? Since I started off programming in C, I am having > a bit of a confusion identifiying the different type of arrays, > listing and tuples and such... (since it's just "build an array of > type so and so, and pass it over" ^^;;) I've seen that you have already solved your main problem, but anyway I'll try to reduce your confusion a little... Python lists and tuples are "generic" containers: both can contain any kind of object, and each item may be of a different type: (1, 2.0, 3+0j, "four", u"Fünf", file("six")) is a tuple containing 6 items, all of different types. Tuples are immutable, lists can be modified. There is a price for such flexibility: memory and time overhead. When you don't require flexibility, you don't have to pay the price; Python already provides simple array objects (a flat container where ALL items are of the same type) and Numeric&Co support more array types and different floating point numbers. Those arrays are not the same thing as lists/tuples - altough they share a very similar interfase. -- Gabriel Genellina -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list