On 17 juin, 11:16, Marcpp <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On 17 jun, 03:53, Dan Hipschman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:> On Sat, Jun 16, > 2007 at 06:30:26PM -0700, Marcpp wrote: > > > Hi, I need to returns a tuple from a function (reads a database) > > > Any idea?. > > > Like this? > > > def foo(): > > return 1, 2, 3, 4 > > Hi, I need to return a tupla like this function: > > def BDllids(a): > a = () > conn = sqlite.connect('tasques.db') > cursor = conn.cursor() > cursor.execute('SELECT * FROM tasques') > for row in cursor: > a.append (row[0]) > return a() > > I'm doing the correct, method?
Why is 'a' used as argument of the function ? You don't need to put it in argument. def BDllids(): a = () conn = sqlite.connect('tasques.db') cursor = conn.cursor() cursor.execute('SELECT * FROM tasques') for row in cursor: a.append (row[0]) return a But that's the correct method ! -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list