On 8/1/07, beginner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi, > > In order to print out the contents of a list, sometimes I have to use > very awkward constructions. For example, I have to convert the > datetime.datetime type to string first, construct a new list, and then > send it to print. The following is an example. > > x=(e[0].strftime("%Y-%m-%d"), e[1].strftime("%Y-%m-%d"))+e[2:] > print >>f, "%s\t%s\t%d\t%f\t%f\t%f\t%d" % x > > e is a tuple. x is my new tuple. > > Does anyone know better ways of handling this? >
You seem to be doing quite complicated things with your magical e tuple. Do you have some specific aversion to classes? -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list