On Aug 30, 9:06 pm, "Carsten Haese" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Thu, 30 Aug 2007 20:17:00 -0700, zzbbaadd wrote > > > Well IN was what I was looking for and would have saved this thread. > > However I don't believe IN showed up on the doc web page that has > > list methods, where I found index(). > > They're not on the exact same page, but index() is in section 3.6.4 of the > library reference (http://docs.python.org/lib/typesseq-mutable.html), whereas > "in" is in section 3.6 of the library reference > (http://docs.python.org/lib/typesseq.html). I'm wondering how you managed to > find subsection 3.6.4 without finding section 3.6.
www.google.com search "python list methods" first search find: 5. Data Structures The list methods make it very easy to use a list as a stack, where the last element added .... Another useful data type built into Python is the dictionary. ... http://docs.python.org/tut/node7.html "The list data type has some more methods. Here are all of the methods of list objects:" -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list