On Tue, 2007-12-11 at 16:55 -0800, katie smith wrote: > I tried your suggestions and all that came up was the error > Traceback (most recent call last): > File "C:\Python25\empire\Empire Strategy.pyw", line 1788, in > <module> > NewMap1= eval (NewMap1, {}, {}) > File "<string>", line 1 > Tropical Islands > ^ > SyntaxError: invalid syntax > > And what is this about trusting your source? The string is taken > exactly from another part in the program so I know for sure it is > correct if that is what that means. >
Katie, First, please provide a useful subject heading when posting to the list. It makes everyone's life easier when searching the archives. Second, the example you provided in your last post was converting a string of the form "[1,2,3,4,5]" to a list of integers. What is happening here, is you are trying to convert a string of the form "Tropical Islands" to... what? I assume you are not getting the string you thought you would get. Eval is acting as advertised. It is taking the line "Tropical Islands" and trying to parse it as python code. If that's not what you wanted to do, the question you should be asking is "why did I get the string "Tropical Islands" instead of "[1,2,3,4,5]". You should not be asking "what is eval doing wrong." Before you were advised not to use eval unless you were sure of the source of your inputs. If the source of your input is "me," or "trusted operators" then you are not sure of your inputs, because you might type something in thinking that the focus was on a different window, or you might mistype something. If the source of your inputs is a line you are extracting from another python file, you are not sure of your inputs, because there could be an error in your python file, or someone could add a line, so while pulling, e.g., line 15 used to give you "[1,2,3,4,5]", that's now line 16, and line 15 gives you "Tropical Islands" instead, because somebody thought there should be an extra blank line before the start of the code or something. If the source of your inputs is the output of another function, why is it passing you a repr of a list instead of the list itself. Almost NEVER use eval. If you find yourself using eval, make your next task figuring out how not to use eval. Cheers, Cliff -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list