On 1月22日, 上午3時05分, John Machin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Jan 22, 3:15 am, "顏灝" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > This is more details about my problem, which I running my py script > > for my project. Programming in pythoncard that we can develop a GUI > > based application easily. > > > I was assigned dialog.colorDialog(self) return value to a result > > object, but I suspect that result.color is the attribute of the result > > object that can assign to a string variable. > > The concepts "<developer> assigned <expression> to a <type> object" > and "<expression> can be assigned to a <type> variable" just don't > exist in Python. > > # Initially "name1" isn't bound to anything > name1 = 42 > # "name1" now refers to an int object whose value is 42 > name1 = 'abc' > # "name1" now refers to a str object whose value is 'abc' > name2 = name1 > # "name2" now refers to the same str object > > What is "dialog.colorDialog(self) return value"? What is "a result > object"? Show us the code! > > What is the connection between your last sentence above and the > "TypeError: list indices must be integers" problem? Show us the code! > > > > > There is a error prompt from python console "TypeError: list indices > > must be integers". > > Have any suggestion to solve this problem? > > Communication would be much easier if you show us the line of code > that causes the error message. > > Here are two simple examples of what can trigger that error message: > > >>> a_list = [1, 42, 666] > >>> not_an_integer = None > >>> a_list[not_an_integer] = 9876 > > Traceback (most recent call last): > File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> > TypeError: list indices must be integers > > >>> a_name = a_list[not_an_integer] > > Traceback (most recent call last): > File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> > TypeError: list indices must be integers > > Look for the pattern a_list[not_an_integer] in the statement that > triggers the exception. > > > > > When I print result.color, it is print out something like (255,0,0). > > Yes, that's most likely a tuple of (red, green, blue) values ... I'm > not astonished; are you? > > > How to covert result.color into a string? > > How? Use elementary Python functionality, after you've decided what > string representation you want. Examples: > > >>> color = (255, 128, 0) > >>> "red=%d green=%d blue=%d" % color > > 'red=255 green=128 blue=0'>>> '.someclass {background-color: #%02x%02x%02x; > }' % color > > '.someclass {background-color: #ff8000; }' > > > > > How to convert a string to > > result.color type? > > Reverse the process. > > Again, what is the connection between "result.color" and the > "TypeError: list indices must be integers" problem?
Many thanks, John Machin for your fast reply! Regards, Andreas -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list