At first glance it looks like a replace for _button_cart with the dictionary items listed in the curly braces and stuffing them into a list item (cartitems)
On Feb 2, 8:47 am, Tim Chase <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > for item in cart.values(): > > v = _button_cart % {"idx": idx, > > "itemname": item.name, > > "amount": item.cost, > > "quantity": item.quantity,} > > cartitems.append(v) > > > What does the % operator is doing there? > > Unless _button_cart is some funky object with its modulo-operator > overloaded, _button_cart is likely a string. For strings, the > "%" does string formatting. If the RHS is a dict (in this case), > it's flexible and allows for named lookups > > Thus, _button_cart likely contains something like > > _button_cart = """ > %(idx)s > ======== > The user bought %(quantity)s %(itemname)s. > They cost $%(amount)0.02f""" > > You're likely already familiar with the case when the RHS is a > tuple/list instead of a dict: > > s = "I have %i tests to take on %s" % ( > test_count, day_of_week) > > You can read the nitty-gritty details at > > http://docs.python.org/lib/typesseq-strings.html > > -tkc -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list