On Tue, Mar 31, 2009 at 5:24 PM, Lada Kugis <lada.ku...@gmail.com> wrote: > I'm coming from fortran and c background so I'm certainly biased by > them. But if you could explain one thing to me: > > in fortran for example: > for i=1,n > goes from 1,2,3,4,...,n > > in python for example: > for i in range(1,n) > goes from 1,2,3,4,...,n-1 > (that is, it goes from 1 up to, but not including n) > > Why is that so ? What were the reasons for that "not including" part ? > It troubles me greatly, and I cannot see it's advantages over the > "standard" "up to and including" n.
Because it's extremely handy when the list variable is a list index: my_list = [1,2,3,4] for i in range(len(my_list)): #i goes from 0 to len(my_list)-1, which is all the indices of the list print my_list[i] Of course, this is a toy example which would be better written `for i in my_list:`, but you get the point. Cheers, Chris -- I have a blog: http://blog.rebertia.com -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list