----- Original Message ----- From: "Ivan Shevanski" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > if __name__ == '__main__': > body = 'x is',x,'y is',y,'.Lets hope that works!' > subject = 'Neo' > sendToMe(subject, body) > > I really have no idea whats going on. . .help? > > -Ivan
Ivan, you need to pass the body as a string, you have constructed it as a tuple. >>> x = 'X' >>> y = 'Y' >>> body = 'x is',x,'y is',y,'.Lets hope that works!' >>> body ('x is', 'X', 'y is', 'Y', '.Lets hope that works!') >>> type(body) <type 'tuple'> But you can't do the following >>> str(body) "('x is', 'X', 'y is', 'Y', '.Lets hope that works!')" So you have the option of things like this >>> 'x is ' + x +' y is ' + y + ' .Lets hope that works!' x is X y is Y .Lets hope that works! but that gets messy the large the the amount of items you have, these are better. >>> ' '.join(body) # there is a space between the ' ' 'x is X y is Y .Lets hope that works!' eg >>> body = ' '.join('x is',x,'y is',y,'.Lets hope that works!') or >>> "x is %s y is %s .Lets hope that works!" % (x, y) 'x is X y is Y .Lets hope that works!' eg >>> body = "x is %s y is %s .Lets hope that works!" % (x, y) You can use '\n' or '\r\n' to insert a line feed (new-line) anywhere in the body text in any of the examples above. HTH :) -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list