On Friday, January 4, 2013 11:18:24 AM UTC+5:30, Steven D'Aprano wrote: > On Thu, 03 Jan 2013 12:04:03 -0800, subhabangalore wrote: > > > > > Dear Group, > > > If I take a list like the following: > > > > > > fruits = ['banana', 'apple', 'mango'] > > > for fruit in fruits: > > > print 'Current fruit :', fruit > > > > > > Now, > > > if I want variables like var1,var2,var3 be assigned to them, we may > > > take, var1=banana, > > > var2=apple, > > > var3=mango > > > > > > but can we do something to assign the variables dynamically > > > > Easy as falling off a log. You can't write "var1", "var2" etc. but you > > can write it as "var[0]", "var[1]" etc. > > > > var = ['banana', 'apple', 'mango'] > > print var[0] # prints 'banana' > > print var[1] # prints 'apple' > > print var[2] # prints 'mango' > > > > > > > > Of course "var" is not a very good variable name. "fruit" or "fruits" > > would be better. > > > > > > > > > > -- > > Steven
Actually in many cases it is easy if you get the variable of list value, I was trying something like, def func1(n): list1=["x1","x2","x3","x4","x5","x6","x7","x8","x9","x10"] blnk=[] for i in range(len(list1)): num1="var"+str(i)+"="+list1[i] blnk.append(num1) print blnk Regards, Subhabrata. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list