On Friday, October 24, 2014 12:36:23 PM UTC-7, Seymore4Head wrote: > On Fri, 24 Oct 2014 12:25:33 -0700 (PDT), sohcahto...@gmail.com wrote: > > >On Friday, October 24, 2014 12:12:10 PM UTC-7, Seymore4Head wrote: > >> On Fri, 24 Oct 2014 11:57:12 -0700 (PDT), sohcahto...@gmail.com wrote: > >> > >> >On Friday, October 24, 2014 11:17:53 AM UTC-7, Seymore4Head wrote: > >> >> On Fri, 24 Oct 2014 11:52:15 -0600, Ian Kelly <ian.g.ke...@gmail.com> > >> >> wrote: > >> >> > >> >> >On Fri, Oct 24, 2014 at 11:03 AM, Seymore4Head > >> >> ><Seymore4Head@hotmail.invalid> wrote: > >> >> >> Actually I was a little frustrated when I added that line back in as > >> >> >> the other lines all work. > >> >> >> Using list(range(10)) Doesn't throw an error but it doesn't work. > >> >> >> > >> >> >> http://i.imgur.com/DTc5zoL.jpg > >> >> >> > >> >> >> The interpreter. I don't know how to use that either. > >> >> > > >> >> >Try both of these in the interpreter, and observe the difference: > >> >> > > >> >> >7 in range(10) > >> >> > > >> >> >"7" in range(10) > >> >> > > >> >> >Do you understand what the difference between 7 and "7" is? > >> >> > >> >> I do understand that. 7 is a number and "7" is a string. > >> >> What my question was...and still is...is why > >> >> Python 3 fails when I try using > >> >> y=1 800 get charter > >> >> > >> >> y in range str(range(10)) > >> >> should work because y is a string and str(range(10)) should be > >> >> "y" in str(1) fails. > >> >> It doesn't give an error it's just not True when y is a number. > >> >> > >> >> These hints are just not working. I am too thick for hints. :) > >> >> If you could use it in the code, I might understand. > >> >> The other work arounds that were posted work. > >> >> I have used them. str(range(10)) doesn't work. > >> >> > >> >> import string > >> >> def nametonumber(name): > >> >> lst=[] > >> >> nx=[] > >> >> digit=[] > >> >> digit="".join(str(i) for i in range(10)) > >> >> for x in name: > >> >> lst.append(x) > >> >> for y in (lst): > >> >> if y in list(range(1,10)): > >> >> #if y in "1234567890": > >> >> #if y.isdigit(): > >> >> #if y in digit: > >> >> #if y in string.digits: > >> >> nx.append(y) > >> >> if y in " -()": > >> >> nx.append(y) > >> >> if y in "abc": > >> >> nx.append("2") > >> >> if y in "def": > >> >> nx.append("3") > >> >> if y in "ghi": > >> >> nx.append("4") > >> >> if y in "jkl": > >> >> nx.append("5") > >> >> if y in "mno": > >> >> nx.append("6") > >> >> if y in "pqrs": > >> >> nx.append("7") > >> >> if y in "tuv": > >> >> nx.append("8") > >> >> if y in "wxyz": > >> >> nx.append("9") > >> >> number="".join(e for e in nx) > >> >> return number > >> >> a="1-800-getcharter" > >> >> print (nametonumber(a))#1800 438 2427 837 > >> >> a="1-800-leo laporte" > >> >> print (nametonumber(a)) > >> >> a="1 800 dialaho" > >> >> print (nametonumber(a)) > >> >> > >> >> Please > >> > > >> >Your code here is actually pretty close to a correct answer. Just a few > >> >things to consider... > >> > > >> >- Why are you converting your name string to a list? It is unnecessary. > >> >When you do "for y in <some string>", then y will still be single > >> >characters on each iteration of the loop. > >> > > >> >- "if y in string.digits" should work fine. > >> > > >> >- "if y in list(range(1,10)" won't work for two reasons: First, it > >> >creates a list of numbers, not strings. Second, even if it did, it would > >> >be missing the "0" digit. > >> > > >> >- At the end, when you convert your list to a string, you don't need to > >> >use list comprehension, since nx is already a list. number = "".join(nx) > >> >should work fine. > >> > > >> >Also, in general, you need to stop and slow down and think like a > >> >programmer. If you get an error, your instinct shouldn't be to just hack > >> >at it to make the error go away. Look at the error and try to make sense > >> >of it. Learn what the error means and try to fix the core problem. > >> > > >> >And for @#$%'s sake...stop saying "It isn't working" and not elaborating. > >> > You've been told by every other post in this thread to show us what you > >> >did and what the error was. You've also been told to *NOT* retype what > >> >you see and to copy/paste your code and the error because when you make a > >> >typo when copying, we might see a problem that doesn't exist and then you > >> >just get more confused. > >> > >> Ok I think I may have the question you guys are looking for. > >> I just posted it. > >> See above. > >> > >> But it's still broke. :( > > > >str(range(10)) doesn't do what you think it does. > > > >Run 'print(str(range(10)))' and look at what you get. > > Yeah, I know that. My question is why? > The answer was that Python 3 only stores the min and max values but > you can still iterate over them. > I don't think that means what I think it means.
"You can iterate over them" pretty much just means you can use them as the source of a 'for' loop. But in your case, when you're calling 'for y in str(range(10))', you're not using 'range(10)' as the source of your loop, you're using the result of a str() function call, and you're calling str() on range(), which doesn't return a concrete value in Python 3. If you try to print a range(), you're just getting a string containing your original call to range. And that's why you're seeing the 1 and a in your output. str(range(10)) returns the string 'range(10)'. Like I said in a previous post, use 'string.digits'. Try this test code and see what you get: import string name="123-xyz-abc" print("string.digits is", string.digits) for x in name: if x in range(10): print ("Range",(x)) if x in string.digits: print ("string.digits",(x)) -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list