brg...@gmail.com wrote: > I typed the If part of an If/Else statement, but did not get a prompt at > the beginning of the next line when I hit return. Instead, the cursor > lined up under the "p" of "print." Here is the line of text (it's part of > a longer bit of coding, I copied out of a textbook). > >>>> if right_this_minute in odds: > print("This minute seems a little odd.") [Return] > > You can't see it, but the cursor is blinking under the "p." > > Why is this happening and what's the fix? > > Thanks, > > Tamara
It works as designed; the interpreter has no way of knowing whether you are about to write another line belonging to the if suite, like in if foo: print("clearing foo") foo = False That's why you have to hit <return> twice to trigger execution of the code. By the way, when you copy (or write) a "longer bit" I recomend that you put the code into a py file so that you don't have to retype it when you want to make a small modification. Instead you can just hit F5 and see the effect of your changes. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list