On 2020-12-07, MRAB <pyt...@mrabarnett.plus.com> wrote: > > word = input( f'input word you want to change letters in: ')
Yes, I've learn already that should use only when want to use variables I just started using this new f' string method. > > There's no need for the f prefix. > > > print(f' Your word to change: ,{word}') > > Is the comma a typo? > lol mixing old and new methods, just old habit. > > > change_this_list = list(change_this) > > replace_with_list = list(replace_with) > > > > while True: > > try: > > for element in word_list: > > for x in change_this_list: > > if element == x: > > to = word_list.index(element) > > replace = change_this_list.index(x) > > word_list[to] = replace_with_list[replace] > > new_word = ''.join(word_list) > > print(f'{new_word}') > > > You can make it a lot shorter and faster by using a dict. The entire > while loop section can be replaced with: > > replacements = dict(zip(change_this, replace_with)) > new_word = ''.join(replacements.get(letter, letter) for letter in word) > print(new_word Simply and nice, I wouldn't come with that yet at all, beyond my knowledge. Thanks a lot for feedback and suggestions. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list