dn <pythonl...@danceswithmice.info> writes: [...]
> Further, if you look at the OP's original solution, it only publishes > the last pair, ie the match, without mention of the list of non-matches. > Was it perhaps only a means of testing the solution? It was a means of showing the student that indeed they obtained a match. If the exercise asked for returning a single die or no die at all, they would make mistakes and there'd be no sign of them being wrong. For instance, one trouble a lot of them went through was to start counting from zero and so their number of rolls was off by one. (I didn't see that coming!) The reason they fall for this is that they also test little --- for some it never occurred a match on the first roll, so they never saw the zero counter coming out. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list