Hi. I'm writing a program that is dependent on the curses library and functions for python, and I'm a little puzzled by the way characters are handled. The basics of the program are that a character is taken from input and put into a certain position within a list (There's more to it than that, but I think it's irrelevant). The problem is, when a character is taken via the <window>.getch() function, what comes back is an int corresponding to it's value ('a' = 97, 'b'=98, etc.). Now, what I need to store is the character representation of this function - it's not enough to simply have the 97/98 in the list, I need the 'a', 'b', etc.
Does anyone know of a solution to this, ideally in the form of a built-in function that takes these numbers and returns the proper character value? Obviously, str(<value>) doesn't work, as it just returns '<value>'. I've read as many docs as I could lay my hands down, and while the ord() function is useful for going the other way (character to int), I need the reverse. If there's any other information you need in relation to this problem, I'll post it, of course. Thanks in advance. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list