On Aug 15, 4:19 pm, Peter Otten <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> If you want to simplify things somewhat you can merge the two loops into
> one:
>
> numbers = [12.5, 25, 12.5]
> accu = Material(numbers[0])
> for x in numbers[1:]:
> accu += Material(x)
> period = Slab(accu)
Bett
On Aug 19, 1:10 pm, Gary Herron <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > On Aug 15, 1:42 pm, mfglinux <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> >> Hello to everybody
>
> >> I would like to know how to declare in python a "variable name" that
> >> it is in turn a variable
> >> In bash shell I
Gary Herron wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>> On Aug 15, 1:42 pm, mfglinux <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>>> Hello to everybody
>>>
>>> I would like to know how to declare in python a "variable name" that
>>> it is in turn a variable
>>> In bash shell I would wrote sthg like:
>>>
>>> for x in
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On Aug 15, 1:42 pm, mfglinux <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> Hello to everybody
>>
>> I would like to know how to declare in python a "variable name" that
>> it is in turn a variable
>> In bash shell I would wrote sthg like:
>>
>> for x in `seq 1 3`
>> do
>> M$i=Mate
On Aug 15, 1:42 pm, mfglinux <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello to everybody
>
> I would like to know how to declare in python a "variable name" that
> it is in turn a variable
> In bash shell I would wrote sthg like:
>
> for x in `seq 1 3`
> do
> M$i=Material(x) #Material is a python class
> do
The solution with the dictionary worked perfectlly well, my script is
running and even produces data with sense!!!
Thank you very much indeed to all of you answering. Cheers!
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Wed, 15 Aug 2007 10:42:02 -0700, mfglinux wrote:
> Hello to everybody
>
> I would like to know how to declare in python a "variable name" that
> it is in turn a variable
> In bash shell I would wrote sthg like:
>
> for x in `seq 1 3`
> do
> M$i=Material(x) #Material is a python class
> don
On 8/15/07, mfglinux <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
> #Let's say x=3, then Period definition is
> Period=Slab(Material1(12.5)+Material2(25)+Material3(12.5)) #Slab is a
> python class
>
> I dont know how to automatize last piece of code for any x
>
Hello,
you could use exec to create on the fly
mfglinux wrote:
> Hello to everybody
>
> I would like to know how to declare in python a "variable name" that
> it is in turn a variable
> In bash shell I would wrote sthg like:
>
> for x in `seq 1 3`
> do
> M$i=Material(x) #Material is a python class
> done
In Python you would build a list
On 8/15/07, mfglinux <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello to everybody
>
> I would like to know how to declare in python a "variable name" that
> it is in turn a variable
> In bash shell I would wrote sthg like:
>
> for x in `seq 1 3`
> do
> M$i=Material(x) #Material is a python class
> done
>
> W
mfglinux wrote:
> Hello to everybody
>
> I would like to know how to declare in python a "variable name" that
> it is in turn a variable
> In bash shell I would wrote sthg like:
>
> for x in `seq 1 3`
> do
> M$i=Material(x) #Material is a python class
> done
>
> Why I need this? Cause I have
On Wed, 15 Aug 2007 10:42:02 -0700, mfglinux wrote:
> I would like to know how to declare in python a "variable name" that
> it is in turn a variable
> In bash shell I would wrote sthg like:
>
> for x in `seq 1 3`
> do
> M$i=Material(x) #Material is a python class
> done
You want a dictionary
Hello to everybody
I would like to know how to declare in python a "variable name" that
it is in turn a variable
In bash shell I would wrote sthg like:
for x in `seq 1 3`
do
M$i=Material(x) #Material is a python class
done
Why I need this? Cause I have a python module that obliges me to build
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