So the problem is that python doesn't know what you're trying to do. It
doesn't know that you meant to say "print." When the parser is looking
at the word Print, it assumes you are referencing an object named Print,
which is completely legal. It's only once you've created the next
token, a strin
>> I feel the error is in Capital P in print .
>> However the error indicated with "*^*"
>> hints at quote at the end of the line.
>
> Anyway, the hint indicates the last quote because this is the location
> where the python interpreter realizes it won't be able to execute the
> code. You should
Aloke Ghosh wrote:
Hi,
I am learning Python and do not have programming experience.
I was following
an exercise from http://learnpythonthehardway.org/book/ex2.html
and made a mistake in entry :
*Print"I like typing this."*
and got the following error message:
*In [2]: Print"I like typing t
Hi,
I am learning Python and do not have programming experience.
I was following an exercise from
http://learnpythonthehardway.org/book/ex2.html
and made a mistake in entry :
*Print"I like typing this."*
and got the following error message:
*In [2]: Print"I like typing this."*
*-