Lamonte(Scheols/Demonic) wrote:
elif event.type == pygame.MOUSEBUTTONDOWN: ... mouse = pygame.mouse.get_pos()
It's better to get the mouse position from the event, seeing as you've got one, than to use mouse.get_pos(). Then you can be sure it's the position relating to that particular event.
if rng in range(0,25):
A much more efficient way to do that is if 0 <= rng < 25: otherwise you're creating a list containing the numbers from 0 to 24 (expensive) and then searching it sequentially for the number you're testing (also expensive). -- Greg Ewing, Computer Science Dept, +--------------------------------------+ University of Canterbury, | Carpe post meridiem! | Christchurch, New Zealand | (I'm not a morning person.) | [EMAIL PROTECTED] +--------------------------------------+