On Thu, Sep 4, 2008 at 10:15 AM, kschnee <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> if WordListFile == "default" or "default" or "Default" or "d" or "D": > > > > This does not do what you think it does. What you want is this: > > if word_list_file.lower() in ("default", "d"): > > By way of further explanation, what Python is doing with the right side of > the original line is selecting the first item that evaulates to True. Any > string other than "" is True, so the result is "default". So, the line > works out to 'if WorldListFile == "default"', and the effect would be that > the other options like "D" won't count as recognized alternatives. >
Actually, no. The effect of the above line is that it will always evaluate to true. It is the equivalent of this: if (word_list_file == "default") or "Default" or "d" or "D": which is of course always true since any non-empty string evaluates to True. Hugo