On May 11, 9:34 pm, Paul McGuire <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On May 11, 8:47 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > > > > ya so im pretty much a newb to this whole python thing... its pretty > > cool but i just started today and im already having trouble. i > > started to use a tutorial that i found somewhere and i followed the > > instructions and couldnt get the correct results. heres the code > > stuff... > > > temperature=input("what is the temperature of the spam?") > > if temperature>50: > > print "the salad is properly cooked." > > else: > > print "cook the salad some more." > > > ya i was trying to do that but when i told it what the spams > > temperature was, it just turned off... well it wasnt working at all at > > first until i realized that i hadnt been following the instructions > > completely correctly and that i was supposed to type that code up in a > > notepad then save and open with python... so ya thats when it asked me > > what temperature the spam was and i typed a number then it just closed > > itself... im not really sure what went wrong... itd be real nice if > > someone would be like a mentor or something... > > Well, this list has a varying level of mentoring and newbie-tolerance, > with more latitude for people who have made some effort to start with > before posting things like "here's my homework problem, please send me > the working code so I can hand it in." > > I just ran your code interactively at the Python prompt, and it runs > just fine. See? > > >>> temperature=input("what is the temperature of the spam?") > > what is the temperature of the spam?55>>> if temperature>50: > > ... print "the salad is properly cooked." > ... else: > ... print "the salad is properly cooked." > ... > the salad is properly cooked. > > I think the problem you are having is that, when you run your program > by double-clicking on the xyz.py file in a file browser, the OS > (Windows, I assume?) opens a separate console window, and runs the > program, and then at the end of the program, CLOSES the window. I > think your code is running just fine, I think your "the salad is > whatever" messages get printed out, but afterward, your program ends, > so the window closes before you can see how your salad turned out. > > A simple workaround you can do is to add to the end of your program > this statement: > > input("<press return to end program>") > > This will cause the process to stop and wait for you to press the > RETURN key, giving you time to stop and admire your salad results > before closing the window. > > One final note: many people post in a "write like I talk" style. This > is okay while telling your story ("well it wasn't working at all at > first..."), and the ee cummings all-lower-case is passable, but please > drop the "ya"s. They are a verbal tic that may be okay in person, but > do not translate at all to written posts. At least you don't say > "like" every other word, and I thank you for that! :) > > You can get a sense of other writing styles by reading through the > comp.lang.python archives. I would also recommend that you might find > more folks in the "just getting started" phase posting to the python- > tutor mailing list (go tohttp://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor), > and you can skim through posts there for many introductory topics. > > Good luck to you, and welcome to Python! > > -- Paul
well... i just discovered another of my mistakes. i was writing it in notepad and not saving it as .py silly me... hoho ya that input thing to get it to make u press enter worked tho... but only with that one... ive got another one that i cant get to work even with the input message to press enter. Sorry about the bad grammar. I'm used to Myspace where no one gives a particular hoot about how you type. I hope this is better. I will follow that link though. Thanks for the help. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list