Hi Bruce, I think I get what you're asking for -- you want to actually end up with a local variable 'cat' which points to an empty list, so that you can then do
cat.append('foot') or whatever. The problem with the last line of this code (based on your attempt): foo=[] foo.append('cat') foo[0] = [] is that Python doesn't evaluate the left hand side of an assignment to figure out what variable name you want. foo[0] doesn't get replaced with 'cat' as the variable name. Instead, Python sees this line of code as a request to store an empty list as the 0th item in the foo array. In C or C++, what you want to do is impossible. However, in Python, there's a way to specify the name of a local variable at runtime: locals()['cat'] = [] locals() is a function call that returns a dictionary mapping all local variable names to their values. Just like "foo[0] = []" above will store an empty list into the 0th item in foo, "locals()['cat'] = []" will store an empty list in the 'cat' entry in the locals dictionary. Once you've done that, you can then refer to the variable cat as usual: cat.append('foot') etc. Note that you can also *read* the value of a local variable using the locals dictionary: locals()['cat'] will return a list. Trying to access an entry in the locals dictionary that isn't defined will raise an exception, much like if your code tried to access a variable that didn't exist. And finally, you can also create a global variable -- one that, even though it's defined from within a function, will be accessible anywhere in the module -- by using the globals() dictionary instead. Hope this helps, and good luck -- Michael On Aug 18, 3:32 am, Bruno Desthuilliers <bruno. [EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > bruce a écrit : > > > hi guys/gals... > > > got a basic question that i can't get my hands around. > > > i'm trying to programatically create/use a list/tuple (or whatever the right > > phrase in pyton is!!) > > > basically, something like: > > foo = [] > > foo.append('cat') > > foo.append('dog') > > > foo[1] = [] (and in this case, i really want to have a list called 'cat' to > > be created!!) > > This doesn't "create a list called 'cat', it replaces the second element > (remember, sequences are zero-based) of list 'foo' with an empty list. > > > when i've tried this, i don't get a list called 'cat', instead (as i > > expected) the foo[1] is now a [] (list)) > > > so foo is now > > ['cat', [] ] > > Indeed. > > > ultimatelly , i want to be able to dynamically create a number of lists that > > i name/create/manipulate on the fly, within the test app. > > > ie, be able to then create a list/array cat = ['a','b','c',....] > > > a dict doesn't seem to work, as it is essentially a series of key/values, > > which isn't exactly what i want... > > Why do you think it's not what you want ? > > lists = dict() > lists['cat'] = [] > lists['cat'].extend(['a', 'b', 'c', 'd']) > > > thoughts/comments/code samples would be reatly appreciated. > > Please provide more informations about your use case. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list