Victor Subervi wrote: > [...] if I go to print, say, > colFieldValues[20], which is a set, it prints out the whole set: > set('Extra-small','Small','Medium','Large','XLarge','XXLarge','XXXLarge') > But if I print out colFieldValues[20][0], it prints out "s".
The only reasonable explanation of this behavior is that despite all your wishing for it to be a set, colFieldValues[20] is in fact not a set, but rather a string. It is a string containing the letter s, followed by the letter e, followed by the letter t, followed by an openening parenthesis, and so on. > Also, how can I test > for it? It's an instance of string. How do I know if it's a set? That's a fantastic question. Python thinks it's a string. What makes you think it's a set? -- Carsten Haese http://informixdb.sourceforge.net -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list