On Mar 20, 9:39 am, Steven D'Aprano <steve +comp.lang.pyt...@pearwood.info> wrote: > On Sat, 19 Mar 2011 16:57:58 -0700, joy99 wrote: > > Dear Group, > > > I am trying to pose two small questions. > > > 1) I am using Python 2.6.5 (r265:79096, Mar 19 2010, 21:48:26) [MSC v. > > 1500 32 bit (Intel)] on win32 Type "copyright", "credits" or "license()" > > for more information, on WINXP SP2. > > > As I am writing a code for class like the following: IDLE 2.6.5 > >>>> class Message: > > def __init__(self,str1): > > self.text="MY NAME" > > def printmessage(self): > > print self.text > > > It works fine as can be seen in the result: > >>>> x1=Message(1) > >>>> x1.printmessage() > > MY NAME > > > Now if I open a new window and write the same code value in printmessage > > is giving arbitrary or no values. > > The description of your problem does not make sense to me. Can you show > an example? > > > 2) Suppose I have a code: > > >>>> def hello(): > > print "HELLO SIR" > > > Can I write another function where I can call the value of this function > > or manipulate it? > > No. The string "HELLO SIR" is a local variable to the hello() function. > You cannot modify it from outside that function. Since your hello() > function prints the result, instead of returning it, another function > cannot capture it either. > > Perhaps what you want is something like this: > > def hello(message="HELLO SIR"): > return message > > Now you can call the function, and print the result: > > print hello() > > If you want to capture the return value, you can: > > result = hello() > print result.lower() > > If you want to change the message used, you can pass it to the function > as an argument: > > hello("Greetings and salutations!") > > Hope this helps, > > -- > Steven
Thanks Steven and Benjamin for your kind time to answer my question. I am sending the code soon, actual code is pretty long that has so many variables, it may well take your long time to evaluate, so I am making a sizable prototype and trying to send it to you. Best Regards, Subhabrata. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list