On Friday, August 2, 2013 6:39:43 PM UTC-7, John Ladasky wrote: > On Friday, August 2, 2013 5:40:52 PM UTC-7, kevin...@gmail.com wrote: > > > Basically, my code is ignoring the if's and else's. I don't get why. > > > Everything appears to be positioned correctly, but for some odd reason, even > > > after an if, the program also runs the else as well. > > > > Look carefully at your indentation. One "else" statement is at the same > indentation as a "for" statement rather than an "if" statement. So what, you > say? > > > > http://docs.python.org/2/tutorial/controlflow.html > > > > "Loop statements may have an else clause; it is executed when the loop > terminates through exhaustion of the list (with for) or when the condition > becomes false (with while), but not when the loop is terminated by a break > statement." > > > > I don't know of any other computer programming language besides Python which > has the "for...break...else" idiom. However, I know quite a few that do not. > I find it useful in many situations.
Yeah, I already know about that. But if I try to change it, I'm not even able to start the program. If I try to change the if statement that it corresponds with, I get a an error saying "card" is not a global. And if I try to shift it in, for some reason...the program runs through the MISS line multiple times. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list