On Thu, 2005-09-08 at 15:15 +0100, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > for i in range(10): > principal = principal * (1 + apr) To calculate compound interest, you in fact don't need to use a loop at all (you could use: 'final = principal * (apr ** years)') but if you really want to use a loop, I would use a while loop (although this may not be the best way involving loops, my loop-fu isn't great). The while loop would look like: while years: principal = principal * (1 + apr) years = years - 1 If you planned to use fractions of years, then you need to tweak this.
> print "The value in years is", principal To actually answer your question, in order to print this correctly, you need to tell Python to convert the integer (principal) to a string by using the built-in function str() like so: print "The value in years is", str(principal) To include the years, you would just add 'str(years)' in an appropriate position, although if you've used the while loop, then referring to years will simply give you 0, as you've been adjusting it. The solution to this is to assign 'years' to a different variable initially (and use one in the loop and the other here) in order to preserve it. _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor