Forwarding to the list with my reply. (Please use reply all to reply to the list)
On Tue, Jul 1, 2008 at 11:36 AM, S Potter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Kent, > > Thanks for the response the answer to question 2 helped. It seem python is > much less verbose than I anticipate at times. > > As for my first question, my apologies I'm using a static list not a > dictionary. > > ex: > > senders = [('albany','somestreet address','state','zipcode'), > ('albany','somestreet address','state','zipcode'), > ('albany','somestreet address','state','zipcode'), > ('albany','somestreet address','state','zipcode'), > ('buffalo','somestreet address','state','zipcode'), > ('buffalo','somestreet address','state','zipcode'), > ('cairo','somestreet address','state','zipcode'),] > > states = [('albany'), > ('buffalo'), > ('cairo'),] > > or states = sort(senders[0]) > > Lets say I select from list states the value of states[0] = 'albany' > > I'd like to filter senders for states[0] ## where the selected value is = > 'albany' > so here I think I'd use a variable to grab the the value > x = states.getselectedvalue() ## for my example x should be 'albany' I don't know how you are selecting from the list? There is no GUI here, just a simple list. Anyway, to get all the values of senders which start with 'albany' you can use a list comprehension: x = 'albany' # doesn't have to be in a variable, just showing that it *can* be a variable filteredlist = [ item for item in senders if item[0] == x ] Are you reading a tutorial? If not I recommend you pick one from this list: http://wiki.python.org/moin/BeginnersGuide/NonProgrammers Kent > providing me with a filtered list from senders only containing the > following: > > [('albany','somestreet address','state','zipcode'), > ('albany','somestreet address','state','zipcode'), > ('albany','somestreet address','state','zipcode'), > ('albany','somestreet address','state','zipcode'),] > > Please excuse this is quasi-pseudo code but I think it clears things up a > bit. > > Basically I need an example of the syntax for this as I'm not certain I have > it correct. > I'm thinking it should be something like this maybe - result(senders,x) > > But I'm clear on it. > > Thanks Again, > > S > > > > ________________________________ >> Date: Tue, 1 Jul 2008 08:40:11 -0400 >> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >> Subject: Re: [Tutor] Novice Python Question >> CC: tutor@python.org >> >> On Tue, Jul 1, 2008 at 7:51 AM, S Potter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> >> > Question 1.) >> > I have dictionary or list containing multiple instances 'duplicate >> > entries' of the same information. Lets say it's a list of addresses and >> > list >> > item i[0] contains city values equal to 'Albany' . >> > >> > I am using a second list of one element to provide my filter criteria. >> > This list contains only cities with no duplicate entries. >> > >> > How do I filter my first list based upon the selected position or a >> > variable equal to the value of the selected position from my second >> > list? >> >> It would help to see more specific examples of the data you have and >> the desired result, but in general a list comprehension is the easiest >> way to filter a list. >> http://docs.python.org/tut/node7.html#SECTION007140000000000000000 >> >> > Question 2.) If I assign a value to a variable x = "MyVlaue" >> > How do I put the value of x into a list? >> >> > I would think it would be something like: >> > list[(str(x))] >> > But I'm not getting the results I expect. >> > This would probably be considered >> > macro-substitution in other languages but I cannot find reference to >> > this in >> > python. >> >> The value of x is the string "MyVlaue", is that what you want? If so >> what you are doingis close, you can use simply [x] to create a list >> containing the value of x. Or do you want the value of the variable >> named MyVlaue? In that case you probably should use a dictionary to >> hold the value rather than a named variable. >> >> Kent > > > ________________________________ > Making the world a better place one message at a time. Check out the i'm > Talkathon. _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor