Megan Land wrote:

All three methods are defined below the snippet I provided.


In Python names must be defined before they are referenced. Put these defs above the snippet.


def func():
code...
def func0():
do stuff
def func1():
do stuff
def func2():
do stuff

Megan Land
FVT Blade EMET Test Engineer
[email protected]

Inactive hide details for Kent Johnson ---08/13/2009 05:18:10 PM---On Thu, Aug 13, 2009 at 3:30 PM, Megan Land<[email protected] Johnson ---08/13/2009 05:18:10 PM---On Thu, Aug 13, 2009 at 3:30 PM, Megan Land<[email protected]> wrote: > Hi,


From:   
Kent Johnson <[email protected]>

To:     
Megan Land/Raleigh/Contr/i...@ibmus

Cc:     
[email protected]

Date:   
08/13/2009 05:18 PM

Subject:        
Re: [Tutor] Dynamic Function Calls

Sent by:        
[email protected]

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On Thu, Aug 13, 2009 at 3:30 PM, Megan Land<[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm trying to call a function from a dictionary. I did some googling and
> from what I can tell my code should work, but doesn't. Here's an example:
>
> def myFunc(self, inputList):
> dict={0: func0, 1: func1, 2:func2}
> for element in inputList:
> dict[element]()
>
> When I go to run this I get an error saying func0 is not defined. Does
> anyone have any ideas as to why this won't work? I'm using Python 2.6 if
> that makes any difference.

You don't show any definition for func0 in the above snippet. Where is
it defined?

Kent

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