On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 7:09 AM, Mike Nickey <mnic...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hey all, > I'm sorry for such a silly question but I want to declare a blank integer > for x. What I have is a base for a program that I'm working on for fun. > Yes, for fun.
1) no question is silly 2) Programming is fun, many people have it as a hobby! That's not weird at all. > The long term goal is to create a way to log items that are currently being > done via pencil & paper and make this easier for me and my team. > What I am running into though is how can I declare a variable to use that is > blank at start but then gets populated later on. > Here is what I have so far. > Thanks in advance The question you need to ask yourself is "why?" If the variable has no value, why would you declare it at all? Why not just wait until you have a value for it? It is common for languages such as C to declare all your variables beforehand, but in python there is really no need to do that. For one, variables in python don't have a type. Values do, but variables do not. So there is no need to tell python beforehand what types your variables will have. You can easily get rid of both of the variable declarations at the top of that program, and assign them when you have a value for them: def get_username(): return raw_input("Enter your name: ") def get_usernumber(): return raw_input("Enter a number: ") username = get_username() x = get_usernumber() Note that raw_input, as a function, returns a value of type str (that's a string). But for a number, it would make more sense to have a value with type int. So we should adapt our get_usernumber function to convert our str value into an int value: def get_usernumber(): return int(raw_input("Enter a number: ")) very simple, right? Now, the next problem you will run into, is what happens when the user doesn't actually enter a number? I suggest you try it. the int() function won't be very happy about it and raise an exception. You'll have to catch that exception, print out some error message, and ask for another number, until the user gets it right. But I'll leave that part up to you. HTH, Hugo _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org To unsubscribe or change subscription options: http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor