On 11/22/2011 12:09 PM, Cranky Frankie wrote:
On Tue, Nov 22, 2011 at 11:26 AM, Dave Angel<d...@davea.name> wrote:
snip
quarterbacks = []
for ....
quarterbacks.append( )
Now that you really have a list, then you can print a particular one with:
print (quarterbacks[2].last_name)
Dave I'm sorry but I just don't get this. I have virtually no
experience with classes.
What seems like it shoud work is this:
#######################
len_Qb_list = len(Qb_list)
for i in range(0, len_Qb_list):
quarterbacks = Qb(*Qb_list[i])
That creates one quarterback, not a list of them. So you need to append
that to some list. As I said in my earlier message, you might want to
append it to a list called quarterbacks, not replace the earlier object.
i = i + 1
print (quarterbacks[2].last_name)
############################
In other words, define an instance of the Qb class called
quarterbacks, and then "load" or instantiate instances of the class
using the 6 sets of values from Qb_list.
My error message is:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "D:/Python31/q", line 27, in<module>
print (quarterbacks[2].last_name)
TypeError: 'Qb' object does not support indexing
As long as it's a single object of your class, you can't index it.
Do you have any experience building a list in Python? If you're trying
to do it in a for loop. you'd have something like
objects= [] #create empty list
for .........whatever..........
newobject = ......something....
objects.append(newobject)
Now you have a list called objects. You also have a newobject, which
is the last one added.
--
DaveA
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