top-level loops
Cameron Laird
claird at lairds.com
Wed Oct 8 18:22:35 EDT 2003
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Wed Oct 8 18:22:35 EDT 2003
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In article <mailman.1065649095.3003.python-list at python.org>, Michael Chermside <mcherm at mcherm.com> wrote: >Stefan writes: >> I am writing a program (code included) and I would like to comment out >> the two top-level loops and run the code that is under it regularly, >> however, because the following code is not indented properly the >> interpreter chokes. Is there a way around this? > >Well first of all, I prefer to use an editor which will allow me >to indent or dedent entire blocks of code at a time. There are lots >of others, but Idle (which almost certainly came with your copy of >Python) is one... select the block then use tab or shift-tab. > >Also, in your case there's another quick work-around: > > > #for i in range(0,3): > # for j in range(0,3): > for i in range(0,1): > for j in range(0,1): > > ... rest of program goes here... > > >Notice how I left in the for loops, but made sure that each >occurred only once. > >-- Michael Chermside > > Are you the kind of fellow who writes a lot of if 1 or complicated_function(): other_stuff(); too, to the same end? I know *I* am ... Stefan, if this really is a problem for you, it suggests to me that it might be time for you to define the body of the loop as an explicit function, which you unit-test separately. -- Cameron Laird <claird at phaseit.net> Business: http://www.Phaseit.net
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