"Jeff Shipman" <shippy at nmt.edu> wrote in message news:3AE8EFCC.CEFCF61F at nmt.edu... > I've used this method before to do funky for loop > stuff, but for some reason, I'm getting a line skipped > this time. ... > for line in linelist: ... > linelist.pop(j) ... > doesn't. I'm assuming it must have something to > do with my linelist.pop(j), but I do something similar > to this in several other locations in the program > and I've done it in other programs with no odd > problems. Basically, I'm doing that to get rid of > all the lines I'm passing to the recursive call. Modifying the sequence that you're looping on while you're looping on it will often give surprising results. If you do it in several other locations and it hasn't been biting you, you may have been lucky (or unlucky, depending on one's viewpoint:-). I would suggest a different approach -- do a simple loop without deletion nor recursion, just keeping track of 'state' ("how deeply nested am I") so you can decorate the output with the appropriate <UL>, </UL> and <LI> tags as depth increases/ decreases/stays above 0. Alex
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