"Ron Stephens" <rdsteph at earthlink.net> wrote in message news:3AD6161F.16F5AC19 at earthlink.net... [snip] > Thanks Alex!!! You're welcone. > I also am looking right now at your Python cookbook web site...wow this > is a really great resource, thanks to you from me and from all > Python learners and users future and present!!! It IS great, I agree, but it's not mine -- it's ActiveState's, it's the Python community's, it's David Ascher's; I'm just one of many contributors, so, direct these thanks to those who most deserve them!-) > I guess in the case of the while loop above, I could nest the while loop in a > one bigger while loop that ask "do you want to run another program option > quit?" Or, alternatively, and perhaps better, I could imbed a statement > asking that question after the else code, immediately before the "break" > statement, asking the same question. That would be better, I think... I would let the user enter a 0 to indicate he or she wants to quit. Maybe something like: while 1: print '0. quit' for i in range(num_programs): print '%d. %s' % (i, functions[i].__name__) input_string = raw_input(prompt) try: input_code = int(input_string) except: print "Please enter a number" else: if 1<=input_code<=num_programs: function = functions[input_code-1] + '.py' function() break elif input_code == 0: break else: print "Please, a number between 0 and", num_programs where we also have a sub-loop reminding the user of available choices, and a little error-diagnosis. These issues have little to do with absence or presence of 'goto', but they do matter:-). Alex
RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue
Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo
HTML:
3.2
| Encoding:
UTF-8
| Version:
0.7.4