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4,382 PointsHello, I'd like to know why these two codes produces a different output.
hellos = [ "hello", "bonjour", "hola"]
for hi in hellos:
... print(hi + " World!")
...
hello World!
bonjour World!
hola World!
hellos = [ "hello", "bonjour", "hola"]
for hi in hellos:
... print("hi" + " World!")
...
hi World!
hi World!
hi World!
hellos = [
"Hello",
"Tungjatjeta",
"Grüßgott",
"Вiтаю",
"dobrý den",
"hyvää päivää",
"你好",
"早上好"
]
for names in hellos:
print("hellos" + "world")
4 Answers
Jennifer Nordell
Treehouse TeacherHi there! It's because when you make a for loop, the first item is a local variable name for each individual item in that list you're iterating through. In your first example, the first iteration has the variable hi
set to equal the first item in the list which is the string literal "hello". You print out the value stored in the hi
variable plus the string literal " World!".
In your second example, the variable hi
is still set to be the value of each individual item you're looking at. But you're not printing out the value of hi
, you're printing out the string literal "hi".
Hope this clarifies things!
Chris Jones
Java Web Development Techdegree Graduate 23,933 PointsHi Renee,
You aren't passing the names
variable into the print
function like you did in the first script you referenced. Instead you passed a string literal, "hellos". You want to pass the variable names
into the print
function instead.
Let me know if that solves it!
Bill Fox
392 PointsIn the first example, you are iterating through the hellos list and printing each item in the list followed by the string " World!" In the second example your use of quotes (python doesn't care whether you use single or double quotes) means you are printing the string "hi" followed by the string " World!"
renee
4,382 PointsThank you so much everyone!
Chris Jones
Java Web Development Techdegree Graduate 23,933 PointsNo problem, renee :)!