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Start your free trialSarah Burgart
5,159 PointsHow do you refer to a string in a list and then only print it if it starts with "A"
I tried alerting the list - not acceptable I tried adding an if statement before (and then after) the for statement - but was told couldn't access string.
The hint says "you can access characters in the string"
Thanks!
continents = [
'Asia',
'South America',
'North America',
'Africa',
'Europe',
'Antarctica',
'Australia',
]
for continent in continents:
print("* " + continent)
3 Answers
KRIS NIKOLAISEN
54,972 PointsDid you do continent(0) or continent[0]? if continent[0] == "A": print("* " + continent) should work
KRIS NIKOLAISEN
54,972 PointsThe hint says "you can access characters in a string by index"
continent[0] would be the first character in continent.
Your idea of using an if statement is a good one.
Sarah Burgart
5,159 Pointsah, should've been "I tried altering the list"
How do I reference the items in the list if not through the for statement - I thought in "for continent in continents" the continent would act as a variable for each item in the list consecutively, and therefore I could write: if continent(0) == "A" print("* " + continent) this does not work - the error that time was that Asia did not appear in list ...
if "A" in continent: had the now obvious effect of printing any of the list items that have "A" anywhere in them (which included North America) but did tell me I can reference the items through the local(?) variable 'continent'
Finally ... pretty sure this is not how I was intended to do this (would be delighted to hear a less convoluted way if there is one):
if continent is < "B":
Sarah Burgart
5,159 PointsSarah Burgart
5,159 Pointsah! Thank you. I was conflating syntax from JS with Python ... I definitely used () not []. Was thinking [] was only for indexing lists, and () was for indexing strings.
Thank you for catching that and pointing it out