So I am working on a chat-bot for discord, and right now on a feature that would work as a todo-list. I have a command to add tasks to the list, where they are stored in a dict. However my problem is returning the list in a more readable format (see pictures).
def show_todo():
for key, value in cal.items():
print(value[0], key)
The tasks are stored in a dict called cal. But in order for the bot to actually send the message I need to use a return statement, otherwise it’ll just print it to the console and not to the actual chat (see pictures).
def show_todo():
for key, value in cal.items():
return(value[0], key)
Here is how I tried to fix it, but since I used return the for-loop does not work properly.
So how do I fix this? How can I use a return statement so that it would print into the chat instead of the console?
Answers:
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Method 1
Using a return inside of a loop will break it and exit the function even if the iteration is still not finished.
For example:
def num():
# Here there will be only one iteration
# For number == 1 => 1 % 2 = 1
# So, break the loop and return the number
for number in range(1, 10):
if number % 2:
return number
>>> num()
1
In some cases we need to break the loop if some conditions are met. However, in your current code, breaking the loop before finishing it is unintentional.
Instead of that, you can use a different approach:
Yielding your data
def show_todo():
# Create a generator
for key, value in cal.items():
yield value[0], key
You can call it like:
a = list(show_todo()) # or tuple(show_todo())
or you can iterate through it:
for v, k in show_todo(): ...
Putting your data into a list or other container
Append your data to a list, then return it after the end of your loop:
def show_todo():
my_list = []
for key, value in cal.items():
my_list.append((value[0], key))
return my_list
Or use a list comprehension:
def show_todo():
return [(value[0], key) for key, value in cal.items()]
Method 2
Use a generator syntax (excellent explanation on SO here):
def show_todo():
for key, value in cal.items():
yield value[0], key
for value, key in show_todo():
print(value, key)
Method 3
You can never iteratively return something. Just return a list and iterate over it to get the result.
def show_todo():
return [key, val for key, val in cal.items()]
All methods was sourced from stackoverflow.com or stackexchange.com, is licensed under cc by-sa 2.5, cc by-sa 3.0 and cc by-sa 4.0