I need to create 20 variables in Python. That variables are all needed, they should initially be empty strings and the empty strings will later be replaced with other strings. I cann not create the variables as needed when they are needed because I also have some if/else statements that need to check whether the variables are still empty or already equal to other strings.
Instead of writing
variable_a = ''
variable_b = ''
....
I thought at something like
list = ['a', 'b']
for item in list:
exec("'variable_'+item+' = '''")
This code does not lead to an error, but still is does not do what I would expect - the variables are not created with the names "variable_1" and so on.
Where is my mistake?
Thanks, Woodpicker
Where is my mistake?
There are possibly three mistakes. The first is that 'variable_' + 'a'
obviously isn't equal to 'variable_1'
. The second is the quoting in the argument to exec
. Do
for x in list:
exec("variable_%s = ''" % x)
to get variable_a
etc.
The third mistake is that you're not using a list
or dict
for this. Just do
variable = dict((x, '') for x in list)
then get the contents of "variable" a
with variable['a']
. Don't fight the language. Use it.