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2,837 Pointssyntax error
can someone help me with this simple problem. Syntax error on an else: I don't see what the problem is, but i can't be very complicated
import sys
input("Do you want to start the movie? Y/N")
if input()=='n'or'N':
sys.exit
else: print ("Enjoy the show!")
2 Answers
Chris Freeman
Treehouse Moderator 68,441 PointsThe syntax error is the indent of the else
statement. The else should align with the
if`:
import sys
input("Do you want to start the movie? Y/N")
if input()=='n'or'N':
sys.exit
else: print ("Enjoy the show!") # <-- unindented
Additionally, there are some structural issues.
The if
clause will always be True
due to the or 'N'
part which is always "truthy". Correct this by repeating the full comparison:
# first pass (still needs fix)
if input() == 'n' or input() == 'N':
The issue now is input() is run twice. (Three times if you count the original prompt). This can be fixed by using a variable to hold the input value:
# second pass (fixed)
result = input("Do you want to start the movie? Y/N")
if result == 'n' or result == 'N':
The body of the else
block should be on its own line and properly indented.
A blank line is used after the import and spaces are used around keywords (like or
), assignments (=
), and comparisons (==
) for readability.
Parens are needed in the call to sys.exit()
All together this would look like:
import sys
result = input("Do you want to start the movie? Y/N")
if result == 'n' or result == 'N':
sys.exit()
else:
print ("Enjoy the show!")
Didier Borel
2,837 Pointsthanks chris