syntax-error: can't assign to operator

丶灬走出姿态 提交于 2019-11-29 09:57:29

Python is upset because you are attempting to assign a value to something that can't be assigned a value.

((t[1])/length) * t[1] += string

When you use an assignment operator, you assign the value of what is on the right to the variable or element on the left. In your case, there is no variable or element on the left, but instead an interpreted value: you are trying to assign a value to something that isn't a "container".

Based on what you've written, you're just misunderstanding how this operator works. Just switch your operands, like so.

string += str(((t[1])/length) * t[1])

Note that I've wrapped the assigned value in str in order to convert it into a str so that it is compatible with the string variable it is being assigned to. (Numbers and strings can't be added together.)

Well, as the error says, you have an expression (((t[1])/length) * t[1]) on the left side of the assignment, rather than a variable name. You have that expression, and then you tell Python to add string to it (which is always "") and assign it to... where? ((t[1])/length) * t[1] isn't a variable name, so you can't store the result into it.

Did you mean string += ((t[1])/length) * t[1]? That would make more sense. Of course, you're still trying to add a number to a string, or multiply by a string... one of those t[1]s should probably be a t[0].

Instead of ((t[1])/length) * t[1] += string, you should use string += ((t[1])/length) * t[1]. (The other syntax issue - int is not iterable - will be your exercise to figure out.)

What do you think this is supposed to be: ((t[1])/length) * t[1] += string

Python can't parse this, it's a syntax error.

Chang Federico

in python only work

a=4
b=3

i=a+b

which i is new operator

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