One of my first complicated python codes, involving temperature unit conversion











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So basically i was trying a more complicated code than what i have been making, since I'm still a college student learning Python basics.



Anyway, whenever i run the program, i keep getting an error saying that "fahrenheit" is not defined.



Here's the code:



def morning():
celsius = int(input('How many degrees C is the temperature in the morning: '))
fahrenheit = 9 / 5 * celsius + 32
return fahrenheit


print('%.1f' % fahrenheit + "F")

morning()


def evening():
celsius = int(input("How many degrees C is the temperature in the evening: "))
fahrenheit = 9 / 5 * celsius + 32
return fahrenheit


print('%.1f' % fahrenheit + "F")

evening()

for i in range(0, 1):
if i is 0:
morning()
else:
evening()

if fahrenheit <= 79:
print("This morning is cold")
else:
if fahrenheit <= 90:
print("It is a little warm this morning")
else:
print("It is quite hot today")

if fahrenheit <= 79:
print("Tonight is cold")
else:
if efahrenheit <= 90:
print("It is a little warm this evening")
else:
print("It is quite hot tonight")

if fahrenheit and efahrenheit <= 79:
print("It was cold today")
else:
if fahrenheit and efahrenheit <= 90:
print("The weather was warm today")
else:
print("Today was quite hot today")


I'm relatively new, so I'm experimenting with a lot of things, since my best way to learn is trial and error










share|improve this question






















  • Maybe try calling morning() before calling print(...). Same with evening(). And assign the values that these functions return to something, like: fahrenheit = morning() so that you're not using some "leftover" value that was assigned inside a function.
    – Carlos Mermingas
    Nov 11 at 16:00








  • 1




    Also, you are using efahrenheit at some point in your code and that has not been defined.
    – Carlos Mermingas
    Nov 11 at 16:03










  • i was trying to use efahrenheit as a different variable as to avoid mixup in the following comparisons in the "for" loops
    – Ahmed Fahmy
    Nov 11 at 23:28















up vote
0
down vote

favorite












So basically i was trying a more complicated code than what i have been making, since I'm still a college student learning Python basics.



Anyway, whenever i run the program, i keep getting an error saying that "fahrenheit" is not defined.



Here's the code:



def morning():
celsius = int(input('How many degrees C is the temperature in the morning: '))
fahrenheit = 9 / 5 * celsius + 32
return fahrenheit


print('%.1f' % fahrenheit + "F")

morning()


def evening():
celsius = int(input("How many degrees C is the temperature in the evening: "))
fahrenheit = 9 / 5 * celsius + 32
return fahrenheit


print('%.1f' % fahrenheit + "F")

evening()

for i in range(0, 1):
if i is 0:
morning()
else:
evening()

if fahrenheit <= 79:
print("This morning is cold")
else:
if fahrenheit <= 90:
print("It is a little warm this morning")
else:
print("It is quite hot today")

if fahrenheit <= 79:
print("Tonight is cold")
else:
if efahrenheit <= 90:
print("It is a little warm this evening")
else:
print("It is quite hot tonight")

if fahrenheit and efahrenheit <= 79:
print("It was cold today")
else:
if fahrenheit and efahrenheit <= 90:
print("The weather was warm today")
else:
print("Today was quite hot today")


I'm relatively new, so I'm experimenting with a lot of things, since my best way to learn is trial and error










share|improve this question






















  • Maybe try calling morning() before calling print(...). Same with evening(). And assign the values that these functions return to something, like: fahrenheit = morning() so that you're not using some "leftover" value that was assigned inside a function.
    – Carlos Mermingas
    Nov 11 at 16:00








  • 1




    Also, you are using efahrenheit at some point in your code and that has not been defined.
    – Carlos Mermingas
    Nov 11 at 16:03










  • i was trying to use efahrenheit as a different variable as to avoid mixup in the following comparisons in the "for" loops
    – Ahmed Fahmy
    Nov 11 at 23:28













up vote
0
down vote

favorite









up vote
0
down vote

favorite











So basically i was trying a more complicated code than what i have been making, since I'm still a college student learning Python basics.



Anyway, whenever i run the program, i keep getting an error saying that "fahrenheit" is not defined.



Here's the code:



def morning():
celsius = int(input('How many degrees C is the temperature in the morning: '))
fahrenheit = 9 / 5 * celsius + 32
return fahrenheit


print('%.1f' % fahrenheit + "F")

morning()


def evening():
celsius = int(input("How many degrees C is the temperature in the evening: "))
fahrenheit = 9 / 5 * celsius + 32
return fahrenheit


print('%.1f' % fahrenheit + "F")

evening()

for i in range(0, 1):
if i is 0:
morning()
else:
evening()

if fahrenheit <= 79:
print("This morning is cold")
else:
if fahrenheit <= 90:
print("It is a little warm this morning")
else:
print("It is quite hot today")

if fahrenheit <= 79:
print("Tonight is cold")
else:
if efahrenheit <= 90:
print("It is a little warm this evening")
else:
print("It is quite hot tonight")

if fahrenheit and efahrenheit <= 79:
print("It was cold today")
else:
if fahrenheit and efahrenheit <= 90:
print("The weather was warm today")
else:
print("Today was quite hot today")


I'm relatively new, so I'm experimenting with a lot of things, since my best way to learn is trial and error










share|improve this question













So basically i was trying a more complicated code than what i have been making, since I'm still a college student learning Python basics.



Anyway, whenever i run the program, i keep getting an error saying that "fahrenheit" is not defined.



Here's the code:



def morning():
celsius = int(input('How many degrees C is the temperature in the morning: '))
fahrenheit = 9 / 5 * celsius + 32
return fahrenheit


print('%.1f' % fahrenheit + "F")

morning()


def evening():
celsius = int(input("How many degrees C is the temperature in the evening: "))
fahrenheit = 9 / 5 * celsius + 32
return fahrenheit


print('%.1f' % fahrenheit + "F")

evening()

for i in range(0, 1):
if i is 0:
morning()
else:
evening()

if fahrenheit <= 79:
print("This morning is cold")
else:
if fahrenheit <= 90:
print("It is a little warm this morning")
else:
print("It is quite hot today")

if fahrenheit <= 79:
print("Tonight is cold")
else:
if efahrenheit <= 90:
print("It is a little warm this evening")
else:
print("It is quite hot tonight")

if fahrenheit and efahrenheit <= 79:
print("It was cold today")
else:
if fahrenheit and efahrenheit <= 90:
print("The weather was warm today")
else:
print("Today was quite hot today")


I'm relatively new, so I'm experimenting with a lot of things, since my best way to learn is trial and error







python






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Nov 11 at 15:57









Ahmed Fahmy

32




32












  • Maybe try calling morning() before calling print(...). Same with evening(). And assign the values that these functions return to something, like: fahrenheit = morning() so that you're not using some "leftover" value that was assigned inside a function.
    – Carlos Mermingas
    Nov 11 at 16:00








  • 1




    Also, you are using efahrenheit at some point in your code and that has not been defined.
    – Carlos Mermingas
    Nov 11 at 16:03










  • i was trying to use efahrenheit as a different variable as to avoid mixup in the following comparisons in the "for" loops
    – Ahmed Fahmy
    Nov 11 at 23:28


















  • Maybe try calling morning() before calling print(...). Same with evening(). And assign the values that these functions return to something, like: fahrenheit = morning() so that you're not using some "leftover" value that was assigned inside a function.
    – Carlos Mermingas
    Nov 11 at 16:00








  • 1




    Also, you are using efahrenheit at some point in your code and that has not been defined.
    – Carlos Mermingas
    Nov 11 at 16:03










  • i was trying to use efahrenheit as a different variable as to avoid mixup in the following comparisons in the "for" loops
    – Ahmed Fahmy
    Nov 11 at 23:28
















Maybe try calling morning() before calling print(...). Same with evening(). And assign the values that these functions return to something, like: fahrenheit = morning() so that you're not using some "leftover" value that was assigned inside a function.
– Carlos Mermingas
Nov 11 at 16:00






Maybe try calling morning() before calling print(...). Same with evening(). And assign the values that these functions return to something, like: fahrenheit = morning() so that you're not using some "leftover" value that was assigned inside a function.
– Carlos Mermingas
Nov 11 at 16:00






1




1




Also, you are using efahrenheit at some point in your code and that has not been defined.
– Carlos Mermingas
Nov 11 at 16:03




Also, you are using efahrenheit at some point in your code and that has not been defined.
– Carlos Mermingas
Nov 11 at 16:03












i was trying to use efahrenheit as a different variable as to avoid mixup in the following comparisons in the "for" loops
– Ahmed Fahmy
Nov 11 at 23:28




i was trying to use efahrenheit as a different variable as to avoid mixup in the following comparisons in the "for" loops
– Ahmed Fahmy
Nov 11 at 23:28












1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
0
down vote



accepted










The problem was that you're declaring the fahrenheit variable inside the methods, but you're trying to use it outside of them.
To be allowed to do it, you need to create it out of the method.
For example, like this:



fahrenheit = morning()


Now, you can work with that varaible






share|improve this answer





















  • this made the code work fine, but it needs ALOT of cleaning up to work as i had in mind.(several inputs are demanded in the code, i think i need to re-edit it.)
    – Ahmed Fahmy
    Nov 11 at 23:34













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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
0
down vote



accepted










The problem was that you're declaring the fahrenheit variable inside the methods, but you're trying to use it outside of them.
To be allowed to do it, you need to create it out of the method.
For example, like this:



fahrenheit = morning()


Now, you can work with that varaible






share|improve this answer





















  • this made the code work fine, but it needs ALOT of cleaning up to work as i had in mind.(several inputs are demanded in the code, i think i need to re-edit it.)
    – Ahmed Fahmy
    Nov 11 at 23:34

















up vote
0
down vote



accepted










The problem was that you're declaring the fahrenheit variable inside the methods, but you're trying to use it outside of them.
To be allowed to do it, you need to create it out of the method.
For example, like this:



fahrenheit = morning()


Now, you can work with that varaible






share|improve this answer





















  • this made the code work fine, but it needs ALOT of cleaning up to work as i had in mind.(several inputs are demanded in the code, i think i need to re-edit it.)
    – Ahmed Fahmy
    Nov 11 at 23:34















up vote
0
down vote



accepted







up vote
0
down vote



accepted






The problem was that you're declaring the fahrenheit variable inside the methods, but you're trying to use it outside of them.
To be allowed to do it, you need to create it out of the method.
For example, like this:



fahrenheit = morning()


Now, you can work with that varaible






share|improve this answer












The problem was that you're declaring the fahrenheit variable inside the methods, but you're trying to use it outside of them.
To be allowed to do it, you need to create it out of the method.
For example, like this:



fahrenheit = morning()


Now, you can work with that varaible







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Nov 11 at 16:04









Inazense

1266




1266












  • this made the code work fine, but it needs ALOT of cleaning up to work as i had in mind.(several inputs are demanded in the code, i think i need to re-edit it.)
    – Ahmed Fahmy
    Nov 11 at 23:34




















  • this made the code work fine, but it needs ALOT of cleaning up to work as i had in mind.(several inputs are demanded in the code, i think i need to re-edit it.)
    – Ahmed Fahmy
    Nov 11 at 23:34


















this made the code work fine, but it needs ALOT of cleaning up to work as i had in mind.(several inputs are demanded in the code, i think i need to re-edit it.)
– Ahmed Fahmy
Nov 11 at 23:34






this made the code work fine, but it needs ALOT of cleaning up to work as i had in mind.(several inputs are demanded in the code, i think i need to re-edit it.)
– Ahmed Fahmy
Nov 11 at 23:34




















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