unable to print objects of a python list in separate lines












1















i want to print contents of a list in separate lines and this is the code



  mylist=
standard=''
for i in range(8):
name=input()
name = name.lower()

num=0
for char in name:
if num==0:
standard+=char.upper()
elif num>0:
standard+=char.lower()
num+=1
mylist.append(standard)
for element in mylist:
print(element)


i expect the elements of my list print like this for example:



Water
Sky
Cloud


but it happens to be like this:



Water
WaterSky
WaterSkyCloud


i don't what is wrong here










share|improve this question


















  • 1





    You need to empty the contents of standard inside the for-loop you use for printing.

    – DatHydroGuy
    Nov 14 '18 at 13:24








  • 1





    You should reset your standard variable at each for loop. Also I think your indentation is wrong...

    – toti08
    Nov 14 '18 at 13:24






  • 1





    I see that you are trying to make the first character an upper case character followed by lower case characters. Like "WATER" turns into "water", and then "Water". You can use a method calles .title() to accomplish this is a nicer/cleaner/shorter way.

    – Ely Fialkoff
    Nov 14 '18 at 15:27
















1















i want to print contents of a list in separate lines and this is the code



  mylist=
standard=''
for i in range(8):
name=input()
name = name.lower()

num=0
for char in name:
if num==0:
standard+=char.upper()
elif num>0:
standard+=char.lower()
num+=1
mylist.append(standard)
for element in mylist:
print(element)


i expect the elements of my list print like this for example:



Water
Sky
Cloud


but it happens to be like this:



Water
WaterSky
WaterSkyCloud


i don't what is wrong here










share|improve this question


















  • 1





    You need to empty the contents of standard inside the for-loop you use for printing.

    – DatHydroGuy
    Nov 14 '18 at 13:24








  • 1





    You should reset your standard variable at each for loop. Also I think your indentation is wrong...

    – toti08
    Nov 14 '18 at 13:24






  • 1





    I see that you are trying to make the first character an upper case character followed by lower case characters. Like "WATER" turns into "water", and then "Water". You can use a method calles .title() to accomplish this is a nicer/cleaner/shorter way.

    – Ely Fialkoff
    Nov 14 '18 at 15:27














1












1








1








i want to print contents of a list in separate lines and this is the code



  mylist=
standard=''
for i in range(8):
name=input()
name = name.lower()

num=0
for char in name:
if num==0:
standard+=char.upper()
elif num>0:
standard+=char.lower()
num+=1
mylist.append(standard)
for element in mylist:
print(element)


i expect the elements of my list print like this for example:



Water
Sky
Cloud


but it happens to be like this:



Water
WaterSky
WaterSkyCloud


i don't what is wrong here










share|improve this question














i want to print contents of a list in separate lines and this is the code



  mylist=
standard=''
for i in range(8):
name=input()
name = name.lower()

num=0
for char in name:
if num==0:
standard+=char.upper()
elif num>0:
standard+=char.lower()
num+=1
mylist.append(standard)
for element in mylist:
print(element)


i expect the elements of my list print like this for example:



Water
Sky
Cloud


but it happens to be like this:



Water
WaterSky
WaterSkyCloud


i don't what is wrong here







python






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Nov 14 '18 at 13:22









kosar afrooshekosar afrooshe

72




72








  • 1





    You need to empty the contents of standard inside the for-loop you use for printing.

    – DatHydroGuy
    Nov 14 '18 at 13:24








  • 1





    You should reset your standard variable at each for loop. Also I think your indentation is wrong...

    – toti08
    Nov 14 '18 at 13:24






  • 1





    I see that you are trying to make the first character an upper case character followed by lower case characters. Like "WATER" turns into "water", and then "Water". You can use a method calles .title() to accomplish this is a nicer/cleaner/shorter way.

    – Ely Fialkoff
    Nov 14 '18 at 15:27














  • 1





    You need to empty the contents of standard inside the for-loop you use for printing.

    – DatHydroGuy
    Nov 14 '18 at 13:24








  • 1





    You should reset your standard variable at each for loop. Also I think your indentation is wrong...

    – toti08
    Nov 14 '18 at 13:24






  • 1





    I see that you are trying to make the first character an upper case character followed by lower case characters. Like "WATER" turns into "water", and then "Water". You can use a method calles .title() to accomplish this is a nicer/cleaner/shorter way.

    – Ely Fialkoff
    Nov 14 '18 at 15:27








1




1





You need to empty the contents of standard inside the for-loop you use for printing.

– DatHydroGuy
Nov 14 '18 at 13:24







You need to empty the contents of standard inside the for-loop you use for printing.

– DatHydroGuy
Nov 14 '18 at 13:24






1




1





You should reset your standard variable at each for loop. Also I think your indentation is wrong...

– toti08
Nov 14 '18 at 13:24





You should reset your standard variable at each for loop. Also I think your indentation is wrong...

– toti08
Nov 14 '18 at 13:24




1




1





I see that you are trying to make the first character an upper case character followed by lower case characters. Like "WATER" turns into "water", and then "Water". You can use a method calles .title() to accomplish this is a nicer/cleaner/shorter way.

– Ely Fialkoff
Nov 14 '18 at 15:27





I see that you are trying to make the first character an upper case character followed by lower case characters. Like "WATER" turns into "water", and then "Water". You can use a method calles .title() to accomplish this is a nicer/cleaner/shorter way.

– Ely Fialkoff
Nov 14 '18 at 15:27












1 Answer
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If you have a list of elements, it is easier to use built-in methods to print on new lines



print(*[x.title() for x in mylist], sep='n')


print(*args) is in python3 and allows you to print iterable as you want, here with a n sep.
You can also use .title() on string to take the first character as upper and the others as lower






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    0














    If you have a list of elements, it is easier to use built-in methods to print on new lines



    print(*[x.title() for x in mylist], sep='n')


    print(*args) is in python3 and allows you to print iterable as you want, here with a n sep.
    You can also use .title() on string to take the first character as upper and the others as lower






    share|improve this answer






























      0














      If you have a list of elements, it is easier to use built-in methods to print on new lines



      print(*[x.title() for x in mylist], sep='n')


      print(*args) is in python3 and allows you to print iterable as you want, here with a n sep.
      You can also use .title() on string to take the first character as upper and the others as lower






      share|improve this answer




























        0












        0








        0







        If you have a list of elements, it is easier to use built-in methods to print on new lines



        print(*[x.title() for x in mylist], sep='n')


        print(*args) is in python3 and allows you to print iterable as you want, here with a n sep.
        You can also use .title() on string to take the first character as upper and the others as lower






        share|improve this answer















        If you have a list of elements, it is easier to use built-in methods to print on new lines



        print(*[x.title() for x in mylist], sep='n')


        print(*args) is in python3 and allows you to print iterable as you want, here with a n sep.
        You can also use .title() on string to take the first character as upper and the others as lower







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Nov 14 '18 at 14:32

























        answered Nov 14 '18 at 14:03









        BlueSheepTokenBlueSheepToken

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