Reputation: 74630
Here's my python code. Could someone show me what's wrong with it.
while 1:
date=input("Example: March 21 | What is the date? ")
if date=="June 21":
sd="23.5° North Latitude"
if date=="March 21" | date=="September 21":
sd="0° Latitude"
if date=="December 21":
sd="23.5° South Latitude"
if sd:
print sd
And Here's what happens:
>>>
Example: March 21 | What is the date?
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "C:\Users\Daniel\Desktop\Solar Declination Calculater.py", line 2, in <module>
date=input("Example: March 21 | What is the date? ")
File "<string>", line 0
^
SyntaxError: unexpected EOF while parsing
>>>
Upvotes: 86
Views: 500508
Reputation: 324
Check the version of your Compiler.
n= raw_input("Enter your Input: ")
n= input("Enter your Input: ")
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 8904
I had this error, because of a missing closing parenthesis on a line.
I started off having an issue with a line saying:
invalid syntax (<string>, line ...)?
at the end of my script.
I deleted that line, then got the EOF message.
Upvotes: 8
Reputation: 408
I'm using the follow code to get Python 2 and 3 compatibility
if sys.version_info < (3, 0):
input = raw_input
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 474
I'm trying to answer in general, not related to this question, this error generally occurs when you break a syntax in half and forget the other half. Like in my case it was:
try :
....
since python was searching for a
except Exception as e:
....
but it encountered an EOF (End Of File), hence the error. See if you can find any incomplete syntax in your code.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 16330
Use raw_input
instead of input
:)
If you use
input
, then the data you type is is interpreted as a Python Expression which means that you end up with gawd knows what type of object in your target variable, and a heck of a wide range of exceptions that can be generated. So you should NOT useinput
unless you're putting something in for temporary testing, to be used only by someone who knows a bit about Python expressions.
raw_input
always returns a string because, heck, that's what you always type in ... but then you can easily convert it to the specific type you want, and catch the specific exceptions that may occur. Hopefully with that explanation, it's a no-brainer to know which you should use.
Note: this is only for Python 2. For Python 3, raw_input()
has become plain input()
and the Python 2 input()
has been removed.
Upvotes: 128
Reputation: 77
After the first if statement instead of typing "if" type "elif" and then it should work.
Ex.
` while 1:
date=input("Example: March 21 | What is the date? ")
if date=="June 21":
sd="23.5° North Latitude
elif date=="March 21" | date=="September 21":
sd="0° Latitude"
elif date=="December 21":
sd="23.5° South Latitude"
elif sd:
print sd `
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 15045
While @simon's answer is most helpful in Python 2, raw_input
is not present in Python 3. I'd suggest doing the following to make sure your code works equally well in Python 2 and Python 3:
First, pip install future:
$ pip install future
Second: import input from future.builtins
# my_file.py
from future.builtins import input
str_value = input('Type something in: ')
And for the specific example listed above:
# example.py
from future.builtins import input
my_date = input("Example: March 21 | What is the date? ")
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 86
i came across the same thing and i figured out what is the issue. When we use the method input, the response we should type should be in double quotes. Like in your line
date=input("Example: March 21 | What is the date? ")
You should type when prompted on console "12/12/2015" - note the "
thing before and after. This way it will take that as a string and process it as expected. I am not sure if this is limitation of this input
method - but it works this way.
Hope it helps
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 181
What you can try is writing your code as normal for python using the normal input
command. However the trick is to add at the beginning of you program the command input=raw_input
.
Now all you have to do is disable (or enable) depending on if you're running in Python/IDLE or Terminal. You do this by simply adding '#' when needed.
Switched off for use in Python/IDLE
#input=raw_input
And of course switched on for use in terminal.
input=raw_input
I'm not sure if it will always work, but its a possible solution for simple programs or scripts.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 56941
Indent it! first. That would take care of your SyntaxError
.
Apart from that there are couple of other problems in your program.
Use raw_input
when you want accept string as an input. input
takes only Python expressions and it does an eval
on them.
You are using certain 8bit characters in your script like 0°
. You might need to define the encoding at the top of your script using # -*- coding:latin-1 -*-
line commonly called as coding-cookie.
Also, while doing str comparison, normalize the strings and compare. (people using lower() it) This helps in giving little flexibility with user input.
I also think that reading Python tutorial might helpful to you. :)
Sample Code
#-*- coding: latin1 -*-
while 1:
date=raw_input("Example: March 21 | What is the date? ")
if date.lower() == "march 21":
....
Upvotes: 15