Azz
Azz

Reputation: 89

Asterisk art in python

I would like to produce this picture in python!

         *
        **
       ***
      ****
     *****
    ******
   *******
  ********
 *********
**********

I entered this:

x=1
while x<10:
 print '%10s'    %'*'*x
 x=x+1

Which sadly seems to produce something composed of the right number of dots as the picture above, but each of those dot asterisks are separated by spaced apart from one another, rather than justified right as a whole.

Anybody have a clever mind on how I might achieve what I want?

Upvotes: 6

Views: 3649

Answers (5)

wim
wim

Reputation: 363384

string object has rjust and ljust methods for precisely this thing.

>>> n = 10
>>> for i in xrange(1,n+1):
...   print (i*'*').rjust(n)
... 
         *
        **
       ***
      ****
     *****
    ******
   *******
  ********
 *********
**********

or, alternatively:

>>> for i in reversed(xrange(n)):
...   print (i*' ').ljust(n, '*')
... 
         *
        **
       ***
      ****
     *****
    ******
   *******
  ********
 *********
**********

My second example uses a space character as the printable character, and * as the fill character.

The argument to ljust or rjust is the terminal width. I often use these for separating sections with headings when you have chatty debug printout, e.g. print '--Spam!'.ljust(80, '-').

Upvotes: 8

Jeremy Banks
Jeremy Banks

Reputation: 129836

 '%10s'    %'*'*x

is being parsed as

('%10s' % '*') * x

because the % and * operators have the same precedence and group left-to-right[docs]. You need to add parentheses, like this:

x = 1
while x < 10:
    print '%10s' % ('*' * x)
    x = x + 1

If you want to loop through a range of numbers, it's considered more idiomatic to use a for loop than a while loop. Like this:

for x in range(1, 10):
    print '%10s' % ('*' * x)

for x in range(0, 10) is equivalent to for(int x = 0; x < 10; x++) in Java or C.

Upvotes: 13

MatthieuW
MatthieuW

Reputation: 2372

To be exact, as your picture ends with 10 asterisks, you need.

for i in range(1, 11):
    print "%10s"%('*' *i)

Upvotes: 1

develerx
develerx

Reputation: 600

print '\n'.join(' ' * (10 - i) + '*' * i for i in range(10))

Upvotes: 1

Karoly Horvath
Karoly Horvath

Reputation: 96306

It's because of the operator precedence, use this one:

x=1
while x<10:
 print '%10s' % ('*'*x)
 x=x+1

Upvotes: 2

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