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Invalid syntax Python code
print("You're born") print("age: 1") friend = input("a kid named Jon whants to be your Friend do you want to be his friend 1- Yes 2-No ") if friend = "1" print("You have now a friend") else: print("You have no friends :( ") Please help im trying to code a lifegame
6 Respuestas
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Marian ,
In first statement for accessing quotation mark you have to use backslash (\) before quotation mark....
And in if condition for checking you have to use (==)...it is the correct syntax ...
If one equal sign means it indicates... assigning value to the variable....
Try this:-
https://code.sololearn.com/cEeH4FraxQva/?ref=app
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Brian yeah you are right bro... thank you so much...since I missed it...
Exactly if the whole string is enclosed within single quote means my statement is valid...
Since within double quotes so no backslash needed...
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The first error is in line 2.
print("age: 1")<74 spaces>friend = input(...
All those spaces are unnecessary, and it needs a newline before friend.
The second problem, as mentioned by Riya, is using the assignment operator (=) instead of the equality comparison operator (==) in the if conditional. That's a very common mistake that nearly all programmers make - from beginner to pro!
(FYI, "wants" is misspelled.)
And finally, there is a missing colon (:) from the end of the if statement.
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Riya, the single quote does not need to have a backslash escape. The whole string is delimited by a pair of double quotes, so a single quote may embedded inside without having to escape it. The reverse holds true as well: you can embed a double quote inside a pair of single quotes without having to escape the double quote. That is the reason behind being able to use either type of quote mark for strings.
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Than you
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There is missing colon in if statement