I am a programming beginner and I am trying to build a fill-in-the-blank quiz. I am almost finished but I am stuck on 2 problems I am not able to solve, whatever I do. I would really appreciate your help with this. Thank you for helping me with this!
If you try to run the code and play the game:
1) It prints the quiz according to the difficulty(easy-insane) and quiz you want to play(apple, bond and programming quiz) which is great but afterwards it prompts you to choose difficulty again (the player_level() function keeps going even though the player/user has already chosen the difficulty level. I don't really understand why it does it? The player_level() procedure seems perfectly okay and logical to me.
2) The errors:
a) local variable blanks_index referenced before assignment
b) global name list_of_answers is not defined.
I know that it is related to the initialize_game() function but I don't know how to change the code so it refers all the variables (blanks_index, answers_index, player_lives) correctly.
It could be solved by creating global variables(I guess) but that is not a good practice so I am trying to avoid it. Formerly, the whole function initialise_game() and play_game() were one function, but as there are over 25 lines of code in one function, it is not a good practice as it is long and messy and I know that I can separate it but I don't know how.
Here is the code:
"""3 diffferent quizzes : Apple quiz, James Bond quiz, Programming quiz"""
"""Quiz and answers about Apple"""
Apple_quiz = ("The most valuable company in terms of market cap in 2016 is, ___1___."
"It was founded in ___2___. Its flagship product is called ___3___."
"___1___ has many competitors, the biggest rival is ___4___,founded by"
" nobody but the richest man on the planet,___5___ ___6___.")
list_of_answers_Apple = ["Apple", "1976", "Iphone", "Microsoft", "Bill", "Gates"]
"""Quiz and answers about Bond"""
Bond_quiz = ("James Bond is agent ___1___. He serves his country,___2___ ___3___"
" against its enemies. His car of choice is usually ___4___ ___5___."
" His favorite drink is ___6___.")
list_of_answers_Bond = ["007", "United", "Kingdom", "Aston", "Martin", "Martini"]
"""Quiz and answers about programming basics"""
Programming_quiz = ("___1___ are created with the def keyword. ___1___ are also called ___2___"
" You specify the inputs a ___1___ take by adding ___3___ separated by commas"
" between the parentheses. ___3___ can be standard data types such as string, number"
" ,dictionary, tuple, and ___4___ or can be more complicated such as ___5___"
" and ___6___ functions.")
list_of_answers_Programming = ["Functions", "procedures", "arguments", "lists", "objects", "lambda"]
blank_space = ["___1___", "___2___", "___3___", "___4___", "___5___", "___6___]"]
#List of levels with corresponding lives/guesses that player can have
quiz_list = ["Apple", "Bond", "Programming"]
level_list = ["easy", "medium", "hard", "superhard", "insane"]
lives_easy = 5
lives_medium = 4
lives_hard = 3
lives_superhard = 2
lives_insane = 1
def choose_quiz():
""" Prompts player to pick a type of quiz and loads the quiz """
#Input = player_quiz (raw input from player)
#Output = loaded quiz, player chose
while True:
player_quiz = raw_input("Please, select a quiz you want to play: "
"(Apple, Bond or Programming): ")
if player_quiz == "Apple":
return Apple_quiz
elif player_quiz == "Bond":
return Bond_quiz
elif player_quiz == "Programming":
return Programming_quiz
else:
print "We don't have such quiz, pick again!"
def answers_for_quiz():
""" Loads appropiate answers to the quiz that player has chosen"""
#Input = player quiz (raw input from player)
#Output = loaded quiz answers from the quiz player chose
player_quiz_pick = choose_quiz()
if player_quiz_pick == Apple_quiz:
return list_of_answers_Apple
elif player_quiz_pick == Bond_quiz:
return list_of_answers_Bond
elif player_quiz_pick == Programming_quiz:
return list_of_answers_Programming
def player_level():
""" Loads a difficulty that player chooses """
#Input = player_level_input (raw input of player choosing a difficulty)
#Output = corresponding number of lives:
#Easy = 5 lives, Medium = 4 lives
#Hard = 3 lives, Superhard = 2 lives
#Insane = 1 life
while True:
player_level_input = raw_input("Please type in a difficulty level: "
"(easy, medium, hard, superhard, insane): ")
if player_level_input == "easy":
return lives_easy #Easy = 5 lives
elif player_level_input == "medium":
return lives_medium #Medium = 4 lives
elif player_level_input == "hard":
return lives_hard #Hard = 3 lives
elif player_level_input == "superhard":
return lives_superhard #Superhard = 2 lives
elif player_level_input == "insane":
return lives_insane #Insane = 1 life
else:
print "We do not have such difficulty! Pick again!"
def correct_answer(player_answer, list_of_answers, answers_index):
""" Checks, whether the the answer from player matches with the answer list. """
#Input: player_answer (raw input that player enters in order to fill in the blank)
#Output: "Right answer!" or "Wrong! Try again!" this output will be later used in the game
if player_answer == list_of_answers[answers_index]:
return "Right answer!"
return "Wrong! Try again!"
def initialize_game():
"""Functions that sets up a game so we can play it """
player_quiz_pick, player_level_pick, list_of_answers = choose_quiz(), player_level(), answers_for_quiz()
print player_quiz_pick
print "\nYou will get maximum " + str(player_level_pick) + " guesses for this game. Good luck.\n"
blanks_index, answers_index, player_lives = 0, 0, 0
#for elements in blank_space:
while blanks_index < len(blank_space):
player_answer = raw_input("Please type in your answer for " + blank_space[blanks_index] + ": ")
if correct_answer(player_answer,list_of_answers,answers_index) == "Right answer!":
print "Correct answer! Keep going!\n"
player_quiz_pick = player_quiz_pick.replace(blank_space[blanks_index],player_answer)
answers_index += 1
blanks_index += 1
print player_quiz_pick
if blanks_index == len(blank_space):
print "Congratulations! You nailed it! You are the winner!"
else:
player_level_pick -= 1
if player_level_pick == 0:
print "Game over! Maybe next time!"
break
else:
print "One life less, that sucks! Have another shot!"
print "You have " + str(player_level_pick) + " guesses left."
initialize_game()
Your main problem is that you keep calling the same functions over and over again and do not save the input into variables. Here are some tips about your code and questions:
You are not doing anything with your player_level() method call, so the player doesn't actually chooses a level in a way that affects the game. You should change the function call, so the returned value will be stored.
//the call to the method:
player_level_pick = player_level()
Afterwards, you keep calling the player_level() method, and not using the actual answer that the user supplied. Change all player_level() appearences to player_level_pick - the variable you use to save the answer (as I showed above). Same goes to all other unneeded function calls such as choose_level().
You should initialize number_of_guesses, player_lives, list_of_answers, and other vars to a matching value to player_level_pick as well, so it will hold the right value according to the level. Likewise, you should change this line:
# the line that checks if game is over
# change from:
if number_of_guesses == player_lives:
# to :
if number_of_guesses == 0:
In order to return multiple values, you have to use tuples. Using multiple return statements one after the other does not work anywhere.
so, instead of:
return list_of_answers
return number_of_guesses
return blanks_index
return answers_index
return player_lives
you should use tuples, and unpack them properly:
# the return statement:
return (list_of_answers, number_of_guesses, blanks_index, answers_index, player_lives)
# and the unpacking in the calling function:
list_of_answers, number_of_guesses, blanks_index, answers_index, player_lives = initialize_game()
this way, all of the returned values go into the wanted variables in the calling function. this way, you need to call the initialize_game() from play_game(). it will be the efficient way for you.
Just saying it again, as I said in the end of (4) - you should unit initialize_game() and play_game() into a single function (because a lot of data is the same needed data), or just call initialize_game() from play_game().
Better practice then using this recursivly: return choose_level(), you should use a while True: loop, and just brake when you get a proper answer.
Related
Im making a "game" for practice. Its a basic guess game, but i wanted to make the game only with functions. This is my problem (for ex.):
function 1:
variablaA
#some other code
function 2:
variableB
variableC = varibleA + variableB
#some other code
I have tried too goole about objects and classes but im not sure i understand what im doing right now.
import random
import sys
min = 1
max = 99
guessed_number = random.randint(min, max)
class functions:
def __init__(game, difficulty, lifes):
game.difficulty = difficulty
game.lifes = lifes
def GameDiff(hardness):
#Setting game difficulty
print "Select difficulty : \n 1; Easy \n 2; Medium \n 3; Hard \n"
difficulty = raw_input()
if difficulty == "1":
print "Its just the beginning"
lifes = 15
elif difficulty == "2":
lifes = 10
elif difficulty == "3":
lifes = 5
else:
print "This isn't an option try again"
GameDiff(hardness)
def core(basic):
#The core of the game
print "I guessed a number..."
player_number = int(raw_input("Whats the number I thinking of?"))
constant = 1
GameTime = 1
while GameTime == constant:
if player_number < guessed_number:
print "Your number is smaller than my guessed number"
print "Try to duplicate your number (But maybe Im wrong)"
player_number = int(raw_input("Make your tip again\n"))
elif player_number > guessed_number:
print "Your number is bigger than my guessed number"
print "Try to half your number (But maybe Im wrong)"
player_number = int(raw_input("Make your tip again\n"))
else:
GameTime = 0
print "You guessed it! Congratulations"
def main(self):
#The whole game only with functions
functions.GameDiff()
functions.core()
Function = functions()
Function.main()
if you are defining function with parameters, you need to pass data(parameters) into a function when you call it
example:
def my_function(name):
print("my name is " + name)
my_function("Kevin")
in your case you define:
def GameDiff(hardness):
def core(basic):
which are expecting parameters
and when you are calling those funcitions, you are doing that on wrong way:
def main(self):
#The whole game only with functions
functions.GameDiff()
functions.core()
Function = functions()
you need to pass parameters
example:
functions.GameDiff(5)
functions.core(1)
Function = functions(1,5)
NOTE: good practice will be to use self instead of game
def __init__(self, difficulty, lifes):
self.difficulty = difficulty
self.lifes = lifes
they are just two different kinds of class elements:
Elements outside the init method are static elements; they belong
to the class. They're shared by all instances.
Elements inside the init method are elements of the
object (self); they don't belong to the class.Variables created inside init (and all other method functions) and prefaced with self. belong to the object instance.
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Im new(-ish) to python and I made a game today which after I finished I realised I'd made a big mistake :
inside the functions I had to access and edit variables which where also accessed and changed in other functions and maybe in the future outside the functions. And I don't know how to do that.
I've researched for a long time and found very few things that might solve the problem, I've tried a few, but they haven't worked and I don't understand how to use others.
Could you please try to help me with the problem and if you spot others please tell me, as Im not too good at debugging :(
Here is the code below, its quite big (I've put the variables I need to access and change in bold):
from random import randint
print ("Ghost Game v2.0")
print ("select difficulty")
score = 0
alive = True
difficulty = 0
doors = 0
ghost_door = 0
action = 0
ghost_power = 0
#define the function 'ask_difficulty'
def ask_difficulty() :
difficulty = input ("Hard, Normal, Easy")
set_difficulty()
# define the function 'set_difficulty' which sets the difficulty.
def set_difficulty() :
if difficulty == 'Hard' or 'Normal' or 'Easy' :
if difficulty == 'Hard' :
doors = 2
elif difficulty == 'Normal' :
doors = 3
elif difficulty == 'Easy' :
doors = 5
else:
print ("Invalid input, please type Hard, Normal, or Easy")
ask_difficulty()
# define the function 'ghost_door_choose' which sets the ghost door and the chosen door
def ghost_door_choose(x):
ghost_door = randint (1, x)
print (doors + " doors ahead...")
print ("A ghost behind one.")
print ("Which do you open?")
if doors == 2 :
door = int("Door number 1, or door number 2...")
if 1 or 2 in door :
ghost_or_no()
else :
print ("Invalid input")
ghost_door_choose(difficulty)
elif doors == 3 :
door = int("Door number 1, door number 2, or door number 3")
if 1 or 2 or 3 in door :
ghost_or_no()
else:
print ("Invalid input")
ghost_door_choose(difficulty)
elif doors == 5 :
print("Door number 1, door number 2, door number 3, door number 4, or door number 5.")
if 1 or 2 or 3 or 4 or 5 in door :
ghost_or_no()
else:
print ("Invalid input")
ghost_door_choose(difficulty)
# define the function 'ghost_or_no'
def ghost_or_no() :
if door == ghost_door:
print ("GHOST!!")
print ("Initiating battle...")
battle()
else:
print ("No ghost, you\'ve been lucky, but will luck remain with you...")
score = score + 1
ghost_door_choose(difficulty)
# define the function 'battle' which is the battle program
def battle() :
ghost_power = randint (1, 4) # 1 = Speed, 2 = Strength, 3 = The ghost is not friendly, 4 = The ghost is friendly
print ("You have 3 options")
print ("You can flee, but beware, the ghost may be fast (flee),")
print ("You can battle it, but beware, the ghost might be strong (fight),")
print ("Or you can aproach the ghost and be friendly, but beware, the ghost may not be friendly (aproach)...")
action = input ("What do you choose?")
if flee in action :
action = 1
elif fight in action :
action = 2
elif aproach in action :
action = 3
else :
print ("Invalid input")
battle()
if ghost_power == action :
if action == 1:
print ("Oh no, the ghost\'s power was speed!")
print ("DEFEAT")
print ("You\'r score is " + score)
alive = False
elif action == 2:
print ("Oh no, the ghost\'s power was strength!")
print ("DEFEAT")
print ("You\'r score is " + score)
alive = False
elif action == 3:
print ("Oh no, the ghost wasn\'t friendly ")
alive = False
elif ghost_power == 4 and action == 3 :
print ("Congratulations, The ghost was friendly!")
score = score + 1
ghost_door_choose(difficulty)
elif ghost_power != action and ghost_power != 4 :
if action == 1:
print ("Congratulations, the ghost wasn\'t fast!")
score = score + 1
ghost_door_choose(difficulty)
elif action == 2:
print ("Congratulations, you defeated the ghost!")
score = score +1
ghost_door_choose(difficulty)
elif ghost_power != action and ghost_power == 4 :
if action == 1:
print ("You ran away from a friendly ghost!")
print ("Because you ran away for no reason, your score is now 0")
score = 0
ghost_door_choose(difficulty)
elif action == 1:
print ("You killed a friendly ghost!")
print ("Your score is now 0 because you killed the friendly ghost")
score = 0
ghost_door_choose(difficulty)
#actual game loop
ask_difficulty()
while alive :
ghost_door_choose(doors)
Consider:
x=0
z=22
def func(x,y):
y=22
z+=1
print x,y,z
func('x','y')
When you call func you will get UnboundLocalError: local variable 'z' referenced before assignment
To fix the error in our function, do:
x=0
z=22
def func(x,y):
global z
y=22
z+=1
print x,y,z
The global keyword allows a local reference to a global defined variable to be changed.
Notice too that the local version of x is printed, not the global version. This is what you would expect. The ambiguity is if there is no local version of a value. Python treats globally defined values as read only unless you use the global keyword.
As stated in comments, a class to hold these variables would be better.
Those variables at the top of your script are global and to set them in functions, you have to declare them global in the function. As a smaller example,
score = 0
alive = True
def add_score(value):
"""Add value to score"""
global score
score += value
def kill_kill_kill():
global alive
alive = False
The next step is to create classes, which can get complicated. For instance, if you want to track score by user but a user can have multiple characters which each have their own aliveness, you would start to build classes to represent those things.
The global keyword may be what you are looking for.
For example in the following code.
some_variable = 10
def some_function():
global some_variable
some_variable = 20
This would result in some_variable (in the global scope) referring to the value of 20. Where as it would remain at 10 (in the global scope) without the use of the global keyword.
More on global and local variables here.
A function has its own variable scope - this is true for many languages. This means that once the function finishes executing, the variables cease to exist (and Python's garbage collection will clean them up).
The old-school (and generally frowned upon, not necessarily fairly) way of doing this is to use Global Variables. These are variables you declared outside the scope of the function, usually at the beginning of your source, and can be used throughout your program's various functions and classes.
There are good reasons people don't use global variables much, from performance issues through to getting them confused with locally scoped variables, but they are a quick and easy way to keep information and access it throughout your program.
To use a global, you need to declare within the function that you are using that variable, like this:
MyGlobal="This is a global variable"
def MyFunction():
global MyGlobal
MyGlobal += " and my function has changed it"
if __name__=="__main__":
print MyGlobal
MyFunction()
print MyGlobal
Having said this, the usual way to pass information to and from functions is to use arguments and return values - this is a better design methodology, and the one usually taught. This is more a design method than a change to your code; you write your program with keeping global variables down to an absolute minimum.
To take the above example, this would change our code to the following:
def MyFunction(MyArg):
MyArg+=" and my function has given me a new version of it"
return MyArg
if __name__=="__main__":
MyVariable="This is a variable"
print MyVariable
MyVariable = MyFunction(MyVariable)
print MyVariable
Note that this is much more flexible - I can use it as I have above, to change the value of MyVariable, but I could also use the same function to return the new value to a different variable, keeping the original intact.
I hope this helps, sorry if I was a tad verbose.
I am trying to program a simple text based game. In order to do this, I am having the user go to three separate rooms to complete a task and receive a piece. In order to do this, I have a value set as False then, upon completion of the room, I have a return statement used to change the Boolean value to True. When all three room functions return a True, then I set that to open a function that progresses the game. As of know, however, the return does not take place, and thus the Boolean values remain unchanged.
Here is an example of one door function:
def door1(incomp1):
if incomp1 == False:
print 'You enter door 1 and find a hideous internet troll.'
print "The troll says, 'LOOK AT THIS LOSER'"
options = ["YOU'RE THE LOSER", "I don't care." , "YOUR MOM IS FAT"]
options2 = [1,2,3]
for x in options:
print "\t :> %s" % x
choice1 = raw_input("What is your response? :>")
if ('loser' in choice1) or ('fat' in choice1):
print "You are sucked into the troll's behaviour and are driven insane"
print "After three days of insanity, you starve to death"
dead()
elif 'care' in choice1:
print 'The troll cannot feed off of your anger.'
print 'The troll starves and you recover one piece of the lever from his stomach.'
change()
entrywayopen()
return incomp1 == True
else:
unknown()
change()
door1(incomp1)
elif incomp1 == True:
print 'You already recovered the piece from room 1.'
entrywayopen()
So, I have incomp1 already at a value of False when the function is called. The user must get the correct answer, in this case the elif statement. At the end, I have it to return incomp1 == True. Yet, the value remains unchanged. My endgame in this room strategy is to return a value of True for the statement if door1(incomp1) and door2(incomp2) and door3(incomp3):. What is causing the Boolean change in value to not be returned?
A little about Python boolean expressions:
every python expression can be evaluated as a boolean
None, False, 0, 0.0, empty strings, lists, tuples and dictionaries are False; most others objects are True
that means: instead of x == True you can usually just write x, in your case: if incomp1:
If you are executing a function and it finishes without hitting a return, a None will be returned implicitly. If you do a boolean comparison on it, it will evaluate as False.
You need to replace "return incomp1 == True" with just "return True". Then call the door1 function like this "incomp1 = door1(incomp1)".
This will change the value of incomp1 to the value returned by the function "True".
You can also replace "elif incomp1 == True:" with a simple "else".
You might also consider adding a .lower() to choice1 = raw_input("What is your response? :>"). This will make it so if the player uses a capital letter in the input it will still function as desired.
def door1(incomp1):
if incomp1 == False:
print 'You enter door 1 and find a hideous internet troll.'
print "The troll says, 'LOOK AT THIS LOSER'"
options = ["YOU'RE THE LOSER", "I don't care." , "YOUR MOM IS FAT"]
options2 = [1,2,3]
for x in options:
print "\t :> %s" % x
#choice1 = raw_input("What is your response? :>")
choice1 = raw_input("What is your response? :>").lower()
if ('loser' in choice1) or ('fat' in choice1):
print "You are sucked into the troll's behaviour and are driven insane"
print "After three days of insanity, you starve to death"
dead()
elif 'care' in choice1:
print 'The troll cannot feed off of your anger.'
print 'The troll starves and you recover one piece of the lever from his stomach.'
change()
entrywayopen()
return True
else:
unknown()
change()
door1(incomp1)
#elif incomp1 == True:
else:
print 'You already recovered the piece from room 1.'
entrywayopen()
incomp1 = door1(incomp1)
I'm trying to create a text game that presents scenarios in a random order. Based upon a user's answer, certain pre-defined statistics should increase. I took a stab at it, but my loop function will not work (among other things). I attempted to incorporate information from this thread: call list of function using list comprehension
Here is my code:
import random
# A class for the user character. Each character has four stats, which start at zero.
class Character(object):
def __init__(self, sass, intuition, despotism, panache):
self.sass = sass
self.intuition = intuition
self.despotism = despotism
self.panache = panache
sass = 0
intuition = 0
despotism = 0
panache = 0
# a function to check the current stat level of the character.
def all_check(self):
print "Your level of sass is %s." % self.sass
print "Your level of intuition is %s." % self.intuition
print "Your level of despotism is %s." % self.despotism
print "Your level of panache is %s." % self.panache
# I assume that these four "Event" functions should be instances of a class due to each Event's commonalities, but I can't understand how to implement.
def Event1():
print """An attractive woman smiles at you and your friend
from across the bar. Your friend confesses that his passions are arouse, but that he is too shy to do anything. What do you do?"""
print "1. Convince the woman to talk to your friend." #intuition
print "2. Tell the woman to talk to your friend... or else." #despotism
print "3. Inform the woman that your friend has herpes, but that you'd love to take her out." #sass
print "4. Why fight? Let's all go back to her place and get weird." #panache, intuition
inp = raw_input(">>> ")
if inp == '1':
Character.intuition += randint(2,4)
elif inp == '2':
Character.despotism += randint(2,4)
elif inp == '3':
Character.sass += randint(2,4)
elif inp == '4':
Character.panache += randint(1,3)
Character.intuition += randint(1,3)
else:
print "You fail."
# To save space, I'm leaving out Events2~4. They have the same structure as Event1
# Put all the Event functions into a list.
events = [
Event1,
Event2,
Event3,
Event4,
]
# A function to cycle through all the Events in random order.
def play(self):
list = shuffle(events)
for x in list:
x()
# Call a class function to create a unique user.
userName = raw_input("What's your name? ")
# Call function to begin the game.
play()
Character.all_check()
I also realize that the Events are more appropriate as instances of a class, but I'm having trouble understanding Zed's (LPTHW) explanation of classes. Any thoughts are welcome.
I am trying to write a program for an assignment where you input a specific command and you can play Rock-Paper-Scissors-Lizard-Spock against the computer.
It was done and working until I realized that the assignment instructions wanted me to make it so that you keep playing the game until one person gets five wins.
So I thought, no big deals, let's throw in a while loop and some variables to track the wins. But when I run the program, it only runs once still. I don't know what I am doing wrong - as this should work. This is my first time working with Python (version 3.3) and this IDE, so I really need some help. Usually I'd just debug but I can't figure out how to work the one in this IDE.
Here is my code. The trouble while-loop is at the way bottom. I am nearly positive everything inside the class works. I would like to note that I already tried while(computerWins < 5 and userWins < 5), so I don't think the condition is the problem.
import random
computerWins = 0
userWins = 0
print ('SELECTION KEY:\nRock = r\nPaper = p\nScissors = sc\nLizard = l\nSpock = sp')
class rockPaperScissorsLizardSpock:
#Two methods for converting from strings to numbers
#convert name to number using if/elif/else
#also converts abbreviated versions of the name
def convertName(name):
if(name == 'rock' or name == 'r'):
return 0
elif(name == 'Spock' or name == 'sp'):
return 1
elif(name == 'paper' or name == 'p'):
return 2
elif(name == 'lizard' or name == 'l'):
return 3
elif(name == 'scissors' or name == 'sc'):
return 4
else:
print ('Error: Invalid name')
#convert number to a name using if/elif/else
def convertNum(number):
if(number == 0):
return 'rock'
elif(number == 1):
return 'Spock'
elif(number == 2):
return 'paper'
elif(number == 3):
return 'lizard'
elif(number == 4):
return 'scissors'
else:
print ('Error: Invalid number')
#User selects an option, and their selection is saved in the 'choice' variable
#Using a while loop so that the user cannot input something other than one of the legal options
prompt = True
while(prompt):
i = input('\nEnter your selection: ')
if(i=='r' or i=='p' or i=='sc' or i=='l' or i=='sp'):
prompt = False
else:
print('Invalid input.')
prompt = True
#Convert the user's selection first to a number and then to its full string
userNum = convertName(i)
userChoice = convertNum(userNum)
#Generate random guess for the computer's choice using random.randrange()
compNum = random.randrange(0, 4)
#Convert the computer's choice to a string
compChoice = convertNum(compNum)
print ('You chose', userChoice)
print ('The computer has chosen', compChoice)
#Determine the difference between the players' number selections
difference = (compNum - userNum) % 5
#Use 'difference' to determine who the winner of the round is
if(difference == 1 or difference == 2):
print ('The computer wins this round.')
computerWins = computerWins+1
elif (difference == 4 or difference == 3):
print ('You win this round!')
userWins = userWins+1
elif(difference == 0):
print ('This round ended up being a tie.')
#Plays the game until someone has won five times
while(computerWins != 5 and userWins != 5):
rockPaperScissorsLizardSpock()
if(computerWins == 5 and userWins != 5):
print ('The computer wins.')
elif(computerWins != 5 and userWins == 5):
print ('You win!')
The essential problem is that rockpaperscissorslizardspock is a class, where you expect it to be a function. The code inside it runs exactly once, when the whole class definition is parsed, rather than each time you call the class as you seem to expect.
You could put the relevant code into an __init__ method - this is a fairly direct analogue of a Java constructor, and hence is is run each time you call the class. But in this case, you probably don't need it to be in a class at all - calling the class creates a new instance (like doing new MyClass() in Java), which you don't use. You would also in this case (or if you made it into a function) need to make some more modifications to make sure the game state persists properly.
The easiest actual solution is to:
delete the line class rockpaperscissorslizardspock: (and unindent everything below it)
Take all the code that was under the class but not in a function - everything from the player makes a selection to determining the winner of the round - and paste it in place of the call to rockpaperscissorslizardspock() in the bottom loop.
The first thing is that you are using a class where you should probably be using a function.
Your code initially runs because python is loading the class.
However, the line rockPaperScissorsLizardSpock() is creating new anonymous instances of your class which calls a constructor that you haven't defined so it does nothing.
One of the interesting things about python is that it allows nested functions so if you change the class to a def you're almost there.
After that, you'll run into trouble with global variables in a local context. That problem is already explained in another StackOverflow question: Using global variables in a function other than the one that created them.
Here is my suggestion for the skeleton to a more simple solution. Use some ideas from here if you like.
import random
legal_shapes = ['r', 'p', 'sc', 'sp', 'l']
scoreboard = [0, 0]
print('SELECTION KEY:\nRock = r\nPaper = p\nScissors = sc\nLizard = l\n'
'Spock = sp')
while(max(scoreboard) < 5):
print("\nScore is {}-{}".format(*scoreboard))
# pick shapes
p1_shape = input('Enter your selection: ')
if p1_shape not in legal_shapes:
print('Not legal selection!')
continue
p2_shape = random.choice(legal_shapes)
print('\np1 plays {} and p2 plays {}'.format(
p1_shape.upper(), p2_shape.upper()))
# determine int values and result indicator
p1_shape_int = legal_shapes.index(p1_shape)
p2_shape_int = legal_shapes.index(p2_shape)
res = (p1_shape_int - p2_shape_int) % 5
if res != 0:
res = abs((res % 2) - 2)
# Print winner
if res == 0:
print(' -> Draw!!')
else:
print(' -> p{} wins'.format(res))
scoreboard[res-1] += 1
print("\nThe game is over!!")
print("p{} won with score {}-{}".format(res, *scoreboard))
It outputs something like
(env)➜ tmp python3 rsp.py
SELECTION KEY:
Rock = r
Paper = p
Scissors = sc
Lizard = l
Spock = sp
Score is 0-0
Enter your selection: T
Not legal selection!
Score is 0-0
Enter your selection: l
p1 plays L and p2 plays SP
-> p2 wins
Score is 0-1
Enter your selection: l
p1 plays L and p2 plays SC
-> p2 wins
...
The game is over!!
p2 won with score 2-5