I came across this weird behaviour with nested for loops and I can't for the light of me explain this. Is this a python-specific thing or am I just overseeing something?
This is the code I'm running:
for i in range(16):
if i == 0:
for j in range(8):
print 'i is (if) ' + str(i)
i = i + 1
else:
print 'i is (else)' + str(i)
This is the output I'm getting:
i is (if) 0
i is (if) 1
i is (if) 2
i is (if) 3
i is (if) 4
i is (if) 5
i is (if) 6
i is (if) 7
i is (else)1
i is (else)2
i is (else)3
i is (else)4
i is (else)5
i is (else)6
i is (else)7
i is (else)8
i is (else)9
i is (else)10
i is (else)11
i is (else)12
i is (else)13
i is (else)14
i is (else)15
This is the output I'm expecting:
i is (if) 0
i is (if) 1
i is (if) 2
i is (if) 3
i is (if) 4
i is (if) 5
i is (if) 6
i is (if) 7
i is (else)8
i is (else)9
i is (else)10
i is (else)11
i is (else)12
i is (else)13
i is (else)14
i is (else)15
It seems like the i in the outer for loop and the i in the inner for loop are different variables, although that seems completely counterintuitive to me.
Any input (I'm fairly new to python but couldn't find documentation on this)