-1
fno = input()
myList = list(fno)
sum = 0
for i in range(len(fno)):
    if myList[0:] == myList[:0]:
    continue
print (myList)

I want to make a number palindrome. eg:

input(123)
print(You are wrong)
input(12121)
print(you are right) 

Please Guide me how to make a palindrome in python.Its not complete code please suggest me what the next step.

Thanks

3
  • possible duplicate of Python reverse() for palindromes
    – jamylak
    May 5, 2012 at 10:19
  • What exactly do you mean by 'make a number a palindrome'? Give an example of what you expect to take in and get out. May 5, 2012 at 10:24
  • 1
    Your example doesn't clarify much. You say 'make' but seem to show checking it to see if it's a palindrome. If you do mean checking as in your example, my answer works. May 5, 2012 at 10:31

4 Answers 4

6

I presume, given your code, you want to check for a palindrome, not make one.

There are a number of issues with your code, but in short, it can be reduced down to

word = input()
if word == "".join(reversed(word)):
    print("Palidrome")

Let's talk about your code, which doesn't make much sense:

fno = input() 
myList = list(fno) #fno will be a string, which is already a sequence, there is no need to make a list.
sum = 0 #This goes unused. What is it for?
for i in range(len(fno)): #You should never loop over a range of a length, just loop over the object itself.
    if myList[0:] == myList[:0]: #This checks if the slice from beginning to the end is equal to the slice from the beginning to the beginning (nothing) - this will only be true for an empty string.
        continue #And then it does nothing anyway. (I am presuming this was meant to be indented)
print (myList) #This will print the list of the characters from the string.
21
  • 2
    Can you demonstrate where it is "potentially slower"? And I think we write code for those who know the syntax.
    – DrTyrsa
    May 5, 2012 at 10:25
  • 2
    @DrTyrsa There is a reason the reversed() built in exists. Python aims to be readable, and reversed(x) is clearer than x[::-1]. As to slower, classes can provide __reversed__() to give faster methods of reversing their contents if there is a way to do it. May 5, 2012 at 10:29
  • 1
    @DrTyrsa You can't use a slice on an iterator - only on sequences. Using __getitem__ to provide a faster method of dealing with reversing is clumsy and awkward. reversed() is there for a reason. Yes, with strings it's not going to help, but in general it may. reversed() is readable, which should be your main concern. It's clear what you are doing. May 5, 2012 at 10:39
  • 1
    @DrTyrsa He means that reversed only works on sequences. It can't work on iterators since it needs to iterate backwards and iterators start at the beginning and can only access each item in order.
    – jamylak
    May 5, 2012 at 10:49
  • 2
    @DrTyrsa I'm not saying that an entire page of Python code should be obvious to a non-programmer, but rather, language constructs should try to make as much sense as possible to them. I'm not going to spam this further by continuing to argue this - if you truly believe it's more obvious that [::-1] produces the reversed sequence than it is for reversed(), then you clearly think very differently to me. May 5, 2012 at 11:30
5

Slice notation is useful here:

>>> "malayalam"[::-1]
'malayalam'
>>> "hello"[::-1]
'olleh'

See Explain Python's slice notation for a good introduction.

1
0
str=input('Enter a String')
print('Original string is : ',str)
rev=str[::-1]
print('the reversed string is : ',rev)
if(str==rev):
    print('its palindrome')
else:
    print('its not palindrome')
-1
x=raw_input("enter the string")
while True:
    if x[0: ]==x[::-1]:
        print 'string is palindrome'
        break
    else:
        print 'string is not palindrome'
        break

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.