I'm writing a very, very, very simple encryption script.
When I ran it, a TypeError occured:
TypeError: list indices must be integers, not str'
I looked through a few questions on Stackoverflow, but nothing helped.
I assume it's an extremly simple point, that I miss here.
import os
os.system("clear")
content = input("content:" + " ")
filename = input("filename:" + " ")
content = list(content)
file = open(filename, "w")
counter = 0
os.system("clear")
input("Press enter to encrypt...")
for counter in content:
if content[counter] in "a":
content[counter] = "z"
if content[counter] in "b":
content[counter] = "y"
if content[counter] in "c":
content[counter] = "x"
if content[counter] in "d":
content[counter] = "w"
if content[counter] in "e":
content[counter] = "v"
if content[counter] in "f":
content[counter] = "u"
if content[counter] in "g":
content[counter] = "t"
if content[counter] in "h":
content[counter] = "s"
if content[counter] in "i":
content[counter] = "r"
if content[counter] in "j":
content[counter] = "q"
if content[counter] in "k":
content[counter] = "p"
if content[counter] in "l":
content[counter] = "o"
if content[counter] in "m":
content[counter] = "n"
if content[counter] in "n":
content[counter] = "m"
if content[counter] in "o":
content[counter] = "l"
if content[counter] in "p":
content[counter] = "k"
if content[counter] in "q":
content[counter] = "j"
if content[counter] in "r":
content[counter] = "i"
if content[counter] in "s":
content[counter] = "h"
if content[counter] in "t":
content[counter] = "g"
if content[counter] in "u":
content[counter] = "f"
if content[counter] in "v":
content[counter] = "e"
if content[counter] in "w":
content[counter] = "d"
if content[counter] in "x":
content[counter] = "c"
if content[counter] in "y":
content[counter] = "b"
if content[counter] in "z":
content[counter] = "a"
content = "".join(content)
file.write(content)
file.close()
os.system("clear")
print("Successfully encrypted!")
print("Use 'decrypt.py' to decrypt.")
counter
is a string (representing the character being iterated) andcontent[counter]
is thus invalid for the reason given in the exception message.for counter in content: print(counter)
(instead of the offending loop, with appropriate formatting added); what result do you see? Why? Use that observation to go back to the original problem.for i in range(0, len(content)): ..
. But this not really what is wanted (hint: strings are not mutable in Python and the individual characters of such can not be changed). Instead create a different variable say,encryped_content = ""
and append the appropriate output to it each loop. Inside the loop you should only need to accesscounter
(call it something else though, likeletter
to avoid confusion) and thisencryped_content
.