fruits = ["watermelon","banana","Cherry","pineapple","oranges"]
vegitable = ["Tomato","potato","torry","bottle goud","bittre gourd"]
#adding fruits and vegitable in a list called dirty_dozen
dirty_dozen = [fruits, vegitable]
print(dirty_dozen)
list_of_names=["Bill", "John", "Susan", "Bob", "Emma","Katherine"]
new_name="James"
list_of_names.append(new_name)
# The list is now ["Bill", "John", "Susan", "Bob", "Emma","Katherine", "James"]
#append to list
lst = [1, 2, 3]
li = 4
lst.append(li)
#lst is now [1, 2, 3, 4]
.append("the add"): append the object to the end of the list.
.insert("the add"): inserts the object before the given index.
.extend("the add"): extends the list by appending elements from the iterable.
def main():
number_of_values = int(input('Please enter number of values: ')) # int
myList = create_list(number_of_values) # myList = function result
total = get_total(myList)
print('the list is: ', myList)
print('the total is ', total)
def get_total(value_list):
total = 0
for num in value_list:
total += num
return total
def create_list(number_of_values):
myList = []
for _ in range(number_of_values): # no need to use num in loop here
num = int(input('Please enter number: ')) # int
myList.append(num)
return myList
if __name__ == '__main__': # it's better to add this line as suggested
main()
# To add items to a list, we use the '.append' method. Example:
browsers_list = ['Google', 'Brave', 'Edge']
browsers_list.append('Firefox')
print(browsers_list) # Output will be ['Google', 'Brave', 'Edge', 'Firefox']