TypeError: 'float' object is not subscriptable

Question:

PizzaChange=float(input("What would you like the new price for all standard pizzas to be? "))      
PriceList[0][1][2][3][4][5][6]=[PizzaChange]  
PriceList[7][8][9][10][11]=[PizzaChange+3]

Basically I have an input that a user will put a number values (float input) into, then it will set all of these aforementioned list indexes to that value. For some reason I can’t get it to set them without coming up with a:

TypeError: 'float' object is not subscriptable

error. Am I doing something wrong or am I just looking at it the wrong way?

Asked By: oreid

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Answers:

You are not selecting multiple indexes with PriceList[0][1][2][3][4][5][6] , instead each [] is going into a sub index.

Try this

PizzaChange=float(input("What would you like the new price for all standard pizzas to be? "))      
PriceList[0:7]=[PizzaChange]*7  
PriceList[7:11]=[PizzaChange+3]*4
Answered By: Pruthvikar

PriceList[0] is a float. PriceList[0][1] is trying to access the first element of a float. Instead, do

PriceList[0] = PriceList[1] = ...code omitted... = PriceList[6] = PizzaChange

or

PriceList[0:7] = [PizzaChange]*7
Answered By: Joshua
PriceList[0][1][2][3][4][5][6]

This says: go to the 1st item of my collection PriceList. That thing is a collection; get its 2nd item. That thing is a collection; get its 3rd…

Instead, you want slicing:

PriceList[:7] = [PizzaChange]*7
Answered By: roippi
PizzaChange=float(input("What would you like the new price for all standard pizzas to be? "))      
for i,price in enumerate(PriceList):
  PriceList[i] = PizzaChange + 3*int(i>=7)
Answered By: inspectorG4dget

It looks like you are trying to set elements 0 through 11 of PriceList to new values. The syntax would usually look like this:

prompt = "What would you like the new price for all standard pizzas to be? "
PizzaChange = float(input(prompt))
for i in [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]: PriceList[i] = PizzaChange
for i in [7, 8, 9, 10, 11]: PriceList[i] = PizzaChange + 3

If they are always consecutive ranges, then it’s even simpler to write:

prompt = "What would you like the new price for all standard pizzas to be? "
PizzaChange = float(input(prompt))
for i in range(0, 7): PriceList[i] = PizzaChange
for i in range(7, 12): PriceList[i] = PizzaChange + 3

For reference, PriceList[0][1][2][3][4][5][6] refers to “Element 6 of element 5 of element 4 of element 3 of element 2 of element 1 of element 0 of PriceList. Put another way, it’s the same as ((((((PriceList[0])[1])[2])[3])[4])[5])[6].

Answered By: Pi Marillion