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face | suit | value | |
---|---|---|---|
king | spades | 13 | |
queen | spades | 12 | |
jack | spades | 11 | |
ten | spades | 10 | |
nine | spades | 9 | |
eight | spades | 8 | |
seven | spades | 7 | |
six | spades | 6 | |
five | spades | 5 | |
four | spades | 4 | |
three | spades | 3 | |
two | spades | 2 | |
ace | spades | 1 | |
king | clubs | 13 | |
queen | clubs | 12 | |
jack | clubs | 11 | |
ten | clubs | 10 | |
nine | clubs | 9 | |
eight | clubs | 8 | |
seven | clubs | 7 | |
six | clubs | 6 | |
five | clubs | 5 | |
four | clubs | 4 | |
three | clubs | 3 | |
two | clubs | 2 | |
ace | clubs | 1 | |
king | diamonds | 13 | |
queen | diamonds | 12 | |
jack | diamonds | 11 | |
ten | diamonds | 10 | |
nine | diamonds | 9 | |
eight | diamonds | 8 | |
seven | diamonds | 7 | |
six | diamonds | 6 | |
five | diamonds | 5 | |
four | diamonds | 4 | |
three | diamonds | 3 | |
two | diamonds | 2 | |
ace | diamonds | 1 | |
king | hearts | 13 | |
queen | hearts | 12 | |
jack | hearts | 11 | |
ten | hearts | 10 | |
nine | hearts | 9 | |
eight | hearts | 8 | |
seven | hearts | 7 | |
six | hearts | 6 | |
five | hearts | 5 | |
four | hearts | 4 | |
three | hearts | 3 | |
two | hearts | 2 | |
ace | hearts | 1 |
Muchas GRACIAS Sr. Garrett !!
El libro está BIEN PADRE e INTERESANTE, APRENDE UNO RÁPIDO... es la primera vez que aprendo a programar.
DIOS lo bendiga siempre!!
Carlos
Hi Felipe, I don't know if its too late, but I had a similar problem and thought that, since you have a Spanish name, like I do, our problem had something to do with the region where we are located. Indeed I found a solution. The problem is that the default separator for Spanish speaking regions is a semicolon (;), not a comma. Hence, when you download the data to Excel it will change some of the quotation marks and commas. To solve this issue you can follow the instructions in this link: https://harvestmedia.zendesk.com/hc/en-us/articles/360023978031-Opening-Excel-files-with-the-correct-CSV-list-separator#:~:text=CSV%20(comma%20delimited)%20will%20not,comma%20separator%20or%20semicolon%20separator.
I think that this may help other Spanish speaking people encountering a similar problem in the future.
I hope it helps.
Is it just me, or are there others who are bothered by the "value" for "jack", "queen", and "king" being set to "11, 12, and 13" respectively?
Perhaps there is some other use that will be made of the "value" numbers, but that should be pointed out right here and now.
I loaded the CSV file into EXCEL and changed those values to all be "10." I did this for the obvious reason.
Thank you!