| # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- |
| # Autogenerated by Sphinx on Sat Nov 21 13:35:13 2015 |
| topics = {'assert': '\n' |
| 'The "assert" statement\n' |
| '**********************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Assert statements are a convenient way to insert debugging ' |
| 'assertions\n' |
| 'into a program:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' assert_stmt ::= "assert" expression ["," expression]\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The simple form, "assert expression", is equivalent to\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' if __debug__:\n' |
| ' if not expression: raise AssertionError\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The extended form, "assert expression1, expression2", is ' |
| 'equivalent to\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' if __debug__:\n' |
| ' if not expression1: raise AssertionError(expression2)\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'These equivalences assume that "__debug__" and "AssertionError" ' |
| 'refer\n' |
| 'to the built-in variables with those names. In the current\n' |
| 'implementation, the built-in variable "__debug__" is "True" ' |
| 'under\n' |
| 'normal circumstances, "False" when optimization is requested ' |
| '(command\n' |
| 'line option -O). The current code generator emits no code for ' |
| 'an\n' |
| 'assert statement when optimization is requested at compile ' |
| 'time. Note\n' |
| 'that it is unnecessary to include the source code for the ' |
| 'expression\n' |
| 'that failed in the error message; it will be displayed as part ' |
| 'of the\n' |
| 'stack trace.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Assignments to "__debug__" are illegal. The value for the ' |
| 'built-in\n' |
| 'variable is determined when the interpreter starts.\n', |
| 'assignment': '\n' |
| 'Assignment statements\n' |
| '*********************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Assignment statements are used to (re)bind names to values ' |
| 'and to\n' |
| 'modify attributes or items of mutable objects:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' assignment_stmt ::= (target_list "=")+ (expression_list | ' |
| 'yield_expression)\n' |
| ' target_list ::= target ("," target)* [","]\n' |
| ' target ::= identifier\n' |
| ' | "(" target_list ")"\n' |
| ' | "[" target_list "]"\n' |
| ' | attributeref\n' |
| ' | subscription\n' |
| ' | slicing\n' |
| '\n' |
| '(See section Primaries for the syntax definitions for the ' |
| 'last three\n' |
| 'symbols.)\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'An assignment statement evaluates the expression list ' |
| '(remember that\n' |
| 'this can be a single expression or a comma-separated list, ' |
| 'the latter\n' |
| 'yielding a tuple) and assigns the single resulting object to ' |
| 'each of\n' |
| 'the target lists, from left to right.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Assignment is defined recursively depending on the form of ' |
| 'the target\n' |
| '(list). When a target is part of a mutable object (an ' |
| 'attribute\n' |
| 'reference, subscription or slicing), the mutable object ' |
| 'must\n' |
| 'ultimately perform the assignment and decide about its ' |
| 'validity, and\n' |
| 'may raise an exception if the assignment is unacceptable. ' |
| 'The rules\n' |
| 'observed by various types and the exceptions raised are ' |
| 'given with the\n' |
| 'definition of the object types (see section The standard ' |
| 'type\n' |
| 'hierarchy).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Assignment of an object to a target list is recursively ' |
| 'defined as\n' |
| 'follows.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* If the target list is a single target: The object is ' |
| 'assigned to\n' |
| ' that target.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* If the target list is a comma-separated list of targets: ' |
| 'The\n' |
| ' object must be an iterable with the same number of items ' |
| 'as there\n' |
| ' are targets in the target list, and the items are ' |
| 'assigned, from\n' |
| ' left to right, to the corresponding targets.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Assignment of an object to a single target is recursively ' |
| 'defined as\n' |
| 'follows.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* If the target is an identifier (name):\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' * If the name does not occur in a "global" statement in ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' current code block: the name is bound to the object in ' |
| 'the current\n' |
| ' local namespace.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' * Otherwise: the name is bound to the object in the ' |
| 'current global\n' |
| ' namespace.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' The name is rebound if it was already bound. This may ' |
| 'cause the\n' |
| ' reference count for the object previously bound to the ' |
| 'name to reach\n' |
| ' zero, causing the object to be deallocated and its ' |
| 'destructor (if it\n' |
| ' has one) to be called.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* If the target is a target list enclosed in parentheses or ' |
| 'in\n' |
| ' square brackets: The object must be an iterable with the ' |
| 'same number\n' |
| ' of items as there are targets in the target list, and its ' |
| 'items are\n' |
| ' assigned, from left to right, to the corresponding ' |
| 'targets.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* If the target is an attribute reference: The primary ' |
| 'expression in\n' |
| ' the reference is evaluated. It should yield an object ' |
| 'with\n' |
| ' assignable attributes; if this is not the case, ' |
| '"TypeError" is\n' |
| ' raised. That object is then asked to assign the assigned ' |
| 'object to\n' |
| ' the given attribute; if it cannot perform the assignment, ' |
| 'it raises\n' |
| ' an exception (usually but not necessarily ' |
| '"AttributeError").\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Note: If the object is a class instance and the attribute ' |
| 'reference\n' |
| ' occurs on both sides of the assignment operator, the RHS ' |
| 'expression,\n' |
| ' "a.x" can access either an instance attribute or (if no ' |
| 'instance\n' |
| ' attribute exists) a class attribute. The LHS target "a.x" ' |
| 'is always\n' |
| ' set as an instance attribute, creating it if necessary. ' |
| 'Thus, the\n' |
| ' two occurrences of "a.x" do not necessarily refer to the ' |
| 'same\n' |
| ' attribute: if the RHS expression refers to a class ' |
| 'attribute, the\n' |
| ' LHS creates a new instance attribute as the target of the\n' |
| ' assignment:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' class Cls:\n' |
| ' x = 3 # class variable\n' |
| ' inst = Cls()\n' |
| ' inst.x = inst.x + 1 # writes inst.x as 4 leaving ' |
| 'Cls.x as 3\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' This description does not necessarily apply to descriptor\n' |
| ' attributes, such as properties created with "property()".\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* If the target is a subscription: The primary expression in ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' reference is evaluated. It should yield either a mutable ' |
| 'sequence\n' |
| ' object (such as a list) or a mapping object (such as a ' |
| 'dictionary).\n' |
| ' Next, the subscript expression is evaluated.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If the primary is a mutable sequence object (such as a ' |
| 'list), the\n' |
| ' subscript must yield a plain integer. If it is negative, ' |
| 'the\n' |
| " sequence's length is added to it. The resulting value must " |
| 'be a\n' |
| " nonnegative integer less than the sequence's length, and " |
| 'the\n' |
| ' sequence is asked to assign the assigned object to its ' |
| 'item with\n' |
| ' that index. If the index is out of range, "IndexError" is ' |
| 'raised\n' |
| ' (assignment to a subscripted sequence cannot add new items ' |
| 'to a\n' |
| ' list).\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If the primary is a mapping object (such as a dictionary), ' |
| 'the\n' |
| " subscript must have a type compatible with the mapping's " |
| 'key type,\n' |
| ' and the mapping is then asked to create a key/datum pair ' |
| 'which maps\n' |
| ' the subscript to the assigned object. This can either ' |
| 'replace an\n' |
| ' existing key/value pair with the same key value, or insert ' |
| 'a new\n' |
| ' key/value pair (if no key with the same value existed).\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* If the target is a slicing: The primary expression in the\n' |
| ' reference is evaluated. It should yield a mutable ' |
| 'sequence object\n' |
| ' (such as a list). The assigned object should be a ' |
| 'sequence object\n' |
| ' of the same type. Next, the lower and upper bound ' |
| 'expressions are\n' |
| ' evaluated, insofar they are present; defaults are zero and ' |
| 'the\n' |
| " sequence's length. The bounds should evaluate to (small) " |
| 'integers.\n' |
| " If either bound is negative, the sequence's length is " |
| 'added to it.\n' |
| ' The resulting bounds are clipped to lie between zero and ' |
| 'the\n' |
| " sequence's length, inclusive. Finally, the sequence " |
| 'object is asked\n' |
| ' to replace the slice with the items of the assigned ' |
| 'sequence. The\n' |
| ' length of the slice may be different from the length of ' |
| 'the assigned\n' |
| ' sequence, thus changing the length of the target sequence, ' |
| 'if the\n' |
| ' object allows it.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '**CPython implementation detail:** In the current ' |
| 'implementation, the\n' |
| 'syntax for targets is taken to be the same as for ' |
| 'expressions, and\n' |
| 'invalid syntax is rejected during the code generation phase, ' |
| 'causing\n' |
| 'less detailed error messages.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'WARNING: Although the definition of assignment implies that ' |
| 'overlaps\n' |
| 'between the left-hand side and the right-hand side are ' |
| "'safe' (for\n" |
| 'example "a, b = b, a" swaps two variables), overlaps ' |
| '*within* the\n' |
| 'collection of assigned-to variables are not safe! For ' |
| 'instance, the\n' |
| 'following program prints "[0, 2]":\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' x = [0, 1]\n' |
| ' i = 0\n' |
| ' i, x[i] = 1, 2\n' |
| ' print x\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Augmented assignment statements\n' |
| '===============================\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Augmented assignment is the combination, in a single ' |
| 'statement, of a\n' |
| 'binary operation and an assignment statement:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' augmented_assignment_stmt ::= augtarget augop ' |
| '(expression_list | yield_expression)\n' |
| ' augtarget ::= identifier | attributeref | ' |
| 'subscription | slicing\n' |
| ' augop ::= "+=" | "-=" | "*=" | "/=" | ' |
| '"//=" | "%=" | "**="\n' |
| ' | ">>=" | "<<=" | "&=" | "^=" | "|="\n' |
| '\n' |
| '(See section Primaries for the syntax definitions for the ' |
| 'last three\n' |
| 'symbols.)\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'An augmented assignment evaluates the target (which, unlike ' |
| 'normal\n' |
| 'assignment statements, cannot be an unpacking) and the ' |
| 'expression\n' |
| 'list, performs the binary operation specific to the type of ' |
| 'assignment\n' |
| 'on the two operands, and assigns the result to the original ' |
| 'target.\n' |
| 'The target is only evaluated once.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'An augmented assignment expression like "x += 1" can be ' |
| 'rewritten as\n' |
| '"x = x + 1" to achieve a similar, but not exactly equal ' |
| 'effect. In the\n' |
| 'augmented version, "x" is only evaluated once. Also, when ' |
| 'possible,\n' |
| 'the actual operation is performed *in-place*, meaning that ' |
| 'rather than\n' |
| 'creating a new object and assigning that to the target, the ' |
| 'old object\n' |
| 'is modified instead.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'With the exception of assigning to tuples and multiple ' |
| 'targets in a\n' |
| 'single statement, the assignment done by augmented ' |
| 'assignment\n' |
| 'statements is handled the same way as normal assignments. ' |
| 'Similarly,\n' |
| 'with the exception of the possible *in-place* behavior, the ' |
| 'binary\n' |
| 'operation performed by augmented assignment is the same as ' |
| 'the normal\n' |
| 'binary operations.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'For targets which are attribute references, the same caveat ' |
| 'about\n' |
| 'class and instance attributes applies as for regular ' |
| 'assignments.\n', |
| 'atom-identifiers': '\n' |
| 'Identifiers (Names)\n' |
| '*******************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'An identifier occurring as an atom is a name. See ' |
| 'section Identifiers\n' |
| 'and keywords for lexical definition and section Naming ' |
| 'and binding for\n' |
| 'documentation of naming and binding.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'When the name is bound to an object, evaluation of the ' |
| 'atom yields\n' |
| 'that object. When a name is not bound, an attempt to ' |
| 'evaluate it\n' |
| 'raises a "NameError" exception.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '**Private name mangling:** When an identifier that ' |
| 'textually occurs in\n' |
| 'a class definition begins with two or more underscore ' |
| 'characters and\n' |
| 'does not end in two or more underscores, it is ' |
| 'considered a *private\n' |
| 'name* of that class. Private names are transformed to ' |
| 'a longer form\n' |
| 'before code is generated for them. The transformation ' |
| 'inserts the\n' |
| 'class name, with leading underscores removed and a ' |
| 'single underscore\n' |
| 'inserted, in front of the name. For example, the ' |
| 'identifier "__spam"\n' |
| 'occurring in a class named "Ham" will be transformed ' |
| 'to "_Ham__spam".\n' |
| 'This transformation is independent of the syntactical ' |
| 'context in which\n' |
| 'the identifier is used. If the transformed name is ' |
| 'extremely long\n' |
| '(longer than 255 characters), implementation defined ' |
| 'truncation may\n' |
| 'happen. If the class name consists only of ' |
| 'underscores, no\n' |
| 'transformation is done.\n', |
| 'atom-literals': '\n' |
| 'Literals\n' |
| '********\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Python supports string literals and various numeric ' |
| 'literals:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' literal ::= stringliteral | integer | longinteger\n' |
| ' | floatnumber | imagnumber\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Evaluation of a literal yields an object of the given ' |
| 'type (string,\n' |
| 'integer, long integer, floating point number, complex ' |
| 'number) with the\n' |
| 'given value. The value may be approximated in the case ' |
| 'of floating\n' |
| 'point and imaginary (complex) literals. See section ' |
| 'Literals for\n' |
| 'details.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'All literals correspond to immutable data types, and ' |
| 'hence the\n' |
| "object's identity is less important than its value. " |
| 'Multiple\n' |
| 'evaluations of literals with the same value (either the ' |
| 'same\n' |
| 'occurrence in the program text or a different occurrence) ' |
| 'may obtain\n' |
| 'the same object or a different object with the same ' |
| 'value.\n', |
| 'attribute-access': '\n' |
| 'Customizing attribute access\n' |
| '****************************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The following methods can be defined to customize the ' |
| 'meaning of\n' |
| 'attribute access (use of, assignment to, or deletion ' |
| 'of "x.name") for\n' |
| 'class instances.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__getattr__(self, name)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called when an attribute lookup has not found the ' |
| 'attribute in the\n' |
| ' usual places (i.e. it is not an instance attribute ' |
| 'nor is it found\n' |
| ' in the class tree for "self"). "name" is the ' |
| 'attribute name. This\n' |
| ' method should return the (computed) attribute value ' |
| 'or raise an\n' |
| ' "AttributeError" exception.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Note that if the attribute is found through the ' |
| 'normal mechanism,\n' |
| ' "__getattr__()" is not called. (This is an ' |
| 'intentional asymmetry\n' |
| ' between "__getattr__()" and "__setattr__()".) This ' |
| 'is done both for\n' |
| ' efficiency reasons and because otherwise ' |
| '"__getattr__()" would have\n' |
| ' no way to access other attributes of the instance. ' |
| 'Note that at\n' |
| ' least for instance variables, you can fake total ' |
| 'control by not\n' |
| ' inserting any values in the instance attribute ' |
| 'dictionary (but\n' |
| ' instead inserting them in another object). See ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' "__getattribute__()" method below for a way to ' |
| 'actually get total\n' |
| ' control in new-style classes.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__setattr__(self, name, value)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called when an attribute assignment is attempted. ' |
| 'This is called\n' |
| ' instead of the normal mechanism (i.e. store the ' |
| 'value in the\n' |
| ' instance dictionary). *name* is the attribute ' |
| 'name, *value* is the\n' |
| ' value to be assigned to it.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If "__setattr__()" wants to assign to an instance ' |
| 'attribute, it\n' |
| ' should not simply execute "self.name = value" --- ' |
| 'this would cause\n' |
| ' a recursive call to itself. Instead, it should ' |
| 'insert the value in\n' |
| ' the dictionary of instance attributes, e.g., ' |
| '"self.__dict__[name] =\n' |
| ' value". For new-style classes, rather than ' |
| 'accessing the instance\n' |
| ' dictionary, it should call the base class method ' |
| 'with the same\n' |
| ' name, for example, "object.__setattr__(self, name, ' |
| 'value)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__delattr__(self, name)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Like "__setattr__()" but for attribute deletion ' |
| 'instead of\n' |
| ' assignment. This should only be implemented if ' |
| '"del obj.name" is\n' |
| ' meaningful for the object.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'More attribute access for new-style classes\n' |
| '===========================================\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The following methods only apply to new-style ' |
| 'classes.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__getattribute__(self, name)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called unconditionally to implement attribute ' |
| 'accesses for\n' |
| ' instances of the class. If the class also defines ' |
| '"__getattr__()",\n' |
| ' the latter will not be called unless ' |
| '"__getattribute__()" either\n' |
| ' calls it explicitly or raises an "AttributeError". ' |
| 'This method\n' |
| ' should return the (computed) attribute value or ' |
| 'raise an\n' |
| ' "AttributeError" exception. In order to avoid ' |
| 'infinite recursion in\n' |
| ' this method, its implementation should always call ' |
| 'the base class\n' |
| ' method with the same name to access any attributes ' |
| 'it needs, for\n' |
| ' example, "object.__getattribute__(self, name)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Note: This method may still be bypassed when ' |
| 'looking up special\n' |
| ' methods as the result of implicit invocation via ' |
| 'language syntax\n' |
| ' or built-in functions. See Special method lookup ' |
| 'for new-style\n' |
| ' classes.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Implementing Descriptors\n' |
| '========================\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The following methods only apply when an instance of ' |
| 'the class\n' |
| 'containing the method (a so-called *descriptor* class) ' |
| 'appears in an\n' |
| '*owner* class (the descriptor must be in either the ' |
| "owner's class\n" |
| 'dictionary or in the class dictionary for one of its ' |
| 'parents). In the\n' |
| 'examples below, "the attribute" refers to the ' |
| 'attribute whose name is\n' |
| "the key of the property in the owner class' " |
| '"__dict__".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__get__(self, instance, owner)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to get the attribute of the owner class ' |
| '(class attribute\n' |
| ' access) or of an instance of that class (instance ' |
| 'attribute\n' |
| ' access). *owner* is always the owner class, while ' |
| '*instance* is the\n' |
| ' instance that the attribute was accessed through, ' |
| 'or "None" when\n' |
| ' the attribute is accessed through the *owner*. ' |
| 'This method should\n' |
| ' return the (computed) attribute value or raise an ' |
| '"AttributeError"\n' |
| ' exception.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__set__(self, instance, value)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to set the attribute on an instance ' |
| '*instance* of the owner\n' |
| ' class to a new value, *value*.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__delete__(self, instance)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to delete the attribute on an instance ' |
| '*instance* of the\n' |
| ' owner class.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Invoking Descriptors\n' |
| '====================\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'In general, a descriptor is an object attribute with ' |
| '"binding\n' |
| 'behavior", one whose attribute access has been ' |
| 'overridden by methods\n' |
| 'in the descriptor protocol: "__get__()", "__set__()", ' |
| 'and\n' |
| '"__delete__()". If any of those methods are defined ' |
| 'for an object, it\n' |
| 'is said to be a descriptor.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The default behavior for attribute access is to get, ' |
| 'set, or delete\n' |
| "the attribute from an object's dictionary. For " |
| 'instance, "a.x" has a\n' |
| 'lookup chain starting with "a.__dict__[\'x\']", then\n' |
| '"type(a).__dict__[\'x\']", and continuing through the ' |
| 'base classes of\n' |
| '"type(a)" excluding metaclasses.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'However, if the looked-up value is an object defining ' |
| 'one of the\n' |
| 'descriptor methods, then Python may override the ' |
| 'default behavior and\n' |
| 'invoke the descriptor method instead. Where this ' |
| 'occurs in the\n' |
| 'precedence chain depends on which descriptor methods ' |
| 'were defined and\n' |
| 'how they were called. Note that descriptors are only ' |
| 'invoked for new\n' |
| 'style objects or classes (ones that subclass ' |
| '"object()" or "type()").\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The starting point for descriptor invocation is a ' |
| 'binding, "a.x". How\n' |
| 'the arguments are assembled depends on "a":\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Direct Call\n' |
| ' The simplest and least common call is when user ' |
| 'code directly\n' |
| ' invokes a descriptor method: "x.__get__(a)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Instance Binding\n' |
| ' If binding to a new-style object instance, "a.x" is ' |
| 'transformed\n' |
| ' into the call: "type(a).__dict__[\'x\'].__get__(a, ' |
| 'type(a))".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Class Binding\n' |
| ' If binding to a new-style class, "A.x" is ' |
| 'transformed into the\n' |
| ' call: "A.__dict__[\'x\'].__get__(None, A)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Super Binding\n' |
| ' If "a" is an instance of "super", then the binding ' |
| '"super(B,\n' |
| ' obj).m()" searches "obj.__class__.__mro__" for the ' |
| 'base class "A"\n' |
| ' immediately preceding "B" and then invokes the ' |
| 'descriptor with the\n' |
| ' call: "A.__dict__[\'m\'].__get__(obj, ' |
| 'obj.__class__)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'For instance bindings, the precedence of descriptor ' |
| 'invocation depends\n' |
| 'on the which descriptor methods are defined. A ' |
| 'descriptor can define\n' |
| 'any combination of "__get__()", "__set__()" and ' |
| '"__delete__()". If it\n' |
| 'does not define "__get__()", then accessing the ' |
| 'attribute will return\n' |
| 'the descriptor object itself unless there is a value ' |
| "in the object's\n" |
| 'instance dictionary. If the descriptor defines ' |
| '"__set__()" and/or\n' |
| '"__delete__()", it is a data descriptor; if it defines ' |
| 'neither, it is\n' |
| 'a non-data descriptor. Normally, data descriptors ' |
| 'define both\n' |
| '"__get__()" and "__set__()", while non-data ' |
| 'descriptors have just the\n' |
| '"__get__()" method. Data descriptors with "__set__()" ' |
| 'and "__get__()"\n' |
| 'defined always override a redefinition in an instance ' |
| 'dictionary. In\n' |
| 'contrast, non-data descriptors can be overridden by ' |
| 'instances.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Python methods (including "staticmethod()" and ' |
| '"classmethod()") are\n' |
| 'implemented as non-data descriptors. Accordingly, ' |
| 'instances can\n' |
| 'redefine and override methods. This allows individual ' |
| 'instances to\n' |
| 'acquire behaviors that differ from other instances of ' |
| 'the same class.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "property()" function is implemented as a data ' |
| 'descriptor.\n' |
| 'Accordingly, instances cannot override the behavior of ' |
| 'a property.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| '__slots__\n' |
| '=========\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'By default, instances of both old and new-style ' |
| 'classes have a\n' |
| 'dictionary for attribute storage. This wastes space ' |
| 'for objects\n' |
| 'having very few instance variables. The space ' |
| 'consumption can become\n' |
| 'acute when creating large numbers of instances.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The default can be overridden by defining *__slots__* ' |
| 'in a new-style\n' |
| 'class definition. The *__slots__* declaration takes a ' |
| 'sequence of\n' |
| 'instance variables and reserves just enough space in ' |
| 'each instance to\n' |
| 'hold a value for each variable. Space is saved ' |
| 'because *__dict__* is\n' |
| 'not created for each instance.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '__slots__\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' This class variable can be assigned a string, ' |
| 'iterable, or sequence\n' |
| ' of strings with variable names used by instances. ' |
| 'If defined in a\n' |
| ' new-style class, *__slots__* reserves space for the ' |
| 'declared\n' |
| ' variables and prevents the automatic creation of ' |
| '*__dict__* and\n' |
| ' *__weakref__* for each instance.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.2.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Notes on using *__slots__*\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* When inheriting from a class without *__slots__*, ' |
| 'the *__dict__*\n' |
| ' attribute of that class will always be accessible, ' |
| 'so a *__slots__*\n' |
| ' definition in the subclass is meaningless.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* Without a *__dict__* variable, instances cannot be ' |
| 'assigned new\n' |
| ' variables not listed in the *__slots__* definition. ' |
| 'Attempts to\n' |
| ' assign to an unlisted variable name raises ' |
| '"AttributeError". If\n' |
| ' dynamic assignment of new variables is desired, then ' |
| 'add\n' |
| ' "\'__dict__\'" to the sequence of strings in the ' |
| '*__slots__*\n' |
| ' declaration.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.3: Previously, adding ' |
| '"\'__dict__\'" to the\n' |
| ' *__slots__* declaration would not enable the ' |
| 'assignment of new\n' |
| ' attributes not specifically listed in the sequence ' |
| 'of instance\n' |
| ' variable names.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* Without a *__weakref__* variable for each instance, ' |
| 'classes\n' |
| ' defining *__slots__* do not support weak references ' |
| 'to its\n' |
| ' instances. If weak reference support is needed, then ' |
| 'add\n' |
| ' "\'__weakref__\'" to the sequence of strings in the ' |
| '*__slots__*\n' |
| ' declaration.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.3: Previously, adding ' |
| '"\'__weakref__\'" to the\n' |
| ' *__slots__* declaration would not enable support for ' |
| 'weak\n' |
| ' references.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* *__slots__* are implemented at the class level by ' |
| 'creating\n' |
| ' descriptors (Implementing Descriptors) for each ' |
| 'variable name. As a\n' |
| ' result, class attributes cannot be used to set ' |
| 'default values for\n' |
| ' instance variables defined by *__slots__*; ' |
| 'otherwise, the class\n' |
| ' attribute would overwrite the descriptor ' |
| 'assignment.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* The action of a *__slots__* declaration is limited ' |
| 'to the class\n' |
| ' where it is defined. As a result, subclasses will ' |
| 'have a *__dict__*\n' |
| ' unless they also define *__slots__* (which must only ' |
| 'contain names\n' |
| ' of any *additional* slots).\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* If a class defines a slot also defined in a base ' |
| 'class, the\n' |
| ' instance variable defined by the base class slot is ' |
| 'inaccessible\n' |
| ' (except by retrieving its descriptor directly from ' |
| 'the base class).\n' |
| ' This renders the meaning of the program undefined. ' |
| 'In the future, a\n' |
| ' check may be added to prevent this.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* Nonempty *__slots__* does not work for classes ' |
| 'derived from\n' |
| ' "variable-length" built-in types such as "long", ' |
| '"str" and "tuple".\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* Any non-string iterable may be assigned to ' |
| '*__slots__*. Mappings\n' |
| ' may also be used; however, in the future, special ' |
| 'meaning may be\n' |
| ' assigned to the values corresponding to each key.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* *__class__* assignment works only if both classes ' |
| 'have the same\n' |
| ' *__slots__*.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.6: Previously, *__class__* ' |
| 'assignment raised an\n' |
| ' error if either new or old class had *__slots__*.\n', |
| 'attribute-references': '\n' |
| 'Attribute references\n' |
| '********************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'An attribute reference is a primary followed by a ' |
| 'period and a name:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' attributeref ::= primary "." identifier\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The primary must evaluate to an object of a type ' |
| 'that supports\n' |
| 'attribute references, e.g., a module, list, or an ' |
| 'instance. This\n' |
| 'object is then asked to produce the attribute ' |
| 'whose name is the\n' |
| 'identifier. If this attribute is not available, ' |
| 'the exception\n' |
| '"AttributeError" is raised. Otherwise, the type ' |
| 'and value of the\n' |
| 'object produced is determined by the object. ' |
| 'Multiple evaluations of\n' |
| 'the same attribute reference may yield different ' |
| 'objects.\n', |
| 'augassign': '\n' |
| 'Augmented assignment statements\n' |
| '*******************************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Augmented assignment is the combination, in a single ' |
| 'statement, of a\n' |
| 'binary operation and an assignment statement:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' augmented_assignment_stmt ::= augtarget augop ' |
| '(expression_list | yield_expression)\n' |
| ' augtarget ::= identifier | attributeref | ' |
| 'subscription | slicing\n' |
| ' augop ::= "+=" | "-=" | "*=" | "/=" | ' |
| '"//=" | "%=" | "**="\n' |
| ' | ">>=" | "<<=" | "&=" | "^=" | "|="\n' |
| '\n' |
| '(See section Primaries for the syntax definitions for the ' |
| 'last three\n' |
| 'symbols.)\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'An augmented assignment evaluates the target (which, unlike ' |
| 'normal\n' |
| 'assignment statements, cannot be an unpacking) and the ' |
| 'expression\n' |
| 'list, performs the binary operation specific to the type of ' |
| 'assignment\n' |
| 'on the two operands, and assigns the result to the original ' |
| 'target.\n' |
| 'The target is only evaluated once.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'An augmented assignment expression like "x += 1" can be ' |
| 'rewritten as\n' |
| '"x = x + 1" to achieve a similar, but not exactly equal ' |
| 'effect. In the\n' |
| 'augmented version, "x" is only evaluated once. Also, when ' |
| 'possible,\n' |
| 'the actual operation is performed *in-place*, meaning that ' |
| 'rather than\n' |
| 'creating a new object and assigning that to the target, the ' |
| 'old object\n' |
| 'is modified instead.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'With the exception of assigning to tuples and multiple ' |
| 'targets in a\n' |
| 'single statement, the assignment done by augmented ' |
| 'assignment\n' |
| 'statements is handled the same way as normal assignments. ' |
| 'Similarly,\n' |
| 'with the exception of the possible *in-place* behavior, the ' |
| 'binary\n' |
| 'operation performed by augmented assignment is the same as ' |
| 'the normal\n' |
| 'binary operations.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'For targets which are attribute references, the same caveat ' |
| 'about\n' |
| 'class and instance attributes applies as for regular ' |
| 'assignments.\n', |
| 'binary': '\n' |
| 'Binary arithmetic operations\n' |
| '****************************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The binary arithmetic operations have the conventional priority\n' |
| 'levels. Note that some of these operations also apply to ' |
| 'certain non-\n' |
| 'numeric types. Apart from the power operator, there are only ' |
| 'two\n' |
| 'levels, one for multiplicative operators and one for additive\n' |
| 'operators:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' m_expr ::= u_expr | m_expr "*" u_expr | m_expr "//" u_expr | ' |
| 'm_expr "/" u_expr\n' |
| ' | m_expr "%" u_expr\n' |
| ' a_expr ::= m_expr | a_expr "+" m_expr | a_expr "-" m_expr\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "*" (multiplication) operator yields the product of its ' |
| 'arguments.\n' |
| 'The arguments must either both be numbers, or one argument must ' |
| 'be an\n' |
| 'integer (plain or long) and the other must be a sequence. In ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'former case, the numbers are converted to a common type and ' |
| 'then\n' |
| 'multiplied together. In the latter case, sequence repetition ' |
| 'is\n' |
| 'performed; a negative repetition factor yields an empty ' |
| 'sequence.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "/" (division) and "//" (floor division) operators yield ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'quotient of their arguments. The numeric arguments are first\n' |
| 'converted to a common type. Plain or long integer division ' |
| 'yields an\n' |
| 'integer of the same type; the result is that of mathematical ' |
| 'division\n' |
| "with the 'floor' function applied to the result. Division by " |
| 'zero\n' |
| 'raises the "ZeroDivisionError" exception.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "%" (modulo) operator yields the remainder from the division ' |
| 'of\n' |
| 'the first argument by the second. The numeric arguments are ' |
| 'first\n' |
| 'converted to a common type. A zero right argument raises the\n' |
| '"ZeroDivisionError" exception. The arguments may be floating ' |
| 'point\n' |
| 'numbers, e.g., "3.14%0.7" equals "0.34" (since "3.14" equals ' |
| '"4*0.7 +\n' |
| '0.34".) The modulo operator always yields a result with the ' |
| 'same sign\n' |
| 'as its second operand (or zero); the absolute value of the ' |
| 'result is\n' |
| 'strictly smaller than the absolute value of the second operand ' |
| '[2].\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The integer division and modulo operators are connected by the\n' |
| 'following identity: "x == (x/y)*y + (x%y)". Integer division ' |
| 'and\n' |
| 'modulo are also connected with the built-in function ' |
| '"divmod()":\n' |
| '"divmod(x, y) == (x/y, x%y)". These identities don\'t hold for\n' |
| 'floating point numbers; there similar identities hold ' |
| 'approximately\n' |
| 'where "x/y" is replaced by "floor(x/y)" or "floor(x/y) - 1" ' |
| '[3].\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'In addition to performing the modulo operation on numbers, the ' |
| '"%"\n' |
| 'operator is also overloaded by string and unicode objects to ' |
| 'perform\n' |
| 'string formatting (also known as interpolation). The syntax for ' |
| 'string\n' |
| 'formatting is described in the Python Library Reference, ' |
| 'section\n' |
| 'String Formatting Operations.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Deprecated since version 2.3: The floor division operator, the ' |
| 'modulo\n' |
| 'operator, and the "divmod()" function are no longer defined for\n' |
| 'complex numbers. Instead, convert to a floating point number ' |
| 'using\n' |
| 'the "abs()" function if appropriate.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "+" (addition) operator yields the sum of its arguments. ' |
| 'The\n' |
| 'arguments must either both be numbers or both sequences of the ' |
| 'same\n' |
| 'type. In the former case, the numbers are converted to a common ' |
| 'type\n' |
| 'and then added together. In the latter case, the sequences are\n' |
| 'concatenated.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "-" (subtraction) operator yields the difference of its ' |
| 'arguments.\n' |
| 'The numeric arguments are first converted to a common type.\n', |
| 'bitwise': '\n' |
| 'Binary bitwise operations\n' |
| '*************************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Each of the three bitwise operations has a different priority ' |
| 'level:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' and_expr ::= shift_expr | and_expr "&" shift_expr\n' |
| ' xor_expr ::= and_expr | xor_expr "^" and_expr\n' |
| ' or_expr ::= xor_expr | or_expr "|" xor_expr\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "&" operator yields the bitwise AND of its arguments, which ' |
| 'must\n' |
| 'be plain or long integers. The arguments are converted to a ' |
| 'common\n' |
| 'type.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "^" operator yields the bitwise XOR (exclusive OR) of its\n' |
| 'arguments, which must be plain or long integers. The arguments ' |
| 'are\n' |
| 'converted to a common type.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "|" operator yields the bitwise (inclusive) OR of its ' |
| 'arguments,\n' |
| 'which must be plain or long integers. The arguments are ' |
| 'converted to\n' |
| 'a common type.\n', |
| 'bltin-code-objects': '\n' |
| 'Code Objects\n' |
| '************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Code objects are used by the implementation to ' |
| 'represent "pseudo-\n' |
| 'compiled" executable Python code such as a function ' |
| 'body. They differ\n' |
| "from function objects because they don't contain a " |
| 'reference to their\n' |
| 'global execution environment. Code objects are ' |
| 'returned by the built-\n' |
| 'in "compile()" function and can be extracted from ' |
| 'function objects\n' |
| 'through their "func_code" attribute. See also the ' |
| '"code" module.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A code object can be executed or evaluated by ' |
| 'passing it (instead of a\n' |
| 'source string) to the "exec" statement or the ' |
| 'built-in "eval()"\n' |
| 'function.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'See The standard type hierarchy for more ' |
| 'information.\n', |
| 'bltin-ellipsis-object': '\n' |
| 'The Ellipsis Object\n' |
| '*******************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'This object is used by extended slice notation ' |
| '(see Slicings). It\n' |
| 'supports no special operations. There is exactly ' |
| 'one ellipsis object,\n' |
| 'named "Ellipsis" (a built-in name).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'It is written as "Ellipsis". When in a ' |
| 'subscript, it can also be\n' |
| 'written as "...", for example "seq[...]".\n', |
| 'bltin-null-object': '\n' |
| 'The Null Object\n' |
| '***************\n' |
| '\n' |
| "This object is returned by functions that don't " |
| 'explicitly return a\n' |
| 'value. It supports no special operations. There is ' |
| 'exactly one null\n' |
| 'object, named "None" (a built-in name).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'It is written as "None".\n', |
| 'bltin-type-objects': '\n' |
| 'Type Objects\n' |
| '************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Type objects represent the various object types. An ' |
| "object's type is\n" |
| 'accessed by the built-in function "type()". There ' |
| 'are no special\n' |
| 'operations on types. The standard module "types" ' |
| 'defines names for\n' |
| 'all standard built-in types.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Types are written like this: "<type \'int\'>".\n', |
| 'booleans': '\n' |
| 'Boolean operations\n' |
| '******************\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' or_test ::= and_test | or_test "or" and_test\n' |
| ' and_test ::= not_test | and_test "and" not_test\n' |
| ' not_test ::= comparison | "not" not_test\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'In the context of Boolean operations, and also when ' |
| 'expressions are\n' |
| 'used by control flow statements, the following values are ' |
| 'interpreted\n' |
| 'as false: "False", "None", numeric zero of all types, and ' |
| 'empty\n' |
| 'strings and containers (including strings, tuples, lists,\n' |
| 'dictionaries, sets and frozensets). All other values are ' |
| 'interpreted\n' |
| 'as true. (See the "__nonzero__()" special method for a way to ' |
| 'change\n' |
| 'this.)\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The operator "not" yields "True" if its argument is false, ' |
| '"False"\n' |
| 'otherwise.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The expression "x and y" first evaluates *x*; if *x* is false, ' |
| 'its\n' |
| 'value is returned; otherwise, *y* is evaluated and the ' |
| 'resulting value\n' |
| 'is returned.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The expression "x or y" first evaluates *x*; if *x* is true, ' |
| 'its value\n' |
| 'is returned; otherwise, *y* is evaluated and the resulting ' |
| 'value is\n' |
| 'returned.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '(Note that neither "and" nor "or" restrict the value and type ' |
| 'they\n' |
| 'return to "False" and "True", but rather return the last ' |
| 'evaluated\n' |
| 'argument. This is sometimes useful, e.g., if "s" is a string ' |
| 'that\n' |
| 'should be replaced by a default value if it is empty, the ' |
| 'expression\n' |
| '"s or \'foo\'" yields the desired value. Because "not" has to ' |
| 'invent a\n' |
| 'value anyway, it does not bother to return a value of the same ' |
| 'type as\n' |
| 'its argument, so e.g., "not \'foo\'" yields "False", not ' |
| '"\'\'".)\n', |
| 'break': '\n' |
| 'The "break" statement\n' |
| '*********************\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' break_stmt ::= "break"\n' |
| '\n' |
| '"break" may only occur syntactically nested in a "for" or ' |
| '"while"\n' |
| 'loop, but not nested in a function or class definition within ' |
| 'that\n' |
| 'loop.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'It terminates the nearest enclosing loop, skipping the optional ' |
| '"else"\n' |
| 'clause if the loop has one.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If a "for" loop is terminated by "break", the loop control ' |
| 'target\n' |
| 'keeps its current value.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'When "break" passes control out of a "try" statement with a ' |
| '"finally"\n' |
| 'clause, that "finally" clause is executed before really leaving ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'loop.\n', |
| 'callable-types': '\n' |
| 'Emulating callable objects\n' |
| '**************************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__call__(self[, args...])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called when the instance is "called" as a function; ' |
| 'if this method\n' |
| ' is defined, "x(arg1, arg2, ...)" is a shorthand for\n' |
| ' "x.__call__(arg1, arg2, ...)".\n', |
| 'calls': '\n' |
| 'Calls\n' |
| '*****\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A call calls a callable object (e.g., a *function*) with a ' |
| 'possibly\n' |
| 'empty series of *arguments*:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' call ::= primary "(" [argument_list [","]\n' |
| ' | expression genexpr_for] ")"\n' |
| ' argument_list ::= positional_arguments ["," ' |
| 'keyword_arguments]\n' |
| ' ["," "*" expression] ["," ' |
| 'keyword_arguments]\n' |
| ' ["," "**" expression]\n' |
| ' | keyword_arguments ["," "*" expression]\n' |
| ' ["," "**" expression]\n' |
| ' | "*" expression ["," keyword_arguments] ' |
| '["," "**" expression]\n' |
| ' | "**" expression\n' |
| ' positional_arguments ::= expression ("," expression)*\n' |
| ' keyword_arguments ::= keyword_item ("," keyword_item)*\n' |
| ' keyword_item ::= identifier "=" expression\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A trailing comma may be present after the positional and keyword\n' |
| 'arguments but does not affect the semantics.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The primary must evaluate to a callable object (user-defined\n' |
| 'functions, built-in functions, methods of built-in objects, ' |
| 'class\n' |
| 'objects, methods of class instances, and certain class instances\n' |
| 'themselves are callable; extensions may define additional ' |
| 'callable\n' |
| 'object types). All argument expressions are evaluated before the ' |
| 'call\n' |
| 'is attempted. Please refer to section Function definitions for ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'syntax of formal *parameter* lists.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If keyword arguments are present, they are first converted to\n' |
| 'positional arguments, as follows. First, a list of unfilled ' |
| 'slots is\n' |
| 'created for the formal parameters. If there are N positional\n' |
| 'arguments, they are placed in the first N slots. Next, for each\n' |
| 'keyword argument, the identifier is used to determine the\n' |
| 'corresponding slot (if the identifier is the same as the first ' |
| 'formal\n' |
| 'parameter name, the first slot is used, and so on). If the slot ' |
| 'is\n' |
| 'already filled, a "TypeError" exception is raised. Otherwise, ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'value of the argument is placed in the slot, filling it (even if ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'expression is "None", it fills the slot). When all arguments ' |
| 'have\n' |
| 'been processed, the slots that are still unfilled are filled with ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'corresponding default value from the function definition. ' |
| '(Default\n' |
| 'values are calculated, once, when the function is defined; thus, ' |
| 'a\n' |
| 'mutable object such as a list or dictionary used as default value ' |
| 'will\n' |
| "be shared by all calls that don't specify an argument value for " |
| 'the\n' |
| 'corresponding slot; this should usually be avoided.) If there ' |
| 'are any\n' |
| 'unfilled slots for which no default value is specified, a ' |
| '"TypeError"\n' |
| 'exception is raised. Otherwise, the list of filled slots is used ' |
| 'as\n' |
| 'the argument list for the call.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '**CPython implementation detail:** An implementation may provide\n' |
| 'built-in functions whose positional parameters do not have names, ' |
| 'even\n' |
| "if they are 'named' for the purpose of documentation, and which\n" |
| 'therefore cannot be supplied by keyword. In CPython, this is the ' |
| 'case\n' |
| 'for functions implemented in C that use "PyArg_ParseTuple()" to ' |
| 'parse\n' |
| 'their arguments.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If there are more positional arguments than there are formal ' |
| 'parameter\n' |
| 'slots, a "TypeError" exception is raised, unless a formal ' |
| 'parameter\n' |
| 'using the syntax "*identifier" is present; in this case, that ' |
| 'formal\n' |
| 'parameter receives a tuple containing the excess positional ' |
| 'arguments\n' |
| '(or an empty tuple if there were no excess positional ' |
| 'arguments).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If any keyword argument does not correspond to a formal ' |
| 'parameter\n' |
| 'name, a "TypeError" exception is raised, unless a formal ' |
| 'parameter\n' |
| 'using the syntax "**identifier" is present; in this case, that ' |
| 'formal\n' |
| 'parameter receives a dictionary containing the excess keyword\n' |
| 'arguments (using the keywords as keys and the argument values as\n' |
| 'corresponding values), or a (new) empty dictionary if there were ' |
| 'no\n' |
| 'excess keyword arguments.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If the syntax "*expression" appears in the function call, ' |
| '"expression"\n' |
| 'must evaluate to an iterable. Elements from this iterable are ' |
| 'treated\n' |
| 'as if they were additional positional arguments; if there are\n' |
| 'positional arguments *x1*, ..., *xN*, and "expression" evaluates ' |
| 'to a\n' |
| 'sequence *y1*, ..., *yM*, this is equivalent to a call with M+N\n' |
| 'positional arguments *x1*, ..., *xN*, *y1*, ..., *yM*.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A consequence of this is that although the "*expression" syntax ' |
| 'may\n' |
| 'appear *after* some keyword arguments, it is processed *before* ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'keyword arguments (and the "**expression" argument, if any -- ' |
| 'see\n' |
| 'below). So:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> def f(a, b):\n' |
| ' ... print a, b\n' |
| ' ...\n' |
| ' >>> f(b=1, *(2,))\n' |
| ' 2 1\n' |
| ' >>> f(a=1, *(2,))\n' |
| ' Traceback (most recent call last):\n' |
| ' File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?\n' |
| " TypeError: f() got multiple values for keyword argument 'a'\n" |
| ' >>> f(1, *(2,))\n' |
| ' 1 2\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'It is unusual for both keyword arguments and the "*expression" ' |
| 'syntax\n' |
| 'to be used in the same call, so in practice this confusion does ' |
| 'not\n' |
| 'arise.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If the syntax "**expression" appears in the function call,\n' |
| '"expression" must evaluate to a mapping, the contents of which ' |
| 'are\n' |
| 'treated as additional keyword arguments. In the case of a ' |
| 'keyword\n' |
| 'appearing in both "expression" and as an explicit keyword ' |
| 'argument, a\n' |
| '"TypeError" exception is raised.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Formal parameters using the syntax "*identifier" or ' |
| '"**identifier"\n' |
| 'cannot be used as positional argument slots or as keyword ' |
| 'argument\n' |
| 'names. Formal parameters using the syntax "(sublist)" cannot be ' |
| 'used\n' |
| 'as keyword argument names; the outermost sublist corresponds to ' |
| 'a\n' |
| 'single unnamed argument slot, and the argument value is assigned ' |
| 'to\n' |
| 'the sublist using the usual tuple assignment rules after all ' |
| 'other\n' |
| 'parameter processing is done.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A call always returns some value, possibly "None", unless it ' |
| 'raises an\n' |
| 'exception. How this value is computed depends on the type of ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'callable object.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If it is---\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'a user-defined function:\n' |
| ' The code block for the function is executed, passing it the\n' |
| ' argument list. The first thing the code block will do is bind ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' formal parameters to the arguments; this is described in ' |
| 'section\n' |
| ' Function definitions. When the code block executes a ' |
| '"return"\n' |
| ' statement, this specifies the return value of the function ' |
| 'call.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'a built-in function or method:\n' |
| ' The result is up to the interpreter; see Built-in Functions ' |
| 'for the\n' |
| ' descriptions of built-in functions and methods.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'a class object:\n' |
| ' A new instance of that class is returned.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'a class instance method:\n' |
| ' The corresponding user-defined function is called, with an ' |
| 'argument\n' |
| ' list that is one longer than the argument list of the call: ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' instance becomes the first argument.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'a class instance:\n' |
| ' The class must define a "__call__()" method; the effect is ' |
| 'then the\n' |
| ' same as if that method was called.\n', |
| 'class': '\n' |
| 'Class definitions\n' |
| '*****************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A class definition defines a class object (see section The ' |
| 'standard\n' |
| 'type hierarchy):\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' classdef ::= "class" classname [inheritance] ":" suite\n' |
| ' inheritance ::= "(" [expression_list] ")"\n' |
| ' classname ::= identifier\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A class definition is an executable statement. It first ' |
| 'evaluates the\n' |
| 'inheritance list, if present. Each item in the inheritance list\n' |
| 'should evaluate to a class object or class type which allows\n' |
| "subclassing. The class's suite is then executed in a new " |
| 'execution\n' |
| 'frame (see section Naming and binding), using a newly created ' |
| 'local\n' |
| 'namespace and the original global namespace. (Usually, the suite\n' |
| "contains only function definitions.) When the class's suite " |
| 'finishes\n' |
| 'execution, its execution frame is discarded but its local ' |
| 'namespace is\n' |
| 'saved. [4] A class object is then created using the inheritance ' |
| 'list\n' |
| 'for the base classes and the saved local namespace for the ' |
| 'attribute\n' |
| 'dictionary. The class name is bound to this class object in the\n' |
| 'original local namespace.\n' |
| '\n' |
| "**Programmer's note:** Variables defined in the class definition " |
| 'are\n' |
| 'class variables; they are shared by all instances. To create ' |
| 'instance\n' |
| 'variables, they can be set in a method with "self.name = value". ' |
| 'Both\n' |
| 'class and instance variables are accessible through the notation\n' |
| '""self.name"", and an instance variable hides a class variable ' |
| 'with\n' |
| 'the same name when accessed in this way. Class variables can be ' |
| 'used\n' |
| 'as defaults for instance variables, but using mutable values ' |
| 'there can\n' |
| 'lead to unexpected results. For *new-style class*es, descriptors ' |
| 'can\n' |
| 'be used to create instance variables with different ' |
| 'implementation\n' |
| 'details.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Class definitions, like function definitions, may be wrapped by ' |
| 'one or\n' |
| 'more *decorator* expressions. The evaluation rules for the ' |
| 'decorator\n' |
| 'expressions are the same as for functions. The result must be a ' |
| 'class\n' |
| 'object, which is then bound to the class name.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '-[ Footnotes ]-\n' |
| '\n' |
| '[1] The exception is propagated to the invocation stack unless\n' |
| ' there is a "finally" clause which happens to raise another\n' |
| ' exception. That new exception causes the old one to be lost.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '[2] Currently, control "flows off the end" except in the case of\n' |
| ' an exception or the execution of a "return", "continue", or\n' |
| ' "break" statement.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '[3] A string literal appearing as the first statement in the\n' |
| ' function body is transformed into the function\'s "__doc__"\n' |
| " attribute and therefore the function's *docstring*.\n" |
| '\n' |
| '[4] A string literal appearing as the first statement in the ' |
| 'class\n' |
| ' body is transformed into the namespace\'s "__doc__" item and\n' |
| " therefore the class's *docstring*.\n", |
| 'comparisons': '\n' |
| 'Comparisons\n' |
| '***********\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Unlike C, all comparison operations in Python have the same ' |
| 'priority,\n' |
| 'which is lower than that of any arithmetic, shifting or ' |
| 'bitwise\n' |
| 'operation. Also unlike C, expressions like "a < b < c" ' |
| 'have the\n' |
| 'interpretation that is conventional in mathematics:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' comparison ::= or_expr ( comp_operator or_expr )*\n' |
| ' comp_operator ::= "<" | ">" | "==" | ">=" | "<=" | "<>" ' |
| '| "!="\n' |
| ' | "is" ["not"] | ["not"] "in"\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Comparisons yield boolean values: "True" or "False".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Comparisons can be chained arbitrarily, e.g., "x < y <= z" ' |
| 'is\n' |
| 'equivalent to "x < y and y <= z", except that "y" is ' |
| 'evaluated only\n' |
| 'once (but in both cases "z" is not evaluated at all when "x ' |
| '< y" is\n' |
| 'found to be false).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Formally, if *a*, *b*, *c*, ..., *y*, *z* are expressions ' |
| 'and *op1*,\n' |
| '*op2*, ..., *opN* are comparison operators, then "a op1 b ' |
| 'op2 c ... y\n' |
| 'opN z" is equivalent to "a op1 b and b op2 c and ... y opN ' |
| 'z", except\n' |
| 'that each expression is evaluated at most once.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Note that "a op1 b op2 c" doesn\'t imply any kind of ' |
| 'comparison between\n' |
| '*a* and *c*, so that, e.g., "x < y > z" is perfectly legal ' |
| '(though\n' |
| 'perhaps not pretty).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The forms "<>" and "!=" are equivalent; for consistency ' |
| 'with C, "!="\n' |
| 'is preferred; where "!=" is mentioned below "<>" is also ' |
| 'accepted.\n' |
| 'The "<>" spelling is considered obsolescent.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The operators "<", ">", "==", ">=", "<=", and "!=" compare ' |
| 'the values\n' |
| 'of two objects. The objects need not have the same type. ' |
| 'If both are\n' |
| 'numbers, they are converted to a common type. Otherwise, ' |
| 'objects of\n' |
| 'different types *always* compare unequal, and are ordered ' |
| 'consistently\n' |
| 'but arbitrarily. You can control comparison behavior of ' |
| 'objects of\n' |
| 'non-built-in types by defining a "__cmp__" method or rich ' |
| 'comparison\n' |
| 'methods like "__gt__", described in section Special method ' |
| 'names.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '(This unusual definition of comparison was used to simplify ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'definition of operations like sorting and the "in" and "not ' |
| 'in"\n' |
| 'operators. In the future, the comparison rules for objects ' |
| 'of\n' |
| 'different types are likely to change.)\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Comparison of objects of the same type depends on the ' |
| 'type:\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* Numbers are compared arithmetically.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* Strings are compared lexicographically using the numeric\n' |
| ' equivalents (the result of the built-in function "ord()") ' |
| 'of their\n' |
| ' characters. Unicode and 8-bit strings are fully ' |
| 'interoperable in\n' |
| ' this behavior. [4]\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* Tuples and lists are compared lexicographically using ' |
| 'comparison\n' |
| ' of corresponding elements. This means that to compare ' |
| 'equal, each\n' |
| ' element must compare equal and the two sequences must be ' |
| 'of the same\n' |
| ' type and have the same length.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If not equal, the sequences are ordered the same as their ' |
| 'first\n' |
| ' differing elements. For example, "cmp([1,2,x], [1,2,y])" ' |
| 'returns\n' |
| ' the same as "cmp(x,y)". If the corresponding element ' |
| 'does not\n' |
| ' exist, the shorter sequence is ordered first (for ' |
| 'example, "[1,2] <\n' |
| ' [1,2,3]").\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* Mappings (dictionaries) compare equal if and only if ' |
| 'their sorted\n' |
| ' (key, value) lists compare equal. [5] Outcomes other than ' |
| 'equality\n' |
| ' are resolved consistently, but are not otherwise defined. ' |
| '[6]\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* Most other objects of built-in types compare unequal ' |
| 'unless they\n' |
| ' are the same object; the choice whether one object is ' |
| 'considered\n' |
| ' smaller or larger than another one is made arbitrarily ' |
| 'but\n' |
| ' consistently within one execution of a program.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The operators "in" and "not in" test for collection ' |
| 'membership. "x in\n' |
| 's" evaluates to true if *x* is a member of the collection ' |
| '*s*, and\n' |
| 'false otherwise. "x not in s" returns the negation of "x ' |
| 'in s". The\n' |
| 'collection membership test has traditionally been bound to ' |
| 'sequences;\n' |
| 'an object is a member of a collection if the collection is ' |
| 'a sequence\n' |
| 'and contains an element equal to that object. However, it ' |
| 'make sense\n' |
| 'for many other object types to support membership tests ' |
| 'without being\n' |
| 'a sequence. In particular, dictionaries (for keys) and ' |
| 'sets support\n' |
| 'membership testing.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'For the list and tuple types, "x in y" is true if and only ' |
| 'if there\n' |
| 'exists an index *i* such that "x == y[i]" is true.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'For the Unicode and string types, "x in y" is true if and ' |
| 'only if *x*\n' |
| 'is a substring of *y*. An equivalent test is "y.find(x) != ' |
| '-1".\n' |
| 'Note, *x* and *y* need not be the same type; consequently, ' |
| '"u\'ab\' in\n' |
| '\'abc\'" will return "True". Empty strings are always ' |
| 'considered to be a\n' |
| 'substring of any other string, so """ in "abc"" will return ' |
| '"True".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Changed in version 2.3: Previously, *x* was required to be ' |
| 'a string of\n' |
| 'length "1".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'For user-defined classes which define the "__contains__()" ' |
| 'method, "x\n' |
| 'in y" is true if and only if "y.__contains__(x)" is true.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'For user-defined classes which do not define ' |
| '"__contains__()" but do\n' |
| 'define "__iter__()", "x in y" is true if some value "z" ' |
| 'with "x == z"\n' |
| 'is produced while iterating over "y". If an exception is ' |
| 'raised\n' |
| 'during the iteration, it is as if "in" raised that ' |
| 'exception.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Lastly, the old-style iteration protocol is tried: if a ' |
| 'class defines\n' |
| '"__getitem__()", "x in y" is true if and only if there is a ' |
| 'non-\n' |
| 'negative integer index *i* such that "x == y[i]", and all ' |
| 'lower\n' |
| 'integer indices do not raise "IndexError" exception. (If ' |
| 'any other\n' |
| 'exception is raised, it is as if "in" raised that ' |
| 'exception).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The operator "not in" is defined to have the inverse true ' |
| 'value of\n' |
| '"in".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The operators "is" and "is not" test for object identity: ' |
| '"x is y" is\n' |
| 'true if and only if *x* and *y* are the same object. "x is ' |
| 'not y"\n' |
| 'yields the inverse truth value. [7]\n', |
| 'compound': '\n' |
| 'Compound statements\n' |
| '*******************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Compound statements contain (groups of) other statements; they ' |
| 'affect\n' |
| 'or control the execution of those other statements in some ' |
| 'way. In\n' |
| 'general, compound statements span multiple lines, although in ' |
| 'simple\n' |
| 'incarnations a whole compound statement may be contained in ' |
| 'one line.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "if", "while" and "for" statements implement traditional ' |
| 'control\n' |
| 'flow constructs. "try" specifies exception handlers and/or ' |
| 'cleanup\n' |
| 'code for a group of statements. Function and class ' |
| 'definitions are\n' |
| 'also syntactically compound statements.\n' |
| '\n' |
| "Compound statements consist of one or more 'clauses.' A " |
| 'clause\n' |
| "consists of a header and a 'suite.' The clause headers of a\n" |
| 'particular compound statement are all at the same indentation ' |
| 'level.\n' |
| 'Each clause header begins with a uniquely identifying keyword ' |
| 'and ends\n' |
| 'with a colon. A suite is a group of statements controlled by ' |
| 'a\n' |
| 'clause. A suite can be one or more semicolon-separated ' |
| 'simple\n' |
| 'statements on the same line as the header, following the ' |
| "header's\n" |
| 'colon, or it can be one or more indented statements on ' |
| 'subsequent\n' |
| 'lines. Only the latter form of suite can contain nested ' |
| 'compound\n' |
| 'statements; the following is illegal, mostly because it ' |
| "wouldn't be\n" |
| 'clear to which "if" clause a following "else" clause would ' |
| 'belong:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' if test1: if test2: print x\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Also note that the semicolon binds tighter than the colon in ' |
| 'this\n' |
| 'context, so that in the following example, either all or none ' |
| 'of the\n' |
| '"print" statements are executed:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' if x < y < z: print x; print y; print z\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Summarizing:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' compound_stmt ::= if_stmt\n' |
| ' | while_stmt\n' |
| ' | for_stmt\n' |
| ' | try_stmt\n' |
| ' | with_stmt\n' |
| ' | funcdef\n' |
| ' | classdef\n' |
| ' | decorated\n' |
| ' suite ::= stmt_list NEWLINE | NEWLINE INDENT ' |
| 'statement+ DEDENT\n' |
| ' statement ::= stmt_list NEWLINE | compound_stmt\n' |
| ' stmt_list ::= simple_stmt (";" simple_stmt)* [";"]\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Note that statements always end in a "NEWLINE" possibly ' |
| 'followed by a\n' |
| '"DEDENT". Also note that optional continuation clauses always ' |
| 'begin\n' |
| 'with a keyword that cannot start a statement, thus there are ' |
| 'no\n' |
| 'ambiguities (the \'dangling "else"\' problem is solved in ' |
| 'Python by\n' |
| 'requiring nested "if" statements to be indented).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The formatting of the grammar rules in the following sections ' |
| 'places\n' |
| 'each clause on a separate line for clarity.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "if" statement\n' |
| '==================\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "if" statement is used for conditional execution:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' if_stmt ::= "if" expression ":" suite\n' |
| ' ( "elif" expression ":" suite )*\n' |
| ' ["else" ":" suite]\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'It selects exactly one of the suites by evaluating the ' |
| 'expressions one\n' |
| 'by one until one is found to be true (see section Boolean ' |
| 'operations\n' |
| 'for the definition of true and false); then that suite is ' |
| 'executed\n' |
| '(and no other part of the "if" statement is executed or ' |
| 'evaluated).\n' |
| 'If all expressions are false, the suite of the "else" clause, ' |
| 'if\n' |
| 'present, is executed.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "while" statement\n' |
| '=====================\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "while" statement is used for repeated execution as long ' |
| 'as an\n' |
| 'expression is true:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' while_stmt ::= "while" expression ":" suite\n' |
| ' ["else" ":" suite]\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'This repeatedly tests the expression and, if it is true, ' |
| 'executes the\n' |
| 'first suite; if the expression is false (which may be the ' |
| 'first time\n' |
| 'it is tested) the suite of the "else" clause, if present, is ' |
| 'executed\n' |
| 'and the loop terminates.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A "break" statement executed in the first suite terminates the ' |
| 'loop\n' |
| 'without executing the "else" clause\'s suite. A "continue" ' |
| 'statement\n' |
| 'executed in the first suite skips the rest of the suite and ' |
| 'goes back\n' |
| 'to testing the expression.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "for" statement\n' |
| '===================\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "for" statement is used to iterate over the elements of a ' |
| 'sequence\n' |
| '(such as a string, tuple or list) or other iterable object:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' for_stmt ::= "for" target_list "in" expression_list ":" ' |
| 'suite\n' |
| ' ["else" ":" suite]\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The expression list is evaluated once; it should yield an ' |
| 'iterable\n' |
| 'object. An iterator is created for the result of the\n' |
| '"expression_list". The suite is then executed once for each ' |
| 'item\n' |
| 'provided by the iterator, in the order of ascending indices. ' |
| 'Each\n' |
| 'item in turn is assigned to the target list using the standard ' |
| 'rules\n' |
| 'for assignments, and then the suite is executed. When the ' |
| 'items are\n' |
| 'exhausted (which is immediately when the sequence is empty), ' |
| 'the suite\n' |
| 'in the "else" clause, if present, is executed, and the loop\n' |
| 'terminates.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A "break" statement executed in the first suite terminates the ' |
| 'loop\n' |
| 'without executing the "else" clause\'s suite. A "continue" ' |
| 'statement\n' |
| 'executed in the first suite skips the rest of the suite and ' |
| 'continues\n' |
| 'with the next item, or with the "else" clause if there was no ' |
| 'next\n' |
| 'item.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The suite may assign to the variable(s) in the target list; ' |
| 'this does\n' |
| 'not affect the next item assigned to it.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The target list is not deleted when the loop is finished, but ' |
| 'if the\n' |
| 'sequence is empty, it will not have been assigned to at all by ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'loop. Hint: the built-in function "range()" returns a ' |
| 'sequence of\n' |
| 'integers suitable to emulate the effect of Pascal\'s "for i := ' |
| 'a to b\n' |
| 'do"; e.g., "range(3)" returns the list "[0, 1, 2]".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Note: There is a subtlety when the sequence is being modified ' |
| 'by the\n' |
| ' loop (this can only occur for mutable sequences, i.e. ' |
| 'lists). An\n' |
| ' internal counter is used to keep track of which item is used ' |
| 'next,\n' |
| ' and this is incremented on each iteration. When this ' |
| 'counter has\n' |
| ' reached the length of the sequence the loop terminates. ' |
| 'This means\n' |
| ' that if the suite deletes the current (or a previous) item ' |
| 'from the\n' |
| ' sequence, the next item will be skipped (since it gets the ' |
| 'index of\n' |
| ' the current item which has already been treated). Likewise, ' |
| 'if the\n' |
| ' suite inserts an item in the sequence before the current ' |
| 'item, the\n' |
| ' current item will be treated again the next time through the ' |
| 'loop.\n' |
| ' This can lead to nasty bugs that can be avoided by making a\n' |
| ' temporary copy using a slice of the whole sequence, e.g.,\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' for x in a[:]:\n' |
| ' if x < 0: a.remove(x)\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "try" statement\n' |
| '===================\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "try" statement specifies exception handlers and/or ' |
| 'cleanup code\n' |
| 'for a group of statements:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' try_stmt ::= try1_stmt | try2_stmt\n' |
| ' try1_stmt ::= "try" ":" suite\n' |
| ' ("except" [expression [("as" | ",") ' |
| 'identifier]] ":" suite)+\n' |
| ' ["else" ":" suite]\n' |
| ' ["finally" ":" suite]\n' |
| ' try2_stmt ::= "try" ":" suite\n' |
| ' "finally" ":" suite\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Changed in version 2.5: In previous versions of Python,\n' |
| '"try"..."except"..."finally" did not work. "try"..."except" ' |
| 'had to be\n' |
| 'nested in "try"..."finally".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "except" clause(s) specify one or more exception handlers. ' |
| 'When no\n' |
| 'exception occurs in the "try" clause, no exception handler is\n' |
| 'executed. When an exception occurs in the "try" suite, a ' |
| 'search for an\n' |
| 'exception handler is started. This search inspects the except ' |
| 'clauses\n' |
| 'in turn until one is found that matches the exception. An ' |
| 'expression-\n' |
| 'less except clause, if present, must be last; it matches any\n' |
| 'exception. For an except clause with an expression, that ' |
| 'expression\n' |
| 'is evaluated, and the clause matches the exception if the ' |
| 'resulting\n' |
| 'object is "compatible" with the exception. An object is ' |
| 'compatible\n' |
| 'with an exception if it is the class or a base class of the ' |
| 'exception\n' |
| 'object, or a tuple containing an item compatible with the ' |
| 'exception.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If no except clause matches the exception, the search for an ' |
| 'exception\n' |
| 'handler continues in the surrounding code and on the ' |
| 'invocation stack.\n' |
| '[1]\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If the evaluation of an expression in the header of an except ' |
| 'clause\n' |
| 'raises an exception, the original search for a handler is ' |
| 'canceled and\n' |
| 'a search starts for the new exception in the surrounding code ' |
| 'and on\n' |
| 'the call stack (it is treated as if the entire "try" statement ' |
| 'raised\n' |
| 'the exception).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'When a matching except clause is found, the exception is ' |
| 'assigned to\n' |
| 'the target specified in that except clause, if present, and ' |
| 'the except\n' |
| "clause's suite is executed. All except clauses must have an\n" |
| 'executable block. When the end of this block is reached, ' |
| 'execution\n' |
| 'continues normally after the entire try statement. (This ' |
| 'means that\n' |
| 'if two nested handlers exist for the same exception, and the ' |
| 'exception\n' |
| 'occurs in the try clause of the inner handler, the outer ' |
| 'handler will\n' |
| 'not handle the exception.)\n' |
| '\n' |
| "Before an except clause's suite is executed, details about " |
| 'the\n' |
| 'exception are assigned to three variables in the "sys" ' |
| 'module:\n' |
| '"sys.exc_type" receives the object identifying the exception;\n' |
| '"sys.exc_value" receives the exception\'s parameter;\n' |
| '"sys.exc_traceback" receives a traceback object (see section ' |
| 'The\n' |
| 'standard type hierarchy) identifying the point in the program ' |
| 'where\n' |
| 'the exception occurred. These details are also available ' |
| 'through the\n' |
| '"sys.exc_info()" function, which returns a tuple "(exc_type,\n' |
| 'exc_value, exc_traceback)". Use of the corresponding ' |
| 'variables is\n' |
| 'deprecated in favor of this function, since their use is ' |
| 'unsafe in a\n' |
| 'threaded program. As of Python 1.5, the variables are ' |
| 'restored to\n' |
| 'their previous values (before the call) when returning from a ' |
| 'function\n' |
| 'that handled an exception.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The optional "else" clause is executed if and when control ' |
| 'flows off\n' |
| 'the end of the "try" clause. [2] Exceptions in the "else" ' |
| 'clause are\n' |
| 'not handled by the preceding "except" clauses.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If "finally" is present, it specifies a \'cleanup\' handler. ' |
| 'The "try"\n' |
| 'clause is executed, including any "except" and "else" ' |
| 'clauses. If an\n' |
| 'exception occurs in any of the clauses and is not handled, ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'exception is temporarily saved. The "finally" clause is ' |
| 'executed. If\n' |
| 'there is a saved exception, it is re-raised at the end of the\n' |
| '"finally" clause. If the "finally" clause raises another ' |
| 'exception or\n' |
| 'executes a "return" or "break" statement, the saved exception ' |
| 'is\n' |
| 'discarded:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> def f():\n' |
| ' ... try:\n' |
| ' ... 1/0\n' |
| ' ... finally:\n' |
| ' ... return 42\n' |
| ' ...\n' |
| ' >>> f()\n' |
| ' 42\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The exception information is not available to the program ' |
| 'during\n' |
| 'execution of the "finally" clause.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'When a "return", "break" or "continue" statement is executed ' |
| 'in the\n' |
| '"try" suite of a "try"..."finally" statement, the "finally" ' |
| 'clause is\n' |
| 'also executed \'on the way out.\' A "continue" statement is ' |
| 'illegal in\n' |
| 'the "finally" clause. (The reason is a problem with the ' |
| 'current\n' |
| 'implementation --- this restriction may be lifted in the ' |
| 'future).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The return value of a function is determined by the last ' |
| '"return"\n' |
| 'statement executed. Since the "finally" clause always ' |
| 'executes, a\n' |
| '"return" statement executed in the "finally" clause will ' |
| 'always be the\n' |
| 'last one executed:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> def foo():\n' |
| ' ... try:\n' |
| " ... return 'try'\n" |
| ' ... finally:\n' |
| " ... return 'finally'\n" |
| ' ...\n' |
| ' >>> foo()\n' |
| " 'finally'\n" |
| '\n' |
| 'Additional information on exceptions can be found in section\n' |
| 'Exceptions, and information on using the "raise" statement to ' |
| 'generate\n' |
| 'exceptions may be found in section The raise statement.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "with" statement\n' |
| '====================\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'New in version 2.5.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "with" statement is used to wrap the execution of a block ' |
| 'with\n' |
| 'methods defined by a context manager (see section With ' |
| 'Statement\n' |
| 'Context Managers). This allows common ' |
| '"try"..."except"..."finally"\n' |
| 'usage patterns to be encapsulated for convenient reuse.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' with_stmt ::= "with" with_item ("," with_item)* ":" suite\n' |
| ' with_item ::= expression ["as" target]\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The execution of the "with" statement with one "item" proceeds ' |
| 'as\n' |
| 'follows:\n' |
| '\n' |
| '1. The context expression (the expression given in the ' |
| '"with_item")\n' |
| ' is evaluated to obtain a context manager.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '2. The context manager\'s "__exit__()" is loaded for later ' |
| 'use.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '3. The context manager\'s "__enter__()" method is invoked.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '4. If a target was included in the "with" statement, the ' |
| 'return\n' |
| ' value from "__enter__()" is assigned to it.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Note: The "with" statement guarantees that if the ' |
| '"__enter__()"\n' |
| ' method returns without an error, then "__exit__()" will ' |
| 'always be\n' |
| ' called. Thus, if an error occurs during the assignment to ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' target list, it will be treated the same as an error ' |
| 'occurring\n' |
| ' within the suite would be. See step 6 below.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '5. The suite is executed.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '6. The context manager\'s "__exit__()" method is invoked. If ' |
| 'an\n' |
| ' exception caused the suite to be exited, its type, value, ' |
| 'and\n' |
| ' traceback are passed as arguments to "__exit__()". ' |
| 'Otherwise, three\n' |
| ' "None" arguments are supplied.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If the suite was exited due to an exception, and the return ' |
| 'value\n' |
| ' from the "__exit__()" method was false, the exception is ' |
| 'reraised.\n' |
| ' If the return value was true, the exception is suppressed, ' |
| 'and\n' |
| ' execution continues with the statement following the ' |
| '"with"\n' |
| ' statement.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If the suite was exited for any reason other than an ' |
| 'exception, the\n' |
| ' return value from "__exit__()" is ignored, and execution ' |
| 'proceeds\n' |
| ' at the normal location for the kind of exit that was ' |
| 'taken.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'With more than one item, the context managers are processed as ' |
| 'if\n' |
| 'multiple "with" statements were nested:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' with A() as a, B() as b:\n' |
| ' suite\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'is equivalent to\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' with A() as a:\n' |
| ' with B() as b:\n' |
| ' suite\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Note: In Python 2.5, the "with" statement is only allowed when ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' "with_statement" feature has been enabled. It is always ' |
| 'enabled in\n' |
| ' Python 2.6.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Changed in version 2.7: Support for multiple context ' |
| 'expressions.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'See also: **PEP 0343** - The "with" statement\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' The specification, background, and examples for the ' |
| 'Python "with"\n' |
| ' statement.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Function definitions\n' |
| '====================\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A function definition defines a user-defined function object ' |
| '(see\n' |
| 'section The standard type hierarchy):\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' decorated ::= decorators (classdef | funcdef)\n' |
| ' decorators ::= decorator+\n' |
| ' decorator ::= "@" dotted_name ["(" [argument_list ' |
| '[","]] ")"] NEWLINE\n' |
| ' funcdef ::= "def" funcname "(" [parameter_list] ")" ' |
| '":" suite\n' |
| ' dotted_name ::= identifier ("." identifier)*\n' |
| ' parameter_list ::= (defparameter ",")*\n' |
| ' ( "*" identifier ["," "**" identifier]\n' |
| ' | "**" identifier\n' |
| ' | defparameter [","] )\n' |
| ' defparameter ::= parameter ["=" expression]\n' |
| ' sublist ::= parameter ("," parameter)* [","]\n' |
| ' parameter ::= identifier | "(" sublist ")"\n' |
| ' funcname ::= identifier\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A function definition is an executable statement. Its ' |
| 'execution binds\n' |
| 'the function name in the current local namespace to a function ' |
| 'object\n' |
| '(a wrapper around the executable code for the function). ' |
| 'This\n' |
| 'function object contains a reference to the current global ' |
| 'namespace\n' |
| 'as the global namespace to be used when the function is ' |
| 'called.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The function definition does not execute the function body; ' |
| 'this gets\n' |
| 'executed only when the function is called. [3]\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A function definition may be wrapped by one or more ' |
| '*decorator*\n' |
| 'expressions. Decorator expressions are evaluated when the ' |
| 'function is\n' |
| 'defined, in the scope that contains the function definition. ' |
| 'The\n' |
| 'result must be a callable, which is invoked with the function ' |
| 'object\n' |
| 'as the only argument. The returned value is bound to the ' |
| 'function name\n' |
| 'instead of the function object. Multiple decorators are ' |
| 'applied in\n' |
| 'nested fashion. For example, the following code:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' @f1(arg)\n' |
| ' @f2\n' |
| ' def func(): pass\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'is equivalent to:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' def func(): pass\n' |
| ' func = f1(arg)(f2(func))\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'When one or more top-level *parameters* have the form ' |
| '*parameter* "="\n' |
| '*expression*, the function is said to have "default parameter ' |
| 'values."\n' |
| 'For a parameter with a default value, the corresponding ' |
| '*argument* may\n' |
| "be omitted from a call, in which case the parameter's default " |
| 'value is\n' |
| 'substituted. If a parameter has a default value, all ' |
| 'following\n' |
| 'parameters must also have a default value --- this is a ' |
| 'syntactic\n' |
| 'restriction that is not expressed by the grammar.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '**Default parameter values are evaluated when the function ' |
| 'definition\n' |
| 'is executed.** This means that the expression is evaluated ' |
| 'once, when\n' |
| 'the function is defined, and that the same "pre-computed" ' |
| 'value is\n' |
| 'used for each call. This is especially important to ' |
| 'understand when a\n' |
| 'default parameter is a mutable object, such as a list or a ' |
| 'dictionary:\n' |
| 'if the function modifies the object (e.g. by appending an item ' |
| 'to a\n' |
| 'list), the default value is in effect modified. This is ' |
| 'generally not\n' |
| 'what was intended. A way around this is to use "None" as ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'default, and explicitly test for it in the body of the ' |
| 'function, e.g.:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' def whats_on_the_telly(penguin=None):\n' |
| ' if penguin is None:\n' |
| ' penguin = []\n' |
| ' penguin.append("property of the zoo")\n' |
| ' return penguin\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Function call semantics are described in more detail in ' |
| 'section Calls.\n' |
| 'A function call always assigns values to all parameters ' |
| 'mentioned in\n' |
| 'the parameter list, either from position arguments, from ' |
| 'keyword\n' |
| 'arguments, or from default values. If the form ' |
| '""*identifier"" is\n' |
| 'present, it is initialized to a tuple receiving any excess ' |
| 'positional\n' |
| 'parameters, defaulting to the empty tuple. If the form\n' |
| '""**identifier"" is present, it is initialized to a new ' |
| 'dictionary\n' |
| 'receiving any excess keyword arguments, defaulting to a new ' |
| 'empty\n' |
| 'dictionary.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'It is also possible to create anonymous functions (functions ' |
| 'not bound\n' |
| 'to a name), for immediate use in expressions. This uses ' |
| 'lambda\n' |
| 'expressions, described in section Lambdas. Note that the ' |
| 'lambda\n' |
| 'expression is merely a shorthand for a simplified function ' |
| 'definition;\n' |
| 'a function defined in a ""def"" statement can be passed around ' |
| 'or\n' |
| 'assigned to another name just like a function defined by a ' |
| 'lambda\n' |
| 'expression. The ""def"" form is actually more powerful since ' |
| 'it\n' |
| 'allows the execution of multiple statements.\n' |
| '\n' |
| "**Programmer's note:** Functions are first-class objects. A " |
| '""def""\n' |
| 'form executed inside a function definition defines a local ' |
| 'function\n' |
| 'that can be returned or passed around. Free variables used in ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'nested function can access the local variables of the ' |
| 'function\n' |
| 'containing the def. See section Naming and binding for ' |
| 'details.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Class definitions\n' |
| '=================\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A class definition defines a class object (see section The ' |
| 'standard\n' |
| 'type hierarchy):\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' classdef ::= "class" classname [inheritance] ":" suite\n' |
| ' inheritance ::= "(" [expression_list] ")"\n' |
| ' classname ::= identifier\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A class definition is an executable statement. It first ' |
| 'evaluates the\n' |
| 'inheritance list, if present. Each item in the inheritance ' |
| 'list\n' |
| 'should evaluate to a class object or class type which allows\n' |
| "subclassing. The class's suite is then executed in a new " |
| 'execution\n' |
| 'frame (see section Naming and binding), using a newly created ' |
| 'local\n' |
| 'namespace and the original global namespace. (Usually, the ' |
| 'suite\n' |
| "contains only function definitions.) When the class's suite " |
| 'finishes\n' |
| 'execution, its execution frame is discarded but its local ' |
| 'namespace is\n' |
| 'saved. [4] A class object is then created using the ' |
| 'inheritance list\n' |
| 'for the base classes and the saved local namespace for the ' |
| 'attribute\n' |
| 'dictionary. The class name is bound to this class object in ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'original local namespace.\n' |
| '\n' |
| "**Programmer's note:** Variables defined in the class " |
| 'definition are\n' |
| 'class variables; they are shared by all instances. To create ' |
| 'instance\n' |
| 'variables, they can be set in a method with "self.name = ' |
| 'value". Both\n' |
| 'class and instance variables are accessible through the ' |
| 'notation\n' |
| '""self.name"", and an instance variable hides a class variable ' |
| 'with\n' |
| 'the same name when accessed in this way. Class variables can ' |
| 'be used\n' |
| 'as defaults for instance variables, but using mutable values ' |
| 'there can\n' |
| 'lead to unexpected results. For *new-style class*es, ' |
| 'descriptors can\n' |
| 'be used to create instance variables with different ' |
| 'implementation\n' |
| 'details.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Class definitions, like function definitions, may be wrapped ' |
| 'by one or\n' |
| 'more *decorator* expressions. The evaluation rules for the ' |
| 'decorator\n' |
| 'expressions are the same as for functions. The result must be ' |
| 'a class\n' |
| 'object, which is then bound to the class name.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '-[ Footnotes ]-\n' |
| '\n' |
| '[1] The exception is propagated to the invocation stack ' |
| 'unless\n' |
| ' there is a "finally" clause which happens to raise ' |
| 'another\n' |
| ' exception. That new exception causes the old one to be ' |
| 'lost.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '[2] Currently, control "flows off the end" except in the case ' |
| 'of\n' |
| ' an exception or the execution of a "return", "continue", ' |
| 'or\n' |
| ' "break" statement.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '[3] A string literal appearing as the first statement in the\n' |
| " function body is transformed into the function's " |
| '"__doc__"\n' |
| " attribute and therefore the function's *docstring*.\n" |
| '\n' |
| '[4] A string literal appearing as the first statement in the ' |
| 'class\n' |
| ' body is transformed into the namespace\'s "__doc__" item ' |
| 'and\n' |
| " therefore the class's *docstring*.\n", |
| 'context-managers': '\n' |
| 'With Statement Context Managers\n' |
| '*******************************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'New in version 2.5.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A *context manager* is an object that defines the ' |
| 'runtime context to\n' |
| 'be established when executing a "with" statement. The ' |
| 'context manager\n' |
| 'handles the entry into, and the exit from, the desired ' |
| 'runtime context\n' |
| 'for the execution of the block of code. Context ' |
| 'managers are normally\n' |
| 'invoked using the "with" statement (described in ' |
| 'section The with\n' |
| 'statement), but can also be used by directly invoking ' |
| 'their methods.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Typical uses of context managers include saving and ' |
| 'restoring various\n' |
| 'kinds of global state, locking and unlocking ' |
| 'resources, closing opened\n' |
| 'files, etc.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'For more information on context managers, see Context ' |
| 'Manager Types.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__enter__(self)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Enter the runtime context related to this object. ' |
| 'The "with"\n' |
| " statement will bind this method's return value to " |
| 'the target(s)\n' |
| ' specified in the "as" clause of the statement, if ' |
| 'any.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, traceback)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Exit the runtime context related to this object. ' |
| 'The parameters\n' |
| ' describe the exception that caused the context to ' |
| 'be exited. If the\n' |
| ' context was exited without an exception, all three ' |
| 'arguments will\n' |
| ' be "None".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If an exception is supplied, and the method wishes ' |
| 'to suppress the\n' |
| ' exception (i.e., prevent it from being propagated), ' |
| 'it should\n' |
| ' return a true value. Otherwise, the exception will ' |
| 'be processed\n' |
| ' normally upon exit from this method.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Note that "__exit__()" methods should not reraise ' |
| 'the passed-in\n' |
| " exception; this is the caller's responsibility.\n" |
| '\n' |
| 'See also: **PEP 0343** - The "with" statement\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' The specification, background, and examples for ' |
| 'the Python "with"\n' |
| ' statement.\n', |
| 'continue': '\n' |
| 'The "continue" statement\n' |
| '************************\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' continue_stmt ::= "continue"\n' |
| '\n' |
| '"continue" may only occur syntactically nested in a "for" or ' |
| '"while"\n' |
| 'loop, but not nested in a function or class definition or ' |
| '"finally"\n' |
| 'clause within that loop. It continues with the next cycle of ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'nearest enclosing loop.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'When "continue" passes control out of a "try" statement with ' |
| 'a\n' |
| '"finally" clause, that "finally" clause is executed before ' |
| 'really\n' |
| 'starting the next loop cycle.\n', |
| 'conversions': '\n' |
| 'Arithmetic conversions\n' |
| '**********************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'When a description of an arithmetic operator below uses the ' |
| 'phrase\n' |
| '"the numeric arguments are converted to a common type," the ' |
| 'arguments\n' |
| 'are coerced using the coercion rules listed at Coercion ' |
| 'rules. If\n' |
| 'both arguments are standard numeric types, the following ' |
| 'coercions are\n' |
| 'applied:\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* If either argument is a complex number, the other is ' |
| 'converted to\n' |
| ' complex;\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* otherwise, if either argument is a floating point number, ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' other is converted to floating point;\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* otherwise, if either argument is a long integer, the ' |
| 'other is\n' |
| ' converted to long integer;\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* otherwise, both must be plain integers and no conversion ' |
| 'is\n' |
| ' necessary.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Some additional rules apply for certain operators (e.g., a ' |
| 'string left\n' |
| "argument to the '%' operator). Extensions can define their " |
| 'own\n' |
| 'coercions.\n', |
| 'customization': '\n' |
| 'Basic customization\n' |
| '*******************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__new__(cls[, ...])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to create a new instance of class *cls*. ' |
| '"__new__()" is a\n' |
| ' static method (special-cased so you need not declare ' |
| 'it as such)\n' |
| ' that takes the class of which an instance was ' |
| 'requested as its\n' |
| ' first argument. The remaining arguments are those ' |
| 'passed to the\n' |
| ' object constructor expression (the call to the ' |
| 'class). The return\n' |
| ' value of "__new__()" should be the new object instance ' |
| '(usually an\n' |
| ' instance of *cls*).\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Typical implementations create a new instance of the ' |
| 'class by\n' |
| ' invoking the superclass\'s "__new__()" method using\n' |
| ' "super(currentclass, cls).__new__(cls[, ...])" with ' |
| 'appropriate\n' |
| ' arguments and then modifying the newly-created ' |
| 'instance as\n' |
| ' necessary before returning it.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If "__new__()" returns an instance of *cls*, then the ' |
| 'new\n' |
| ' instance\'s "__init__()" method will be invoked like\n' |
| ' "__init__(self[, ...])", where *self* is the new ' |
| 'instance and the\n' |
| ' remaining arguments are the same as were passed to ' |
| '"__new__()".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If "__new__()" does not return an instance of *cls*, ' |
| 'then the new\n' |
| ' instance\'s "__init__()" method will not be invoked.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' "__new__()" is intended mainly to allow subclasses of ' |
| 'immutable\n' |
| ' types (like int, str, or tuple) to customize instance ' |
| 'creation. It\n' |
| ' is also commonly overridden in custom metaclasses in ' |
| 'order to\n' |
| ' customize class creation.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__init__(self[, ...])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called after the instance has been created (by ' |
| '"__new__()"), but\n' |
| ' before it is returned to the caller. The arguments ' |
| 'are those\n' |
| ' passed to the class constructor expression. If a base ' |
| 'class has an\n' |
| ' "__init__()" method, the derived class\'s "__init__()" ' |
| 'method, if\n' |
| ' any, must explicitly call it to ensure proper ' |
| 'initialization of the\n' |
| ' base class part of the instance; for example:\n' |
| ' "BaseClass.__init__(self, [args...])".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Because "__new__()" and "__init__()" work together in ' |
| 'constructing\n' |
| ' objects ("__new__()" to create it, and "__init__()" to ' |
| 'customise\n' |
| ' it), no non-"None" value may be returned by ' |
| '"__init__()"; doing so\n' |
| ' will cause a "TypeError" to be raised at runtime.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__del__(self)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called when the instance is about to be destroyed. ' |
| 'This is also\n' |
| ' called a destructor. If a base class has a ' |
| '"__del__()" method, the\n' |
| ' derived class\'s "__del__()" method, if any, must ' |
| 'explicitly call it\n' |
| ' to ensure proper deletion of the base class part of ' |
| 'the instance.\n' |
| ' Note that it is possible (though not recommended!) for ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' "__del__()" method to postpone destruction of the ' |
| 'instance by\n' |
| ' creating a new reference to it. It may then be called ' |
| 'at a later\n' |
| ' time when this new reference is deleted. It is not ' |
| 'guaranteed that\n' |
| ' "__del__()" methods are called for objects that still ' |
| 'exist when\n' |
| ' the interpreter exits.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Note: "del x" doesn\'t directly call "x.__del__()" --- ' |
| 'the former\n' |
| ' decrements the reference count for "x" by one, and ' |
| 'the latter is\n' |
| ' only called when "x"\'s reference count reaches ' |
| 'zero. Some common\n' |
| ' situations that may prevent the reference count of ' |
| 'an object from\n' |
| ' going to zero include: circular references between ' |
| 'objects (e.g.,\n' |
| ' a doubly-linked list or a tree data structure with ' |
| 'parent and\n' |
| ' child pointers); a reference to the object on the ' |
| 'stack frame of\n' |
| ' a function that caught an exception (the traceback ' |
| 'stored in\n' |
| ' "sys.exc_traceback" keeps the stack frame alive); or ' |
| 'a reference\n' |
| ' to the object on the stack frame that raised an ' |
| 'unhandled\n' |
| ' exception in interactive mode (the traceback stored ' |
| 'in\n' |
| ' "sys.last_traceback" keeps the stack frame alive). ' |
| 'The first\n' |
| ' situation can only be remedied by explicitly ' |
| 'breaking the cycles;\n' |
| ' the latter two situations can be resolved by storing ' |
| '"None" in\n' |
| ' "sys.exc_traceback" or "sys.last_traceback". ' |
| 'Circular references\n' |
| ' which are garbage are detected when the option cycle ' |
| 'detector is\n' |
| " enabled (it's on by default), but can only be " |
| 'cleaned up if there\n' |
| ' are no Python-level "__del__()" methods involved. ' |
| 'Refer to the\n' |
| ' documentation for the "gc" module for more ' |
| 'information about how\n' |
| ' "__del__()" methods are handled by the cycle ' |
| 'detector,\n' |
| ' particularly the description of the "garbage" ' |
| 'value.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Warning: Due to the precarious circumstances under ' |
| 'which\n' |
| ' "__del__()" methods are invoked, exceptions that ' |
| 'occur during\n' |
| ' their execution are ignored, and a warning is ' |
| 'printed to\n' |
| ' "sys.stderr" instead. Also, when "__del__()" is ' |
| 'invoked in\n' |
| ' response to a module being deleted (e.g., when ' |
| 'execution of the\n' |
| ' program is done), other globals referenced by the ' |
| '"__del__()"\n' |
| ' method may already have been deleted or in the ' |
| 'process of being\n' |
| ' torn down (e.g. the import machinery shutting ' |
| 'down). For this\n' |
| ' reason, "__del__()" methods should do the absolute ' |
| 'minimum needed\n' |
| ' to maintain external invariants. Starting with ' |
| 'version 1.5,\n' |
| ' Python guarantees that globals whose name begins ' |
| 'with a single\n' |
| ' underscore are deleted from their module before ' |
| 'other globals are\n' |
| ' deleted; if no other references to such globals ' |
| 'exist, this may\n' |
| ' help in assuring that imported modules are still ' |
| 'available at the\n' |
| ' time when the "__del__()" method is called.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' See also the "-R" command-line option.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__repr__(self)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called by the "repr()" built-in function and by string ' |
| 'conversions\n' |
| ' (reverse quotes) to compute the "official" string ' |
| 'representation of\n' |
| ' an object. If at all possible, this should look like ' |
| 'a valid\n' |
| ' Python expression that could be used to recreate an ' |
| 'object with the\n' |
| ' same value (given an appropriate environment). If ' |
| 'this is not\n' |
| ' possible, a string of the form "<...some useful ' |
| 'description...>"\n' |
| ' should be returned. The return value must be a string ' |
| 'object. If a\n' |
| ' class defines "__repr__()" but not "__str__()", then ' |
| '"__repr__()"\n' |
| ' is also used when an "informal" string representation ' |
| 'of instances\n' |
| ' of that class is required.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' This is typically used for debugging, so it is ' |
| 'important that the\n' |
| ' representation is information-rich and unambiguous.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__str__(self)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called by the "str()" built-in function and by the ' |
| '"print"\n' |
| ' statement to compute the "informal" string ' |
| 'representation of an\n' |
| ' object. This differs from "__repr__()" in that it ' |
| 'does not have to\n' |
| ' be a valid Python expression: a more convenient or ' |
| 'concise\n' |
| ' representation may be used instead. The return value ' |
| 'must be a\n' |
| ' string object.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__lt__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__le__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__eq__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__ne__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__gt__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__ge__(self, other)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.1.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' These are the so-called "rich comparison" methods, and ' |
| 'are called\n' |
| ' for comparison operators in preference to "__cmp__()" ' |
| 'below. The\n' |
| ' correspondence between operator symbols and method ' |
| 'names is as\n' |
| ' follows: "x<y" calls "x.__lt__(y)", "x<=y" calls ' |
| '"x.__le__(y)",\n' |
| ' "x==y" calls "x.__eq__(y)", "x!=y" and "x<>y" call ' |
| '"x.__ne__(y)",\n' |
| ' "x>y" calls "x.__gt__(y)", and "x>=y" calls ' |
| '"x.__ge__(y)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' A rich comparison method may return the singleton ' |
| '"NotImplemented"\n' |
| ' if it does not implement the operation for a given ' |
| 'pair of\n' |
| ' arguments. By convention, "False" and "True" are ' |
| 'returned for a\n' |
| ' successful comparison. However, these methods can ' |
| 'return any value,\n' |
| ' so if the comparison operator is used in a Boolean ' |
| 'context (e.g.,\n' |
| ' in the condition of an "if" statement), Python will ' |
| 'call "bool()"\n' |
| ' on the value to determine if the result is true or ' |
| 'false.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' There are no implied relationships among the ' |
| 'comparison operators.\n' |
| ' The truth of "x==y" does not imply that "x!=y" is ' |
| 'false.\n' |
| ' Accordingly, when defining "__eq__()", one should also ' |
| 'define\n' |
| ' "__ne__()" so that the operators will behave as ' |
| 'expected. See the\n' |
| ' paragraph on "__hash__()" for some important notes on ' |
| 'creating\n' |
| ' *hashable* objects which support custom comparison ' |
| 'operations and\n' |
| ' are usable as dictionary keys.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' There are no swapped-argument versions of these ' |
| 'methods (to be used\n' |
| ' when the left argument does not support the operation ' |
| 'but the right\n' |
| ' argument does); rather, "__lt__()" and "__gt__()" are ' |
| "each other's\n" |
| ' reflection, "__le__()" and "__ge__()" are each ' |
| "other's reflection,\n" |
| ' and "__eq__()" and "__ne__()" are their own ' |
| 'reflection.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Arguments to rich comparison methods are never ' |
| 'coerced.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' To automatically generate ordering operations from a ' |
| 'single root\n' |
| ' operation, see "functools.total_ordering()".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__cmp__(self, other)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called by comparison operations if rich comparison ' |
| '(see above) is\n' |
| ' not defined. Should return a negative integer if ' |
| '"self < other",\n' |
| ' zero if "self == other", a positive integer if "self > ' |
| 'other". If\n' |
| ' no "__cmp__()", "__eq__()" or "__ne__()" operation is ' |
| 'defined,\n' |
| ' class instances are compared by object identity ' |
| '("address"). See\n' |
| ' also the description of "__hash__()" for some ' |
| 'important notes on\n' |
| ' creating *hashable* objects which support custom ' |
| 'comparison\n' |
| ' operations and are usable as dictionary keys. (Note: ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' restriction that exceptions are not propagated by ' |
| '"__cmp__()" has\n' |
| ' been removed since Python 1.5.)\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__rcmp__(self, other)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.1: No longer supported.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__hash__(self)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called by built-in function "hash()" and for ' |
| 'operations on members\n' |
| ' of hashed collections including "set", "frozenset", ' |
| 'and "dict".\n' |
| ' "__hash__()" should return an integer. The only ' |
| 'required property\n' |
| ' is that objects which compare equal have the same hash ' |
| 'value; it is\n' |
| ' advised to somehow mix together (e.g. using exclusive ' |
| 'or) the hash\n' |
| ' values for the components of the object that also play ' |
| 'a part in\n' |
| ' comparison of objects.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If a class does not define a "__cmp__()" or "__eq__()" ' |
| 'method it\n' |
| ' should not define a "__hash__()" operation either; if ' |
| 'it defines\n' |
| ' "__cmp__()" or "__eq__()" but not "__hash__()", its ' |
| 'instances will\n' |
| ' not be usable in hashed collections. If a class ' |
| 'defines mutable\n' |
| ' objects and implements a "__cmp__()" or "__eq__()" ' |
| 'method, it\n' |
| ' should not implement "__hash__()", since hashable ' |
| 'collection\n' |
| " implementations require that a object's hash value is " |
| 'immutable (if\n' |
| " the object's hash value changes, it will be in the " |
| 'wrong hash\n' |
| ' bucket).\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' User-defined classes have "__cmp__()" and "__hash__()" ' |
| 'methods by\n' |
| ' default; with them, all objects compare unequal ' |
| '(except with\n' |
| ' themselves) and "x.__hash__()" returns a result ' |
| 'derived from\n' |
| ' "id(x)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Classes which inherit a "__hash__()" method from a ' |
| 'parent class but\n' |
| ' change the meaning of "__cmp__()" or "__eq__()" such ' |
| 'that the hash\n' |
| ' value returned is no longer appropriate (e.g. by ' |
| 'switching to a\n' |
| ' value-based concept of equality instead of the default ' |
| 'identity\n' |
| ' based equality) can explicitly flag themselves as ' |
| 'being unhashable\n' |
| ' by setting "__hash__ = None" in the class definition. ' |
| 'Doing so\n' |
| ' means that not only will instances of the class raise ' |
| 'an\n' |
| ' appropriate "TypeError" when a program attempts to ' |
| 'retrieve their\n' |
| ' hash value, but they will also be correctly identified ' |
| 'as\n' |
| ' unhashable when checking "isinstance(obj, ' |
| 'collections.Hashable)"\n' |
| ' (unlike classes which define their own "__hash__()" to ' |
| 'explicitly\n' |
| ' raise "TypeError").\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.5: "__hash__()" may now also ' |
| 'return a long\n' |
| ' integer object; the 32-bit integer is then derived ' |
| 'from the hash of\n' |
| ' that object.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.6: "__hash__" may now be set to ' |
| '"None" to\n' |
| ' explicitly flag instances of a class as unhashable.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__nonzero__(self)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to implement truth value testing and the ' |
| 'built-in operation\n' |
| ' "bool()"; should return "False" or "True", or their ' |
| 'integer\n' |
| ' equivalents "0" or "1". When this method is not ' |
| 'defined,\n' |
| ' "__len__()" is called, if it is defined, and the ' |
| 'object is\n' |
| ' considered true if its result is nonzero. If a class ' |
| 'defines\n' |
| ' neither "__len__()" nor "__nonzero__()", all its ' |
| 'instances are\n' |
| ' considered true.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__unicode__(self)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to implement "unicode()" built-in; should ' |
| 'return a Unicode\n' |
| ' object. When this method is not defined, string ' |
| 'conversion is\n' |
| ' attempted, and the result of string conversion is ' |
| 'converted to\n' |
| ' Unicode using the system default encoding.\n', |
| 'debugger': '\n' |
| '"pdb" --- The Python Debugger\n' |
| '*****************************\n' |
| '\n' |
| '**Source code:** Lib/pdb.py\n' |
| '\n' |
| '======================================================================\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The module "pdb" defines an interactive source code debugger ' |
| 'for\n' |
| 'Python programs. It supports setting (conditional) ' |
| 'breakpoints and\n' |
| 'single stepping at the source line level, inspection of stack ' |
| 'frames,\n' |
| 'source code listing, and evaluation of arbitrary Python code ' |
| 'in the\n' |
| 'context of any stack frame. It also supports post-mortem ' |
| 'debugging\n' |
| 'and can be called under program control.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The debugger is extensible --- it is actually defined as the ' |
| 'class\n' |
| '"Pdb". This is currently undocumented but easily understood by ' |
| 'reading\n' |
| 'the source. The extension interface uses the modules "bdb" ' |
| 'and "cmd".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The debugger\'s prompt is "(Pdb)". Typical usage to run a ' |
| 'program under\n' |
| 'control of the debugger is:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> import pdb\n' |
| ' >>> import mymodule\n' |
| " >>> pdb.run('mymodule.test()')\n" |
| ' > <string>(0)?()\n' |
| ' (Pdb) continue\n' |
| ' > <string>(1)?()\n' |
| ' (Pdb) continue\n' |
| " NameError: 'spam'\n" |
| ' > <string>(1)?()\n' |
| ' (Pdb)\n' |
| '\n' |
| '"pdb.py" can also be invoked as a script to debug other ' |
| 'scripts. For\n' |
| 'example:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' python -m pdb myscript.py\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'When invoked as a script, pdb will automatically enter ' |
| 'post-mortem\n' |
| 'debugging if the program being debugged exits abnormally. ' |
| 'After post-\n' |
| 'mortem debugging (or after normal exit of the program), pdb ' |
| 'will\n' |
| "restart the program. Automatic restarting preserves pdb's " |
| 'state (such\n' |
| 'as breakpoints) and in most cases is more useful than quitting ' |
| 'the\n' |
| "debugger upon program's exit.\n" |
| '\n' |
| 'New in version 2.4: Restarting post-mortem behavior added.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The typical usage to break into the debugger from a running ' |
| 'program is\n' |
| 'to insert\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' import pdb; pdb.set_trace()\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'at the location you want to break into the debugger. You can ' |
| 'then\n' |
| 'step through the code following this statement, and continue ' |
| 'running\n' |
| 'without the debugger using the "c" command.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The typical usage to inspect a crashed program is:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> import pdb\n' |
| ' >>> import mymodule\n' |
| ' >>> mymodule.test()\n' |
| ' Traceback (most recent call last):\n' |
| ' File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?\n' |
| ' File "./mymodule.py", line 4, in test\n' |
| ' test2()\n' |
| ' File "./mymodule.py", line 3, in test2\n' |
| ' print spam\n' |
| ' NameError: spam\n' |
| ' >>> pdb.pm()\n' |
| ' > ./mymodule.py(3)test2()\n' |
| ' -> print spam\n' |
| ' (Pdb)\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The module defines the following functions; each enters the ' |
| 'debugger\n' |
| 'in a slightly different way:\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'pdb.run(statement[, globals[, locals]])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Execute the *statement* (given as a string) under debugger ' |
| 'control.\n' |
| ' The debugger prompt appears before any code is executed; ' |
| 'you can\n' |
| ' set breakpoints and type "continue", or you can step ' |
| 'through the\n' |
| ' statement using "step" or "next" (all these commands are ' |
| 'explained\n' |
| ' below). The optional *globals* and *locals* arguments ' |
| 'specify the\n' |
| ' environment in which the code is executed; by default the\n' |
| ' dictionary of the module "__main__" is used. (See the ' |
| 'explanation\n' |
| ' of the "exec" statement or the "eval()" built-in ' |
| 'function.)\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'pdb.runeval(expression[, globals[, locals]])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Evaluate the *expression* (given as a string) under ' |
| 'debugger\n' |
| ' control. When "runeval()" returns, it returns the value of ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' expression. Otherwise this function is similar to ' |
| '"run()".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'pdb.runcall(function[, argument, ...])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Call the *function* (a function or method object, not a ' |
| 'string)\n' |
| ' with the given arguments. When "runcall()" returns, it ' |
| 'returns\n' |
| ' whatever the function call returned. The debugger prompt ' |
| 'appears\n' |
| ' as soon as the function is entered.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'pdb.set_trace()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Enter the debugger at the calling stack frame. This is ' |
| 'useful to\n' |
| ' hard-code a breakpoint at a given point in a program, even ' |
| 'if the\n' |
| ' code is not otherwise being debugged (e.g. when an ' |
| 'assertion\n' |
| ' fails).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'pdb.post_mortem([traceback])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Enter post-mortem debugging of the given *traceback* ' |
| 'object. If no\n' |
| ' *traceback* is given, it uses the one of the exception that ' |
| 'is\n' |
| ' currently being handled (an exception must be being handled ' |
| 'if the\n' |
| ' default is to be used).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'pdb.pm()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Enter post-mortem debugging of the traceback found in\n' |
| ' "sys.last_traceback".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "run*" functions and "set_trace()" are aliases for ' |
| 'instantiating\n' |
| 'the "Pdb" class and calling the method of the same name. If ' |
| 'you want\n' |
| 'to access further features, you have to do this yourself:\n' |
| '\n' |
| "class class pdb.Pdb(completekey='tab', stdin=None, " |
| 'stdout=None, skip=None)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' "Pdb" is the debugger class.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' The *completekey*, *stdin* and *stdout* arguments are ' |
| 'passed to the\n' |
| ' underlying "cmd.Cmd" class; see the description there.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' The *skip* argument, if given, must be an iterable of ' |
| 'glob-style\n' |
| ' module name patterns. The debugger will not step into ' |
| 'frames that\n' |
| ' originate in a module that matches one of these patterns. ' |
| '[1]\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Example call to enable tracing with *skip*:\n' |
| '\n' |
| " import pdb; pdb.Pdb(skip=['django.*']).set_trace()\n" |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.7: The *skip* argument.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' run(statement[, globals[, locals]])\n' |
| ' runeval(expression[, globals[, locals]])\n' |
| ' runcall(function[, argument, ...])\n' |
| ' set_trace()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' See the documentation for the functions explained ' |
| 'above.\n', |
| 'del': '\n' |
| 'The "del" statement\n' |
| '*******************\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' del_stmt ::= "del" target_list\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Deletion is recursively defined very similar to the way assignment ' |
| 'is\n' |
| 'defined. Rather than spelling it out in full details, here are ' |
| 'some\n' |
| 'hints.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Deletion of a target list recursively deletes each target, from ' |
| 'left\n' |
| 'to right.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Deletion of a name removes the binding of that name from the local ' |
| 'or\n' |
| 'global namespace, depending on whether the name occurs in a ' |
| '"global"\n' |
| 'statement in the same code block. If the name is unbound, a\n' |
| '"NameError" exception will be raised.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'It is illegal to delete a name from the local namespace if it ' |
| 'occurs\n' |
| 'as a free variable in a nested block.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Deletion of attribute references, subscriptions and slicings is ' |
| 'passed\n' |
| 'to the primary object involved; deletion of a slicing is in ' |
| 'general\n' |
| 'equivalent to assignment of an empty slice of the right type (but ' |
| 'even\n' |
| 'this is determined by the sliced object).\n', |
| 'dict': '\n' |
| 'Dictionary displays\n' |
| '*******************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A dictionary display is a possibly empty series of key/datum ' |
| 'pairs\n' |
| 'enclosed in curly braces:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' dict_display ::= "{" [key_datum_list | ' |
| 'dict_comprehension] "}"\n' |
| ' key_datum_list ::= key_datum ("," key_datum)* [","]\n' |
| ' key_datum ::= expression ":" expression\n' |
| ' dict_comprehension ::= expression ":" expression comp_for\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A dictionary display yields a new dictionary object.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If a comma-separated sequence of key/datum pairs is given, they ' |
| 'are\n' |
| 'evaluated from left to right to define the entries of the ' |
| 'dictionary:\n' |
| 'each key object is used as a key into the dictionary to store the\n' |
| 'corresponding datum. This means that you can specify the same ' |
| 'key\n' |
| "multiple times in the key/datum list, and the final dictionary's " |
| 'value\n' |
| 'for that key will be the last one given.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A dict comprehension, in contrast to list and set comprehensions,\n' |
| 'needs two expressions separated with a colon followed by the ' |
| 'usual\n' |
| '"for" and "if" clauses. When the comprehension is run, the ' |
| 'resulting\n' |
| 'key and value elements are inserted in the new dictionary in the ' |
| 'order\n' |
| 'they are produced.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Restrictions on the types of the key values are listed earlier in\n' |
| 'section The standard type hierarchy. (To summarize, the key type\n' |
| 'should be *hashable*, which excludes all mutable objects.) ' |
| 'Clashes\n' |
| 'between duplicate keys are not detected; the last datum ' |
| '(textually\n' |
| 'rightmost in the display) stored for a given key value prevails.\n', |
| 'dynamic-features': '\n' |
| 'Interaction with dynamic features\n' |
| '*********************************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'There are several cases where Python statements are ' |
| 'illegal when used\n' |
| 'in conjunction with nested scopes that contain free ' |
| 'variables.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If a variable is referenced in an enclosing scope, it ' |
| 'is illegal to\n' |
| 'delete the name. An error will be reported at compile ' |
| 'time.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If the wild card form of import --- "import *" --- is ' |
| 'used in a\n' |
| 'function and the function contains or is a nested ' |
| 'block with free\n' |
| 'variables, the compiler will raise a "SyntaxError".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If "exec" is used in a function and the function ' |
| 'contains or is a\n' |
| 'nested block with free variables, the compiler will ' |
| 'raise a\n' |
| '"SyntaxError" unless the exec explicitly specifies the ' |
| 'local namespace\n' |
| 'for the "exec". (In other words, "exec obj" would be ' |
| 'illegal, but\n' |
| '"exec obj in ns" would be legal.)\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "eval()", "execfile()", and "input()" functions ' |
| 'and the "exec"\n' |
| 'statement do not have access to the full environment ' |
| 'for resolving\n' |
| 'names. Names may be resolved in the local and global ' |
| 'namespaces of\n' |
| 'the caller. Free variables are not resolved in the ' |
| 'nearest enclosing\n' |
| 'namespace, but in the global namespace. [1] The "exec" ' |
| 'statement and\n' |
| 'the "eval()" and "execfile()" functions have optional ' |
| 'arguments to\n' |
| 'override the global and local namespace. If only one ' |
| 'namespace is\n' |
| 'specified, it is used for both.\n', |
| 'else': '\n' |
| 'The "if" statement\n' |
| '******************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "if" statement is used for conditional execution:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' if_stmt ::= "if" expression ":" suite\n' |
| ' ( "elif" expression ":" suite )*\n' |
| ' ["else" ":" suite]\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'It selects exactly one of the suites by evaluating the expressions ' |
| 'one\n' |
| 'by one until one is found to be true (see section Boolean ' |
| 'operations\n' |
| 'for the definition of true and false); then that suite is ' |
| 'executed\n' |
| '(and no other part of the "if" statement is executed or ' |
| 'evaluated).\n' |
| 'If all expressions are false, the suite of the "else" clause, if\n' |
| 'present, is executed.\n', |
| 'exceptions': '\n' |
| 'Exceptions\n' |
| '**********\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Exceptions are a means of breaking out of the normal flow of ' |
| 'control\n' |
| 'of a code block in order to handle errors or other ' |
| 'exceptional\n' |
| 'conditions. An exception is *raised* at the point where the ' |
| 'error is\n' |
| 'detected; it may be *handled* by the surrounding code block ' |
| 'or by any\n' |
| 'code block that directly or indirectly invoked the code ' |
| 'block where\n' |
| 'the error occurred.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The Python interpreter raises an exception when it detects a ' |
| 'run-time\n' |
| 'error (such as division by zero). A Python program can ' |
| 'also\n' |
| 'explicitly raise an exception with the "raise" statement. ' |
| 'Exception\n' |
| 'handlers are specified with the "try" ... "except" ' |
| 'statement. The\n' |
| '"finally" clause of such a statement can be used to specify ' |
| 'cleanup\n' |
| 'code which does not handle the exception, but is executed ' |
| 'whether an\n' |
| 'exception occurred or not in the preceding code.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Python uses the "termination" model of error handling: an ' |
| 'exception\n' |
| 'handler can find out what happened and continue execution at ' |
| 'an outer\n' |
| 'level, but it cannot repair the cause of the error and retry ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'failing operation (except by re-entering the offending piece ' |
| 'of code\n' |
| 'from the top).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'When an exception is not handled at all, the interpreter ' |
| 'terminates\n' |
| 'execution of the program, or returns to its interactive main ' |
| 'loop. In\n' |
| 'either case, it prints a stack backtrace, except when the ' |
| 'exception is\n' |
| '"SystemExit".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Exceptions are identified by class instances. The "except" ' |
| 'clause is\n' |
| 'selected depending on the class of the instance: it must ' |
| 'reference the\n' |
| 'class of the instance or a base class thereof. The instance ' |
| 'can be\n' |
| 'received by the handler and can carry additional information ' |
| 'about the\n' |
| 'exceptional condition.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Exceptions can also be identified by strings, in which case ' |
| 'the\n' |
| '"except" clause is selected by object identity. An ' |
| 'arbitrary value\n' |
| 'can be raised along with the identifying string which can be ' |
| 'passed to\n' |
| 'the handler.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Note: Messages to exceptions are not part of the Python ' |
| 'API. Their\n' |
| ' contents may change from one version of Python to the next ' |
| 'without\n' |
| ' warning and should not be relied on by code which will run ' |
| 'under\n' |
| ' multiple versions of the interpreter.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'See also the description of the "try" statement in section ' |
| 'The try\n' |
| 'statement and "raise" statement in section The raise ' |
| 'statement.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '-[ Footnotes ]-\n' |
| '\n' |
| '[1] This limitation occurs because the code that is executed ' |
| 'by\n' |
| ' these operations is not available at the time the module ' |
| 'is\n' |
| ' compiled.\n', |
| 'exec': '\n' |
| 'The "exec" statement\n' |
| '********************\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' exec_stmt ::= "exec" or_expr ["in" expression ["," ' |
| 'expression]]\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'This statement supports dynamic execution of Python code. The ' |
| 'first\n' |
| 'expression should evaluate to either a Unicode string, a ' |
| '*Latin-1*\n' |
| 'encoded string, an open file object, a code object, or a tuple. ' |
| 'If it\n' |
| 'is a string, the string is parsed as a suite of Python statements\n' |
| 'which is then executed (unless a syntax error occurs). [1] If it ' |
| 'is an\n' |
| 'open file, the file is parsed until EOF and executed. If it is a ' |
| 'code\n' |
| 'object, it is simply executed. For the interpretation of a tuple, ' |
| 'see\n' |
| "below. In all cases, the code that's executed is expected to be " |
| 'valid\n' |
| 'as file input (see section File input). Be aware that the ' |
| '"return"\n' |
| 'and "yield" statements may not be used outside of function ' |
| 'definitions\n' |
| 'even within the context of code passed to the "exec" statement.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'In all cases, if the optional parts are omitted, the code is ' |
| 'executed\n' |
| 'in the current scope. If only the first expression after "in" is\n' |
| 'specified, it should be a dictionary, which will be used for both ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'global and the local variables. If two expressions are given, ' |
| 'they\n' |
| 'are used for the global and local variables, respectively. If\n' |
| 'provided, *locals* can be any mapping object. Remember that at ' |
| 'module\n' |
| 'level, globals and locals are the same dictionary. If two ' |
| 'separate\n' |
| 'objects are given as *globals* and *locals*, the code will be ' |
| 'executed\n' |
| 'as if it were embedded in a class definition.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The first expression may also be a tuple of length 2 or 3. In ' |
| 'this\n' |
| 'case, the optional parts must be omitted. The form "exec(expr,\n' |
| 'globals)" is equivalent to "exec expr in globals", while the form\n' |
| '"exec(expr, globals, locals)" is equivalent to "exec expr in ' |
| 'globals,\n' |
| 'locals". The tuple form of "exec" provides compatibility with ' |
| 'Python\n' |
| '3, where "exec" is a function rather than a statement.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Changed in version 2.4: Formerly, *locals* was required to be a\n' |
| 'dictionary.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'As a side effect, an implementation may insert additional keys ' |
| 'into\n' |
| 'the dictionaries given besides those corresponding to variable ' |
| 'names\n' |
| 'set by the executed code. For example, the current implementation ' |
| 'may\n' |
| 'add a reference to the dictionary of the built-in module ' |
| '"__builtin__"\n' |
| 'under the key "__builtins__" (!).\n' |
| '\n' |
| "**Programmer's hints:** dynamic evaluation of expressions is " |
| 'supported\n' |
| 'by the built-in function "eval()". The built-in functions ' |
| '"globals()"\n' |
| 'and "locals()" return the current global and local dictionary,\n' |
| 'respectively, which may be useful to pass around for use by ' |
| '"exec".\n' |
| '\n' |
| '-[ Footnotes ]-\n' |
| '\n' |
| '[1] Note that the parser only accepts the Unix-style end of line\n' |
| ' convention. If you are reading the code from a file, make sure ' |
| 'to\n' |
| ' use *universal newlines* mode to convert Windows or Mac-style\n' |
| ' newlines.\n', |
| 'execmodel': '\n' |
| 'Execution model\n' |
| '***************\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Naming and binding\n' |
| '==================\n' |
| '\n' |
| '*Names* refer to objects. Names are introduced by name ' |
| 'binding\n' |
| 'operations. Each occurrence of a name in the program text ' |
| 'refers to\n' |
| 'the *binding* of that name established in the innermost ' |
| 'function block\n' |
| 'containing the use.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A *block* is a piece of Python program text that is executed ' |
| 'as a\n' |
| 'unit. The following are blocks: a module, a function body, ' |
| 'and a class\n' |
| 'definition. Each command typed interactively is a block. A ' |
| 'script\n' |
| 'file (a file given as standard input to the interpreter or ' |
| 'specified\n' |
| 'on the interpreter command line the first argument) is a code ' |
| 'block.\n' |
| 'A script command (a command specified on the interpreter ' |
| 'command line\n' |
| "with the '**-c**' option) is a code block. The file read by " |
| 'the\n' |
| 'built-in function "execfile()" is a code block. The string ' |
| 'argument\n' |
| 'passed to the built-in function "eval()" and to the "exec" ' |
| 'statement\n' |
| 'is a code block. The expression read and evaluated by the ' |
| 'built-in\n' |
| 'function "input()" is a code block.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A code block is executed in an *execution frame*. A frame ' |
| 'contains\n' |
| 'some administrative information (used for debugging) and ' |
| 'determines\n' |
| "where and how execution continues after the code block's " |
| 'execution has\n' |
| 'completed.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A *scope* defines the visibility of a name within a block. ' |
| 'If a local\n' |
| 'variable is defined in a block, its scope includes that ' |
| 'block. If the\n' |
| 'definition occurs in a function block, the scope extends to ' |
| 'any blocks\n' |
| 'contained within the defining one, unless a contained block ' |
| 'introduces\n' |
| 'a different binding for the name. The scope of names defined ' |
| 'in a\n' |
| 'class block is limited to the class block; it does not extend ' |
| 'to the\n' |
| 'code blocks of methods -- this includes generator expressions ' |
| 'since\n' |
| 'they are implemented using a function scope. This means that ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'following will fail:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' class A:\n' |
| ' a = 42\n' |
| ' b = list(a + i for i in range(10))\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'When a name is used in a code block, it is resolved using the ' |
| 'nearest\n' |
| 'enclosing scope. The set of all such scopes visible to a ' |
| 'code block\n' |
| "is called the block's *environment*.\n" |
| '\n' |
| 'If a name is bound in a block, it is a local variable of that ' |
| 'block.\n' |
| 'If a name is bound at the module level, it is a global ' |
| 'variable. (The\n' |
| 'variables of the module code block are local and global.) If ' |
| 'a\n' |
| 'variable is used in a code block but not defined there, it is ' |
| 'a *free\n' |
| 'variable*.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'When a name is not found at all, a "NameError" exception is ' |
| 'raised.\n' |
| 'If the name refers to a local variable that has not been ' |
| 'bound, a\n' |
| '"UnboundLocalError" exception is raised. "UnboundLocalError" ' |
| 'is a\n' |
| 'subclass of "NameError".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The following constructs bind names: formal parameters to ' |
| 'functions,\n' |
| '"import" statements, class and function definitions (these ' |
| 'bind the\n' |
| 'class or function name in the defining block), and targets ' |
| 'that are\n' |
| 'identifiers if occurring in an assignment, "for" loop header, ' |
| 'in the\n' |
| 'second position of an "except" clause header or after "as" in ' |
| 'a "with"\n' |
| 'statement. The "import" statement of the form "from ... ' |
| 'import *"\n' |
| 'binds all names defined in the imported module, except those ' |
| 'beginning\n' |
| 'with an underscore. This form may only be used at the module ' |
| 'level.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A target occurring in a "del" statement is also considered ' |
| 'bound for\n' |
| 'this purpose (though the actual semantics are to unbind the ' |
| 'name). It\n' |
| 'is illegal to unbind a name that is referenced by an ' |
| 'enclosing scope;\n' |
| 'the compiler will report a "SyntaxError".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Each assignment or import statement occurs within a block ' |
| 'defined by a\n' |
| 'class or function definition or at the module level (the ' |
| 'top-level\n' |
| 'code block).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If a name binding operation occurs anywhere within a code ' |
| 'block, all\n' |
| 'uses of the name within the block are treated as references ' |
| 'to the\n' |
| 'current block. This can lead to errors when a name is used ' |
| 'within a\n' |
| 'block before it is bound. This rule is subtle. Python lacks\n' |
| 'declarations and allows name binding operations to occur ' |
| 'anywhere\n' |
| 'within a code block. The local variables of a code block can ' |
| 'be\n' |
| 'determined by scanning the entire text of the block for name ' |
| 'binding\n' |
| 'operations.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If the global statement occurs within a block, all uses of ' |
| 'the name\n' |
| 'specified in the statement refer to the binding of that name ' |
| 'in the\n' |
| 'top-level namespace. Names are resolved in the top-level ' |
| 'namespace by\n' |
| 'searching the global namespace, i.e. the namespace of the ' |
| 'module\n' |
| 'containing the code block, and the builtins namespace, the ' |
| 'namespace\n' |
| 'of the module "__builtin__". The global namespace is ' |
| 'searched first.\n' |
| 'If the name is not found there, the builtins namespace is ' |
| 'searched.\n' |
| 'The global statement must precede all uses of the name.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The builtins namespace associated with the execution of a ' |
| 'code block\n' |
| 'is actually found by looking up the name "__builtins__" in ' |
| 'its global\n' |
| 'namespace; this should be a dictionary or a module (in the ' |
| 'latter case\n' |
| "the module's dictionary is used). By default, when in the " |
| '"__main__"\n' |
| 'module, "__builtins__" is the built-in module "__builtin__" ' |
| '(note: no\n' |
| '\'s\'); when in any other module, "__builtins__" is an alias ' |
| 'for the\n' |
| 'dictionary of the "__builtin__" module itself. ' |
| '"__builtins__" can be\n' |
| 'set to a user-created dictionary to create a weak form of ' |
| 'restricted\n' |
| 'execution.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '**CPython implementation detail:** Users should not touch\n' |
| '"__builtins__"; it is strictly an implementation detail. ' |
| 'Users\n' |
| 'wanting to override values in the builtins namespace should ' |
| '"import"\n' |
| 'the "__builtin__" (no \'s\') module and modify its ' |
| 'attributes\n' |
| 'appropriately.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The namespace for a module is automatically created the first ' |
| 'time a\n' |
| 'module is imported. The main module for a script is always ' |
| 'called\n' |
| '"__main__".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "global" statement has the same scope as a name binding ' |
| 'operation\n' |
| 'in the same block. If the nearest enclosing scope for a free ' |
| 'variable\n' |
| 'contains a global statement, the free variable is treated as ' |
| 'a global.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A class definition is an executable statement that may use ' |
| 'and define\n' |
| 'names. These references follow the normal rules for name ' |
| 'resolution.\n' |
| 'The namespace of the class definition becomes the attribute ' |
| 'dictionary\n' |
| 'of the class. Names defined at the class scope are not ' |
| 'visible in\n' |
| 'methods.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Interaction with dynamic features\n' |
| '---------------------------------\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'There are several cases where Python statements are illegal ' |
| 'when used\n' |
| 'in conjunction with nested scopes that contain free ' |
| 'variables.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If a variable is referenced in an enclosing scope, it is ' |
| 'illegal to\n' |
| 'delete the name. An error will be reported at compile time.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If the wild card form of import --- "import *" --- is used in ' |
| 'a\n' |
| 'function and the function contains or is a nested block with ' |
| 'free\n' |
| 'variables, the compiler will raise a "SyntaxError".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If "exec" is used in a function and the function contains or ' |
| 'is a\n' |
| 'nested block with free variables, the compiler will raise a\n' |
| '"SyntaxError" unless the exec explicitly specifies the local ' |
| 'namespace\n' |
| 'for the "exec". (In other words, "exec obj" would be ' |
| 'illegal, but\n' |
| '"exec obj in ns" would be legal.)\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "eval()", "execfile()", and "input()" functions and the ' |
| '"exec"\n' |
| 'statement do not have access to the full environment for ' |
| 'resolving\n' |
| 'names. Names may be resolved in the local and global ' |
| 'namespaces of\n' |
| 'the caller. Free variables are not resolved in the nearest ' |
| 'enclosing\n' |
| 'namespace, but in the global namespace. [1] The "exec" ' |
| 'statement and\n' |
| 'the "eval()" and "execfile()" functions have optional ' |
| 'arguments to\n' |
| 'override the global and local namespace. If only one ' |
| 'namespace is\n' |
| 'specified, it is used for both.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Exceptions\n' |
| '==========\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Exceptions are a means of breaking out of the normal flow of ' |
| 'control\n' |
| 'of a code block in order to handle errors or other ' |
| 'exceptional\n' |
| 'conditions. An exception is *raised* at the point where the ' |
| 'error is\n' |
| 'detected; it may be *handled* by the surrounding code block ' |
| 'or by any\n' |
| 'code block that directly or indirectly invoked the code block ' |
| 'where\n' |
| 'the error occurred.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The Python interpreter raises an exception when it detects a ' |
| 'run-time\n' |
| 'error (such as division by zero). A Python program can also\n' |
| 'explicitly raise an exception with the "raise" statement. ' |
| 'Exception\n' |
| 'handlers are specified with the "try" ... "except" ' |
| 'statement. The\n' |
| '"finally" clause of such a statement can be used to specify ' |
| 'cleanup\n' |
| 'code which does not handle the exception, but is executed ' |
| 'whether an\n' |
| 'exception occurred or not in the preceding code.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Python uses the "termination" model of error handling: an ' |
| 'exception\n' |
| 'handler can find out what happened and continue execution at ' |
| 'an outer\n' |
| 'level, but it cannot repair the cause of the error and retry ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'failing operation (except by re-entering the offending piece ' |
| 'of code\n' |
| 'from the top).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'When an exception is not handled at all, the interpreter ' |
| 'terminates\n' |
| 'execution of the program, or returns to its interactive main ' |
| 'loop. In\n' |
| 'either case, it prints a stack backtrace, except when the ' |
| 'exception is\n' |
| '"SystemExit".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Exceptions are identified by class instances. The "except" ' |
| 'clause is\n' |
| 'selected depending on the class of the instance: it must ' |
| 'reference the\n' |
| 'class of the instance or a base class thereof. The instance ' |
| 'can be\n' |
| 'received by the handler and can carry additional information ' |
| 'about the\n' |
| 'exceptional condition.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Exceptions can also be identified by strings, in which case ' |
| 'the\n' |
| '"except" clause is selected by object identity. An arbitrary ' |
| 'value\n' |
| 'can be raised along with the identifying string which can be ' |
| 'passed to\n' |
| 'the handler.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Note: Messages to exceptions are not part of the Python API. ' |
| 'Their\n' |
| ' contents may change from one version of Python to the next ' |
| 'without\n' |
| ' warning and should not be relied on by code which will run ' |
| 'under\n' |
| ' multiple versions of the interpreter.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'See also the description of the "try" statement in section ' |
| 'The try\n' |
| 'statement and "raise" statement in section The raise ' |
| 'statement.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '-[ Footnotes ]-\n' |
| '\n' |
| '[1] This limitation occurs because the code that is executed ' |
| 'by\n' |
| ' these operations is not available at the time the module ' |
| 'is\n' |
| ' compiled.\n', |
| 'exprlists': '\n' |
| 'Expression lists\n' |
| '****************\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' expression_list ::= expression ( "," expression )* [","]\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'An expression list containing at least one comma yields a ' |
| 'tuple. The\n' |
| 'length of the tuple is the number of expressions in the ' |
| 'list. The\n' |
| 'expressions are evaluated from left to right.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The trailing comma is required only to create a single tuple ' |
| '(a.k.a. a\n' |
| '*singleton*); it is optional in all other cases. A single ' |
| 'expression\n' |
| "without a trailing comma doesn't create a tuple, but rather " |
| 'yields the\n' |
| 'value of that expression. (To create an empty tuple, use an ' |
| 'empty pair\n' |
| 'of parentheses: "()".)\n', |
| 'floating': '\n' |
| 'Floating point literals\n' |
| '***********************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Floating point literals are described by the following ' |
| 'lexical\n' |
| 'definitions:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' floatnumber ::= pointfloat | exponentfloat\n' |
| ' pointfloat ::= [intpart] fraction | intpart "."\n' |
| ' exponentfloat ::= (intpart | pointfloat) exponent\n' |
| ' intpart ::= digit+\n' |
| ' fraction ::= "." digit+\n' |
| ' exponent ::= ("e" | "E") ["+" | "-"] digit+\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Note that the integer and exponent parts of floating point ' |
| 'numbers can\n' |
| 'look like octal integers, but are interpreted using radix 10. ' |
| 'For\n' |
| 'example, "077e010" is legal, and denotes the same number as ' |
| '"77e10".\n' |
| 'The allowed range of floating point literals is ' |
| 'implementation-\n' |
| 'dependent. Some examples of floating point literals:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' 3.14 10. .001 1e100 3.14e-10 0e0\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Note that numeric literals do not include a sign; a phrase ' |
| 'like "-1"\n' |
| 'is actually an expression composed of the unary operator "-" ' |
| 'and the\n' |
| 'literal "1".\n', |
| 'for': '\n' |
| 'The "for" statement\n' |
| '*******************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "for" statement is used to iterate over the elements of a ' |
| 'sequence\n' |
| '(such as a string, tuple or list) or other iterable object:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' for_stmt ::= "for" target_list "in" expression_list ":" suite\n' |
| ' ["else" ":" suite]\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The expression list is evaluated once; it should yield an iterable\n' |
| 'object. An iterator is created for the result of the\n' |
| '"expression_list". The suite is then executed once for each item\n' |
| 'provided by the iterator, in the order of ascending indices. Each\n' |
| 'item in turn is assigned to the target list using the standard ' |
| 'rules\n' |
| 'for assignments, and then the suite is executed. When the items ' |
| 'are\n' |
| 'exhausted (which is immediately when the sequence is empty), the ' |
| 'suite\n' |
| 'in the "else" clause, if present, is executed, and the loop\n' |
| 'terminates.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A "break" statement executed in the first suite terminates the ' |
| 'loop\n' |
| 'without executing the "else" clause\'s suite. A "continue" ' |
| 'statement\n' |
| 'executed in the first suite skips the rest of the suite and ' |
| 'continues\n' |
| 'with the next item, or with the "else" clause if there was no next\n' |
| 'item.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The suite may assign to the variable(s) in the target list; this ' |
| 'does\n' |
| 'not affect the next item assigned to it.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The target list is not deleted when the loop is finished, but if ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'sequence is empty, it will not have been assigned to at all by the\n' |
| 'loop. Hint: the built-in function "range()" returns a sequence of\n' |
| 'integers suitable to emulate the effect of Pascal\'s "for i := a to ' |
| 'b\n' |
| 'do"; e.g., "range(3)" returns the list "[0, 1, 2]".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Note: There is a subtlety when the sequence is being modified by ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' loop (this can only occur for mutable sequences, i.e. lists). An\n' |
| ' internal counter is used to keep track of which item is used ' |
| 'next,\n' |
| ' and this is incremented on each iteration. When this counter ' |
| 'has\n' |
| ' reached the length of the sequence the loop terminates. This ' |
| 'means\n' |
| ' that if the suite deletes the current (or a previous) item from ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' sequence, the next item will be skipped (since it gets the index ' |
| 'of\n' |
| ' the current item which has already been treated). Likewise, if ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' suite inserts an item in the sequence before the current item, ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' current item will be treated again the next time through the ' |
| 'loop.\n' |
| ' This can lead to nasty bugs that can be avoided by making a\n' |
| ' temporary copy using a slice of the whole sequence, e.g.,\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' for x in a[:]:\n' |
| ' if x < 0: a.remove(x)\n', |
| 'formatstrings': '\n' |
| 'Format String Syntax\n' |
| '********************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "str.format()" method and the "Formatter" class share ' |
| 'the same\n' |
| 'syntax for format strings (although in the case of ' |
| '"Formatter",\n' |
| 'subclasses can define their own format string syntax).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Format strings contain "replacement fields" surrounded by ' |
| 'curly braces\n' |
| '"{}". Anything that is not contained in braces is ' |
| 'considered literal\n' |
| 'text, which is copied unchanged to the output. If you ' |
| 'need to include\n' |
| 'a brace character in the literal text, it can be escaped ' |
| 'by doubling:\n' |
| '"{{" and "}}".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The grammar for a replacement field is as follows:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' replacement_field ::= "{" [field_name] ["!" ' |
| 'conversion] [":" format_spec] "}"\n' |
| ' field_name ::= arg_name ("." attribute_name ' |
| '| "[" element_index "]")*\n' |
| ' arg_name ::= [identifier | integer]\n' |
| ' attribute_name ::= identifier\n' |
| ' element_index ::= integer | index_string\n' |
| ' index_string ::= <any source character except ' |
| '"]"> +\n' |
| ' conversion ::= "r" | "s"\n' |
| ' format_spec ::= <described in the next ' |
| 'section>\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'In less formal terms, the replacement field can start ' |
| 'with a\n' |
| '*field_name* that specifies the object whose value is to ' |
| 'be formatted\n' |
| 'and inserted into the output instead of the replacement ' |
| 'field. The\n' |
| '*field_name* is optionally followed by a *conversion* ' |
| 'field, which is\n' |
| 'preceded by an exclamation point "\'!\'", and a ' |
| '*format_spec*, which is\n' |
| 'preceded by a colon "\':\'". These specify a non-default ' |
| 'format for the\n' |
| 'replacement value.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'See also the Format Specification Mini-Language section.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The *field_name* itself begins with an *arg_name* that is ' |
| 'either a\n' |
| "number or a keyword. If it's a number, it refers to a " |
| 'positional\n' |
| "argument, and if it's a keyword, it refers to a named " |
| 'keyword\n' |
| 'argument. If the numerical arg_names in a format string ' |
| 'are 0, 1, 2,\n' |
| '... in sequence, they can all be omitted (not just some) ' |
| 'and the\n' |
| 'numbers 0, 1, 2, ... will be automatically inserted in ' |
| 'that order.\n' |
| 'Because *arg_name* is not quote-delimited, it is not ' |
| 'possible to\n' |
| 'specify arbitrary dictionary keys (e.g., the strings ' |
| '"\'10\'" or\n' |
| '"\':-]\'") within a format string. The *arg_name* can be ' |
| 'followed by any\n' |
| 'number of index or attribute expressions. An expression ' |
| 'of the form\n' |
| '"\'.name\'" selects the named attribute using ' |
| '"getattr()", while an\n' |
| 'expression of the form "\'[index]\'" does an index lookup ' |
| 'using\n' |
| '"__getitem__()".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Changed in version 2.7: The positional argument ' |
| 'specifiers can be\n' |
| 'omitted, so "\'{} {}\'" is equivalent to "\'{0} {1}\'".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Some simple format string examples:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' "First, thou shalt count to {0}" # References first ' |
| 'positional argument\n' |
| ' "Bring me a {}" # Implicitly ' |
| 'references the first positional argument\n' |
| ' "From {} to {}" # Same as "From {0} ' |
| 'to {1}"\n' |
| ' "My quest is {name}" # References keyword ' |
| "argument 'name'\n" |
| ' "Weight in tons {0.weight}" # \'weight\' ' |
| 'attribute of first positional arg\n' |
| ' "Units destroyed: {players[0]}" # First element of ' |
| "keyword argument 'players'.\n" |
| '\n' |
| 'The *conversion* field causes a type coercion before ' |
| 'formatting.\n' |
| 'Normally, the job of formatting a value is done by the ' |
| '"__format__()"\n' |
| 'method of the value itself. However, in some cases it is ' |
| 'desirable to\n' |
| 'force a type to be formatted as a string, overriding its ' |
| 'own\n' |
| 'definition of formatting. By converting the value to a ' |
| 'string before\n' |
| 'calling "__format__()", the normal formatting logic is ' |
| 'bypassed.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Two conversion flags are currently supported: "\'!s\'" ' |
| 'which calls\n' |
| '"str()" on the value, and "\'!r\'" which calls "repr()".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Some examples:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' "Harold\'s a clever {0!s}" # Calls str() on the ' |
| 'argument first\n' |
| ' "Bring out the holy {name!r}" # Calls repr() on the ' |
| 'argument first\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The *format_spec* field contains a specification of how ' |
| 'the value\n' |
| 'should be presented, including such details as field ' |
| 'width, alignment,\n' |
| 'padding, decimal precision and so on. Each value type ' |
| 'can define its\n' |
| 'own "formatting mini-language" or interpretation of the ' |
| '*format_spec*.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Most built-in types support a common formatting ' |
| 'mini-language, which\n' |
| 'is described in the next section.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A *format_spec* field can also include nested replacement ' |
| 'fields\n' |
| 'within it. These nested replacement fields can contain ' |
| 'only a field\n' |
| 'name; conversion flags and format specifications are not ' |
| 'allowed. The\n' |
| 'replacement fields within the format_spec are substituted ' |
| 'before the\n' |
| '*format_spec* string is interpreted. This allows the ' |
| 'formatting of a\n' |
| 'value to be dynamically specified.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'See the Format examples section for some examples.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Format Specification Mini-Language\n' |
| '==================================\n' |
| '\n' |
| '"Format specifications" are used within replacement ' |
| 'fields contained\n' |
| 'within a format string to define how individual values ' |
| 'are presented\n' |
| '(see Format String Syntax). They can also be passed ' |
| 'directly to the\n' |
| 'built-in "format()" function. Each formattable type may ' |
| 'define how\n' |
| 'the format specification is to be interpreted.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Most built-in types implement the following options for ' |
| 'format\n' |
| 'specifications, although some of the formatting options ' |
| 'are only\n' |
| 'supported by the numeric types.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A general convention is that an empty format string ' |
| '("""") produces\n' |
| 'the same result as if you had called "str()" on the ' |
| 'value. A non-empty\n' |
| 'format string typically modifies the result.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The general form of a *standard format specifier* is:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' format_spec ::= ' |
| '[[fill]align][sign][#][0][width][,][.precision][type]\n' |
| ' fill ::= <any character>\n' |
| ' align ::= "<" | ">" | "=" | "^"\n' |
| ' sign ::= "+" | "-" | " "\n' |
| ' width ::= integer\n' |
| ' precision ::= integer\n' |
| ' type ::= "b" | "c" | "d" | "e" | "E" | "f" | ' |
| '"F" | "g" | "G" | "n" | "o" | "s" | "x" | "X" | "%"\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If a valid *align* value is specified, it can be preceded ' |
| 'by a *fill*\n' |
| 'character that can be any character and defaults to a ' |
| 'space if\n' |
| 'omitted. Note that it is not possible to use "{" and "}" ' |
| 'as *fill*\n' |
| 'char while using the "str.format()" method; this ' |
| 'limitation however\n' |
| 'doesn\'t affect the "format()" function.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The meaning of the various alignment options is as ' |
| 'follows:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| ' | Option | ' |
| 'Meaning ' |
| '|\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+===========+============================================================+\n' |
| ' | "\'<\'" | Forces the field to be left-aligned ' |
| 'within the available |\n' |
| ' | | space (this is the default for most ' |
| 'objects). |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| ' | "\'>\'" | Forces the field to be right-aligned ' |
| 'within the available |\n' |
| ' | | space (this is the default for ' |
| 'numbers). |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| ' | "\'=\'" | Forces the padding to be placed after ' |
| 'the sign (if any) |\n' |
| ' | | but before the digits. This is used for ' |
| 'printing fields |\n' |
| " | | in the form '+000000120'. This alignment " |
| 'option is only |\n' |
| ' | | valid for numeric ' |
| 'types. |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| ' | "\'^\'" | Forces the field to be centered within ' |
| 'the available |\n' |
| ' | | ' |
| 'space. ' |
| '|\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Note that unless a minimum field width is defined, the ' |
| 'field width\n' |
| 'will always be the same size as the data to fill it, so ' |
| 'that the\n' |
| 'alignment option has no meaning in this case.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The *sign* option is only valid for number types, and can ' |
| 'be one of\n' |
| 'the following:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| ' | Option | ' |
| 'Meaning ' |
| '|\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+===========+============================================================+\n' |
| ' | "\'+\'" | indicates that a sign should be used ' |
| 'for both positive as |\n' |
| ' | | well as negative ' |
| 'numbers. |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| ' | "\'-\'" | indicates that a sign should be used ' |
| 'only for negative |\n' |
| ' | | numbers (this is the default ' |
| 'behavior). |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| ' | space | indicates that a leading space should be ' |
| 'used on positive |\n' |
| ' | | numbers, and a minus sign on negative ' |
| 'numbers. |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "\'#\'" option is only valid for integers, and only ' |
| 'for binary,\n' |
| 'octal, or hexadecimal output. If present, it specifies ' |
| 'that the\n' |
| 'output will be prefixed by "\'0b\'", "\'0o\'", or ' |
| '"\'0x\'", respectively.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "\',\'" option signals the use of a comma for a ' |
| 'thousands separator.\n' |
| 'For a locale aware separator, use the "\'n\'" integer ' |
| 'presentation type\n' |
| 'instead.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Changed in version 2.7: Added the "\',\'" option (see ' |
| 'also **PEP 378**).\n' |
| '\n' |
| '*width* is a decimal integer defining the minimum field ' |
| 'width. If not\n' |
| 'specified, then the field width will be determined by the ' |
| 'content.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Preceding the *width* field by a zero ("\'0\'") character ' |
| 'enables sign-\n' |
| 'aware zero-padding for numeric types. This is equivalent ' |
| 'to a *fill*\n' |
| 'character of "\'0\'" with an *alignment* type of ' |
| '"\'=\'".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The *precision* is a decimal number indicating how many ' |
| 'digits should\n' |
| 'be displayed after the decimal point for a floating point ' |
| 'value\n' |
| 'formatted with "\'f\'" and "\'F\'", or before and after ' |
| 'the decimal point\n' |
| 'for a floating point value formatted with "\'g\'" or ' |
| '"\'G\'". For non-\n' |
| 'number types the field indicates the maximum field size - ' |
| 'in other\n' |
| 'words, how many characters will be used from the field ' |
| 'content. The\n' |
| '*precision* is not allowed for integer values.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Finally, the *type* determines how the data should be ' |
| 'presented.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The available string presentation types are:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| ' | Type | ' |
| 'Meaning ' |
| '|\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+===========+============================================================+\n' |
| ' | "\'s\'" | String format. This is the default ' |
| 'type for strings and |\n' |
| ' | | may be ' |
| 'omitted. |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| ' | None | The same as ' |
| '"\'s\'". |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The available integer presentation types are:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| ' | Type | ' |
| 'Meaning ' |
| '|\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+===========+============================================================+\n' |
| ' | "\'b\'" | Binary format. Outputs the number in ' |
| 'base 2. |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| ' | "\'c\'" | Character. Converts the integer to the ' |
| 'corresponding |\n' |
| ' | | unicode character before ' |
| 'printing. |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| ' | "\'d\'" | Decimal Integer. Outputs the number in ' |
| 'base 10. |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| ' | "\'o\'" | Octal format. Outputs the number in ' |
| 'base 8. |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| ' | "\'x\'" | Hex format. Outputs the number in base ' |
| '16, using lower- |\n' |
| ' | | case letters for the digits above ' |
| '9. |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| ' | "\'X\'" | Hex format. Outputs the number in base ' |
| '16, using upper- |\n' |
| ' | | case letters for the digits above ' |
| '9. |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| ' | "\'n\'" | Number. This is the same as "\'d\'", ' |
| 'except that it uses the |\n' |
| ' | | current locale setting to insert the ' |
| 'appropriate number |\n' |
| ' | | separator ' |
| 'characters. |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| ' | None | The same as ' |
| '"\'d\'". |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'In addition to the above presentation types, integers can ' |
| 'be formatted\n' |
| 'with the floating point presentation types listed below ' |
| '(except "\'n\'"\n' |
| 'and None). When doing so, "float()" is used to convert ' |
| 'the integer to\n' |
| 'a floating point number before formatting.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The available presentation types for floating point and ' |
| 'decimal values\n' |
| 'are:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| ' | Type | ' |
| 'Meaning ' |
| '|\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+===========+============================================================+\n' |
| ' | "\'e\'" | Exponent notation. Prints the number ' |
| 'in scientific |\n' |
| " | | notation using the letter 'e' to " |
| 'indicate the exponent. |\n' |
| ' | | The default precision is ' |
| '"6". |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| ' | "\'E\'" | Exponent notation. Same as "\'e\'" ' |
| 'except it uses an upper |\n' |
| " | | case 'E' as the separator " |
| 'character. |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| ' | "\'f\'" | Fixed point. Displays the number as a ' |
| 'fixed-point number. |\n' |
| ' | | The default precision is ' |
| '"6". |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| ' | "\'F\'" | Fixed point. Same as ' |
| '"\'f\'". |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| ' | "\'g\'" | General format. For a given precision ' |
| '"p >= 1", this |\n' |
| ' | | rounds the number to "p" significant ' |
| 'digits and then |\n' |
| ' | | formats the result in either fixed-point ' |
| 'format or in |\n' |
| ' | | scientific notation, depending on its ' |
| 'magnitude. The |\n' |
| ' | | precise rules are as follows: suppose ' |
| 'that the result |\n' |
| ' | | formatted with presentation type "\'e\'" ' |
| 'and precision "p-1" |\n' |
| ' | | would have exponent "exp". Then if "-4 ' |
| '<= exp < p", the |\n' |
| ' | | number is formatted with presentation ' |
| 'type "\'f\'" and |\n' |
| ' | | precision "p-1-exp". Otherwise, the ' |
| 'number is formatted |\n' |
| ' | | with presentation type "\'e\'" and ' |
| 'precision "p-1". In both |\n' |
| ' | | cases insignificant trailing zeros are ' |
| 'removed from the |\n' |
| ' | | significand, and the decimal point is ' |
| 'also removed if |\n' |
| ' | | there are no remaining digits following ' |
| 'it. Positive and |\n' |
| ' | | negative infinity, positive and negative ' |
| 'zero, and nans, |\n' |
| ' | | are formatted as "inf", "-inf", "0", ' |
| '"-0" and "nan" |\n' |
| ' | | respectively, regardless of the ' |
| 'precision. A precision of |\n' |
| ' | | "0" is treated as equivalent to a ' |
| 'precision of "1". The |\n' |
| ' | | default precision is ' |
| '"6". |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| ' | "\'G\'" | General format. Same as "\'g\'" except ' |
| 'switches to "\'E\'" if |\n' |
| ' | | the number gets too large. The ' |
| 'representations of infinity |\n' |
| ' | | and NaN are uppercased, ' |
| 'too. |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| ' | "\'n\'" | Number. This is the same as "\'g\'", ' |
| 'except that it uses the |\n' |
| ' | | current locale setting to insert the ' |
| 'appropriate number |\n' |
| ' | | separator ' |
| 'characters. |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| ' | "\'%\'" | Percentage. Multiplies the number by ' |
| '100 and displays in |\n' |
| ' | | fixed ("\'f\'") format, followed by a ' |
| 'percent sign. |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| ' | None | The same as ' |
| '"\'g\'". |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-----------+------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Format examples\n' |
| '===============\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'This section contains examples of the new format syntax ' |
| 'and comparison\n' |
| 'with the old "%"-formatting.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'In most of the cases the syntax is similar to the old ' |
| '"%"-formatting,\n' |
| 'with the addition of the "{}" and with ":" used instead ' |
| 'of "%". For\n' |
| 'example, "\'%03.2f\'" can be translated to ' |
| '"\'{:03.2f}\'".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The new format syntax also supports new and different ' |
| 'options, shown\n' |
| 'in the follow examples.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Accessing arguments by position:\n' |
| '\n' |
| " >>> '{0}, {1}, {2}'.format('a', 'b', 'c')\n" |
| " 'a, b, c'\n" |
| " >>> '{}, {}, {}'.format('a', 'b', 'c') # 2.7+ only\n" |
| " 'a, b, c'\n" |
| " >>> '{2}, {1}, {0}'.format('a', 'b', 'c')\n" |
| " 'c, b, a'\n" |
| " >>> '{2}, {1}, {0}'.format(*'abc') # unpacking " |
| 'argument sequence\n' |
| " 'c, b, a'\n" |
| " >>> '{0}{1}{0}'.format('abra', 'cad') # arguments' " |
| 'indices can be repeated\n' |
| " 'abracadabra'\n" |
| '\n' |
| 'Accessing arguments by name:\n' |
| '\n' |
| " >>> 'Coordinates: {latitude}, " |
| "{longitude}'.format(latitude='37.24N', " |
| "longitude='-115.81W')\n" |
| " 'Coordinates: 37.24N, -115.81W'\n" |
| " >>> coord = {'latitude': '37.24N', 'longitude': " |
| "'-115.81W'}\n" |
| " >>> 'Coordinates: {latitude}, " |
| "{longitude}'.format(**coord)\n" |
| " 'Coordinates: 37.24N, -115.81W'\n" |
| '\n' |
| "Accessing arguments' attributes:\n" |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> c = 3-5j\n' |
| " >>> ('The complex number {0} is formed from the real " |
| "part {0.real} '\n" |
| " ... 'and the imaginary part {0.imag}.').format(c)\n" |
| " 'The complex number (3-5j) is formed from the real " |
| "part 3.0 and the imaginary part -5.0.'\n" |
| ' >>> class Point(object):\n' |
| ' ... def __init__(self, x, y):\n' |
| ' ... self.x, self.y = x, y\n' |
| ' ... def __str__(self):\n' |
| " ... return 'Point({self.x}, " |
| "{self.y})'.format(self=self)\n" |
| ' ...\n' |
| ' >>> str(Point(4, 2))\n' |
| " 'Point(4, 2)'\n" |
| '\n' |
| "Accessing arguments' items:\n" |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> coord = (3, 5)\n' |
| " >>> 'X: {0[0]}; Y: {0[1]}'.format(coord)\n" |
| " 'X: 3; Y: 5'\n" |
| '\n' |
| 'Replacing "%s" and "%r":\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> "repr() shows quotes: {!r}; str() doesn\'t: ' |
| '{!s}".format(\'test1\', \'test2\')\n' |
| ' "repr() shows quotes: \'test1\'; str() doesn\'t: ' |
| 'test2"\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Aligning the text and specifying a width:\n' |
| '\n' |
| " >>> '{:<30}'.format('left aligned')\n" |
| " 'left aligned '\n" |
| " >>> '{:>30}'.format('right aligned')\n" |
| " ' right aligned'\n" |
| " >>> '{:^30}'.format('centered')\n" |
| " ' centered '\n" |
| " >>> '{:*^30}'.format('centered') # use '*' as a fill " |
| 'char\n' |
| " '***********centered***********'\n" |
| '\n' |
| 'Replacing "%+f", "%-f", and "% f" and specifying a sign:\n' |
| '\n' |
| " >>> '{:+f}; {:+f}'.format(3.14, -3.14) # show it " |
| 'always\n' |
| " '+3.140000; -3.140000'\n" |
| " >>> '{: f}; {: f}'.format(3.14, -3.14) # show a space " |
| 'for positive numbers\n' |
| " ' 3.140000; -3.140000'\n" |
| " >>> '{:-f}; {:-f}'.format(3.14, -3.14) # show only " |
| "the minus -- same as '{:f}; {:f}'\n" |
| " '3.140000; -3.140000'\n" |
| '\n' |
| 'Replacing "%x" and "%o" and converting the value to ' |
| 'different bases:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> # format also supports binary numbers\n' |
| ' >>> "int: {0:d}; hex: {0:x}; oct: {0:o}; bin: ' |
| '{0:b}".format(42)\n' |
| " 'int: 42; hex: 2a; oct: 52; bin: 101010'\n" |
| ' >>> # with 0x, 0o, or 0b as prefix:\n' |
| ' >>> "int: {0:d}; hex: {0:#x}; oct: {0:#o}; bin: ' |
| '{0:#b}".format(42)\n' |
| " 'int: 42; hex: 0x2a; oct: 0o52; bin: 0b101010'\n" |
| '\n' |
| 'Using the comma as a thousands separator:\n' |
| '\n' |
| " >>> '{:,}'.format(1234567890)\n" |
| " '1,234,567,890'\n" |
| '\n' |
| 'Expressing a percentage:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> points = 19.5\n' |
| ' >>> total = 22\n' |
| " >>> 'Correct answers: {:.2%}'.format(points/total)\n" |
| " 'Correct answers: 88.64%'\n" |
| '\n' |
| 'Using type-specific formatting:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> import datetime\n' |
| ' >>> d = datetime.datetime(2010, 7, 4, 12, 15, 58)\n' |
| " >>> '{:%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S}'.format(d)\n" |
| " '2010-07-04 12:15:58'\n" |
| '\n' |
| 'Nesting arguments and more complex examples:\n' |
| '\n' |
| " >>> for align, text in zip('<^>', ['left', 'center', " |
| "'right']):\n" |
| " ... '{0:{fill}{align}16}'.format(text, fill=align, " |
| 'align=align)\n' |
| ' ...\n' |
| " 'left<<<<<<<<<<<<'\n" |
| " '^^^^^center^^^^^'\n" |
| " '>>>>>>>>>>>right'\n" |
| ' >>>\n' |
| ' >>> octets = [192, 168, 0, 1]\n' |
| " >>> '{:02X}{:02X}{:02X}{:02X}'.format(*octets)\n" |
| " 'C0A80001'\n" |
| ' >>> int(_, 16)\n' |
| ' 3232235521\n' |
| ' >>>\n' |
| ' >>> width = 5\n' |
| ' >>> for num in range(5,12):\n' |
| " ... for base in 'dXob':\n" |
| " ... print '{0:{width}{base}}'.format(num, " |
| 'base=base, width=width),\n' |
| ' ... print\n' |
| ' ...\n' |
| ' 5 5 5 101\n' |
| ' 6 6 6 110\n' |
| ' 7 7 7 111\n' |
| ' 8 8 10 1000\n' |
| ' 9 9 11 1001\n' |
| ' 10 A 12 1010\n' |
| ' 11 B 13 1011\n', |
| 'function': '\n' |
| 'Function definitions\n' |
| '********************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A function definition defines a user-defined function object ' |
| '(see\n' |
| 'section The standard type hierarchy):\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' decorated ::= decorators (classdef | funcdef)\n' |
| ' decorators ::= decorator+\n' |
| ' decorator ::= "@" dotted_name ["(" [argument_list ' |
| '[","]] ")"] NEWLINE\n' |
| ' funcdef ::= "def" funcname "(" [parameter_list] ")" ' |
| '":" suite\n' |
| ' dotted_name ::= identifier ("." identifier)*\n' |
| ' parameter_list ::= (defparameter ",")*\n' |
| ' ( "*" identifier ["," "**" identifier]\n' |
| ' | "**" identifier\n' |
| ' | defparameter [","] )\n' |
| ' defparameter ::= parameter ["=" expression]\n' |
| ' sublist ::= parameter ("," parameter)* [","]\n' |
| ' parameter ::= identifier | "(" sublist ")"\n' |
| ' funcname ::= identifier\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A function definition is an executable statement. Its ' |
| 'execution binds\n' |
| 'the function name in the current local namespace to a function ' |
| 'object\n' |
| '(a wrapper around the executable code for the function). ' |
| 'This\n' |
| 'function object contains a reference to the current global ' |
| 'namespace\n' |
| 'as the global namespace to be used when the function is ' |
| 'called.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The function definition does not execute the function body; ' |
| 'this gets\n' |
| 'executed only when the function is called. [3]\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A function definition may be wrapped by one or more ' |
| '*decorator*\n' |
| 'expressions. Decorator expressions are evaluated when the ' |
| 'function is\n' |
| 'defined, in the scope that contains the function definition. ' |
| 'The\n' |
| 'result must be a callable, which is invoked with the function ' |
| 'object\n' |
| 'as the only argument. The returned value is bound to the ' |
| 'function name\n' |
| 'instead of the function object. Multiple decorators are ' |
| 'applied in\n' |
| 'nested fashion. For example, the following code:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' @f1(arg)\n' |
| ' @f2\n' |
| ' def func(): pass\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'is equivalent to:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' def func(): pass\n' |
| ' func = f1(arg)(f2(func))\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'When one or more top-level *parameters* have the form ' |
| '*parameter* "="\n' |
| '*expression*, the function is said to have "default parameter ' |
| 'values."\n' |
| 'For a parameter with a default value, the corresponding ' |
| '*argument* may\n' |
| "be omitted from a call, in which case the parameter's default " |
| 'value is\n' |
| 'substituted. If a parameter has a default value, all ' |
| 'following\n' |
| 'parameters must also have a default value --- this is a ' |
| 'syntactic\n' |
| 'restriction that is not expressed by the grammar.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '**Default parameter values are evaluated when the function ' |
| 'definition\n' |
| 'is executed.** This means that the expression is evaluated ' |
| 'once, when\n' |
| 'the function is defined, and that the same "pre-computed" ' |
| 'value is\n' |
| 'used for each call. This is especially important to ' |
| 'understand when a\n' |
| 'default parameter is a mutable object, such as a list or a ' |
| 'dictionary:\n' |
| 'if the function modifies the object (e.g. by appending an item ' |
| 'to a\n' |
| 'list), the default value is in effect modified. This is ' |
| 'generally not\n' |
| 'what was intended. A way around this is to use "None" as ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'default, and explicitly test for it in the body of the ' |
| 'function, e.g.:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' def whats_on_the_telly(penguin=None):\n' |
| ' if penguin is None:\n' |
| ' penguin = []\n' |
| ' penguin.append("property of the zoo")\n' |
| ' return penguin\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Function call semantics are described in more detail in ' |
| 'section Calls.\n' |
| 'A function call always assigns values to all parameters ' |
| 'mentioned in\n' |
| 'the parameter list, either from position arguments, from ' |
| 'keyword\n' |
| 'arguments, or from default values. If the form ' |
| '""*identifier"" is\n' |
| 'present, it is initialized to a tuple receiving any excess ' |
| 'positional\n' |
| 'parameters, defaulting to the empty tuple. If the form\n' |
| '""**identifier"" is present, it is initialized to a new ' |
| 'dictionary\n' |
| 'receiving any excess keyword arguments, defaulting to a new ' |
| 'empty\n' |
| 'dictionary.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'It is also possible to create anonymous functions (functions ' |
| 'not bound\n' |
| 'to a name), for immediate use in expressions. This uses ' |
| 'lambda\n' |
| 'expressions, described in section Lambdas. Note that the ' |
| 'lambda\n' |
| 'expression is merely a shorthand for a simplified function ' |
| 'definition;\n' |
| 'a function defined in a ""def"" statement can be passed around ' |
| 'or\n' |
| 'assigned to another name just like a function defined by a ' |
| 'lambda\n' |
| 'expression. The ""def"" form is actually more powerful since ' |
| 'it\n' |
| 'allows the execution of multiple statements.\n' |
| '\n' |
| "**Programmer's note:** Functions are first-class objects. A " |
| '""def""\n' |
| 'form executed inside a function definition defines a local ' |
| 'function\n' |
| 'that can be returned or passed around. Free variables used in ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'nested function can access the local variables of the ' |
| 'function\n' |
| 'containing the def. See section Naming and binding for ' |
| 'details.\n', |
| 'global': '\n' |
| 'The "global" statement\n' |
| '**********************\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' global_stmt ::= "global" identifier ("," identifier)*\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "global" statement is a declaration which holds for the ' |
| 'entire\n' |
| 'current code block. It means that the listed identifiers are to ' |
| 'be\n' |
| 'interpreted as globals. It would be impossible to assign to a ' |
| 'global\n' |
| 'variable without "global", although free variables may refer to\n' |
| 'globals without being declared global.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Names listed in a "global" statement must not be used in the ' |
| 'same code\n' |
| 'block textually preceding that "global" statement.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Names listed in a "global" statement must not be defined as ' |
| 'formal\n' |
| 'parameters or in a "for" loop control target, "class" ' |
| 'definition,\n' |
| 'function definition, or "import" statement.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '**CPython implementation detail:** The current implementation ' |
| 'does not\n' |
| 'enforce the latter two restrictions, but programs should not ' |
| 'abuse\n' |
| 'this freedom, as future implementations may enforce them or ' |
| 'silently\n' |
| 'change the meaning of the program.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '**Programmer\'s note:** the "global" is a directive to the ' |
| 'parser. It\n' |
| 'applies only to code parsed at the same time as the "global"\n' |
| 'statement. In particular, a "global" statement contained in an ' |
| '"exec"\n' |
| 'statement does not affect the code block *containing* the ' |
| '"exec"\n' |
| 'statement, and code contained in an "exec" statement is ' |
| 'unaffected by\n' |
| '"global" statements in the code containing the "exec" ' |
| 'statement. The\n' |
| 'same applies to the "eval()", "execfile()" and "compile()" ' |
| 'functions.\n', |
| 'id-classes': '\n' |
| 'Reserved classes of identifiers\n' |
| '*******************************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Certain classes of identifiers (besides keywords) have ' |
| 'special\n' |
| 'meanings. These classes are identified by the patterns of ' |
| 'leading and\n' |
| 'trailing underscore characters:\n' |
| '\n' |
| '"_*"\n' |
| ' Not imported by "from module import *". The special ' |
| 'identifier "_"\n' |
| ' is used in the interactive interpreter to store the ' |
| 'result of the\n' |
| ' last evaluation; it is stored in the "__builtin__" ' |
| 'module. When\n' |
| ' not in interactive mode, "_" has no special meaning and ' |
| 'is not\n' |
| ' defined. See section The import statement.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Note: The name "_" is often used in conjunction with\n' |
| ' internationalization; refer to the documentation for ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' "gettext" module for more information on this ' |
| 'convention.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '"__*__"\n' |
| ' System-defined names. These names are defined by the ' |
| 'interpreter\n' |
| ' and its implementation (including the standard library). ' |
| 'Current\n' |
| ' system names are discussed in the Special method names ' |
| 'section and\n' |
| ' elsewhere. More will likely be defined in future ' |
| 'versions of\n' |
| ' Python. *Any* use of "__*__" names, in any context, that ' |
| 'does not\n' |
| ' follow explicitly documented use, is subject to breakage ' |
| 'without\n' |
| ' warning.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '"__*"\n' |
| ' Class-private names. Names in this category, when used ' |
| 'within the\n' |
| ' context of a class definition, are re-written to use a ' |
| 'mangled form\n' |
| ' to help avoid name clashes between "private" attributes ' |
| 'of base and\n' |
| ' derived classes. See section Identifiers (Names).\n', |
| 'identifiers': '\n' |
| 'Identifiers and keywords\n' |
| '************************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Identifiers (also referred to as *names*) are described by ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'following lexical definitions:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' identifier ::= (letter|"_") (letter | digit | "_")*\n' |
| ' letter ::= lowercase | uppercase\n' |
| ' lowercase ::= "a"..."z"\n' |
| ' uppercase ::= "A"..."Z"\n' |
| ' digit ::= "0"..."9"\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Identifiers are unlimited in length. Case is significant.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Keywords\n' |
| '========\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The following identifiers are used as reserved words, or ' |
| '*keywords* of\n' |
| 'the language, and cannot be used as ordinary identifiers. ' |
| 'They must\n' |
| 'be spelled exactly as written here:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' and del from not while\n' |
| ' as elif global or with\n' |
| ' assert else if pass yield\n' |
| ' break except import print\n' |
| ' class exec in raise\n' |
| ' continue finally is return\n' |
| ' def for lambda try\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Changed in version 2.4: "None" became a constant and is now ' |
| 'recognized\n' |
| 'by the compiler as a name for the built-in object "None". ' |
| 'Although it\n' |
| 'is not a keyword, you cannot assign a different object to ' |
| 'it.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Changed in version 2.5: Using "as" and "with" as ' |
| 'identifiers triggers\n' |
| 'a warning. To use them as keywords, enable the ' |
| '"with_statement"\n' |
| 'future feature .\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Changed in version 2.6: "as" and "with" are full keywords.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Reserved classes of identifiers\n' |
| '===============================\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Certain classes of identifiers (besides keywords) have ' |
| 'special\n' |
| 'meanings. These classes are identified by the patterns of ' |
| 'leading and\n' |
| 'trailing underscore characters:\n' |
| '\n' |
| '"_*"\n' |
| ' Not imported by "from module import *". The special ' |
| 'identifier "_"\n' |
| ' is used in the interactive interpreter to store the ' |
| 'result of the\n' |
| ' last evaluation; it is stored in the "__builtin__" ' |
| 'module. When\n' |
| ' not in interactive mode, "_" has no special meaning and ' |
| 'is not\n' |
| ' defined. See section The import statement.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Note: The name "_" is often used in conjunction with\n' |
| ' internationalization; refer to the documentation for ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' "gettext" module for more information on this ' |
| 'convention.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '"__*__"\n' |
| ' System-defined names. These names are defined by the ' |
| 'interpreter\n' |
| ' and its implementation (including the standard ' |
| 'library). Current\n' |
| ' system names are discussed in the Special method names ' |
| 'section and\n' |
| ' elsewhere. More will likely be defined in future ' |
| 'versions of\n' |
| ' Python. *Any* use of "__*__" names, in any context, ' |
| 'that does not\n' |
| ' follow explicitly documented use, is subject to breakage ' |
| 'without\n' |
| ' warning.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '"__*"\n' |
| ' Class-private names. Names in this category, when used ' |
| 'within the\n' |
| ' context of a class definition, are re-written to use a ' |
| 'mangled form\n' |
| ' to help avoid name clashes between "private" attributes ' |
| 'of base and\n' |
| ' derived classes. See section Identifiers (Names).\n', |
| 'if': '\n' |
| 'The "if" statement\n' |
| '******************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "if" statement is used for conditional execution:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' if_stmt ::= "if" expression ":" suite\n' |
| ' ( "elif" expression ":" suite )*\n' |
| ' ["else" ":" suite]\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'It selects exactly one of the suites by evaluating the expressions ' |
| 'one\n' |
| 'by one until one is found to be true (see section Boolean ' |
| 'operations\n' |
| 'for the definition of true and false); then that suite is executed\n' |
| '(and no other part of the "if" statement is executed or evaluated).\n' |
| 'If all expressions are false, the suite of the "else" clause, if\n' |
| 'present, is executed.\n', |
| 'imaginary': '\n' |
| 'Imaginary literals\n' |
| '******************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Imaginary literals are described by the following lexical ' |
| 'definitions:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' imagnumber ::= (floatnumber | intpart) ("j" | "J")\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'An imaginary literal yields a complex number with a real part ' |
| 'of 0.0.\n' |
| 'Complex numbers are represented as a pair of floating point ' |
| 'numbers\n' |
| 'and have the same restrictions on their range. To create a ' |
| 'complex\n' |
| 'number with a nonzero real part, add a floating point number ' |
| 'to it,\n' |
| 'e.g., "(3+4j)". Some examples of imaginary literals:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' 3.14j 10.j 10j .001j 1e100j 3.14e-10j\n', |
| 'import': '\n' |
| 'The "import" statement\n' |
| '**********************\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' import_stmt ::= "import" module ["as" name] ( "," module ' |
| '["as" name] )*\n' |
| ' | "from" relative_module "import" identifier ' |
| '["as" name]\n' |
| ' ( "," identifier ["as" name] )*\n' |
| ' | "from" relative_module "import" "(" ' |
| 'identifier ["as" name]\n' |
| ' ( "," identifier ["as" name] )* [","] ")"\n' |
| ' | "from" module "import" "*"\n' |
| ' module ::= (identifier ".")* identifier\n' |
| ' relative_module ::= "."* module | "."+\n' |
| ' name ::= identifier\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Import statements are executed in two steps: (1) find a module, ' |
| 'and\n' |
| 'initialize it if necessary; (2) define a name or names in the ' |
| 'local\n' |
| 'namespace (of the scope where the "import" statement occurs). ' |
| 'The\n' |
| 'statement comes in two forms differing on whether it uses the ' |
| '"from"\n' |
| 'keyword. The first form (without "from") repeats these steps for ' |
| 'each\n' |
| 'identifier in the list. The form with "from" performs step (1) ' |
| 'once,\n' |
| 'and then performs step (2) repeatedly.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'To understand how step (1) occurs, one must first understand ' |
| 'how\n' |
| 'Python handles hierarchical naming of modules. To help organize\n' |
| 'modules and provide a hierarchy in naming, Python has a concept ' |
| 'of\n' |
| 'packages. A package can contain other packages and modules ' |
| 'while\n' |
| 'modules cannot contain other modules or packages. From a file ' |
| 'system\n' |
| 'perspective, packages are directories and modules are files.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Once the name of the module is known (unless otherwise ' |
| 'specified, the\n' |
| 'term "module" will refer to both packages and modules), ' |
| 'searching for\n' |
| 'the module or package can begin. The first place checked is\n' |
| '"sys.modules", the cache of all modules that have been imported\n' |
| 'previously. If the module is found there then it is used in step ' |
| '(2)\n' |
| 'of import.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If the module is not found in the cache, then "sys.meta_path" ' |
| 'is\n' |
| 'searched (the specification for "sys.meta_path" can be found in ' |
| '**PEP\n' |
| '302**). The object is a list of *finder* objects which are ' |
| 'queried in\n' |
| 'order as to whether they know how to load the module by calling ' |
| 'their\n' |
| '"find_module()" method with the name of the module. If the ' |
| 'module\n' |
| 'happens to be contained within a package (as denoted by the ' |
| 'existence\n' |
| 'of a dot in the name), then a second argument to "find_module()" ' |
| 'is\n' |
| 'given as the value of the "__path__" attribute from the parent ' |
| 'package\n' |
| '(everything up to the last dot in the name of the module being\n' |
| 'imported). If a finder can find the module it returns a ' |
| '*loader*\n' |
| '(discussed later) or returns "None".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If none of the finders on "sys.meta_path" are able to find the ' |
| 'module\n' |
| 'then some implicitly defined finders are queried. ' |
| 'Implementations of\n' |
| 'Python vary in what implicit meta path finders are defined. The ' |
| 'one\n' |
| 'they all do define, though, is one that handles ' |
| '"sys.path_hooks",\n' |
| '"sys.path_importer_cache", and "sys.path".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The implicit finder searches for the requested module in the ' |
| '"paths"\n' |
| 'specified in one of two places ("paths" do not have to be file ' |
| 'system\n' |
| 'paths). If the module being imported is supposed to be ' |
| 'contained\n' |
| 'within a package then the second argument passed to ' |
| '"find_module()",\n' |
| '"__path__" on the parent package, is used as the source of ' |
| 'paths. If\n' |
| 'the module is not contained in a package then "sys.path" is used ' |
| 'as\n' |
| 'the source of paths.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Once the source of paths is chosen it is iterated over to find ' |
| 'a\n' |
| 'finder that can handle that path. The dict at\n' |
| '"sys.path_importer_cache" caches finders for paths and is ' |
| 'checked for\n' |
| 'a finder. If the path does not have a finder cached then\n' |
| '"sys.path_hooks" is searched by calling each object in the list ' |
| 'with a\n' |
| 'single argument of the path, returning a finder or raises\n' |
| '"ImportError". If a finder is returned then it is cached in\n' |
| '"sys.path_importer_cache" and then used for that path entry. If ' |
| 'no\n' |
| 'finder can be found but the path exists then a value of "None" ' |
| 'is\n' |
| 'stored in "sys.path_importer_cache" to signify that an implicit, ' |
| 'file-\n' |
| 'based finder that handles modules stored as individual files ' |
| 'should be\n' |
| 'used for that path. If the path does not exist then a finder ' |
| 'which\n' |
| 'always returns "None" is placed in the cache for the path.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If no finder can find the module then "ImportError" is raised.\n' |
| 'Otherwise some finder returned a loader whose "load_module()" ' |
| 'method\n' |
| 'is called with the name of the module to load (see **PEP 302** ' |
| 'for the\n' |
| 'original definition of loaders). A loader has several ' |
| 'responsibilities\n' |
| 'to perform on a module it loads. First, if the module already ' |
| 'exists\n' |
| 'in "sys.modules" (a possibility if the loader is called outside ' |
| 'of the\n' |
| 'import machinery) then it is to use that module for ' |
| 'initialization and\n' |
| 'not a new module. But if the module does not exist in ' |
| '"sys.modules"\n' |
| 'then it is to be added to that dict before initialization ' |
| 'begins. If\n' |
| 'an error occurs during loading of the module and it was added ' |
| 'to\n' |
| '"sys.modules" it is to be removed from the dict. If an error ' |
| 'occurs\n' |
| 'but the module was already in "sys.modules" it is left in the ' |
| 'dict.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The loader must set several attributes on the module. "__name__" ' |
| 'is to\n' |
| 'be set to the name of the module. "__file__" is to be the "path" ' |
| 'to\n' |
| 'the file unless the module is built-in (and thus listed in\n' |
| '"sys.builtin_module_names") in which case the attribute is not ' |
| 'set. If\n' |
| 'what is being imported is a package then "__path__" is to be set ' |
| 'to a\n' |
| 'list of paths to be searched when looking for modules and ' |
| 'packages\n' |
| 'contained within the package being imported. "__package__" is ' |
| 'optional\n' |
| 'but should be set to the name of package that contains the ' |
| 'module or\n' |
| 'package (the empty string is used for module not contained in a\n' |
| 'package). "__loader__" is also optional but should be set to ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'loader object that is loading the module.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If an error occurs during loading then the loader raises ' |
| '"ImportError"\n' |
| 'if some other exception is not already being propagated. ' |
| 'Otherwise the\n' |
| 'loader returns the module that was loaded and initialized.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'When step (1) finishes without raising an exception, step (2) ' |
| 'can\n' |
| 'begin.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The first form of "import" statement binds the module name in ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'local namespace to the module object, and then goes on to import ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'next identifier, if any. If the module name is followed by ' |
| '"as", the\n' |
| 'name following "as" is used as the local name for the module.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "from" form does not bind the module name: it goes through ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'list of identifiers, looks each one of them up in the module ' |
| 'found in\n' |
| 'step (1), and binds the name in the local namespace to the ' |
| 'object thus\n' |
| 'found. As with the first form of "import", an alternate local ' |
| 'name\n' |
| 'can be supplied by specifying ""as" localname". If a name is ' |
| 'not\n' |
| 'found, "ImportError" is raised. If the list of identifiers is\n' |
| 'replaced by a star ("\'*\'"), all public names defined in the ' |
| 'module are\n' |
| 'bound in the local namespace of the "import" statement..\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The *public names* defined by a module are determined by ' |
| 'checking the\n' |
| 'module\'s namespace for a variable named "__all__"; if defined, ' |
| 'it must\n' |
| 'be a sequence of strings which are names defined or imported by ' |
| 'that\n' |
| 'module. The names given in "__all__" are all considered public ' |
| 'and\n' |
| 'are required to exist. If "__all__" is not defined, the set of ' |
| 'public\n' |
| "names includes all names found in the module's namespace which " |
| 'do not\n' |
| 'begin with an underscore character ("\'_\'"). "__all__" should ' |
| 'contain\n' |
| 'the entire public API. It is intended to avoid accidentally ' |
| 'exporting\n' |
| 'items that are not part of the API (such as library modules ' |
| 'which were\n' |
| 'imported and used within the module).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "from" form with "*" may only occur in a module scope. If ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'wild card form of import --- "import *" --- is used in a ' |
| 'function and\n' |
| 'the function contains or is a nested block with free variables, ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'compiler will raise a "SyntaxError".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'When specifying what module to import you do not have to specify ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'absolute name of the module. When a module or package is ' |
| 'contained\n' |
| 'within another package it is possible to make a relative import ' |
| 'within\n' |
| 'the same top package without having to mention the package name. ' |
| 'By\n' |
| 'using leading dots in the specified module or package after ' |
| '"from" you\n' |
| 'can specify how high to traverse up the current package ' |
| 'hierarchy\n' |
| 'without specifying exact names. One leading dot means the ' |
| 'current\n' |
| 'package where the module making the import exists. Two dots ' |
| 'means up\n' |
| 'one package level. Three dots is up two levels, etc. So if you ' |
| 'execute\n' |
| '"from . import mod" from a module in the "pkg" package then you ' |
| 'will\n' |
| 'end up importing "pkg.mod". If you execute "from ..subpkg2 ' |
| 'import mod"\n' |
| 'from within "pkg.subpkg1" you will import "pkg.subpkg2.mod". ' |
| 'The\n' |
| 'specification for relative imports is contained within **PEP ' |
| '328**.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '"importlib.import_module()" is provided to support applications ' |
| 'that\n' |
| 'determine which modules need to be loaded dynamically.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Future statements\n' |
| '=================\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A *future statement* is a directive to the compiler that a ' |
| 'particular\n' |
| 'module should be compiled using syntax or semantics that will ' |
| 'be\n' |
| 'available in a specified future release of Python. The future\n' |
| 'statement is intended to ease migration to future versions of ' |
| 'Python\n' |
| 'that introduce incompatible changes to the language. It allows ' |
| 'use of\n' |
| 'the new features on a per-module basis before the release in ' |
| 'which the\n' |
| 'feature becomes standard.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' future_statement ::= "from" "__future__" "import" feature ' |
| '["as" name]\n' |
| ' ("," feature ["as" name])*\n' |
| ' | "from" "__future__" "import" "(" ' |
| 'feature ["as" name]\n' |
| ' ("," feature ["as" name])* [","] ")"\n' |
| ' feature ::= identifier\n' |
| ' name ::= identifier\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A future statement must appear near the top of the module. The ' |
| 'only\n' |
| 'lines that can appear before a future statement are:\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* the module docstring (if any),\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* comments,\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* blank lines, and\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* other future statements.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The features recognized by Python 2.6 are "unicode_literals",\n' |
| '"print_function", "absolute_import", "division", "generators",\n' |
| '"nested_scopes" and "with_statement". "generators", ' |
| '"with_statement",\n' |
| '"nested_scopes" are redundant in Python version 2.6 and above ' |
| 'because\n' |
| 'they are always enabled.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A future statement is recognized and treated specially at ' |
| 'compile\n' |
| 'time: Changes to the semantics of core constructs are often\n' |
| 'implemented by generating different code. It may even be the ' |
| 'case\n' |
| 'that a new feature introduces new incompatible syntax (such as a ' |
| 'new\n' |
| 'reserved word), in which case the compiler may need to parse ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'module differently. Such decisions cannot be pushed off until\n' |
| 'runtime.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'For any given release, the compiler knows which feature names ' |
| 'have\n' |
| 'been defined, and raises a compile-time error if a future ' |
| 'statement\n' |
| 'contains a feature not known to it.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The direct runtime semantics are the same as for any import ' |
| 'statement:\n' |
| 'there is a standard module "__future__", described later, and it ' |
| 'will\n' |
| 'be imported in the usual way at the time the future statement ' |
| 'is\n' |
| 'executed.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The interesting runtime semantics depend on the specific ' |
| 'feature\n' |
| 'enabled by the future statement.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Note that there is nothing special about the statement:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' import __future__ [as name]\n' |
| '\n' |
| "That is not a future statement; it's an ordinary import " |
| 'statement with\n' |
| 'no special semantics or syntax restrictions.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Code compiled by an "exec" statement or calls to the built-in\n' |
| 'functions "compile()" and "execfile()" that occur in a module ' |
| '"M"\n' |
| 'containing a future statement will, by default, use the new ' |
| 'syntax or\n' |
| 'semantics associated with the future statement. This can, ' |
| 'starting\n' |
| 'with Python 2.2 be controlled by optional arguments to ' |
| '"compile()" ---\n' |
| 'see the documentation of that function for details.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A future statement typed at an interactive interpreter prompt ' |
| 'will\n' |
| 'take effect for the rest of the interpreter session. If an\n' |
| 'interpreter is started with the "-i" option, is passed a script ' |
| 'name\n' |
| 'to execute, and the script includes a future statement, it will ' |
| 'be in\n' |
| 'effect in the interactive session started after the script is\n' |
| 'executed.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'See also: **PEP 236** - Back to the __future__\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' The original proposal for the __future__ mechanism.\n', |
| 'in': '\n' |
| 'Comparisons\n' |
| '***********\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Unlike C, all comparison operations in Python have the same ' |
| 'priority,\n' |
| 'which is lower than that of any arithmetic, shifting or bitwise\n' |
| 'operation. Also unlike C, expressions like "a < b < c" have the\n' |
| 'interpretation that is conventional in mathematics:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' comparison ::= or_expr ( comp_operator or_expr )*\n' |
| ' comp_operator ::= "<" | ">" | "==" | ">=" | "<=" | "<>" | "!="\n' |
| ' | "is" ["not"] | ["not"] "in"\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Comparisons yield boolean values: "True" or "False".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Comparisons can be chained arbitrarily, e.g., "x < y <= z" is\n' |
| 'equivalent to "x < y and y <= z", except that "y" is evaluated only\n' |
| 'once (but in both cases "z" is not evaluated at all when "x < y" is\n' |
| 'found to be false).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Formally, if *a*, *b*, *c*, ..., *y*, *z* are expressions and ' |
| '*op1*,\n' |
| '*op2*, ..., *opN* are comparison operators, then "a op1 b op2 c ... ' |
| 'y\n' |
| 'opN z" is equivalent to "a op1 b and b op2 c and ... y opN z", ' |
| 'except\n' |
| 'that each expression is evaluated at most once.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Note that "a op1 b op2 c" doesn\'t imply any kind of comparison ' |
| 'between\n' |
| '*a* and *c*, so that, e.g., "x < y > z" is perfectly legal (though\n' |
| 'perhaps not pretty).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The forms "<>" and "!=" are equivalent; for consistency with C, ' |
| '"!="\n' |
| 'is preferred; where "!=" is mentioned below "<>" is also accepted.\n' |
| 'The "<>" spelling is considered obsolescent.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The operators "<", ">", "==", ">=", "<=", and "!=" compare the ' |
| 'values\n' |
| 'of two objects. The objects need not have the same type. If both ' |
| 'are\n' |
| 'numbers, they are converted to a common type. Otherwise, objects ' |
| 'of\n' |
| 'different types *always* compare unequal, and are ordered ' |
| 'consistently\n' |
| 'but arbitrarily. You can control comparison behavior of objects of\n' |
| 'non-built-in types by defining a "__cmp__" method or rich ' |
| 'comparison\n' |
| 'methods like "__gt__", described in section Special method names.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '(This unusual definition of comparison was used to simplify the\n' |
| 'definition of operations like sorting and the "in" and "not in"\n' |
| 'operators. In the future, the comparison rules for objects of\n' |
| 'different types are likely to change.)\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Comparison of objects of the same type depends on the type:\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* Numbers are compared arithmetically.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* Strings are compared lexicographically using the numeric\n' |
| ' equivalents (the result of the built-in function "ord()") of ' |
| 'their\n' |
| ' characters. Unicode and 8-bit strings are fully interoperable in\n' |
| ' this behavior. [4]\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* Tuples and lists are compared lexicographically using comparison\n' |
| ' of corresponding elements. This means that to compare equal, ' |
| 'each\n' |
| ' element must compare equal and the two sequences must be of the ' |
| 'same\n' |
| ' type and have the same length.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If not equal, the sequences are ordered the same as their first\n' |
| ' differing elements. For example, "cmp([1,2,x], [1,2,y])" returns\n' |
| ' the same as "cmp(x,y)". If the corresponding element does not\n' |
| ' exist, the shorter sequence is ordered first (for example, "[1,2] ' |
| '<\n' |
| ' [1,2,3]").\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* Mappings (dictionaries) compare equal if and only if their sorted\n' |
| ' (key, value) lists compare equal. [5] Outcomes other than ' |
| 'equality\n' |
| ' are resolved consistently, but are not otherwise defined. [6]\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* Most other objects of built-in types compare unequal unless they\n' |
| ' are the same object; the choice whether one object is considered\n' |
| ' smaller or larger than another one is made arbitrarily but\n' |
| ' consistently within one execution of a program.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The operators "in" and "not in" test for collection membership. "x ' |
| 'in\n' |
| 's" evaluates to true if *x* is a member of the collection *s*, and\n' |
| 'false otherwise. "x not in s" returns the negation of "x in s". ' |
| 'The\n' |
| 'collection membership test has traditionally been bound to ' |
| 'sequences;\n' |
| 'an object is a member of a collection if the collection is a ' |
| 'sequence\n' |
| 'and contains an element equal to that object. However, it make ' |
| 'sense\n' |
| 'for many other object types to support membership tests without ' |
| 'being\n' |
| 'a sequence. In particular, dictionaries (for keys) and sets ' |
| 'support\n' |
| 'membership testing.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'For the list and tuple types, "x in y" is true if and only if there\n' |
| 'exists an index *i* such that "x == y[i]" is true.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'For the Unicode and string types, "x in y" is true if and only if ' |
| '*x*\n' |
| 'is a substring of *y*. An equivalent test is "y.find(x) != -1".\n' |
| 'Note, *x* and *y* need not be the same type; consequently, "u\'ab\' ' |
| 'in\n' |
| '\'abc\'" will return "True". Empty strings are always considered to ' |
| 'be a\n' |
| 'substring of any other string, so """ in "abc"" will return "True".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Changed in version 2.3: Previously, *x* was required to be a string ' |
| 'of\n' |
| 'length "1".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'For user-defined classes which define the "__contains__()" method, ' |
| '"x\n' |
| 'in y" is true if and only if "y.__contains__(x)" is true.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'For user-defined classes which do not define "__contains__()" but ' |
| 'do\n' |
| 'define "__iter__()", "x in y" is true if some value "z" with "x == ' |
| 'z"\n' |
| 'is produced while iterating over "y". If an exception is raised\n' |
| 'during the iteration, it is as if "in" raised that exception.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Lastly, the old-style iteration protocol is tried: if a class ' |
| 'defines\n' |
| '"__getitem__()", "x in y" is true if and only if there is a non-\n' |
| 'negative integer index *i* such that "x == y[i]", and all lower\n' |
| 'integer indices do not raise "IndexError" exception. (If any other\n' |
| 'exception is raised, it is as if "in" raised that exception).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The operator "not in" is defined to have the inverse true value of\n' |
| '"in".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The operators "is" and "is not" test for object identity: "x is y" ' |
| 'is\n' |
| 'true if and only if *x* and *y* are the same object. "x is not y"\n' |
| 'yields the inverse truth value. [7]\n', |
| 'integers': '\n' |
| 'Integer and long integer literals\n' |
| '*********************************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Integer and long integer literals are described by the ' |
| 'following\n' |
| 'lexical definitions:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' longinteger ::= integer ("l" | "L")\n' |
| ' integer ::= decimalinteger | octinteger | hexinteger ' |
| '| bininteger\n' |
| ' decimalinteger ::= nonzerodigit digit* | "0"\n' |
| ' octinteger ::= "0" ("o" | "O") octdigit+ | "0" ' |
| 'octdigit+\n' |
| ' hexinteger ::= "0" ("x" | "X") hexdigit+\n' |
| ' bininteger ::= "0" ("b" | "B") bindigit+\n' |
| ' nonzerodigit ::= "1"..."9"\n' |
| ' octdigit ::= "0"..."7"\n' |
| ' bindigit ::= "0" | "1"\n' |
| ' hexdigit ::= digit | "a"..."f" | "A"..."F"\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Although both lower case "\'l\'" and upper case "\'L\'" are ' |
| 'allowed as\n' |
| 'suffix for long integers, it is strongly recommended to always ' |
| 'use\n' |
| '"\'L\'", since the letter "\'l\'" looks too much like the ' |
| 'digit "\'1\'".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Plain integer literals that are above the largest ' |
| 'representable plain\n' |
| 'integer (e.g., 2147483647 when using 32-bit arithmetic) are ' |
| 'accepted\n' |
| 'as if they were long integers instead. [1] There is no limit ' |
| 'for long\n' |
| 'integer literals apart from what can be stored in available ' |
| 'memory.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Some examples of plain integer literals (first row) and long ' |
| 'integer\n' |
| 'literals (second and third rows):\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' 7 2147483647 0177\n' |
| ' 3L 79228162514264337593543950336L 0377L ' |
| '0x100000000L\n' |
| ' 79228162514264337593543950336 0xdeadbeef\n', |
| 'lambda': '\n' |
| 'Lambdas\n' |
| '*******\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' lambda_expr ::= "lambda" [parameter_list]: expression\n' |
| ' old_lambda_expr ::= "lambda" [parameter_list]: ' |
| 'old_expression\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Lambda expressions (sometimes called lambda forms) have the ' |
| 'same\n' |
| 'syntactic position as expressions. They are a shorthand to ' |
| 'create\n' |
| 'anonymous functions; the expression "lambda arguments: ' |
| 'expression"\n' |
| 'yields a function object. The unnamed object behaves like a ' |
| 'function\n' |
| 'object defined with\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' def name(arguments):\n' |
| ' return expression\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'See section Function definitions for the syntax of parameter ' |
| 'lists.\n' |
| 'Note that functions created with lambda expressions cannot ' |
| 'contain\n' |
| 'statements.\n', |
| 'lists': '\n' |
| 'List displays\n' |
| '*************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A list display is a possibly empty series of expressions enclosed ' |
| 'in\n' |
| 'square brackets:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' list_display ::= "[" [expression_list | ' |
| 'list_comprehension] "]"\n' |
| ' list_comprehension ::= expression list_for\n' |
| ' list_for ::= "for" target_list "in" ' |
| 'old_expression_list [list_iter]\n' |
| ' old_expression_list ::= old_expression [("," old_expression)+ ' |
| '[","]]\n' |
| ' old_expression ::= or_test | old_lambda_expr\n' |
| ' list_iter ::= list_for | list_if\n' |
| ' list_if ::= "if" old_expression [list_iter]\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A list display yields a new list object. Its contents are ' |
| 'specified\n' |
| 'by providing either a list of expressions or a list ' |
| 'comprehension.\n' |
| 'When a comma-separated list of expressions is supplied, its ' |
| 'elements\n' |
| 'are evaluated from left to right and placed into the list object ' |
| 'in\n' |
| 'that order. When a list comprehension is supplied, it consists ' |
| 'of a\n' |
| 'single expression followed by at least one "for" clause and zero ' |
| 'or\n' |
| 'more "for" or "if" clauses. In this case, the elements of the ' |
| 'new\n' |
| 'list are those that would be produced by considering each of the ' |
| '"for"\n' |
| 'or "if" clauses a block, nesting from left to right, and ' |
| 'evaluating\n' |
| 'the expression to produce a list element each time the innermost ' |
| 'block\n' |
| 'is reached [1].\n', |
| 'naming': '\n' |
| 'Naming and binding\n' |
| '******************\n' |
| '\n' |
| '*Names* refer to objects. Names are introduced by name binding\n' |
| 'operations. Each occurrence of a name in the program text refers ' |
| 'to\n' |
| 'the *binding* of that name established in the innermost function ' |
| 'block\n' |
| 'containing the use.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A *block* is a piece of Python program text that is executed as ' |
| 'a\n' |
| 'unit. The following are blocks: a module, a function body, and a ' |
| 'class\n' |
| 'definition. Each command typed interactively is a block. A ' |
| 'script\n' |
| 'file (a file given as standard input to the interpreter or ' |
| 'specified\n' |
| 'on the interpreter command line the first argument) is a code ' |
| 'block.\n' |
| 'A script command (a command specified on the interpreter command ' |
| 'line\n' |
| "with the '**-c**' option) is a code block. The file read by " |
| 'the\n' |
| 'built-in function "execfile()" is a code block. The string ' |
| 'argument\n' |
| 'passed to the built-in function "eval()" and to the "exec" ' |
| 'statement\n' |
| 'is a code block. The expression read and evaluated by the ' |
| 'built-in\n' |
| 'function "input()" is a code block.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A code block is executed in an *execution frame*. A frame ' |
| 'contains\n' |
| 'some administrative information (used for debugging) and ' |
| 'determines\n' |
| "where and how execution continues after the code block's " |
| 'execution has\n' |
| 'completed.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A *scope* defines the visibility of a name within a block. If a ' |
| 'local\n' |
| 'variable is defined in a block, its scope includes that block. ' |
| 'If the\n' |
| 'definition occurs in a function block, the scope extends to any ' |
| 'blocks\n' |
| 'contained within the defining one, unless a contained block ' |
| 'introduces\n' |
| 'a different binding for the name. The scope of names defined in ' |
| 'a\n' |
| 'class block is limited to the class block; it does not extend to ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'code blocks of methods -- this includes generator expressions ' |
| 'since\n' |
| 'they are implemented using a function scope. This means that ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'following will fail:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' class A:\n' |
| ' a = 42\n' |
| ' b = list(a + i for i in range(10))\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'When a name is used in a code block, it is resolved using the ' |
| 'nearest\n' |
| 'enclosing scope. The set of all such scopes visible to a code ' |
| 'block\n' |
| "is called the block's *environment*.\n" |
| '\n' |
| 'If a name is bound in a block, it is a local variable of that ' |
| 'block.\n' |
| 'If a name is bound at the module level, it is a global ' |
| 'variable. (The\n' |
| 'variables of the module code block are local and global.) If a\n' |
| 'variable is used in a code block but not defined there, it is a ' |
| '*free\n' |
| 'variable*.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'When a name is not found at all, a "NameError" exception is ' |
| 'raised.\n' |
| 'If the name refers to a local variable that has not been bound, ' |
| 'a\n' |
| '"UnboundLocalError" exception is raised. "UnboundLocalError" is ' |
| 'a\n' |
| 'subclass of "NameError".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The following constructs bind names: formal parameters to ' |
| 'functions,\n' |
| '"import" statements, class and function definitions (these bind ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'class or function name in the defining block), and targets that ' |
| 'are\n' |
| 'identifiers if occurring in an assignment, "for" loop header, in ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'second position of an "except" clause header or after "as" in a ' |
| '"with"\n' |
| 'statement. The "import" statement of the form "from ... import ' |
| '*"\n' |
| 'binds all names defined in the imported module, except those ' |
| 'beginning\n' |
| 'with an underscore. This form may only be used at the module ' |
| 'level.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A target occurring in a "del" statement is also considered bound ' |
| 'for\n' |
| 'this purpose (though the actual semantics are to unbind the ' |
| 'name). It\n' |
| 'is illegal to unbind a name that is referenced by an enclosing ' |
| 'scope;\n' |
| 'the compiler will report a "SyntaxError".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Each assignment or import statement occurs within a block ' |
| 'defined by a\n' |
| 'class or function definition or at the module level (the ' |
| 'top-level\n' |
| 'code block).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If a name binding operation occurs anywhere within a code block, ' |
| 'all\n' |
| 'uses of the name within the block are treated as references to ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'current block. This can lead to errors when a name is used ' |
| 'within a\n' |
| 'block before it is bound. This rule is subtle. Python lacks\n' |
| 'declarations and allows name binding operations to occur ' |
| 'anywhere\n' |
| 'within a code block. The local variables of a code block can ' |
| 'be\n' |
| 'determined by scanning the entire text of the block for name ' |
| 'binding\n' |
| 'operations.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If the global statement occurs within a block, all uses of the ' |
| 'name\n' |
| 'specified in the statement refer to the binding of that name in ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'top-level namespace. Names are resolved in the top-level ' |
| 'namespace by\n' |
| 'searching the global namespace, i.e. the namespace of the ' |
| 'module\n' |
| 'containing the code block, and the builtins namespace, the ' |
| 'namespace\n' |
| 'of the module "__builtin__". The global namespace is searched ' |
| 'first.\n' |
| 'If the name is not found there, the builtins namespace is ' |
| 'searched.\n' |
| 'The global statement must precede all uses of the name.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The builtins namespace associated with the execution of a code ' |
| 'block\n' |
| 'is actually found by looking up the name "__builtins__" in its ' |
| 'global\n' |
| 'namespace; this should be a dictionary or a module (in the ' |
| 'latter case\n' |
| "the module's dictionary is used). By default, when in the " |
| '"__main__"\n' |
| 'module, "__builtins__" is the built-in module "__builtin__" ' |
| '(note: no\n' |
| '\'s\'); when in any other module, "__builtins__" is an alias for ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'dictionary of the "__builtin__" module itself. "__builtins__" ' |
| 'can be\n' |
| 'set to a user-created dictionary to create a weak form of ' |
| 'restricted\n' |
| 'execution.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '**CPython implementation detail:** Users should not touch\n' |
| '"__builtins__"; it is strictly an implementation detail. Users\n' |
| 'wanting to override values in the builtins namespace should ' |
| '"import"\n' |
| 'the "__builtin__" (no \'s\') module and modify its attributes\n' |
| 'appropriately.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The namespace for a module is automatically created the first ' |
| 'time a\n' |
| 'module is imported. The main module for a script is always ' |
| 'called\n' |
| '"__main__".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "global" statement has the same scope as a name binding ' |
| 'operation\n' |
| 'in the same block. If the nearest enclosing scope for a free ' |
| 'variable\n' |
| 'contains a global statement, the free variable is treated as a ' |
| 'global.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A class definition is an executable statement that may use and ' |
| 'define\n' |
| 'names. These references follow the normal rules for name ' |
| 'resolution.\n' |
| 'The namespace of the class definition becomes the attribute ' |
| 'dictionary\n' |
| 'of the class. Names defined at the class scope are not visible ' |
| 'in\n' |
| 'methods.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Interaction with dynamic features\n' |
| '=================================\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'There are several cases where Python statements are illegal when ' |
| 'used\n' |
| 'in conjunction with nested scopes that contain free variables.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If a variable is referenced in an enclosing scope, it is illegal ' |
| 'to\n' |
| 'delete the name. An error will be reported at compile time.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If the wild card form of import --- "import *" --- is used in a\n' |
| 'function and the function contains or is a nested block with ' |
| 'free\n' |
| 'variables, the compiler will raise a "SyntaxError".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If "exec" is used in a function and the function contains or is ' |
| 'a\n' |
| 'nested block with free variables, the compiler will raise a\n' |
| '"SyntaxError" unless the exec explicitly specifies the local ' |
| 'namespace\n' |
| 'for the "exec". (In other words, "exec obj" would be illegal, ' |
| 'but\n' |
| '"exec obj in ns" would be legal.)\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "eval()", "execfile()", and "input()" functions and the ' |
| '"exec"\n' |
| 'statement do not have access to the full environment for ' |
| 'resolving\n' |
| 'names. Names may be resolved in the local and global namespaces ' |
| 'of\n' |
| 'the caller. Free variables are not resolved in the nearest ' |
| 'enclosing\n' |
| 'namespace, but in the global namespace. [1] The "exec" statement ' |
| 'and\n' |
| 'the "eval()" and "execfile()" functions have optional arguments ' |
| 'to\n' |
| 'override the global and local namespace. If only one namespace ' |
| 'is\n' |
| 'specified, it is used for both.\n', |
| 'numbers': '\n' |
| 'Numeric literals\n' |
| '****************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'There are four types of numeric literals: plain integers, long\n' |
| 'integers, floating point numbers, and imaginary numbers. There ' |
| 'are no\n' |
| 'complex literals (complex numbers can be formed by adding a ' |
| 'real\n' |
| 'number and an imaginary number).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Note that numeric literals do not include a sign; a phrase like ' |
| '"-1"\n' |
| 'is actually an expression composed of the unary operator ' |
| '\'"-"\' and the\n' |
| 'literal "1".\n', |
| 'numeric-types': '\n' |
| 'Emulating numeric types\n' |
| '***********************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The following methods can be defined to emulate numeric ' |
| 'objects.\n' |
| 'Methods corresponding to operations that are not ' |
| 'supported by the\n' |
| 'particular kind of number implemented (e.g., bitwise ' |
| 'operations for\n' |
| 'non-integral numbers) should be left undefined.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__add__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__sub__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__mul__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__floordiv__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__mod__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__divmod__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__pow__(self, other[, modulo])\n' |
| 'object.__lshift__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__rshift__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__and__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__xor__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__or__(self, other)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' These methods are called to implement the binary ' |
| 'arithmetic\n' |
| ' operations ("+", "-", "*", "//", "%", "divmod()", ' |
| '"pow()", "**",\n' |
| ' "<<", ">>", "&", "^", "|"). For instance, to evaluate ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' expression "x + y", where *x* is an instance of a ' |
| 'class that has an\n' |
| ' "__add__()" method, "x.__add__(y)" is called. The ' |
| '"__divmod__()"\n' |
| ' method should be the equivalent to using ' |
| '"__floordiv__()" and\n' |
| ' "__mod__()"; it should not be related to ' |
| '"__truediv__()" (described\n' |
| ' below). Note that "__pow__()" should be defined to ' |
| 'accept an\n' |
| ' optional third argument if the ternary version of the ' |
| 'built-in\n' |
| ' "pow()" function is to be supported.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If one of those methods does not support the operation ' |
| 'with the\n' |
| ' supplied arguments, it should return ' |
| '"NotImplemented".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__div__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__truediv__(self, other)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' The division operator ("/") is implemented by these ' |
| 'methods. The\n' |
| ' "__truediv__()" method is used when ' |
| '"__future__.division" is in\n' |
| ' effect, otherwise "__div__()" is used. If only one of ' |
| 'these two\n' |
| ' methods is defined, the object will not support ' |
| 'division in the\n' |
| ' alternate context; "TypeError" will be raised ' |
| 'instead.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__radd__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__rsub__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__rmul__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__rdiv__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__rtruediv__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__rfloordiv__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__rmod__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__rdivmod__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__rpow__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__rlshift__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__rrshift__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__rand__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__rxor__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__ror__(self, other)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' These methods are called to implement the binary ' |
| 'arithmetic\n' |
| ' operations ("+", "-", "*", "/", "%", "divmod()", ' |
| '"pow()", "**",\n' |
| ' "<<", ">>", "&", "^", "|") with reflected (swapped) ' |
| 'operands.\n' |
| ' These functions are only called if the left operand ' |
| 'does not\n' |
| ' support the corresponding operation and the operands ' |
| 'are of\n' |
| ' different types. [2] For instance, to evaluate the ' |
| 'expression "x -\n' |
| ' y", where *y* is an instance of a class that has an ' |
| '"__rsub__()"\n' |
| ' method, "y.__rsub__(x)" is called if "x.__sub__(y)" ' |
| 'returns\n' |
| ' *NotImplemented*.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Note that ternary "pow()" will not try calling ' |
| '"__rpow__()" (the\n' |
| ' coercion rules would become too complicated).\n' |
| '\n' |
| " Note: If the right operand's type is a subclass of the " |
| 'left\n' |
| " operand's type and that subclass provides the " |
| 'reflected method\n' |
| ' for the operation, this method will be called before ' |
| 'the left\n' |
| " operand's non-reflected method. This behavior " |
| 'allows subclasses\n' |
| " to override their ancestors' operations.\n" |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__iadd__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__isub__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__imul__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__idiv__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__itruediv__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__ifloordiv__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__imod__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__ipow__(self, other[, modulo])\n' |
| 'object.__ilshift__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__irshift__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__iand__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__ixor__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__ior__(self, other)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' These methods are called to implement the augmented ' |
| 'arithmetic\n' |
| ' assignments ("+=", "-=", "*=", "/=", "//=", "%=", ' |
| '"**=", "<<=",\n' |
| ' ">>=", "&=", "^=", "|="). These methods should ' |
| 'attempt to do the\n' |
| ' operation in-place (modifying *self*) and return the ' |
| 'result (which\n' |
| ' could be, but does not have to be, *self*). If a ' |
| 'specific method\n' |
| ' is not defined, the augmented assignment falls back to ' |
| 'the normal\n' |
| ' methods. For instance, to execute the statement "x += ' |
| 'y", where\n' |
| ' *x* is an instance of a class that has an "__iadd__()" ' |
| 'method,\n' |
| ' "x.__iadd__(y)" is called. If *x* is an instance of a ' |
| 'class that\n' |
| ' does not define a "__iadd__()" method, "x.__add__(y)" ' |
| 'and\n' |
| ' "y.__radd__(x)" are considered, as with the evaluation ' |
| 'of "x + y".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__neg__(self)\n' |
| 'object.__pos__(self)\n' |
| 'object.__abs__(self)\n' |
| 'object.__invert__(self)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to implement the unary arithmetic operations ' |
| '("-", "+",\n' |
| ' "abs()" and "~").\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__complex__(self)\n' |
| 'object.__int__(self)\n' |
| 'object.__long__(self)\n' |
| 'object.__float__(self)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to implement the built-in functions ' |
| '"complex()", "int()",\n' |
| ' "long()", and "float()". Should return a value of the ' |
| 'appropriate\n' |
| ' type.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__oct__(self)\n' |
| 'object.__hex__(self)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to implement the built-in functions "oct()" and ' |
| '"hex()".\n' |
| ' Should return a string value.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__index__(self)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to implement "operator.index()". Also called ' |
| 'whenever\n' |
| ' Python needs an integer object (such as in slicing). ' |
| 'Must return\n' |
| ' an integer (int or long).\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.5.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__coerce__(self, other)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to implement "mixed-mode" numeric arithmetic. ' |
| 'Should either\n' |
| ' return a 2-tuple containing *self* and *other* ' |
| 'converted to a\n' |
| ' common numeric type, or "None" if conversion is ' |
| 'impossible. When\n' |
| ' the common type would be the type of "other", it is ' |
| 'sufficient to\n' |
| ' return "None", since the interpreter will also ask the ' |
| 'other object\n' |
| ' to attempt a coercion (but sometimes, if the ' |
| 'implementation of the\n' |
| ' other type cannot be changed, it is useful to do the ' |
| 'conversion to\n' |
| ' the other type here). A return value of ' |
| '"NotImplemented" is\n' |
| ' equivalent to returning "None".\n', |
| 'objects': '\n' |
| 'Objects, values and types\n' |
| '*************************\n' |
| '\n' |
| "*Objects* are Python's abstraction for data. All data in a " |
| 'Python\n' |
| 'program is represented by objects or by relations between ' |
| 'objects. (In\n' |
| "a sense, and in conformance to Von Neumann's model of a " |
| '"stored\n' |
| 'program computer," code is also represented by objects.)\n' |
| '\n' |
| "Every object has an identity, a type and a value. An object's\n" |
| '*identity* never changes once it has been created; you may ' |
| 'think of it\n' |
| 'as the object\'s address in memory. The \'"is"\' operator ' |
| 'compares the\n' |
| 'identity of two objects; the "id()" function returns an ' |
| 'integer\n' |
| 'representing its identity (currently implemented as its ' |
| 'address). An\n' |
| "object's *type* is also unchangeable. [1] An object's type " |
| 'determines\n' |
| 'the operations that the object supports (e.g., "does it have a\n' |
| 'length?") and also defines the possible values for objects of ' |
| 'that\n' |
| 'type. The "type()" function returns an object\'s type (which ' |
| 'is an\n' |
| 'object itself). The *value* of some objects can change. ' |
| 'Objects\n' |
| 'whose value can change are said to be *mutable*; objects whose ' |
| 'value\n' |
| 'is unchangeable once they are created are called *immutable*. ' |
| '(The\n' |
| 'value of an immutable container object that contains a ' |
| 'reference to a\n' |
| "mutable object can change when the latter's value is changed; " |
| 'however\n' |
| 'the container is still considered immutable, because the ' |
| 'collection of\n' |
| 'objects it contains cannot be changed. So, immutability is ' |
| 'not\n' |
| 'strictly the same as having an unchangeable value, it is more ' |
| 'subtle.)\n' |
| "An object's mutability is determined by its type; for " |
| 'instance,\n' |
| 'numbers, strings and tuples are immutable, while dictionaries ' |
| 'and\n' |
| 'lists are mutable.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Objects are never explicitly destroyed; however, when they ' |
| 'become\n' |
| 'unreachable they may be garbage-collected. An implementation ' |
| 'is\n' |
| 'allowed to postpone garbage collection or omit it altogether ' |
| '--- it is\n' |
| 'a matter of implementation quality how garbage collection is\n' |
| 'implemented, as long as no objects are collected that are ' |
| 'still\n' |
| 'reachable.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '**CPython implementation detail:** CPython currently uses a ' |
| 'reference-\n' |
| 'counting scheme with (optional) delayed detection of cyclically ' |
| 'linked\n' |
| 'garbage, which collects most objects as soon as they become\n' |
| 'unreachable, but is not guaranteed to collect garbage ' |
| 'containing\n' |
| 'circular references. See the documentation of the "gc" module ' |
| 'for\n' |
| 'information on controlling the collection of cyclic garbage. ' |
| 'Other\n' |
| 'implementations act differently and CPython may change. Do not ' |
| 'depend\n' |
| 'on immediate finalization of objects when they become ' |
| 'unreachable (ex:\n' |
| 'always close files).\n' |
| '\n' |
| "Note that the use of the implementation's tracing or debugging\n" |
| 'facilities may keep objects alive that would normally be ' |
| 'collectable.\n' |
| 'Also note that catching an exception with a ' |
| '\'"try"..."except"\'\n' |
| 'statement may keep objects alive.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Some objects contain references to "external" resources such as ' |
| 'open\n' |
| 'files or windows. It is understood that these resources are ' |
| 'freed\n' |
| 'when the object is garbage-collected, but since garbage ' |
| 'collection is\n' |
| 'not guaranteed to happen, such objects also provide an explicit ' |
| 'way to\n' |
| 'release the external resource, usually a "close()" method. ' |
| 'Programs\n' |
| 'are strongly recommended to explicitly close such objects. ' |
| 'The\n' |
| '\'"try"..."finally"\' statement provides a convenient way to do ' |
| 'this.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Some objects contain references to other objects; these are ' |
| 'called\n' |
| '*containers*. Examples of containers are tuples, lists and\n' |
| "dictionaries. The references are part of a container's value. " |
| 'In\n' |
| 'most cases, when we talk about the value of a container, we ' |
| 'imply the\n' |
| 'values, not the identities of the contained objects; however, ' |
| 'when we\n' |
| 'talk about the mutability of a container, only the identities ' |
| 'of the\n' |
| 'immediately contained objects are implied. So, if an ' |
| 'immutable\n' |
| 'container (like a tuple) contains a reference to a mutable ' |
| 'object, its\n' |
| 'value changes if that mutable object is changed.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Types affect almost all aspects of object behavior. Even the\n' |
| 'importance of object identity is affected in some sense: for ' |
| 'immutable\n' |
| 'types, operations that compute new values may actually return ' |
| 'a\n' |
| 'reference to any existing object with the same type and value, ' |
| 'while\n' |
| 'for mutable objects this is not allowed. E.g., after "a = 1; b ' |
| '= 1",\n' |
| '"a" and "b" may or may not refer to the same object with the ' |
| 'value\n' |
| 'one, depending on the implementation, but after "c = []; d = ' |
| '[]", "c"\n' |
| 'and "d" are guaranteed to refer to two different, unique, ' |
| 'newly\n' |
| 'created empty lists. (Note that "c = d = []" assigns the same ' |
| 'object\n' |
| 'to both "c" and "d".)\n', |
| 'operator-summary': '\n' |
| 'Operator precedence\n' |
| '*******************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The following table summarizes the operator ' |
| 'precedences in Python,\n' |
| 'from lowest precedence (least binding) to highest ' |
| 'precedence (most\n' |
| 'binding). Operators in the same box have the same ' |
| 'precedence. Unless\n' |
| 'the syntax is explicitly given, operators are binary. ' |
| 'Operators in\n' |
| 'the same box group left to right (except for ' |
| 'comparisons, including\n' |
| 'tests, which all have the same precedence and chain ' |
| 'from left to right\n' |
| '--- see section Comparisons --- and exponentiation, ' |
| 'which groups from\n' |
| 'right to left).\n' |
| '\n' |
| '+-------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+\n' |
| '| Operator | ' |
| 'Description |\n' |
| '+=================================================+=======================================+\n' |
| '| "lambda" | ' |
| 'Lambda expression |\n' |
| '+-------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+\n' |
| '| "if" -- "else" | ' |
| 'Conditional expression |\n' |
| '+-------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+\n' |
| '| "or" | ' |
| 'Boolean OR |\n' |
| '+-------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+\n' |
| '| "and" | ' |
| 'Boolean AND |\n' |
| '+-------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+\n' |
| '| "not" "x" | ' |
| 'Boolean NOT |\n' |
| '+-------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+\n' |
| '| "in", "not in", "is", "is not", "<", "<=", ">", | ' |
| 'Comparisons, including membership |\n' |
| '| ">=", "<>", "!=", "==" | ' |
| 'tests and identity tests |\n' |
| '+-------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+\n' |
| '| "|" | ' |
| 'Bitwise OR |\n' |
| '+-------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+\n' |
| '| "^" | ' |
| 'Bitwise XOR |\n' |
| '+-------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+\n' |
| '| "&" | ' |
| 'Bitwise AND |\n' |
| '+-------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+\n' |
| '| "<<", ">>" | ' |
| 'Shifts |\n' |
| '+-------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+\n' |
| '| "+", "-" | ' |
| 'Addition and subtraction |\n' |
| '+-------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+\n' |
| '| "*", "/", "//", "%" | ' |
| 'Multiplication, division, remainder |\n' |
| '| | ' |
| '[8] |\n' |
| '+-------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+\n' |
| '| "+x", "-x", "~x" | ' |
| 'Positive, negative, bitwise NOT |\n' |
| '+-------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+\n' |
| '| "**" | ' |
| 'Exponentiation [9] |\n' |
| '+-------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+\n' |
| '| "x[index]", "x[index:index]", | ' |
| 'Subscription, slicing, call, |\n' |
| '| "x(arguments...)", "x.attribute" | ' |
| 'attribute reference |\n' |
| '+-------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+\n' |
| '| "(expressions...)", "[expressions...]", "{key: | ' |
| 'Binding or tuple display, list |\n' |
| '| value...}", "`expressions...`" | ' |
| 'display, dictionary display, string |\n' |
| '| | ' |
| 'conversion |\n' |
| '+-------------------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+\n' |
| '\n' |
| '-[ Footnotes ]-\n' |
| '\n' |
| '[1] In Python 2.3 and later releases, a list ' |
| 'comprehension "leaks"\n' |
| ' the control variables of each "for" it contains ' |
| 'into the\n' |
| ' containing scope. However, this behavior is ' |
| 'deprecated, and\n' |
| ' relying on it will not work in Python 3.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '[2] While "abs(x%y) < abs(y)" is true mathematically, ' |
| 'for floats\n' |
| ' it may not be true numerically due to roundoff. ' |
| 'For example, and\n' |
| ' assuming a platform on which a Python float is an ' |
| 'IEEE 754 double-\n' |
| ' precision number, in order that "-1e-100 % 1e100" ' |
| 'have the same\n' |
| ' sign as "1e100", the computed result is "-1e-100 + ' |
| '1e100", which\n' |
| ' is numerically exactly equal to "1e100". The ' |
| 'function\n' |
| ' "math.fmod()" returns a result whose sign matches ' |
| 'the sign of the\n' |
| ' first argument instead, and so returns "-1e-100" ' |
| 'in this case.\n' |
| ' Which approach is more appropriate depends on the ' |
| 'application.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '[3] If x is very close to an exact integer multiple of ' |
| "y, it's\n" |
| ' possible for "floor(x/y)" to be one larger than ' |
| '"(x-x%y)/y" due to\n' |
| ' rounding. In such cases, Python returns the ' |
| 'latter result, in\n' |
| ' order to preserve that "divmod(x,y)[0] * y + x % ' |
| 'y" be very close\n' |
| ' to "x".\n' |
| '\n' |
| '[4] While comparisons between unicode strings make ' |
| 'sense at the\n' |
| ' byte level, they may be counter-intuitive to ' |
| 'users. For example,\n' |
| ' the strings "u"\\u00C7"" and "u"\\u0043\\u0327"" ' |
| 'compare differently,\n' |
| ' even though they both represent the same unicode ' |
| 'character (LATIN\n' |
| ' CAPITAL LETTER C WITH CEDILLA). To compare strings ' |
| 'in a human\n' |
| ' recognizable way, compare using ' |
| '"unicodedata.normalize()".\n' |
| '\n' |
| '[5] The implementation computes this efficiently, ' |
| 'without\n' |
| ' constructing lists or sorting.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '[6] Earlier versions of Python used lexicographic ' |
| 'comparison of\n' |
| ' the sorted (key, value) lists, but this was very ' |
| 'expensive for the\n' |
| ' common case of comparing for equality. An even ' |
| 'earlier version of\n' |
| ' Python compared dictionaries by identity only, but ' |
| 'this caused\n' |
| ' surprises because people expected to be able to ' |
| 'test a dictionary\n' |
| ' for emptiness by comparing it to "{}".\n' |
| '\n' |
| '[7] Due to automatic garbage-collection, free lists, ' |
| 'and the\n' |
| ' dynamic nature of descriptors, you may notice ' |
| 'seemingly unusual\n' |
| ' behaviour in certain uses of the "is" operator, ' |
| 'like those\n' |
| ' involving comparisons between instance methods, or ' |
| 'constants.\n' |
| ' Check their documentation for more info.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '[8] The "%" operator is also used for string ' |
| 'formatting; the same\n' |
| ' precedence applies.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '[9] The power operator "**" binds less tightly than an ' |
| 'arithmetic\n' |
| ' or bitwise unary operator on its right, that is, ' |
| '"2**-1" is "0.5".\n', |
| 'pass': '\n' |
| 'The "pass" statement\n' |
| '********************\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' pass_stmt ::= "pass"\n' |
| '\n' |
| '"pass" is a null operation --- when it is executed, nothing ' |
| 'happens.\n' |
| 'It is useful as a placeholder when a statement is required\n' |
| 'syntactically, but no code needs to be executed, for example:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' def f(arg): pass # a function that does nothing (yet)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' class C: pass # a class with no methods (yet)\n', |
| 'power': '\n' |
| 'The power operator\n' |
| '******************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The power operator binds more tightly than unary operators on ' |
| 'its\n' |
| 'left; it binds less tightly than unary operators on its right. ' |
| 'The\n' |
| 'syntax is:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' power ::= primary ["**" u_expr]\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Thus, in an unparenthesized sequence of power and unary ' |
| 'operators, the\n' |
| 'operators are evaluated from right to left (this does not ' |
| 'constrain\n' |
| 'the evaluation order for the operands): "-1**2" results in "-1".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The power operator has the same semantics as the built-in ' |
| '"pow()"\n' |
| 'function, when called with two arguments: it yields its left ' |
| 'argument\n' |
| 'raised to the power of its right argument. The numeric arguments ' |
| 'are\n' |
| 'first converted to a common type. The result type is that of ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'arguments after coercion.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'With mixed operand types, the coercion rules for binary ' |
| 'arithmetic\n' |
| 'operators apply. For int and long int operands, the result has ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'same type as the operands (after coercion) unless the second ' |
| 'argument\n' |
| 'is negative; in that case, all arguments are converted to float ' |
| 'and a\n' |
| 'float result is delivered. For example, "10**2" returns "100", ' |
| 'but\n' |
| '"10**-2" returns "0.01". (This last feature was added in Python ' |
| '2.2.\n' |
| 'In Python 2.1 and before, if both arguments were of integer types ' |
| 'and\n' |
| 'the second argument was negative, an exception was raised).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Raising "0.0" to a negative power results in a ' |
| '"ZeroDivisionError".\n' |
| 'Raising a negative number to a fractional power results in a\n' |
| '"ValueError".\n', |
| 'print': '\n' |
| 'The "print" statement\n' |
| '*********************\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' print_stmt ::= "print" ([expression ("," expression)* [","]]\n' |
| ' | ">>" expression [("," expression)+ [","]])\n' |
| '\n' |
| '"print" evaluates each expression in turn and writes the ' |
| 'resulting\n' |
| 'object to standard output (see below). If an object is not a ' |
| 'string,\n' |
| 'it is first converted to a string using the rules for string\n' |
| 'conversions. The (resulting or original) string is then ' |
| 'written. A\n' |
| 'space is written before each object is (converted and) written, ' |
| 'unless\n' |
| 'the output system believes it is positioned at the beginning of ' |
| 'a\n' |
| 'line. This is the case (1) when no characters have yet been ' |
| 'written\n' |
| 'to standard output, (2) when the last character written to ' |
| 'standard\n' |
| 'output is a whitespace character except "\' \'", or (3) when the ' |
| 'last\n' |
| 'write operation on standard output was not a "print" statement. ' |
| '(In\n' |
| 'some cases it may be functional to write an empty string to ' |
| 'standard\n' |
| 'output for this reason.)\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Note: Objects which act like file objects but which are not the\n' |
| ' built-in file objects often do not properly emulate this aspect ' |
| 'of\n' |
| " the file object's behavior, so it is best not to rely on this.\n" |
| '\n' |
| 'A "\'\\n\'" character is written at the end, unless the "print" ' |
| 'statement\n' |
| 'ends with a comma. This is the only action if the statement ' |
| 'contains\n' |
| 'just the keyword "print".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Standard output is defined as the file object named "stdout" in ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'built-in module "sys". If no such object exists, or if it does ' |
| 'not\n' |
| 'have a "write()" method, a "RuntimeError" exception is raised.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '"print" also has an extended form, defined by the second portion ' |
| 'of\n' |
| 'the syntax described above. This form is sometimes referred to ' |
| 'as\n' |
| '""print" chevron." In this form, the first expression after the ' |
| '">>"\n' |
| 'must evaluate to a "file-like" object, specifically an object ' |
| 'that has\n' |
| 'a "write()" method as described above. With this extended form, ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'subsequent expressions are printed to this file object. If the ' |
| 'first\n' |
| 'expression evaluates to "None", then "sys.stdout" is used as the ' |
| 'file\n' |
| 'for output.\n', |
| 'raise': '\n' |
| 'The "raise" statement\n' |
| '*********************\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' raise_stmt ::= "raise" [expression ["," expression ["," ' |
| 'expression]]]\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If no expressions are present, "raise" re-raises the last ' |
| 'exception\n' |
| 'that was active in the current scope. If no exception is active ' |
| 'in\n' |
| 'the current scope, a "TypeError" exception is raised indicating ' |
| 'that\n' |
| 'this is an error (if running under IDLE, a "Queue.Empty" ' |
| 'exception is\n' |
| 'raised instead).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Otherwise, "raise" evaluates the expressions to get three ' |
| 'objects,\n' |
| 'using "None" as the value of omitted expressions. The first two\n' |
| 'objects are used to determine the *type* and *value* of the ' |
| 'exception.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If the first object is an instance, the type of the exception is ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'class of the instance, the instance itself is the value, and the\n' |
| 'second object must be "None".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If the first object is a class, it becomes the type of the ' |
| 'exception.\n' |
| 'The second object is used to determine the exception value: If it ' |
| 'is\n' |
| 'an instance of the class, the instance becomes the exception ' |
| 'value. If\n' |
| 'the second object is a tuple, it is used as the argument list for ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'class constructor; if it is "None", an empty argument list is ' |
| 'used,\n' |
| 'and any other object is treated as a single argument to the\n' |
| 'constructor. The instance so created by calling the constructor ' |
| 'is\n' |
| 'used as the exception value.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If a third object is present and not "None", it must be a ' |
| 'traceback\n' |
| 'object (see section The standard type hierarchy), and it is\n' |
| 'substituted instead of the current location as the place where ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'exception occurred. If the third object is present and not a\n' |
| 'traceback object or "None", a "TypeError" exception is raised. ' |
| 'The\n' |
| 'three-expression form of "raise" is useful to re-raise an ' |
| 'exception\n' |
| 'transparently in an except clause, but "raise" with no ' |
| 'expressions\n' |
| 'should be preferred if the exception to be re-raised was the ' |
| 'most\n' |
| 'recently active exception in the current scope.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Additional information on exceptions can be found in section\n' |
| 'Exceptions, and information about handling exceptions is in ' |
| 'section\n' |
| 'The try statement.\n', |
| 'return': '\n' |
| 'The "return" statement\n' |
| '**********************\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' return_stmt ::= "return" [expression_list]\n' |
| '\n' |
| '"return" may only occur syntactically nested in a function ' |
| 'definition,\n' |
| 'not within a nested class definition.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If an expression list is present, it is evaluated, else "None" ' |
| 'is\n' |
| 'substituted.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '"return" leaves the current function call with the expression ' |
| 'list (or\n' |
| '"None") as return value.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'When "return" passes control out of a "try" statement with a ' |
| '"finally"\n' |
| 'clause, that "finally" clause is executed before really leaving ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'function.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'In a generator function, the "return" statement is not allowed ' |
| 'to\n' |
| 'include an "expression_list". In that context, a bare "return"\n' |
| 'indicates that the generator is done and will cause ' |
| '"StopIteration" to\n' |
| 'be raised.\n', |
| 'sequence-types': '\n' |
| 'Emulating container types\n' |
| '*************************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The following methods can be defined to implement ' |
| 'container objects.\n' |
| 'Containers usually are sequences (such as lists or ' |
| 'tuples) or mappings\n' |
| '(like dictionaries), but can represent other containers ' |
| 'as well. The\n' |
| 'first set of methods is used either to emulate a ' |
| 'sequence or to\n' |
| 'emulate a mapping; the difference is that for a ' |
| 'sequence, the\n' |
| 'allowable keys should be the integers *k* for which "0 ' |
| '<= k < N" where\n' |
| '*N* is the length of the sequence, or slice objects, ' |
| 'which define a\n' |
| 'range of items. (For backwards compatibility, the ' |
| 'method\n' |
| '"__getslice__()" (see below) can also be defined to ' |
| 'handle simple, but\n' |
| 'not extended slices.) It is also recommended that ' |
| 'mappings provide the\n' |
| 'methods "keys()", "values()", "items()", "has_key()", ' |
| '"get()",\n' |
| '"clear()", "setdefault()", "iterkeys()", ' |
| '"itervalues()",\n' |
| '"iteritems()", "pop()", "popitem()", "copy()", and ' |
| '"update()" behaving\n' |
| "similar to those for Python's standard dictionary " |
| 'objects. The\n' |
| '"UserDict" module provides a "DictMixin" class to help ' |
| 'create those\n' |
| 'methods from a base set of "__getitem__()", ' |
| '"__setitem__()",\n' |
| '"__delitem__()", and "keys()". Mutable sequences should ' |
| 'provide\n' |
| 'methods "append()", "count()", "index()", "extend()", ' |
| '"insert()",\n' |
| '"pop()", "remove()", "reverse()" and "sort()", like ' |
| 'Python standard\n' |
| 'list objects. Finally, sequence types should implement ' |
| 'addition\n' |
| '(meaning concatenation) and multiplication (meaning ' |
| 'repetition) by\n' |
| 'defining the methods "__add__()", "__radd__()", ' |
| '"__iadd__()",\n' |
| '"__mul__()", "__rmul__()" and "__imul__()" described ' |
| 'below; they\n' |
| 'should not define "__coerce__()" or other numerical ' |
| 'operators. It is\n' |
| 'recommended that both mappings and sequences implement ' |
| 'the\n' |
| '"__contains__()" method to allow efficient use of the ' |
| '"in" operator;\n' |
| 'for mappings, "in" should be equivalent of "has_key()"; ' |
| 'for sequences,\n' |
| 'it should search through the values. It is further ' |
| 'recommended that\n' |
| 'both mappings and sequences implement the "__iter__()" ' |
| 'method to allow\n' |
| 'efficient iteration through the container; for mappings, ' |
| '"__iter__()"\n' |
| 'should be the same as "iterkeys()"; for sequences, it ' |
| 'should iterate\n' |
| 'through the values.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__len__(self)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to implement the built-in function "len()". ' |
| 'Should return\n' |
| ' the length of the object, an integer ">=" 0. Also, ' |
| 'an object that\n' |
| ' doesn\'t define a "__nonzero__()" method and whose ' |
| '"__len__()"\n' |
| ' method returns zero is considered to be false in a ' |
| 'Boolean context.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__getitem__(self, key)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to implement evaluation of "self[key]". For ' |
| 'sequence types,\n' |
| ' the accepted keys should be integers and slice ' |
| 'objects. Note that\n' |
| ' the special interpretation of negative indexes (if ' |
| 'the class wishes\n' |
| ' to emulate a sequence type) is up to the ' |
| '"__getitem__()" method. If\n' |
| ' *key* is of an inappropriate type, "TypeError" may be ' |
| 'raised; if of\n' |
| ' a value outside the set of indexes for the sequence ' |
| '(after any\n' |
| ' special interpretation of negative values), ' |
| '"IndexError" should be\n' |
| ' raised. For mapping types, if *key* is missing (not ' |
| 'in the\n' |
| ' container), "KeyError" should be raised.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Note: "for" loops expect that an "IndexError" will be ' |
| 'raised for\n' |
| ' illegal indexes to allow proper detection of the ' |
| 'end of the\n' |
| ' sequence.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__missing__(self, key)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called by "dict"."__getitem__()" to implement ' |
| '"self[key]" for dict\n' |
| ' subclasses when key is not in the dictionary.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__setitem__(self, key, value)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to implement assignment to "self[key]". Same ' |
| 'note as for\n' |
| ' "__getitem__()". This should only be implemented for ' |
| 'mappings if\n' |
| ' the objects support changes to the values for keys, ' |
| 'or if new keys\n' |
| ' can be added, or for sequences if elements can be ' |
| 'replaced. The\n' |
| ' same exceptions should be raised for improper *key* ' |
| 'values as for\n' |
| ' the "__getitem__()" method.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__delitem__(self, key)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to implement deletion of "self[key]". Same ' |
| 'note as for\n' |
| ' "__getitem__()". This should only be implemented for ' |
| 'mappings if\n' |
| ' the objects support removal of keys, or for sequences ' |
| 'if elements\n' |
| ' can be removed from the sequence. The same ' |
| 'exceptions should be\n' |
| ' raised for improper *key* values as for the ' |
| '"__getitem__()" method.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__iter__(self)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' This method is called when an iterator is required ' |
| 'for a container.\n' |
| ' This method should return a new iterator object that ' |
| 'can iterate\n' |
| ' over all the objects in the container. For mappings, ' |
| 'it should\n' |
| ' iterate over the keys of the container, and should ' |
| 'also be made\n' |
| ' available as the method "iterkeys()".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Iterator objects also need to implement this method; ' |
| 'they are\n' |
| ' required to return themselves. For more information ' |
| 'on iterator\n' |
| ' objects, see Iterator Types.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__reversed__(self)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called (if present) by the "reversed()" built-in to ' |
| 'implement\n' |
| ' reverse iteration. It should return a new iterator ' |
| 'object that\n' |
| ' iterates over all the objects in the container in ' |
| 'reverse order.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If the "__reversed__()" method is not provided, the ' |
| '"reversed()"\n' |
| ' built-in will fall back to using the sequence ' |
| 'protocol ("__len__()"\n' |
| ' and "__getitem__()"). Objects that support the ' |
| 'sequence protocol\n' |
| ' should only provide "__reversed__()" if they can ' |
| 'provide an\n' |
| ' implementation that is more efficient than the one ' |
| 'provided by\n' |
| ' "reversed()".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.6.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The membership test operators ("in" and "not in") are ' |
| 'normally\n' |
| 'implemented as an iteration through a sequence. ' |
| 'However, container\n' |
| 'objects can supply the following special method with a ' |
| 'more efficient\n' |
| 'implementation, which also does not require the object ' |
| 'be a sequence.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__contains__(self, item)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to implement membership test operators. ' |
| 'Should return true\n' |
| ' if *item* is in *self*, false otherwise. For mapping ' |
| 'objects, this\n' |
| ' should consider the keys of the mapping rather than ' |
| 'the values or\n' |
| ' the key-item pairs.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For objects that don\'t define "__contains__()", the ' |
| 'membership test\n' |
| ' first tries iteration via "__iter__()", then the old ' |
| 'sequence\n' |
| ' iteration protocol via "__getitem__()", see this ' |
| 'section in the\n' |
| ' language reference.\n', |
| 'shifting': '\n' |
| 'Shifting operations\n' |
| '*******************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The shifting operations have lower priority than the ' |
| 'arithmetic\n' |
| 'operations:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' shift_expr ::= a_expr | shift_expr ( "<<" | ">>" ) a_expr\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'These operators accept plain or long integers as arguments. ' |
| 'The\n' |
| 'arguments are converted to a common type. They shift the ' |
| 'first\n' |
| 'argument to the left or right by the number of bits given by ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'second argument.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A right shift by *n* bits is defined as division by "pow(2, ' |
| 'n)". A\n' |
| 'left shift by *n* bits is defined as multiplication with ' |
| '"pow(2, n)".\n' |
| 'Negative shift counts raise a "ValueError" exception.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Note: In the current implementation, the right-hand operand ' |
| 'is\n' |
| ' required to be at most "sys.maxsize". If the right-hand ' |
| 'operand is\n' |
| ' larger than "sys.maxsize" an "OverflowError" exception is ' |
| 'raised.\n', |
| 'slicings': '\n' |
| 'Slicings\n' |
| '********\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A slicing selects a range of items in a sequence object (e.g., ' |
| 'a\n' |
| 'string, tuple or list). Slicings may be used as expressions ' |
| 'or as\n' |
| 'targets in assignment or "del" statements. The syntax for a ' |
| 'slicing:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' slicing ::= simple_slicing | extended_slicing\n' |
| ' simple_slicing ::= primary "[" short_slice "]"\n' |
| ' extended_slicing ::= primary "[" slice_list "]"\n' |
| ' slice_list ::= slice_item ("," slice_item)* [","]\n' |
| ' slice_item ::= expression | proper_slice | ellipsis\n' |
| ' proper_slice ::= short_slice | long_slice\n' |
| ' short_slice ::= [lower_bound] ":" [upper_bound]\n' |
| ' long_slice ::= short_slice ":" [stride]\n' |
| ' lower_bound ::= expression\n' |
| ' upper_bound ::= expression\n' |
| ' stride ::= expression\n' |
| ' ellipsis ::= "..."\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'There is ambiguity in the formal syntax here: anything that ' |
| 'looks like\n' |
| 'an expression list also looks like a slice list, so any ' |
| 'subscription\n' |
| 'can be interpreted as a slicing. Rather than further ' |
| 'complicating the\n' |
| 'syntax, this is disambiguated by defining that in this case ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'interpretation as a subscription takes priority over the\n' |
| 'interpretation as a slicing (this is the case if the slice ' |
| 'list\n' |
| 'contains no proper slice nor ellipses). Similarly, when the ' |
| 'slice\n' |
| 'list has exactly one short slice and no trailing comma, the\n' |
| 'interpretation as a simple slicing takes priority over that as ' |
| 'an\n' |
| 'extended slicing.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The semantics for a simple slicing are as follows. The ' |
| 'primary must\n' |
| 'evaluate to a sequence object. The lower and upper bound ' |
| 'expressions,\n' |
| 'if present, must evaluate to plain integers; defaults are zero ' |
| 'and the\n' |
| '"sys.maxint", respectively. If either bound is negative, the\n' |
| "sequence's length is added to it. The slicing now selects all " |
| 'items\n' |
| 'with index *k* such that "i <= k < j" where *i* and *j* are ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'specified lower and upper bounds. This may be an empty ' |
| 'sequence. It\n' |
| 'is not an error if *i* or *j* lie outside the range of valid ' |
| 'indexes\n' |
| "(such items don't exist so they aren't selected).\n" |
| '\n' |
| 'The semantics for an extended slicing are as follows. The ' |
| 'primary\n' |
| 'must evaluate to a mapping object, and it is indexed with a ' |
| 'key that\n' |
| 'is constructed from the slice list, as follows. If the slice ' |
| 'list\n' |
| 'contains at least one comma, the key is a tuple containing ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'conversion of the slice items; otherwise, the conversion of ' |
| 'the lone\n' |
| 'slice item is the key. The conversion of a slice item that is ' |
| 'an\n' |
| 'expression is that expression. The conversion of an ellipsis ' |
| 'slice\n' |
| 'item is the built-in "Ellipsis" object. The conversion of a ' |
| 'proper\n' |
| 'slice is a slice object (see section The standard type ' |
| 'hierarchy)\n' |
| 'whose "start", "stop" and "step" attributes are the values of ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'expressions given as lower bound, upper bound and stride,\n' |
| 'respectively, substituting "None" for missing expressions.\n', |
| 'specialattrs': '\n' |
| 'Special Attributes\n' |
| '******************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The implementation adds a few special read-only attributes ' |
| 'to several\n' |
| 'object types, where they are relevant. Some of these are ' |
| 'not reported\n' |
| 'by the "dir()" built-in function.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__dict__\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' A dictionary or other mapping object used to store an ' |
| "object's\n" |
| ' (writable) attributes.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__methods__\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Deprecated since version 2.2: Use the built-in function ' |
| '"dir()" to\n' |
| " get a list of an object's attributes. This attribute is " |
| 'no longer\n' |
| ' available.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__members__\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Deprecated since version 2.2: Use the built-in function ' |
| '"dir()" to\n' |
| " get a list of an object's attributes. This attribute is " |
| 'no longer\n' |
| ' available.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'instance.__class__\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' The class to which a class instance belongs.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'class.__bases__\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' The tuple of base classes of a class object.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'class.__name__\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' The name of the class or type.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The following attributes are only supported by *new-style ' |
| 'class*es.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'class.__mro__\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' This attribute is a tuple of classes that are ' |
| 'considered when\n' |
| ' looking for base classes during method resolution.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'class.mro()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' This method can be overridden by a metaclass to ' |
| 'customize the\n' |
| ' method resolution order for its instances. It is ' |
| 'called at class\n' |
| ' instantiation, and its result is stored in "__mro__".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'class.__subclasses__()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Each new-style class keeps a list of weak references to ' |
| 'its\n' |
| ' immediate subclasses. This method returns a list of ' |
| 'all those\n' |
| ' references still alive. Example:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> int.__subclasses__()\n' |
| " [<type 'bool'>]\n" |
| '\n' |
| '-[ Footnotes ]-\n' |
| '\n' |
| '[1] Additional information on these special methods may be ' |
| 'found\n' |
| ' in the Python Reference Manual (Basic customization).\n' |
| '\n' |
| '[2] As a consequence, the list "[1, 2]" is considered ' |
| 'equal to\n' |
| ' "[1.0, 2.0]", and similarly for tuples.\n' |
| '\n' |
| "[3] They must have since the parser can't tell the type of " |
| 'the\n' |
| ' operands.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '[4] Cased characters are those with general category ' |
| 'property\n' |
| ' being one of "Lu" (Letter, uppercase), "Ll" (Letter, ' |
| 'lowercase),\n' |
| ' or "Lt" (Letter, titlecase).\n' |
| '\n' |
| '[5] To format only a tuple you should therefore provide a\n' |
| ' singleton tuple whose only element is the tuple to be ' |
| 'formatted.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '[6] The advantage of leaving the newline on is that ' |
| 'returning an\n' |
| ' empty string is then an unambiguous EOF indication. ' |
| 'It is also\n' |
| ' possible (in cases where it might matter, for example, ' |
| 'if you want\n' |
| ' to make an exact copy of a file while scanning its ' |
| 'lines) to tell\n' |
| ' whether the last line of a file ended in a newline or ' |
| 'not (yes\n' |
| ' this happens!).\n', |
| 'specialnames': '\n' |
| 'Special method names\n' |
| '********************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A class can implement certain operations that are invoked ' |
| 'by special\n' |
| 'syntax (such as arithmetic operations or subscripting and ' |
| 'slicing) by\n' |
| "defining methods with special names. This is Python's " |
| 'approach to\n' |
| '*operator overloading*, allowing classes to define their ' |
| 'own behavior\n' |
| 'with respect to language operators. For instance, if a ' |
| 'class defines\n' |
| 'a method named "__getitem__()", and "x" is an instance of ' |
| 'this class,\n' |
| 'then "x[i]" is roughly equivalent to "x.__getitem__(i)" ' |
| 'for old-style\n' |
| 'classes and "type(x).__getitem__(x, i)" for new-style ' |
| 'classes. Except\n' |
| 'where mentioned, attempts to execute an operation raise an ' |
| 'exception\n' |
| 'when no appropriate method is defined (typically ' |
| '"AttributeError" or\n' |
| '"TypeError").\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'When implementing a class that emulates any built-in type, ' |
| 'it is\n' |
| 'important that the emulation only be implemented to the ' |
| 'degree that it\n' |
| 'makes sense for the object being modelled. For example, ' |
| 'some\n' |
| 'sequences may work well with retrieval of individual ' |
| 'elements, but\n' |
| 'extracting a slice may not make sense. (One example of ' |
| 'this is the\n' |
| '"NodeList" interface in the W3C\'s Document Object ' |
| 'Model.)\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Basic customization\n' |
| '===================\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__new__(cls[, ...])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to create a new instance of class *cls*. ' |
| '"__new__()" is a\n' |
| ' static method (special-cased so you need not declare it ' |
| 'as such)\n' |
| ' that takes the class of which an instance was requested ' |
| 'as its\n' |
| ' first argument. The remaining arguments are those ' |
| 'passed to the\n' |
| ' object constructor expression (the call to the class). ' |
| 'The return\n' |
| ' value of "__new__()" should be the new object instance ' |
| '(usually an\n' |
| ' instance of *cls*).\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Typical implementations create a new instance of the ' |
| 'class by\n' |
| ' invoking the superclass\'s "__new__()" method using\n' |
| ' "super(currentclass, cls).__new__(cls[, ...])" with ' |
| 'appropriate\n' |
| ' arguments and then modifying the newly-created instance ' |
| 'as\n' |
| ' necessary before returning it.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If "__new__()" returns an instance of *cls*, then the ' |
| 'new\n' |
| ' instance\'s "__init__()" method will be invoked like\n' |
| ' "__init__(self[, ...])", where *self* is the new ' |
| 'instance and the\n' |
| ' remaining arguments are the same as were passed to ' |
| '"__new__()".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If "__new__()" does not return an instance of *cls*, ' |
| 'then the new\n' |
| ' instance\'s "__init__()" method will not be invoked.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' "__new__()" is intended mainly to allow subclasses of ' |
| 'immutable\n' |
| ' types (like int, str, or tuple) to customize instance ' |
| 'creation. It\n' |
| ' is also commonly overridden in custom metaclasses in ' |
| 'order to\n' |
| ' customize class creation.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__init__(self[, ...])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called after the instance has been created (by ' |
| '"__new__()"), but\n' |
| ' before it is returned to the caller. The arguments are ' |
| 'those\n' |
| ' passed to the class constructor expression. If a base ' |
| 'class has an\n' |
| ' "__init__()" method, the derived class\'s "__init__()" ' |
| 'method, if\n' |
| ' any, must explicitly call it to ensure proper ' |
| 'initialization of the\n' |
| ' base class part of the instance; for example:\n' |
| ' "BaseClass.__init__(self, [args...])".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Because "__new__()" and "__init__()" work together in ' |
| 'constructing\n' |
| ' objects ("__new__()" to create it, and "__init__()" to ' |
| 'customise\n' |
| ' it), no non-"None" value may be returned by ' |
| '"__init__()"; doing so\n' |
| ' will cause a "TypeError" to be raised at runtime.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__del__(self)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called when the instance is about to be destroyed. ' |
| 'This is also\n' |
| ' called a destructor. If a base class has a "__del__()" ' |
| 'method, the\n' |
| ' derived class\'s "__del__()" method, if any, must ' |
| 'explicitly call it\n' |
| ' to ensure proper deletion of the base class part of the ' |
| 'instance.\n' |
| ' Note that it is possible (though not recommended!) for ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' "__del__()" method to postpone destruction of the ' |
| 'instance by\n' |
| ' creating a new reference to it. It may then be called ' |
| 'at a later\n' |
| ' time when this new reference is deleted. It is not ' |
| 'guaranteed that\n' |
| ' "__del__()" methods are called for objects that still ' |
| 'exist when\n' |
| ' the interpreter exits.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Note: "del x" doesn\'t directly call "x.__del__()" --- ' |
| 'the former\n' |
| ' decrements the reference count for "x" by one, and ' |
| 'the latter is\n' |
| ' only called when "x"\'s reference count reaches ' |
| 'zero. Some common\n' |
| ' situations that may prevent the reference count of an ' |
| 'object from\n' |
| ' going to zero include: circular references between ' |
| 'objects (e.g.,\n' |
| ' a doubly-linked list or a tree data structure with ' |
| 'parent and\n' |
| ' child pointers); a reference to the object on the ' |
| 'stack frame of\n' |
| ' a function that caught an exception (the traceback ' |
| 'stored in\n' |
| ' "sys.exc_traceback" keeps the stack frame alive); or ' |
| 'a reference\n' |
| ' to the object on the stack frame that raised an ' |
| 'unhandled\n' |
| ' exception in interactive mode (the traceback stored ' |
| 'in\n' |
| ' "sys.last_traceback" keeps the stack frame alive). ' |
| 'The first\n' |
| ' situation can only be remedied by explicitly breaking ' |
| 'the cycles;\n' |
| ' the latter two situations can be resolved by storing ' |
| '"None" in\n' |
| ' "sys.exc_traceback" or "sys.last_traceback". ' |
| 'Circular references\n' |
| ' which are garbage are detected when the option cycle ' |
| 'detector is\n' |
| " enabled (it's on by default), but can only be cleaned " |
| 'up if there\n' |
| ' are no Python-level "__del__()" methods involved. ' |
| 'Refer to the\n' |
| ' documentation for the "gc" module for more ' |
| 'information about how\n' |
| ' "__del__()" methods are handled by the cycle ' |
| 'detector,\n' |
| ' particularly the description of the "garbage" value.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Warning: Due to the precarious circumstances under ' |
| 'which\n' |
| ' "__del__()" methods are invoked, exceptions that ' |
| 'occur during\n' |
| ' their execution are ignored, and a warning is printed ' |
| 'to\n' |
| ' "sys.stderr" instead. Also, when "__del__()" is ' |
| 'invoked in\n' |
| ' response to a module being deleted (e.g., when ' |
| 'execution of the\n' |
| ' program is done), other globals referenced by the ' |
| '"__del__()"\n' |
| ' method may already have been deleted or in the ' |
| 'process of being\n' |
| ' torn down (e.g. the import machinery shutting down). ' |
| 'For this\n' |
| ' reason, "__del__()" methods should do the absolute ' |
| 'minimum needed\n' |
| ' to maintain external invariants. Starting with ' |
| 'version 1.5,\n' |
| ' Python guarantees that globals whose name begins with ' |
| 'a single\n' |
| ' underscore are deleted from their module before other ' |
| 'globals are\n' |
| ' deleted; if no other references to such globals ' |
| 'exist, this may\n' |
| ' help in assuring that imported modules are still ' |
| 'available at the\n' |
| ' time when the "__del__()" method is called.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' See also the "-R" command-line option.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__repr__(self)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called by the "repr()" built-in function and by string ' |
| 'conversions\n' |
| ' (reverse quotes) to compute the "official" string ' |
| 'representation of\n' |
| ' an object. If at all possible, this should look like a ' |
| 'valid\n' |
| ' Python expression that could be used to recreate an ' |
| 'object with the\n' |
| ' same value (given an appropriate environment). If this ' |
| 'is not\n' |
| ' possible, a string of the form "<...some useful ' |
| 'description...>"\n' |
| ' should be returned. The return value must be a string ' |
| 'object. If a\n' |
| ' class defines "__repr__()" but not "__str__()", then ' |
| '"__repr__()"\n' |
| ' is also used when an "informal" string representation ' |
| 'of instances\n' |
| ' of that class is required.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' This is typically used for debugging, so it is ' |
| 'important that the\n' |
| ' representation is information-rich and unambiguous.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__str__(self)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called by the "str()" built-in function and by the ' |
| '"print"\n' |
| ' statement to compute the "informal" string ' |
| 'representation of an\n' |
| ' object. This differs from "__repr__()" in that it does ' |
| 'not have to\n' |
| ' be a valid Python expression: a more convenient or ' |
| 'concise\n' |
| ' representation may be used instead. The return value ' |
| 'must be a\n' |
| ' string object.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__lt__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__le__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__eq__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__ne__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__gt__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__ge__(self, other)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.1.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' These are the so-called "rich comparison" methods, and ' |
| 'are called\n' |
| ' for comparison operators in preference to "__cmp__()" ' |
| 'below. The\n' |
| ' correspondence between operator symbols and method ' |
| 'names is as\n' |
| ' follows: "x<y" calls "x.__lt__(y)", "x<=y" calls ' |
| '"x.__le__(y)",\n' |
| ' "x==y" calls "x.__eq__(y)", "x!=y" and "x<>y" call ' |
| '"x.__ne__(y)",\n' |
| ' "x>y" calls "x.__gt__(y)", and "x>=y" calls ' |
| '"x.__ge__(y)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' A rich comparison method may return the singleton ' |
| '"NotImplemented"\n' |
| ' if it does not implement the operation for a given pair ' |
| 'of\n' |
| ' arguments. By convention, "False" and "True" are ' |
| 'returned for a\n' |
| ' successful comparison. However, these methods can ' |
| 'return any value,\n' |
| ' so if the comparison operator is used in a Boolean ' |
| 'context (e.g.,\n' |
| ' in the condition of an "if" statement), Python will ' |
| 'call "bool()"\n' |
| ' on the value to determine if the result is true or ' |
| 'false.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' There are no implied relationships among the comparison ' |
| 'operators.\n' |
| ' The truth of "x==y" does not imply that "x!=y" is ' |
| 'false.\n' |
| ' Accordingly, when defining "__eq__()", one should also ' |
| 'define\n' |
| ' "__ne__()" so that the operators will behave as ' |
| 'expected. See the\n' |
| ' paragraph on "__hash__()" for some important notes on ' |
| 'creating\n' |
| ' *hashable* objects which support custom comparison ' |
| 'operations and\n' |
| ' are usable as dictionary keys.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' There are no swapped-argument versions of these methods ' |
| '(to be used\n' |
| ' when the left argument does not support the operation ' |
| 'but the right\n' |
| ' argument does); rather, "__lt__()" and "__gt__()" are ' |
| "each other's\n" |
| ' reflection, "__le__()" and "__ge__()" are each other\'s ' |
| 'reflection,\n' |
| ' and "__eq__()" and "__ne__()" are their own ' |
| 'reflection.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Arguments to rich comparison methods are never ' |
| 'coerced.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' To automatically generate ordering operations from a ' |
| 'single root\n' |
| ' operation, see "functools.total_ordering()".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__cmp__(self, other)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called by comparison operations if rich comparison (see ' |
| 'above) is\n' |
| ' not defined. Should return a negative integer if "self ' |
| '< other",\n' |
| ' zero if "self == other", a positive integer if "self > ' |
| 'other". If\n' |
| ' no "__cmp__()", "__eq__()" or "__ne__()" operation is ' |
| 'defined,\n' |
| ' class instances are compared by object identity ' |
| '("address"). See\n' |
| ' also the description of "__hash__()" for some important ' |
| 'notes on\n' |
| ' creating *hashable* objects which support custom ' |
| 'comparison\n' |
| ' operations and are usable as dictionary keys. (Note: ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' restriction that exceptions are not propagated by ' |
| '"__cmp__()" has\n' |
| ' been removed since Python 1.5.)\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__rcmp__(self, other)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.1: No longer supported.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__hash__(self)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called by built-in function "hash()" and for operations ' |
| 'on members\n' |
| ' of hashed collections including "set", "frozenset", and ' |
| '"dict".\n' |
| ' "__hash__()" should return an integer. The only ' |
| 'required property\n' |
| ' is that objects which compare equal have the same hash ' |
| 'value; it is\n' |
| ' advised to somehow mix together (e.g. using exclusive ' |
| 'or) the hash\n' |
| ' values for the components of the object that also play ' |
| 'a part in\n' |
| ' comparison of objects.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If a class does not define a "__cmp__()" or "__eq__()" ' |
| 'method it\n' |
| ' should not define a "__hash__()" operation either; if ' |
| 'it defines\n' |
| ' "__cmp__()" or "__eq__()" but not "__hash__()", its ' |
| 'instances will\n' |
| ' not be usable in hashed collections. If a class ' |
| 'defines mutable\n' |
| ' objects and implements a "__cmp__()" or "__eq__()" ' |
| 'method, it\n' |
| ' should not implement "__hash__()", since hashable ' |
| 'collection\n' |
| " implementations require that a object's hash value is " |
| 'immutable (if\n' |
| " the object's hash value changes, it will be in the " |
| 'wrong hash\n' |
| ' bucket).\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' User-defined classes have "__cmp__()" and "__hash__()" ' |
| 'methods by\n' |
| ' default; with them, all objects compare unequal (except ' |
| 'with\n' |
| ' themselves) and "x.__hash__()" returns a result derived ' |
| 'from\n' |
| ' "id(x)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Classes which inherit a "__hash__()" method from a ' |
| 'parent class but\n' |
| ' change the meaning of "__cmp__()" or "__eq__()" such ' |
| 'that the hash\n' |
| ' value returned is no longer appropriate (e.g. by ' |
| 'switching to a\n' |
| ' value-based concept of equality instead of the default ' |
| 'identity\n' |
| ' based equality) can explicitly flag themselves as being ' |
| 'unhashable\n' |
| ' by setting "__hash__ = None" in the class definition. ' |
| 'Doing so\n' |
| ' means that not only will instances of the class raise ' |
| 'an\n' |
| ' appropriate "TypeError" when a program attempts to ' |
| 'retrieve their\n' |
| ' hash value, but they will also be correctly identified ' |
| 'as\n' |
| ' unhashable when checking "isinstance(obj, ' |
| 'collections.Hashable)"\n' |
| ' (unlike classes which define their own "__hash__()" to ' |
| 'explicitly\n' |
| ' raise "TypeError").\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.5: "__hash__()" may now also ' |
| 'return a long\n' |
| ' integer object; the 32-bit integer is then derived from ' |
| 'the hash of\n' |
| ' that object.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.6: "__hash__" may now be set to ' |
| '"None" to\n' |
| ' explicitly flag instances of a class as unhashable.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__nonzero__(self)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to implement truth value testing and the ' |
| 'built-in operation\n' |
| ' "bool()"; should return "False" or "True", or their ' |
| 'integer\n' |
| ' equivalents "0" or "1". When this method is not ' |
| 'defined,\n' |
| ' "__len__()" is called, if it is defined, and the object ' |
| 'is\n' |
| ' considered true if its result is nonzero. If a class ' |
| 'defines\n' |
| ' neither "__len__()" nor "__nonzero__()", all its ' |
| 'instances are\n' |
| ' considered true.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__unicode__(self)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to implement "unicode()" built-in; should return ' |
| 'a Unicode\n' |
| ' object. When this method is not defined, string ' |
| 'conversion is\n' |
| ' attempted, and the result of string conversion is ' |
| 'converted to\n' |
| ' Unicode using the system default encoding.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Customizing attribute access\n' |
| '============================\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The following methods can be defined to customize the ' |
| 'meaning of\n' |
| 'attribute access (use of, assignment to, or deletion of ' |
| '"x.name") for\n' |
| 'class instances.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__getattr__(self, name)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called when an attribute lookup has not found the ' |
| 'attribute in the\n' |
| ' usual places (i.e. it is not an instance attribute nor ' |
| 'is it found\n' |
| ' in the class tree for "self"). "name" is the attribute ' |
| 'name. This\n' |
| ' method should return the (computed) attribute value or ' |
| 'raise an\n' |
| ' "AttributeError" exception.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Note that if the attribute is found through the normal ' |
| 'mechanism,\n' |
| ' "__getattr__()" is not called. (This is an intentional ' |
| 'asymmetry\n' |
| ' between "__getattr__()" and "__setattr__()".) This is ' |
| 'done both for\n' |
| ' efficiency reasons and because otherwise ' |
| '"__getattr__()" would have\n' |
| ' no way to access other attributes of the instance. ' |
| 'Note that at\n' |
| ' least for instance variables, you can fake total ' |
| 'control by not\n' |
| ' inserting any values in the instance attribute ' |
| 'dictionary (but\n' |
| ' instead inserting them in another object). See the\n' |
| ' "__getattribute__()" method below for a way to actually ' |
| 'get total\n' |
| ' control in new-style classes.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__setattr__(self, name, value)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called when an attribute assignment is attempted. This ' |
| 'is called\n' |
| ' instead of the normal mechanism (i.e. store the value ' |
| 'in the\n' |
| ' instance dictionary). *name* is the attribute name, ' |
| '*value* is the\n' |
| ' value to be assigned to it.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If "__setattr__()" wants to assign to an instance ' |
| 'attribute, it\n' |
| ' should not simply execute "self.name = value" --- this ' |
| 'would cause\n' |
| ' a recursive call to itself. Instead, it should insert ' |
| 'the value in\n' |
| ' the dictionary of instance attributes, e.g., ' |
| '"self.__dict__[name] =\n' |
| ' value". For new-style classes, rather than accessing ' |
| 'the instance\n' |
| ' dictionary, it should call the base class method with ' |
| 'the same\n' |
| ' name, for example, "object.__setattr__(self, name, ' |
| 'value)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__delattr__(self, name)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Like "__setattr__()" but for attribute deletion instead ' |
| 'of\n' |
| ' assignment. This should only be implemented if "del ' |
| 'obj.name" is\n' |
| ' meaningful for the object.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'More attribute access for new-style classes\n' |
| '-------------------------------------------\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The following methods only apply to new-style classes.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__getattribute__(self, name)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called unconditionally to implement attribute accesses ' |
| 'for\n' |
| ' instances of the class. If the class also defines ' |
| '"__getattr__()",\n' |
| ' the latter will not be called unless ' |
| '"__getattribute__()" either\n' |
| ' calls it explicitly or raises an "AttributeError". This ' |
| 'method\n' |
| ' should return the (computed) attribute value or raise ' |
| 'an\n' |
| ' "AttributeError" exception. In order to avoid infinite ' |
| 'recursion in\n' |
| ' this method, its implementation should always call the ' |
| 'base class\n' |
| ' method with the same name to access any attributes it ' |
| 'needs, for\n' |
| ' example, "object.__getattribute__(self, name)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Note: This method may still be bypassed when looking up ' |
| 'special\n' |
| ' methods as the result of implicit invocation via ' |
| 'language syntax\n' |
| ' or built-in functions. See Special method lookup for ' |
| 'new-style\n' |
| ' classes.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Implementing Descriptors\n' |
| '------------------------\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The following methods only apply when an instance of the ' |
| 'class\n' |
| 'containing the method (a so-called *descriptor* class) ' |
| 'appears in an\n' |
| '*owner* class (the descriptor must be in either the ' |
| "owner's class\n" |
| 'dictionary or in the class dictionary for one of its ' |
| 'parents). In the\n' |
| 'examples below, "the attribute" refers to the attribute ' |
| 'whose name is\n' |
| 'the key of the property in the owner class\' "__dict__".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__get__(self, instance, owner)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to get the attribute of the owner class (class ' |
| 'attribute\n' |
| ' access) or of an instance of that class (instance ' |
| 'attribute\n' |
| ' access). *owner* is always the owner class, while ' |
| '*instance* is the\n' |
| ' instance that the attribute was accessed through, or ' |
| '"None" when\n' |
| ' the attribute is accessed through the *owner*. This ' |
| 'method should\n' |
| ' return the (computed) attribute value or raise an ' |
| '"AttributeError"\n' |
| ' exception.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__set__(self, instance, value)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to set the attribute on an instance *instance* ' |
| 'of the owner\n' |
| ' class to a new value, *value*.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__delete__(self, instance)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to delete the attribute on an instance ' |
| '*instance* of the\n' |
| ' owner class.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Invoking Descriptors\n' |
| '--------------------\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'In general, a descriptor is an object attribute with ' |
| '"binding\n' |
| 'behavior", one whose attribute access has been overridden ' |
| 'by methods\n' |
| 'in the descriptor protocol: "__get__()", "__set__()", ' |
| 'and\n' |
| '"__delete__()". If any of those methods are defined for an ' |
| 'object, it\n' |
| 'is said to be a descriptor.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The default behavior for attribute access is to get, set, ' |
| 'or delete\n' |
| "the attribute from an object's dictionary. For instance, " |
| '"a.x" has a\n' |
| 'lookup chain starting with "a.__dict__[\'x\']", then\n' |
| '"type(a).__dict__[\'x\']", and continuing through the base ' |
| 'classes of\n' |
| '"type(a)" excluding metaclasses.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'However, if the looked-up value is an object defining one ' |
| 'of the\n' |
| 'descriptor methods, then Python may override the default ' |
| 'behavior and\n' |
| 'invoke the descriptor method instead. Where this occurs ' |
| 'in the\n' |
| 'precedence chain depends on which descriptor methods were ' |
| 'defined and\n' |
| 'how they were called. Note that descriptors are only ' |
| 'invoked for new\n' |
| 'style objects or classes (ones that subclass "object()" or ' |
| '"type()").\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The starting point for descriptor invocation is a binding, ' |
| '"a.x". How\n' |
| 'the arguments are assembled depends on "a":\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Direct Call\n' |
| ' The simplest and least common call is when user code ' |
| 'directly\n' |
| ' invokes a descriptor method: "x.__get__(a)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Instance Binding\n' |
| ' If binding to a new-style object instance, "a.x" is ' |
| 'transformed\n' |
| ' into the call: "type(a).__dict__[\'x\'].__get__(a, ' |
| 'type(a))".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Class Binding\n' |
| ' If binding to a new-style class, "A.x" is transformed ' |
| 'into the\n' |
| ' call: "A.__dict__[\'x\'].__get__(None, A)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Super Binding\n' |
| ' If "a" is an instance of "super", then the binding ' |
| '"super(B,\n' |
| ' obj).m()" searches "obj.__class__.__mro__" for the base ' |
| 'class "A"\n' |
| ' immediately preceding "B" and then invokes the ' |
| 'descriptor with the\n' |
| ' call: "A.__dict__[\'m\'].__get__(obj, obj.__class__)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'For instance bindings, the precedence of descriptor ' |
| 'invocation depends\n' |
| 'on the which descriptor methods are defined. A descriptor ' |
| 'can define\n' |
| 'any combination of "__get__()", "__set__()" and ' |
| '"__delete__()". If it\n' |
| 'does not define "__get__()", then accessing the attribute ' |
| 'will return\n' |
| 'the descriptor object itself unless there is a value in ' |
| "the object's\n" |
| 'instance dictionary. If the descriptor defines ' |
| '"__set__()" and/or\n' |
| '"__delete__()", it is a data descriptor; if it defines ' |
| 'neither, it is\n' |
| 'a non-data descriptor. Normally, data descriptors define ' |
| 'both\n' |
| '"__get__()" and "__set__()", while non-data descriptors ' |
| 'have just the\n' |
| '"__get__()" method. Data descriptors with "__set__()" and ' |
| '"__get__()"\n' |
| 'defined always override a redefinition in an instance ' |
| 'dictionary. In\n' |
| 'contrast, non-data descriptors can be overridden by ' |
| 'instances.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Python methods (including "staticmethod()" and ' |
| '"classmethod()") are\n' |
| 'implemented as non-data descriptors. Accordingly, ' |
| 'instances can\n' |
| 'redefine and override methods. This allows individual ' |
| 'instances to\n' |
| 'acquire behaviors that differ from other instances of the ' |
| 'same class.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "property()" function is implemented as a data ' |
| 'descriptor.\n' |
| 'Accordingly, instances cannot override the behavior of a ' |
| 'property.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| '__slots__\n' |
| '---------\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'By default, instances of both old and new-style classes ' |
| 'have a\n' |
| 'dictionary for attribute storage. This wastes space for ' |
| 'objects\n' |
| 'having very few instance variables. The space consumption ' |
| 'can become\n' |
| 'acute when creating large numbers of instances.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The default can be overridden by defining *__slots__* in a ' |
| 'new-style\n' |
| 'class definition. The *__slots__* declaration takes a ' |
| 'sequence of\n' |
| 'instance variables and reserves just enough space in each ' |
| 'instance to\n' |
| 'hold a value for each variable. Space is saved because ' |
| '*__dict__* is\n' |
| 'not created for each instance.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '__slots__\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' This class variable can be assigned a string, iterable, ' |
| 'or sequence\n' |
| ' of strings with variable names used by instances. If ' |
| 'defined in a\n' |
| ' new-style class, *__slots__* reserves space for the ' |
| 'declared\n' |
| ' variables and prevents the automatic creation of ' |
| '*__dict__* and\n' |
| ' *__weakref__* for each instance.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.2.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Notes on using *__slots__*\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* When inheriting from a class without *__slots__*, the ' |
| '*__dict__*\n' |
| ' attribute of that class will always be accessible, so a ' |
| '*__slots__*\n' |
| ' definition in the subclass is meaningless.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* Without a *__dict__* variable, instances cannot be ' |
| 'assigned new\n' |
| ' variables not listed in the *__slots__* definition. ' |
| 'Attempts to\n' |
| ' assign to an unlisted variable name raises ' |
| '"AttributeError". If\n' |
| ' dynamic assignment of new variables is desired, then ' |
| 'add\n' |
| ' "\'__dict__\'" to the sequence of strings in the ' |
| '*__slots__*\n' |
| ' declaration.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.3: Previously, adding ' |
| '"\'__dict__\'" to the\n' |
| ' *__slots__* declaration would not enable the assignment ' |
| 'of new\n' |
| ' attributes not specifically listed in the sequence of ' |
| 'instance\n' |
| ' variable names.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* Without a *__weakref__* variable for each instance, ' |
| 'classes\n' |
| ' defining *__slots__* do not support weak references to ' |
| 'its\n' |
| ' instances. If weak reference support is needed, then ' |
| 'add\n' |
| ' "\'__weakref__\'" to the sequence of strings in the ' |
| '*__slots__*\n' |
| ' declaration.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.3: Previously, adding ' |
| '"\'__weakref__\'" to the\n' |
| ' *__slots__* declaration would not enable support for ' |
| 'weak\n' |
| ' references.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* *__slots__* are implemented at the class level by ' |
| 'creating\n' |
| ' descriptors (Implementing Descriptors) for each variable ' |
| 'name. As a\n' |
| ' result, class attributes cannot be used to set default ' |
| 'values for\n' |
| ' instance variables defined by *__slots__*; otherwise, ' |
| 'the class\n' |
| ' attribute would overwrite the descriptor assignment.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* The action of a *__slots__* declaration is limited to ' |
| 'the class\n' |
| ' where it is defined. As a result, subclasses will have ' |
| 'a *__dict__*\n' |
| ' unless they also define *__slots__* (which must only ' |
| 'contain names\n' |
| ' of any *additional* slots).\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* If a class defines a slot also defined in a base class, ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' instance variable defined by the base class slot is ' |
| 'inaccessible\n' |
| ' (except by retrieving its descriptor directly from the ' |
| 'base class).\n' |
| ' This renders the meaning of the program undefined. In ' |
| 'the future, a\n' |
| ' check may be added to prevent this.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* Nonempty *__slots__* does not work for classes derived ' |
| 'from\n' |
| ' "variable-length" built-in types such as "long", "str" ' |
| 'and "tuple".\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* Any non-string iterable may be assigned to *__slots__*. ' |
| 'Mappings\n' |
| ' may also be used; however, in the future, special ' |
| 'meaning may be\n' |
| ' assigned to the values corresponding to each key.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* *__class__* assignment works only if both classes have ' |
| 'the same\n' |
| ' *__slots__*.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.6: Previously, *__class__* ' |
| 'assignment raised an\n' |
| ' error if either new or old class had *__slots__*.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Customizing class creation\n' |
| '==========================\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'By default, new-style classes are constructed using ' |
| '"type()". A class\n' |
| 'definition is read into a separate namespace and the value ' |
| 'of class\n' |
| 'name is bound to the result of "type(name, bases, dict)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'When the class definition is read, if *__metaclass__* is ' |
| 'defined then\n' |
| 'the callable assigned to it will be called instead of ' |
| '"type()". This\n' |
| 'allows classes or functions to be written which monitor or ' |
| 'alter the\n' |
| 'class creation process:\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* Modifying the class dictionary prior to the class being ' |
| 'created.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* Returning an instance of another class -- essentially ' |
| 'performing\n' |
| ' the role of a factory function.\n' |
| '\n' |
| "These steps will have to be performed in the metaclass's " |
| '"__new__()"\n' |
| 'method -- "type.__new__()" can then be called from this ' |
| 'method to\n' |
| 'create a class with different properties. This example ' |
| 'adds a new\n' |
| 'element to the class dictionary before creating the ' |
| 'class:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' class metacls(type):\n' |
| ' def __new__(mcs, name, bases, dict):\n' |
| " dict['foo'] = 'metacls was here'\n" |
| ' return type.__new__(mcs, name, bases, dict)\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'You can of course also override other class methods (or ' |
| 'add new\n' |
| 'methods); for example defining a custom "__call__()" ' |
| 'method in the\n' |
| 'metaclass allows custom behavior when the class is called, ' |
| 'e.g. not\n' |
| 'always creating a new instance.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '__metaclass__\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' This variable can be any callable accepting arguments ' |
| 'for "name",\n' |
| ' "bases", and "dict". Upon class creation, the callable ' |
| 'is used\n' |
| ' instead of the built-in "type()".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.2.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The appropriate metaclass is determined by the following ' |
| 'precedence\n' |
| 'rules:\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* If "dict[\'__metaclass__\']" exists, it is used.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* Otherwise, if there is at least one base class, its ' |
| 'metaclass is\n' |
| ' used (this looks for a *__class__* attribute first and ' |
| 'if not found,\n' |
| ' uses its type).\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* Otherwise, if a global variable named __metaclass__ ' |
| 'exists, it is\n' |
| ' used.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* Otherwise, the old-style, classic metaclass ' |
| '(types.ClassType) is\n' |
| ' used.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The potential uses for metaclasses are boundless. Some ' |
| 'ideas that have\n' |
| 'been explored including logging, interface checking, ' |
| 'automatic\n' |
| 'delegation, automatic property creation, proxies, ' |
| 'frameworks, and\n' |
| 'automatic resource locking/synchronization.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Customizing instance and subclass checks\n' |
| '========================================\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'New in version 2.6.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The following methods are used to override the default ' |
| 'behavior of the\n' |
| '"isinstance()" and "issubclass()" built-in functions.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'In particular, the metaclass "abc.ABCMeta" implements ' |
| 'these methods in\n' |
| 'order to allow the addition of Abstract Base Classes ' |
| '(ABCs) as\n' |
| '"virtual base classes" to any class or type (including ' |
| 'built-in\n' |
| 'types), including other ABCs.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'class.__instancecheck__(self, instance)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return true if *instance* should be considered a ' |
| '(direct or\n' |
| ' indirect) instance of *class*. If defined, called to ' |
| 'implement\n' |
| ' "isinstance(instance, class)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'class.__subclasscheck__(self, subclass)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return true if *subclass* should be considered a ' |
| '(direct or\n' |
| ' indirect) subclass of *class*. If defined, called to ' |
| 'implement\n' |
| ' "issubclass(subclass, class)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Note that these methods are looked up on the type ' |
| '(metaclass) of a\n' |
| 'class. They cannot be defined as class methods in the ' |
| 'actual class.\n' |
| 'This is consistent with the lookup of special methods that ' |
| 'are called\n' |
| 'on instances, only in this case the instance is itself a ' |
| 'class.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'See also: **PEP 3119** - Introducing Abstract Base ' |
| 'Classes\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Includes the specification for customizing ' |
| '"isinstance()" and\n' |
| ' "issubclass()" behavior through "__instancecheck__()" ' |
| 'and\n' |
| ' "__subclasscheck__()", with motivation for this ' |
| 'functionality in\n' |
| ' the context of adding Abstract Base Classes (see the ' |
| '"abc"\n' |
| ' module) to the language.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Emulating callable objects\n' |
| '==========================\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__call__(self[, args...])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called when the instance is "called" as a function; if ' |
| 'this method\n' |
| ' is defined, "x(arg1, arg2, ...)" is a shorthand for\n' |
| ' "x.__call__(arg1, arg2, ...)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Emulating container types\n' |
| '=========================\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The following methods can be defined to implement ' |
| 'container objects.\n' |
| 'Containers usually are sequences (such as lists or tuples) ' |
| 'or mappings\n' |
| '(like dictionaries), but can represent other containers as ' |
| 'well. The\n' |
| 'first set of methods is used either to emulate a sequence ' |
| 'or to\n' |
| 'emulate a mapping; the difference is that for a sequence, ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'allowable keys should be the integers *k* for which "0 <= ' |
| 'k < N" where\n' |
| '*N* is the length of the sequence, or slice objects, which ' |
| 'define a\n' |
| 'range of items. (For backwards compatibility, the method\n' |
| '"__getslice__()" (see below) can also be defined to handle ' |
| 'simple, but\n' |
| 'not extended slices.) It is also recommended that mappings ' |
| 'provide the\n' |
| 'methods "keys()", "values()", "items()", "has_key()", ' |
| '"get()",\n' |
| '"clear()", "setdefault()", "iterkeys()", "itervalues()",\n' |
| '"iteritems()", "pop()", "popitem()", "copy()", and ' |
| '"update()" behaving\n' |
| "similar to those for Python's standard dictionary " |
| 'objects. The\n' |
| '"UserDict" module provides a "DictMixin" class to help ' |
| 'create those\n' |
| 'methods from a base set of "__getitem__()", ' |
| '"__setitem__()",\n' |
| '"__delitem__()", and "keys()". Mutable sequences should ' |
| 'provide\n' |
| 'methods "append()", "count()", "index()", "extend()", ' |
| '"insert()",\n' |
| '"pop()", "remove()", "reverse()" and "sort()", like Python ' |
| 'standard\n' |
| 'list objects. Finally, sequence types should implement ' |
| 'addition\n' |
| '(meaning concatenation) and multiplication (meaning ' |
| 'repetition) by\n' |
| 'defining the methods "__add__()", "__radd__()", ' |
| '"__iadd__()",\n' |
| '"__mul__()", "__rmul__()" and "__imul__()" described ' |
| 'below; they\n' |
| 'should not define "__coerce__()" or other numerical ' |
| 'operators. It is\n' |
| 'recommended that both mappings and sequences implement ' |
| 'the\n' |
| '"__contains__()" method to allow efficient use of the "in" ' |
| 'operator;\n' |
| 'for mappings, "in" should be equivalent of "has_key()"; ' |
| 'for sequences,\n' |
| 'it should search through the values. It is further ' |
| 'recommended that\n' |
| 'both mappings and sequences implement the "__iter__()" ' |
| 'method to allow\n' |
| 'efficient iteration through the container; for mappings, ' |
| '"__iter__()"\n' |
| 'should be the same as "iterkeys()"; for sequences, it ' |
| 'should iterate\n' |
| 'through the values.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__len__(self)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to implement the built-in function "len()". ' |
| 'Should return\n' |
| ' the length of the object, an integer ">=" 0. Also, an ' |
| 'object that\n' |
| ' doesn\'t define a "__nonzero__()" method and whose ' |
| '"__len__()"\n' |
| ' method returns zero is considered to be false in a ' |
| 'Boolean context.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__getitem__(self, key)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to implement evaluation of "self[key]". For ' |
| 'sequence types,\n' |
| ' the accepted keys should be integers and slice ' |
| 'objects. Note that\n' |
| ' the special interpretation of negative indexes (if the ' |
| 'class wishes\n' |
| ' to emulate a sequence type) is up to the ' |
| '"__getitem__()" method. If\n' |
| ' *key* is of an inappropriate type, "TypeError" may be ' |
| 'raised; if of\n' |
| ' a value outside the set of indexes for the sequence ' |
| '(after any\n' |
| ' special interpretation of negative values), ' |
| '"IndexError" should be\n' |
| ' raised. For mapping types, if *key* is missing (not in ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' container), "KeyError" should be raised.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Note: "for" loops expect that an "IndexError" will be ' |
| 'raised for\n' |
| ' illegal indexes to allow proper detection of the end ' |
| 'of the\n' |
| ' sequence.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__missing__(self, key)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called by "dict"."__getitem__()" to implement ' |
| '"self[key]" for dict\n' |
| ' subclasses when key is not in the dictionary.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__setitem__(self, key, value)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to implement assignment to "self[key]". Same ' |
| 'note as for\n' |
| ' "__getitem__()". This should only be implemented for ' |
| 'mappings if\n' |
| ' the objects support changes to the values for keys, or ' |
| 'if new keys\n' |
| ' can be added, or for sequences if elements can be ' |
| 'replaced. The\n' |
| ' same exceptions should be raised for improper *key* ' |
| 'values as for\n' |
| ' the "__getitem__()" method.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__delitem__(self, key)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to implement deletion of "self[key]". Same note ' |
| 'as for\n' |
| ' "__getitem__()". This should only be implemented for ' |
| 'mappings if\n' |
| ' the objects support removal of keys, or for sequences ' |
| 'if elements\n' |
| ' can be removed from the sequence. The same exceptions ' |
| 'should be\n' |
| ' raised for improper *key* values as for the ' |
| '"__getitem__()" method.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__iter__(self)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' This method is called when an iterator is required for ' |
| 'a container.\n' |
| ' This method should return a new iterator object that ' |
| 'can iterate\n' |
| ' over all the objects in the container. For mappings, ' |
| 'it should\n' |
| ' iterate over the keys of the container, and should also ' |
| 'be made\n' |
| ' available as the method "iterkeys()".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Iterator objects also need to implement this method; ' |
| 'they are\n' |
| ' required to return themselves. For more information on ' |
| 'iterator\n' |
| ' objects, see Iterator Types.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__reversed__(self)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called (if present) by the "reversed()" built-in to ' |
| 'implement\n' |
| ' reverse iteration. It should return a new iterator ' |
| 'object that\n' |
| ' iterates over all the objects in the container in ' |
| 'reverse order.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If the "__reversed__()" method is not provided, the ' |
| '"reversed()"\n' |
| ' built-in will fall back to using the sequence protocol ' |
| '("__len__()"\n' |
| ' and "__getitem__()"). Objects that support the ' |
| 'sequence protocol\n' |
| ' should only provide "__reversed__()" if they can ' |
| 'provide an\n' |
| ' implementation that is more efficient than the one ' |
| 'provided by\n' |
| ' "reversed()".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.6.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The membership test operators ("in" and "not in") are ' |
| 'normally\n' |
| 'implemented as an iteration through a sequence. However, ' |
| 'container\n' |
| 'objects can supply the following special method with a ' |
| 'more efficient\n' |
| 'implementation, which also does not require the object be ' |
| 'a sequence.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__contains__(self, item)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to implement membership test operators. Should ' |
| 'return true\n' |
| ' if *item* is in *self*, false otherwise. For mapping ' |
| 'objects, this\n' |
| ' should consider the keys of the mapping rather than the ' |
| 'values or\n' |
| ' the key-item pairs.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For objects that don\'t define "__contains__()", the ' |
| 'membership test\n' |
| ' first tries iteration via "__iter__()", then the old ' |
| 'sequence\n' |
| ' iteration protocol via "__getitem__()", see this ' |
| 'section in the\n' |
| ' language reference.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Additional methods for emulation of sequence types\n' |
| '==================================================\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The following optional methods can be defined to further ' |
| 'emulate\n' |
| 'sequence objects. Immutable sequences methods should at ' |
| 'most only\n' |
| 'define "__getslice__()"; mutable sequences might define ' |
| 'all three\n' |
| 'methods.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__getslice__(self, i, j)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Deprecated since version 2.0: Support slice objects as ' |
| 'parameters\n' |
| ' to the "__getitem__()" method. (However, built-in types ' |
| 'in CPython\n' |
| ' currently still implement "__getslice__()". Therefore, ' |
| 'you have to\n' |
| ' override it in derived classes when implementing ' |
| 'slicing.)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to implement evaluation of "self[i:j]". The ' |
| 'returned object\n' |
| ' should be of the same type as *self*. Note that ' |
| 'missing *i* or *j*\n' |
| ' in the slice expression are replaced by zero or ' |
| '"sys.maxsize",\n' |
| ' respectively. If negative indexes are used in the ' |
| 'slice, the\n' |
| ' length of the sequence is added to that index. If the ' |
| 'instance does\n' |
| ' not implement the "__len__()" method, an ' |
| '"AttributeError" is\n' |
| ' raised. No guarantee is made that indexes adjusted this ' |
| 'way are not\n' |
| ' still negative. Indexes which are greater than the ' |
| 'length of the\n' |
| ' sequence are not modified. If no "__getslice__()" is ' |
| 'found, a slice\n' |
| ' object is created instead, and passed to ' |
| '"__getitem__()" instead.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__setslice__(self, i, j, sequence)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to implement assignment to "self[i:j]". Same ' |
| 'notes for *i*\n' |
| ' and *j* as for "__getslice__()".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' This method is deprecated. If no "__setslice__()" is ' |
| 'found, or for\n' |
| ' extended slicing of the form "self[i:j:k]", a slice ' |
| 'object is\n' |
| ' created, and passed to "__setitem__()", instead of ' |
| '"__setslice__()"\n' |
| ' being called.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__delslice__(self, i, j)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to implement deletion of "self[i:j]". Same notes ' |
| 'for *i* and\n' |
| ' *j* as for "__getslice__()". This method is deprecated. ' |
| 'If no\n' |
| ' "__delslice__()" is found, or for extended slicing of ' |
| 'the form\n' |
| ' "self[i:j:k]", a slice object is created, and passed ' |
| 'to\n' |
| ' "__delitem__()", instead of "__delslice__()" being ' |
| 'called.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Notice that these methods are only invoked when a single ' |
| 'slice with a\n' |
| 'single colon is used, and the slice method is available. ' |
| 'For slice\n' |
| 'operations involving extended slice notation, or in ' |
| 'absence of the\n' |
| 'slice methods, "__getitem__()", "__setitem__()" or ' |
| '"__delitem__()" is\n' |
| 'called with a slice object as argument.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The following example demonstrate how to make your program ' |
| 'or module\n' |
| 'compatible with earlier versions of Python (assuming that ' |
| 'methods\n' |
| '"__getitem__()", "__setitem__()" and "__delitem__()" ' |
| 'support slice\n' |
| 'objects as arguments):\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' class MyClass:\n' |
| ' ...\n' |
| ' def __getitem__(self, index):\n' |
| ' ...\n' |
| ' def __setitem__(self, index, value):\n' |
| ' ...\n' |
| ' def __delitem__(self, index):\n' |
| ' ...\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' if sys.version_info < (2, 0):\n' |
| " # They won't be defined if version is at least " |
| '2.0 final\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' def __getslice__(self, i, j):\n' |
| ' return self[max(0, i):max(0, j):]\n' |
| ' def __setslice__(self, i, j, seq):\n' |
| ' self[max(0, i):max(0, j):] = seq\n' |
| ' def __delslice__(self, i, j):\n' |
| ' del self[max(0, i):max(0, j):]\n' |
| ' ...\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Note the calls to "max()"; these are necessary because of ' |
| 'the handling\n' |
| 'of negative indices before the "__*slice__()" methods are ' |
| 'called.\n' |
| 'When negative indexes are used, the "__*item__()" methods ' |
| 'receive them\n' |
| 'as provided, but the "__*slice__()" methods get a "cooked" ' |
| 'form of the\n' |
| 'index values. For each negative index value, the length ' |
| 'of the\n' |
| 'sequence is added to the index before calling the method ' |
| '(which may\n' |
| 'still result in a negative index); this is the customary ' |
| 'handling of\n' |
| 'negative indexes by the built-in sequence types, and the ' |
| '"__*item__()"\n' |
| 'methods are expected to do this as well. However, since ' |
| 'they should\n' |
| 'already be doing that, negative indexes cannot be passed ' |
| 'in; they must\n' |
| 'be constrained to the bounds of the sequence before being ' |
| 'passed to\n' |
| 'the "__*item__()" methods. Calling "max(0, i)" ' |
| 'conveniently returns\n' |
| 'the proper value.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Emulating numeric types\n' |
| '=======================\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The following methods can be defined to emulate numeric ' |
| 'objects.\n' |
| 'Methods corresponding to operations that are not supported ' |
| 'by the\n' |
| 'particular kind of number implemented (e.g., bitwise ' |
| 'operations for\n' |
| 'non-integral numbers) should be left undefined.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__add__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__sub__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__mul__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__floordiv__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__mod__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__divmod__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__pow__(self, other[, modulo])\n' |
| 'object.__lshift__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__rshift__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__and__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__xor__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__or__(self, other)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' These methods are called to implement the binary ' |
| 'arithmetic\n' |
| ' operations ("+", "-", "*", "//", "%", "divmod()", ' |
| '"pow()", "**",\n' |
| ' "<<", ">>", "&", "^", "|"). For instance, to evaluate ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' expression "x + y", where *x* is an instance of a class ' |
| 'that has an\n' |
| ' "__add__()" method, "x.__add__(y)" is called. The ' |
| '"__divmod__()"\n' |
| ' method should be the equivalent to using ' |
| '"__floordiv__()" and\n' |
| ' "__mod__()"; it should not be related to ' |
| '"__truediv__()" (described\n' |
| ' below). Note that "__pow__()" should be defined to ' |
| 'accept an\n' |
| ' optional third argument if the ternary version of the ' |
| 'built-in\n' |
| ' "pow()" function is to be supported.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If one of those methods does not support the operation ' |
| 'with the\n' |
| ' supplied arguments, it should return "NotImplemented".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__div__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__truediv__(self, other)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' The division operator ("/") is implemented by these ' |
| 'methods. The\n' |
| ' "__truediv__()" method is used when ' |
| '"__future__.division" is in\n' |
| ' effect, otherwise "__div__()" is used. If only one of ' |
| 'these two\n' |
| ' methods is defined, the object will not support ' |
| 'division in the\n' |
| ' alternate context; "TypeError" will be raised instead.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__radd__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__rsub__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__rmul__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__rdiv__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__rtruediv__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__rfloordiv__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__rmod__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__rdivmod__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__rpow__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__rlshift__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__rrshift__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__rand__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__rxor__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__ror__(self, other)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' These methods are called to implement the binary ' |
| 'arithmetic\n' |
| ' operations ("+", "-", "*", "/", "%", "divmod()", ' |
| '"pow()", "**",\n' |
| ' "<<", ">>", "&", "^", "|") with reflected (swapped) ' |
| 'operands.\n' |
| ' These functions are only called if the left operand ' |
| 'does not\n' |
| ' support the corresponding operation and the operands ' |
| 'are of\n' |
| ' different types. [2] For instance, to evaluate the ' |
| 'expression "x -\n' |
| ' y", where *y* is an instance of a class that has an ' |
| '"__rsub__()"\n' |
| ' method, "y.__rsub__(x)" is called if "x.__sub__(y)" ' |
| 'returns\n' |
| ' *NotImplemented*.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Note that ternary "pow()" will not try calling ' |
| '"__rpow__()" (the\n' |
| ' coercion rules would become too complicated).\n' |
| '\n' |
| " Note: If the right operand's type is a subclass of the " |
| 'left\n' |
| " operand's type and that subclass provides the " |
| 'reflected method\n' |
| ' for the operation, this method will be called before ' |
| 'the left\n' |
| " operand's non-reflected method. This behavior allows " |
| 'subclasses\n' |
| " to override their ancestors' operations.\n" |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__iadd__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__isub__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__imul__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__idiv__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__itruediv__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__ifloordiv__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__imod__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__ipow__(self, other[, modulo])\n' |
| 'object.__ilshift__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__irshift__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__iand__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__ixor__(self, other)\n' |
| 'object.__ior__(self, other)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' These methods are called to implement the augmented ' |
| 'arithmetic\n' |
| ' assignments ("+=", "-=", "*=", "/=", "//=", "%=", ' |
| '"**=", "<<=",\n' |
| ' ">>=", "&=", "^=", "|="). These methods should attempt ' |
| 'to do the\n' |
| ' operation in-place (modifying *self*) and return the ' |
| 'result (which\n' |
| ' could be, but does not have to be, *self*). If a ' |
| 'specific method\n' |
| ' is not defined, the augmented assignment falls back to ' |
| 'the normal\n' |
| ' methods. For instance, to execute the statement "x += ' |
| 'y", where\n' |
| ' *x* is an instance of a class that has an "__iadd__()" ' |
| 'method,\n' |
| ' "x.__iadd__(y)" is called. If *x* is an instance of a ' |
| 'class that\n' |
| ' does not define a "__iadd__()" method, "x.__add__(y)" ' |
| 'and\n' |
| ' "y.__radd__(x)" are considered, as with the evaluation ' |
| 'of "x + y".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__neg__(self)\n' |
| 'object.__pos__(self)\n' |
| 'object.__abs__(self)\n' |
| 'object.__invert__(self)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to implement the unary arithmetic operations ' |
| '("-", "+",\n' |
| ' "abs()" and "~").\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__complex__(self)\n' |
| 'object.__int__(self)\n' |
| 'object.__long__(self)\n' |
| 'object.__float__(self)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to implement the built-in functions "complex()", ' |
| '"int()",\n' |
| ' "long()", and "float()". Should return a value of the ' |
| 'appropriate\n' |
| ' type.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__oct__(self)\n' |
| 'object.__hex__(self)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to implement the built-in functions "oct()" and ' |
| '"hex()".\n' |
| ' Should return a string value.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__index__(self)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to implement "operator.index()". Also called ' |
| 'whenever\n' |
| ' Python needs an integer object (such as in slicing). ' |
| 'Must return\n' |
| ' an integer (int or long).\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.5.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__coerce__(self, other)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Called to implement "mixed-mode" numeric arithmetic. ' |
| 'Should either\n' |
| ' return a 2-tuple containing *self* and *other* ' |
| 'converted to a\n' |
| ' common numeric type, or "None" if conversion is ' |
| 'impossible. When\n' |
| ' the common type would be the type of "other", it is ' |
| 'sufficient to\n' |
| ' return "None", since the interpreter will also ask the ' |
| 'other object\n' |
| ' to attempt a coercion (but sometimes, if the ' |
| 'implementation of the\n' |
| ' other type cannot be changed, it is useful to do the ' |
| 'conversion to\n' |
| ' the other type here). A return value of ' |
| '"NotImplemented" is\n' |
| ' equivalent to returning "None".\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Coercion rules\n' |
| '==============\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'This section used to document the rules for coercion. As ' |
| 'the language\n' |
| 'has evolved, the coercion rules have become hard to ' |
| 'document\n' |
| 'precisely; documenting what one version of one particular\n' |
| 'implementation does is undesirable. Instead, here are ' |
| 'some informal\n' |
| 'guidelines regarding coercion. In Python 3, coercion will ' |
| 'not be\n' |
| 'supported.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* If the left operand of a % operator is a string or ' |
| 'Unicode object,\n' |
| ' no coercion takes place and the string formatting ' |
| 'operation is\n' |
| ' invoked instead.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* It is no longer recommended to define a coercion ' |
| 'operation. Mixed-\n' |
| " mode operations on types that don't define coercion pass " |
| 'the\n' |
| ' original arguments to the operation.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* New-style classes (those derived from "object") never ' |
| 'invoke the\n' |
| ' "__coerce__()" method in response to a binary operator; ' |
| 'the only\n' |
| ' time "__coerce__()" is invoked is when the built-in ' |
| 'function\n' |
| ' "coerce()" is called.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* For most intents and purposes, an operator that returns\n' |
| ' "NotImplemented" is treated the same as one that is not ' |
| 'implemented\n' |
| ' at all.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* Below, "__op__()" and "__rop__()" are used to signify ' |
| 'the generic\n' |
| ' method names corresponding to an operator; "__iop__()" ' |
| 'is used for\n' |
| ' the corresponding in-place operator. For example, for ' |
| 'the operator\n' |
| ' \'"+"\', "__add__()" and "__radd__()" are used for the ' |
| 'left and right\n' |
| ' variant of the binary operator, and "__iadd__()" for the ' |
| 'in-place\n' |
| ' variant.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* For objects *x* and *y*, first "x.__op__(y)" is tried. ' |
| 'If this is\n' |
| ' not implemented or returns "NotImplemented", ' |
| '"y.__rop__(x)" is\n' |
| ' tried. If this is also not implemented or returns ' |
| '"NotImplemented",\n' |
| ' a "TypeError" exception is raised. But see the ' |
| 'following exception:\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* Exception to the previous item: if the left operand is ' |
| 'an instance\n' |
| ' of a built-in type or a new-style class, and the right ' |
| 'operand is an\n' |
| ' instance of a proper subclass of that type or class and ' |
| 'overrides\n' |
| ' the base\'s "__rop__()" method, the right operand\'s ' |
| '"__rop__()"\n' |
| ' method is tried *before* the left operand\'s "__op__()" ' |
| 'method.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' This is done so that a subclass can completely override ' |
| 'binary\n' |
| ' operators. Otherwise, the left operand\'s "__op__()" ' |
| 'method would\n' |
| ' always accept the right operand: when an instance of a ' |
| 'given class\n' |
| ' is expected, an instance of a subclass of that class is ' |
| 'always\n' |
| ' acceptable.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* When either operand type defines a coercion, this ' |
| 'coercion is\n' |
| ' called before that type\'s "__op__()" or "__rop__()" ' |
| 'method is\n' |
| ' called, but no sooner. If the coercion returns an ' |
| 'object of a\n' |
| ' different type for the operand whose coercion is ' |
| 'invoked, part of\n' |
| ' the process is redone using the new object.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* When an in-place operator (like \'"+="\') is used, if ' |
| 'the left\n' |
| ' operand implements "__iop__()", it is invoked without ' |
| 'any coercion.\n' |
| ' When the operation falls back to "__op__()" and/or ' |
| '"__rop__()", the\n' |
| ' normal coercion rules apply.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* In "x + y", if *x* is a sequence that implements ' |
| 'sequence\n' |
| ' concatenation, sequence concatenation is invoked.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* In "x * y", if one operand is a sequence that implements ' |
| 'sequence\n' |
| ' repetition, and the other is an integer ("int" or ' |
| '"long"), sequence\n' |
| ' repetition is invoked.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* Rich comparisons (implemented by methods "__eq__()" and ' |
| 'so on)\n' |
| ' never use coercion. Three-way comparison (implemented ' |
| 'by\n' |
| ' "__cmp__()") does use coercion under the same conditions ' |
| 'as other\n' |
| ' binary operations use it.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* In the current implementation, the built-in numeric ' |
| 'types "int",\n' |
| ' "long", "float", and "complex" do not use coercion. All ' |
| 'these types\n' |
| ' implement a "__coerce__()" method, for use by the ' |
| 'built-in\n' |
| ' "coerce()" function.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.7: The complex type no longer makes ' |
| 'implicit\n' |
| ' calls to the "__coerce__()" method for mixed-type binary ' |
| 'arithmetic\n' |
| ' operations.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'With Statement Context Managers\n' |
| '===============================\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'New in version 2.5.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A *context manager* is an object that defines the runtime ' |
| 'context to\n' |
| 'be established when executing a "with" statement. The ' |
| 'context manager\n' |
| 'handles the entry into, and the exit from, the desired ' |
| 'runtime context\n' |
| 'for the execution of the block of code. Context managers ' |
| 'are normally\n' |
| 'invoked using the "with" statement (described in section ' |
| 'The with\n' |
| 'statement), but can also be used by directly invoking ' |
| 'their methods.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Typical uses of context managers include saving and ' |
| 'restoring various\n' |
| 'kinds of global state, locking and unlocking resources, ' |
| 'closing opened\n' |
| 'files, etc.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'For more information on context managers, see Context ' |
| 'Manager Types.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__enter__(self)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Enter the runtime context related to this object. The ' |
| '"with"\n' |
| " statement will bind this method's return value to the " |
| 'target(s)\n' |
| ' specified in the "as" clause of the statement, if any.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'object.__exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, traceback)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Exit the runtime context related to this object. The ' |
| 'parameters\n' |
| ' describe the exception that caused the context to be ' |
| 'exited. If the\n' |
| ' context was exited without an exception, all three ' |
| 'arguments will\n' |
| ' be "None".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If an exception is supplied, and the method wishes to ' |
| 'suppress the\n' |
| ' exception (i.e., prevent it from being propagated), it ' |
| 'should\n' |
| ' return a true value. Otherwise, the exception will be ' |
| 'processed\n' |
| ' normally upon exit from this method.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Note that "__exit__()" methods should not reraise the ' |
| 'passed-in\n' |
| " exception; this is the caller's responsibility.\n" |
| '\n' |
| 'See also: **PEP 0343** - The "with" statement\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' The specification, background, and examples for the ' |
| 'Python "with"\n' |
| ' statement.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Special method lookup for old-style classes\n' |
| '===========================================\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'For old-style classes, special methods are always looked ' |
| 'up in exactly\n' |
| 'the same way as any other method or attribute. This is the ' |
| 'case\n' |
| 'regardless of whether the method is being looked up ' |
| 'explicitly as in\n' |
| '"x.__getitem__(i)" or implicitly as in "x[i]".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'This behaviour means that special methods may exhibit ' |
| 'different\n' |
| 'behaviour for different instances of a single old-style ' |
| 'class if the\n' |
| 'appropriate special attributes are set differently:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> class C:\n' |
| ' ... pass\n' |
| ' ...\n' |
| ' >>> c1 = C()\n' |
| ' >>> c2 = C()\n' |
| ' >>> c1.__len__ = lambda: 5\n' |
| ' >>> c2.__len__ = lambda: 9\n' |
| ' >>> len(c1)\n' |
| ' 5\n' |
| ' >>> len(c2)\n' |
| ' 9\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Special method lookup for new-style classes\n' |
| '===========================================\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'For new-style classes, implicit invocations of special ' |
| 'methods are\n' |
| 'only guaranteed to work correctly if defined on an ' |
| "object's type, not\n" |
| "in the object's instance dictionary. That behaviour is " |
| 'the reason why\n' |
| 'the following code raises an exception (unlike the ' |
| 'equivalent example\n' |
| 'with old-style classes):\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> class C(object):\n' |
| ' ... pass\n' |
| ' ...\n' |
| ' >>> c = C()\n' |
| ' >>> c.__len__ = lambda: 5\n' |
| ' >>> len(c)\n' |
| ' Traceback (most recent call last):\n' |
| ' File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>\n' |
| " TypeError: object of type 'C' has no len()\n" |
| '\n' |
| 'The rationale behind this behaviour lies with a number of ' |
| 'special\n' |
| 'methods such as "__hash__()" and "__repr__()" that are ' |
| 'implemented by\n' |
| 'all objects, including type objects. If the implicit ' |
| 'lookup of these\n' |
| 'methods used the conventional lookup process, they would ' |
| 'fail when\n' |
| 'invoked on the type object itself:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> 1 .__hash__() == hash(1)\n' |
| ' True\n' |
| ' >>> int.__hash__() == hash(int)\n' |
| ' Traceback (most recent call last):\n' |
| ' File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>\n' |
| " TypeError: descriptor '__hash__' of 'int' object needs " |
| 'an argument\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Incorrectly attempting to invoke an unbound method of a ' |
| 'class in this\n' |
| "way is sometimes referred to as 'metaclass confusion', and " |
| 'is avoided\n' |
| 'by bypassing the instance when looking up special ' |
| 'methods:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> type(1).__hash__(1) == hash(1)\n' |
| ' True\n' |
| ' >>> type(int).__hash__(int) == hash(int)\n' |
| ' True\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'In addition to bypassing any instance attributes in the ' |
| 'interest of\n' |
| 'correctness, implicit special method lookup generally also ' |
| 'bypasses\n' |
| 'the "__getattribute__()" method even of the object\'s ' |
| 'metaclass:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> class Meta(type):\n' |
| ' ... def __getattribute__(*args):\n' |
| ' ... print "Metaclass getattribute invoked"\n' |
| ' ... return type.__getattribute__(*args)\n' |
| ' ...\n' |
| ' >>> class C(object):\n' |
| ' ... __metaclass__ = Meta\n' |
| ' ... def __len__(self):\n' |
| ' ... return 10\n' |
| ' ... def __getattribute__(*args):\n' |
| ' ... print "Class getattribute invoked"\n' |
| ' ... return object.__getattribute__(*args)\n' |
| ' ...\n' |
| ' >>> c = C()\n' |
| ' >>> c.__len__() # Explicit lookup via ' |
| 'instance\n' |
| ' Class getattribute invoked\n' |
| ' 10\n' |
| ' >>> type(c).__len__(c) # Explicit lookup via ' |
| 'type\n' |
| ' Metaclass getattribute invoked\n' |
| ' 10\n' |
| ' >>> len(c) # Implicit lookup\n' |
| ' 10\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Bypassing the "__getattribute__()" machinery in this ' |
| 'fashion provides\n' |
| 'significant scope for speed optimisations within the ' |
| 'interpreter, at\n' |
| 'the cost of some flexibility in the handling of special ' |
| 'methods (the\n' |
| 'special method *must* be set on the class object itself in ' |
| 'order to be\n' |
| 'consistently invoked by the interpreter).\n' |
| '\n' |
| '-[ Footnotes ]-\n' |
| '\n' |
| "[1] It *is* possible in some cases to change an object's " |
| 'type,\n' |
| ' under certain controlled conditions. It generally ' |
| "isn't a good\n" |
| ' idea though, since it can lead to some very strange ' |
| 'behaviour if\n' |
| ' it is handled incorrectly.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '[2] For operands of the same type, it is assumed that if ' |
| 'the non-\n' |
| ' reflected method (such as "__add__()") fails the ' |
| 'operation is not\n' |
| ' supported, which is why the reflected method is not ' |
| 'called.\n', |
| 'string-methods': '\n' |
| 'String Methods\n' |
| '**************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Below are listed the string methods which both 8-bit ' |
| 'strings and\n' |
| 'Unicode objects support. Some of them are also ' |
| 'available on\n' |
| '"bytearray" objects.\n' |
| '\n' |
| "In addition, Python's strings support the sequence type " |
| 'methods\n' |
| 'described in the Sequence Types --- str, unicode, list, ' |
| 'tuple,\n' |
| 'bytearray, buffer, xrange section. To output formatted ' |
| 'strings use\n' |
| 'template strings or the "%" operator described in the ' |
| 'String\n' |
| 'Formatting Operations section. Also, see the "re" module ' |
| 'for string\n' |
| 'functions based on regular expressions.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.capitalize()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a copy of the string with its first character ' |
| 'capitalized\n' |
| ' and the rest lowercased.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.center(width[, fillchar])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return centered in a string of length *width*. ' |
| 'Padding is done\n' |
| ' using the specified *fillchar* (default is a space).\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.4: Support for the *fillchar* ' |
| 'argument.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.count(sub[, start[, end]])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return the number of non-overlapping occurrences of ' |
| 'substring *sub*\n' |
| ' in the range [*start*, *end*]. Optional arguments ' |
| '*start* and\n' |
| ' *end* are interpreted as in slice notation.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.decode([encoding[, errors]])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Decodes the string using the codec registered for ' |
| '*encoding*.\n' |
| ' *encoding* defaults to the default string encoding. ' |
| '*errors* may\n' |
| ' be given to set a different error handling scheme. ' |
| 'The default is\n' |
| ' "\'strict\'", meaning that encoding errors raise ' |
| '"UnicodeError".\n' |
| ' Other possible values are "\'ignore\'", "\'replace\'" ' |
| 'and any other\n' |
| ' name registered via "codecs.register_error()", see ' |
| 'section Codec\n' |
| ' Base Classes.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.2.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.3: Support for other error ' |
| 'handling schemes\n' |
| ' added.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.7: Support for keyword arguments ' |
| 'added.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.encode([encoding[, errors]])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return an encoded version of the string. Default ' |
| 'encoding is the\n' |
| ' current default string encoding. *errors* may be ' |
| 'given to set a\n' |
| ' different error handling scheme. The default for ' |
| '*errors* is\n' |
| ' "\'strict\'", meaning that encoding errors raise a ' |
| '"UnicodeError".\n' |
| ' Other possible values are "\'ignore\'", ' |
| '"\'replace\'",\n' |
| ' "\'xmlcharrefreplace\'", "\'backslashreplace\'" and ' |
| 'any other name\n' |
| ' registered via "codecs.register_error()", see section ' |
| 'Codec Base\n' |
| ' Classes. For a list of possible encodings, see ' |
| 'section Standard\n' |
| ' Encodings.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.0.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.3: Support for ' |
| '"\'xmlcharrefreplace\'" and\n' |
| ' "\'backslashreplace\'" and other error handling ' |
| 'schemes added.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.7: Support for keyword arguments ' |
| 'added.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.endswith(suffix[, start[, end]])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return "True" if the string ends with the specified ' |
| '*suffix*,\n' |
| ' otherwise return "False". *suffix* can also be a ' |
| 'tuple of suffixes\n' |
| ' to look for. With optional *start*, test beginning ' |
| 'at that\n' |
| ' position. With optional *end*, stop comparing at ' |
| 'that position.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.5: Accept tuples as *suffix*.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.expandtabs([tabsize])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a copy of the string where all tab characters ' |
| 'are replaced\n' |
| ' by one or more spaces, depending on the current ' |
| 'column and the\n' |
| ' given tab size. Tab positions occur every *tabsize* ' |
| 'characters\n' |
| ' (default is 8, giving tab positions at columns 0, 8, ' |
| '16 and so on).\n' |
| ' To expand the string, the current column is set to ' |
| 'zero and the\n' |
| ' string is examined character by character. If the ' |
| 'character is a\n' |
| ' tab ("\\t"), one or more space characters are ' |
| 'inserted in the result\n' |
| ' until the current column is equal to the next tab ' |
| 'position. (The\n' |
| ' tab character itself is not copied.) If the ' |
| 'character is a newline\n' |
| ' ("\\n") or return ("\\r"), it is copied and the ' |
| 'current column is\n' |
| ' reset to zero. Any other character is copied ' |
| 'unchanged and the\n' |
| ' current column is incremented by one regardless of ' |
| 'how the\n' |
| ' character is represented when printed.\n' |
| '\n' |
| " >>> '01\\t012\\t0123\\t01234'.expandtabs()\n" |
| " '01 012 0123 01234'\n" |
| " >>> '01\\t012\\t0123\\t01234'.expandtabs(4)\n" |
| " '01 012 0123 01234'\n" |
| '\n' |
| 'str.find(sub[, start[, end]])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return the lowest index in the string where substring ' |
| '*sub* is\n' |
| ' found, such that *sub* is contained in the slice ' |
| '"s[start:end]".\n' |
| ' Optional arguments *start* and *end* are interpreted ' |
| 'as in slice\n' |
| ' notation. Return "-1" if *sub* is not found.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Note: The "find()" method should be used only if you ' |
| 'need to know\n' |
| ' the position of *sub*. To check if *sub* is a ' |
| 'substring or not,\n' |
| ' use the "in" operator:\n' |
| '\n' |
| " >>> 'Py' in 'Python'\n" |
| ' True\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.format(*args, **kwargs)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Perform a string formatting operation. The string on ' |
| 'which this\n' |
| ' method is called can contain literal text or ' |
| 'replacement fields\n' |
| ' delimited by braces "{}". Each replacement field ' |
| 'contains either\n' |
| ' the numeric index of a positional argument, or the ' |
| 'name of a\n' |
| ' keyword argument. Returns a copy of the string where ' |
| 'each\n' |
| ' replacement field is replaced with the string value ' |
| 'of the\n' |
| ' corresponding argument.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> "The sum of 1 + 2 is {0}".format(1+2)\n' |
| " 'The sum of 1 + 2 is 3'\n" |
| '\n' |
| ' See Format String Syntax for a description of the ' |
| 'various\n' |
| ' formatting options that can be specified in format ' |
| 'strings.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' This method of string formatting is the new standard ' |
| 'in Python 3,\n' |
| ' and should be preferred to the "%" formatting ' |
| 'described in String\n' |
| ' Formatting Operations in new code.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.6.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.index(sub[, start[, end]])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Like "find()", but raise "ValueError" when the ' |
| 'substring is not\n' |
| ' found.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.isalnum()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return true if all characters in the string are ' |
| 'alphanumeric and\n' |
| ' there is at least one character, false otherwise.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.isalpha()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return true if all characters in the string are ' |
| 'alphabetic and\n' |
| ' there is at least one character, false otherwise.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.isdigit()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return true if all characters in the string are ' |
| 'digits and there is\n' |
| ' at least one character, false otherwise.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.islower()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return true if all cased characters [4] in the string ' |
| 'are lowercase\n' |
| ' and there is at least one cased character, false ' |
| 'otherwise.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.isspace()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return true if there are only whitespace characters ' |
| 'in the string\n' |
| ' and there is at least one character, false ' |
| 'otherwise.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.istitle()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return true if the string is a titlecased string and ' |
| 'there is at\n' |
| ' least one character, for example uppercase characters ' |
| 'may only\n' |
| ' follow uncased characters and lowercase characters ' |
| 'only cased ones.\n' |
| ' Return false otherwise.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.isupper()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return true if all cased characters [4] in the string ' |
| 'are uppercase\n' |
| ' and there is at least one cased character, false ' |
| 'otherwise.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.join(iterable)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a string which is the concatenation of the ' |
| 'strings in the\n' |
| ' *iterable* *iterable*. The separator between ' |
| 'elements is the\n' |
| ' string providing this method.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.ljust(width[, fillchar])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return the string left justified in a string of ' |
| 'length *width*.\n' |
| ' Padding is done using the specified *fillchar* ' |
| '(default is a\n' |
| ' space). The original string is returned if *width* ' |
| 'is less than or\n' |
| ' equal to "len(s)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.4: Support for the *fillchar* ' |
| 'argument.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.lower()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a copy of the string with all the cased ' |
| 'characters [4]\n' |
| ' converted to lowercase.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.lstrip([chars])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a copy of the string with leading characters ' |
| 'removed. The\n' |
| ' *chars* argument is a string specifying the set of ' |
| 'characters to be\n' |
| ' removed. If omitted or "None", the *chars* argument ' |
| 'defaults to\n' |
| ' removing whitespace. The *chars* argument is not a ' |
| 'prefix; rather,\n' |
| ' all combinations of its values are stripped:\n' |
| '\n' |
| " >>> ' spacious '.lstrip()\n" |
| " 'spacious '\n" |
| " >>> 'www.example.com'.lstrip('cmowz.')\n" |
| " 'example.com'\n" |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.2.2: Support for the *chars* ' |
| 'argument.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.partition(sep)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Split the string at the first occurrence of *sep*, ' |
| 'and return a\n' |
| ' 3-tuple containing the part before the separator, the ' |
| 'separator\n' |
| ' itself, and the part after the separator. If the ' |
| 'separator is not\n' |
| ' found, return a 3-tuple containing the string itself, ' |
| 'followed by\n' |
| ' two empty strings.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.5.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.replace(old, new[, count])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a copy of the string with all occurrences of ' |
| 'substring *old*\n' |
| ' replaced by *new*. If the optional argument *count* ' |
| 'is given, only\n' |
| ' the first *count* occurrences are replaced.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.rfind(sub[, start[, end]])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return the highest index in the string where ' |
| 'substring *sub* is\n' |
| ' found, such that *sub* is contained within ' |
| '"s[start:end]".\n' |
| ' Optional arguments *start* and *end* are interpreted ' |
| 'as in slice\n' |
| ' notation. Return "-1" on failure.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.rindex(sub[, start[, end]])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Like "rfind()" but raises "ValueError" when the ' |
| 'substring *sub* is\n' |
| ' not found.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.rjust(width[, fillchar])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return the string right justified in a string of ' |
| 'length *width*.\n' |
| ' Padding is done using the specified *fillchar* ' |
| '(default is a\n' |
| ' space). The original string is returned if *width* is ' |
| 'less than or\n' |
| ' equal to "len(s)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.4: Support for the *fillchar* ' |
| 'argument.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.rpartition(sep)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Split the string at the last occurrence of *sep*, and ' |
| 'return a\n' |
| ' 3-tuple containing the part before the separator, the ' |
| 'separator\n' |
| ' itself, and the part after the separator. If the ' |
| 'separator is not\n' |
| ' found, return a 3-tuple containing two empty strings, ' |
| 'followed by\n' |
| ' the string itself.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.5.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.rsplit([sep[, maxsplit]])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a list of the words in the string, using *sep* ' |
| 'as the\n' |
| ' delimiter string. If *maxsplit* is given, at most ' |
| '*maxsplit* splits\n' |
| ' are done, the *rightmost* ones. If *sep* is not ' |
| 'specified or\n' |
| ' "None", any whitespace string is a separator. Except ' |
| 'for splitting\n' |
| ' from the right, "rsplit()" behaves like "split()" ' |
| 'which is\n' |
| ' described in detail below.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.4.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.rstrip([chars])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a copy of the string with trailing characters ' |
| 'removed. The\n' |
| ' *chars* argument is a string specifying the set of ' |
| 'characters to be\n' |
| ' removed. If omitted or "None", the *chars* argument ' |
| 'defaults to\n' |
| ' removing whitespace. The *chars* argument is not a ' |
| 'suffix; rather,\n' |
| ' all combinations of its values are stripped:\n' |
| '\n' |
| " >>> ' spacious '.rstrip()\n" |
| " ' spacious'\n" |
| " >>> 'mississippi'.rstrip('ipz')\n" |
| " 'mississ'\n" |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.2.2: Support for the *chars* ' |
| 'argument.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.split([sep[, maxsplit]])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a list of the words in the string, using *sep* ' |
| 'as the\n' |
| ' delimiter string. If *maxsplit* is given, at most ' |
| '*maxsplit*\n' |
| ' splits are done (thus, the list will have at most ' |
| '"maxsplit+1"\n' |
| ' elements). If *maxsplit* is not specified or "-1", ' |
| 'then there is\n' |
| ' no limit on the number of splits (all possible splits ' |
| 'are made).\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If *sep* is given, consecutive delimiters are not ' |
| 'grouped together\n' |
| ' and are deemed to delimit empty strings (for ' |
| 'example,\n' |
| ' "\'1,,2\'.split(\',\')" returns "[\'1\', \'\', ' |
| '\'2\']"). The *sep* argument\n' |
| ' may consist of multiple characters (for example,\n' |
| ' "\'1<>2<>3\'.split(\'<>\')" returns "[\'1\', \'2\', ' |
| '\'3\']"). Splitting an\n' |
| ' empty string with a specified separator returns ' |
| '"[\'\']".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If *sep* is not specified or is "None", a different ' |
| 'splitting\n' |
| ' algorithm is applied: runs of consecutive whitespace ' |
| 'are regarded\n' |
| ' as a single separator, and the result will contain no ' |
| 'empty strings\n' |
| ' at the start or end if the string has leading or ' |
| 'trailing\n' |
| ' whitespace. Consequently, splitting an empty string ' |
| 'or a string\n' |
| ' consisting of just whitespace with a "None" separator ' |
| 'returns "[]".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For example, "\' 1 2 3 \'.split()" returns ' |
| '"[\'1\', \'2\', \'3\']", and\n' |
| ' "\' 1 2 3 \'.split(None, 1)" returns "[\'1\', ' |
| '\'2 3 \']".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.splitlines([keepends])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a list of the lines in the string, breaking at ' |
| 'line\n' |
| ' boundaries. This method uses the *universal newlines* ' |
| 'approach to\n' |
| ' splitting lines. Line breaks are not included in the ' |
| 'resulting list\n' |
| ' unless *keepends* is given and true.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For example, "\'ab c\\n\\nde ' |
| 'fg\\rkl\\r\\n\'.splitlines()" returns "[\'ab\n' |
| ' c\', \'\', \'de fg\', \'kl\']", while the same call ' |
| 'with\n' |
| ' "splitlines(True)" returns "[\'ab c\\n\', \'\\n\', ' |
| '\'de fg\\r\', \'kl\\r\\n\']".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Unlike "split()" when a delimiter string *sep* is ' |
| 'given, this\n' |
| ' method returns an empty list for the empty string, ' |
| 'and a terminal\n' |
| ' line break does not result in an extra line.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.startswith(prefix[, start[, end]])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return "True" if string starts with the *prefix*, ' |
| 'otherwise return\n' |
| ' "False". *prefix* can also be a tuple of prefixes to ' |
| 'look for.\n' |
| ' With optional *start*, test string beginning at that ' |
| 'position.\n' |
| ' With optional *end*, stop comparing string at that ' |
| 'position.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.5: Accept tuples as *prefix*.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.strip([chars])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a copy of the string with the leading and ' |
| 'trailing\n' |
| ' characters removed. The *chars* argument is a string ' |
| 'specifying the\n' |
| ' set of characters to be removed. If omitted or ' |
| '"None", the *chars*\n' |
| ' argument defaults to removing whitespace. The *chars* ' |
| 'argument is\n' |
| ' not a prefix or suffix; rather, all combinations of ' |
| 'its values are\n' |
| ' stripped:\n' |
| '\n' |
| " >>> ' spacious '.strip()\n" |
| " 'spacious'\n" |
| " >>> 'www.example.com'.strip('cmowz.')\n" |
| " 'example'\n" |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.2.2: Support for the *chars* ' |
| 'argument.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.swapcase()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a copy of the string with uppercase characters ' |
| 'converted to\n' |
| ' lowercase and vice versa.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.title()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a titlecased version of the string where words ' |
| 'start with an\n' |
| ' uppercase character and the remaining characters are ' |
| 'lowercase.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' The algorithm uses a simple language-independent ' |
| 'definition of a\n' |
| ' word as groups of consecutive letters. The ' |
| 'definition works in\n' |
| ' many contexts but it means that apostrophes in ' |
| 'contractions and\n' |
| ' possessives form word boundaries, which may not be ' |
| 'the desired\n' |
| ' result:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> "they\'re bill\'s friends from the ' |
| 'UK".title()\n' |
| ' "They\'Re Bill\'S Friends From The Uk"\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' A workaround for apostrophes can be constructed using ' |
| 'regular\n' |
| ' expressions:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> import re\n' |
| ' >>> def titlecase(s):\n' |
| ' ... return re.sub(r"[A-Za-z]+(\'[A-Za-z]+)?",\n' |
| ' ... lambda mo: ' |
| 'mo.group(0)[0].upper() +\n' |
| ' ... ' |
| 'mo.group(0)[1:].lower(),\n' |
| ' ... s)\n' |
| ' ...\n' |
| ' >>> titlecase("they\'re bill\'s friends.")\n' |
| ' "They\'re Bill\'s Friends."\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.translate(table[, deletechars])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a copy of the string where all characters ' |
| 'occurring in the\n' |
| ' optional argument *deletechars* are removed, and the ' |
| 'remaining\n' |
| ' characters have been mapped through the given ' |
| 'translation table,\n' |
| ' which must be a string of length 256.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' You can use the "maketrans()" helper function in the ' |
| '"string"\n' |
| ' module to create a translation table. For string ' |
| 'objects, set the\n' |
| ' *table* argument to "None" for translations that only ' |
| 'delete\n' |
| ' characters:\n' |
| '\n' |
| " >>> 'read this short text'.translate(None, 'aeiou')\n" |
| " 'rd ths shrt txt'\n" |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.6: Support for a "None" *table* ' |
| 'argument.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For Unicode objects, the "translate()" method does ' |
| 'not accept the\n' |
| ' optional *deletechars* argument. Instead, it returns ' |
| 'a copy of the\n' |
| ' *s* where all characters have been mapped through the ' |
| 'given\n' |
| ' translation table which must be a mapping of Unicode ' |
| 'ordinals to\n' |
| ' Unicode ordinals, Unicode strings or "None". Unmapped ' |
| 'characters\n' |
| ' are left untouched. Characters mapped to "None" are ' |
| 'deleted. Note,\n' |
| ' a more flexible approach is to create a custom ' |
| 'character mapping\n' |
| ' codec using the "codecs" module (see ' |
| '"encodings.cp1251" for an\n' |
| ' example).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.upper()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a copy of the string with all the cased ' |
| 'characters [4]\n' |
| ' converted to uppercase. Note that ' |
| '"str.upper().isupper()" might be\n' |
| ' "False" if "s" contains uncased characters or if the ' |
| 'Unicode\n' |
| ' category of the resulting character(s) is not "Lu" ' |
| '(Letter,\n' |
| ' uppercase), but e.g. "Lt" (Letter, titlecase).\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.zfill(width)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return the numeric string left filled with zeros in a ' |
| 'string of\n' |
| ' length *width*. A sign prefix is handled correctly. ' |
| 'The original\n' |
| ' string is returned if *width* is less than or equal ' |
| 'to "len(s)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.2.2.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The following methods are present only on unicode ' |
| 'objects:\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'unicode.isnumeric()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return "True" if there are only numeric characters in ' |
| 'S, "False"\n' |
| ' otherwise. Numeric characters include digit ' |
| 'characters, and all\n' |
| ' characters that have the Unicode numeric value ' |
| 'property, e.g.\n' |
| ' U+2155, VULGAR FRACTION ONE FIFTH.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'unicode.isdecimal()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return "True" if there are only decimal characters in ' |
| 'S, "False"\n' |
| ' otherwise. Decimal characters include digit ' |
| 'characters, and all\n' |
| ' characters that can be used to form decimal-radix ' |
| 'numbers, e.g.\n' |
| ' U+0660, ARABIC-INDIC DIGIT ZERO.\n', |
| 'strings': '\n' |
| 'String literals\n' |
| '***************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'String literals are described by the following lexical ' |
| 'definitions:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' stringliteral ::= [stringprefix](shortstring | ' |
| 'longstring)\n' |
| ' stringprefix ::= "r" | "u" | "ur" | "R" | "U" | "UR" | ' |
| '"Ur" | "uR"\n' |
| ' | "b" | "B" | "br" | "Br" | "bR" | "BR"\n' |
| ' shortstring ::= "\'" shortstringitem* "\'" | \'"\' ' |
| 'shortstringitem* \'"\'\n' |
| ' longstring ::= "\'\'\'" longstringitem* "\'\'\'"\n' |
| ' | \'"""\' longstringitem* \'"""\'\n' |
| ' shortstringitem ::= shortstringchar | escapeseq\n' |
| ' longstringitem ::= longstringchar | escapeseq\n' |
| ' shortstringchar ::= <any source character except "\\" or ' |
| 'newline or the quote>\n' |
| ' longstringchar ::= <any source character except "\\">\n' |
| ' escapeseq ::= "\\" <any ASCII character>\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'One syntactic restriction not indicated by these productions is ' |
| 'that\n' |
| 'whitespace is not allowed between the "stringprefix" and the ' |
| 'rest of\n' |
| 'the string literal. The source character set is defined by the\n' |
| 'encoding declaration; it is ASCII if no encoding declaration is ' |
| 'given\n' |
| 'in the source file; see section Encoding declarations.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'In plain English: String literals can be enclosed in matching ' |
| 'single\n' |
| 'quotes ("\'") or double quotes ("""). They can also be ' |
| 'enclosed in\n' |
| 'matching groups of three single or double quotes (these are ' |
| 'generally\n' |
| 'referred to as *triple-quoted strings*). The backslash ("\\")\n' |
| 'character is used to escape characters that otherwise have a ' |
| 'special\n' |
| 'meaning, such as newline, backslash itself, or the quote ' |
| 'character.\n' |
| 'String literals may optionally be prefixed with a letter ' |
| '"\'r\'" or\n' |
| '"\'R\'"; such strings are called *raw strings* and use ' |
| 'different rules\n' |
| 'for interpreting backslash escape sequences. A prefix of ' |
| '"\'u\'" or\n' |
| '"\'U\'" makes the string a Unicode string. Unicode strings use ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'Unicode character set as defined by the Unicode Consortium and ' |
| 'ISO\n' |
| '10646. Some additional escape sequences, described below, are\n' |
| 'available in Unicode strings. A prefix of "\'b\'" or "\'B\'" is ' |
| 'ignored in\n' |
| 'Python 2; it indicates that the literal should become a bytes ' |
| 'literal\n' |
| 'in Python 3 (e.g. when code is automatically converted with ' |
| '2to3). A\n' |
| '"\'u\'" or "\'b\'" prefix may be followed by an "\'r\'" ' |
| 'prefix.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'In triple-quoted strings, unescaped newlines and quotes are ' |
| 'allowed\n' |
| '(and are retained), except that three unescaped quotes in a ' |
| 'row\n' |
| 'terminate the string. (A "quote" is the character used to open ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'string, i.e. either "\'" or """.)\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Unless an "\'r\'" or "\'R\'" prefix is present, escape ' |
| 'sequences in\n' |
| 'strings are interpreted according to rules similar to those ' |
| 'used by\n' |
| 'Standard C. The recognized escape sequences are:\n' |
| '\n' |
| '+-------------------+-----------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| Escape Sequence | Meaning | ' |
| 'Notes |\n' |
| '+===================+===================================+=========+\n' |
| '| "\\newline" | Ignored ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '+-------------------+-----------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\\\\" | Backslash ("\\") ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '+-------------------+-----------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\\\'" | Single quote ("\'") ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '+-------------------+-----------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\\"" | Double quote (""") ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '+-------------------+-----------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\\a" | ASCII Bell (BEL) ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '+-------------------+-----------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\\b" | ASCII Backspace (BS) ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '+-------------------+-----------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\\f" | ASCII Formfeed (FF) ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '+-------------------+-----------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\\n" | ASCII Linefeed (LF) ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '+-------------------+-----------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\\N{name}" | Character named *name* in the ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '| | Unicode database (Unicode only) ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '+-------------------+-----------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\\r" | ASCII Carriage Return (CR) ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '+-------------------+-----------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\\t" | ASCII Horizontal Tab (TAB) ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '+-------------------+-----------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\\uxxxx" | Character with 16-bit hex value | ' |
| '(1) |\n' |
| '| | *xxxx* (Unicode only) ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '+-------------------+-----------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\\Uxxxxxxxx" | Character with 32-bit hex value | ' |
| '(2) |\n' |
| '| | *xxxxxxxx* (Unicode only) ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '+-------------------+-----------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\\v" | ASCII Vertical Tab (VT) ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '+-------------------+-----------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\\ooo" | Character with octal value *ooo* | ' |
| '(3,5) |\n' |
| '+-------------------+-----------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\\xhh" | Character with hex value *hh* | ' |
| '(4,5) |\n' |
| '+-------------------+-----------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Notes:\n' |
| '\n' |
| '1. Individual code units which form parts of a surrogate pair ' |
| 'can\n' |
| ' be encoded using this escape sequence.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '2. Any Unicode character can be encoded this way, but ' |
| 'characters\n' |
| ' outside the Basic Multilingual Plane (BMP) will be encoded ' |
| 'using a\n' |
| ' surrogate pair if Python is compiled to use 16-bit code ' |
| 'units (the\n' |
| ' default).\n' |
| '\n' |
| '3. As in Standard C, up to three octal digits are accepted.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '4. Unlike in Standard C, exactly two hex digits are required.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '5. In a string literal, hexadecimal and octal escapes denote ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' byte with the given value; it is not necessary that the ' |
| 'byte\n' |
| ' encodes a character in the source character set. In a ' |
| 'Unicode\n' |
| ' literal, these escapes denote a Unicode character with the ' |
| 'given\n' |
| ' value.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Unlike Standard C, all unrecognized escape sequences are left ' |
| 'in the\n' |
| 'string unchanged, i.e., *the backslash is left in the string*. ' |
| '(This\n' |
| 'behavior is useful when debugging: if an escape sequence is ' |
| 'mistyped,\n' |
| 'the resulting output is more easily recognized as broken.) It ' |
| 'is also\n' |
| 'important to note that the escape sequences marked as "(Unicode ' |
| 'only)"\n' |
| 'in the table above fall into the category of unrecognized ' |
| 'escapes for\n' |
| 'non-Unicode string literals.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'When an "\'r\'" or "\'R\'" prefix is present, a character ' |
| 'following a\n' |
| 'backslash is included in the string without change, and *all\n' |
| 'backslashes are left in the string*. For example, the string ' |
| 'literal\n' |
| '"r"\\n"" consists of two characters: a backslash and a ' |
| 'lowercase "\'n\'".\n' |
| 'String quotes can be escaped with a backslash, but the ' |
| 'backslash\n' |
| 'remains in the string; for example, "r"\\""" is a valid string ' |
| 'literal\n' |
| 'consisting of two characters: a backslash and a double quote; ' |
| '"r"\\""\n' |
| 'is not a valid string literal (even a raw string cannot end in ' |
| 'an odd\n' |
| 'number of backslashes). Specifically, *a raw string cannot end ' |
| 'in a\n' |
| 'single backslash* (since the backslash would escape the ' |
| 'following\n' |
| 'quote character). Note also that a single backslash followed ' |
| 'by a\n' |
| 'newline is interpreted as those two characters as part of the ' |
| 'string,\n' |
| '*not* as a line continuation.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'When an "\'r\'" or "\'R\'" prefix is used in conjunction with a ' |
| '"\'u\'" or\n' |
| '"\'U\'" prefix, then the "\\uXXXX" and "\\UXXXXXXXX" escape ' |
| 'sequences are\n' |
| 'processed while *all other backslashes are left in the ' |
| 'string*. For\n' |
| 'example, the string literal "ur"\\u0062\\n"" consists of three ' |
| 'Unicode\n' |
| "characters: 'LATIN SMALL LETTER B', 'REVERSE SOLIDUS', and " |
| "'LATIN\n" |
| "SMALL LETTER N'. Backslashes can be escaped with a preceding\n" |
| 'backslash; however, both remain in the string. As a result, ' |
| '"\\uXXXX"\n' |
| 'escape sequences are only recognized when there are an odd ' |
| 'number of\n' |
| 'backslashes.\n', |
| 'subscriptions': '\n' |
| 'Subscriptions\n' |
| '*************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A subscription selects an item of a sequence (string, ' |
| 'tuple or list)\n' |
| 'or mapping (dictionary) object:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' subscription ::= primary "[" expression_list "]"\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The primary must evaluate to an object of a sequence or ' |
| 'mapping type.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If the primary is a mapping, the expression list must ' |
| 'evaluate to an\n' |
| 'object whose value is one of the keys of the mapping, and ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'subscription selects the value in the mapping that ' |
| 'corresponds to that\n' |
| 'key. (The expression list is a tuple except if it has ' |
| 'exactly one\n' |
| 'item.)\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If the primary is a sequence, the expression (list) must ' |
| 'evaluate to a\n' |
| 'plain integer. If this value is negative, the length of ' |
| 'the sequence\n' |
| 'is added to it (so that, e.g., "x[-1]" selects the last ' |
| 'item of "x".)\n' |
| 'The resulting value must be a nonnegative integer less ' |
| 'than the number\n' |
| 'of items in the sequence, and the subscription selects ' |
| 'the item whose\n' |
| 'index is that value (counting from zero).\n' |
| '\n' |
| "A string's items are characters. A character is not a " |
| 'separate data\n' |
| 'type but a string of exactly one character.\n', |
| 'truth': '\n' |
| 'Truth Value Testing\n' |
| '*******************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Any object can be tested for truth value, for use in an "if" or\n' |
| '"while" condition or as operand of the Boolean operations below. ' |
| 'The\n' |
| 'following values are considered false:\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* "None"\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* "False"\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* zero of any numeric type, for example, "0", "0L", "0.0", "0j".\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* any empty sequence, for example, "\'\'", "()", "[]".\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* any empty mapping, for example, "{}".\n' |
| '\n' |
| '* instances of user-defined classes, if the class defines a\n' |
| ' "__nonzero__()" or "__len__()" method, when that method returns ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' integer zero or "bool" value "False". [1]\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'All other values are considered true --- so objects of many types ' |
| 'are\n' |
| 'always true.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Operations and built-in functions that have a Boolean result ' |
| 'always\n' |
| 'return "0" or "False" for false and "1" or "True" for true, ' |
| 'unless\n' |
| 'otherwise stated. (Important exception: the Boolean operations ' |
| '"or"\n' |
| 'and "and" always return one of their operands.)\n', |
| 'try': '\n' |
| 'The "try" statement\n' |
| '*******************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "try" statement specifies exception handlers and/or cleanup ' |
| 'code\n' |
| 'for a group of statements:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' try_stmt ::= try1_stmt | try2_stmt\n' |
| ' try1_stmt ::= "try" ":" suite\n' |
| ' ("except" [expression [("as" | ",") identifier]] ' |
| '":" suite)+\n' |
| ' ["else" ":" suite]\n' |
| ' ["finally" ":" suite]\n' |
| ' try2_stmt ::= "try" ":" suite\n' |
| ' "finally" ":" suite\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Changed in version 2.5: In previous versions of Python,\n' |
| '"try"..."except"..."finally" did not work. "try"..."except" had to ' |
| 'be\n' |
| 'nested in "try"..."finally".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "except" clause(s) specify one or more exception handlers. When ' |
| 'no\n' |
| 'exception occurs in the "try" clause, no exception handler is\n' |
| 'executed. When an exception occurs in the "try" suite, a search for ' |
| 'an\n' |
| 'exception handler is started. This search inspects the except ' |
| 'clauses\n' |
| 'in turn until one is found that matches the exception. An ' |
| 'expression-\n' |
| 'less except clause, if present, must be last; it matches any\n' |
| 'exception. For an except clause with an expression, that ' |
| 'expression\n' |
| 'is evaluated, and the clause matches the exception if the ' |
| 'resulting\n' |
| 'object is "compatible" with the exception. An object is ' |
| 'compatible\n' |
| 'with an exception if it is the class or a base class of the ' |
| 'exception\n' |
| 'object, or a tuple containing an item compatible with the ' |
| 'exception.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If no except clause matches the exception, the search for an ' |
| 'exception\n' |
| 'handler continues in the surrounding code and on the invocation ' |
| 'stack.\n' |
| '[1]\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If the evaluation of an expression in the header of an except ' |
| 'clause\n' |
| 'raises an exception, the original search for a handler is canceled ' |
| 'and\n' |
| 'a search starts for the new exception in the surrounding code and ' |
| 'on\n' |
| 'the call stack (it is treated as if the entire "try" statement ' |
| 'raised\n' |
| 'the exception).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'When a matching except clause is found, the exception is assigned ' |
| 'to\n' |
| 'the target specified in that except clause, if present, and the ' |
| 'except\n' |
| "clause's suite is executed. All except clauses must have an\n" |
| 'executable block. When the end of this block is reached, ' |
| 'execution\n' |
| 'continues normally after the entire try statement. (This means ' |
| 'that\n' |
| 'if two nested handlers exist for the same exception, and the ' |
| 'exception\n' |
| 'occurs in the try clause of the inner handler, the outer handler ' |
| 'will\n' |
| 'not handle the exception.)\n' |
| '\n' |
| "Before an except clause's suite is executed, details about the\n" |
| 'exception are assigned to three variables in the "sys" module:\n' |
| '"sys.exc_type" receives the object identifying the exception;\n' |
| '"sys.exc_value" receives the exception\'s parameter;\n' |
| '"sys.exc_traceback" receives a traceback object (see section The\n' |
| 'standard type hierarchy) identifying the point in the program ' |
| 'where\n' |
| 'the exception occurred. These details are also available through ' |
| 'the\n' |
| '"sys.exc_info()" function, which returns a tuple "(exc_type,\n' |
| 'exc_value, exc_traceback)". Use of the corresponding variables is\n' |
| 'deprecated in favor of this function, since their use is unsafe in ' |
| 'a\n' |
| 'threaded program. As of Python 1.5, the variables are restored to\n' |
| 'their previous values (before the call) when returning from a ' |
| 'function\n' |
| 'that handled an exception.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The optional "else" clause is executed if and when control flows ' |
| 'off\n' |
| 'the end of the "try" clause. [2] Exceptions in the "else" clause ' |
| 'are\n' |
| 'not handled by the preceding "except" clauses.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If "finally" is present, it specifies a \'cleanup\' handler. The ' |
| '"try"\n' |
| 'clause is executed, including any "except" and "else" clauses. If ' |
| 'an\n' |
| 'exception occurs in any of the clauses and is not handled, the\n' |
| 'exception is temporarily saved. The "finally" clause is executed. ' |
| 'If\n' |
| 'there is a saved exception, it is re-raised at the end of the\n' |
| '"finally" clause. If the "finally" clause raises another exception ' |
| 'or\n' |
| 'executes a "return" or "break" statement, the saved exception is\n' |
| 'discarded:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> def f():\n' |
| ' ... try:\n' |
| ' ... 1/0\n' |
| ' ... finally:\n' |
| ' ... return 42\n' |
| ' ...\n' |
| ' >>> f()\n' |
| ' 42\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The exception information is not available to the program during\n' |
| 'execution of the "finally" clause.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'When a "return", "break" or "continue" statement is executed in ' |
| 'the\n' |
| '"try" suite of a "try"..."finally" statement, the "finally" clause ' |
| 'is\n' |
| 'also executed \'on the way out.\' A "continue" statement is illegal ' |
| 'in\n' |
| 'the "finally" clause. (The reason is a problem with the current\n' |
| 'implementation --- this restriction may be lifted in the future).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The return value of a function is determined by the last "return"\n' |
| 'statement executed. Since the "finally" clause always executes, a\n' |
| '"return" statement executed in the "finally" clause will always be ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'last one executed:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> def foo():\n' |
| ' ... try:\n' |
| " ... return 'try'\n" |
| ' ... finally:\n' |
| " ... return 'finally'\n" |
| ' ...\n' |
| ' >>> foo()\n' |
| " 'finally'\n" |
| '\n' |
| 'Additional information on exceptions can be found in section\n' |
| 'Exceptions, and information on using the "raise" statement to ' |
| 'generate\n' |
| 'exceptions may be found in section The raise statement.\n', |
| 'types': '\n' |
| 'The standard type hierarchy\n' |
| '***************************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Below is a list of the types that are built into Python. ' |
| 'Extension\n' |
| 'modules (written in C, Java, or other languages, depending on ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'implementation) can define additional types. Future versions of\n' |
| 'Python may add types to the type hierarchy (e.g., rational ' |
| 'numbers,\n' |
| 'efficiently stored arrays of integers, etc.).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Some of the type descriptions below contain a paragraph listing\n' |
| "'special attributes.' These are attributes that provide access " |
| 'to the\n' |
| 'implementation and are not intended for general use. Their ' |
| 'definition\n' |
| 'may change in the future.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'None\n' |
| ' This type has a single value. There is a single object with ' |
| 'this\n' |
| ' value. This object is accessed through the built-in name ' |
| '"None". It\n' |
| ' is used to signify the absence of a value in many situations, ' |
| 'e.g.,\n' |
| " it is returned from functions that don't explicitly return\n" |
| ' anything. Its truth value is false.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'NotImplemented\n' |
| ' This type has a single value. There is a single object with ' |
| 'this\n' |
| ' value. This object is accessed through the built-in name\n' |
| ' "NotImplemented". Numeric methods and rich comparison methods ' |
| 'may\n' |
| ' return this value if they do not implement the operation for ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' operands provided. (The interpreter will then try the ' |
| 'reflected\n' |
| ' operation, or some other fallback, depending on the ' |
| 'operator.) Its\n' |
| ' truth value is true.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Ellipsis\n' |
| ' This type has a single value. There is a single object with ' |
| 'this\n' |
| ' value. This object is accessed through the built-in name\n' |
| ' "Ellipsis". It is used to indicate the presence of the "..." ' |
| 'syntax\n' |
| ' in a slice. Its truth value is true.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '"numbers.Number"\n' |
| ' These are created by numeric literals and returned as results ' |
| 'by\n' |
| ' arithmetic operators and arithmetic built-in functions. ' |
| 'Numeric\n' |
| ' objects are immutable; once created their value never ' |
| 'changes.\n' |
| ' Python numbers are of course strongly related to mathematical\n' |
| ' numbers, but subject to the limitations of numerical ' |
| 'representation\n' |
| ' in computers.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Python distinguishes between integers, floating point numbers, ' |
| 'and\n' |
| ' complex numbers:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' "numbers.Integral"\n' |
| ' These represent elements from the mathematical set of ' |
| 'integers\n' |
| ' (positive and negative).\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' There are three types of integers:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Plain integers\n' |
| ' These represent numbers in the range -2147483648 ' |
| 'through\n' |
| ' 2147483647. (The range may be larger on machines with a\n' |
| ' larger natural word size, but not smaller.) When the ' |
| 'result\n' |
| ' of an operation would fall outside this range, the ' |
| 'result is\n' |
| ' normally returned as a long integer (in some cases, the\n' |
| ' exception "OverflowError" is raised instead). For the\n' |
| ' purpose of shift and mask operations, integers are ' |
| 'assumed to\n' |
| " have a binary, 2's complement notation using 32 or more " |
| 'bits,\n' |
| ' and hiding no bits from the user (i.e., all 4294967296\n' |
| ' different bit patterns correspond to different values).\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Long integers\n' |
| ' These represent numbers in an unlimited range, subject ' |
| 'to\n' |
| ' available (virtual) memory only. For the purpose of ' |
| 'shift\n' |
| ' and mask operations, a binary representation is assumed, ' |
| 'and\n' |
| " negative numbers are represented in a variant of 2's\n" |
| ' complement which gives the illusion of an infinite ' |
| 'string of\n' |
| ' sign bits extending to the left.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Booleans\n' |
| ' These represent the truth values False and True. The ' |
| 'two\n' |
| ' objects representing the values "False" and "True" are ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' only Boolean objects. The Boolean type is a subtype of ' |
| 'plain\n' |
| ' integers, and Boolean values behave like the values 0 ' |
| 'and 1,\n' |
| ' respectively, in almost all contexts, the exception ' |
| 'being\n' |
| ' that when converted to a string, the strings ""False"" ' |
| 'or\n' |
| ' ""True"" are returned, respectively.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' The rules for integer representation are intended to give ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' most meaningful interpretation of shift and mask ' |
| 'operations\n' |
| ' involving negative integers and the least surprises when\n' |
| ' switching between the plain and long integer domains. Any\n' |
| ' operation, if it yields a result in the plain integer ' |
| 'domain,\n' |
| ' will yield the same result in the long integer domain or ' |
| 'when\n' |
| ' using mixed operands. The switch between domains is ' |
| 'transparent\n' |
| ' to the programmer.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' "numbers.Real" ("float")\n' |
| ' These represent machine-level double precision floating ' |
| 'point\n' |
| ' numbers. You are at the mercy of the underlying machine\n' |
| ' architecture (and C or Java implementation) for the ' |
| 'accepted\n' |
| ' range and handling of overflow. Python does not support ' |
| 'single-\n' |
| ' precision floating point numbers; the savings in processor ' |
| 'and\n' |
| ' memory usage that are usually the reason for using these ' |
| 'are\n' |
| ' dwarfed by the overhead of using objects in Python, so ' |
| 'there is\n' |
| ' no reason to complicate the language with two kinds of ' |
| 'floating\n' |
| ' point numbers.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' "numbers.Complex"\n' |
| ' These represent complex numbers as a pair of machine-level\n' |
| ' double precision floating point numbers. The same caveats ' |
| 'apply\n' |
| ' as for floating point numbers. The real and imaginary parts ' |
| 'of a\n' |
| ' complex number "z" can be retrieved through the read-only\n' |
| ' attributes "z.real" and "z.imag".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Sequences\n' |
| ' These represent finite ordered sets indexed by non-negative\n' |
| ' numbers. The built-in function "len()" returns the number of ' |
| 'items\n' |
| ' of a sequence. When the length of a sequence is *n*, the index ' |
| 'set\n' |
| ' contains the numbers 0, 1, ..., *n*-1. Item *i* of sequence ' |
| '*a* is\n' |
| ' selected by "a[i]".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Sequences also support slicing: "a[i:j]" selects all items ' |
| 'with\n' |
| ' index *k* such that *i* "<=" *k* "<" *j*. When used as an\n' |
| ' expression, a slice is a sequence of the same type. This ' |
| 'implies\n' |
| ' that the index set is renumbered so that it starts at 0.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Some sequences also support "extended slicing" with a third ' |
| '"step"\n' |
| ' parameter: "a[i:j:k]" selects all items of *a* with index *x* ' |
| 'where\n' |
| ' "x = i + n*k", *n* ">=" "0" and *i* "<=" *x* "<" *j*.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Sequences are distinguished according to their mutability:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Immutable sequences\n' |
| ' An object of an immutable sequence type cannot change once ' |
| 'it is\n' |
| ' created. (If the object contains references to other ' |
| 'objects,\n' |
| ' these other objects may be mutable and may be changed; ' |
| 'however,\n' |
| ' the collection of objects directly referenced by an ' |
| 'immutable\n' |
| ' object cannot change.)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' The following types are immutable sequences:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Strings\n' |
| ' The items of a string are characters. There is no ' |
| 'separate\n' |
| ' character type; a character is represented by a string ' |
| 'of one\n' |
| ' item. Characters represent (at least) 8-bit bytes. The\n' |
| ' built-in functions "chr()" and "ord()" convert between\n' |
| ' characters and nonnegative integers representing the ' |
| 'byte\n' |
| ' values. Bytes with the values 0-127 usually represent ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' corresponding ASCII values, but the interpretation of ' |
| 'values\n' |
| ' is up to the program. The string data type is also used ' |
| 'to\n' |
| ' represent arrays of bytes, e.g., to hold data read from ' |
| 'a\n' |
| ' file.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' (On systems whose native character set is not ASCII, ' |
| 'strings\n' |
| ' may use EBCDIC in their internal representation, ' |
| 'provided the\n' |
| ' functions "chr()" and "ord()" implement a mapping ' |
| 'between\n' |
| ' ASCII and EBCDIC, and string comparison preserves the ' |
| 'ASCII\n' |
| ' order. Or perhaps someone can propose a better rule?)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Unicode\n' |
| ' The items of a Unicode object are Unicode code units. ' |
| 'A\n' |
| ' Unicode code unit is represented by a Unicode object of ' |
| 'one\n' |
| ' item and can hold either a 16-bit or 32-bit value\n' |
| ' representing a Unicode ordinal (the maximum value for ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' ordinal is given in "sys.maxunicode", and depends on ' |
| 'how\n' |
| ' Python is configured at compile time). Surrogate pairs ' |
| 'may\n' |
| ' be present in the Unicode object, and will be reported ' |
| 'as two\n' |
| ' separate items. The built-in functions "unichr()" and\n' |
| ' "ord()" convert between code units and nonnegative ' |
| 'integers\n' |
| ' representing the Unicode ordinals as defined in the ' |
| 'Unicode\n' |
| ' Standard 3.0. Conversion from and to other encodings ' |
| 'are\n' |
| ' possible through the Unicode method "encode()" and the ' |
| 'built-\n' |
| ' in function "unicode()".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Tuples\n' |
| ' The items of a tuple are arbitrary Python objects. ' |
| 'Tuples of\n' |
| ' two or more items are formed by comma-separated lists ' |
| 'of\n' |
| " expressions. A tuple of one item (a 'singleton') can " |
| 'be\n' |
| ' formed by affixing a comma to an expression (an ' |
| 'expression by\n' |
| ' itself does not create a tuple, since parentheses must ' |
| 'be\n' |
| ' usable for grouping of expressions). An empty tuple can ' |
| 'be\n' |
| ' formed by an empty pair of parentheses.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Mutable sequences\n' |
| ' Mutable sequences can be changed after they are created. ' |
| 'The\n' |
| ' subscription and slicing notations can be used as the ' |
| 'target of\n' |
| ' assignment and "del" (delete) statements.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' There are currently two intrinsic mutable sequence types:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Lists\n' |
| ' The items of a list are arbitrary Python objects. Lists ' |
| 'are\n' |
| ' formed by placing a comma-separated list of expressions ' |
| 'in\n' |
| ' square brackets. (Note that there are no special cases ' |
| 'needed\n' |
| ' to form lists of length 0 or 1.)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Byte Arrays\n' |
| ' A bytearray object is a mutable array. They are created ' |
| 'by\n' |
| ' the built-in "bytearray()" constructor. Aside from ' |
| 'being\n' |
| ' mutable (and hence unhashable), byte arrays otherwise ' |
| 'provide\n' |
| ' the same interface and functionality as immutable bytes\n' |
| ' objects.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' The extension module "array" provides an additional example ' |
| 'of a\n' |
| ' mutable sequence type.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Set types\n' |
| ' These represent unordered, finite sets of unique, immutable\n' |
| ' objects. As such, they cannot be indexed by any subscript. ' |
| 'However,\n' |
| ' they can be iterated over, and the built-in function "len()"\n' |
| ' returns the number of items in a set. Common uses for sets are ' |
| 'fast\n' |
| ' membership testing, removing duplicates from a sequence, and\n' |
| ' computing mathematical operations such as intersection, ' |
| 'union,\n' |
| ' difference, and symmetric difference.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For set elements, the same immutability rules apply as for\n' |
| ' dictionary keys. Note that numeric types obey the normal rules ' |
| 'for\n' |
| ' numeric comparison: if two numbers compare equal (e.g., "1" ' |
| 'and\n' |
| ' "1.0"), only one of them can be contained in a set.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' There are currently two intrinsic set types:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Sets\n' |
| ' These represent a mutable set. They are created by the ' |
| 'built-in\n' |
| ' "set()" constructor and can be modified afterwards by ' |
| 'several\n' |
| ' methods, such as "add()".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Frozen sets\n' |
| ' These represent an immutable set. They are created by the\n' |
| ' built-in "frozenset()" constructor. As a frozenset is ' |
| 'immutable\n' |
| ' and *hashable*, it can be used again as an element of ' |
| 'another\n' |
| ' set, or as a dictionary key.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Mappings\n' |
| ' These represent finite sets of objects indexed by arbitrary ' |
| 'index\n' |
| ' sets. The subscript notation "a[k]" selects the item indexed ' |
| 'by "k"\n' |
| ' from the mapping "a"; this can be used in expressions and as ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' target of assignments or "del" statements. The built-in ' |
| 'function\n' |
| ' "len()" returns the number of items in a mapping.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' There is currently a single intrinsic mapping type:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Dictionaries\n' |
| ' These represent finite sets of objects indexed by nearly\n' |
| ' arbitrary values. The only types of values not acceptable ' |
| 'as\n' |
| ' keys are values containing lists or dictionaries or other\n' |
| ' mutable types that are compared by value rather than by ' |
| 'object\n' |
| ' identity, the reason being that the efficient ' |
| 'implementation of\n' |
| " dictionaries requires a key's hash value to remain " |
| 'constant.\n' |
| ' Numeric types used for keys obey the normal rules for ' |
| 'numeric\n' |
| ' comparison: if two numbers compare equal (e.g., "1" and ' |
| '"1.0")\n' |
| ' then they can be used interchangeably to index the same\n' |
| ' dictionary entry.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Dictionaries are mutable; they can be created by the ' |
| '"{...}"\n' |
| ' notation (see section Dictionary displays).\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' The extension modules "dbm", "gdbm", and "bsddb" provide\n' |
| ' additional examples of mapping types.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Callable types\n' |
| ' These are the types to which the function call operation (see\n' |
| ' section Calls) can be applied:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' User-defined functions\n' |
| ' A user-defined function object is created by a function\n' |
| ' definition (see section Function definitions). It should ' |
| 'be\n' |
| ' called with an argument list containing the same number of ' |
| 'items\n' |
| " as the function's formal parameter list.\n" |
| '\n' |
| ' Special attributes:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-------------------------+---------------------------------+-------------+\n' |
| ' | Attribute | Meaning ' |
| '| |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+=========================+=================================+=============+\n' |
| ' | "__doc__" "func_doc" | The function\'s ' |
| 'documentation | Writable |\n' |
| ' | | string, or "None" if ' |
| '| |\n' |
| ' | | unavailable. ' |
| '| |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-------------------------+---------------------------------+-------------+\n' |
| ' | "__name__" "func_name" | The function\'s ' |
| 'name. | Writable |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-------------------------+---------------------------------+-------------+\n' |
| ' | "__module__" | The name of the module the ' |
| '| Writable |\n' |
| ' | | function was defined in, or ' |
| '| |\n' |
| ' | | "None" if unavailable. ' |
| '| |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-------------------------+---------------------------------+-------------+\n' |
| ' | "__defaults__" | A tuple containing default ' |
| '| Writable |\n' |
| ' | "func_defaults" | argument values for those ' |
| '| |\n' |
| ' | | arguments that have defaults, ' |
| '| |\n' |
| ' | | or "None" if no arguments have ' |
| '| |\n' |
| ' | | a default value. ' |
| '| |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-------------------------+---------------------------------+-------------+\n' |
| ' | "__code__" "func_code" | The code object representing ' |
| '| Writable |\n' |
| ' | | the compiled function body. ' |
| '| |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-------------------------+---------------------------------+-------------+\n' |
| ' | "__globals__" | A reference to the dictionary ' |
| '| Read-only |\n' |
| ' | "func_globals" | that holds the ' |
| "function's | |\n" |
| ' | | global variables --- the global ' |
| '| |\n' |
| ' | | namespace of the module in ' |
| '| |\n' |
| ' | | which the function was defined. ' |
| '| |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-------------------------+---------------------------------+-------------+\n' |
| ' | "__dict__" "func_dict" | The namespace supporting ' |
| '| Writable |\n' |
| ' | | arbitrary function attributes. ' |
| '| |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-------------------------+---------------------------------+-------------+\n' |
| ' | "__closure__" | "None" or a tuple of cells that ' |
| '| Read-only |\n' |
| ' | "func_closure" | contain bindings for the ' |
| '| |\n' |
| " | | function's free variables. " |
| '| |\n' |
| ' ' |
| '+-------------------------+---------------------------------+-------------+\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Most of the attributes labelled "Writable" check the type ' |
| 'of the\n' |
| ' assigned value.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.4: "func_name" is now writable.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.6: The double-underscore attributes\n' |
| ' "__closure__", "__code__", "__defaults__", and ' |
| '"__globals__"\n' |
| ' were introduced as aliases for the corresponding "func_*"\n' |
| ' attributes for forwards compatibility with Python 3.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Function objects also support getting and setting ' |
| 'arbitrary\n' |
| ' attributes, which can be used, for example, to attach ' |
| 'metadata\n' |
| ' to functions. Regular attribute dot-notation is used to ' |
| 'get and\n' |
| ' set such attributes. *Note that the current implementation ' |
| 'only\n' |
| ' supports function attributes on user-defined functions. ' |
| 'Function\n' |
| ' attributes on built-in functions may be supported in the\n' |
| ' future.*\n' |
| '\n' |
| " Additional information about a function's definition can " |
| 'be\n' |
| ' retrieved from its code object; see the description of ' |
| 'internal\n' |
| ' types below.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' User-defined methods\n' |
| ' A user-defined method object combines a class, a class ' |
| 'instance\n' |
| ' (or "None") and any callable object (normally a ' |
| 'user-defined\n' |
| ' function).\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Special read-only attributes: "im_self" is the class ' |
| 'instance\n' |
| ' object, "im_func" is the function object; "im_class" is ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' class of "im_self" for bound methods or the class that ' |
| 'asked for\n' |
| ' the method for unbound methods; "__doc__" is the method\'s\n' |
| ' documentation (same as "im_func.__doc__"); "__name__" is ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' method name (same as "im_func.__name__"); "__module__" is ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' name of the module the method was defined in, or "None" if\n' |
| ' unavailable.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.2: "im_self" used to refer to the ' |
| 'class\n' |
| ' that defined the method.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.6: For Python 3 ' |
| 'forward-compatibility,\n' |
| ' "im_func" is also available as "__func__", and "im_self" ' |
| 'as\n' |
| ' "__self__".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Methods also support accessing (but not setting) the ' |
| 'arbitrary\n' |
| ' function attributes on the underlying function object.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' User-defined method objects may be created when getting an\n' |
| ' attribute of a class (perhaps via an instance of that ' |
| 'class), if\n' |
| ' that attribute is a user-defined function object, an ' |
| 'unbound\n' |
| ' user-defined method object, or a class method object. When ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' attribute is a user-defined method object, a new method ' |
| 'object\n' |
| ' is only created if the class from which it is being ' |
| 'retrieved is\n' |
| ' the same as, or a derived class of, the class stored in ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' original method object; otherwise, the original method ' |
| 'object is\n' |
| ' used as it is.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' When a user-defined method object is created by retrieving ' |
| 'a\n' |
| ' user-defined function object from a class, its "im_self"\n' |
| ' attribute is "None" and the method object is said to be ' |
| 'unbound.\n' |
| ' When one is created by retrieving a user-defined function ' |
| 'object\n' |
| ' from a class via one of its instances, its "im_self" ' |
| 'attribute\n' |
| ' is the instance, and the method object is said to be bound. ' |
| 'In\n' |
| ' either case, the new method\'s "im_class" attribute is the ' |
| 'class\n' |
| ' from which the retrieval takes place, and its "im_func"\n' |
| ' attribute is the original function object.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' When a user-defined method object is created by retrieving\n' |
| ' another method object from a class or instance, the ' |
| 'behaviour is\n' |
| ' the same as for a function object, except that the ' |
| '"im_func"\n' |
| ' attribute of the new instance is not the original method ' |
| 'object\n' |
| ' but its "im_func" attribute.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' When a user-defined method object is created by retrieving ' |
| 'a\n' |
| ' class method object from a class or instance, its ' |
| '"im_self"\n' |
| ' attribute is the class itself, and its "im_func" attribute ' |
| 'is\n' |
| ' the function object underlying the class method.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' When an unbound user-defined method object is called, the\n' |
| ' underlying function ("im_func") is called, with the ' |
| 'restriction\n' |
| ' that the first argument must be an instance of the proper ' |
| 'class\n' |
| ' ("im_class") or of a derived class thereof.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' When a bound user-defined method object is called, the\n' |
| ' underlying function ("im_func") is called, inserting the ' |
| 'class\n' |
| ' instance ("im_self") in front of the argument list. For\n' |
| ' instance, when "C" is a class which contains a definition ' |
| 'for a\n' |
| ' function "f()", and "x" is an instance of "C", calling ' |
| '"x.f(1)"\n' |
| ' is equivalent to calling "C.f(x, 1)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' When a user-defined method object is derived from a class ' |
| 'method\n' |
| ' object, the "class instance" stored in "im_self" will ' |
| 'actually\n' |
| ' be the class itself, so that calling either "x.f(1)" or ' |
| '"C.f(1)"\n' |
| ' is equivalent to calling "f(C,1)" where "f" is the ' |
| 'underlying\n' |
| ' function.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Note that the transformation from function object to ' |
| '(unbound or\n' |
| ' bound) method object happens each time the attribute is\n' |
| ' retrieved from the class or instance. In some cases, a ' |
| 'fruitful\n' |
| ' optimization is to assign the attribute to a local variable ' |
| 'and\n' |
| ' call that local variable. Also notice that this ' |
| 'transformation\n' |
| ' only happens for user-defined functions; other callable ' |
| 'objects\n' |
| ' (and all non-callable objects) are retrieved without\n' |
| ' transformation. It is also important to note that ' |
| 'user-defined\n' |
| ' functions which are attributes of a class instance are not\n' |
| ' converted to bound methods; this *only* happens when the\n' |
| ' function is an attribute of the class.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Generator functions\n' |
| ' A function or method which uses the "yield" statement (see\n' |
| ' section The yield statement) is called a *generator ' |
| 'function*.\n' |
| ' Such a function, when called, always returns an iterator ' |
| 'object\n' |
| ' which can be used to execute the body of the function: ' |
| 'calling\n' |
| ' the iterator\'s "next()" method will cause the function to\n' |
| ' execute until it provides a value using the "yield" ' |
| 'statement.\n' |
| ' When the function executes a "return" statement or falls ' |
| 'off the\n' |
| ' end, a "StopIteration" exception is raised and the iterator ' |
| 'will\n' |
| ' have reached the end of the set of values to be returned.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Built-in functions\n' |
| ' A built-in function object is a wrapper around a C ' |
| 'function.\n' |
| ' Examples of built-in functions are "len()" and ' |
| '"math.sin()"\n' |
| ' ("math" is a standard built-in module). The number and type ' |
| 'of\n' |
| ' the arguments are determined by the C function. Special ' |
| 'read-\n' |
| ' only attributes: "__doc__" is the function\'s ' |
| 'documentation\n' |
| ' string, or "None" if unavailable; "__name__" is the ' |
| "function's\n" |
| ' name; "__self__" is set to "None" (but see the next item);\n' |
| ' "__module__" is the name of the module the function was ' |
| 'defined\n' |
| ' in or "None" if unavailable.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Built-in methods\n' |
| ' This is really a different disguise of a built-in function, ' |
| 'this\n' |
| ' time containing an object passed to the C function as an\n' |
| ' implicit extra argument. An example of a built-in method ' |
| 'is\n' |
| ' "alist.append()", assuming *alist* is a list object. In ' |
| 'this\n' |
| ' case, the special read-only attribute "__self__" is set to ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' object denoted by *alist*.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Class Types\n' |
| ' Class types, or "new-style classes," are callable. These\n' |
| ' objects normally act as factories for new instances of\n' |
| ' themselves, but variations are possible for class types ' |
| 'that\n' |
| ' override "__new__()". The arguments of the call are passed ' |
| 'to\n' |
| ' "__new__()" and, in the typical case, to "__init__()" to\n' |
| ' initialize the new instance.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Classic Classes\n' |
| ' Class objects are described below. When a class object is\n' |
| ' called, a new class instance (also described below) is ' |
| 'created\n' |
| " and returned. This implies a call to the class's " |
| '"__init__()"\n' |
| ' method if it has one. Any arguments are passed on to the\n' |
| ' "__init__()" method. If there is no "__init__()" method, ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' class must be called without arguments.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Class instances\n' |
| ' Class instances are described below. Class instances are\n' |
| ' callable only when the class has a "__call__()" method;\n' |
| ' "x(arguments)" is a shorthand for "x.__call__(arguments)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Modules\n' |
| ' Modules are imported by the "import" statement (see section ' |
| 'The\n' |
| ' import statement). A module object has a namespace implemented ' |
| 'by a\n' |
| ' dictionary object (this is the dictionary referenced by the\n' |
| ' func_globals attribute of functions defined in the module).\n' |
| ' Attribute references are translated to lookups in this ' |
| 'dictionary,\n' |
| ' e.g., "m.x" is equivalent to "m.__dict__["x"]". A module ' |
| 'object\n' |
| ' does not contain the code object used to initialize the ' |
| 'module\n' |
| " (since it isn't needed once the initialization is done).\n" |
| '\n' |
| " Attribute assignment updates the module's namespace " |
| 'dictionary,\n' |
| ' e.g., "m.x = 1" is equivalent to "m.__dict__["x"] = 1".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Special read-only attribute: "__dict__" is the module\'s ' |
| 'namespace\n' |
| ' as a dictionary object.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' **CPython implementation detail:** Because of the way CPython\n' |
| ' clears module dictionaries, the module dictionary will be ' |
| 'cleared\n' |
| ' when the module falls out of scope even if the dictionary ' |
| 'still has\n' |
| ' live references. To avoid this, copy the dictionary or keep ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' module around while using its dictionary directly.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Predefined (writable) attributes: "__name__" is the module\'s ' |
| 'name;\n' |
| ' "__doc__" is the module\'s documentation string, or "None" if\n' |
| ' unavailable; "__file__" is the pathname of the file from which ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' module was loaded, if it was loaded from a file. The ' |
| '"__file__"\n' |
| ' attribute is not present for C modules that are statically ' |
| 'linked\n' |
| ' into the interpreter; for extension modules loaded dynamically ' |
| 'from\n' |
| ' a shared library, it is the pathname of the shared library ' |
| 'file.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Classes\n' |
| ' Both class types (new-style classes) and class objects (old-\n' |
| ' style/classic classes) are typically created by class ' |
| 'definitions\n' |
| ' (see section Class definitions). A class has a namespace\n' |
| ' implemented by a dictionary object. Class attribute references ' |
| 'are\n' |
| ' translated to lookups in this dictionary, e.g., "C.x" is ' |
| 'translated\n' |
| ' to "C.__dict__["x"]" (although for new-style classes in ' |
| 'particular\n' |
| ' there are a number of hooks which allow for other means of ' |
| 'locating\n' |
| ' attributes). When the attribute name is not found there, the\n' |
| ' attribute search continues in the base classes. For ' |
| 'old-style\n' |
| ' classes, the search is depth-first, left-to-right in the order ' |
| 'of\n' |
| ' occurrence in the base class list. New-style classes use the ' |
| 'more\n' |
| ' complex C3 method resolution order which behaves correctly ' |
| 'even in\n' |
| " the presence of 'diamond' inheritance structures where there " |
| 'are\n' |
| ' multiple inheritance paths leading back to a common ancestor.\n' |
| ' Additional details on the C3 MRO used by new-style classes can ' |
| 'be\n' |
| ' found in the documentation accompanying the 2.3 release at\n' |
| ' https://www.python.org/download/releases/2.3/mro/.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' When a class attribute reference (for class "C", say) would ' |
| 'yield a\n' |
| ' user-defined function object or an unbound user-defined ' |
| 'method\n' |
| ' object whose associated class is either "C" or one of its ' |
| 'base\n' |
| ' classes, it is transformed into an unbound user-defined ' |
| 'method\n' |
| ' object whose "im_class" attribute is "C". When it would yield ' |
| 'a\n' |
| ' class method object, it is transformed into a bound ' |
| 'user-defined\n' |
| ' method object whose "im_self" attribute is "C". When it ' |
| 'would\n' |
| ' yield a static method object, it is transformed into the ' |
| 'object\n' |
| ' wrapped by the static method object. See section Implementing\n' |
| ' Descriptors for another way in which attributes retrieved from ' |
| 'a\n' |
| ' class may differ from those actually contained in its ' |
| '"__dict__"\n' |
| ' (note that only new-style classes support descriptors).\n' |
| '\n' |
| " Class attribute assignments update the class's dictionary, " |
| 'never\n' |
| ' the dictionary of a base class.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' A class object can be called (see above) to yield a class ' |
| 'instance\n' |
| ' (see below).\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Special attributes: "__name__" is the class name; "__module__" ' |
| 'is\n' |
| ' the module name in which the class was defined; "__dict__" is ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' dictionary containing the class\'s namespace; "__bases__" is a ' |
| 'tuple\n' |
| ' (possibly empty or a singleton) containing the base classes, ' |
| 'in the\n' |
| ' order of their occurrence in the base class list; "__doc__" is ' |
| 'the\n' |
| " class's documentation string, or None if undefined.\n" |
| '\n' |
| 'Class instances\n' |
| ' A class instance is created by calling a class object (see ' |
| 'above).\n' |
| ' A class instance has a namespace implemented as a dictionary ' |
| 'which\n' |
| ' is the first place in which attribute references are ' |
| 'searched.\n' |
| " When an attribute is not found there, and the instance's class " |
| 'has\n' |
| ' an attribute by that name, the search continues with the ' |
| 'class\n' |
| ' attributes. If a class attribute is found that is a ' |
| 'user-defined\n' |
| ' function object or an unbound user-defined method object ' |
| 'whose\n' |
| ' associated class is the class (call it "C") of the instance ' |
| 'for\n' |
| ' which the attribute reference was initiated or one of its ' |
| 'bases, it\n' |
| ' is transformed into a bound user-defined method object whose\n' |
| ' "im_class" attribute is "C" and whose "im_self" attribute is ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' instance. Static method and class method objects are also\n' |
| ' transformed, as if they had been retrieved from class "C"; ' |
| 'see\n' |
| ' above under "Classes". See section Implementing Descriptors ' |
| 'for\n' |
| ' another way in which attributes of a class retrieved via its\n' |
| ' instances may differ from the objects actually stored in the\n' |
| ' class\'s "__dict__". If no class attribute is found, and the\n' |
| ' object\'s class has a "__getattr__()" method, that is called ' |
| 'to\n' |
| ' satisfy the lookup.\n' |
| '\n' |
| " Attribute assignments and deletions update the instance's\n" |
| " dictionary, never a class's dictionary. If the class has a\n" |
| ' "__setattr__()" or "__delattr__()" method, this is called ' |
| 'instead\n' |
| ' of updating the instance dictionary directly.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Class instances can pretend to be numbers, sequences, or ' |
| 'mappings\n' |
| ' if they have methods with certain special names. See section\n' |
| ' Special method names.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Special attributes: "__dict__" is the attribute dictionary;\n' |
| ' "__class__" is the instance\'s class.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Files\n' |
| ' A file object represents an open file. File objects are ' |
| 'created by\n' |
| ' the "open()" built-in function, and also by "os.popen()",\n' |
| ' "os.fdopen()", and the "makefile()" method of socket objects ' |
| '(and\n' |
| ' perhaps by other functions or methods provided by extension\n' |
| ' modules). The objects "sys.stdin", "sys.stdout" and ' |
| '"sys.stderr"\n' |
| ' are initialized to file objects corresponding to the ' |
| "interpreter's\n" |
| ' standard input, output and error streams. See File Objects ' |
| 'for\n' |
| ' complete documentation of file objects.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Internal types\n' |
| ' A few types used internally by the interpreter are exposed to ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' user. Their definitions may change with future versions of ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' interpreter, but they are mentioned here for completeness.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Code objects\n' |
| ' Code objects represent *byte-compiled* executable Python ' |
| 'code,\n' |
| ' or *bytecode*. The difference between a code object and a\n' |
| ' function object is that the function object contains an ' |
| 'explicit\n' |
| " reference to the function's globals (the module in which it " |
| 'was\n' |
| ' defined), while a code object contains no context; also ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' default argument values are stored in the function object, ' |
| 'not\n' |
| ' in the code object (because they represent values ' |
| 'calculated at\n' |
| ' run-time). Unlike function objects, code objects are ' |
| 'immutable\n' |
| ' and contain no references (directly or indirectly) to ' |
| 'mutable\n' |
| ' objects.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Special read-only attributes: "co_name" gives the function ' |
| 'name;\n' |
| ' "co_argcount" is the number of positional arguments ' |
| '(including\n' |
| ' arguments with default values); "co_nlocals" is the number ' |
| 'of\n' |
| ' local variables used by the function (including ' |
| 'arguments);\n' |
| ' "co_varnames" is a tuple containing the names of the local\n' |
| ' variables (starting with the argument names); "co_cellvars" ' |
| 'is a\n' |
| ' tuple containing the names of local variables that are\n' |
| ' referenced by nested functions; "co_freevars" is a tuple\n' |
| ' containing the names of free variables; "co_code" is a ' |
| 'string\n' |
| ' representing the sequence of bytecode instructions; ' |
| '"co_consts"\n' |
| ' is a tuple containing the literals used by the bytecode;\n' |
| ' "co_names" is a tuple containing the names used by the ' |
| 'bytecode;\n' |
| ' "co_filename" is the filename from which the code was ' |
| 'compiled;\n' |
| ' "co_firstlineno" is the first line number of the function;\n' |
| ' "co_lnotab" is a string encoding the mapping from bytecode\n' |
| ' offsets to line numbers (for details see the source code of ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' interpreter); "co_stacksize" is the required stack size\n' |
| ' (including local variables); "co_flags" is an integer ' |
| 'encoding a\n' |
| ' number of flags for the interpreter.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' The following flag bits are defined for "co_flags": bit ' |
| '"0x04"\n' |
| ' is set if the function uses the "*arguments" syntax to ' |
| 'accept an\n' |
| ' arbitrary number of positional arguments; bit "0x08" is set ' |
| 'if\n' |
| ' the function uses the "**keywords" syntax to accept ' |
| 'arbitrary\n' |
| ' keyword arguments; bit "0x20" is set if the function is a\n' |
| ' generator.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Future feature declarations ("from __future__ import ' |
| 'division")\n' |
| ' also use bits in "co_flags" to indicate whether a code ' |
| 'object\n' |
| ' was compiled with a particular feature enabled: bit ' |
| '"0x2000" is\n' |
| ' set if the function was compiled with future division ' |
| 'enabled;\n' |
| ' bits "0x10" and "0x1000" were used in earlier versions of\n' |
| ' Python.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Other bits in "co_flags" are reserved for internal use.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If a code object represents a function, the first item in\n' |
| ' "co_consts" is the documentation string of the function, ' |
| 'or\n' |
| ' "None" if undefined.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Frame objects\n' |
| ' Frame objects represent execution frames. They may occur ' |
| 'in\n' |
| ' traceback objects (see below).\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Special read-only attributes: "f_back" is to the previous ' |
| 'stack\n' |
| ' frame (towards the caller), or "None" if this is the ' |
| 'bottom\n' |
| ' stack frame; "f_code" is the code object being executed in ' |
| 'this\n' |
| ' frame; "f_locals" is the dictionary used to look up local\n' |
| ' variables; "f_globals" is used for global variables;\n' |
| ' "f_builtins" is used for built-in (intrinsic) names;\n' |
| ' "f_restricted" is a flag indicating whether the function ' |
| 'is\n' |
| ' executing in restricted execution mode; "f_lasti" gives ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' precise instruction (this is an index into the bytecode ' |
| 'string\n' |
| ' of the code object).\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Special writable attributes: "f_trace", if not "None", is ' |
| 'a\n' |
| ' function called at the start of each source code line (this ' |
| 'is\n' |
| ' used by the debugger); "f_exc_type", "f_exc_value",\n' |
| ' "f_exc_traceback" represent the last exception raised in ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' parent frame provided another exception was ever raised in ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' current frame (in all other cases they are None); ' |
| '"f_lineno" is\n' |
| ' the current line number of the frame --- writing to this ' |
| 'from\n' |
| ' within a trace function jumps to the given line (only for ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' bottom-most frame). A debugger can implement a Jump ' |
| 'command\n' |
| ' (aka Set Next Statement) by writing to f_lineno.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Traceback objects\n' |
| ' Traceback objects represent a stack trace of an exception. ' |
| 'A\n' |
| ' traceback object is created when an exception occurs. When ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' search for an exception handler unwinds the execution ' |
| 'stack, at\n' |
| ' each unwound level a traceback object is inserted in front ' |
| 'of\n' |
| ' the current traceback. When an exception handler is ' |
| 'entered,\n' |
| ' the stack trace is made available to the program. (See ' |
| 'section\n' |
| ' The try statement.) It is accessible as ' |
| '"sys.exc_traceback", and\n' |
| ' also as the third item of the tuple returned by\n' |
| ' "sys.exc_info()". The latter is the preferred interface, ' |
| 'since\n' |
| ' it works correctly when the program is using multiple ' |
| 'threads.\n' |
| ' When the program contains no suitable handler, the stack ' |
| 'trace\n' |
| ' is written (nicely formatted) to the standard error stream; ' |
| 'if\n' |
| ' the interpreter is interactive, it is also made available ' |
| 'to the\n' |
| ' user as "sys.last_traceback".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Special read-only attributes: "tb_next" is the next level ' |
| 'in the\n' |
| ' stack trace (towards the frame where the exception ' |
| 'occurred), or\n' |
| ' "None" if there is no next level; "tb_frame" points to the\n' |
| ' execution frame of the current level; "tb_lineno" gives the ' |
| 'line\n' |
| ' number where the exception occurred; "tb_lasti" indicates ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' precise instruction. The line number and last instruction ' |
| 'in\n' |
| ' the traceback may differ from the line number of its frame\n' |
| ' object if the exception occurred in a "try" statement with ' |
| 'no\n' |
| ' matching except clause or with a finally clause.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Slice objects\n' |
| ' Slice objects are used to represent slices when *extended ' |
| 'slice\n' |
| ' syntax* is used. This is a slice using two colons, or ' |
| 'multiple\n' |
| ' slices or ellipses separated by commas, e.g., ' |
| '"a[i:j:step]",\n' |
| ' "a[i:j, k:l]", or "a[..., i:j]". They are also created by ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' built-in "slice()" function.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Special read-only attributes: "start" is the lower bound; ' |
| '"stop"\n' |
| ' is the upper bound; "step" is the step value; each is ' |
| '"None" if\n' |
| ' omitted. These attributes can have any type.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Slice objects support one method:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' slice.indices(self, length)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' This method takes a single integer argument *length* ' |
| 'and\n' |
| ' computes information about the extended slice that the ' |
| 'slice\n' |
| ' object would describe if applied to a sequence of ' |
| '*length*\n' |
| ' items. It returns a tuple of three integers; ' |
| 'respectively\n' |
| ' these are the *start* and *stop* indices and the *step* ' |
| 'or\n' |
| ' stride length of the slice. Missing or out-of-bounds ' |
| 'indices\n' |
| ' are handled in a manner consistent with regular slices.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.3.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Static method objects\n' |
| ' Static method objects provide a way of defeating the\n' |
| ' transformation of function objects to method objects ' |
| 'described\n' |
| ' above. A static method object is a wrapper around any ' |
| 'other\n' |
| ' object, usually a user-defined method object. When a ' |
| 'static\n' |
| ' method object is retrieved from a class or a class ' |
| 'instance, the\n' |
| ' object actually returned is the wrapped object, which is ' |
| 'not\n' |
| ' subject to any further transformation. Static method ' |
| 'objects are\n' |
| ' not themselves callable, although the objects they wrap ' |
| 'usually\n' |
| ' are. Static method objects are created by the built-in\n' |
| ' "staticmethod()" constructor.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Class method objects\n' |
| ' A class method object, like a static method object, is a ' |
| 'wrapper\n' |
| ' around another object that alters the way in which that ' |
| 'object\n' |
| ' is retrieved from classes and class instances. The ' |
| 'behaviour of\n' |
| ' class method objects upon such retrieval is described ' |
| 'above,\n' |
| ' under "User-defined methods". Class method objects are ' |
| 'created\n' |
| ' by the built-in "classmethod()" constructor.\n', |
| 'typesfunctions': '\n' |
| 'Functions\n' |
| '*********\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Function objects are created by function definitions. ' |
| 'The only\n' |
| 'operation on a function object is to call it: ' |
| '"func(argument-list)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'There are really two flavors of function objects: ' |
| 'built-in functions\n' |
| 'and user-defined functions. Both support the same ' |
| 'operation (to call\n' |
| 'the function), but the implementation is different, ' |
| 'hence the\n' |
| 'different object types.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'See Function definitions for more information.\n', |
| 'typesmapping': '\n' |
| 'Mapping Types --- "dict"\n' |
| '************************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A *mapping* object maps *hashable* values to arbitrary ' |
| 'objects.\n' |
| 'Mappings are mutable objects. There is currently only one ' |
| 'standard\n' |
| 'mapping type, the *dictionary*. (For other containers see ' |
| 'the built\n' |
| 'in "list", "set", and "tuple" classes, and the ' |
| '"collections" module.)\n' |
| '\n' |
| "A dictionary's keys are *almost* arbitrary values. Values " |
| 'that are\n' |
| 'not *hashable*, that is, values containing lists, ' |
| 'dictionaries or\n' |
| 'other mutable types (that are compared by value rather ' |
| 'than by object\n' |
| 'identity) may not be used as keys. Numeric types used for ' |
| 'keys obey\n' |
| 'the normal rules for numeric comparison: if two numbers ' |
| 'compare equal\n' |
| '(such as "1" and "1.0") then they can be used ' |
| 'interchangeably to index\n' |
| 'the same dictionary entry. (Note however, that since ' |
| 'computers store\n' |
| 'floating-point numbers as approximations it is usually ' |
| 'unwise to use\n' |
| 'them as dictionary keys.)\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Dictionaries can be created by placing a comma-separated ' |
| 'list of "key:\n' |
| 'value" pairs within braces, for example: "{\'jack\': 4098, ' |
| "'sjoerd':\n" |
| '4127}" or "{4098: \'jack\', 4127: \'sjoerd\'}", or by the ' |
| '"dict"\n' |
| 'constructor.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'class class dict(**kwarg)\n' |
| 'class class dict(mapping, **kwarg)\n' |
| 'class class dict(iterable, **kwarg)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a new dictionary initialized from an optional ' |
| 'positional\n' |
| ' argument and a possibly empty set of keyword ' |
| 'arguments.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If no positional argument is given, an empty dictionary ' |
| 'is created.\n' |
| ' If a positional argument is given and it is a mapping ' |
| 'object, a\n' |
| ' dictionary is created with the same key-value pairs as ' |
| 'the mapping\n' |
| ' object. Otherwise, the positional argument must be an ' |
| '*iterable*\n' |
| ' object. Each item in the iterable must itself be an ' |
| 'iterable with\n' |
| ' exactly two objects. The first object of each item ' |
| 'becomes a key\n' |
| ' in the new dictionary, and the second object the ' |
| 'corresponding\n' |
| ' value. If a key occurs more than once, the last value ' |
| 'for that key\n' |
| ' becomes the corresponding value in the new dictionary.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If keyword arguments are given, the keyword arguments ' |
| 'and their\n' |
| ' values are added to the dictionary created from the ' |
| 'positional\n' |
| ' argument. If a key being added is already present, the ' |
| 'value from\n' |
| ' the keyword argument replaces the value from the ' |
| 'positional\n' |
| ' argument.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' To illustrate, the following examples all return a ' |
| 'dictionary equal\n' |
| ' to "{"one": 1, "two": 2, "three": 3}":\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> a = dict(one=1, two=2, three=3)\n' |
| " >>> b = {'one': 1, 'two': 2, 'three': 3}\n" |
| " >>> c = dict(zip(['one', 'two', 'three'], [1, 2, " |
| '3]))\n' |
| " >>> d = dict([('two', 2), ('one', 1), ('three', " |
| '3)])\n' |
| " >>> e = dict({'three': 3, 'one': 1, 'two': 2})\n" |
| ' >>> a == b == c == d == e\n' |
| ' True\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Providing keyword arguments as in the first example ' |
| 'only works for\n' |
| ' keys that are valid Python identifiers. Otherwise, any ' |
| 'valid keys\n' |
| ' can be used.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.2.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.3: Support for building a ' |
| 'dictionary from\n' |
| ' keyword arguments added.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' These are the operations that dictionaries support (and ' |
| 'therefore,\n' |
| ' custom mapping types should support too):\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' len(d)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return the number of items in the dictionary *d*.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' d[key]\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return the item of *d* with key *key*. Raises a ' |
| '"KeyError" if\n' |
| ' *key* is not in the map.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If a subclass of dict defines a method ' |
| '"__missing__()" and *key*\n' |
| ' is not present, the "d[key]" operation calls that ' |
| 'method with\n' |
| ' the key *key* as argument. The "d[key]" operation ' |
| 'then returns\n' |
| ' or raises whatever is returned or raised by the\n' |
| ' "__missing__(key)" call. No other operations or ' |
| 'methods invoke\n' |
| ' "__missing__()". If "__missing__()" is not defined, ' |
| '"KeyError"\n' |
| ' is raised. "__missing__()" must be a method; it ' |
| 'cannot be an\n' |
| ' instance variable:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> class Counter(dict):\n' |
| ' ... def __missing__(self, key):\n' |
| ' ... return 0\n' |
| ' >>> c = Counter()\n' |
| " >>> c['red']\n" |
| ' 0\n' |
| " >>> c['red'] += 1\n" |
| " >>> c['red']\n" |
| ' 1\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' The example above shows part of the implementation ' |
| 'of\n' |
| ' "collections.Counter". A different "__missing__" ' |
| 'method is used\n' |
| ' by "collections.defaultdict".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.5: Recognition of __missing__ ' |
| 'methods of dict\n' |
| ' subclasses.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' d[key] = value\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Set "d[key]" to *value*.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' del d[key]\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Remove "d[key]" from *d*. Raises a "KeyError" if ' |
| '*key* is not\n' |
| ' in the map.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' key in d\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return "True" if *d* has a key *key*, else "False".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.2.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' key not in d\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Equivalent to "not key in d".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.2.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' iter(d)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return an iterator over the keys of the dictionary. ' |
| 'This is a\n' |
| ' shortcut for "iterkeys()".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' clear()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Remove all items from the dictionary.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' copy()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a shallow copy of the dictionary.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' fromkeys(seq[, value])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Create a new dictionary with keys from *seq* and ' |
| 'values set to\n' |
| ' *value*.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' "fromkeys()" is a class method that returns a new ' |
| 'dictionary.\n' |
| ' *value* defaults to "None".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.3.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' get(key[, default])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return the value for *key* if *key* is in the ' |
| 'dictionary, else\n' |
| ' *default*. If *default* is not given, it defaults to ' |
| '"None", so\n' |
| ' that this method never raises a "KeyError".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' has_key(key)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Test for the presence of *key* in the dictionary. ' |
| '"has_key()"\n' |
| ' is deprecated in favor of "key in d".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' items()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a copy of the dictionary\'s list of "(key, ' |
| 'value)" pairs.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' **CPython implementation detail:** Keys and values ' |
| 'are listed in\n' |
| ' an arbitrary order which is non-random, varies ' |
| 'across Python\n' |
| " implementations, and depends on the dictionary's " |
| 'history of\n' |
| ' insertions and deletions.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If "items()", "keys()", "values()", "iteritems()", ' |
| '"iterkeys()",\n' |
| ' and "itervalues()" are called with no intervening ' |
| 'modifications\n' |
| ' to the dictionary, the lists will directly ' |
| 'correspond. This\n' |
| ' allows the creation of "(value, key)" pairs using ' |
| '"zip()":\n' |
| ' "pairs = zip(d.values(), d.keys())". The same ' |
| 'relationship\n' |
| ' holds for the "iterkeys()" and "itervalues()" ' |
| 'methods: "pairs =\n' |
| ' zip(d.itervalues(), d.iterkeys())" provides the same ' |
| 'value for\n' |
| ' "pairs". Another way to create the same list is ' |
| '"pairs = [(v, k)\n' |
| ' for (k, v) in d.iteritems()]".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' iteritems()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return an iterator over the dictionary\'s "(key, ' |
| 'value)" pairs.\n' |
| ' See the note for "dict.items()".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Using "iteritems()" while adding or deleting entries ' |
| 'in the\n' |
| ' dictionary may raise a "RuntimeError" or fail to ' |
| 'iterate over\n' |
| ' all entries.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.2.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' iterkeys()\n' |
| '\n' |
| " Return an iterator over the dictionary's keys. See " |
| 'the note for\n' |
| ' "dict.items()".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Using "iterkeys()" while adding or deleting entries ' |
| 'in the\n' |
| ' dictionary may raise a "RuntimeError" or fail to ' |
| 'iterate over\n' |
| ' all entries.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.2.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' itervalues()\n' |
| '\n' |
| " Return an iterator over the dictionary's values. " |
| 'See the note\n' |
| ' for "dict.items()".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Using "itervalues()" while adding or deleting ' |
| 'entries in the\n' |
| ' dictionary may raise a "RuntimeError" or fail to ' |
| 'iterate over\n' |
| ' all entries.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.2.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' keys()\n' |
| '\n' |
| " Return a copy of the dictionary's list of keys. See " |
| 'the note\n' |
| ' for "dict.items()".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' pop(key[, default])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If *key* is in the dictionary, remove it and return ' |
| 'its value,\n' |
| ' else return *default*. If *default* is not given ' |
| 'and *key* is\n' |
| ' not in the dictionary, a "KeyError" is raised.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.3.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' popitem()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Remove and return an arbitrary "(key, value)" pair ' |
| 'from the\n' |
| ' dictionary.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' "popitem()" is useful to destructively iterate over ' |
| 'a\n' |
| ' dictionary, as often used in set algorithms. If the ' |
| 'dictionary\n' |
| ' is empty, calling "popitem()" raises a "KeyError".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' setdefault(key[, default])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If *key* is in the dictionary, return its value. If ' |
| 'not, insert\n' |
| ' *key* with a value of *default* and return ' |
| '*default*. *default*\n' |
| ' defaults to "None".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' update([other])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Update the dictionary with the key/value pairs from ' |
| '*other*,\n' |
| ' overwriting existing keys. Return "None".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' "update()" accepts either another dictionary object ' |
| 'or an\n' |
| ' iterable of key/value pairs (as tuples or other ' |
| 'iterables of\n' |
| ' length two). If keyword arguments are specified, ' |
| 'the dictionary\n' |
| ' is then updated with those key/value pairs: ' |
| '"d.update(red=1,\n' |
| ' blue=2)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.4: Allowed the argument to be ' |
| 'an iterable\n' |
| ' of key/value pairs and allowed keyword arguments.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' values()\n' |
| '\n' |
| " Return a copy of the dictionary's list of values. " |
| 'See the note\n' |
| ' for "dict.items()".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' viewitems()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a new view of the dictionary\'s items ("(key, ' |
| 'value)"\n' |
| ' pairs). See below for documentation of view ' |
| 'objects.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.7.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' viewkeys()\n' |
| '\n' |
| " Return a new view of the dictionary's keys. See " |
| 'below for\n' |
| ' documentation of view objects.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.7.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' viewvalues()\n' |
| '\n' |
| " Return a new view of the dictionary's values. See " |
| 'below for\n' |
| ' documentation of view objects.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.7.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Dictionaries compare equal if and only if they have the ' |
| 'same "(key,\n' |
| ' value)" pairs.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Dictionary view objects\n' |
| '=======================\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The objects returned by "dict.viewkeys()", ' |
| '"dict.viewvalues()" and\n' |
| '"dict.viewitems()" are *view objects*. They provide a ' |
| 'dynamic view on\n' |
| "the dictionary's entries, which means that when the " |
| 'dictionary\n' |
| 'changes, the view reflects these changes.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Dictionary views can be iterated over to yield their ' |
| 'respective data,\n' |
| 'and support membership tests:\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'len(dictview)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return the number of entries in the dictionary.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'iter(dictview)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return an iterator over the keys, values or items ' |
| '(represented as\n' |
| ' tuples of "(key, value)") in the dictionary.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Keys and values are iterated over in an arbitrary order ' |
| 'which is\n' |
| ' non-random, varies across Python implementations, and ' |
| 'depends on\n' |
| " the dictionary's history of insertions and deletions. " |
| 'If keys,\n' |
| ' values and items views are iterated over with no ' |
| 'intervening\n' |
| ' modifications to the dictionary, the order of items ' |
| 'will directly\n' |
| ' correspond. This allows the creation of "(value, key)" ' |
| 'pairs using\n' |
| ' "zip()": "pairs = zip(d.values(), d.keys())". Another ' |
| 'way to\n' |
| ' create the same list is "pairs = [(v, k) for (k, v) in ' |
| 'd.items()]".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Iterating views while adding or deleting entries in the ' |
| 'dictionary\n' |
| ' may raise a "RuntimeError" or fail to iterate over all ' |
| 'entries.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'x in dictview\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return "True" if *x* is in the underlying dictionary\'s ' |
| 'keys, values\n' |
| ' or items (in the latter case, *x* should be a "(key, ' |
| 'value)"\n' |
| ' tuple).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Keys views are set-like since their entries are unique and ' |
| 'hashable.\n' |
| 'If all values are hashable, so that (key, value) pairs are ' |
| 'unique and\n' |
| 'hashable, then the items view is also set-like. (Values ' |
| 'views are not\n' |
| 'treated as set-like since the entries are generally not ' |
| 'unique.) Then\n' |
| 'these set operations are available ("other" refers either ' |
| 'to another\n' |
| 'view or a set):\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'dictview & other\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return the intersection of the dictview and the other ' |
| 'object as a\n' |
| ' new set.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'dictview | other\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return the union of the dictview and the other object ' |
| 'as a new set.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'dictview - other\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return the difference between the dictview and the ' |
| 'other object\n' |
| " (all elements in *dictview* that aren't in *other*) as " |
| 'a new set.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'dictview ^ other\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return the symmetric difference (all elements either in ' |
| '*dictview*\n' |
| ' or *other*, but not in both) of the dictview and the ' |
| 'other object\n' |
| ' as a new set.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'An example of dictionary view usage:\n' |
| '\n' |
| " >>> dishes = {'eggs': 2, 'sausage': 1, 'bacon': 1, " |
| "'spam': 500}\n" |
| ' >>> keys = dishes.viewkeys()\n' |
| ' >>> values = dishes.viewvalues()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> # iteration\n' |
| ' >>> n = 0\n' |
| ' >>> for val in values:\n' |
| ' ... n += val\n' |
| ' >>> print(n)\n' |
| ' 504\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> # keys and values are iterated over in the same ' |
| 'order\n' |
| ' >>> list(keys)\n' |
| " ['eggs', 'bacon', 'sausage', 'spam']\n" |
| ' >>> list(values)\n' |
| ' [2, 1, 1, 500]\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> # view objects are dynamic and reflect dict ' |
| 'changes\n' |
| " >>> del dishes['eggs']\n" |
| " >>> del dishes['sausage']\n" |
| ' >>> list(keys)\n' |
| " ['spam', 'bacon']\n" |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> # set operations\n' |
| " >>> keys & {'eggs', 'bacon', 'salad'}\n" |
| " {'bacon'}\n", |
| 'typesmethods': '\n' |
| 'Methods\n' |
| '*******\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Methods are functions that are called using the attribute ' |
| 'notation.\n' |
| 'There are two flavors: built-in methods (such as ' |
| '"append()" on lists)\n' |
| 'and class instance methods. Built-in methods are ' |
| 'described with the\n' |
| 'types that support them.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The implementation adds two special read-only attributes ' |
| 'to class\n' |
| 'instance methods: "m.im_self" is the object on which the ' |
| 'method\n' |
| 'operates, and "m.im_func" is the function implementing the ' |
| 'method.\n' |
| 'Calling "m(arg-1, arg-2, ..., arg-n)" is completely ' |
| 'equivalent to\n' |
| 'calling "m.im_func(m.im_self, arg-1, arg-2, ..., arg-n)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Class instance methods are either *bound* or *unbound*, ' |
| 'referring to\n' |
| 'whether the method was accessed through an instance or a ' |
| 'class,\n' |
| 'respectively. When a method is unbound, its "im_self" ' |
| 'attribute will\n' |
| 'be "None" and if called, an explicit "self" object must be ' |
| 'passed as\n' |
| 'the first argument. In this case, "self" must be an ' |
| 'instance of the\n' |
| "unbound method's class (or a subclass of that class), " |
| 'otherwise a\n' |
| '"TypeError" is raised.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Like function objects, methods objects support getting ' |
| 'arbitrary\n' |
| 'attributes. However, since method attributes are actually ' |
| 'stored on\n' |
| 'the underlying function object ("meth.im_func"), setting ' |
| 'method\n' |
| 'attributes on either bound or unbound methods is ' |
| 'disallowed.\n' |
| 'Attempting to set an attribute on a method results in an\n' |
| '"AttributeError" being raised. In order to set a method ' |
| 'attribute,\n' |
| 'you need to explicitly set it on the underlying function ' |
| 'object:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> class C:\n' |
| ' ... def method(self):\n' |
| ' ... pass\n' |
| ' ...\n' |
| ' >>> c = C()\n' |
| " >>> c.method.whoami = 'my name is method' # can't set " |
| 'on the method\n' |
| ' Traceback (most recent call last):\n' |
| ' File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>\n' |
| " AttributeError: 'instancemethod' object has no " |
| "attribute 'whoami'\n" |
| " >>> c.method.im_func.whoami = 'my name is method'\n" |
| ' >>> c.method.whoami\n' |
| " 'my name is method'\n" |
| '\n' |
| 'See The standard type hierarchy for more information.\n', |
| 'typesmodules': '\n' |
| 'Modules\n' |
| '*******\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The only special operation on a module is attribute ' |
| 'access: "m.name",\n' |
| 'where *m* is a module and *name* accesses a name defined ' |
| "in *m*'s\n" |
| 'symbol table. Module attributes can be assigned to. (Note ' |
| 'that the\n' |
| '"import" statement is not, strictly speaking, an operation ' |
| 'on a module\n' |
| 'object; "import foo" does not require a module object ' |
| 'named *foo* to\n' |
| 'exist, rather it requires an (external) *definition* for a ' |
| 'module\n' |
| 'named *foo* somewhere.)\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A special attribute of every module is "__dict__". This is ' |
| 'the\n' |
| "dictionary containing the module's symbol table. Modifying " |
| 'this\n' |
| "dictionary will actually change the module's symbol table, " |
| 'but direct\n' |
| 'assignment to the "__dict__" attribute is not possible ' |
| '(you can write\n' |
| '"m.__dict__[\'a\'] = 1", which defines "m.a" to be "1", ' |
| "but you can't\n" |
| 'write "m.__dict__ = {}"). Modifying "__dict__" directly ' |
| 'is not\n' |
| 'recommended.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Modules built into the interpreter are written like this: ' |
| '"<module\n' |
| '\'sys\' (built-in)>". If loaded from a file, they are ' |
| 'written as\n' |
| '"<module \'os\' from ' |
| '\'/usr/local/lib/pythonX.Y/os.pyc\'>".\n', |
| 'typesseq': '\n' |
| 'Sequence Types --- "str", "unicode", "list", "tuple", ' |
| '"bytearray", "buffer", "xrange"\n' |
| '*************************************************************************************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'There are seven sequence types: strings, Unicode strings, ' |
| 'lists,\n' |
| 'tuples, bytearrays, buffers, and xrange objects.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'For other containers see the built in "dict" and "set" ' |
| 'classes, and\n' |
| 'the "collections" module.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'String literals are written in single or double quotes: ' |
| '"\'xyzzy\'",\n' |
| '""frobozz"". See String literals for more about string ' |
| 'literals.\n' |
| 'Unicode strings are much like strings, but are specified in ' |
| 'the syntax\n' |
| 'using a preceding "\'u\'" character: "u\'abc\'", "u"def"". In ' |
| 'addition to\n' |
| 'the functionality described here, there are also ' |
| 'string-specific\n' |
| 'methods described in the String Methods section. Lists are ' |
| 'constructed\n' |
| 'with square brackets, separating items with commas: "[a, b, ' |
| 'c]".\n' |
| 'Tuples are constructed by the comma operator (not within ' |
| 'square\n' |
| 'brackets), with or without enclosing parentheses, but an empty ' |
| 'tuple\n' |
| 'must have the enclosing parentheses, such as "a, b, c" or ' |
| '"()". A\n' |
| 'single item tuple must have a trailing comma, such as "(d,)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Bytearray objects are created with the built-in function\n' |
| '"bytearray()".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Buffer objects are not directly supported by Python syntax, ' |
| 'but can be\n' |
| 'created by calling the built-in function "buffer()". They ' |
| "don't\n" |
| 'support concatenation or repetition.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Objects of type xrange are similar to buffers in that there is ' |
| 'no\n' |
| 'specific syntax to create them, but they are created using ' |
| 'the\n' |
| '"xrange()" function. They don\'t support slicing, ' |
| 'concatenation or\n' |
| 'repetition, and using "in", "not in", "min()" or "max()" on ' |
| 'them is\n' |
| 'inefficient.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Most sequence types support the following operations. The ' |
| '"in" and\n' |
| '"not in" operations have the same priorities as the ' |
| 'comparison\n' |
| 'operations. The "+" and "*" operations have the same priority ' |
| 'as the\n' |
| 'corresponding numeric operations. [3] Additional methods are ' |
| 'provided\n' |
| 'for Mutable Sequence Types.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'This table lists the sequence operations sorted in ascending ' |
| 'priority.\n' |
| 'In the table, *s* and *t* are sequences of the same type; *n*, ' |
| '*i* and\n' |
| '*j* are integers:\n' |
| '\n' |
| '+--------------------+----------------------------------+------------+\n' |
| '| Operation | Result | ' |
| 'Notes |\n' |
| '+====================+==================================+============+\n' |
| '| "x in s" | "True" if an item of *s* is | ' |
| '(1) |\n' |
| '| | equal to *x*, else "False" ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '+--------------------+----------------------------------+------------+\n' |
| '| "x not in s" | "False" if an item of *s* is | ' |
| '(1) |\n' |
| '| | equal to *x*, else "True" ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '+--------------------+----------------------------------+------------+\n' |
| '| "s + t" | the concatenation of *s* and *t* | ' |
| '(6) |\n' |
| '+--------------------+----------------------------------+------------+\n' |
| '| "s * n, n * s" | equivalent to adding *s* to | ' |
| '(2) |\n' |
| '| | itself *n* times ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '+--------------------+----------------------------------+------------+\n' |
| '| "s[i]" | *i*th item of *s*, origin 0 | ' |
| '(3) |\n' |
| '+--------------------+----------------------------------+------------+\n' |
| '| "s[i:j]" | slice of *s* from *i* to *j* | ' |
| '(3)(4) |\n' |
| '+--------------------+----------------------------------+------------+\n' |
| '| "s[i:j:k]" | slice of *s* from *i* to *j* | ' |
| '(3)(5) |\n' |
| '| | with step *k* ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '+--------------------+----------------------------------+------------+\n' |
| '| "len(s)" | length of *s* ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '+--------------------+----------------------------------+------------+\n' |
| '| "min(s)" | smallest item of *s* ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '+--------------------+----------------------------------+------------+\n' |
| '| "max(s)" | largest item of *s* ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '+--------------------+----------------------------------+------------+\n' |
| '| "s.index(x)" | index of the first occurrence of ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '| | *x* in *s* ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '+--------------------+----------------------------------+------------+\n' |
| '| "s.count(x)" | total number of occurrences of ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '| | *x* in *s* ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '+--------------------+----------------------------------+------------+\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Sequence types also support comparisons. In particular, tuples ' |
| 'and\n' |
| 'lists are compared lexicographically by comparing ' |
| 'corresponding\n' |
| 'elements. This means that to compare equal, every element must ' |
| 'compare\n' |
| 'equal and the two sequences must be of the same type and have ' |
| 'the same\n' |
| 'length. (For full details see Comparisons in the language ' |
| 'reference.)\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Notes:\n' |
| '\n' |
| '1. When *s* is a string or Unicode string object the "in" and ' |
| '"not\n' |
| ' in" operations act like a substring test. In Python ' |
| 'versions\n' |
| ' before 2.3, *x* had to be a string of length 1. In Python ' |
| '2.3 and\n' |
| ' beyond, *x* may be a string of any length.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '2. Values of *n* less than "0" are treated as "0" (which ' |
| 'yields an\n' |
| ' empty sequence of the same type as *s*). Note that items ' |
| 'in the\n' |
| ' sequence *s* are not copied; they are referenced multiple ' |
| 'times.\n' |
| ' This often haunts new Python programmers; consider:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> lists = [[]] * 3\n' |
| ' >>> lists\n' |
| ' [[], [], []]\n' |
| ' >>> lists[0].append(3)\n' |
| ' >>> lists\n' |
| ' [[3], [3], [3]]\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' What has happened is that "[[]]" is a one-element list ' |
| 'containing\n' |
| ' an empty list, so all three elements of "[[]] * 3" are ' |
| 'references\n' |
| ' to this single empty list. Modifying any of the elements ' |
| 'of\n' |
| ' "lists" modifies this single list. You can create a list ' |
| 'of\n' |
| ' different lists this way:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> lists = [[] for i in range(3)]\n' |
| ' >>> lists[0].append(3)\n' |
| ' >>> lists[1].append(5)\n' |
| ' >>> lists[2].append(7)\n' |
| ' >>> lists\n' |
| ' [[3], [5], [7]]\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Further explanation is available in the FAQ entry How do I ' |
| 'create a\n' |
| ' multidimensional list?.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '3. If *i* or *j* is negative, the index is relative to the end ' |
| 'of\n' |
| ' the string: "len(s) + i" or "len(s) + j" is substituted. ' |
| 'But note\n' |
| ' that "-0" is still "0".\n' |
| '\n' |
| '4. The slice of *s* from *i* to *j* is defined as the sequence ' |
| 'of\n' |
| ' items with index *k* such that "i <= k < j". If *i* or *j* ' |
| 'is\n' |
| ' greater than "len(s)", use "len(s)". If *i* is omitted or ' |
| '"None",\n' |
| ' use "0". If *j* is omitted or "None", use "len(s)". If ' |
| '*i* is\n' |
| ' greater than or equal to *j*, the slice is empty.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '5. The slice of *s* from *i* to *j* with step *k* is defined ' |
| 'as the\n' |
| ' sequence of items with index "x = i + n*k" such that "0 <= ' |
| 'n <\n' |
| ' (j-i)/k". In other words, the indices are "i", "i+k", ' |
| '"i+2*k",\n' |
| ' "i+3*k" and so on, stopping when *j* is reached (but never\n' |
| ' including *j*). If *i* or *j* is greater than "len(s)", ' |
| 'use\n' |
| ' "len(s)". If *i* or *j* are omitted or "None", they become ' |
| '"end"\n' |
| ' values (which end depends on the sign of *k*). Note, *k* ' |
| 'cannot be\n' |
| ' zero. If *k* is "None", it is treated like "1".\n' |
| '\n' |
| '6. **CPython implementation detail:** If *s* and *t* are both\n' |
| ' strings, some Python implementations such as CPython can ' |
| 'usually\n' |
| ' perform an in-place optimization for assignments of the ' |
| 'form "s = s\n' |
| ' + t" or "s += t". When applicable, this optimization ' |
| 'makes\n' |
| ' quadratic run-time much less likely. This optimization is ' |
| 'both\n' |
| ' version and implementation dependent. For performance ' |
| 'sensitive\n' |
| ' code, it is preferable to use the "str.join()" method which ' |
| 'assures\n' |
| ' consistent linear concatenation performance across versions ' |
| 'and\n' |
| ' implementations.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.4: Formerly, string concatenation ' |
| 'never\n' |
| ' occurred in-place.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'String Methods\n' |
| '==============\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Below are listed the string methods which both 8-bit strings ' |
| 'and\n' |
| 'Unicode objects support. Some of them are also available on\n' |
| '"bytearray" objects.\n' |
| '\n' |
| "In addition, Python's strings support the sequence type " |
| 'methods\n' |
| 'described in the Sequence Types --- str, unicode, list, ' |
| 'tuple,\n' |
| 'bytearray, buffer, xrange section. To output formatted strings ' |
| 'use\n' |
| 'template strings or the "%" operator described in the String\n' |
| 'Formatting Operations section. Also, see the "re" module for ' |
| 'string\n' |
| 'functions based on regular expressions.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.capitalize()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a copy of the string with its first character ' |
| 'capitalized\n' |
| ' and the rest lowercased.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.center(width[, fillchar])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return centered in a string of length *width*. Padding is ' |
| 'done\n' |
| ' using the specified *fillchar* (default is a space).\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.4: Support for the *fillchar* ' |
| 'argument.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.count(sub[, start[, end]])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return the number of non-overlapping occurrences of ' |
| 'substring *sub*\n' |
| ' in the range [*start*, *end*]. Optional arguments *start* ' |
| 'and\n' |
| ' *end* are interpreted as in slice notation.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.decode([encoding[, errors]])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Decodes the string using the codec registered for ' |
| '*encoding*.\n' |
| ' *encoding* defaults to the default string encoding. ' |
| '*errors* may\n' |
| ' be given to set a different error handling scheme. The ' |
| 'default is\n' |
| ' "\'strict\'", meaning that encoding errors raise ' |
| '"UnicodeError".\n' |
| ' Other possible values are "\'ignore\'", "\'replace\'" and ' |
| 'any other\n' |
| ' name registered via "codecs.register_error()", see section ' |
| 'Codec\n' |
| ' Base Classes.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.2.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.3: Support for other error handling ' |
| 'schemes\n' |
| ' added.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.7: Support for keyword arguments ' |
| 'added.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.encode([encoding[, errors]])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return an encoded version of the string. Default encoding ' |
| 'is the\n' |
| ' current default string encoding. *errors* may be given to ' |
| 'set a\n' |
| ' different error handling scheme. The default for *errors* ' |
| 'is\n' |
| ' "\'strict\'", meaning that encoding errors raise a ' |
| '"UnicodeError".\n' |
| ' Other possible values are "\'ignore\'", "\'replace\'",\n' |
| ' "\'xmlcharrefreplace\'", "\'backslashreplace\'" and any ' |
| 'other name\n' |
| ' registered via "codecs.register_error()", see section Codec ' |
| 'Base\n' |
| ' Classes. For a list of possible encodings, see section ' |
| 'Standard\n' |
| ' Encodings.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.0.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.3: Support for "\'xmlcharrefreplace\'" ' |
| 'and\n' |
| ' "\'backslashreplace\'" and other error handling schemes ' |
| 'added.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.7: Support for keyword arguments ' |
| 'added.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.endswith(suffix[, start[, end]])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return "True" if the string ends with the specified ' |
| '*suffix*,\n' |
| ' otherwise return "False". *suffix* can also be a tuple of ' |
| 'suffixes\n' |
| ' to look for. With optional *start*, test beginning at ' |
| 'that\n' |
| ' position. With optional *end*, stop comparing at that ' |
| 'position.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.5: Accept tuples as *suffix*.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.expandtabs([tabsize])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a copy of the string where all tab characters are ' |
| 'replaced\n' |
| ' by one or more spaces, depending on the current column and ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' given tab size. Tab positions occur every *tabsize* ' |
| 'characters\n' |
| ' (default is 8, giving tab positions at columns 0, 8, 16 and ' |
| 'so on).\n' |
| ' To expand the string, the current column is set to zero and ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' string is examined character by character. If the ' |
| 'character is a\n' |
| ' tab ("\\t"), one or more space characters are inserted in ' |
| 'the result\n' |
| ' until the current column is equal to the next tab position. ' |
| '(The\n' |
| ' tab character itself is not copied.) If the character is a ' |
| 'newline\n' |
| ' ("\\n") or return ("\\r"), it is copied and the current ' |
| 'column is\n' |
| ' reset to zero. Any other character is copied unchanged and ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' current column is incremented by one regardless of how the\n' |
| ' character is represented when printed.\n' |
| '\n' |
| " >>> '01\\t012\\t0123\\t01234'.expandtabs()\n" |
| " '01 012 0123 01234'\n" |
| " >>> '01\\t012\\t0123\\t01234'.expandtabs(4)\n" |
| " '01 012 0123 01234'\n" |
| '\n' |
| 'str.find(sub[, start[, end]])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return the lowest index in the string where substring *sub* ' |
| 'is\n' |
| ' found, such that *sub* is contained in the slice ' |
| '"s[start:end]".\n' |
| ' Optional arguments *start* and *end* are interpreted as in ' |
| 'slice\n' |
| ' notation. Return "-1" if *sub* is not found.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Note: The "find()" method should be used only if you need ' |
| 'to know\n' |
| ' the position of *sub*. To check if *sub* is a substring ' |
| 'or not,\n' |
| ' use the "in" operator:\n' |
| '\n' |
| " >>> 'Py' in 'Python'\n" |
| ' True\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.format(*args, **kwargs)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Perform a string formatting operation. The string on which ' |
| 'this\n' |
| ' method is called can contain literal text or replacement ' |
| 'fields\n' |
| ' delimited by braces "{}". Each replacement field contains ' |
| 'either\n' |
| ' the numeric index of a positional argument, or the name of ' |
| 'a\n' |
| ' keyword argument. Returns a copy of the string where each\n' |
| ' replacement field is replaced with the string value of the\n' |
| ' corresponding argument.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> "The sum of 1 + 2 is {0}".format(1+2)\n' |
| " 'The sum of 1 + 2 is 3'\n" |
| '\n' |
| ' See Format String Syntax for a description of the various\n' |
| ' formatting options that can be specified in format ' |
| 'strings.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' This method of string formatting is the new standard in ' |
| 'Python 3,\n' |
| ' and should be preferred to the "%" formatting described in ' |
| 'String\n' |
| ' Formatting Operations in new code.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.6.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.index(sub[, start[, end]])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Like "find()", but raise "ValueError" when the substring is ' |
| 'not\n' |
| ' found.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.isalnum()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return true if all characters in the string are ' |
| 'alphanumeric and\n' |
| ' there is at least one character, false otherwise.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.isalpha()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return true if all characters in the string are alphabetic ' |
| 'and\n' |
| ' there is at least one character, false otherwise.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.isdigit()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return true if all characters in the string are digits and ' |
| 'there is\n' |
| ' at least one character, false otherwise.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.islower()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return true if all cased characters [4] in the string are ' |
| 'lowercase\n' |
| ' and there is at least one cased character, false ' |
| 'otherwise.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.isspace()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return true if there are only whitespace characters in the ' |
| 'string\n' |
| ' and there is at least one character, false otherwise.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.istitle()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return true if the string is a titlecased string and there ' |
| 'is at\n' |
| ' least one character, for example uppercase characters may ' |
| 'only\n' |
| ' follow uncased characters and lowercase characters only ' |
| 'cased ones.\n' |
| ' Return false otherwise.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.isupper()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return true if all cased characters [4] in the string are ' |
| 'uppercase\n' |
| ' and there is at least one cased character, false ' |
| 'otherwise.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.join(iterable)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a string which is the concatenation of the strings ' |
| 'in the\n' |
| ' *iterable* *iterable*. The separator between elements is ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' string providing this method.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.ljust(width[, fillchar])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return the string left justified in a string of length ' |
| '*width*.\n' |
| ' Padding is done using the specified *fillchar* (default is ' |
| 'a\n' |
| ' space). The original string is returned if *width* is less ' |
| 'than or\n' |
| ' equal to "len(s)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.4: Support for the *fillchar* ' |
| 'argument.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.lower()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a copy of the string with all the cased characters ' |
| '[4]\n' |
| ' converted to lowercase.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.lstrip([chars])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a copy of the string with leading characters ' |
| 'removed. The\n' |
| ' *chars* argument is a string specifying the set of ' |
| 'characters to be\n' |
| ' removed. If omitted or "None", the *chars* argument ' |
| 'defaults to\n' |
| ' removing whitespace. The *chars* argument is not a prefix; ' |
| 'rather,\n' |
| ' all combinations of its values are stripped:\n' |
| '\n' |
| " >>> ' spacious '.lstrip()\n" |
| " 'spacious '\n" |
| " >>> 'www.example.com'.lstrip('cmowz.')\n" |
| " 'example.com'\n" |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.2.2: Support for the *chars* ' |
| 'argument.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.partition(sep)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Split the string at the first occurrence of *sep*, and ' |
| 'return a\n' |
| ' 3-tuple containing the part before the separator, the ' |
| 'separator\n' |
| ' itself, and the part after the separator. If the separator ' |
| 'is not\n' |
| ' found, return a 3-tuple containing the string itself, ' |
| 'followed by\n' |
| ' two empty strings.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.5.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.replace(old, new[, count])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a copy of the string with all occurrences of ' |
| 'substring *old*\n' |
| ' replaced by *new*. If the optional argument *count* is ' |
| 'given, only\n' |
| ' the first *count* occurrences are replaced.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.rfind(sub[, start[, end]])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return the highest index in the string where substring ' |
| '*sub* is\n' |
| ' found, such that *sub* is contained within "s[start:end]".\n' |
| ' Optional arguments *start* and *end* are interpreted as in ' |
| 'slice\n' |
| ' notation. Return "-1" on failure.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.rindex(sub[, start[, end]])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Like "rfind()" but raises "ValueError" when the substring ' |
| '*sub* is\n' |
| ' not found.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.rjust(width[, fillchar])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return the string right justified in a string of length ' |
| '*width*.\n' |
| ' Padding is done using the specified *fillchar* (default is ' |
| 'a\n' |
| ' space). The original string is returned if *width* is less ' |
| 'than or\n' |
| ' equal to "len(s)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.4: Support for the *fillchar* ' |
| 'argument.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.rpartition(sep)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Split the string at the last occurrence of *sep*, and ' |
| 'return a\n' |
| ' 3-tuple containing the part before the separator, the ' |
| 'separator\n' |
| ' itself, and the part after the separator. If the separator ' |
| 'is not\n' |
| ' found, return a 3-tuple containing two empty strings, ' |
| 'followed by\n' |
| ' the string itself.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.5.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.rsplit([sep[, maxsplit]])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a list of the words in the string, using *sep* as ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' delimiter string. If *maxsplit* is given, at most ' |
| '*maxsplit* splits\n' |
| ' are done, the *rightmost* ones. If *sep* is not specified ' |
| 'or\n' |
| ' "None", any whitespace string is a separator. Except for ' |
| 'splitting\n' |
| ' from the right, "rsplit()" behaves like "split()" which is\n' |
| ' described in detail below.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.4.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.rstrip([chars])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a copy of the string with trailing characters ' |
| 'removed. The\n' |
| ' *chars* argument is a string specifying the set of ' |
| 'characters to be\n' |
| ' removed. If omitted or "None", the *chars* argument ' |
| 'defaults to\n' |
| ' removing whitespace. The *chars* argument is not a suffix; ' |
| 'rather,\n' |
| ' all combinations of its values are stripped:\n' |
| '\n' |
| " >>> ' spacious '.rstrip()\n" |
| " ' spacious'\n" |
| " >>> 'mississippi'.rstrip('ipz')\n" |
| " 'mississ'\n" |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.2.2: Support for the *chars* ' |
| 'argument.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.split([sep[, maxsplit]])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a list of the words in the string, using *sep* as ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' delimiter string. If *maxsplit* is given, at most ' |
| '*maxsplit*\n' |
| ' splits are done (thus, the list will have at most ' |
| '"maxsplit+1"\n' |
| ' elements). If *maxsplit* is not specified or "-1", then ' |
| 'there is\n' |
| ' no limit on the number of splits (all possible splits are ' |
| 'made).\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If *sep* is given, consecutive delimiters are not grouped ' |
| 'together\n' |
| ' and are deemed to delimit empty strings (for example,\n' |
| ' "\'1,,2\'.split(\',\')" returns "[\'1\', \'\', \'2\']"). ' |
| 'The *sep* argument\n' |
| ' may consist of multiple characters (for example,\n' |
| ' "\'1<>2<>3\'.split(\'<>\')" returns "[\'1\', \'2\', ' |
| '\'3\']"). Splitting an\n' |
| ' empty string with a specified separator returns "[\'\']".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If *sep* is not specified or is "None", a different ' |
| 'splitting\n' |
| ' algorithm is applied: runs of consecutive whitespace are ' |
| 'regarded\n' |
| ' as a single separator, and the result will contain no empty ' |
| 'strings\n' |
| ' at the start or end if the string has leading or trailing\n' |
| ' whitespace. Consequently, splitting an empty string or a ' |
| 'string\n' |
| ' consisting of just whitespace with a "None" separator ' |
| 'returns "[]".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For example, "\' 1 2 3 \'.split()" returns "[\'1\', ' |
| '\'2\', \'3\']", and\n' |
| ' "\' 1 2 3 \'.split(None, 1)" returns "[\'1\', \'2 3 ' |
| '\']".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.splitlines([keepends])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a list of the lines in the string, breaking at line\n' |
| ' boundaries. This method uses the *universal newlines* ' |
| 'approach to\n' |
| ' splitting lines. Line breaks are not included in the ' |
| 'resulting list\n' |
| ' unless *keepends* is given and true.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For example, "\'ab c\\n\\nde fg\\rkl\\r\\n\'.splitlines()" ' |
| 'returns "[\'ab\n' |
| ' c\', \'\', \'de fg\', \'kl\']", while the same call with\n' |
| ' "splitlines(True)" returns "[\'ab c\\n\', \'\\n\', \'de ' |
| 'fg\\r\', \'kl\\r\\n\']".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Unlike "split()" when a delimiter string *sep* is given, ' |
| 'this\n' |
| ' method returns an empty list for the empty string, and a ' |
| 'terminal\n' |
| ' line break does not result in an extra line.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.startswith(prefix[, start[, end]])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return "True" if string starts with the *prefix*, otherwise ' |
| 'return\n' |
| ' "False". *prefix* can also be a tuple of prefixes to look ' |
| 'for.\n' |
| ' With optional *start*, test string beginning at that ' |
| 'position.\n' |
| ' With optional *end*, stop comparing string at that ' |
| 'position.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.5: Accept tuples as *prefix*.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.strip([chars])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a copy of the string with the leading and trailing\n' |
| ' characters removed. The *chars* argument is a string ' |
| 'specifying the\n' |
| ' set of characters to be removed. If omitted or "None", the ' |
| '*chars*\n' |
| ' argument defaults to removing whitespace. The *chars* ' |
| 'argument is\n' |
| ' not a prefix or suffix; rather, all combinations of its ' |
| 'values are\n' |
| ' stripped:\n' |
| '\n' |
| " >>> ' spacious '.strip()\n" |
| " 'spacious'\n" |
| " >>> 'www.example.com'.strip('cmowz.')\n" |
| " 'example'\n" |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.2.2: Support for the *chars* ' |
| 'argument.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.swapcase()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a copy of the string with uppercase characters ' |
| 'converted to\n' |
| ' lowercase and vice versa.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.title()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a titlecased version of the string where words start ' |
| 'with an\n' |
| ' uppercase character and the remaining characters are ' |
| 'lowercase.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' The algorithm uses a simple language-independent definition ' |
| 'of a\n' |
| ' word as groups of consecutive letters. The definition ' |
| 'works in\n' |
| ' many contexts but it means that apostrophes in contractions ' |
| 'and\n' |
| ' possessives form word boundaries, which may not be the ' |
| 'desired\n' |
| ' result:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> "they\'re bill\'s friends from the UK".title()\n' |
| ' "They\'Re Bill\'S Friends From The Uk"\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' A workaround for apostrophes can be constructed using ' |
| 'regular\n' |
| ' expressions:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' >>> import re\n' |
| ' >>> def titlecase(s):\n' |
| ' ... return re.sub(r"[A-Za-z]+(\'[A-Za-z]+)?",\n' |
| ' ... lambda mo: mo.group(0)[0].upper() ' |
| '+\n' |
| ' ... ' |
| 'mo.group(0)[1:].lower(),\n' |
| ' ... s)\n' |
| ' ...\n' |
| ' >>> titlecase("they\'re bill\'s friends.")\n' |
| ' "They\'re Bill\'s Friends."\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.translate(table[, deletechars])\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a copy of the string where all characters occurring ' |
| 'in the\n' |
| ' optional argument *deletechars* are removed, and the ' |
| 'remaining\n' |
| ' characters have been mapped through the given translation ' |
| 'table,\n' |
| ' which must be a string of length 256.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' You can use the "maketrans()" helper function in the ' |
| '"string"\n' |
| ' module to create a translation table. For string objects, ' |
| 'set the\n' |
| ' *table* argument to "None" for translations that only ' |
| 'delete\n' |
| ' characters:\n' |
| '\n' |
| " >>> 'read this short text'.translate(None, 'aeiou')\n" |
| " 'rd ths shrt txt'\n" |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.6: Support for a "None" *table* argument.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For Unicode objects, the "translate()" method does not ' |
| 'accept the\n' |
| ' optional *deletechars* argument. Instead, it returns a ' |
| 'copy of the\n' |
| ' *s* where all characters have been mapped through the ' |
| 'given\n' |
| ' translation table which must be a mapping of Unicode ' |
| 'ordinals to\n' |
| ' Unicode ordinals, Unicode strings or "None". Unmapped ' |
| 'characters\n' |
| ' are left untouched. Characters mapped to "None" are ' |
| 'deleted. Note,\n' |
| ' a more flexible approach is to create a custom character ' |
| 'mapping\n' |
| ' codec using the "codecs" module (see "encodings.cp1251" for ' |
| 'an\n' |
| ' example).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.upper()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return a copy of the string with all the cased characters ' |
| '[4]\n' |
| ' converted to uppercase. Note that "str.upper().isupper()" ' |
| 'might be\n' |
| ' "False" if "s" contains uncased characters or if the ' |
| 'Unicode\n' |
| ' category of the resulting character(s) is not "Lu" ' |
| '(Letter,\n' |
| ' uppercase), but e.g. "Lt" (Letter, titlecase).\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' For 8-bit strings, this method is locale-dependent.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'str.zfill(width)\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return the numeric string left filled with zeros in a ' |
| 'string of\n' |
| ' length *width*. A sign prefix is handled correctly. The ' |
| 'original\n' |
| ' string is returned if *width* is less than or equal to ' |
| '"len(s)".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' New in version 2.2.2.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The following methods are present only on unicode objects:\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'unicode.isnumeric()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return "True" if there are only numeric characters in S, ' |
| '"False"\n' |
| ' otherwise. Numeric characters include digit characters, and ' |
| 'all\n' |
| ' characters that have the Unicode numeric value property, ' |
| 'e.g.\n' |
| ' U+2155, VULGAR FRACTION ONE FIFTH.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'unicode.isdecimal()\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Return "True" if there are only decimal characters in S, ' |
| '"False"\n' |
| ' otherwise. Decimal characters include digit characters, and ' |
| 'all\n' |
| ' characters that can be used to form decimal-radix numbers, ' |
| 'e.g.\n' |
| ' U+0660, ARABIC-INDIC DIGIT ZERO.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'String Formatting Operations\n' |
| '============================\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'String and Unicode objects have one unique built-in operation: ' |
| 'the "%"\n' |
| 'operator (modulo). This is also known as the string ' |
| '*formatting* or\n' |
| '*interpolation* operator. Given "format % values" (where ' |
| '*format* is\n' |
| 'a string or Unicode object), "%" conversion specifications in ' |
| '*format*\n' |
| 'are replaced with zero or more elements of *values*. The ' |
| 'effect is\n' |
| 'similar to the using "sprintf()" in the C language. If ' |
| '*format* is a\n' |
| 'Unicode object, or if any of the objects being converted using ' |
| 'the\n' |
| '"%s" conversion are Unicode objects, the result will also be a ' |
| 'Unicode\n' |
| 'object.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'If *format* requires a single argument, *values* may be a ' |
| 'single non-\n' |
| 'tuple object. [5] Otherwise, *values* must be a tuple with ' |
| 'exactly\n' |
| 'the number of items specified by the format string, or a ' |
| 'single\n' |
| 'mapping object (for example, a dictionary).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A conversion specifier contains two or more characters and has ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'following components, which must occur in this order:\n' |
| '\n' |
| '1. The "\'%\'" character, which marks the start of the ' |
| 'specifier.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '2. Mapping key (optional), consisting of a parenthesised ' |
| 'sequence\n' |
| ' of characters (for example, "(somename)").\n' |
| '\n' |
| '3. Conversion flags (optional), which affect the result of ' |
| 'some\n' |
| ' conversion types.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '4. Minimum field width (optional). If specified as an ' |
| '"\'*\'"\n' |
| ' (asterisk), the actual width is read from the next element ' |
| 'of the\n' |
| ' tuple in *values*, and the object to convert comes after ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' minimum field width and optional precision.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '5. Precision (optional), given as a "\'.\'" (dot) followed by ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' precision. If specified as "\'*\'" (an asterisk), the ' |
| 'actual width\n' |
| ' is read from the next element of the tuple in *values*, and ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' value to convert comes after the precision.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '6. Length modifier (optional).\n' |
| '\n' |
| '7. Conversion type.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'When the right argument is a dictionary (or other mapping ' |
| 'type), then\n' |
| 'the formats in the string *must* include a parenthesised ' |
| 'mapping key\n' |
| 'into that dictionary inserted immediately after the "\'%\'" ' |
| 'character.\n' |
| 'The mapping key selects the value to be formatted from the ' |
| 'mapping.\n' |
| 'For example:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ">>> print '%(language)s has %(number)03d quote types.' % \\\n" |
| '... {"language": "Python", "number": 2}\n' |
| 'Python has 002 quote types.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'In this case no "*" specifiers may occur in a format (since ' |
| 'they\n' |
| 'require a sequential parameter list).\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The conversion flag characters are:\n' |
| '\n' |
| '+-----------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| '| Flag | ' |
| 'Meaning ' |
| '|\n' |
| '+===========+=======================================================================+\n' |
| '| "\'#\'" | The value conversion will use the "alternate ' |
| 'form" (where defined |\n' |
| '| | ' |
| 'below). ' |
| '|\n' |
| '+-----------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| '| "\'0\'" | The conversion will be zero padded for numeric ' |
| 'values. |\n' |
| '+-----------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| '| "\'-\'" | The converted value is left adjusted ' |
| '(overrides the "\'0\'" conversion |\n' |
| '| | if both are ' |
| 'given). |\n' |
| '+-----------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| '| "\' \'" | (a space) A blank should be left before a ' |
| 'positive number (or empty |\n' |
| '| | string) produced by a signed ' |
| 'conversion. |\n' |
| '+-----------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| '| "\'+\'" | A sign character ("\'+\'" or "\'-\'") will ' |
| 'precede the conversion |\n' |
| '| | (overrides a "space" ' |
| 'flag). |\n' |
| '+-----------+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A length modifier ("h", "l", or "L") may be present, but is ' |
| 'ignored as\n' |
| 'it is not necessary for Python -- so e.g. "%ld" is identical ' |
| 'to "%d".\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The conversion types are:\n' |
| '\n' |
| '+--------------+-------------------------------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| Conversion | ' |
| 'Meaning | ' |
| 'Notes |\n' |
| '+==============+=======================================================+=========+\n' |
| '| "\'d\'" | Signed integer ' |
| 'decimal. | |\n' |
| '+--------------+-------------------------------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\'i\'" | Signed integer ' |
| 'decimal. | |\n' |
| '+--------------+-------------------------------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\'o\'" | Signed octal ' |
| 'value. | (1) |\n' |
| '+--------------+-------------------------------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\'u\'" | Obsolete type -- it is identical to ' |
| '"\'d\'". | (7) |\n' |
| '+--------------+-------------------------------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\'x\'" | Signed hexadecimal ' |
| '(lowercase). | (2) |\n' |
| '+--------------+-------------------------------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\'X\'" | Signed hexadecimal ' |
| '(uppercase). | (2) |\n' |
| '+--------------+-------------------------------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\'e\'" | Floating point exponential format ' |
| '(lowercase). | (3) |\n' |
| '+--------------+-------------------------------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\'E\'" | Floating point exponential format ' |
| '(uppercase). | (3) |\n' |
| '+--------------+-------------------------------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\'f\'" | Floating point decimal ' |
| 'format. | (3) |\n' |
| '+--------------+-------------------------------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\'F\'" | Floating point decimal ' |
| 'format. | (3) |\n' |
| '+--------------+-------------------------------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\'g\'" | Floating point format. Uses lowercase ' |
| 'exponential | (4) |\n' |
| '| | format if exponent is less than -4 or not ' |
| 'less than | |\n' |
| '| | precision, decimal format ' |
| 'otherwise. | |\n' |
| '+--------------+-------------------------------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\'G\'" | Floating point format. Uses uppercase ' |
| 'exponential | (4) |\n' |
| '| | format if exponent is less than -4 or not ' |
| 'less than | |\n' |
| '| | precision, decimal format ' |
| 'otherwise. | |\n' |
| '+--------------+-------------------------------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\'c\'" | Single character (accepts integer or single ' |
| 'character | |\n' |
| '| | ' |
| 'string). ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '+--------------+-------------------------------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\'r\'" | String (converts any Python object using ' |
| 'repr()). | (5) |\n' |
| '+--------------+-------------------------------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\'s\'" | String (converts any Python object using ' |
| '"str()"). | (6) |\n' |
| '+--------------+-------------------------------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '| "\'%\'" | No argument is converted, results in a ' |
| '"\'%\'" | |\n' |
| '| | character in the ' |
| 'result. | |\n' |
| '+--------------+-------------------------------------------------------+---------+\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Notes:\n' |
| '\n' |
| '1. The alternate form causes a leading zero ("\'0\'") to be ' |
| 'inserted\n' |
| ' between left-hand padding and the formatting of the number ' |
| 'if the\n' |
| ' leading character of the result is not already a zero.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '2. The alternate form causes a leading "\'0x\'" or "\'0X\'" ' |
| '(depending\n' |
| ' on whether the "\'x\'" or "\'X\'" format was used) to be ' |
| 'inserted\n' |
| ' between left-hand padding and the formatting of the number ' |
| 'if the\n' |
| ' leading character of the result is not already a zero.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '3. The alternate form causes the result to always contain a ' |
| 'decimal\n' |
| ' point, even if no digits follow it.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' The precision determines the number of digits after the ' |
| 'decimal\n' |
| ' point and defaults to 6.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '4. The alternate form causes the result to always contain a ' |
| 'decimal\n' |
| ' point, and trailing zeroes are not removed as they would ' |
| 'otherwise\n' |
| ' be.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' The precision determines the number of significant digits ' |
| 'before\n' |
| ' and after the decimal point and defaults to 6.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '5. The "%r" conversion was added in Python 2.0.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' The precision determines the maximal number of characters ' |
| 'used.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '6. If the object or format provided is a "unicode" string, ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' resulting string will also be "unicode".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' The precision determines the maximal number of characters ' |
| 'used.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '7. See **PEP 237**.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Since Python strings have an explicit length, "%s" conversions ' |
| 'do not\n' |
| 'assume that "\'\\0\'" is the end of the string.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Changed in version 2.7: "%f" conversions for numbers whose ' |
| 'absolute\n' |
| 'value is over 1e50 are no longer replaced by "%g" ' |
| 'conversions.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Additional string operations are defined in standard modules ' |
| '"string"\n' |
| 'and "re".\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'XRange Type\n' |
| '===========\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "xrange" type is an immutable sequence which is commonly ' |
| 'used for\n' |
| 'looping. The advantage of the "xrange" type is that an ' |
| '"xrange"\n' |
| 'object will always take the same amount of memory, no matter ' |
| 'the size\n' |
| 'of the range it represents. There are no consistent ' |
| 'performance\n' |
| 'advantages.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'XRange objects have very little behavior: they only support ' |
| 'indexing,\n' |
| 'iteration, and the "len()" function.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Mutable Sequence Types\n' |
| '======================\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'List and "bytearray" objects support additional operations ' |
| 'that allow\n' |
| 'in-place modification of the object. Other mutable sequence ' |
| 'types\n' |
| '(when added to the language) should also support these ' |
| 'operations.\n' |
| 'Strings and tuples are immutable sequence types: such objects ' |
| 'cannot\n' |
| 'be modified once created. The following operations are defined ' |
| 'on\n' |
| 'mutable sequence types (where *x* is an arbitrary object):\n' |
| '\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| Operation | ' |
| 'Result | Notes |\n' |
| '+================================+==================================+=======================+\n' |
| '| "s[i] = x" | item *i* of *s* is replaced ' |
| 'by | |\n' |
| '| | ' |
| '*x* | |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| "s[i:j] = t" | slice of *s* from *i* to ' |
| '*j* is | |\n' |
| '| | replaced by the contents of ' |
| 'the | |\n' |
| '| | iterable ' |
| '*t* | |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| "del s[i:j]" | same as "s[i:j] = ' |
| '[]" | |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| "s[i:j:k] = t" | the elements of "s[i:j:k]" ' |
| 'are | (1) |\n' |
| '| | replaced by those of ' |
| '*t* | |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| "del s[i:j:k]" | removes the elements ' |
| 'of | |\n' |
| '| | "s[i:j:k]" from the ' |
| 'list | |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| "s.append(x)" | same as "s[len(s):len(s)] = ' |
| '[x]" | (2) |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| "s.extend(x)" or "s += t" | for the most part the same ' |
| 'as | (3) |\n' |
| '| | "s[len(s):len(s)] = ' |
| 'x" | |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| "s *= n" | updates *s* with its ' |
| 'contents | (11) |\n' |
| '| | repeated *n* ' |
| 'times | |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| "s.count(x)" | return number of *i*\'s for ' |
| 'which | |\n' |
| '| | "s[i] == ' |
| 'x" | |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| "s.index(x[, i[, j]])" | return smallest *k* such ' |
| 'that | (4) |\n' |
| '| | "s[k] == x" and "i <= k < ' |
| 'j" | |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| "s.insert(i, x)" | same as "s[i:i] = ' |
| '[x]" | (5) |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| "s.pop([i])" | same as "x = s[i]; del ' |
| 's[i]; | (6) |\n' |
| '| | return ' |
| 'x" | |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| "s.remove(x)" | same as "del ' |
| 's[s.index(x)]" | (4) |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| "s.reverse()" | reverses the items of *s* ' |
| 'in | (7) |\n' |
| '| | ' |
| 'place | |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| "s.sort([cmp[, key[, | sort the items of *s* in ' |
| 'place | (7)(8)(9)(10) |\n' |
| '| reverse]]])" ' |
| '| | |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Notes:\n' |
| '\n' |
| '1. *t* must have the same length as the slice it is ' |
| 'replacing.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '2. The C implementation of Python has historically accepted\n' |
| ' multiple parameters and implicitly joined them into a ' |
| 'tuple; this\n' |
| ' no longer works in Python 2.0. Use of this misfeature has ' |
| 'been\n' |
| ' deprecated since Python 1.4.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '3. *x* can be any iterable object.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '4. Raises "ValueError" when *x* is not found in *s*. When a\n' |
| ' negative index is passed as the second or third parameter ' |
| 'to the\n' |
| ' "index()" method, the list length is added, as for slice ' |
| 'indices.\n' |
| ' If it is still negative, it is truncated to zero, as for ' |
| 'slice\n' |
| ' indices.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.3: Previously, "index()" didn\'t have ' |
| 'arguments\n' |
| ' for specifying start and stop positions.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '5. When a negative index is passed as the first parameter to ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' "insert()" method, the list length is added, as for slice ' |
| 'indices.\n' |
| ' If it is still negative, it is truncated to zero, as for ' |
| 'slice\n' |
| ' indices.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.3: Previously, all negative indices ' |
| 'were\n' |
| ' truncated to zero.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '6. The "pop()" method\'s optional argument *i* defaults to ' |
| '"-1", so\n' |
| ' that by default the last item is removed and returned.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '7. The "sort()" and "reverse()" methods modify the list in ' |
| 'place\n' |
| ' for economy of space when sorting or reversing a large ' |
| 'list. To\n' |
| " remind you that they operate by side effect, they don't " |
| 'return the\n' |
| ' sorted or reversed list.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '8. The "sort()" method takes optional arguments for ' |
| 'controlling the\n' |
| ' comparisons.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' *cmp* specifies a custom comparison function of two ' |
| 'arguments (list\n' |
| ' items) which should return a negative, zero or positive ' |
| 'number\n' |
| ' depending on whether the first argument is considered ' |
| 'smaller than,\n' |
| ' equal to, or larger than the second argument: "cmp=lambda ' |
| 'x,y:\n' |
| ' cmp(x.lower(), y.lower())". The default value is "None".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' *key* specifies a function of one argument that is used to ' |
| 'extract\n' |
| ' a comparison key from each list element: "key=str.lower". ' |
| 'The\n' |
| ' default value is "None".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' *reverse* is a boolean value. If set to "True", then the ' |
| 'list\n' |
| ' elements are sorted as if each comparison were reversed.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' In general, the *key* and *reverse* conversion processes ' |
| 'are much\n' |
| ' faster than specifying an equivalent *cmp* function. This ' |
| 'is\n' |
| ' because *cmp* is called multiple times for each list ' |
| 'element while\n' |
| ' *key* and *reverse* touch each element only once. Use\n' |
| ' "functools.cmp_to_key()" to convert an old-style *cmp* ' |
| 'function to\n' |
| ' a *key* function.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.3: Support for "None" as an equivalent ' |
| 'to\n' |
| ' omitting *cmp* was added.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.4: Support for *key* and *reverse* was ' |
| 'added.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '9. Starting with Python 2.3, the "sort()" method is guaranteed ' |
| 'to\n' |
| ' be stable. A sort is stable if it guarantees not to change ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' relative order of elements that compare equal --- this is ' |
| 'helpful\n' |
| ' for sorting in multiple passes (for example, sort by ' |
| 'department,\n' |
| ' then by salary grade).\n' |
| '\n' |
| '10. **CPython implementation detail:** While a list is being\n' |
| ' sorted, the effect of attempting to mutate, or even ' |
| 'inspect, the\n' |
| ' list is undefined. The C implementation of Python 2.3 and ' |
| 'newer\n' |
| ' makes the list appear empty for the duration, and raises\n' |
| ' "ValueError" if it can detect that the list has been ' |
| 'mutated\n' |
| ' during a sort.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '11. The value *n* is an integer, or an object implementing\n' |
| ' "__index__()". Zero and negative values of *n* clear the\n' |
| ' sequence. Items in the sequence are not copied; they are\n' |
| ' referenced multiple times, as explained for "s * n" under ' |
| 'Sequence\n' |
| ' Types --- str, unicode, list, tuple, bytearray, buffer, ' |
| 'xrange.\n', |
| 'typesseq-mutable': '\n' |
| 'Mutable Sequence Types\n' |
| '**********************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'List and "bytearray" objects support additional ' |
| 'operations that allow\n' |
| 'in-place modification of the object. Other mutable ' |
| 'sequence types\n' |
| '(when added to the language) should also support these ' |
| 'operations.\n' |
| 'Strings and tuples are immutable sequence types: such ' |
| 'objects cannot\n' |
| 'be modified once created. The following operations are ' |
| 'defined on\n' |
| 'mutable sequence types (where *x* is an arbitrary ' |
| 'object):\n' |
| '\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| Operation | ' |
| 'Result | ' |
| 'Notes |\n' |
| '+================================+==================================+=======================+\n' |
| '| "s[i] = x" | item *i* of *s* is ' |
| 'replaced by | |\n' |
| '| | ' |
| '*x* ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| "s[i:j] = t" | slice of *s* from ' |
| '*i* to *j* is | |\n' |
| '| | replaced by the ' |
| 'contents of the | |\n' |
| '| | iterable ' |
| '*t* | |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| "del s[i:j]" | same as "s[i:j] = ' |
| '[]" | |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| "s[i:j:k] = t" | the elements of ' |
| '"s[i:j:k]" are | (1) |\n' |
| '| | replaced by those ' |
| 'of *t* | |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| "del s[i:j:k]" | removes the ' |
| 'elements of | |\n' |
| '| | "s[i:j:k]" from the ' |
| 'list | |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| "s.append(x)" | same as ' |
| '"s[len(s):len(s)] = [x]" | (2) |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| "s.extend(x)" or "s += t" | for the most part ' |
| 'the same as | (3) |\n' |
| '| | "s[len(s):len(s)] = ' |
| 'x" | |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| "s *= n" | updates *s* with ' |
| 'its contents | (11) |\n' |
| '| | repeated *n* ' |
| 'times | |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| "s.count(x)" | return number of ' |
| "*i*'s for which | |\n" |
| '| | "s[i] == ' |
| 'x" | |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| "s.index(x[, i[, j]])" | return smallest *k* ' |
| 'such that | (4) |\n' |
| '| | "s[k] == x" and "i ' |
| '<= k < j" | |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| "s.insert(i, x)" | same as "s[i:i] = ' |
| '[x]" | (5) |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| "s.pop([i])" | same as "x = s[i]; ' |
| 'del s[i]; | (6) |\n' |
| '| | return ' |
| 'x" | |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| "s.remove(x)" | same as "del ' |
| 's[s.index(x)]" | (4) |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| "s.reverse()" | reverses the items ' |
| 'of *s* in | (7) |\n' |
| '| | ' |
| 'place ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '| "s.sort([cmp[, key[, | sort the items of ' |
| '*s* in place | (7)(8)(9)(10) |\n' |
| '| reverse]]])" ' |
| '| ' |
| '| |\n' |
| '+--------------------------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------+\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Notes:\n' |
| '\n' |
| '1. *t* must have the same length as the slice it is ' |
| 'replacing.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '2. The C implementation of Python has historically ' |
| 'accepted\n' |
| ' multiple parameters and implicitly joined them into ' |
| 'a tuple; this\n' |
| ' no longer works in Python 2.0. Use of this ' |
| 'misfeature has been\n' |
| ' deprecated since Python 1.4.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '3. *x* can be any iterable object.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '4. Raises "ValueError" when *x* is not found in *s*. ' |
| 'When a\n' |
| ' negative index is passed as the second or third ' |
| 'parameter to the\n' |
| ' "index()" method, the list length is added, as for ' |
| 'slice indices.\n' |
| ' If it is still negative, it is truncated to zero, ' |
| 'as for slice\n' |
| ' indices.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.3: Previously, "index()" ' |
| "didn't have arguments\n" |
| ' for specifying start and stop positions.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '5. When a negative index is passed as the first ' |
| 'parameter to the\n' |
| ' "insert()" method, the list length is added, as for ' |
| 'slice indices.\n' |
| ' If it is still negative, it is truncated to zero, ' |
| 'as for slice\n' |
| ' indices.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.3: Previously, all negative ' |
| 'indices were\n' |
| ' truncated to zero.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '6. The "pop()" method\'s optional argument *i* ' |
| 'defaults to "-1", so\n' |
| ' that by default the last item is removed and ' |
| 'returned.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '7. The "sort()" and "reverse()" methods modify the ' |
| 'list in place\n' |
| ' for economy of space when sorting or reversing a ' |
| 'large list. To\n' |
| ' remind you that they operate by side effect, they ' |
| "don't return the\n" |
| ' sorted or reversed list.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '8. The "sort()" method takes optional arguments for ' |
| 'controlling the\n' |
| ' comparisons.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' *cmp* specifies a custom comparison function of two ' |
| 'arguments (list\n' |
| ' items) which should return a negative, zero or ' |
| 'positive number\n' |
| ' depending on whether the first argument is ' |
| 'considered smaller than,\n' |
| ' equal to, or larger than the second argument: ' |
| '"cmp=lambda x,y:\n' |
| ' cmp(x.lower(), y.lower())". The default value is ' |
| '"None".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' *key* specifies a function of one argument that is ' |
| 'used to extract\n' |
| ' a comparison key from each list element: ' |
| '"key=str.lower". The\n' |
| ' default value is "None".\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' *reverse* is a boolean value. If set to "True", ' |
| 'then the list\n' |
| ' elements are sorted as if each comparison were ' |
| 'reversed.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' In general, the *key* and *reverse* conversion ' |
| 'processes are much\n' |
| ' faster than specifying an equivalent *cmp* ' |
| 'function. This is\n' |
| ' because *cmp* is called multiple times for each ' |
| 'list element while\n' |
| ' *key* and *reverse* touch each element only once. ' |
| 'Use\n' |
| ' "functools.cmp_to_key()" to convert an old-style ' |
| '*cmp* function to\n' |
| ' a *key* function.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.3: Support for "None" as an ' |
| 'equivalent to\n' |
| ' omitting *cmp* was added.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Changed in version 2.4: Support for *key* and ' |
| '*reverse* was added.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '9. Starting with Python 2.3, the "sort()" method is ' |
| 'guaranteed to\n' |
| ' be stable. A sort is stable if it guarantees not ' |
| 'to change the\n' |
| ' relative order of elements that compare equal --- ' |
| 'this is helpful\n' |
| ' for sorting in multiple passes (for example, sort ' |
| 'by department,\n' |
| ' then by salary grade).\n' |
| '\n' |
| '10. **CPython implementation detail:** While a list is ' |
| 'being\n' |
| ' sorted, the effect of attempting to mutate, or ' |
| 'even inspect, the\n' |
| ' list is undefined. The C implementation of Python ' |
| '2.3 and newer\n' |
| ' makes the list appear empty for the duration, and ' |
| 'raises\n' |
| ' "ValueError" if it can detect that the list has ' |
| 'been mutated\n' |
| ' during a sort.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '11. The value *n* is an integer, or an object ' |
| 'implementing\n' |
| ' "__index__()". Zero and negative values of *n* ' |
| 'clear the\n' |
| ' sequence. Items in the sequence are not copied; ' |
| 'they are\n' |
| ' referenced multiple times, as explained for "s * ' |
| 'n" under Sequence\n' |
| ' Types --- str, unicode, list, tuple, bytearray, ' |
| 'buffer, xrange.\n', |
| 'unary': '\n' |
| 'Unary arithmetic and bitwise operations\n' |
| '***************************************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'All unary arithmetic and bitwise operations have the same ' |
| 'priority:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' u_expr ::= power | "-" u_expr | "+" u_expr | "~" u_expr\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The unary "-" (minus) operator yields the negation of its ' |
| 'numeric\n' |
| 'argument.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The unary "+" (plus) operator yields its numeric argument ' |
| 'unchanged.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The unary "~" (invert) operator yields the bitwise inversion of ' |
| 'its\n' |
| 'plain or long integer argument. The bitwise inversion of "x" is\n' |
| 'defined as "-(x+1)". It only applies to integral numbers.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'In all three cases, if the argument does not have the proper ' |
| 'type, a\n' |
| '"TypeError" exception is raised.\n', |
| 'while': '\n' |
| 'The "while" statement\n' |
| '*********************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "while" statement is used for repeated execution as long as ' |
| 'an\n' |
| 'expression is true:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' while_stmt ::= "while" expression ":" suite\n' |
| ' ["else" ":" suite]\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'This repeatedly tests the expression and, if it is true, executes ' |
| 'the\n' |
| 'first suite; if the expression is false (which may be the first ' |
| 'time\n' |
| 'it is tested) the suite of the "else" clause, if present, is ' |
| 'executed\n' |
| 'and the loop terminates.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'A "break" statement executed in the first suite terminates the ' |
| 'loop\n' |
| 'without executing the "else" clause\'s suite. A "continue" ' |
| 'statement\n' |
| 'executed in the first suite skips the rest of the suite and goes ' |
| 'back\n' |
| 'to testing the expression.\n', |
| 'with': '\n' |
| 'The "with" statement\n' |
| '********************\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'New in version 2.5.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "with" statement is used to wrap the execution of a block ' |
| 'with\n' |
| 'methods defined by a context manager (see section With Statement\n' |
| 'Context Managers). This allows common ' |
| '"try"..."except"..."finally"\n' |
| 'usage patterns to be encapsulated for convenient reuse.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' with_stmt ::= "with" with_item ("," with_item)* ":" suite\n' |
| ' with_item ::= expression ["as" target]\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The execution of the "with" statement with one "item" proceeds as\n' |
| 'follows:\n' |
| '\n' |
| '1. The context expression (the expression given in the ' |
| '"with_item")\n' |
| ' is evaluated to obtain a context manager.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '2. The context manager\'s "__exit__()" is loaded for later use.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '3. The context manager\'s "__enter__()" method is invoked.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '4. If a target was included in the "with" statement, the return\n' |
| ' value from "__enter__()" is assigned to it.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' Note: The "with" statement guarantees that if the ' |
| '"__enter__()"\n' |
| ' method returns without an error, then "__exit__()" will ' |
| 'always be\n' |
| ' called. Thus, if an error occurs during the assignment to ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' target list, it will be treated the same as an error ' |
| 'occurring\n' |
| ' within the suite would be. See step 6 below.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '5. The suite is executed.\n' |
| '\n' |
| '6. The context manager\'s "__exit__()" method is invoked. If an\n' |
| ' exception caused the suite to be exited, its type, value, and\n' |
| ' traceback are passed as arguments to "__exit__()". Otherwise, ' |
| 'three\n' |
| ' "None" arguments are supplied.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If the suite was exited due to an exception, and the return ' |
| 'value\n' |
| ' from the "__exit__()" method was false, the exception is ' |
| 'reraised.\n' |
| ' If the return value was true, the exception is suppressed, and\n' |
| ' execution continues with the statement following the "with"\n' |
| ' statement.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' If the suite was exited for any reason other than an exception, ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' return value from "__exit__()" is ignored, and execution ' |
| 'proceeds\n' |
| ' at the normal location for the kind of exit that was taken.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'With more than one item, the context managers are processed as if\n' |
| 'multiple "with" statements were nested:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' with A() as a, B() as b:\n' |
| ' suite\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'is equivalent to\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' with A() as a:\n' |
| ' with B() as b:\n' |
| ' suite\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Note: In Python 2.5, the "with" statement is only allowed when ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' "with_statement" feature has been enabled. It is always enabled ' |
| 'in\n' |
| ' Python 2.6.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Changed in version 2.7: Support for multiple context expressions.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'See also: **PEP 0343** - The "with" statement\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' The specification, background, and examples for the Python ' |
| '"with"\n' |
| ' statement.\n', |
| 'yield': '\n' |
| 'The "yield" statement\n' |
| '*********************\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' yield_stmt ::= yield_expression\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'The "yield" statement is only used when defining a generator ' |
| 'function,\n' |
| 'and is only used in the body of the generator function. Using a\n' |
| '"yield" statement in a function definition is sufficient to cause ' |
| 'that\n' |
| 'definition to create a generator function instead of a normal\n' |
| 'function.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'When a generator function is called, it returns an iterator known ' |
| 'as a\n' |
| 'generator iterator, or more commonly, a generator. The body of ' |
| 'the\n' |
| "generator function is executed by calling the generator's " |
| '"next()"\n' |
| 'method repeatedly until it raises an exception.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'When a "yield" statement is executed, the state of the generator ' |
| 'is\n' |
| 'frozen and the value of "expression_list" is returned to ' |
| '"next()"\'s\n' |
| 'caller. By "frozen" we mean that all local state is retained,\n' |
| 'including the current bindings of local variables, the ' |
| 'instruction\n' |
| 'pointer, and the internal evaluation stack: enough information ' |
| 'is\n' |
| 'saved so that the next time "next()" is invoked, the function ' |
| 'can\n' |
| 'proceed exactly as if the "yield" statement were just another ' |
| 'external\n' |
| 'call.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'As of Python version 2.5, the "yield" statement is now allowed in ' |
| 'the\n' |
| '"try" clause of a "try" ... "finally" construct. If the ' |
| 'generator is\n' |
| 'not resumed before it is finalized (by reaching a zero reference ' |
| 'count\n' |
| "or by being garbage collected), the generator-iterator's " |
| '"close()"\n' |
| 'method will be called, allowing any pending "finally" clauses to\n' |
| 'execute.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'For full details of "yield" semantics, refer to the Yield ' |
| 'expressions\n' |
| 'section.\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'Note: In Python 2.2, the "yield" statement was only allowed when ' |
| 'the\n' |
| ' "generators" feature has been enabled. This "__future__" ' |
| 'import\n' |
| ' statement was used to enable the feature:\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' from __future__ import generators\n' |
| '\n' |
| 'See also: **PEP 0255** - Simple Generators\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' The proposal for adding generators and the "yield" statement ' |
| 'to\n' |
| ' Python.\n' |
| '\n' |
| ' **PEP 0342** - Coroutines via Enhanced Generators\n' |
| ' The proposal that, among other generator enhancements, ' |
| 'proposed\n' |
| ' allowing "yield" to appear inside a "try" ... "finally" ' |
| 'block.\n'} |