blob: 22ad7d7203531df08274d89c696b0ed46ceda4cf [file] [log] [blame]
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +00001Subject: FAQ: Python -- an object-oriented language
Guido van Rossum5333c5d1994-04-11 11:06:22 +00002Newsgroups: comp.lang.python,comp.answers,news.answers
3Followup-to: comp.lang.python
Guido van Rossum81300541996-09-06 16:37:56 +00004From: guido@cnri.reston.va.us (Guido van Rossum)
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +00005Reply-to: guido@cnri.reston.va.us (Guido van Rossum)
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +00006Expires: Sun, 1 Dec 1996 00:00:00 GMT
7Supersedes: <DxJ3t1.CJv@cwi.nl>
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +00008Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
9
10Archive-name: python-faq/part1
Guido van Rossum81300541996-09-06 16:37:56 +000011Submitted-by: Guido van Rossum <guido@cnri.reston.va.us>
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +000012Version: $Revision$
Guido van Rossum9c5dc291996-10-13 15:48:56 +000013Last-modified: $Date$
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +000014
15This article contains answers to Frequently Asked Questions about
16Python (an object-oriented interpreted programming language -- see
17the answer to question 1.1 for a short overview).
18
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +000019Copyright 1993-1996 Guido van Rossum. Unchanged electronic
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +000020redistribution of this FAQ is allowed. Printed redistribution only
21with permission of the author. No warranties.
22
23Author's address:
Guido van Rossume7d92d51995-10-11 18:06:54 +000024 Guido van Rossum
25 C.N.R.I.
26 1895 Preston White Drive
Guido van Rossum81300541996-09-06 16:37:56 +000027 Reston, VA 20191
Guido van Rossume7d92d51995-10-11 18:06:54 +000028 U.S.A.
Guido van Rossum81300541996-09-06 16:37:56 +000029Email: <guido@python.org>, <guido@cnri.reston.va.us>
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +000030
31The latest version of this FAQ is available by anonymous ftp from
Guido van Rossumca318ec1996-06-26 19:50:09 +000032<URL:ftp://ftp.python.org/pub/python/doc/FAQ>. It will also be posted
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +000033regularly to the newsgroups comp.answers <URL:news:comp.answers> and
34comp.lang.python <URL:news:comp.lang.python>.
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +000035
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +000036Many FAQs, including this one, are available by anonymous ftp
37<URL:ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/>. The name under
38which a FAQ is archived appears in the Archive-name line at the top of
39the article. This FAQ is archived as python-faq/part1
40<URL:ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/python-faq/part1>.
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +000041
42There's a mail server on that machine which will send you files from
43the archive by e-mail if you have no ftp access. You send a e-mail
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +000044message to <mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu> containing the single word help
45in the message body to receive instructions.
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +000046
47This FAQ is divided in the following chapters:
48
49 1. General information and availability
50 2. Python in the real world
Guido van Rossumb0a2ce51995-08-28 19:41:35 +000051 3. Building Python and Other Known Bugs
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +000052 4. Programming in Python
53 5. Extending Python
54 6. Python's design
55 7. Using Python on non-UNIX platforms
56
57To find the start of a particular chapter, search for the chapter number
58followed by a dot and a space at the beginning of a line (e.g. to
59find chapter 4 in vi, type /^4\. /).
60
61Here's an overview of the questions per chapter:
62
63 1. General information and availability
64 1.1. Q. What is Python?
65 1.2. Q. Why is it called Python?
66 1.3. Q. How do I obtain a copy of the Python source?
67 1.4. Q. How do I get documentation on Python?
Guido van Rossumc50158e1994-05-31 09:18:50 +000068 1.5. Q. Are there other ftp sites that mirror the Python distribution?
69 1.6. Q. Is there a newsgroup or mailing list devoted to Python?
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +000070 1.7. Q. Is there a WWW page devoted to Python?
Guido van Rossuma8a8d4a1995-03-10 16:19:31 +000071 1.8. Q. Is the Python documentation available on the WWW?
72 1.9. Q. Is there a book on Python, or will there be one out soon?
73 1.10. Q. Are there any published articles about Python that I can quote?
74 1.11. Q. Are there short introductory papers or talks on Python?
75 1.12. Q. How does the Python version numbering scheme work?
76 1.13. Q. How do I get a beta test version of Python?
Guido van Rossum05151e01995-09-28 13:24:46 +000077 1.14. Q. Are there copyright restrictions on the use of Python?
78 1.15. Q. Why was Python created in the first place?
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +000079
80 2. Python in the real world
81 2.1. Q. How many people are using Python?
82 2.2. Q. Have any significant projects been done in Python?
83 2.3. Q. Are there any commercial projects going on using Python?
Guido van Rossum95f61a71994-01-26 17:23:37 +000084 2.4. Q. How stable is Python?
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +000085 2.5. Q. What new developments are expected for Python in the future?
86 2.6. Q. Is it reasonable to propose incompatible changes to Python?
87 2.7. Q. What is the future of Python?
88 2.8. Q. What is the PSA, anyway?
89 2.9. Q. How do I join the PSA?
90 2.10. Q. What are the benefits of joining the PSA?
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +000091
Guido van Rossumb0a2ce51995-08-28 19:41:35 +000092 3. Building Python and Other Known Bugs
Guido van Rossum91f60831994-02-15 15:52:27 +000093 3.1. Q. Is there a test set?
94 3.2. Q. When running the test set, I get complaints about floating point
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +000095 operations, but when playing with floating point operations I cannot
96 find anything wrong with them.
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +000097 3.3. Q. Link errors after rerunning the configure script.
98 3.4. Q. The python interpreter complains about options passed to a
Guido van Rossum24349991994-02-02 14:12:45 +000099 script (after the script name).
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +0000100 3.5. Q. When building on the SGI, make tries to run python to create
Guido van Rossum5333c5d1994-04-11 11:06:22 +0000101 glmodule.c, but python hasn't been built or installed yet.
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +0000102 3.6. Q. I use VPATH but some targets are built in the source directory.
103 3.7. Q. Trouble building or linking with the GNU readline library.
104 3.8. Q. Trouble with socket I/O on older Linux 1.x versions.
105 3.9. Q. Trouble with prototypes on Ultrix.
Guido van Rossum8a913021996-10-08 17:18:30 +0000106 3.10. Q. Other trouble building Python on platform X.
107 3.11. Q. How to configure dynamic loading on Linux.
Guido van Rossum9c5dc291996-10-13 15:48:56 +0000108 3.12. Q: I can't get shared modules to work on Linux 2.0 (Slackware96)?
Guido van Rossumcaa83c41996-11-13 15:06:24 +0000109 3.13. Q: Trouble when making modules shared on Linux.
110 3.14. Q. How to use threads on Linux.
111 3.15. Q. Errors when linking with a shared library containing C++ code.
112 3.16. Q. I built with tkintermodule.c enabled but get "Tkinter not found".
113 3.17. Q. I built with Tk 4.0 but Tkinter complains about the Tk version.
114 3.18. Q. Link errors for Tcl/Tk symbols when linking with Tcl/Tk.
115 3.19. Q. I configured and built Python for Tcl/Tk but "import Tkinter"
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +0000116 fails.
Guido van Rossumcaa83c41996-11-13 15:06:24 +0000117 3.20. Q. Tk doesn't work right on DEC Alpha.
118 3.21. Q. Several common system calls are missing from the posix module.
119 3.22. Q. ImportError: No module named string, on MS Windows.
120 3.23. Q. Core dump on SGI when using the gl module.
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000121
122 4. Programming in Python
Guido van Rossum24349991994-02-02 14:12:45 +0000123 4.1. Q. Is there a source code level debugger with breakpoints, step,
124 etc.?
125 4.2. Q. Can I create an object class with some methods implemented in
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000126 C and others in Python (e.g. through inheritance)? (Also phrased as:
127 Can I use a built-in type as base class?)
Guido van Rossum24349991994-02-02 14:12:45 +0000128 4.3. Q. Is there a curses/termcap package for Python?
129 4.4. Q. Is there an equivalent to C's onexit() in Python?
130 4.5. Q. When I define a function nested inside another function, the
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000131 nested function seemingly can't access the local variables of the
132 outer function. What is going on? How do I pass local data to a
133 nested function?
Guido van Rossum24349991994-02-02 14:12:45 +0000134 4.6. Q. How do I iterate over a sequence in reverse order?
135 4.7. Q. My program is too slow. How do I speed it up?
136 4.8. Q. When I have imported a module, then edit it, and import it
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000137 again (into the same Python process), the changes don't seem to take
138 place. What is going on?
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +0000139 4.9. Q. How do I find the current module name?
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000140 4.10. Q. I have a module in which I want to execute some extra code
141 when it is run as a script. How do I find out whether I am running as
142 a script?
143 4.11. Q. I try to run a program from the Demo directory but it fails
144 with ImportError: No module named ...; what gives?
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +0000145 4.12. Q. I have successfully built Python with STDWIN but it can't
146 find some modules (e.g. stdwinevents).
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +0000147 4.13. Q. What GUI toolkits exist for Python?
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +0000148 4.14. Q. Are there any interfaces to database packages in Python?
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +0000149 4.15. Q. Is it possible to write obfuscated one-liners in Python?
150 4.16. Q. Is there an equivalent of C's "?:" ternary operator?
151 4.17. Q. My class defines __del__ but it is not called when I delete the
152 object.
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000153 4.18. Q. How do I change the shell environment for programs called
154 using os.popen() or os.system()? Changing os.environ doesn't work.
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +0000155 4.19. Q. What is a class?
156 4.20. Q. What is a method?
157 4.21. Q. What is self?
158 4.22. Q. What is a unbound method?
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000159 4.23. Q. How do I call a method defined in a base class from a derived
160 class that overrides it?
161 4.24. Q. How do I call a method from a base class without using the
162 name of the base class?
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +0000163 4.25. Q. How can I organize my code to make it easier to change the base
164 class?
165 4.26. Q. How can I find the methods or attributes of an object?
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +0000166 4.27. Q. I can't seem to use os.read() on a pipe created with os.popen().
167 4.28. Q. How can I create a stand-alone binary from a Python script?
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +0000168 4.29. Q. What WWW tools are there for Python?
169 4.30. Q. How do I run a subprocess with pipes connected to both input
Guido van Rossum796b2591995-01-20 23:05:52 +0000170 and output?
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +0000171 4.31. Q. How do I call a function if I have the arguments in a tuple?
172 4.32. Q. How do I enable font-lock-mode for Python in Emacs?
173 4.33. Q. Is there an inverse to the format operator (a la C's scanf())?
Guido van Rossumca318ec1996-06-26 19:50:09 +0000174 4.34. Q. Can I have Tk events handled while waiting for I/O?
175 4.35. Q. How do I write a function with output parameters (call by reference)?
Guido van Rossum0d20cfa1996-07-30 18:53:05 +0000176 4.36. Q. Please explain the rules for local and global variables in Python.
177 4.37. Q. How can I have modules that mutually import each other?
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +0000178 4.38. Q. How do I copy an object in Python?
179 4.39. Q. How to implement persistent objects in Python? (Persistent ==
180 automatically saved to and restored from disk.)
Guido van Rossuma4e41a81996-10-22 03:00:43 +0000181 4.40. Q. I try to use __spam and I get an error about _SomeClassName__spam.
Guido van Rossumc59120b1996-11-14 14:10:11 +0000182 4.41. Q. How do I delete a file? And other file questions.
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000183
184 5. Extending Python
185 5.1. Q. Can I create my own functions in C?
186 5.2. Q. Can I create my own functions in C++?
Guido van Rossum7ce61c11994-06-13 15:13:56 +0000187 5.3. Q. How can I execute arbitrary Python statements from C?
188 5.4. Q. How can I evaluate an arbitrary Python expression from C?
189 5.5. Q. How do I extract C values from a Python object?
190 5.6. Q. How do I use mkvalue() to create a tuple of arbitrary length?
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +0000191 5.7. Q. How do I call an object's method from C?
192 5.8. Q. How do I catch the output from print_error()?
193 5.9. Q. How do I access a module written in Python from C?
194 5.10. Q. How do I interface to C++ objects from Python?
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000195
196 6. Python's design
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +0000197 6.1. Q. Why isn't there a switch or case statement in Python?
198 6.2. Q. Why does Python use indentation for grouping of statements?
199 6.3. Q. Why are Python strings immutable?
200 6.4. Q. Why don't strings have methods like index() or sort(), like
Guido van Rossum3de27361994-07-25 14:19:33 +0000201 lists?
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +0000202 6.5. Q. Why does Python use methods for some functionality
Guido van Rossum3de27361994-07-25 14:19:33 +0000203 (e.g. list.index()) but functions for other (e.g. len(list))?
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +0000204 6.6. Q. Why can't I derive a class from built-in types (e.g. lists or
Guido van Rossum3de27361994-07-25 14:19:33 +0000205 files)?
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +0000206 6.7. Q. Why must 'self' be declared and used explicitly in method
Guido van Rossum3de27361994-07-25 14:19:33 +0000207 definitions and calls?
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +0000208 6.8. Q. Can't you emulate threads in the interpreter instead of
209 relying on an OS-specific thread implementation?
210 6.9. Q. Why can't lambda forms contain statements?
211 6.10. Q. Why don't lambdas have access to variables defined in the
212 containing scope?
213 6.11. Q. Why can't recursive functions be defined inside other functions?
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +0000214 6.12. Q. Why is there no more efficient way of iterating over a dictionary
215 than first constructing the list of keys()?
Guido van Rossumb0a2ce51995-08-28 19:41:35 +0000216 6.13. Q. Can Python be compiled to machine code, C or some other language?
Guido van Rossum05151e01995-09-28 13:24:46 +0000217 6.14. Q. Why doesn't Python use proper garbage collection?
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000218
219 7. Using Python on non-UNIX platforms
Guido van Rossum91f60831994-02-15 15:52:27 +0000220 7.1. Q. Is there a Mac version of Python?
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +0000221 7.2. Q. Are there DOS and Windows versions of Python?
222 7.3. Q. Is there an OS/2 version of Python?
223 7.4. Q. Is there a VMS version of Python?
224 7.5. Q. What about IBM mainframes, or other non-UNIX platforms?
225 7.6. Q. Where are the source or Makefiles for the non-UNIX versions?
226 7.7. Q. What is the status and support for the non-UNIX versions?
227 7.8. Q. I have a PC version but it appears to be only a binary.
228 Where's the library?
229 7.9. Q. Where's the documentation for the Mac or PC version?
230 7.10. Q. The Mac (PC) version doesn't seem to have any facilities for
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +0000231 creating or editing programs apart from entering it interactively, and
232 there seems to be no way to save code that was entered interactively.
233 How do I create a Python program on the Mac (PC)?
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000234
235To find a particular question, search for the question number followed
236by a dot, a space, and a Q at the beginning of a line (e.g. to find
237question 4.2 in vi, type /^4\.2\. Q/).
238
239
2401. General information and availability
Guido van Rossumb0a2ce51995-08-28 19:41:35 +0000241 =======================================
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000242
2431.1. Q. What is Python?
244
245A. Python is an interpreted, interactive, object-oriented programming
246language. It incorporates modules, exceptions, dynamic typing, very
247high level dynamic data types, and classes. Python combines
248remarkable power with very clear syntax. It has interfaces to many
249system calls and libraries, as well as to various window systems, and
250is extensible in C or C++. It is also usable as an extension language
251for applications that need a programmable interface. Finally, Python
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000252is portable: it runs on many brands of UNIX, on the Mac, and on PCs
253under MS-DOS, Windows, Windows NT, and OS/2.
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000254
255To find out more, the best thing to do is to start reading the
256tutorial from the documentation set (see a few questions further
257down).
258
2591.2. Q. Why is it called Python?
260
Guido van Rossum796b2591995-01-20 23:05:52 +0000261A. Apart from being a computer scientist, I'm also a fan of "Monty
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000262Python's Flying Circus" (a BBC comedy series from the seventies, in
Guido van Rossum5333c5d1994-04-11 11:06:22 +0000263the -- unlikely -- case you didn't know). It occurred to me one day
264that I needed a name that was short, unique, and slightly mysterious.
265And I happened to be reading some scripts from the series at the
266time... So then I decided to call my language Python. But Python is
267not a joke. And don't you associate it with dangerous reptiles
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000268either! (If you need an icon, use an image of the 16-ton weight from
269the TV series or of a can of SPAM :-)
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000270
2711.3. Q. How do I obtain a copy of the Python source?
272
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000273A. The latest complete Python source distribution is always available
274by anonymous ftp, e.g.
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +0000275<URL:ftp://ftp.python.org/pub/python/src/python1.3.tar.gz>. It is a
Guido van Rossume530c581995-04-10 12:32:16 +0000276gzipped tar file containing the complete C source, LaTeX
277documentation, Python library modules, example programs, and several
278useful pieces of freely distributable software. This will compile and
279run out of the box on most UNIX platforms. (See section 7 for
280non-UNIX information.)
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000281
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +0000282Sometimes beta versions of a newer release are available; check the
283subdirectory "beta" of the above-mentioned URL (i.e.
284<URL:ftp://ftp.python.org/pub/python/src/beta/>). (At the time of
285writing, beta3 for Python 1.4 is available there, and should be
286checked before reporting problems with version 1.3.)
287
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000288Occasionally a set of patches is issued which has to be applied using
289the patch program. These patches are placed in the same directory,
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +0000290e.g. <URL:ftp://ftp.python.org/pub/python/src/patch1.1.1>. (At the time
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +0000291of writing, no patches exist.)
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000292
293An index of said ftp directory can be found in the file INDEX. An
294HTML version of the index can be found in the file index.html,
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +0000295<URL:ftp://ftp.python.org/pub/python/index.html>.
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000296
2971.4. Q. How do I get documentation on Python?
298
Guido van Rossuma8a8d4a1995-03-10 16:19:31 +0000299A. The LaTeX source for the documentation is part of the source
300distribution. If you don't have LaTeX, the latest Python
301documentation set is always available by anonymous ftp, e.g.
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +0000302<URL:ftp://ftp.python.org/pub/python/doc/postscript.tar.gz>. It is a
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000303gzipped tar file containing PostScript files of the reference manual,
Guido van Rossum3de27361994-07-25 14:19:33 +0000304the library manual, and the tutorial. Note that the library manual is
305the most important one of the set, as much of Python's power stems
306from the standard or built-in types, functions and modules, all of
307which are described here. PostScript for a high-level description of
Guido van Rossuma8a8d4a1995-03-10 16:19:31 +0000308Python is in the file nluug-paper.ps (a separate file on the ftp
309site).
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000310
Guido van Rossumc50158e1994-05-31 09:18:50 +00003111.5. Q. Are there other ftp sites that mirror the Python distribution?
312
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000313A. The following anonymous ftp sites keep mirrors of the Python
314distribution:
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000315
Guido van Rossume7d92d51995-10-11 18:06:54 +0000316USA:
317
318 <URL:ftp://ftp.python.org/pub/python/>
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000319 <URL:ftp://gatekeeper.dec.com/pub/plan/python/>
Guido van Rossume7d92d51995-10-11 18:06:54 +0000320 <URL:ftp://ftp.uu.net/languages/python/>
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000321 <URL:ftp://ftp.wustl.edu/graphics/graphics/sgi-stuff/python/>
Guido van Rossume7d92d51995-10-11 18:06:54 +0000322 <URL:ftp://ftp.sterling.com/programming/languages/python/>
323 <URL:ftp://uiarchive.cso.uiuc.edu/pub/lang/python/>
324 <URL:ftp://ftp.pht.com/mirrors/python/python/>
325
326Europe:
327
328 <URL:ftp://ftp.cwi.nl/pub/python/>
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000329 <URL:ftp://ftp.funet.fi/pub/languages/python/>
330 <URL:ftp://ftp.sunet.se/pub/lang/python/>
Guido van Rossum3fc9d731995-07-25 15:10:56 +0000331 <URL:ftp://unix.hensa.ac.uk/mirrors/uunet/languages/python/>
Guido van Rossumb0a2ce51995-08-28 19:41:35 +0000332 <URL:ftp://ftp.ibp.fr/pub/python/>
Guido van Rossum79413791996-12-05 22:01:11 +0000333 <URL:ftp://sunsite.cnlab-switch.ch/mirror/python/>
Guido van Rossum3fc9d731995-07-25 15:10:56 +0000334 <URL:ftp://ftp.informatik.tu-muenchen.de/pub/comp/programming/languages/python/>
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000335
Guido van Rossume7d92d51995-10-11 18:06:54 +0000336Australia:
337
338 <URL:ftp://ftp.dstc.edu.au/pub/python/>
339
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000340Or try archie on the string "python".
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000341
Guido van Rossumc50158e1994-05-31 09:18:50 +00003421.6. Q. Is there a newsgroup or mailing list devoted to Python?
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000343
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000344A. There is a newsgroup, comp.lang.python <URL:news:comp.lang.python>,
345and a mailing list. The newsgroup and mailing list are gatewayed into
346each other -- if you can read news it's unnecessary to subscribe to
347the mailing list. Send e-mail to <python-list-request@cwi.nl> to
Guido van Rossume530c581995-04-10 12:32:16 +0000348(un)subscribe to the mailing list. Hypermail archives of (nearly)
349everything posted to the mailing list (and thus the newsgroup) are
350available on our WWW server,
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000351<URL:http://www.cwi.nl/~guido/hypermail/index.html>. The raw archives
352are also available by ftp, e.g.
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +0000353<URL:ftp://ftp.python.org/pub/python/mail/mailinglist.gz>. The
Guido van Rossume530c581995-04-10 12:32:16 +0000354uncompressed versions of these files can be read with the standard
355UNIX Mail program ("Mail -f file") or with nn ("nn file"). To read
Guido van Rossumbf8e7d51995-08-28 03:09:13 +0000356them using MH, you could use "inc -file file". (The archival service
357has stopped archiving new articles around the end of April 1995. I
358hope to revive it on the PSA server www.python.org sometime in the
359future.)
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000360
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +00003611.7. Q. Is there a WWW page devoted to Python?
362
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +0000363A. Yes, <URL:http://www.python.org/> is the official Python home page.
364At the time of writing, this page is not yet completely operational;
365you may have a look at the old Python home page:
366<URL:http://www.cwi.nl/~guido/Python.html> or at the U.S. copy:
367<URL:http://www.python.org/~guido/Python.html>.
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000368
Guido van Rossuma8a8d4a1995-03-10 16:19:31 +00003691.8. Q. Is the Python documentation available on the WWW?
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000370
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +0000371A. Yes, see <URL:http://www.python.org/> (Python's home page). It
372contains pointers to hypertext versions of the whole documentation set
373(as hypertext, not just PostScript).
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000374
Guido van Rossuma8a8d4a1995-03-10 16:19:31 +0000375If you wish to browse this collection of HTML files on your own
376machine, it is available bundled up by anonymous ftp,
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +0000377e.g. <URL:ftp://ftp.python.org/pub/python/doc/html.tar.gz>.
Guido van Rossuma8a8d4a1995-03-10 16:19:31 +0000378
379An Emacs-INFO set containing the library manual is also available by
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +0000380ftp, e.g. <URL:ftp://ftp.python.org/pub/python/doc/lib-info.tar.gz>.
Guido van Rossuma8a8d4a1995-03-10 16:19:31 +0000381
3821.9. Q. Is there a book on Python, or will there be one out soon?
383
Guido van Rossum3fc9d731995-07-25 15:10:56 +0000384A. Mark Lutz is writing a Python book for O'Reilly and Associates, to
385be published early 1996. See the outline (in PostScript):
386<URL:http://www.python.org/workshops/1995-05/outlinep.eps>.
Guido van Rossuma8a8d4a1995-03-10 16:19:31 +0000387
3881.10. Q. Are there any published articles about Python that I can quote?
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000389
390A. So far the only refereed and published article that describes
391Python in some detail is:
392
393 Guido van Rossum and Jelke de Boer, "Interactively Testing Remote
394 Servers Using the Python Programming Language", CWI Quarterly, Volume
395 4, Issue 4 (December 1991), Amsterdam, pp 283-303.
396
397LaTeX source for this paper is available as part of the Python source
398distribution.
399
Guido van Rossum05151e01995-09-28 13:24:46 +0000400See also the next section (supposedly Aaron Watters' paper has been
401refereed).
402
Guido van Rossuma8a8d4a1995-03-10 16:19:31 +00004031.11. Q. Are there short introductory papers or talks on Python?
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000404
Guido van Rossum05151e01995-09-28 13:24:46 +0000405A. A recent, very entertaining introduction to Python is the tutorial by
406Aaron Watters in UnixWorld Online:
407
408 Aaron R. Watters: "The What, Why, Who, and Where of Python",
409 <URL:http://www.wcmh.com/uworld/archives/95/tutorial/005.html>
410
411An olded paper is:
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000412
413 Guido van Rossum, "An Introduction to Python for UNIX/C
414 Programmers", in the proceedings of the NLUUG najaarsconferentie
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +0000415 1993 (dutch UNIX users group meeting November 1993).
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000416
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000417PostScript for this paper and for the slides used for the accompanying
418presentation is available by ftp as
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +0000419<URL:ftp://ftp.python.org/pub/python/doc/nluug-paper.ps> and
420<URL:ftp://ftp.python.org/pub/python/doc/nluug-slides.ps>, respectively.
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000421
422Slides for a talk on Python that I gave at the Usenix Symposium on
Guido van Rossum05151e01995-09-28 13:24:46 +0000423Very High Level Languages in Santa Fe, NM, USA in October 1994 are
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +0000424available as <URL:ftp://ftp.python.org/pub/python/doc/vhll-slides.ps>.
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000425
Guido van Rossuma8a8d4a1995-03-10 16:19:31 +00004261.12. Q. How does the Python version numbering scheme work?
Guido van Rossum95f61a71994-01-26 17:23:37 +0000427
Guido van Rossum05151e01995-09-28 13:24:46 +0000428A. Python versions are numbered A.B.C or A.B. A is the major version
429number -- it is only incremented for major changes in functionality or
430source structure. B is the minor version number, incremented for less
Guido van Rossum95f61a71994-01-26 17:23:37 +0000431earth-shattering changes to a release. C is the patchlevel -- it is
Guido van Rossum05151e01995-09-28 13:24:46 +0000432incremented for each new patch release. Not all releases have patch
433releases. Note that in the past, patches have added significant
434changes; in fact the changeover from 0.9.9 to 1.0.0 was the first time
435that either A or B changed!
Guido van Rossum95f61a71994-01-26 17:23:37 +0000436
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +0000437Beta versions have an additional suffix of "betaN" for some small
438number N. Note that (for instance) all versions labeled 1.4betaN
439*precede* the actual release of 1.4. 1.4b3 is short for 1.4beta3.
Guido van Rossuma8a8d4a1995-03-10 16:19:31 +0000440
4411.13. Q. How do I get a beta test version of Python?
442
Guido van Rossum05151e01995-09-28 13:24:46 +0000443A. If there are any beta releases, they are published in the normal
444source directory (e.g. <URL:ftp://ftp.python.org/pub/python/src/>).
Guido van Rossuma8a8d4a1995-03-10 16:19:31 +0000445
Guido van Rossum05151e01995-09-28 13:24:46 +00004461.14. Q. Are there copyright restrictions on the use of Python?
Guido van Rossum7ce61c11994-06-13 15:13:56 +0000447
448A. Hardly. You can do anything you want with the source, as long as
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000449you leave the copyrights in, and display those copyrights in any
450documentation about Python that you produce. Also, don't use the
451author's institute's name in publicity without prior written
452permission, and don't hold them responsible for anything (read the
453actual copyright for a precise legal wording).
454
455In particular, if you honor the copyright rules, it's OK to use Python
456for commercial use, to sell copies of Python in source or binary form,
457or to sell products that enhance Python or incorporate Python (or part
458of it) in some form. I would still like to know about all commercial
459use of Python!
Guido van Rossum5333c5d1994-04-11 11:06:22 +0000460
Guido van Rossum05151e01995-09-28 13:24:46 +00004611.15. Q. Why was Python created in the first place?
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +0000462
463A. Here's a *very* brief summary of what got me started:
464
465- I had extensive experience with implementing an interpreted language
466in the ABC group at CWI, and from working with this group I had
467learned a lot about language design. This is the origin of many
468Python features, including the use of indentation for statement
469grouping and the inclusion of very-high-level data types (although the
470details are all different in Python).
471
472- I had a number of gripes about the ABC language, but also liked many
473of its features. It was impossible to extend the ABC language (or its
474implementation) to remedy my complaints -- in fact its lack of
475extensibility was one of its biggest problems.
476
477- I had some experience with using Modula-2+ and talked with the
478designers of Modula-3 (and read the M3 report). M3 is the origin of
479the syntax and semantics used for exceptions, and some other Python
480features.
481
482- I was working in the Amoeba distributed operating system group at
483CWI. We needed a better way to do system administration than by
484writing either C programs or Bourne shell scripts, since Amoeba had
485its own system call interface which wasn't easily accessible from the
Guido van Rossumbf8e7d51995-08-28 03:09:13 +0000486Bourne shell. My experience with error handling in Amoeba made me
487acutely aware of the importance of exceptions as a programming
488language feature.
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +0000489
490- It occurred to me that a scripting language with a syntax like ABC
491but with access to the Amoeba system calls would fill the need. I
492realized that it would be foolish to write an Amoeba-specific
493language, so I decided that I needed a language that was generally
494extensible.
495
496- During the 1989 Christmas holidays, I had a lot of time on my hand,
497so I decided to give it a try. During the next year, while still
498mostly working on it in my own time, Python was used in the Amoeba
499project with increasing success, and the feedback from colleagues made
500me add many early improvements.
501
502- In February 1991, after just over a year of development, I decided
503to post to USENET. The rest is in the Misc/HISTORY file.
504
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000505
5062. Python in the real world
507===========================
508
5092.1. Q. How many people are using Python?
510
Guido van Rossum5333c5d1994-04-11 11:06:22 +0000511A. I don't know, but the maximum number of simultaneous subscriptions
512to the Python mailing list before it was gatewayed into the newsgroup
513was about 180 (several of which were local redistribution lists). I
514believe that many active Python users don't bother to subscribe to the
515list, and now that there's a newsgroup the mailing list subscription
Guido van Rossum7ce61c11994-06-13 15:13:56 +0000516is even less meaningful. I see new names on the newsgroup all the
517time and my best guess is that there are currently at least several
518thousands of users.
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000519
Guido van Rossumb0a2ce51995-08-28 19:41:35 +0000520Another statistic is the number of accesses to the Python WWW server.
521Have a look at <URL:http://www.python.org/stats/>.
522
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +00005232.2. Q. Have any significant projects been done in Python?
524
525A. Here at CWI (the home of Python), we have written a 20,000 line
526authoring environment for transportable hypermedia presentations, a
Guido van Rossum5333c5d1994-04-11 11:06:22 +00005275,000 line multimedia teleconferencing tool, as well as many many
528smaller programs.
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000529
530The University of Virginia uses Python to control a virtual reality
531engine. Contact: Matt Conway <conway@virginia.edu>.
532
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000533The ILU project at Xerox PARC can generate Python glue for ILU
534interfaces. See <URL:ftp://ftp.parc.xerox.com/pub/ilu/ilu.html>.
535
Guido van Rossumac3f2121995-04-10 11:53:42 +0000536The University of California, Irvine uses a student administration
537system called TELE-Vision written entirely in Python. Contact: Ray
538Price <rlprice@uci.edu>.
539
Guido van Rossumb0a2ce51995-08-28 19:41:35 +0000540See also the next question.
541
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +0000542If you have done a significant project in Python that you'd like to be
543included in the list above, send me email!
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000544
5452.3. Q. Are there any commercial projects going on using Python?
546
547A. Several companies have revealed to me that they are planning or
Guido van Rossum796b2591995-01-20 23:05:52 +0000548considering use of Python in a future product.
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +0000549
Guido van Rossumbf8e7d51995-08-28 03:09:13 +0000550Sunrise Software has a product out using Python -- they use Python
Guido van Rossumac3f2121995-04-10 11:53:42 +0000551for a GUI management application and an SNMP network management
552application. Contact: <info@sunrise.com>.
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000553
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000554Infoseek uses Python to implement their commercial WWW information
555retrieval service <URL:http://www.infoseek.com/>. Contact:
556<info@infoseek.com>.
Guido van Rossumf8c76d01994-08-17 12:19:53 +0000557
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000558Paul Everitt of Connecting Minds is planning a Lotus Notes gateway.
559Contact: <Paul.Everitt@cminds.com>. Or see their WWW server
560<URL:http://www.cminds.com/>.
561
Guido van Rossumac3f2121995-04-10 11:53:42 +0000562KaPRE in Boulder, CO is using Python for on-site customization of C++
563applications, rapid-prototyping/development,
564language-based-components, and possibly more. This is pretty solid:
565Python's being shipped with their tool-set now, to beta sites.
566Contact: <lutz@KaPRE.COM> (Mark Lutz).
567
568Individuals at many other companies are using Python for internal
569development or for as yet unannounced products (witness their
570contributions to the Python mailing list or newsgroup).
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000571
Guido van Rossumb0a2ce51995-08-28 19:41:35 +0000572SGI has advertised in the Python list looking for Python programmers
573for a project involving interactive television.
574
575See also the workshop minutes at
576<URL:http://www.python.org/workshops/> -- in general the WWW server is
577more up to date than the FAQ for these issues.
578
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000579Python has also been elected as an extension language by MADE, a
580consortium supported by the European Committee's ESPRIT program and
581consisting of Bull, CWI and some other European companies. Contact:
582Ivan Herman <ivan@cwi.nl>.
583
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +0000584If you'd like to be included in the list above, send me email!
585
Guido van Rossum95f61a71994-01-26 17:23:37 +00005862.4. Q. How stable is Python?
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000587
Guido van Rossum3de27361994-07-25 14:19:33 +0000588A. Very stable. While the current version number would suggest it is
589in the early stages of development, in fact new, stable releases
Guido van Rossume7d92d51995-10-11 18:06:54 +0000590(numbered 0.9.x through 1.3) have been coming out roughly every 3 to
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +00005916 months for the past four years.
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000592
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +00005932.5. Q. What new developments are expected for Python in the future?
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000594
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +0000595A. See my Work-In-Progress web page, currently at
596<URL:http://www.python.org:~guido/WIP.html>, and the pages for the
597Second Python Workshop (best reached via the Python home page,
Guido van Rossumb0a2ce51995-08-28 19:41:35 +0000598<URL:http://www.python.org/>). Also follow the newsgroup discussions!
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000599
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +00006002.6. Q. Is it reasonable to propose incompatible changes to Python?
Guido van Rossum3de27361994-07-25 14:19:33 +0000601
602A. In general, no. There are already millions of lines of Python code
603around the world, so any changes in the language that invalidates more
604than a very small fraction of existing programs has to be frowned
605upon. Even if you can provide a conversion program, there still is
606the problem of updating all documentation. Providing a gradual
607upgrade path is the only way if a feature has to be changed.
608
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +00006092.7. Q. What is the future of Python?
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000610
Guido van Rossumb0a2ce51995-08-28 19:41:35 +0000611A. If I knew, I'd be rich :-)
612
613Seriously, the formation of the PSA (Pyton Software Activity, see
614<URL:http://www.python.org/psa/>) ensures some kind of support even in
615the (unlikely! event that I'd be hit by a bus (actually, here in the
616US, a car accident would be more likely :-), were to join a nunnery,
617or would be head-hunted. A large number of Python users have become
618experts at Python programming as well as maintenance of the
619implementation, and would easily fill the vacuum created by my
620disappearance.
621
622In the mean time, I have no plans to disappear -- rather, I am
623committed to improving Python, and my current benefactor, CNRI (see
624<URL:http://www.cnri.reston.va.us>) is just as committed to continue
625its support of Python and the PSA. In fact, we have great plans for
626Python -- we just can't tell yet!
627
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +00006282.8. Q. What is the PSA, anyway?
Guido van Rossum05151e01995-09-28 13:24:46 +0000629
630A. The Python Software Activity <URL:http://www.python.org/psa/> was
631created by a number of Python aficionados who want Python to be more
632than the product and responsibility of a single individual. It has
633found a home at CNRI <URL:http://www.cnri.reston.va.us>. Anybody who
634wishes Python well should join the PSA.
635
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +00006362.9. Q. How do I join the PSA?
Guido van Rossum05151e01995-09-28 13:24:46 +0000637
638A. The full scoop is available on the web, see
639<URL:http://www.python.org/psa/Joining.html>. Summary: send a check
640of at least $50 to CNRI/PSA, 1895 Preston White Drive, Suite 100, in
Guido van Rossum81300541996-09-06 16:37:56 +0000641Reston, VA 20191. Full-time students pay $25. Companies can join for
Guido van Rossum05151e01995-09-28 13:24:46 +0000642a mere $500.
643
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +00006442.10. Q. What are the benefits of joining the PSA?
Guido van Rossum05151e01995-09-28 13:24:46 +0000645
646A. Like National Public Radio, if not enough people join, Python will
647wither. Your name will be mentioned on the PSA's web server.
648Workshops organized by the PSA <URL:http://www.python.org/workshops/>
649are only accessible to PSA members (you can join at the door). The
650PSA is working on additional benefits, such as reduced prices for
651books and software, and early access to beta versions of Python.
652
Guido van Rossumb0a2ce51995-08-28 19:41:35 +0000653
6543. Building Python and Other Known Bugs
655=======================================
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000656
Guido van Rossum91f60831994-02-15 15:52:27 +00006573.1. Q. Is there a test set?
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000658
659A. Yes, simply do "import testall" (or "import autotest" if you aren't
660interested in the output). The standard modules whose name begins
661with "test" together comprise the test. The test set doesn't test
662*all* features of Python but it goes a long way to confirm that a new
663port is actually working. The Makefile contains an entry "make test"
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000664which runs the autotest module. NOTE: if "make test" fails, run the
665tests manually ("import testall") to see what goes wrong before
666reporting the error.
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000667
Guido van Rossum91f60831994-02-15 15:52:27 +00006683.2. Q. When running the test set, I get complaints about floating point
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000669operations, but when playing with floating point operations I cannot
670find anything wrong with them.
671
672A. The test set makes occasional unwarranted assumptions about the
673semantics of C floating point operations. Until someone donates a
674better floating point test set, you will have to comment out the
675offending floating point tests and execute similar tests manually.
676
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +00006773.3. Q. Link errors after rerunning the configure script.
Guido van Rossum24349991994-02-02 14:12:45 +0000678
679A. It is generally necessary to run "make clean" after a configuration
680change.
681
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +00006823.4. Q. The python interpreter complains about options passed to a
Guido van Rossum24349991994-02-02 14:12:45 +0000683script (after the script name).
684
685A. You are probably linking with GNU getopt, e.g. through -liberty.
Guido van Rossumf8c76d01994-08-17 12:19:53 +0000686Don't. The reason for the complaint is that GNU getopt, unlike System
687V getopt and other getopt implementations, doesn't consider a
688non-option to be the end of the option list. A quick (and compatible)
689fix for scripts is to add "--" to the interpreter, like this:
690
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000691 #! /usr/local/bin/python --
Guido van Rossumf8c76d01994-08-17 12:19:53 +0000692
693You can also use this interactively:
694
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000695 python -- script.py [options]
696
697Note that a working getopt implementation is provided in the Python
698distribution (in Python/getopt.c) but not automatically used.
Guido van Rossum24349991994-02-02 14:12:45 +0000699
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +00007003.5. Q. When building on the SGI, make tries to run python to create
Guido van Rossum24349991994-02-02 14:12:45 +0000701glmodule.c, but python hasn't been built or installed yet.
702
703A. Comment out the line mentioning glmodule.c in Setup and build a
704python without gl first; install it or make sure it is in your $PATH,
705then edit the Setup file again to turn on the gl module, and make
706again. You don't need to do "make clean"; you do need to run "make
707Makefile" in the Modules subdirectory (or just run "make" at the
708toplevel).
709
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +00007103.6. Q. I use VPATH but some targets are built in the source directory.
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +0000711
712A. On some systems (e.g. Sun), if the target already exists in the
713source directory, it is created there instead of in the build
714directory. This is usually because you have previously built without
715VPATH. Try running "make clobber" in the source directory.
716
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +00007173.7. Q. Trouble building or linking with the GNU readline library.
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +0000718
Guido van Rossumac3f2121995-04-10 11:53:42 +0000719A. Consider using readline 2.0. Some hints:
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +0000720
721- You can use the GNU readline library to improve the interactive user
722interface: this gives you line editing and command history when
Guido van Rossum796b2591995-01-20 23:05:52 +0000723calling python interactively. You need to configure and build the GNU
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +0000724readline library before running the configure script. Its sources are
725no longer distributed with Python; you can ftp them from any GNU
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000726mirror site, or from its home site
727<URL:ftp://slc2.ins.cwru.edu/pub/dist/readline-2.0.tar.gz> (or a
728higher version number -- using version 1.x is not recommended). Pass
729the Python configure script the option --with-readline=DIRECTORY where
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +0000730DIRECTORY is the absolute pathname of the directory where you've built
731the readline library. Some hints on building and using the readline
732library:
733
734- On SGI IRIX 5, you may have to add the following
735to rldefs.h:
736
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000737 #ifndef sigmask
738 #define sigmask(sig) (1L << ((sig)-1))
739 #endif
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +0000740
741- On most systems, you will have to add #include "rldefs.h" to the
742top of several source files, and if you use the VPATH feature, you
743will have to add dependencies of the form foo.o: foo.c to the
744Makefile for several values of foo.
745
746- The readline library requires use of the termcap library. A
747known problem with this is that it contains entry points which
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +0000748cause conflicts with the STDWIN and SGI GL libraries. The STDWIN
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +0000749conflict can be solved (and will be, in the next release of
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +0000750STDWIN) by adding a line saying '#define werase w_erase' to the
751stdwin.h file (in the STDWIN distribution, subdirectory H). The
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +0000752GL conflict has been solved in the Python configure script by a
753hack that forces use of the static version of the termcap library.
754
Guido van Rossumac3f2121995-04-10 11:53:42 +0000755- Check the newsgroup gnu.bash.bug <URL:news:gnu.bash.bug> for
756specific problems with the readline library (I don't read this group
757but I've been told that it is the place for readline bugs).
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +0000758
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +00007593.8. Q. Trouble with socket I/O on older Linux 1.x versions.
Guido van Rossumca318ec1996-06-26 19:50:09 +0000760
761A. Once you've built Python, use it to run the regen.py script in the
762Lib/linux1 directory. Apparently the files as distributed don't match
763the system headers on some Linux versions.
764
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +00007653.9. Q. Trouble with prototypes on Ultrix.
Guido van Rossum72eb83c1994-10-07 11:33:28 +0000766
767A. Ultrix cc seems broken -- use gcc, or edit config.h to #undef
768HAVE_PROTOTYPES.
769
Guido van Rossum8a913021996-10-08 17:18:30 +00007703.10. Q. Other trouble building Python on platform X.
Guido van Rossum95f61a71994-01-26 17:23:37 +0000771
Guido van Rossum81300541996-09-06 16:37:56 +0000772A. Please email the details to <guido@cnri.reston.va.us> and I'll look
773into it. Please provide as many details as possible. In particular,
774if you don't tell me what type of computer and what operating system
775(and version) you are using it will be difficult for me to figure out
776what is the matter. If you get a specific error message, please email
777it to me too.
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000778
Guido van Rossum8a913021996-10-08 17:18:30 +00007793.11. Q. How to configure dynamic loading on Linux.
Guido van Rossum07779351995-02-07 16:59:56 +0000780
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +0000781A. This is now automatic as long as your Linux version uses the ELF
782object format (all recent Linuxes do).
Guido van Rossum07779351995-02-07 16:59:56 +0000783
Guido van Rossum9c5dc291996-10-13 15:48:56 +00007843.12. Q: I can't get shared modules to work on Linux 2.0 (Slackware96)?
785
786A: This is a bug in the Slackware96 release. The fix is simple:
787
788Make sure that there is a link from /lib/libdl.so to /lib/libdl.so.1
789so that the following links are setup:
790
791 /lib/libdl.so -> /lib/libdl.so.1
792 /lib/libdl.so.1 -> /lib/libdl.so.1.7.14
793
Guido van Rossumcaa83c41996-11-13 15:06:24 +00007943.13. Q: Trouble when making modules shared on Linux.
795
796A. This happens when you have built Python for static linking and then
797enable *shared* in the Setup file. Shared library code must be
798compiled with "-fpic". If a .o file for the module already exist that
799was compiled for static linking, you must remove it or do "make clean"
800in the Modules directory.
801
8023.14. Q. How to use threads on Linux.
Guido van Rossum9e0e4dd1996-10-23 20:52:55 +0000803
804A. [Greg Stein] I built myself a libpthreads.so from the libc.5.3.12
805distribution (the binary distribution doesn't have pthreads in
806it). Then, I configured Python with --with-threads and then tweaked
807config.h to include a #define _MIT_POSIX_THREADS (or something like
808that, see /usr/include/pthreads.h). It worked fine at that point.
809
810Note that I couldn't get threading to "operate well" with any of the
811other thread packages. Prior libc versions didn't integrate well with
812threads, either, so I couldn't use them (e.g. sleep() blocked all
813threads :-( ).
814
Guido van Rossumcaa83c41996-11-13 15:06:24 +00008153.15. Q. Errors when linking with a shared library containing C++ code.
Guido van Rossum3fc9d731995-07-25 15:10:56 +0000816
817A. Link the main Python binary with C++. Change the definition of
818LINKCC in Modules/Makefile to be your C++ compiler. You may have to
819edit config.c slightly to make it compilable with C++.
Guido van Rossum07779351995-02-07 16:59:56 +0000820
Guido van Rossumcaa83c41996-11-13 15:06:24 +00008213.16. Q. I built with tkintermodule.c enabled but get "Tkinter not found".
Guido van Rossumb0a2ce51995-08-28 19:41:35 +0000822
823A. Tkinter.py (note: upper case T) lives in a subdirectory of Lib,
824Lib/tkinter. If you are using the default module search path, you
825probably didn't enable the line in the Modules/Setup file defining
826TKPATH; if you use the environment variable PYTHONPATH, you'll have to
827add the proper tkinter subdirectory.
828
Guido van Rossumcaa83c41996-11-13 15:06:24 +00008293.17. Q. I built with Tk 4.0 but Tkinter complains about the Tk version.
Guido van Rossumb0a2ce51995-08-28 19:41:35 +0000830
831A. Several things could cause this. You most likely have a Tk 3.6
832installation that wasn't completely eradicated by the Tk 4.0
833installation (which tends to add "4.0" to its installed files). You
834may have the Tk 3.6 support library installed in the place where the
835Tk 4.0 support files should be (default /usr/local/lib/tk/); you may
836have compiled Python with the old tk.h header file (yes, this actually
837compiles!); you may actually have linked with Tk 3.6 even though Tk
8384.0 is also around. Similar for Tcl 7.4 vs. Tcl 7.3.
839
Guido van Rossumcaa83c41996-11-13 15:06:24 +00008403.18. Q. Link errors for Tcl/Tk symbols when linking with Tcl/Tk.
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +0000841
842Quite possibly, there's a version mismatch between the Tcl/Tk header
843files (tcl.h and tk.h) and the tck/tk libraries you are using (the
844"-ltk4.0" and "-ltcl7.4" arguments for _tkinter in the Setup file).
845If you have installed both versions 7.4/4.0 and 7.5/4.1 of Tcl/Tk,
846most likely your header files are for The newer versions, but the
847Setup line for _tkinter in some Python distributions references
8487.4/4.0 by default. Changing this to 7.5/4.1 should take care of
849this.
850
Guido van Rossumcaa83c41996-11-13 15:06:24 +00008513.19. Q. I configured and built Python for Tcl/Tk but "import Tkinter"
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +0000852fails.
853
854A. Most likely, you forgot to enable the line in Setup that says
855"TKPATH=:$(DESTLIB)/tkinter".
856
Guido van Rossumcaa83c41996-11-13 15:06:24 +00008573.20. Q. Tk doesn't work right on DEC Alpha.
Guido van Rossumb0a2ce51995-08-28 19:41:35 +0000858
859A. You probably compiled either Tcl, Tk or Python with gcc. Don't.
860For this platform, which has 64-bit integers, gcc is known to generate
861broken code. The standard cc (which comes bundled with the OS!)
862works. If you still prefer gcc, at least try recompiling with cc
863before reporting problems to the newsgroup or the author; if this
864fixes the problem, report the bug to the gcc developers instead. (As
865far as we know, there are no problem with gcc on other platforms --
866the instabilities seem to be restricted to the DEC Alpha.) See also
867question 3.6.
868
Guido van Rossumcaa83c41996-11-13 15:06:24 +00008693.21. Q. Several common system calls are missing from the posix module.
Guido van Rossumca318ec1996-06-26 19:50:09 +0000870
871A. Most likely, *all* test compilations run by the configure script
872are failing for some reason or another. Have a look in config.log to
873see what could be the reason. A common reason is specifying a
874directory to the --with-readline option that doesn't contain the
875libreadline.a file.
876
Guido van Rossumcaa83c41996-11-13 15:06:24 +00008773.22. Q. ImportError: No module named string, on MS Windows.
Guido van Rossumca318ec1996-06-26 19:50:09 +0000878
879A. Most likely, your PYTHONPATH environment variable should be set to
880something like:
881
882set PYTHONPATH=c:\python;c:\python\lib;c:\python\scripts
883
884(assuming Python was installed in c:\python)
885
Guido van Rossumcaa83c41996-11-13 15:06:24 +00008863.23. Q. Core dump on SGI when using the gl module.
Guido van Rossumca318ec1996-06-26 19:50:09 +0000887
888There are conflicts between entry points in the termcap and curses
889libraries and an entry point in the GL library. There's a hack of a
890fix for the termcap library if it's needed for the GNU readline
891library, but it doesn't work when you're using curses. Concluding,
892you can't build a Python binary containing both the curses and gl
893modules.
894
895
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000896
8974. Programming in Python
898========================
899
Guido van Rossum24349991994-02-02 14:12:45 +00009004.1. Q. Is there a source code level debugger with breakpoints, step,
901etc.?
902
903A. Yes. Check out module pdb; pdb.help() prints the documentation (or
904you can read it as Lib/pdb.doc). If you use the STDWIN option,
905there's also a windowing interface, wdb. You can write your own
906debugger by using the code for pdb or wdb as an example.
907
9084.2. Q. Can I create an object class with some methods implemented in
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000909C and others in Python (e.g. through inheritance)? (Also phrased as:
910Can I use a built-in type as base class?)
911
912A. No, but you can easily create a Python class which serves as a
913wrapper around a built-in object, e.g. (for dictionaries):
914
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000915 # A user-defined class behaving almost identical
916 # to a built-in dictionary.
917 class UserDict:
918 def __init__(self): self.data = {}
919 def __repr__(self): return repr(self.data)
920 def __cmp__(self, dict):
921 if type(dict) == type(self.data):
922 return cmp(self.data, dict)
923 else:
924 return cmp(self.data, dict.data)
925 def __len__(self): return len(self.data)
926 def __getitem__(self, key): return self.data[key]
927 def __setitem__(self, key, item): self.data[key] = item
928 def __delitem__(self, key): del self.data[key]
929 def keys(self): return self.data.keys()
930 def items(self): return self.data.items()
931 def values(self): return self.data.values()
932 def has_key(self, key): return self.data.has_key(key)
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000933
Guido van Rossum24349991994-02-02 14:12:45 +00009344.3. Q. Is there a curses/termcap package for Python?
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000935
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000936A. Yes -- Lance Ellinghaus has written a module that interfaces to
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +0000937System V's "ncurses". If you know a little curses and some Python,
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000938it's straightforward to use. It is part of the standard Python
939distribution, but not configured by default -- you must enable it by
940editing Modules/Setup. It requires a System V curses implementation.
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +0000941
942You could also consider using the "alfa" (== character cell) version
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000943of STDWIN. (Standard Window System Interface, a portable windowing
944system interface by myself <URL:ftp://ftp.cwi.nl/pub/stdwin/>.) This
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +0000945will also prepare your program for porting to windowing environments
946such as X11 or the Macintosh.
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000947
Guido van Rossum24349991994-02-02 14:12:45 +00009484.4. Q. Is there an equivalent to C's onexit() in Python?
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000949
950A. Yes, if you import sys and assign a function to sys.exitfunc, it
951will be called when your program exits, is killed by an unhandled
952exception, or (on UNIX) receives a SIGHUP or SIGTERM signal.
953
Guido van Rossum24349991994-02-02 14:12:45 +00009544.5. Q. When I define a function nested inside another function, the
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000955nested function seemingly can't access the local variables of the
956outer function. What is going on? How do I pass local data to a
957nested function?
958
959A. Python does not have arbitrarily nested scopes. When you need to
960create a function that needs to access some data which you have
961available locally, create a new class to hold the data and return a
962method of an instance of that class, e.g.:
963
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000964 class MultiplierClass:
965 def __init__(self, factor):
966 self.factor = factor
967 def multiplier(self, argument):
968 return argument * self.factor
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000969
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000970 def generate_multiplier(factor):
971 return MultiplierClass(factor).multiplier
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000972
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000973 twice = generate_multiplier(2)
974 print twice(10)
975 # Output: 20
976
977An alternative solution uses default arguments, e.g.:
978
979 def generate_multiplier(factor):
980 def multiplier(arg, fact = factor):
981 return arg*fact
982 return multiplier
983
984 twice = generate_multiplier(2)
985 print twice(10)
986 # Output: 20
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000987
Guido van Rossum24349991994-02-02 14:12:45 +00009884.6. Q. How do I iterate over a sequence in reverse order?
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000989
990A. If it is a list, the fastest solution is
991
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +0000992 list.reverse()
993 try:
994 for x in list:
995 "do something with x"
996 finally:
997 list.reverse()
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +0000998
999This has the disadvantage that while you are in the loop, the list
1000is temporarily reversed. If you don't like this, you can make a copy.
1001This appears expensive but is actually faster than other solutions:
1002
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +00001003 rev = list[:]
1004 rev.reverse()
1005 for x in rev:
1006 <do something with x>
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +00001007
1008If it isn't a list, a more general but slower solution is:
1009
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +00001010 i = len(list)
1011 while i > 0:
1012 i = i-1
1013 x = list[i]
1014 <do something with x>
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +00001015
1016A more elegant solution, is to define a class which acts as a sequence
1017and yields the elements in reverse order (solution due to Steve
1018Majewski):
1019
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +00001020 class Rev:
1021 def __init__(self, seq):
1022 self.forw = seq
1023 def __len__(self):
1024 return len(self.forw)
1025 def __getitem__(self, i):
1026 return self.forw[-(i + 1)]
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +00001027
1028You can now simply write:
1029
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +00001030 for x in Rev(list):
1031 <do something with x>
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +00001032
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +00001033Unfortunately, this solution is slowest of all, due to the method
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +00001034call overhead...
1035
Guido van Rossum24349991994-02-02 14:12:45 +000010364.7. Q. My program is too slow. How do I speed it up?
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +00001037
1038A. That's a tough one, in general. There are many tricks to speed up
1039Python code; I would consider rewriting parts in C only as a last
1040resort. One thing to notice is that function and (especially) method
1041calls are rather expensive; if you have designed a purely OO interface
1042with lots of tiny functions that don't do much more than get or set an
1043instance variable or call another method, you may consider using a
1044more direct way, e.g. directly accessing instance variables. Also see
1045the standard module "profile" (described in the file
1046"python/lib/profile.doc") which makes it possible to find out where
1047your program is spending most of its time (if you have some patience
1048-- the profiling itself can slow your program down by an order of
1049magnitude).
1050
Guido van Rossum24349991994-02-02 14:12:45 +000010514.8. Q. When I have imported a module, then edit it, and import it
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +00001052again (into the same Python process), the changes don't seem to take
1053place. What is going on?
1054
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +00001055A. For reasons of efficiency as well as consistency, Python only reads
Guido van Rossum796b2591995-01-20 23:05:52 +00001056the module file on the first time a module is imported. (Otherwise a
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +00001057program consisting of many modules, each of which imports the same
Guido van Rossum796b2591995-01-20 23:05:52 +00001058basic module, would read the basic module over and over again.) To
1059force rereading of a changed module, do this:
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +00001060
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +00001061 import modname
1062 reload(modname)
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +00001063
1064Warning: this technique is not 100% fool-proof. In particular,
1065modules containing statements like
1066
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +00001067 from modname import some_objects
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +00001068
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001069will continue to work with the old version of the imported objects.
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +00001070
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +000010714.9. Q. How do I find the current module name?
Guido van Rossum24349991994-02-02 14:12:45 +00001072
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +00001073A. A module can find out its own module name by looking at the
Guido van Rossum24349991994-02-02 14:12:45 +00001074(predefined) global variable __name__. If this has the value
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001075'__main__' you are running as a script.
1076
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +000010774.10. Q. I have a module in which I want to execute some extra code
1078when it is run as a script. How do I find out whether I am running as
1079a script?
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001080
1081A. See the previous question. E.g. if you put the following on the
1082last line of your module, main() is called only when your module is
1083running as a script:
Guido van Rossum24349991994-02-02 14:12:45 +00001084
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +00001085 if __name__ == '__main__': main()
Guido van Rossum24349991994-02-02 14:12:45 +00001086
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +000010874.11. Q. I try to run a program from the Demo directory but it fails
1088with ImportError: No module named ...; what gives?
Guido van Rossum7ce61c11994-06-13 15:13:56 +00001089
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +00001090A. This is probably an optional module (written in C!) which hasn't
1091been configured on your system. This especially happens with modules
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +00001092like "Tkinter", "stdwin", "gl", "Xt" or "Xm". For Tkinter, STDWIN and
1093many other modules, see Modules/Setup.in for info on how to add these
1094modules to your Python, if it is possible at all. Sometimes you will
1095have to ftp and build another package first (e.g. STDWIN). Sometimes
1096the module only works on specific platforms (e.g. gl only works on SGI
1097machines).
1098
1099NOTE: if the complaint is about "Tkinter" (upper case T) and you have
Guido van Rossumca318ec1996-06-26 19:50:09 +00001100already configured module "tkinter" (lower case t), the solution is
1101*not* to rename tkinter to Tkinter or vice versa. There is probably
1102something wrong with your module search path. Check out the value of
1103sys.path.
Guido van Rossum7ce61c11994-06-13 15:13:56 +00001104
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +00001105For X-related modules (Xt and Xm) you will have to do more work: they
1106are currently not part of the standard Python distribution. You will
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +00001107have to ftp the Extensions tar file, e.g.
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +00001108<URL:ftp://ftp.python.org/pub/python/src/extensions.tar.gz> and follow
1109the instructions there.
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +00001110
1111See also the next question.
1112
11134.12. Q. I have successfully built Python with STDWIN but it can't
1114find some modules (e.g. stdwinevents).
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001115
1116A. There's a subdirectory of the library directory named 'stdwin'
1117which should be in the default module search path. There's a line in
1118Modules/Setup(.in) that you have to enable for this purpose --
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +00001119unfortunately in the latest release it's not near the other
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001120STDWIN-related lines so it's easy to miss it.
1121
11224.13. Q. What GUI toolkits exist for Python?
Guido van Rossum7ce61c11994-06-13 15:13:56 +00001123
1124A. Depending on what platform(s) you are aiming at, there are several.
1125
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +00001126Currently supported solutions:
1127
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001128- There's a neat object-oriented interface to the Tcl/Tk widget set,
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +00001129called Tkinter. It is part of the standard Python distribution and
1130well-supported -- all you need to do is build and install Tcl/Tk and
1131enable the _tkinter module and the TKPATH definition in Modules/Setup
1132when building Python. This is probably the easiest to install and
1133use, and the most complete widget set. It is also very likely that in
1134the future the standard Python GUI API will be based on or at least
1135look very much like the Tkinter interface. For more info about Tk,
1136including pointers to the source, see the Tcl/Tk home page
1137<URL:http://www.sunlabs.com/research/tcl/>. Tcl/Tk is now fully
1138portable to the Mac and Windows platforms (NT and 95 only); you need
1139Python 1.4beta3 or later and Tk 4.1patch1 or later.
Guido van Rossum7ce61c11994-06-13 15:13:56 +00001140
1141- There's an interface to X11, including the Athena and Motif widget
1142sets (and a few individual widgets, like Mosaic's HTML widget and
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +00001143SGI's GL widget) available from
1144<URL:ftp://ftp.python.org/pub/python/src/X-extension.tar.gz>.
1145Support by Sjoerd Mullender <sjoerd@cwi.nl>.
Guido van Rossum7ce61c11994-06-13 15:13:56 +00001146
Guido van Rossum8a913021996-10-08 17:18:30 +00001147- On top of the X11 interface there's the (recently revived) vpApp
1148toolkit by Per Spilling, now also maintained by Sjoerd Mullender
1149<sjoerd@cwi.nl>. See <URL:ftp://ftp.cwi.nl/pub/sjoerd/vpApp.tar.gz>.
1150
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +00001151- The Mac port has a rich and ever-growing set of modules that support
1152the native Mac toolbox calls. See the documentation that comes with
1153the Mac port. See <URL:ftp://ftp.python.org/pub/python/mac>. Support
1154by Jack Jansen <jack@cwi.nl>.
Guido van Rossum7ce61c11994-06-13 15:13:56 +00001155
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +00001156- The NT port supported by Mark Hammond <MHammond@skippinet.com.au>
1157(see question 7.2) includes an interface to the Microsoft Foundation
1158Classes and a Python programming environment using it that's written
1159mostly in Python. See
1160<URL:ftp://ftp.python.org/pub/python/pythonwin/>.
Guido van Rossum7ce61c11994-06-13 15:13:56 +00001161
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +00001162- There's an object-oriented GUI based on the Microsoft Foundation
1163Classes model called WPY, supported by Jim Ahlstrom <jim@interet.com>.
1164Programs written in WPY run unchanged and with native look and feel on
1165Windows NT/95, Windows 3.1 (using win32s), and on Unix (using Tk).
1166Source and binaries for Windows and Linux are available in
1167<URL:ftp://ftp.python.org/pub/python/wpy/>.
1168
1169Obsolete or minority solutions:
Guido van Rossumbf8e7d51995-08-28 03:09:13 +00001170
Guido van Rossuma8a8d4a1995-03-10 16:19:31 +00001171- There's an interface to wxWindows. wxWindows is a portable GUI
1172class library written in C++. It supports XView, Motif, MS-Windows as
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +00001173targets. There is some support for Macs and CURSES as well.
1174wxWindows preserves the look and feel of the underlying graphics
1175toolkit. See the wxPython WWW page at
Guido van Rossuma8a8d4a1995-03-10 16:19:31 +00001176<URL:http://www.aiai.ed.ac.uk/~jacs/wx/wxpython/wxpython.html>.
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +00001177Support for wxPython (by Harri Pasanen <pa@tekla.fi>) appears
1178to have a low priority.
Guido van Rossuma8a8d4a1995-03-10 16:19:31 +00001179
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +00001180- For SGI IRIX only, there are unsupported interfaces to the complete
1181GL (Graphics Library -- low level but very good 3D capabilities) as
1182well as to FORMS (a buttons-and-sliders-etc package built on top of GL
1183by Mark Overmars -- ftp'able from
1184<URL:ftp://ftp.cs.ruu.nl/pub/SGI/FORMS/>). This is probably also
1185becoming obsolete, as OpenGL takes over.
1186
1187- There's an interface to STDWIN, a platform-independent low-level
1188windowing interface for Mac and X11. This is totally unsupported and
1189rapidly becoming obsolete. The STDWIN sources are at
1190<URL:ftp://ftp.cwi.nl/pub/stdwin/>. (For info about STDWIN 2.0,
1191please refer to Steven Pemberton <steven@cwi.nl> -- I believe it is
1192also dead.)
1193
1194- There once was an interface to WAFE, a Tcl interface to the X11
1195Motif and Athena widget sets. WAFE is at
1196<URL:ftp://ftp.wu-wien.ac.at/pub/src/X11/wafe/>. It's not clear what
1197the status of the Python support is.
Guido van Rossum3fc9d731995-07-25 15:10:56 +00001198
Guido van Rossum0d20cfa1996-07-30 18:53:05 +00001199- (The Fresco port that was mentioned in earlier versions of this FAQ
1200no longer seems to exist. Inquire with Mark Linton.)
Guido van Rossuma8a8d4a1995-03-10 16:19:31 +00001201
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +000012024.14. Q. Are there any interfaces to database packages in Python?
Guido van Rossum7ce61c11994-06-13 15:13:56 +00001203
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +00001204A. There's a whole collection of them in the contrib area of the ftp
1205server, see <URL:http://www.python.org/ftp/python/contrib/Database/>.
Guido van Rossum796b2591995-01-20 23:05:52 +00001206
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +000012074.15. Q. Is it possible to write obfuscated one-liners in Python?
Guido van Rossumc24da7c1994-09-23 14:08:41 +00001208
1209A. Yes. See the following three examples, due to Ulf Bartelt:
1210
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +00001211 # Primes < 1000
1212 print filter(None,map(lambda y:y*reduce(lambda x,y:x*y!=0,
1213 map(lambda x,y=y:y%x,range(2,int(pow(y,0.5)+1))),1),range(2,1000)))
Guido van Rossumc24da7c1994-09-23 14:08:41 +00001214
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +00001215 # First 10 Fibonacci numbers
1216 print map(lambda x,f=lambda x,f:(x<=1) or (f(x-1,f)+f(x-2,f)): f(x,f),
1217 range(10))
Guido van Rossumc24da7c1994-09-23 14:08:41 +00001218
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +00001219 # Mandelbrot set
1220 print (lambda Ru,Ro,Iu,Io,IM,Sx,Sy:reduce(lambda x,y:x+y,map(lambda y,
1221 Iu=Iu,Io=Io,Ru=Ru,Ro=Ro,Sy=Sy,L=lambda yc,Iu=Iu,Io=Io,Ru=Ru,Ro=Ro,i=IM,
1222 Sx=Sx,Sy=Sy:reduce(lambda x,y:x+y,map(lambda x,xc=Ru,yc=yc,Ru=Ru,Ro=Ro,
1223 i=i,Sx=Sx,F=lambda xc,yc,x,y,k,f=lambda xc,yc,x,y,k,f:(k<=0)or (x*x+y*y
1224 >=4.0) or 1+f(xc,yc,x*x-y*y+xc,2.0*x*y+yc,k-1,f):f(xc,yc,x,y,k,f):chr(
1225 64+F(Ru+x*(Ro-Ru)/Sx,yc,0,0,i)),range(Sx))):L(Iu+y*(Io-Iu)/Sy),range(Sy
1226 ))))(-2.1, 0.7, -1.2, 1.2, 30, 80, 24)
1227 # \___ ___/ \___ ___/ | | |__ lines on screen
1228 # V V | |______ columns on screen
1229 # | | |__________ maximum of "iterations"
1230 # | |_________________ range on y axis
1231 # |____________________________ range on x axis
Guido van Rossumc24da7c1994-09-23 14:08:41 +00001232
1233Don't try this at home, kids!
1234
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +000012354.16. Q. Is there an equivalent of C's "?:" ternary operator?
Guido van Rossumc24da7c1994-09-23 14:08:41 +00001236
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001237A. Not directly. In many cases you can mimic a?b:c with "a and b or
1238c", but there's a flaw: if b is zero (or empty, or None -- anything
1239that tests false) then c will be selected instead. In many cases you
1240can prove by looking at the code that this can't happen (e.g. because
1241b is a constant or has a type that can never be false), but in general
1242this can be a problem.
1243
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +00001244Tim Peters (who wishes it was Steve Majewski) suggested the following
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001245solution: (a and [b] or [c])[0]. Because [b] is a singleton list it
1246is never false, so the wrong path is never taken; then applying [0] to
1247the whole thing gets the b or c that you really wanted. Ugly, but it
1248gets you there in the rare cases where it is really inconvenient to
1249rewrite your code using 'if'.
1250
12514.17. Q. My class defines __del__ but it is not called when I delete the
1252object.
1253
1254A. There are several possible reasons for this.
1255
1256- The del statement does not necessarily call __del__ -- it simply
1257decrements the object's reference count, and if this reaches zero
1258__del__ is called.
1259
1260- If your data structures contain circular links (e.g. a tree where
1261each child has a parent pointer and each parent has a list of
1262children) the reference counts will never go back to zero. You'll
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +00001263have to define an explicit close() method which removes those
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001264pointers. Please don't ever call __del__ directly -- __del__ should
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +00001265call close() and close() should make sure that it can be called more
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001266than once for the same object.
1267
1268- If the object has ever been a local variable (or argument, which is
1269really the same thing) to a function that caught an expression in an
1270except clause, chances are that a reference to the object still exists
1271in that function's stack frame as contained in the stack trace.
1272Normally, deleting (better: assigning None to) sys.exc_traceback will
1273take care of this. If you a stack was printed for an unhandled
1274exception in an interactive interpreter, delete sys.last_traceback
1275instead.
1276
1277- There is code that deletes all objects when the interpreter exits,
1278but if your Python has been configured to support threads, it is not
1279called (because other threads may still be active). You can define
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +00001280your own cleanup function using sys.exitfunc (see question 4.4).
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001281
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +00001282- Finally, if your __del__ method raises an exception, this will be
1283ignored. Starting with Python 1.4beta3, a warning message is printed
1284to sys.stderr when this happens.
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +00001285
12864.18. Q. How do I change the shell environment for programs called
1287using os.popen() or os.system()? Changing os.environ doesn't work.
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001288
1289A. Modifying the environment passed to subshells was left out of the
1290interpreter because there seemed to be no well-established portable
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +00001291way to do it (in particular, some systems, have putenv(), others have
1292setenv(), and some have none at all).
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001293
1294However if all you want is to pass environment variables to the
1295commands run by os.system() or os.popen(), there's a simple solution:
1296prefix the command string with a couple of variable assignments and
Guido van Rossum796b2591995-01-20 23:05:52 +00001297export statements. The following would be universal for popen:
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001298
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +00001299 import os
1300 from commands import mkarg # nifty routine to add shell quoting
1301 def epopen(cmd, mode, env = {}):
1302 # env is a dictionary of environment variables
1303 prefix = ''
Guido van Rossum796b2591995-01-20 23:05:52 +00001304 for key, value in env.items():
1305 prefix = prefix + '%s=%s\n' % (key, mkarg(value)[1:])
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +00001306 prefix = prefix + 'export %s\n' % key
1307 return os.popen(prefix + cmd, mode)
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001308
13094.19. Q. What is a class?
1310
1311A. A class is the particular object type that is created by executing
Guido van Rossum796b2591995-01-20 23:05:52 +00001312a class statement. Class objects are used as templates, to create
1313class instance objects, which embody both the data structure and
1314program routines specific to a datatype.
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001315
13164.20. Q. What is a method?
1317
1318A. A method is a function that you normally call as
Guido van Rossum796b2591995-01-20 23:05:52 +00001319x.name(arguments...) for some object x. The term is used for methods
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001320of classes and class instances as well as for methods of built-in
Guido van Rossum796b2591995-01-20 23:05:52 +00001321objects. (The latter have a completely different implementation and
1322only share the way their calls look in Python code.) Methods of
1323classes (and class instances) are defined as functions inside the
1324class definition.
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001325
13264.21. Q. What is self?
1327
1328A. Self is merely a conventional name for the first argument of a
1329method -- i.e. a function defined inside a class definition. A method
1330defined as meth(self, a, b, c) should be called as x.meth(a, b, c) for
1331some instance x of the class in which the definition occurs;
1332the called method will think it is called as meth(x, a, b, c).
1333
13344.22. Q. What is a unbound method?
1335
1336A. An unbound method is a method defined in a class that is not yet
1337bound to an instance. You get an unbound method if you ask for a
1338class attribute that happens to be a function. You get a bound method
1339if you ask for an instance attribute. A bound method knows which
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +00001340instance it belongs to and calling it supplies the instance automatically;
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001341an unbound method only knows which class it wants for its first
1342argument (a derived class is also OK). Calling an unbound method
1343doesn't "magically" derive the first argument from the context -- you
1344have to provide it explicitly.
1345
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +000013464.23. Q. How do I call a method defined in a base class from a derived
1347class that overrides it?
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001348
1349A. If your class definition starts with "class Derived(Base): ..."
1350then you can call method meth defined in Base (or one of Base's base
1351classes) as Base.meth(self, arguments...). Here, Base.meth is an
1352unbound method (see previous question).
1353
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +000013544.24. Q. How do I call a method from a base class without using the
1355name of the base class?
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001356
1357A. DON'T DO THIS. REALLY. I MEAN IT. It appears that you could call
1358self.__class__.__bases__[0].meth(self, arguments...) but this fails when
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +00001359a doubly-derived method is derived from your class: for its instances,
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001360self.__class__.__bases__[0] is your class, not its base class -- so
1361(assuming you are doing this from within Derived.meth) you would start
1362a recursive call.
1363
13644.25. Q. How can I organize my code to make it easier to change the base
1365class?
1366
1367A. You could define an alias for the base class, assign the real base
1368class to it before your class definition, and use the alias throughout
1369your class. Then all you have to change is the value assigned to the
1370alias. Incidentally, this trick is also handy if you want to decide
1371dynamically (e.g. depending on availability of resources) which base
1372class to use. Example:
1373
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +00001374 BaseAlias = <real base class>
1375 class Derived(BaseAlias):
1376 def meth(self):
1377 BaseAlias.meth(self)
1378 ...
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001379
13804.26. Q. How can I find the methods or attributes of an object?
1381
1382A. This depends on the object type.
1383
1384For an instance x of a user-defined class, instance attributes are
1385found in the dictionary x.__dict__, and methods and attributes defined
1386by its class are found in x.__class__.__bases__[i].__dict__ (for i in
1387range(len(x.__class__.__bases__))). You'll have to walk the tree of
1388base classes to find *all* class methods and attributes.
1389
1390Many, but not all built-in types define a list of their method names
1391in x.__methods__, and if they have data attributes, their names may be
1392found in x.__members__. However this is only a convention.
1393
1394For more information, read the source of the standard (but
1395undocumented) module newdir.
1396
13974.27. Q. I can't seem to use os.read() on a pipe created with os.popen().
1398
1399A. os.read() is a low-level function which takes a file descriptor (a
1400small integer). os.popen() creates a high-level file object -- the
1401same type used for sys.std{in,out,err} and returned by the builtin
1402open() function. Thus, to read n bytes from a pipe p created with
1403os.popen(), you need to use p.read(n).
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +00001404
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +000014054.28. Q. How can I create a stand-alone binary from a Python script?
1406
1407The demo script "Demo/scripts/freeze.py" does what you want. (It's
1408actually not a demo but a support tool -- there is some extra code in
1409the interpreter to accommodate it.) It requires that you have the
1410Python build tree handy, complete with all the lib*.a files.
1411
1412This works by scanning your source recursively for import statements
1413(both forms) and looking for the modules on the standard Python path
1414as well as in the source directory (for built-in modules). It then
1415"compiles" the modules written in Python to C code (array initializers
1416that can be turned into code objects using the marshal module) and
1417creates a custom-made config file that only contains those built-in
1418modules which are actually used in the program. It then compiles the
1419generated C code and links it with the rest of the Python interpreter
1420to form a self-contained binary which acts exactly like your script.
1421
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +00001422Hint: the freeze program only works if your script's filename ends in
1423".py".
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +00001424
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +000014254.29. Q. What WWW tools are there for Python?
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +00001426
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +00001427A. See the chapter titled "Internet and WWW" in the Library Reference
1428Manual. There's also a web browser written in Python, called Grail --
Guido van Rossum4662b871996-11-27 15:24:34 +00001429see <URL:http://grail.cnri.reston.va.us/grail/>.
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +00001430
1431Steve Miale <smiale@cs.indiana.edu> has written a modular WWW browser
1432called Dancer. An alpha version can be FTP'ed from
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +00001433<URL:ftp://ftp.cs.indiana.edu/pub/smiale/dancer.tar.gz>. (There are a
1434few articles about Dancer in the (hyper)mail archive
1435<URL:http://www.cwi.nl/~guido/hypermail/python-1994q3/index.html>.)
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +00001436
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +000014374.30. Q. How do I run a subprocess with pipes connected to both input
Guido van Rossum796b2591995-01-20 23:05:52 +00001438and output?
1439
1440A. This is really a UNIX question. Also, in general, it is unwise to
1441do so, because you can easily cause a deadlock where the parent
1442process is blocked waiting for output from the child, while the child
1443is blocked waiting for input from the child. This can be caused
1444because the parent expects the child to output more text than it does,
1445or it can be caused by data being stuck in stdio buffers due to lack
1446of flushing. The Python parent can of course explicitly flush the data
1447it sends to the child before it reads any output, but if the child is
1448a naive C program it can easily have been written to never explicitly
1449flush its output, even if it is interactive, since flushing is
1450normally automatic.
1451
1452In many cases, all you really need is to run some data through a
1453command and get the result back. Unless the data is infinite in size,
1454the easiest (and often the most efficient!) way to do this is to write
1455it to a temporary file and run the command with that temporary file as
1456input. The standard module tempfile exports a function mktemp() which
1457generates unique temporary file names.
1458
1459If after reading all of the above you still want to connect two pipes
1460to a subprocess's standard input and output, here's a simple solution,
1461due to Jack Jansen:
1462
Guido van Rossume7d92d51995-10-11 18:06:54 +00001463 import os
1464 import sys
1465 import string
Guido van Rossum796b2591995-01-20 23:05:52 +00001466
Guido van Rossume7d92d51995-10-11 18:06:54 +00001467 MAXFD = 100 # Max number of file descriptors in this system
Guido van Rossum796b2591995-01-20 23:05:52 +00001468
Guido van Rossume7d92d51995-10-11 18:06:54 +00001469 def popen2(cmd):
1470 cmd = string.split(cmd)
1471 p2cread, p2cwrite = os.pipe()
1472 c2pread, c2pwrite = os.pipe()
1473 pid = os.fork()
1474 if pid == 0:
1475 # Child
1476 os.close(0)
1477 os.close(1)
Guido van Rossumca318ec1996-06-26 19:50:09 +00001478 if os.dup(p2cread) != 0:
Guido van Rossume7d92d51995-10-11 18:06:54 +00001479 sys.stderr.write('popen2: bad read dup\n')
Guido van Rossumca318ec1996-06-26 19:50:09 +00001480 if os.dup(c2pwrite) != 1:
Guido van Rossume7d92d51995-10-11 18:06:54 +00001481 sys.stderr.write('popen2: bad write dup\n')
1482 for i in range(3, MAXFD):
1483 try:
1484 os.close(i)
1485 except:
1486 pass
1487 try:
1488 os.execv(cmd[0], cmd)
1489 finally:
1490 os._exit(1)
1491 os.close(p2cread)
1492 tochild = os.fdopen(p2cwrite, 'w')
1493 os.close(c2pwrite)
1494 fromchild = os.fdopen(c2pread, 'r')
1495 return fromchild, tochild
Guido van Rossum796b2591995-01-20 23:05:52 +00001496
1497Note that many interactive programs (e.g. vi) don't work well with
1498pipes substituted for standard input and output. You will have to use
1499pseudo ttys ("ptys") instead of pipes. There is some undocumented
1500code to use these in the library module pty.py -- I'm afraid you're on
Guido van Rossum3fc9d731995-07-25 15:10:56 +00001501your own here.
1502
1503A different answer is a Python interface to Don Libes' "expect"
1504library. A prerelease of this is available on the Python ftp mirror
1505sites in the contrib subdirectory as expy-0.3.tar.gz, e.g.
1506<URL:ftp://ftp.python.org/pub/python/contrib/expy-0.3.tar.gz>.
Guido van Rossum796b2591995-01-20 23:05:52 +00001507
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +000015084.31. Q. How do I call a function if I have the arguments in a tuple?
Guido van Rossumac3f2121995-04-10 11:53:42 +00001509
1510A. Use the built-in function apply(). For instance,
1511
1512 func(1, 2, 3)
1513
1514is equivalent to
1515
1516 args = (1, 2, 3)
1517 apply(func, args)
1518
1519Note that func(args) is not the same -- it calls func() with exactly
1520one argument, the tuple args, instead of three arguments, the integers
15211, 2 and 3.
1522
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +000015234.32. Q. How do I enable font-lock-mode for Python in Emacs?
1524
1525A. Assuming you're already using python-mode and font-lock-mode
1526separately, all you need to do is put this in your .emacs file:
1527
Guido van Rossume7d92d51995-10-11 18:06:54 +00001528 (defun my-python-mode-hook ()
1529 (setq font-lock-keywords python-font-lock-keywords)
1530 (font-lock-mode 1))
1531 (add-hook 'python-mode-hook 'my-python-mode-hook)
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +00001532
15334.33. Q. Is there an inverse to the format operator (a la C's scanf())?
1534
1535A. Not as such.
1536
1537For simple input parsing, the easiest approach is usually to split
1538the line into whitespace-delimited words using string.split(), and to
1539convert decimal strings to numeric values using string.atoi(),
1540string.atol() or string.atof(). (Python's atoi() is 32-bit and its
1541atol() is arbitrary precision.) If you want to use another delimiter
1542than whitespace, use string.splitfield() (possibly combining it with
1543string.strip() which removes surrounding whitespace from a string).
1544
1545For more complicated input parsing, regular expressions (see module
1546regex) are better suited and more powerful than C's scanf().
1547
Guido van Rossumca318ec1996-06-26 19:50:09 +000015484.34. Q. Can I have Tk events handled while waiting for I/O?
1549
1550A. Yes, and you don't even need threads! But you'll have to
1551restructure your I/O code a bit. Tk has the equivalent of Xt's
1552XtAddInput() call, which allows you to register a callback function
1553which will be called from the Tk mainloop when I/O is possible on a
1554file descriptor. Here's what you need:
1555
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +00001556 from Tkinter import tkinter
1557 tkinter.createfilehandler(file, mask, callback)
Guido van Rossumca318ec1996-06-26 19:50:09 +00001558
1559The file may be a Python file or socket object (actually, anything
1560with a fileno() method), or an integer file descriptor. The mask is
1561one of the constants tkinter.READABLE or tkinter.WRITABLE. The
1562callback is called as follows:
1563
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +00001564 callback(file, mask)
Guido van Rossumca318ec1996-06-26 19:50:09 +00001565
1566You must unregister the callback when you're done, using
1567
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +00001568 tkinter.deletefilehandler(file)
Guido van Rossumca318ec1996-06-26 19:50:09 +00001569
1570Note: since you don't know *how many bytes* are available for reading,
1571you can't use the Python file object's read or readline methods, since
1572these will insist on reading a predefined number of bytes. For
1573sockets, the recv() or recvfrom() methods will work fine; for other
1574files, use os.read(file.fileno(), maxbytecount).
1575
15764.35. Q. How do I write a function with output parameters (call by reference)?
1577
1578A. [Mark Lutz] The thing to remember is that arguments are passed by
1579assignment in Python. Since assignment just creates references to
1580objects, there's no alias between an argument name in the caller and
1581callee, and so no call-by-reference per se. But you can simulate it
1582in a number of ways:
1583
15841) By using global variables; but you probably shouldn't :-)
1585
15862) By passing a mutable (changeable in-place) object:
1587
1588 def func1(a):
1589 a[0] = 'new-value' # 'a' references a mutable list
1590 a[1] = a[1] + 1 # changes a shared object
1591
1592 args = ['old-value', 99]
1593 func1(args)
1594 print args[0], args[1] # output: new-value 100
1595
15963) By return a tuple, holding the final values of arguments:
1597
1598 def func2(a, b):
1599 a = 'new-value' # a and b are local names
1600 b = b + 1 # assigned to new objects
1601 return a, b # return new values
1602
1603 x, y = 'old-value', 99
1604 x, y = func2(x, y)
1605 print x, y # output: new-value 100
1606
16074) And other ideas that fall-out from Python's object model. For
1608 instance, it might be clearer to pass in a mutable dictionary:
1609
1610 def func3(args):
1611 args['a'] = 'new-value' # args is a mutable dictionary
1612 args['b'] = args['b'] + 1 # change it in-place
1613
1614 args = {'a':' old-value', 'b': 99}
1615 func3(args)
1616 print args['a'], args['b']
1617
16185) Or bundle-up values in a class instance:
1619
1620 class callByRef:
1621 def __init__(self, **args):
1622 for (key, value) in args.items():
1623 setattr(self, key, value)
1624
1625 def func4(args):
1626 args.a = 'new-value' # args is a mutable callByRef
1627 args.b = args.b + 1 # change object in-place
1628
1629 args = callByRef(a='old-value', b=99)
1630 func4(args)
1631 print args.a, args.b
1632
1633 But there's probably no good reason to get this complicated :-).
1634
1635[Python' author favors solution 3 in most cases.]
1636
Guido van Rossum0d20cfa1996-07-30 18:53:05 +000016374.36. Q. Please explain the rules for local and global variables in Python.
1638
1639A. [Ken Manheimer] In Python, procedure variables are implicitly
1640global, unless they assigned anywhere within the block. In that case
1641they are implicitly local, and you need to explicitly declare them as
1642'global'.
1643
1644Though a bit surprising at first, a moments consideration explains
1645this. On one hand, requirement of 'global' for assigned vars provides
1646a bar against unintended side-effects. On the other hand, if global
1647were required for all global references, you'd be using global all the
1648time. Eg, you'd have to declare as global every reference to a
1649builtin function, or to a component of an imported module. This
1650clutter would defeat the usefulness of the 'global' declaration for
1651identifying side-effects.
1652
16534.37. Q. How can I have modules that mutually import each other?
1654
1655A. Jim Roskind recommends the following order in each module:
1656
1657First: all exports (like globals, functions, and classes that don't
1658need imported bases classes).
1659
1660Then: all import statements.
1661
1662Finally: all active code (including globals that are initialized from
1663imported values).
1664
1665Python's author doesn't like this approach much because the imports
1666appear in a strange place, but has to admit that it works. His
1667recommended strategy is to avoid all uses of "from <module> import *"
1668(so everything from an imported module is referenced as
1669<module>.<name>) and to place all code inside functions.
1670Initializations of global variables and class variables should use
1671constants or built-in functions only.
1672
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +000016734.38. Q. How do I copy an object in Python?
1674
1675A. There is no generic copying operation built into Python, however
1676most object types have some way to create a clone. Here's how for the
1677most common objects:
1678
1679- For immutable objects (numbers, strings, tuples), cloning is
1680unnecessary since their value can't change.
1681
1682- For lists (and generally for mutable sequence types), a clone is
1683created by the expression l[:].
1684
1685- For dictionaries, the following function returns a clone:
1686
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +00001687 def dictclone(o):
1688 n = {}
1689 for k in o.keys(): n[k] = o[k]
1690 return n
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +00001691
1692- Finally, for generic objects, the "copy" module defines two
1693functions for copying objects. copy.copy(x) returns a copy as shown
1694by the above rules. copy.deepcopy(x) also copies the elements of
1695composite objects. See the section on this module in the Library
1696Reference Manual.
1697
16984.39. Q. How to implement persistent objects in Python? (Persistent ==
1699automatically saved to and restored from disk.)
1700
1701A. The library module "pickle" now solves this in a very general way
1702(though you still can't store things like open files, sockests or
1703windows), and the library module "shelve" uses pickle and (g)dbm to
1704create presistent mappings containing arbitrary Python objects.
1705
Guido van Rossuma4e41a81996-10-22 03:00:43 +000017064.40. Q. I try to use __spam and I get an error about _SomeClassName__spam.
1707
1708A. Variables with double leading underscore are "mangled" to provide a
1709simple but effective way to define class private variables. See the
1710chapter "New in Release 1.4" in the Python Tutorial.
1711
Guido van Rossumc59120b1996-11-14 14:10:11 +000017124.41. Q. How do I delete a file? And other file questions.
1713
1714A. Use os.remove(filename) or os.unlink(filename); for documentation,
1715see the posix section of the library manual. They are the same,
1716unlink() is simply the Unix name for this function. In earlier
1717versions of Python, only os.unlink() was available.
1718
1719To remove a directory, use os.rmdir(); use os.mkdir() to create one.
1720
1721To rename a file, use os.rename().
1722
1723To truncate a file, open it using f = open(filename, "w+"), and use
1724f.truncate(offset); offset defaults to the current seek position.
1725There's also os.ftruncate(fd, offset) for files opened with os.open()
1726-- for advanced Unix hacks only.
1727
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +00001728
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +000017295. Extending Python
1730===================
1731
17325.1. Q. Can I create my own functions in C?
1733
1734A. Yes, you can create built-in modules containing functions,
Guido van Rossum24349991994-02-02 14:12:45 +00001735variables, exceptions and even new types in C. This is explained in
1736the document "Extending and Embedding the Python Interpreter" (the
1737LaTeX file Doc/ext.tex). Also read the chapter on dynamic loading.
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +00001738
17395.2. Q. Can I create my own functions in C++?
1740
1741A. Yes, using the C-compatibility features found in C++. Basically
1742you place extern "C" { ... } around the Python include files and put
1743extern "C" before each function that is going to be called by the
1744Python interpreter. Global or static C++ objects with constructors
1745are probably not a good idea.
1746
Guido van Rossum7ce61c11994-06-13 15:13:56 +000017475.3. Q. How can I execute arbitrary Python statements from C?
1748
1749A. The highest-level function to do this is run_command() which takes
1750a single string argument which is executed in the context of module
1751__main__ and returns 0 for success and -1 when an exception occurred
1752(including SyntaxError). If you want more control, use run_string();
1753see the source for run_command() in Python/pythonrun.c.
1754
17555.4. Q. How can I evaluate an arbitrary Python expression from C?
1756
1757A. Call the function run_string() from the previous question with the
1758start symbol eval_input; it then parses an expression, evaluates it
1759and returns its value. See exec_eval() in Python/bltinmodule.c.
1760
17615.5. Q. How do I extract C values from a Python object?
1762
1763A. That depends on the object's type. If it's a tuple,
1764gettuplesize(o) returns its length and gettupleitem(o, i) returns its
1765i'th item; similar for lists with getlistsize(o) and getlistitem(o,
1766i). For strings, getstringsize(o) returns its length and
1767getstringvalue(o) a pointer to its value (note that Python strings may
1768contain null bytes so strlen() is not safe). To test which type an
1769object is, first make sure it isn't NULL, and then use
1770is_stringobject(o), is_tupleobject(o), is_listobject(o) etc.
1771
17725.6. Q. How do I use mkvalue() to create a tuple of arbitrary length?
1773
1774A. You can't. Use t = newtupleobject(n) instead, and fill it with
1775objects using settupleitem(t, i, o) -- note that this "eats" a
1776reference count of o. Similar for lists with newlistobject(n) and
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001777setlistitem(l, i, o). Note that you *must* set all the tuple items to
1778some value before you pass the tuple to Python code --
1779newtupleobject(n) initializes them to NULL, which isn't a valid Python
1780value.
1781
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +000017825.7. Q. How do I call an object's method from C?
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001783
1784A. Here's a function (untested) that might become part of the next
1785release in some form. It uses <stdarg.h> to allow passing the
1786argument list on to vmkvalue():
1787
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +00001788 object *call_method(object *inst, char *methodname, char *format, ...)
1789 {
1790 object *method;
1791 object *args;
1792 object *result;
1793 va_list va;
1794 method = getattr(inst, methodname);
1795 if (method == NULL) return NULL;
1796 va_start(va, format);
1797 args = vmkvalue(format, va);
1798 va_end(va);
1799 if (args == NULL) {
1800 DECREF(method);
1801 return NULL;
1802 }
1803 result = call_object(method, args);
1804 DECREF(method);
1805 DECREF(args);
1806 return result;
1807 }
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001808
1809This works for any instance that has methods -- whether built-in or
1810user-defined. You are responsible for eventually DECREF'ing the
1811return value.
1812
1813To call, e.g., a file object's "seek" method with arguments 10, 0
1814(assuming the file object pointer is "f"):
1815
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +00001816 res = call_method(f, "seek", "(OO)", 10, 0);
1817 if (res == NULL) {
1818 ... an exception occurred ...
1819 }
1820 else {
1821 DECREF(res);
1822 }
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001823
1824Note that since call_object() *always* wants a tuple for the argument
1825list, to call a function without arguments, pass "()" for the format,
1826and to call a function with one argument, surround the argument in
1827parentheses, e.g. "(i)".
1828
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +000018295.8. Q. How do I catch the output from print_error()?
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001830
1831A. (Due to Mark Hammond):
1832
1833* in Python code, define an object that supports the "write()" method.
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001834
1835* redirect sys.stdout and sys.stderr to this object.
1836
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +00001837* call print_error, or just allow the standard traceback mechanism to
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001838work.
1839
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +00001840Then, the output will go wherever your write() method sends it.
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001841
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +000018425.9. Q. How do I access a module written in Python from C?
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001843
1844A. You can get a pointer to the module object as follows:
1845
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +00001846 module = import_module("<modulename>");
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001847
1848If the module hasn't been imported yet (i.e. it is not yet present in
1849sys.modules), this initializes the module; otherwise it simply returns
1850the value of sys.modules["<modulename>"]. Note that it doesn't enter
1851the module into any namespace -- it only ensures it has been
1852initialized and is stored in sys.modules.
1853
1854You can then access the module's attributes (i.e. any name defined in
1855the module) as follows:
1856
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +00001857 attr = getattr(module, "<attrname>");
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00001858
1859Calling setattr(), to assign to variables in the module, also works.
Guido van Rossum7ce61c11994-06-13 15:13:56 +00001860
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +000018615.10. Q. How do I interface to C++ objects from Python?
Guido van Rossumb0a2ce51995-08-28 19:41:35 +00001862
1863A. Depending on your requirements, there are many approaches. Begin
1864by reading the "Extending and Embedding" document (Doc/ext.tex, see
1865also <URL:http://www.python.org/doc/>). Realize that for the Python
1866run-time system, there isn't a whole lot of difference between C and
1867C++ -- so the strategy to build a new Python type around a C structure
1868(pointer) type will also work for C++ objects.
1869
1870Automatic generation of interfaces between Python and C++ is still at
1871the horizon -- parsing C++ header files requires an almost complete
1872C++ parser, and many features aren't easily translated from C++ to
1873Python: certain forms of operator oveloading, function overloading
1874(best approached by a varargs function which explicitly type-checks
1875its arguments), and reference arguments are just a number of features
1876that are hard to translate correctly if at all.
1877
1878The hardest problem is to transparently translate the C++ class
1879hierarchy to Python, so that Python programs derive classes from C++
1880classes. Given suitable constraints, this may be possible, but it
1881would require more space than I have in this FAQ to explain how.
1882In any case, you can get quite a bit done without this, using just the
1883existing classes from Python.
1884
1885If this all seems rather daunting, that may be because it is -- C++
1886isn't exactly a baby to handle without gloves! However, people have
1887accomplished amazing feats of interfacing between Python and C++, and
1888a detailed question posted to the Python list is likely to elicit some
1889interesting and useful responses.
1890
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +00001891
18926. Python's design
1893==================
1894
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +000018956.1. Q. Why isn't there a switch or case statement in Python?
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +00001896
1897A. You can do this easily enough with a sequence of
1898if... elif... elif... else. There have been some proposals for switch
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +00001899statement syntax, but there is no consensus (yet) on whether and how
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +00001900to do range tests.
1901
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +000019026.2. Q. Why does Python use indentation for grouping of statements?
Guido van Rossumc50158e1994-05-31 09:18:50 +00001903
1904A. Basically I believe that using indentation for grouping is
1905extremely elegant and contributes a lot to the clarity of the average
1906Python program. Most people learn to love this feature after a while.
1907Some arguments for it:
1908
1909- Since there are no begin/end brackets there cannot be a disagreement
1910between grouping perceived by the parser and the human reader. I
1911remember long ago seeing a C fragment like this:
1912
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +00001913 if (x <= y)
1914 x++;
1915 y--;
1916 z++;
Guido van Rossumc50158e1994-05-31 09:18:50 +00001917
1918and staring a long time at it wondering why y was being decremented
1919even for x > y... (And I wasn't a C newbie then either.)
1920
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +00001921- Since there are no begin/end brackets, Python is much less prone to
1922coding-style conflicts. In C there are loads of different ways to
1923place the braces (including the choice whether to place braces around
1924single statements in certain cases, for consistency). If you're used
1925to reading (and writing) code that uses one style, you will feel at
1926least slightly uneasy when reading (or being required to write)
1927another style.
Guido van Rossumc50158e1994-05-31 09:18:50 +00001928
1929- Many coding styles place begin/end brackets on a line by themself.
1930This makes programs considerably longer and wastes valuable screen
1931space, making it harder to get a good overview over a program.
1932Ideally, a function should fit on one basic tty screen (say, 20
1933lines). 20 lines of Python are worth a LOT more than 20 lines of C.
1934This is not solely due to the lack of begin/end brackets (the lack of
1935declarations also helps, and the powerful operations of course), but
1936it certainly helps!
1937
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +000019386.3. Q. Why are Python strings immutable?
Guido van Rossum3de27361994-07-25 14:19:33 +00001939
1940A. There are two advantages. One is performance: knowing that a
1941string is immutable makes it easy to lay it out at construction time
1942-- fixed and unchanging storage requirements. (This is also one of
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +00001943the reasons for the distinction between tuples and lists.) The
Guido van Rossum3de27361994-07-25 14:19:33 +00001944other is that strings in Python are considered as "elemental" as
1945numbers. No amount of activity will change the value 8 to anything
1946else, and in Python, no amount of activity will change the string
1947"eight" to anything else. (Adapted from Jim Roskind)
1948
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +000019496.4. Q. Why don't strings have methods like index() or sort(), like
Guido van Rossum3de27361994-07-25 14:19:33 +00001950lists?
1951
1952A. Good question. Strings currently don't have methods at all
1953(likewise tuples and numbers). Long ago, it seemed unnecessary to
1954implement any of these functions in C, so a standard library module
1955"string" written in Python was created that performs string related
1956operations. Since then, the cry for performance has moved most of
1957them into the built-in module strop (this is imported by module
Guido van Rossumf8c76d01994-08-17 12:19:53 +00001958string, which is still the preferred interface, without loss of
Guido van Rossum3de27361994-07-25 14:19:33 +00001959performance except during initialization). Some of these functions
1960(e.g. index()) could easily be implemented as string methods instead,
1961but others (e.g. sort()) can't, since their interface prescribes that
1962they modify the object, while strings are immutable (see the previous
1963question).
1964
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +000019656.5. Q. Why does Python use methods for some functionality
Guido van Rossum3de27361994-07-25 14:19:33 +00001966(e.g. list.index()) but functions for other (e.g. len(list))?
1967
1968A. Functions are used for those operations that are generic for a
1969group of types and which should work even for objects that don't have
1970methods at all (e.g. numbers, strings, tuples). Also, implementing
1971len(), max(), min() as a built-in function is actually less code than
1972implementing them as methods for each type. One can quibble about
1973individual cases but it's really too late to change such things
1974fundamentally now.
1975
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +000019766.6. Q. Why can't I derive a class from built-in types (e.g. lists or
Guido van Rossum3de27361994-07-25 14:19:33 +00001977files)?
1978
1979A. This is caused by the relatively late addition of (user-defined)
1980classes to the language -- the implementation framework doesn't easily
1981allow it. See the answer to question 4.2 for a work-around. This
1982*may* be fixed in the (distant) future.
1983
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +000019846.7. Q. Why must 'self' be declared and used explicitly in method
Guido van Rossum3de27361994-07-25 14:19:33 +00001985definitions and calls?
1986
1987A. By asking this question you reveal your C++ background. :-)
1988When I added classes, this was (again) the simplest way of
1989implementing methods without too many changes to the interpreter. I
1990borrowed the idea from Modula-3. It turns out to be very useful, for
1991a variety of reasons.
1992
1993First, it makes it more obvious that you are using a method or
1994instance attribute instead of a local variable. Reading "self.x" or
1995"self.meth()" makes it absolutely clear that an instance variable or
1996method is used even if you don't know the class definition by heart.
1997In C++, you can sort of tell by the lack of a local variable
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +00001998declaration (assuming globals are rare or easily recognizable) -- but
Guido van Rossum3de27361994-07-25 14:19:33 +00001999in Python, there are no local variable declarations, so you'd have to
2000look up the class definition to be sure.
2001
2002Second, it means that no special syntax is necessary if you want to
2003explicitly reference or call the method from a particular class. In
2004C++, if you want to use a method from base class that is overridden in
2005a derived class, you have to use the :: operator -- in Python you can
2006write baseclass.methodname(self, <argument list>). This is
2007particularly useful for __init__() methods, and in general in cases
2008where a derived class method wants to extend the base class method of
2009the same name and thus has to call the base class method somehow.
2010
2011Lastly, for instance variables, it solves a syntactic problem with
2012assignment: since local variables in Python are (by definition!) those
2013variables to which a value assigned in a function body (and that
2014aren't explicitly declared global), there has to be some way to tell
2015the interpreter that an assignment was meant to assign to an instance
2016variable instead of to a local variable, and it should preferably be
2017syntactic (for efficiency reasons). C++ does this through
2018declarations, but Python doesn't have declarations and it would be a
2019pity having to introduce them just for this purpose. Using the
2020explicit "self.var" solves this nicely. Similarly, for using instance
2021variables, having to write "self.var" means that references to
2022unqualified names inside a method don't have to search the instance's
2023directories.
2024
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +000020256.8. Q. Can't you emulate threads in the interpreter instead of
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00002026relying on an OS-specific thread implementation?
2027
2028A. Unfortunately, the interpreter pushes at least one C stack frame
2029for each Python stack frame. Also, extensions can call back into
2030Python at almost random moments. Therefore a complete threads
2031implementation requires thread support for C.
2032
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +000020336.9. Q. Why can't lambda forms contain statements?
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +00002034
2035A. Python lambda forms cannot contain statements because Python's
Guido van Rossum796b2591995-01-20 23:05:52 +00002036syntactic framework can't handle statements nested inside expressions.
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +00002037
2038However, in Python, this is not a serious problem. Unlike lambda
2039forms in other languages, where they add functionality, Python lambdas
2040are only a shorthand notation if you're too lazy to define a function.
2041
2042Functions are already first class objects in Python, and can be
2043declared in a local scope. Therefore the only advantage of using a
2044lambda form instead of a locally-defined function is that you'll have
2045to invent a name for the function -- but that's just a local variable
2046to which the function object (which is exactly the same type of object
2047that a lambda form yields) is assigned!
2048
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +000020496.10. Q. Why don't lambdas have access to variables defined in the
2050containing scope?
2051
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +00002052A. Because they are implemented as ordinary functions.
2053See question 4.5 above.
Guido van Rossum8727df41996-09-09 15:16:39 +00002054
20556.11. Q. Why can't recursive functions be defined inside other functions?
2056
2057A. See question 4.5 above.
2058
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +000020596.12. Q. Why is there no more efficient way of iterating over a dictionary
2060than first constructing the list of keys()?
2061
2062A. Have you tried it? I bet it's fast enough for your purposes! In
2063most cases such a list takes only a few percent of the space occupied
2064by the dictionary -- it needs only 4 bytes (the size of a pointer) per
2065key -- a dictionary costs 8 bytes per key plus between 30 and 70
2066percent hash table overhead, plus the space for the keys and values --
2067by necessity all keys are unique objects and a string object (the most
2068common key type) costs at least 18 bytes plus the length of the
2069string. Add to that the values contained in the dictionary, and you
2070see that 4 bytes more per item really isn't that much more memory...
2071
2072A call to dict.keys() makes one fast scan over the dictionary
2073(internally, the iteration function does exist) copying the pointers
2074to the key objects into a pre-allocated list object of the right size.
2075The iteration time isn't lost (since you'll have to iterate anyway --
2076unless in the majority of cases your loop terminates very prematurely
2077(which I doubt since you're getting the keys in random order).
2078
2079I don't expose the dictionary iteration operation to Python
2080programmers because the dictionary shouldn't be modified during the
2081entire iteration -- if it is, there's a very small chance that the
2082dictionary is reorganized because the hash table becomes too full, and
2083then the iteration may miss some items and see others twice. Exactly
2084because this only occurs rarely, it would lead to hidden bugs in
2085programs: it's easy never to have it happen during test runs if you
2086only insert or delete a few items per iteration -- but your users will
2087surely hit upon it sooner or later.
2088
Guido van Rossumb0a2ce51995-08-28 19:41:35 +000020896.13. Q. Can Python be compiled to machine code, C or some other language?
2090
2091A. Not easily. Python's high level data types, dynamic typing of
2092objects and run-time invocation of the interpreter (using eval() or
2093exec) together mean that a "compiled" Python program would probably
2094consist mostly of calls into the Python run-time system, even for
2095seemingly simple operations like "x+1". Thus, the performance gain
2096would probably be minimal.
2097
2098Internally, Python source code is always translated into a "virtual
2099machine code" or "byte code" representation before it is interpreted
2100(by the "Python virtual machine" or "bytecode interpreter"). In order
2101to avoid the overhead of parsing and translating modules that rarely
2102change over and over again, this byte code is written on a file whose
2103name ends in ".pyc" whenever a module is parsed (from a file whose
2104name ends in ".py"). When the corresponding .py file is changed, it
2105is parsed and translated again and the .pyc file is rewritten. There
2106is no performance difference once the .pyc file has been loaded (the
2107bytecode read from the .pyc file is exactly the same as the bytecode
2108created by direct translation). The only difference is that loading
2109code from a .pyc file is faster than parsing and translating a .py
2110file, so the presence of precompiled .pyc files will generally improve
2111start-up time of Python scripts. If desired, the Lib/compileall.py
2112module/script can be used to force creation of valid .pyc files for a
2113given set of modules.
2114
2115If you are looking for a way to translate Python programs in order to
2116distribute them in binary form, without the need to distribute the
2117interpreter and library as well, have a look at the freeze.py script
2118in the Tools/freeze directory. This creates a single binary file
2119incorporating your program, the Python interpreter, and those parts of
2120the Python library that are needed by your program. Of course, the
2121resulting binary will only run on the same type of platform as that
2122used to create it.
2123
2124Hints for proper usage of freeze.py:
2125
2126- the script must be in a file whose name ends in .py
2127
2128- you must have installed Python fully:
2129
Guido van Rossume7d92d51995-10-11 18:06:54 +00002130 make install
2131 make libinstall
2132 make inclinstall
2133 make libainstall
Guido van Rossumb0a2ce51995-08-28 19:41:35 +00002134
Guido van Rossum05151e01995-09-28 13:24:46 +000021356.14. Q. Why doesn't Python use proper garbage collection?
2136
2137A. It's looking less and less likely that Python will ever get
2138"automatic" garbage collection (GC). For one thing, unless this were
2139added to C as a standard feature, it's a portability pain in the ass.
2140And yes, I know about the Xerox library. It has bits of assembler
2141code for *most* *common* platforms. Not for all. And although it is
2142mostly transparent, it isn't completely transparent (when I once
2143linked Python with it, it dumped core).
2144
2145"Proper" GC also becomes a problem when Python gets embedded into
2146other applications. While in a stand-alone Python it may be fine to
2147replace the standard malloc() and free() with versions provided by the
2148GC library, an application embedding Python may want to have its *own*
2149substitute for malloc() and free(), and may not want Python's. Right
2150now, Python works with anything that implements malloc() and free()
2151properly.
2152
2153Besides, the predictability of destructor calls in Python is kind of
2154attractive. With GC, the following code (which is fine in current
2155Python) will run out of file descriptors long before it runs out of
2156memory:
2157
Guido van Rossume7d92d51995-10-11 18:06:54 +00002158 for file in <very long list of files>:
2159 f = open(file)
2160 c = file.read(1)
Guido van Rossum05151e01995-09-28 13:24:46 +00002161
2162Using the current reference counting and destructor scheme, each new
2163assignment to f closes the previous file. Using GC, this is not
2164guaranteed. Sure, you can think of ways to fix this. But it's not
2165off-the-shelf technology.
2166
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +00002167
21687. Using Python on non-UNIX platforms
2169=====================================
2170
Guido van Rossum91f60831994-02-15 15:52:27 +000021717.1. Q. Is there a Mac version of Python?
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +00002172
Guido van Rossume530c581995-04-10 12:32:16 +00002173A. Yes, see the "mac" subdirectory of the distribution sites,
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +00002174e.g. <URL:ftp://ftp.python.org/pub/python/mac/>.
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +00002175
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +000021767.2. Q. Are there DOS and Windows versions of Python?
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +00002177
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +00002178A. Yes. There is a plethora of not-always-compatible versions. See
2179the "pythonwin", "wpy", "nt" and "pc" subdirectories of the
2180distribution sites. A quick comparison:
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +00002181
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +00002182PythonWin: Extensive support for the 32-bit native Windows API and GUI
2183building using MFC. Windows NT and Windows 95 only (and Windows
21843.1(1) using win32s, until Microsoft stops supporting it :-( ).
2185<URL:ftp://ftp.python.org/pub/python/pythonwin/>.
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00002186
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +00002187WPY: Ports to DOS, Windows 3.1(1), Windows 95, Windows NT and OS/2.
2188Also contains a GUI package that offers portability between Windows
2189(not DOS) and Unix, and native look and feel on both.
2190<URL:ftp://ftp.python.org/pub/python/wpy/>.
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00002191
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +00002192NT: Basic ports built straight from the 1.4 distribution for Windows
219395 and Windows NT. This will eventually provide core support for
2194both PythonWin and WPY on all 32-bit Microsoft platforms.
Guido van Rossum3fc9d731995-07-25 15:10:56 +00002195<URL:ftp://ftp.python.org/pub/python/nt/>.
2196
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +00002197PC: Old, unsupported ports to DOS, Windows 3.1(1) and OS/2.
2198<URL:ftp://ftp.python.org/pub/python/pc/>.
Guido van Rossum91f60831994-02-15 15:52:27 +00002199
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +000022007.3. Q. Is there an OS/2 version of Python?
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +00002201
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +00002202A. Yes, see the "pc" and "wpy" subdirectory of the distribution sites
2203(see above).
Guido van Rossum061f1821994-10-06 16:03:45 +00002204
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +000022057.4. Q. Is there a VMS version of Python?
Guido van Rossume530c581995-04-10 12:32:16 +00002206
Guido van Rossum3fc9d731995-07-25 15:10:56 +00002207A. Donn Cave <donn@cac.washington.edu> did a partial port. The
2208results of his efforts are on public display in
Guido van Rossumbf8e7d51995-08-28 03:09:13 +00002209<<URL:ftp://ftp.python.org/pub/python/contrib/vms.tar.gz/>. Someone
2210else is working on a more complete port, for details watch the list.
Guido van Rossume530c581995-04-10 12:32:16 +00002211
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +000022127.5. Q. What about IBM mainframes, or other non-UNIX platforms?
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00002213
Guido van Rossumb0a2ce51995-08-28 19:41:35 +00002214A. I haven't heard about these, except I remember hearing about an
2215OS/9 port and a port to Vxworks (both operating systems for embedded
2216systems). If you're interested in any of this, go directly to the
2217newsgroup and ask there, you may find exactly what you need. For
2218example, a port to MPE/iX 5.0 on HP3000 computers was just announced,
2219see <URL:http://www.allegro.com/software/>.
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00002220
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +000022217.6. Q. Where are the source or Makefiles for the non-UNIX versions?
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00002222
Guido van Rossume530c581995-04-10 12:32:16 +00002223A. The standard sources can (almost) be used. Additional sources can
2224be found in the platform-specific subdirectories of the distribution.
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00002225
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +000022267.7. Q. What is the status and support for the non-UNIX versions?
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00002227
2228A. I don't have access to most of these platforms, so in general I am
2229dependent on material submitted by volunteers(*). However I strive to
2230integrate all changes needed to get it to compile on a particular
2231platform back into the standard sources, so porting of the next
2232version to the various non-UNIX platforms should be easy.
2233
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +00002234(*) For the Macintosh, that volunteer is me, with help from Jack
2235Jansen <jack@cwi.nl>.
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00002236
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +000022377.8. Q. I have a PC version but it appears to be only a binary.
Guido van Rossum7ce61c11994-06-13 15:13:56 +00002238Where's the library?
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +00002239
2240A. You still need to copy the files from the distribution directory
Guido van Rossum91f60831994-02-15 15:52:27 +00002241"python/Lib" to your system. If you don't have the full distribution,
Guido van Rossume530c581995-04-10 12:32:16 +00002242you can get the file lib<version>.tar.gz from most ftp sites carrying
2243Python; this is a subset of the distribution containing just those
Guido van Rossum7be34a81995-05-31 15:17:12 +00002244files, e.g. <URL:ftp://ftp.python.org/pub/python/src/lib1.1.tar.gz>.
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +00002245
Guido van Rossum5333c5d1994-04-11 11:06:22 +00002246Once you have installed the library, you need to point sys.path to it.
2247Assuming the library is in C:\misc\python\lib, the following commands
2248will point your Python interpreter to it (note the doubled backslashes
2249-- you can also use single forward slashes instead):
2250
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +00002251 >>> import sys
2252 >>> sys.path.insert(0, 'C:\\misc\\python\\lib')
2253 >>>
Guido van Rossum5333c5d1994-04-11 11:06:22 +00002254
2255For a more permanent effect, set the environment variable PYTHONPATH,
2256as follows (talking to a DOS prompt):
2257
Guido van Rossuma6c707c1995-01-02 17:32:28 +00002258 C> SET PYTHONPATH=C:\misc\python\lib
Guido van Rossum5333c5d1994-04-11 11:06:22 +00002259
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +000022607.9. Q. Where's the documentation for the Mac or PC version?
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +00002261
Guido van Rossume530c581995-04-10 12:32:16 +00002262A. The documentation for the Unix version also applies to the Mac and
2263PC versions. Where applicable, differences are indicated in the text.
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +00002264
Guido van Rossumc458e941996-09-11 15:43:13 +000022657.10. Q. The Mac (PC) version doesn't seem to have any facilities for
Guido van Rossum91f60831994-02-15 15:52:27 +00002266creating or editing programs apart from entering it interactively, and
2267there seems to be no way to save code that was entered interactively.
2268How do I create a Python program on the Mac (PC)?
Guido van Rossuma7925f11994-01-26 10:20:16 +00002269
Guido van Rossumb34e8aa1994-09-23 14:20:38 +00002270A. Use an external editor. On the Mac, BBEdit seems to be a popular
2271no-frills text editor. I work like this: start the interpreter; edit
2272a module file using BBedit; import and test it in the interpreter;
2273edit again in BBedit; then use the built-in function reload() to
2274re-read the imported module; etc.
Guido van Rossum5333c5d1994-04-11 11:06:22 +00002275
2276Regarding the same question for the PC, Kurt Wm. Hemr writes: "While
2277anyone with a pulse could certainly figure out how to do the same on
2278MS-Windows, I would recommend the NotGNU Emacs clone for MS-Windows.
2279Not only can you easily resave and "reload()" from Python after making
2280changes, but since WinNot auto-copies to the clipboard any text you
2281select, you can simply select the entire procedure (function) which
2282you changed in WinNot, switch to QWPython, and shift-ins to reenter
2283the changed program unit."