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Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001:tocdepth: 2
2
3===============
4Programming FAQ
5===============
6
7.. contents::
8
9General Questions
10=================
11
12Is there a source code level debugger with breakpoints, single-stepping, etc.?
13------------------------------------------------------------------------------
14
15Yes.
16
17The pdb module is a simple but adequate console-mode debugger for Python. It is
18part of the standard Python library, and is :mod:`documented in the Library
19Reference Manual <pdb>`. You can also write your own debugger by using the code
20for pdb as an example.
21
22The IDLE interactive development environment, which is part of the standard
23Python distribution (normally available as Tools/scripts/idle), includes a
24graphical debugger. There is documentation for the IDLE debugger at
25http://www.python.org/idle/doc/idle2.html#Debugger.
26
27PythonWin is a Python IDE that includes a GUI debugger based on pdb. The
28Pythonwin debugger colors breakpoints and has quite a few cool features such as
29debugging non-Pythonwin programs. Pythonwin is available as part of the `Python
30for Windows Extensions <http://sourceforge.net/projects/pywin32/>`__ project and
31as a part of the ActivePython distribution (see
32http://www.activestate.com/Products/ActivePython/index.html).
33
34`Boa Constructor <http://boa-constructor.sourceforge.net/>`_ is an IDE and GUI
35builder that uses wxWidgets. It offers visual frame creation and manipulation,
36an object inspector, many views on the source like object browsers, inheritance
37hierarchies, doc string generated html documentation, an advanced debugger,
38integrated help, and Zope support.
39
40`Eric <http://www.die-offenbachs.de/eric/index.html>`_ is an IDE built on PyQt
41and the Scintilla editing component.
42
43Pydb is a version of the standard Python debugger pdb, modified for use with DDD
44(Data Display Debugger), a popular graphical debugger front end. Pydb can be
45found at http://bashdb.sourceforge.net/pydb/ and DDD can be found at
46http://www.gnu.org/software/ddd.
47
48There are a number of commercial Python IDEs that include graphical debuggers.
49They include:
50
51* Wing IDE (http://wingware.com/)
52* Komodo IDE (http://www.activestate.com/Products/Komodo)
53
54
55Is there a tool to help find bugs or perform static analysis?
56-------------------------------------------------------------
57
58Yes.
59
60PyChecker is a static analysis tool that finds bugs in Python source code and
61warns about code complexity and style. You can get PyChecker from
62http://pychecker.sf.net.
63
64`Pylint <http://www.logilab.org/projects/pylint>`_ is another tool that checks
65if a module satisfies a coding standard, and also makes it possible to write
66plug-ins to add a custom feature. In addition to the bug checking that
67PyChecker performs, Pylint offers some additional features such as checking line
68length, whether variable names are well-formed according to your coding
69standard, whether declared interfaces are fully implemented, and more.
Georg Brandl495f7b52009-10-27 15:28:25 +000070http://www.logilab.org/card/pylint_manual provides a full list of Pylint's
71features.
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +000072
73
74How can I create a stand-alone binary from a Python script?
75-----------------------------------------------------------
76
77You don't need the ability to compile Python to C code if all you want is a
78stand-alone program that users can download and run without having to install
79the Python distribution first. There are a number of tools that determine the
80set of modules required by a program and bind these modules together with a
81Python binary to produce a single executable.
82
83One is to use the freeze tool, which is included in the Python source tree as
84``Tools/freeze``. It converts Python byte code to C arrays; a C compiler you can
85embed all your modules into a new program, which is then linked with the
86standard Python modules.
87
88It works by scanning your source recursively for import statements (in both
89forms) and looking for the modules in the standard Python path as well as in the
90source directory (for built-in modules). It then turns the bytecode for modules
91written in Python into C code (array initializers that can be turned into code
92objects using the marshal module) and creates a custom-made config file that
93only contains those built-in modules which are actually used in the program. It
94then compiles the generated C code and links it with the rest of the Python
95interpreter to form a self-contained binary which acts exactly like your script.
96
97Obviously, freeze requires a C compiler. There are several other utilities
98which don't. One is Thomas Heller's py2exe (Windows only) at
99
100 http://www.py2exe.org/
101
102Another is Christian Tismer's `SQFREEZE <http://starship.python.net/crew/pirx>`_
103which appends the byte code to a specially-prepared Python interpreter that can
104find the byte code in the executable.
105
106Other tools include Fredrik Lundh's `Squeeze
107<http://www.pythonware.com/products/python/squeeze>`_ and Anthony Tuininga's
108`cx_Freeze <http://starship.python.net/crew/atuining/cx_Freeze/index.html>`_.
109
110
111Are there coding standards or a style guide for Python programs?
112----------------------------------------------------------------
113
114Yes. The coding style required for standard library modules is documented as
115:pep:`8`.
116
117
118My program is too slow. How do I speed it up?
119---------------------------------------------
120
121That's a tough one, in general. There are many tricks to speed up Python code;
122consider rewriting parts in C as a last resort.
123
Antoine Pitrou09264b62011-02-05 10:57:17 +0000124`Cython <http://cython.org>`_ and `Pyrex <http://www.cosc.canterbury.ac.nz/~greg/python/Pyrex/>`_
125can compile a slightly modified version of Python code into a C extension, and
Antoine Pitrou9cb41df2011-12-03 21:21:36 +0100126can be used on many different platforms. Depending on your code, Cython
127may be able to make it significantly faster than when run by the Python
128interpreter.
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000129
130The rest of this answer will discuss various tricks for squeezing a bit more
131speed out of Python code. *Never* apply any optimization tricks unless you know
132you need them, after profiling has indicated that a particular function is the
133heavily executed hot spot in the code. Optimizations almost always make the
134code less clear, and you shouldn't pay the costs of reduced clarity (increased
135development time, greater likelihood of bugs) unless the resulting performance
136benefit is worth it.
137
138There is a page on the wiki devoted to `performance tips
139<http://wiki.python.org/moin/PythonSpeed/PerformanceTips>`_.
140
141Guido van Rossum has written up an anecdote related to optimization at
142http://www.python.org/doc/essays/list2str.html.
143
144One thing to notice is that function and (especially) method calls are rather
145expensive; if you have designed a purely OO interface with lots of tiny
146functions that don't do much more than get or set an instance variable or call
147another method, you might consider using a more direct way such as directly
148accessing instance variables. Also see the standard module :mod:`profile` which
149makes it possible to find out where your program is spending most of its time
150(if you have some patience -- the profiling itself can slow your program down by
151an order of magnitude).
152
153Remember that many standard optimization heuristics you may know from other
154programming experience may well apply to Python. For example it may be faster
155to send output to output devices using larger writes rather than smaller ones in
156order to reduce the overhead of kernel system calls. Thus CGI scripts that
157write all output in "one shot" may be faster than those that write lots of small
158pieces of output.
159
160Also, be sure to use Python's core features where appropriate. For example,
161slicing allows programs to chop up lists and other sequence objects in a single
162tick of the interpreter's mainloop using highly optimized C implementations.
163Thus to get the same effect as::
164
165 L2 = []
Georg Brandle1eef412011-08-25 11:52:26 +0200166 for i in range(3):
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000167 L2.append(L1[i])
168
169it is much shorter and far faster to use ::
170
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000171 L2 = list(L1[:3]) # "list" is redundant if L1 is a list.
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000172
Georg Brandlc4a55fc2010-02-06 18:46:57 +0000173Note that the functionally-oriented built-in functions such as :func:`map`,
174:func:`zip`, and friends can be a convenient accelerator for loops that
175perform a single task. For example to pair the elements of two lists
176together::
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000177
Georg Brandl11b63622009-12-20 14:21:27 +0000178 >>> list(zip([1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6]))
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000179 [(1, 4), (2, 5), (3, 6)]
180
181or to compute a number of sines::
182
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000183 >>> list(map(math.sin, (1, 2, 3, 4)))
184 [0.841470984808, 0.909297426826, 0.14112000806, -0.756802495308]
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000185
186The operation completes very quickly in such cases.
187
Georg Brandl11b63622009-12-20 14:21:27 +0000188Other examples include the ``join()`` and ``split()`` :ref:`methods
189of string objects <string-methods>`.
190
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000191For example if s1..s7 are large (10K+) strings then
192``"".join([s1,s2,s3,s4,s5,s6,s7])`` may be far faster than the more obvious
193``s1+s2+s3+s4+s5+s6+s7``, since the "summation" will compute many
194subexpressions, whereas ``join()`` does all the copying in one pass. For
Georg Brandl11b63622009-12-20 14:21:27 +0000195manipulating strings, use the ``replace()`` and the ``format()`` :ref:`methods
196on string objects <string-methods>`. Use regular expressions only when you're
197not dealing with constant string patterns.
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000198
Georg Brandlc4a55fc2010-02-06 18:46:57 +0000199Be sure to use the :meth:`list.sort` built-in method to do sorting, and see the
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000200`sorting mini-HOWTO <http://wiki.python.org/moin/HowTo/Sorting>`_ for examples
201of moderately advanced usage. :meth:`list.sort` beats other techniques for
202sorting in all but the most extreme circumstances.
203
204Another common trick is to "push loops into functions or methods." For example
205suppose you have a program that runs slowly and you use the profiler to
206determine that a Python function ``ff()`` is being called lots of times. If you
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000207notice that ``ff()``::
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000208
209 def ff(x):
210 ... # do something with x computing result...
211 return result
212
213tends to be called in loops like::
214
215 list = map(ff, oldlist)
216
217or::
218
219 for x in sequence:
220 value = ff(x)
221 ... # do something with value...
222
223then you can often eliminate function call overhead by rewriting ``ff()`` to::
224
225 def ffseq(seq):
226 resultseq = []
227 for x in seq:
228 ... # do something with x computing result...
229 resultseq.append(result)
230 return resultseq
231
232and rewrite the two examples to ``list = ffseq(oldlist)`` and to::
233
234 for value in ffseq(sequence):
235 ... # do something with value...
236
237Single calls to ``ff(x)`` translate to ``ffseq([x])[0]`` with little penalty.
238Of course this technique is not always appropriate and there are other variants
239which you can figure out.
240
241You can gain some performance by explicitly storing the results of a function or
242method lookup into a local variable. A loop like::
243
244 for key in token:
245 dict[key] = dict.get(key, 0) + 1
246
247resolves ``dict.get`` every iteration. If the method isn't going to change, a
248slightly faster implementation is::
249
250 dict_get = dict.get # look up the method once
251 for key in token:
252 dict[key] = dict_get(key, 0) + 1
253
254Default arguments can be used to determine values once, at compile time instead
255of at run time. This can only be done for functions or objects which will not
256be changed during program execution, such as replacing ::
257
258 def degree_sin(deg):
259 return math.sin(deg * math.pi / 180.0)
260
261with ::
262
263 def degree_sin(deg, factor=math.pi/180.0, sin=math.sin):
264 return sin(deg * factor)
265
266Because this trick uses default arguments for terms which should not be changed,
267it should only be used when you are not concerned with presenting a possibly
268confusing API to your users.
269
270
271Core Language
272=============
273
R. David Murrayc04a6942009-11-14 22:21:32 +0000274Why am I getting an UnboundLocalError when the variable has a value?
275--------------------------------------------------------------------
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000276
R. David Murrayc04a6942009-11-14 22:21:32 +0000277It can be a surprise to get the UnboundLocalError in previously working
278code when it is modified by adding an assignment statement somewhere in
279the body of a function.
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000280
R. David Murrayc04a6942009-11-14 22:21:32 +0000281This code:
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000282
R. David Murrayc04a6942009-11-14 22:21:32 +0000283 >>> x = 10
284 >>> def bar():
285 ... print(x)
286 >>> bar()
287 10
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000288
R. David Murrayc04a6942009-11-14 22:21:32 +0000289works, but this code:
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000290
R. David Murrayc04a6942009-11-14 22:21:32 +0000291 >>> x = 10
292 >>> def foo():
293 ... print(x)
294 ... x += 1
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000295
R. David Murrayc04a6942009-11-14 22:21:32 +0000296results in an UnboundLocalError:
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000297
R. David Murrayc04a6942009-11-14 22:21:32 +0000298 >>> foo()
299 Traceback (most recent call last):
300 ...
301 UnboundLocalError: local variable 'x' referenced before assignment
302
303This is because when you make an assignment to a variable in a scope, that
304variable becomes local to that scope and shadows any similarly named variable
305in the outer scope. Since the last statement in foo assigns a new value to
306``x``, the compiler recognizes it as a local variable. Consequently when the
R. David Murray18163c32009-11-14 22:27:22 +0000307earlier ``print(x)`` attempts to print the uninitialized local variable and
R. David Murrayc04a6942009-11-14 22:21:32 +0000308an error results.
309
310In the example above you can access the outer scope variable by declaring it
311global:
312
313 >>> x = 10
314 >>> def foobar():
315 ... global x
316 ... print(x)
317 ... x += 1
318 >>> foobar()
319 10
320
321This explicit declaration is required in order to remind you that (unlike the
322superficially analogous situation with class and instance variables) you are
323actually modifying the value of the variable in the outer scope:
324
325 >>> print(x)
326 11
327
328You can do a similar thing in a nested scope using the :keyword:`nonlocal`
329keyword:
330
331 >>> def foo():
332 ... x = 10
333 ... def bar():
334 ... nonlocal x
335 ... print(x)
336 ... x += 1
337 ... bar()
338 ... print(x)
339 >>> foo()
340 10
341 11
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000342
343
344What are the rules for local and global variables in Python?
345------------------------------------------------------------
346
347In Python, variables that are only referenced inside a function are implicitly
348global. If a variable is assigned a new value anywhere within the function's
349body, it's assumed to be a local. If a variable is ever assigned a new value
350inside the function, the variable is implicitly local, and you need to
351explicitly declare it as 'global'.
352
353Though a bit surprising at first, a moment's consideration explains this. On
354one hand, requiring :keyword:`global` for assigned variables provides a bar
355against unintended side-effects. On the other hand, if ``global`` was required
356for all global references, you'd be using ``global`` all the time. You'd have
Georg Brandlc4a55fc2010-02-06 18:46:57 +0000357to declare as global every reference to a built-in function or to a component of
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000358an imported module. This clutter would defeat the usefulness of the ``global``
359declaration for identifying side-effects.
360
361
362How do I share global variables across modules?
363------------------------------------------------
364
365The canonical way to share information across modules within a single program is
366to create a special module (often called config or cfg). Just import the config
367module in all modules of your application; the module then becomes available as
368a global name. Because there is only one instance of each module, any changes
369made to the module object get reflected everywhere. For example:
370
371config.py::
372
373 x = 0 # Default value of the 'x' configuration setting
374
375mod.py::
376
377 import config
378 config.x = 1
379
380main.py::
381
382 import config
383 import mod
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000384 print(config.x)
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000385
386Note that using a module is also the basis for implementing the Singleton design
387pattern, for the same reason.
388
389
390What are the "best practices" for using import in a module?
391-----------------------------------------------------------
392
393In general, don't use ``from modulename import *``. Doing so clutters the
394importer's namespace. Some people avoid this idiom even with the few modules
395that were designed to be imported in this manner. Modules designed in this
Georg Brandld404fa62009-10-13 16:55:12 +0000396manner include :mod:`tkinter`, and :mod:`threading`.
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000397
398Import modules at the top of a file. Doing so makes it clear what other modules
399your code requires and avoids questions of whether the module name is in scope.
400Using one import per line makes it easy to add and delete module imports, but
401using multiple imports per line uses less screen space.
402
403It's good practice if you import modules in the following order:
404
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00004051. standard library modules -- e.g. ``sys``, ``os``, ``getopt``, ``re``
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00004062. third-party library modules (anything installed in Python's site-packages
407 directory) -- e.g. mx.DateTime, ZODB, PIL.Image, etc.
4083. locally-developed modules
409
410Never use relative package imports. If you're writing code that's in the
411``package.sub.m1`` module and want to import ``package.sub.m2``, do not just
Georg Brandl11b63622009-12-20 14:21:27 +0000412write ``from . import m2``, even though it's legal. Write ``from package.sub
413import m2`` instead. See :pep:`328` for details.
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000414
415It is sometimes necessary to move imports to a function or class to avoid
416problems with circular imports. Gordon McMillan says:
417
418 Circular imports are fine where both modules use the "import <module>" form
419 of import. They fail when the 2nd module wants to grab a name out of the
420 first ("from module import name") and the import is at the top level. That's
421 because names in the 1st are not yet available, because the first module is
422 busy importing the 2nd.
423
424In this case, if the second module is only used in one function, then the import
425can easily be moved into that function. By the time the import is called, the
426first module will have finished initializing, and the second module can do its
427import.
428
429It may also be necessary to move imports out of the top level of code if some of
430the modules are platform-specific. In that case, it may not even be possible to
431import all of the modules at the top of the file. In this case, importing the
432correct modules in the corresponding platform-specific code is a good option.
433
434Only move imports into a local scope, such as inside a function definition, if
435it's necessary to solve a problem such as avoiding a circular import or are
436trying to reduce the initialization time of a module. This technique is
437especially helpful if many of the imports are unnecessary depending on how the
438program executes. You may also want to move imports into a function if the
439modules are only ever used in that function. Note that loading a module the
440first time may be expensive because of the one time initialization of the
441module, but loading a module multiple times is virtually free, costing only a
442couple of dictionary lookups. Even if the module name has gone out of scope,
443the module is probably available in :data:`sys.modules`.
444
445If only instances of a specific class use a module, then it is reasonable to
446import the module in the class's ``__init__`` method and then assign the module
447to an instance variable so that the module is always available (via that
448instance variable) during the life of the object. Note that to delay an import
449until the class is instantiated, the import must be inside a method. Putting
450the import inside the class but outside of any method still causes the import to
451occur when the module is initialized.
452
453
454How can I pass optional or keyword parameters from one function to another?
455---------------------------------------------------------------------------
456
457Collect the arguments using the ``*`` and ``**`` specifiers in the function's
458parameter list; this gives you the positional arguments as a tuple and the
459keyword arguments as a dictionary. You can then pass these arguments when
460calling another function by using ``*`` and ``**``::
461
462 def f(x, *args, **kwargs):
463 ...
464 kwargs['width'] = '14.3c'
465 ...
466 g(x, *args, **kwargs)
467
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000468
469How do I write a function with output parameters (call by reference)?
470---------------------------------------------------------------------
471
472Remember that arguments are passed by assignment in Python. Since assignment
473just creates references to objects, there's no alias between an argument name in
474the caller and callee, and so no call-by-reference per se. You can achieve the
475desired effect in a number of ways.
476
4771) By returning a tuple of the results::
478
479 def func2(a, b):
480 a = 'new-value' # a and b are local names
481 b = b + 1 # assigned to new objects
482 return a, b # return new values
483
484 x, y = 'old-value', 99
485 x, y = func2(x, y)
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000486 print(x, y) # output: new-value 100
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000487
488 This is almost always the clearest solution.
489
4902) By using global variables. This isn't thread-safe, and is not recommended.
491
4923) By passing a mutable (changeable in-place) object::
493
494 def func1(a):
495 a[0] = 'new-value' # 'a' references a mutable list
496 a[1] = a[1] + 1 # changes a shared object
497
498 args = ['old-value', 99]
499 func1(args)
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000500 print(args[0], args[1]) # output: new-value 100
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000501
5024) By passing in a dictionary that gets mutated::
503
504 def func3(args):
505 args['a'] = 'new-value' # args is a mutable dictionary
506 args['b'] = args['b'] + 1 # change it in-place
507
508 args = {'a':' old-value', 'b': 99}
509 func3(args)
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000510 print(args['a'], args['b'])
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000511
5125) Or bundle up values in a class instance::
513
514 class callByRef:
515 def __init__(self, **args):
516 for (key, value) in args.items():
517 setattr(self, key, value)
518
519 def func4(args):
520 args.a = 'new-value' # args is a mutable callByRef
521 args.b = args.b + 1 # change object in-place
522
523 args = callByRef(a='old-value', b=99)
524 func4(args)
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000525 print(args.a, args.b)
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000526
527
528 There's almost never a good reason to get this complicated.
529
530Your best choice is to return a tuple containing the multiple results.
531
532
533How do you make a higher order function in Python?
534--------------------------------------------------
535
536You have two choices: you can use nested scopes or you can use callable objects.
537For example, suppose you wanted to define ``linear(a,b)`` which returns a
538function ``f(x)`` that computes the value ``a*x+b``. Using nested scopes::
539
540 def linear(a, b):
541 def result(x):
542 return a * x + b
543 return result
544
545Or using a callable object::
546
547 class linear:
548
549 def __init__(self, a, b):
550 self.a, self.b = a, b
551
552 def __call__(self, x):
553 return self.a * x + self.b
554
555In both cases, ::
556
557 taxes = linear(0.3, 2)
558
559gives a callable object where ``taxes(10e6) == 0.3 * 10e6 + 2``.
560
561The callable object approach has the disadvantage that it is a bit slower and
562results in slightly longer code. However, note that a collection of callables
563can share their signature via inheritance::
564
565 class exponential(linear):
566 # __init__ inherited
567 def __call__(self, x):
568 return self.a * (x ** self.b)
569
570Object can encapsulate state for several methods::
571
572 class counter:
573
574 value = 0
575
576 def set(self, x):
577 self.value = x
578
579 def up(self):
580 self.value = self.value + 1
581
582 def down(self):
583 self.value = self.value - 1
584
585 count = counter()
586 inc, dec, reset = count.up, count.down, count.set
587
588Here ``inc()``, ``dec()`` and ``reset()`` act like functions which share the
589same counting variable.
590
591
592How do I copy an object in Python?
593----------------------------------
594
595In general, try :func:`copy.copy` or :func:`copy.deepcopy` for the general case.
596Not all objects can be copied, but most can.
597
598Some objects can be copied more easily. Dictionaries have a :meth:`~dict.copy`
599method::
600
601 newdict = olddict.copy()
602
603Sequences can be copied by slicing::
604
605 new_l = l[:]
606
607
608How can I find the methods or attributes of an object?
609------------------------------------------------------
610
611For an instance x of a user-defined class, ``dir(x)`` returns an alphabetized
612list of the names containing the instance attributes and methods and attributes
613defined by its class.
614
615
616How can my code discover the name of an object?
617-----------------------------------------------
618
619Generally speaking, it can't, because objects don't really have names.
620Essentially, assignment always binds a name to a value; The same is true of
621``def`` and ``class`` statements, but in that case the value is a
622callable. Consider the following code::
623
624 class A:
625 pass
626
627 B = A
628
629 a = B()
630 b = a
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000631 print(b)
632 <__main__.A object at 0x16D07CC>
633 print(a)
634 <__main__.A object at 0x16D07CC>
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000635
636Arguably the class has a name: even though it is bound to two names and invoked
637through the name B the created instance is still reported as an instance of
638class A. However, it is impossible to say whether the instance's name is a or
639b, since both names are bound to the same value.
640
641Generally speaking it should not be necessary for your code to "know the names"
642of particular values. Unless you are deliberately writing introspective
643programs, this is usually an indication that a change of approach might be
644beneficial.
645
646In comp.lang.python, Fredrik Lundh once gave an excellent analogy in answer to
647this question:
648
649 The same way as you get the name of that cat you found on your porch: the cat
650 (object) itself cannot tell you its name, and it doesn't really care -- so
651 the only way to find out what it's called is to ask all your neighbours
652 (namespaces) if it's their cat (object)...
653
654 ....and don't be surprised if you'll find that it's known by many names, or
655 no name at all!
656
657
658What's up with the comma operator's precedence?
659-----------------------------------------------
660
661Comma is not an operator in Python. Consider this session::
662
663 >>> "a" in "b", "a"
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000664 (False, 'a')
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000665
666Since the comma is not an operator, but a separator between expressions the
667above is evaluated as if you had entered::
668
669 >>> ("a" in "b"), "a"
670
671not::
672
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000673 >>> "a" in ("b", "a")
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000674
675The same is true of the various assignment operators (``=``, ``+=`` etc). They
676are not truly operators but syntactic delimiters in assignment statements.
677
678
679Is there an equivalent of C's "?:" ternary operator?
680----------------------------------------------------
681
682Yes, this feature was added in Python 2.5. The syntax would be as follows::
683
684 [on_true] if [expression] else [on_false]
685
686 x, y = 50, 25
687
688 small = x if x < y else y
689
690For versions previous to 2.5 the answer would be 'No'.
691
692.. XXX remove rest?
693
694In many cases you can mimic ``a ? b : c`` with ``a and b or c``, but there's a
695flaw: if *b* is zero (or empty, or ``None`` -- anything that tests false) then
696*c* will be selected instead. In many cases you can prove by looking at the
697code that this can't happen (e.g. because *b* is a constant or has a type that
698can never be false), but in general this can be a problem.
699
700Tim Peters (who wishes it was Steve Majewski) suggested the following solution:
701``(a and [b] or [c])[0]``. Because ``[b]`` is a singleton list it is never
702false, so the wrong path is never taken; then applying ``[0]`` to the whole
703thing gets the *b* or *c* that you really wanted. Ugly, but it gets you there
704in the rare cases where it is really inconvenient to rewrite your code using
705'if'.
706
707The best course is usually to write a simple ``if...else`` statement. Another
708solution is to implement the ``?:`` operator as a function::
709
710 def q(cond, on_true, on_false):
711 if cond:
712 if not isfunction(on_true):
713 return on_true
714 else:
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000715 return on_true()
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000716 else:
717 if not isfunction(on_false):
718 return on_false
719 else:
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000720 return on_false()
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000721
722In most cases you'll pass b and c directly: ``q(a, b, c)``. To avoid evaluating
723b or c when they shouldn't be, encapsulate them within a lambda function, e.g.:
724``q(a, lambda: b, lambda: c)``.
725
726It has been asked *why* Python has no if-then-else expression. There are
727several answers: many languages do just fine without one; it can easily lead to
728less readable code; no sufficiently "Pythonic" syntax has been discovered; a
729search of the standard library found remarkably few places where using an
730if-then-else expression would make the code more understandable.
731
732In 2002, :pep:`308` was written proposing several possible syntaxes and the
733community was asked to vote on the issue. The vote was inconclusive. Most
734people liked one of the syntaxes, but also hated other syntaxes; many votes
735implied that people preferred no ternary operator rather than having a syntax
736they hated.
737
738
739Is it possible to write obfuscated one-liners in Python?
740--------------------------------------------------------
741
742Yes. Usually this is done by nesting :keyword:`lambda` within
743:keyword:`lambda`. See the following three examples, due to Ulf Bartelt::
744
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000745 from functools import reduce
746
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000747 # Primes < 1000
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000748 print(list(filter(None,map(lambda y:y*reduce(lambda x,y:x*y!=0,
749 map(lambda x,y=y:y%x,range(2,int(pow(y,0.5)+1))),1),range(2,1000)))))
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000750
751 # First 10 Fibonacci numbers
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000752 print(list(map(lambda x,f=lambda x,f:(f(x-1,f)+f(x-2,f)) if x>1 else 1:
753 f(x,f), range(10))))
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000754
755 # Mandelbrot set
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000756 print((lambda Ru,Ro,Iu,Io,IM,Sx,Sy:reduce(lambda x,y:x+y,map(lambda y,
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000757 Iu=Iu,Io=Io,Ru=Ru,Ro=Ro,Sy=Sy,L=lambda yc,Iu=Iu,Io=Io,Ru=Ru,Ro=Ro,i=IM,
758 Sx=Sx,Sy=Sy:reduce(lambda x,y:x+y,map(lambda x,xc=Ru,yc=yc,Ru=Ru,Ro=Ro,
759 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
760 >=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(
761 64+F(Ru+x*(Ro-Ru)/Sx,yc,0,0,i)),range(Sx))):L(Iu+y*(Io-Iu)/Sy),range(Sy
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000762 ))))(-2.1, 0.7, -1.2, 1.2, 30, 80, 24))
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000763 # \___ ___/ \___ ___/ | | |__ lines on screen
764 # V V | |______ columns on screen
765 # | | |__________ maximum of "iterations"
766 # | |_________________ range on y axis
767 # |____________________________ range on x axis
768
769Don't try this at home, kids!
770
771
772Numbers and strings
773===================
774
775How do I specify hexadecimal and octal integers?
776------------------------------------------------
777
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000778To specify an octal digit, precede the octal value with a zero, and then a lower
779or uppercase "o". For example, to set the variable "a" to the octal value "10"
780(8 in decimal), type::
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000781
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000782 >>> a = 0o10
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000783 >>> a
784 8
785
786Hexadecimal is just as easy. Simply precede the hexadecimal number with a zero,
787and then a lower or uppercase "x". Hexadecimal digits can be specified in lower
788or uppercase. For example, in the Python interpreter::
789
790 >>> a = 0xa5
791 >>> a
792 165
793 >>> b = 0XB2
794 >>> b
795 178
796
797
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000798Why does -22 // 10 return -3?
799-----------------------------
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000800
801It's primarily driven by the desire that ``i % j`` have the same sign as ``j``.
802If you want that, and also want::
803
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000804 i == (i // j) * j + (i % j)
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000805
806then integer division has to return the floor. C also requires that identity to
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000807hold, and then compilers that truncate ``i // j`` need to make ``i % j`` have
808the same sign as ``i``.
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000809
810There are few real use cases for ``i % j`` when ``j`` is negative. When ``j``
811is positive, there are many, and in virtually all of them it's more useful for
812``i % j`` to be ``>= 0``. If the clock says 10 now, what did it say 200 hours
813ago? ``-190 % 12 == 2`` is useful; ``-190 % 12 == -10`` is a bug waiting to
814bite.
815
816
817How do I convert a string to a number?
818--------------------------------------
819
820For integers, use the built-in :func:`int` type constructor, e.g. ``int('144')
821== 144``. Similarly, :func:`float` converts to floating-point,
822e.g. ``float('144') == 144.0``.
823
824By default, these interpret the number as decimal, so that ``int('0144') ==
825144`` and ``int('0x144')`` raises :exc:`ValueError`. ``int(string, base)`` takes
826the base to convert from as a second optional argument, so ``int('0x144', 16) ==
827324``. If the base is specified as 0, the number is interpreted using Python's
828rules: a leading '0' indicates octal, and '0x' indicates a hex number.
829
830Do not use the built-in function :func:`eval` if all you need is to convert
831strings to numbers. :func:`eval` will be significantly slower and it presents a
832security risk: someone could pass you a Python expression that might have
833unwanted side effects. For example, someone could pass
834``__import__('os').system("rm -rf $HOME")`` which would erase your home
835directory.
836
837:func:`eval` also has the effect of interpreting numbers as Python expressions,
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000838so that e.g. ``eval('09')`` gives a syntax error because Python does not allow
839leading '0' in a decimal number (except '0').
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000840
841
842How do I convert a number to a string?
843--------------------------------------
844
845To convert, e.g., the number 144 to the string '144', use the built-in type
846constructor :func:`str`. If you want a hexadecimal or octal representation, use
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000847the built-in functions :func:`hex` or :func:`oct`. For fancy formatting, see
848the :ref:`string-formatting` section, e.g. ``"{:04d}".format(144)`` yields
Georg Brandl11b63622009-12-20 14:21:27 +0000849``'0144'`` and ``"{:.3f}".format(1/3)`` yields ``'0.333'``.
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000850
851
852How do I modify a string in place?
853----------------------------------
854
855You can't, because strings are immutable. If you need an object with this
856ability, try converting the string to a list or use the array module::
857
858 >>> s = "Hello, world"
859 >>> a = list(s)
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000860 >>> print(a)
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000861 ['H', 'e', 'l', 'l', 'o', ',', ' ', 'w', 'o', 'r', 'l', 'd']
862 >>> a[7:] = list("there!")
863 >>> ''.join(a)
864 'Hello, there!'
865
866 >>> import array
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000867 >>> a = array.array('u', s)
868 >>> print(a)
869 array('u', 'Hello, world')
870 >>> a[0] = 'y'
871 >>> print(a)
872 array('u', 'yello world')
873 >>> a.tounicode()
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000874 'yello, world'
875
876
877How do I use strings to call functions/methods?
878-----------------------------------------------
879
880There are various techniques.
881
882* The best is to use a dictionary that maps strings to functions. The primary
883 advantage of this technique is that the strings do not need to match the names
884 of the functions. This is also the primary technique used to emulate a case
885 construct::
886
887 def a():
888 pass
889
890 def b():
891 pass
892
893 dispatch = {'go': a, 'stop': b} # Note lack of parens for funcs
894
895 dispatch[get_input()]() # Note trailing parens to call function
896
897* Use the built-in function :func:`getattr`::
898
899 import foo
900 getattr(foo, 'bar')()
901
902 Note that :func:`getattr` works on any object, including classes, class
903 instances, modules, and so on.
904
905 This is used in several places in the standard library, like this::
906
907 class Foo:
908 def do_foo(self):
909 ...
910
911 def do_bar(self):
912 ...
913
914 f = getattr(foo_instance, 'do_' + opname)
915 f()
916
917
918* Use :func:`locals` or :func:`eval` to resolve the function name::
919
920 def myFunc():
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000921 print("hello")
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000922
923 fname = "myFunc"
924
925 f = locals()[fname]
926 f()
927
928 f = eval(fname)
929 f()
930
931 Note: Using :func:`eval` is slow and dangerous. If you don't have absolute
932 control over the contents of the string, someone could pass a string that
933 resulted in an arbitrary function being executed.
934
935Is there an equivalent to Perl's chomp() for removing trailing newlines from strings?
936-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
937
938Starting with Python 2.2, you can use ``S.rstrip("\r\n")`` to remove all
Georg Brandl6faee4e2010-09-21 14:48:28 +0000939occurrences of any line terminator from the end of the string ``S`` without
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000940removing other trailing whitespace. If the string ``S`` represents more than
941one line, with several empty lines at the end, the line terminators for all the
942blank lines will be removed::
943
944 >>> lines = ("line 1 \r\n"
945 ... "\r\n"
946 ... "\r\n")
947 >>> lines.rstrip("\n\r")
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000948 'line 1 '
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000949
950Since this is typically only desired when reading text one line at a time, using
951``S.rstrip()`` this way works well.
952
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000953For older versions of Python, there are two partial substitutes:
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000954
955- If you want to remove all trailing whitespace, use the ``rstrip()`` method of
956 string objects. This removes all trailing whitespace, not just a single
957 newline.
958
959- Otherwise, if there is only one line in the string ``S``, use
960 ``S.splitlines()[0]``.
961
962
963Is there a scanf() or sscanf() equivalent?
964------------------------------------------
965
966Not as such.
967
968For simple input parsing, the easiest approach is usually to split the line into
969whitespace-delimited words using the :meth:`~str.split` method of string objects
970and then convert decimal strings to numeric values using :func:`int` or
971:func:`float`. ``split()`` supports an optional "sep" parameter which is useful
972if the line uses something other than whitespace as a separator.
973
Brian Curtin5a7a52f2010-09-23 13:45:21 +0000974For more complicated input parsing, regular expressions are more powerful
Georg Brandl60203b42010-10-06 10:11:56 +0000975than C's :c:func:`sscanf` and better suited for the task.
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000976
977
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000978What does 'UnicodeDecodeError' or 'UnicodeEncodeError' error mean?
979-------------------------------------------------------------------
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000980
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +0000981See the :ref:`unicode-howto`.
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +0000982
983
Antoine Pitroufd9ebd42011-11-25 16:33:53 +0100984What is the most efficient way to concatenate many strings together?
985--------------------------------------------------------------------
986
987:class:`str` and :class:`bytes` objects are immutable, therefore concatenating
988many strings together is inefficient as each concatenation creates a new
989object. In the general case, the total runtime cost is quadratic in the
990total string length.
991
992To accumulate many :class:`str` objects, the recommended idiom is to place
993them into a list and call :meth:`str.join` at the end::
994
995 chunks = []
996 for s in my_strings:
997 chunks.append(s)
998 result = ''.join(chunks)
999
1000(another reasonably efficient idiom is to use :class:`io.StringIO`)
1001
1002To accumulate many :class:`bytes` objects, the recommended idiom is to extend
1003a :class:`bytearray` object using in-place concatenation (the ``+=`` operator)::
1004
1005 result = bytearray()
1006 for b in my_bytes_objects:
1007 result += b
1008
1009
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001010Sequences (Tuples/Lists)
1011========================
1012
1013How do I convert between tuples and lists?
1014------------------------------------------
1015
1016The type constructor ``tuple(seq)`` converts any sequence (actually, any
1017iterable) into a tuple with the same items in the same order.
1018
1019For example, ``tuple([1, 2, 3])`` yields ``(1, 2, 3)`` and ``tuple('abc')``
1020yields ``('a', 'b', 'c')``. If the argument is a tuple, it does not make a copy
1021but returns the same object, so it is cheap to call :func:`tuple` when you
1022aren't sure that an object is already a tuple.
1023
1024The type constructor ``list(seq)`` converts any sequence or iterable into a list
1025with the same items in the same order. For example, ``list((1, 2, 3))`` yields
1026``[1, 2, 3]`` and ``list('abc')`` yields ``['a', 'b', 'c']``. If the argument
1027is a list, it makes a copy just like ``seq[:]`` would.
1028
1029
1030What's a negative index?
1031------------------------
1032
1033Python sequences are indexed with positive numbers and negative numbers. For
1034positive numbers 0 is the first index 1 is the second index and so forth. For
1035negative indices -1 is the last index and -2 is the penultimate (next to last)
1036index and so forth. Think of ``seq[-n]`` as the same as ``seq[len(seq)-n]``.
1037
1038Using negative indices can be very convenient. For example ``S[:-1]`` is all of
1039the string except for its last character, which is useful for removing the
1040trailing newline from a string.
1041
1042
1043How do I iterate over a sequence in reverse order?
1044--------------------------------------------------
1045
Georg Brandlc4a55fc2010-02-06 18:46:57 +00001046Use the :func:`reversed` built-in function, which is new in Python 2.4::
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001047
1048 for x in reversed(sequence):
1049 ... # do something with x...
1050
1051This won't touch your original sequence, but build a new copy with reversed
1052order to iterate over.
1053
1054With Python 2.3, you can use an extended slice syntax::
1055
1056 for x in sequence[::-1]:
1057 ... # do something with x...
1058
1059
1060How do you remove duplicates from a list?
1061-----------------------------------------
1062
1063See the Python Cookbook for a long discussion of many ways to do this:
1064
1065 http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/52560
1066
1067If you don't mind reordering the list, sort it and then scan from the end of the
1068list, deleting duplicates as you go::
1069
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001070 if mylist:
1071 mylist.sort()
1072 last = mylist[-1]
1073 for i in range(len(mylist)-2, -1, -1):
1074 if last == mylist[i]:
1075 del mylist[i]
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001076 else:
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001077 last = mylist[i]
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001078
1079If all elements of the list may be used as dictionary keys (i.e. they are all
1080hashable) this is often faster ::
1081
1082 d = {}
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001083 for x in mylist:
1084 d[x] = 1
1085 mylist = list(d.keys())
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001086
1087In Python 2.5 and later, the following is possible instead::
1088
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001089 mylist = list(set(mylist))
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001090
1091This converts the list into a set, thereby removing duplicates, and then back
1092into a list.
1093
1094
1095How do you make an array in Python?
1096-----------------------------------
1097
1098Use a list::
1099
1100 ["this", 1, "is", "an", "array"]
1101
1102Lists are equivalent to C or Pascal arrays in their time complexity; the primary
1103difference is that a Python list can contain objects of many different types.
1104
1105The ``array`` module also provides methods for creating arrays of fixed types
1106with compact representations, but they are slower to index than lists. Also
1107note that the Numeric extensions and others define array-like structures with
1108various characteristics as well.
1109
1110To get Lisp-style linked lists, you can emulate cons cells using tuples::
1111
1112 lisp_list = ("like", ("this", ("example", None) ) )
1113
1114If mutability is desired, you could use lists instead of tuples. Here the
1115analogue of lisp car is ``lisp_list[0]`` and the analogue of cdr is
1116``lisp_list[1]``. Only do this if you're sure you really need to, because it's
1117usually a lot slower than using Python lists.
1118
1119
1120How do I create a multidimensional list?
1121----------------------------------------
1122
1123You probably tried to make a multidimensional array like this::
1124
1125 A = [[None] * 2] * 3
1126
1127This looks correct if you print it::
1128
1129 >>> A
1130 [[None, None], [None, None], [None, None]]
1131
1132But when you assign a value, it shows up in multiple places:
1133
1134 >>> A[0][0] = 5
1135 >>> A
1136 [[5, None], [5, None], [5, None]]
1137
1138The reason is that replicating a list with ``*`` doesn't create copies, it only
1139creates references to the existing objects. The ``*3`` creates a list
1140containing 3 references to the same list of length two. Changes to one row will
1141show in all rows, which is almost certainly not what you want.
1142
1143The suggested approach is to create a list of the desired length first and then
1144fill in each element with a newly created list::
1145
1146 A = [None] * 3
1147 for i in range(3):
1148 A[i] = [None] * 2
1149
1150This generates a list containing 3 different lists of length two. You can also
1151use a list comprehension::
1152
1153 w, h = 2, 3
1154 A = [[None] * w for i in range(h)]
1155
1156Or, you can use an extension that provides a matrix datatype; `Numeric Python
Georg Brandl495f7b52009-10-27 15:28:25 +00001157<http://numpy.scipy.org/>`_ is the best known.
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001158
1159
1160How do I apply a method to a sequence of objects?
1161-------------------------------------------------
1162
1163Use a list comprehension::
1164
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001165 result = [obj.method() for obj in mylist]
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001166
1167
1168Dictionaries
1169============
1170
1171How can I get a dictionary to display its keys in a consistent order?
1172---------------------------------------------------------------------
1173
1174You can't. Dictionaries store their keys in an unpredictable order, so the
1175display order of a dictionary's elements will be similarly unpredictable.
1176
1177This can be frustrating if you want to save a printable version to a file, make
1178some changes and then compare it with some other printed dictionary. In this
1179case, use the ``pprint`` module to pretty-print the dictionary; the items will
1180be presented in order sorted by the key.
1181
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001182A more complicated solution is to subclass ``dict`` to create a
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001183``SortedDict`` class that prints itself in a predictable order. Here's one
1184simpleminded implementation of such a class::
1185
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001186 class SortedDict(dict):
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001187 def __repr__(self):
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001188 keys = sorted(self.keys())
1189 result = ("{!r}: {!r}".format(k, self[k]) for k in keys)
1190 return "{{{}}}".format(", ".join(result))
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001191
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001192 __str__ = __repr__
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001193
1194This will work for many common situations you might encounter, though it's far
1195from a perfect solution. The largest flaw is that if some values in the
1196dictionary are also dictionaries, their values won't be presented in any
1197particular order.
1198
1199
1200I want to do a complicated sort: can you do a Schwartzian Transform in Python?
1201------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1202
1203The technique, attributed to Randal Schwartz of the Perl community, sorts the
1204elements of a list by a metric which maps each element to its "sort value". In
1205Python, just use the ``key`` argument for the ``sort()`` method::
1206
1207 Isorted = L[:]
1208 Isorted.sort(key=lambda s: int(s[10:15]))
1209
1210The ``key`` argument is new in Python 2.4, for older versions this kind of
1211sorting is quite simple to do with list comprehensions. To sort a list of
1212strings by their uppercase values::
1213
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001214 tmp1 = [(x.upper(), x) for x in L] # Schwartzian transform
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001215 tmp1.sort()
1216 Usorted = [x[1] for x in tmp1]
1217
1218To sort by the integer value of a subfield extending from positions 10-15 in
1219each string::
1220
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001221 tmp2 = [(int(s[10:15]), s) for s in L] # Schwartzian transform
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001222 tmp2.sort()
1223 Isorted = [x[1] for x in tmp2]
1224
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001225For versions prior to 3.0, Isorted may also be computed by ::
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001226
1227 def intfield(s):
1228 return int(s[10:15])
1229
1230 def Icmp(s1, s2):
1231 return cmp(intfield(s1), intfield(s2))
1232
1233 Isorted = L[:]
1234 Isorted.sort(Icmp)
1235
1236but since this method calls ``intfield()`` many times for each element of L, it
1237is slower than the Schwartzian Transform.
1238
1239
1240How can I sort one list by values from another list?
1241----------------------------------------------------
1242
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001243Merge them into an iterator of tuples, sort the resulting list, and then pick
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001244out the element you want. ::
1245
1246 >>> list1 = ["what", "I'm", "sorting", "by"]
1247 >>> list2 = ["something", "else", "to", "sort"]
1248 >>> pairs = zip(list1, list2)
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001249 >>> pairs = sorted(pairs)
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001250 >>> pairs
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001251 [("I'm", 'else'), ('by', 'sort'), ('sorting', 'to'), ('what', 'something')]
1252 >>> result = [x[1] for x in pairs]
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001253 >>> result
1254 ['else', 'sort', 'to', 'something']
1255
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001256
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001257An alternative for the last step is::
1258
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001259 >>> result = []
1260 >>> for p in pairs: result.append(p[1])
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001261
1262If you find this more legible, you might prefer to use this instead of the final
1263list comprehension. However, it is almost twice as slow for long lists. Why?
1264First, the ``append()`` operation has to reallocate memory, and while it uses
1265some tricks to avoid doing that each time, it still has to do it occasionally,
1266and that costs quite a bit. Second, the expression "result.append" requires an
1267extra attribute lookup, and third, there's a speed reduction from having to make
1268all those function calls.
1269
1270
1271Objects
1272=======
1273
1274What is a class?
1275----------------
1276
1277A class is the particular object type created by executing a class statement.
1278Class objects are used as templates to create instance objects, which embody
1279both the data (attributes) and code (methods) specific to a datatype.
1280
1281A class can be based on one or more other classes, called its base class(es). It
1282then inherits the attributes and methods of its base classes. This allows an
1283object model to be successively refined by inheritance. You might have a
1284generic ``Mailbox`` class that provides basic accessor methods for a mailbox,
1285and subclasses such as ``MboxMailbox``, ``MaildirMailbox``, ``OutlookMailbox``
1286that handle various specific mailbox formats.
1287
1288
1289What is a method?
1290-----------------
1291
1292A method is a function on some object ``x`` that you normally call as
1293``x.name(arguments...)``. Methods are defined as functions inside the class
1294definition::
1295
1296 class C:
1297 def meth (self, arg):
1298 return arg * 2 + self.attribute
1299
1300
1301What is self?
1302-------------
1303
1304Self is merely a conventional name for the first argument of a method. A method
1305defined as ``meth(self, a, b, c)`` should be called as ``x.meth(a, b, c)`` for
1306some instance ``x`` of the class in which the definition occurs; the called
1307method will think it is called as ``meth(x, a, b, c)``.
1308
1309See also :ref:`why-self`.
1310
1311
1312How do I check if an object is an instance of a given class or of a subclass of it?
1313-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1314
1315Use the built-in function ``isinstance(obj, cls)``. You can check if an object
1316is an instance of any of a number of classes by providing a tuple instead of a
1317single class, e.g. ``isinstance(obj, (class1, class2, ...))``, and can also
1318check whether an object is one of Python's built-in types, e.g.
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001319``isinstance(obj, str)`` or ``isinstance(obj, (int, float, complex))``.
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001320
1321Note that most programs do not use :func:`isinstance` on user-defined classes
1322very often. If you are developing the classes yourself, a more proper
1323object-oriented style is to define methods on the classes that encapsulate a
1324particular behaviour, instead of checking the object's class and doing a
1325different thing based on what class it is. For example, if you have a function
1326that does something::
1327
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001328 def search(obj):
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001329 if isinstance(obj, Mailbox):
1330 # ... code to search a mailbox
1331 elif isinstance(obj, Document):
1332 # ... code to search a document
1333 elif ...
1334
1335A better approach is to define a ``search()`` method on all the classes and just
1336call it::
1337
1338 class Mailbox:
1339 def search(self):
1340 # ... code to search a mailbox
1341
1342 class Document:
1343 def search(self):
1344 # ... code to search a document
1345
1346 obj.search()
1347
1348
1349What is delegation?
1350-------------------
1351
1352Delegation is an object oriented technique (also called a design pattern).
1353Let's say you have an object ``x`` and want to change the behaviour of just one
1354of its methods. You can create a new class that provides a new implementation
1355of the method you're interested in changing and delegates all other methods to
1356the corresponding method of ``x``.
1357
1358Python programmers can easily implement delegation. For example, the following
1359class implements a class that behaves like a file but converts all written data
1360to uppercase::
1361
1362 class UpperOut:
1363
1364 def __init__(self, outfile):
1365 self._outfile = outfile
1366
1367 def write(self, s):
1368 self._outfile.write(s.upper())
1369
1370 def __getattr__(self, name):
1371 return getattr(self._outfile, name)
1372
1373Here the ``UpperOut`` class redefines the ``write()`` method to convert the
1374argument string to uppercase before calling the underlying
1375``self.__outfile.write()`` method. All other methods are delegated to the
1376underlying ``self.__outfile`` object. The delegation is accomplished via the
1377``__getattr__`` method; consult :ref:`the language reference <attribute-access>`
1378for more information about controlling attribute access.
1379
1380Note that for more general cases delegation can get trickier. When attributes
1381must be set as well as retrieved, the class must define a :meth:`__setattr__`
1382method too, and it must do so carefully. The basic implementation of
1383:meth:`__setattr__` is roughly equivalent to the following::
1384
1385 class X:
1386 ...
1387 def __setattr__(self, name, value):
1388 self.__dict__[name] = value
1389 ...
1390
1391Most :meth:`__setattr__` implementations must modify ``self.__dict__`` to store
1392local state for self without causing an infinite recursion.
1393
1394
1395How do I call a method defined in a base class from a derived class that overrides it?
1396--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1397
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001398Use the built-in :func:`super` function::
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001399
1400 class Derived(Base):
1401 def meth (self):
1402 super(Derived, self).meth()
1403
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001404For version prior to 3.0, you may be using classic classes: For a class
1405definition such as ``class Derived(Base): ...`` you can call method ``meth()``
1406defined in ``Base`` (or one of ``Base``'s base classes) as ``Base.meth(self,
1407arguments...)``. Here, ``Base.meth`` is an unbound method, so you need to
1408provide the ``self`` argument.
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001409
1410
1411How can I organize my code to make it easier to change the base class?
1412----------------------------------------------------------------------
1413
1414You could define an alias for the base class, assign the real base class to it
1415before your class definition, and use the alias throughout your class. Then all
1416you have to change is the value assigned to the alias. Incidentally, this trick
1417is also handy if you want to decide dynamically (e.g. depending on availability
1418of resources) which base class to use. Example::
1419
1420 BaseAlias = <real base class>
1421
1422 class Derived(BaseAlias):
1423 def meth(self):
1424 BaseAlias.meth(self)
1425 ...
1426
1427
1428How do I create static class data and static class methods?
1429-----------------------------------------------------------
1430
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001431Both static data and static methods (in the sense of C++ or Java) are supported
1432in Python.
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001433
1434For static data, simply define a class attribute. To assign a new value to the
1435attribute, you have to explicitly use the class name in the assignment::
1436
1437 class C:
1438 count = 0 # number of times C.__init__ called
1439
1440 def __init__(self):
1441 C.count = C.count + 1
1442
1443 def getcount(self):
1444 return C.count # or return self.count
1445
1446``c.count`` also refers to ``C.count`` for any ``c`` such that ``isinstance(c,
1447C)`` holds, unless overridden by ``c`` itself or by some class on the base-class
1448search path from ``c.__class__`` back to ``C``.
1449
1450Caution: within a method of C, an assignment like ``self.count = 42`` creates a
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001451new and unrelated instance named "count" in ``self``'s own dict. Rebinding of a
1452class-static data name must always specify the class whether inside a method or
1453not::
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001454
1455 C.count = 314
1456
1457Static methods are possible since Python 2.2::
1458
1459 class C:
1460 def static(arg1, arg2, arg3):
1461 # No 'self' parameter!
1462 ...
1463 static = staticmethod(static)
1464
1465With Python 2.4's decorators, this can also be written as ::
1466
1467 class C:
1468 @staticmethod
1469 def static(arg1, arg2, arg3):
1470 # No 'self' parameter!
1471 ...
1472
1473However, a far more straightforward way to get the effect of a static method is
1474via a simple module-level function::
1475
1476 def getcount():
1477 return C.count
1478
1479If your code is structured so as to define one class (or tightly related class
1480hierarchy) per module, this supplies the desired encapsulation.
1481
1482
1483How can I overload constructors (or methods) in Python?
1484-------------------------------------------------------
1485
1486This answer actually applies to all methods, but the question usually comes up
1487first in the context of constructors.
1488
1489In C++ you'd write
1490
1491.. code-block:: c
1492
1493 class C {
1494 C() { cout << "No arguments\n"; }
1495 C(int i) { cout << "Argument is " << i << "\n"; }
1496 }
1497
1498In Python you have to write a single constructor that catches all cases using
1499default arguments. For example::
1500
1501 class C:
1502 def __init__(self, i=None):
1503 if i is None:
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001504 print("No arguments")
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001505 else:
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001506 print("Argument is", i)
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001507
1508This is not entirely equivalent, but close enough in practice.
1509
1510You could also try a variable-length argument list, e.g. ::
1511
1512 def __init__(self, *args):
1513 ...
1514
1515The same approach works for all method definitions.
1516
1517
1518I try to use __spam and I get an error about _SomeClassName__spam.
1519------------------------------------------------------------------
1520
1521Variable names with double leading underscores are "mangled" to provide a simple
1522but effective way to define class private variables. Any identifier of the form
1523``__spam`` (at least two leading underscores, at most one trailing underscore)
1524is textually replaced with ``_classname__spam``, where ``classname`` is the
1525current class name with any leading underscores stripped.
1526
1527This doesn't guarantee privacy: an outside user can still deliberately access
1528the "_classname__spam" attribute, and private values are visible in the object's
1529``__dict__``. Many Python programmers never bother to use private variable
1530names at all.
1531
1532
1533My class defines __del__ but it is not called when I delete the object.
1534-----------------------------------------------------------------------
1535
1536There are several possible reasons for this.
1537
1538The del statement does not necessarily call :meth:`__del__` -- it simply
1539decrements the object's reference count, and if this reaches zero
1540:meth:`__del__` is called.
1541
1542If your data structures contain circular links (e.g. a tree where each child has
1543a parent reference and each parent has a list of children) the reference counts
1544will never go back to zero. Once in a while Python runs an algorithm to detect
1545such cycles, but the garbage collector might run some time after the last
1546reference to your data structure vanishes, so your :meth:`__del__` method may be
1547called at an inconvenient and random time. This is inconvenient if you're trying
1548to reproduce a problem. Worse, the order in which object's :meth:`__del__`
1549methods are executed is arbitrary. You can run :func:`gc.collect` to force a
1550collection, but there *are* pathological cases where objects will never be
1551collected.
1552
1553Despite the cycle collector, it's still a good idea to define an explicit
1554``close()`` method on objects to be called whenever you're done with them. The
1555``close()`` method can then remove attributes that refer to subobjecs. Don't
1556call :meth:`__del__` directly -- :meth:`__del__` should call ``close()`` and
1557``close()`` should make sure that it can be called more than once for the same
1558object.
1559
1560Another way to avoid cyclical references is to use the :mod:`weakref` module,
1561which allows you to point to objects without incrementing their reference count.
1562Tree data structures, for instance, should use weak references for their parent
1563and sibling references (if they need them!).
1564
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001565.. XXX relevant for Python 3?
1566
1567 If the object has ever been a local variable in a function that caught an
1568 expression in an except clause, chances are that a reference to the object
1569 still exists in that function's stack frame as contained in the stack trace.
1570 Normally, calling :func:`sys.exc_clear` will take care of this by clearing
1571 the last recorded exception.
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001572
1573Finally, if your :meth:`__del__` method raises an exception, a warning message
1574is printed to :data:`sys.stderr`.
1575
1576
1577How do I get a list of all instances of a given class?
1578------------------------------------------------------
1579
1580Python does not keep track of all instances of a class (or of a built-in type).
1581You can program the class's constructor to keep track of all instances by
1582keeping a list of weak references to each instance.
1583
1584
1585Modules
1586=======
1587
1588How do I create a .pyc file?
1589----------------------------
1590
1591When a module is imported for the first time (or when the source is more recent
1592than the current compiled file) a ``.pyc`` file containing the compiled code
1593should be created in the same directory as the ``.py`` file.
1594
1595One reason that a ``.pyc`` file may not be created is permissions problems with
1596the directory. This can happen, for example, if you develop as one user but run
1597as another, such as if you are testing with a web server. Creation of a .pyc
1598file is automatic if you're importing a module and Python has the ability
1599(permissions, free space, etc...) to write the compiled module back to the
1600directory.
1601
1602Running Python on a top level script is not considered an import and no ``.pyc``
1603will be created. For example, if you have a top-level module ``abc.py`` that
1604imports another module ``xyz.py``, when you run abc, ``xyz.pyc`` will be created
1605since xyz is imported, but no ``abc.pyc`` file will be created since ``abc.py``
1606isn't being imported.
1607
1608If you need to create abc.pyc -- that is, to create a .pyc file for a module
1609that is not imported -- you can, using the :mod:`py_compile` and
1610:mod:`compileall` modules.
1611
1612The :mod:`py_compile` module can manually compile any module. One way is to use
1613the ``compile()`` function in that module interactively::
1614
1615 >>> import py_compile
1616 >>> py_compile.compile('abc.py')
1617
1618This will write the ``.pyc`` to the same location as ``abc.py`` (or you can
1619override that with the optional parameter ``cfile``).
1620
1621You can also automatically compile all files in a directory or directories using
1622the :mod:`compileall` module. You can do it from the shell prompt by running
1623``compileall.py`` and providing the path of a directory containing Python files
1624to compile::
1625
1626 python -m compileall .
1627
1628
1629How do I find the current module name?
1630--------------------------------------
1631
1632A module can find out its own module name by looking at the predefined global
1633variable ``__name__``. If this has the value ``'__main__'``, the program is
1634running as a script. Many modules that are usually used by importing them also
1635provide a command-line interface or a self-test, and only execute this code
1636after checking ``__name__``::
1637
1638 def main():
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001639 print('Running test...')
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001640 ...
1641
1642 if __name__ == '__main__':
1643 main()
1644
1645
1646How can I have modules that mutually import each other?
1647-------------------------------------------------------
1648
1649Suppose you have the following modules:
1650
1651foo.py::
1652
1653 from bar import bar_var
1654 foo_var = 1
1655
1656bar.py::
1657
1658 from foo import foo_var
1659 bar_var = 2
1660
1661The problem is that the interpreter will perform the following steps:
1662
1663* main imports foo
1664* Empty globals for foo are created
1665* foo is compiled and starts executing
1666* foo imports bar
1667* Empty globals for bar are created
1668* bar is compiled and starts executing
1669* bar imports foo (which is a no-op since there already is a module named foo)
1670* bar.foo_var = foo.foo_var
1671
1672The last step fails, because Python isn't done with interpreting ``foo`` yet and
1673the global symbol dictionary for ``foo`` is still empty.
1674
1675The same thing happens when you use ``import foo``, and then try to access
1676``foo.foo_var`` in global code.
1677
1678There are (at least) three possible workarounds for this problem.
1679
1680Guido van Rossum recommends avoiding all uses of ``from <module> import ...``,
1681and placing all code inside functions. Initializations of global variables and
1682class variables should use constants or built-in functions only. This means
1683everything from an imported module is referenced as ``<module>.<name>``.
1684
1685Jim Roskind suggests performing steps in the following order in each module:
1686
1687* exports (globals, functions, and classes that don't need imported base
1688 classes)
1689* ``import`` statements
1690* active code (including globals that are initialized from imported values).
1691
1692van Rossum doesn't like this approach much because the imports appear in a
1693strange place, but it does work.
1694
1695Matthias Urlichs recommends restructuring your code so that the recursive import
1696is not necessary in the first place.
1697
1698These solutions are not mutually exclusive.
1699
1700
1701__import__('x.y.z') returns <module 'x'>; how do I get z?
1702---------------------------------------------------------
1703
1704Try::
1705
1706 __import__('x.y.z').y.z
1707
1708For more realistic situations, you may have to do something like ::
1709
1710 m = __import__(s)
1711 for i in s.split(".")[1:]:
1712 m = getattr(m, i)
1713
1714See :mod:`importlib` for a convenience function called
1715:func:`~importlib.import_module`.
1716
1717
1718
1719When I edit an imported module and reimport it, the changes don't show up. Why does this happen?
1720-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1721
1722For reasons of efficiency as well as consistency, Python only reads the module
1723file on the first time a module is imported. If it didn't, in a program
1724consisting of many modules where each one imports the same basic module, the
1725basic module would be parsed and re-parsed many times. To force rereading of a
1726changed module, do this::
1727
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001728 import imp
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001729 import modname
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001730 imp.reload(modname)
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001731
1732Warning: this technique is not 100% fool-proof. In particular, modules
1733containing statements like ::
1734
1735 from modname import some_objects
1736
1737will continue to work with the old version of the imported objects. If the
1738module contains class definitions, existing class instances will *not* be
1739updated to use the new class definition. This can result in the following
1740paradoxical behaviour:
1741
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001742 >>> import imp
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001743 >>> import cls
1744 >>> c = cls.C() # Create an instance of C
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001745 >>> imp.reload(cls)
1746 <module 'cls' from 'cls.py'>
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001747 >>> isinstance(c, cls.C) # isinstance is false?!?
1748 False
1749
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001750The nature of the problem is made clear if you print out the "identity" of the
1751class objects:
Georg Brandld7413152009-10-11 21:25:26 +00001752
Georg Brandl62eaaf62009-12-19 17:51:41 +00001753 >>> hex(id(c.__class__))
1754 '0x7352a0'
1755 >>> hex(id(cls.C))
1756 '0x4198d0'