| |
| .. _lexical: |
| |
| **************** |
| Lexical analysis |
| **************** |
| |
| .. index:: lexical analysis, parser, token |
| |
| A Python program is read by a *parser*. Input to the parser is a stream of |
| *tokens*, generated by the *lexical analyzer*. This chapter describes how the |
| lexical analyzer breaks a file into tokens. |
| |
| Python reads program text as Unicode code points; the encoding of a source file |
| can be given by an encoding declaration and defaults to UTF-8, see :pep:`3120` |
| for details. If the source file cannot be decoded, a :exc:`SyntaxError` is |
| raised. |
| |
| |
| .. _line-structure: |
| |
| Line structure |
| ============== |
| |
| .. index:: line structure |
| |
| A Python program is divided into a number of *logical lines*. |
| |
| |
| .. _logical-lines: |
| |
| Logical lines |
| ------------- |
| |
| .. index:: logical line, physical line, line joining, NEWLINE token |
| |
| The end of a logical line is represented by the token NEWLINE. Statements |
| cannot cross logical line boundaries except where NEWLINE is allowed by the |
| syntax (e.g., between statements in compound statements). A logical line is |
| constructed from one or more *physical lines* by following the explicit or |
| implicit *line joining* rules. |
| |
| |
| .. _physical-lines: |
| |
| Physical lines |
| -------------- |
| |
| A physical line is a sequence of characters terminated by an end-of-line |
| sequence. In source files, any of the standard platform line termination |
| sequences can be used - the Unix form using ASCII LF (linefeed), the Windows |
| form using the ASCII sequence CR LF (return followed by linefeed), or the old |
| Macintosh form using the ASCII CR (return) character. All of these forms can be |
| used equally, regardless of platform. |
| |
| When embedding Python, source code strings should be passed to Python APIs using |
| the standard C conventions for newline characters (the ``\n`` character, |
| representing ASCII LF, is the line terminator). |
| |
| |
| .. _comments: |
| |
| Comments |
| -------- |
| |
| .. index:: comment, hash character |
| |
| A comment starts with a hash character (``#``) that is not part of a string |
| literal, and ends at the end of the physical line. A comment signifies the end |
| of the logical line unless the implicit line joining rules are invoked. Comments |
| are ignored by the syntax; they are not tokens. |
| |
| |
| .. _encodings: |
| |
| Encoding declarations |
| --------------------- |
| |
| .. index:: source character set, encoding declarations (source file) |
| |
| If a comment in the first or second line of the Python script matches the |
| regular expression ``coding[=:]\s*([-\w.]+)``, this comment is processed as an |
| encoding declaration; the first group of this expression names the encoding of |
| the source code file. The encoding declaration must appear on a line of its |
| own. If it is the second line, the first line must also be a comment-only line. |
| The recommended forms of an encoding expression are :: |
| |
| # -*- coding: <encoding-name> -*- |
| |
| which is recognized also by GNU Emacs, and :: |
| |
| # vim:fileencoding=<encoding-name> |
| |
| which is recognized by Bram Moolenaar's VIM. |
| |
| If no encoding declaration is found, the default encoding is UTF-8. In |
| addition, if the first bytes of the file are the UTF-8 byte-order mark |
| (``b'\xef\xbb\xbf'``), the declared file encoding is UTF-8 (this is supported, |
| among others, by Microsoft's :program:`notepad`). |
| |
| If an encoding is declared, the encoding name must be recognized by Python. The |
| encoding is used for all lexical analysis, including string literals, comments |
| and identifiers. |
| |
| .. XXX there should be a list of supported encodings. |
| |
| |
| .. _explicit-joining: |
| |
| Explicit line joining |
| --------------------- |
| |
| .. index:: physical line, line joining, line continuation, backslash character |
| |
| Two or more physical lines may be joined into logical lines using backslash |
| characters (``\``), as follows: when a physical line ends in a backslash that is |
| not part of a string literal or comment, it is joined with the following forming |
| a single logical line, deleting the backslash and the following end-of-line |
| character. For example:: |
| |
| if 1900 < year < 2100 and 1 <= month <= 12 \ |
| and 1 <= day <= 31 and 0 <= hour < 24 \ |
| and 0 <= minute < 60 and 0 <= second < 60: # Looks like a valid date |
| return 1 |
| |
| A line ending in a backslash cannot carry a comment. A backslash does not |
| continue a comment. A backslash does not continue a token except for string |
| literals (i.e., tokens other than string literals cannot be split across |
| physical lines using a backslash). A backslash is illegal elsewhere on a line |
| outside a string literal. |
| |
| |
| .. _implicit-joining: |
| |
| Implicit line joining |
| --------------------- |
| |
| Expressions in parentheses, square brackets or curly braces can be split over |
| more than one physical line without using backslashes. For example:: |
| |
| month_names = ['Januari', 'Februari', 'Maart', # These are the |
| 'April', 'Mei', 'Juni', # Dutch names |
| 'Juli', 'Augustus', 'September', # for the months |
| 'Oktober', 'November', 'December'] # of the year |
| |
| Implicitly continued lines can carry comments. The indentation of the |
| continuation lines is not important. Blank continuation lines are allowed. |
| There is no NEWLINE token between implicit continuation lines. Implicitly |
| continued lines can also occur within triple-quoted strings (see below); in that |
| case they cannot carry comments. |
| |
| |
| .. _blank-lines: |
| |
| Blank lines |
| ----------- |
| |
| .. index:: single: blank line |
| |
| A logical line that contains only spaces, tabs, formfeeds and possibly a |
| comment, is ignored (i.e., no NEWLINE token is generated). During interactive |
| input of statements, handling of a blank line may differ depending on the |
| implementation of the read-eval-print loop. In the standard interactive |
| interpreter, an entirely blank logical line (i.e. one containing not even |
| whitespace or a comment) terminates a multi-line statement. |
| |
| |
| .. _indentation: |
| |
| Indentation |
| ----------- |
| |
| .. index:: indentation, leading whitespace, space, tab, grouping, statement grouping |
| |
| Leading whitespace (spaces and tabs) at the beginning of a logical line is used |
| to compute the indentation level of the line, which in turn is used to determine |
| the grouping of statements. |
| |
| Tabs are replaced (from left to right) by one to eight spaces such that the |
| total number of characters up to and including the replacement is a multiple of |
| eight (this is intended to be the same rule as used by Unix). The total number |
| of spaces preceding the first non-blank character then determines the line's |
| indentation. Indentation cannot be split over multiple physical lines using |
| backslashes; the whitespace up to the first backslash determines the |
| indentation. |
| |
| Indentation is rejected as inconsistent if a source file mixes tabs and spaces |
| in a way that makes the meaning dependent on the worth of a tab in spaces; a |
| :exc:`TabError` is raised in that case. |
| |
| **Cross-platform compatibility note:** because of the nature of text editors on |
| non-UNIX platforms, it is unwise to use a mixture of spaces and tabs for the |
| indentation in a single source file. It should also be noted that different |
| platforms may explicitly limit the maximum indentation level. |
| |
| A formfeed character may be present at the start of the line; it will be ignored |
| for the indentation calculations above. Formfeed characters occurring elsewhere |
| in the leading whitespace have an undefined effect (for instance, they may reset |
| the space count to zero). |
| |
| .. index:: INDENT token, DEDENT token |
| |
| The indentation levels of consecutive lines are used to generate INDENT and |
| DEDENT tokens, using a stack, as follows. |
| |
| Before the first line of the file is read, a single zero is pushed on the stack; |
| this will never be popped off again. The numbers pushed on the stack will |
| always be strictly increasing from bottom to top. At the beginning of each |
| logical line, the line's indentation level is compared to the top of the stack. |
| If it is equal, nothing happens. If it is larger, it is pushed on the stack, and |
| one INDENT token is generated. If it is smaller, it *must* be one of the |
| numbers occurring on the stack; all numbers on the stack that are larger are |
| popped off, and for each number popped off a DEDENT token is generated. At the |
| end of the file, a DEDENT token is generated for each number remaining on the |
| stack that is larger than zero. |
| |
| Here is an example of a correctly (though confusingly) indented piece of Python |
| code:: |
| |
| def perm(l): |
| # Compute the list of all permutations of l |
| if len(l) <= 1: |
| return [l] |
| r = [] |
| for i in range(len(l)): |
| s = l[:i] + l[i+1:] |
| p = perm(s) |
| for x in p: |
| r.append(l[i:i+1] + x) |
| return r |
| |
| The following example shows various indentation errors:: |
| |
| def perm(l): # error: first line indented |
| for i in range(len(l)): # error: not indented |
| s = l[:i] + l[i+1:] |
| p = perm(l[:i] + l[i+1:]) # error: unexpected indent |
| for x in p: |
| r.append(l[i:i+1] + x) |
| return r # error: inconsistent dedent |
| |
| (Actually, the first three errors are detected by the parser; only the last |
| error is found by the lexical analyzer --- the indentation of ``return r`` does |
| not match a level popped off the stack.) |
| |
| |
| .. _whitespace: |
| |
| Whitespace between tokens |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| Except at the beginning of a logical line or in string literals, the whitespace |
| characters space, tab and formfeed can be used interchangeably to separate |
| tokens. Whitespace is needed between two tokens only if their concatenation |
| could otherwise be interpreted as a different token (e.g., ab is one token, but |
| a b is two tokens). |
| |
| |
| .. _other-tokens: |
| |
| Other tokens |
| ============ |
| |
| Besides NEWLINE, INDENT and DEDENT, the following categories of tokens exist: |
| *identifiers*, *keywords*, *literals*, *operators*, and *delimiters*. Whitespace |
| characters (other than line terminators, discussed earlier) are not tokens, but |
| serve to delimit tokens. Where ambiguity exists, a token comprises the longest |
| possible string that forms a legal token, when read from left to right. |
| |
| |
| .. _identifiers: |
| |
| Identifiers and keywords |
| ======================== |
| |
| .. index:: identifier, name |
| |
| Identifiers (also referred to as *names*) are described by the following lexical |
| definitions. |
| |
| The syntax of identifiers in Python is based on the Unicode standard annex |
| UAX-31, with elaboration and changes as defined below; see also :pep:`3131` for |
| further details. |
| |
| Within the ASCII range (U+0001..U+007F), the valid characters for identifiers |
| are the same as in Python 2.x: the uppercase and lowercase letters ``A`` through |
| ``Z``, the underscore ``_`` and, except for the first character, the digits |
| ``0`` through ``9``. |
| |
| Python 3.0 introduces additional characters from outside the ASCII range (see |
| :pep:`3131`). For these characters, the classification uses the version of the |
| Unicode Character Database as included in the :mod:`unicodedata` module. |
| |
| Identifiers are unlimited in length. Case is significant. |
| |
| .. productionlist:: |
| identifier: `xid_start` `xid_continue`* |
| id_start: <all characters in general categories Lu, Ll, Lt, Lm, Lo, Nl, the underscore, and characters with the Other_ID_Start property> |
| id_continue: <all characters in `id_start`, plus characters in the categories Mn, Mc, Nd, Pc and others with the Other_ID_Continue property> |
| xid_start: <all characters in `id_start` whose NFKC normalization is in "id_start xid_continue*"> |
| xid_continue: <all characters in `id_continue` whose NFKC normalization is in "id_continue*"> |
| |
| The Unicode category codes mentioned above stand for: |
| |
| * *Lu* - uppercase letters |
| * *Ll* - lowercase letters |
| * *Lt* - titlecase letters |
| * *Lm* - modifier letters |
| * *Lo* - other letters |
| * *Nl* - letter numbers |
| * *Mn* - nonspacing marks |
| * *Mc* - spacing combining marks |
| * *Nd* - decimal numbers |
| * *Pc* - connector punctuations |
| * *Other_ID_Start* - explicit list of characters in `PropList.txt |
| <http://www.unicode.org/Public/8.0.0/ucd/PropList.txt>`_ to support backwards |
| compatibility |
| * *Other_ID_Continue* - likewise |
| |
| All identifiers are converted into the normal form NFKC while parsing; comparison |
| of identifiers is based on NFKC. |
| |
| A non-normative HTML file listing all valid identifier characters for Unicode |
| 4.1 can be found at |
| https://www.dcl.hpi.uni-potsdam.de/home/loewis/table-3131.html. |
| |
| |
| .. _keywords: |
| |
| Keywords |
| -------- |
| |
| .. index:: |
| single: keyword |
| single: reserved word |
| |
| The following identifiers are used as reserved words, or *keywords* of the |
| language, and cannot be used as ordinary identifiers. They must be spelled |
| exactly as written here: |
| |
| .. sourcecode:: text |
| |
| False class finally is return |
| None continue for lambda try |
| True def from nonlocal while |
| and del global not with |
| as elif if or yield |
| assert else import pass |
| break except in raise |
| |
| .. _id-classes: |
| |
| Reserved classes of identifiers |
| ------------------------------- |
| |
| Certain classes of identifiers (besides keywords) have special meanings. These |
| classes are identified by the patterns of leading and trailing underscore |
| characters: |
| |
| ``_*`` |
| Not imported by ``from module import *``. The special identifier ``_`` is used |
| in the interactive interpreter to store the result of the last evaluation; it is |
| stored in the :mod:`builtins` module. When not in interactive mode, ``_`` |
| has no special meaning and is not defined. See section :ref:`import`. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| The name ``_`` is often used in conjunction with internationalization; |
| refer to the documentation for the :mod:`gettext` module for more |
| information on this convention. |
| |
| ``__*__`` |
| System-defined names. These names are defined by the interpreter and its |
| implementation (including the standard library). Current system names are |
| discussed in the :ref:`specialnames` section and elsewhere. More will likely |
| be defined in future versions of Python. *Any* use of ``__*__`` names, in |
| any context, that does not follow explicitly documented use, is subject to |
| breakage without warning. |
| |
| ``__*`` |
| Class-private names. Names in this category, when used within the context of a |
| class definition, are re-written to use a mangled form to help avoid name |
| clashes between "private" attributes of base and derived classes. See section |
| :ref:`atom-identifiers`. |
| |
| |
| .. _literals: |
| |
| Literals |
| ======== |
| |
| .. index:: literal, constant |
| |
| Literals are notations for constant values of some built-in types. |
| |
| |
| .. _strings: |
| |
| String and Bytes literals |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| .. index:: string literal, bytes literal, ASCII |
| |
| String literals are described by the following lexical definitions: |
| |
| .. productionlist:: |
| stringliteral: [`stringprefix`](`shortstring` | `longstring`) |
| stringprefix: "r" | "u" | "R" | "U" | "f" | "F" |
| : | "fr" | "Fr" | "fR" | "FR" | "rf" | "rF" | "Rf" | "RF" |
| shortstring: "'" `shortstringitem`* "'" | '"' `shortstringitem`* '"' |
| longstring: "'''" `longstringitem`* "'''" | '"""' `longstringitem`* '"""' |
| shortstringitem: `shortstringchar` | `stringescapeseq` |
| longstringitem: `longstringchar` | `stringescapeseq` |
| shortstringchar: <any source character except "\" or newline or the quote> |
| longstringchar: <any source character except "\"> |
| stringescapeseq: "\" <any source character> |
| |
| .. productionlist:: |
| bytesliteral: `bytesprefix`(`shortbytes` | `longbytes`) |
| bytesprefix: "b" | "B" | "br" | "Br" | "bR" | "BR" | "rb" | "rB" | "Rb" | "RB" |
| shortbytes: "'" `shortbytesitem`* "'" | '"' `shortbytesitem`* '"' |
| longbytes: "'''" `longbytesitem`* "'''" | '"""' `longbytesitem`* '"""' |
| shortbytesitem: `shortbyteschar` | `bytesescapeseq` |
| longbytesitem: `longbyteschar` | `bytesescapeseq` |
| shortbyteschar: <any ASCII character except "\" or newline or the quote> |
| longbyteschar: <any ASCII character except "\"> |
| bytesescapeseq: "\" <any ASCII character> |
| |
| One syntactic restriction not indicated by these productions is that whitespace |
| is not allowed between the :token:`stringprefix` or :token:`bytesprefix` and the |
| rest of the literal. The source character set is defined by the encoding |
| declaration; it is UTF-8 if no encoding declaration is given in the source file; |
| see section :ref:`encodings`. |
| |
| .. index:: triple-quoted string, Unicode Consortium, raw string |
| |
| In plain English: Both types of literals can be enclosed in matching single quotes |
| (``'``) or double quotes (``"``). They can also be enclosed in matching groups |
| of three single or double quotes (these are generally referred to as |
| *triple-quoted strings*). The backslash (``\``) character is used to escape |
| characters that otherwise have a special meaning, such as newline, backslash |
| itself, or the quote character. |
| |
| Bytes literals are always prefixed with ``'b'`` or ``'B'``; they produce an |
| instance of the :class:`bytes` type instead of the :class:`str` type. They |
| may only contain ASCII characters; bytes with a numeric value of 128 or greater |
| must be expressed with escapes. |
| |
| As of Python 3.3 it is possible again to prefix string literals with a |
| ``u`` prefix to simplify maintenance of dual 2.x and 3.x codebases. |
| |
| Both string and bytes literals may optionally be prefixed with a letter ``'r'`` |
| or ``'R'``; such strings are called :dfn:`raw strings` and treat backslashes as |
| literal characters. As a result, in string literals, ``'\U'`` and ``'\u'`` |
| escapes in raw strings are not treated specially. Given that Python 2.x's raw |
| unicode literals behave differently than Python 3.x's the ``'ur'`` syntax |
| is not supported. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 3.3 |
| The ``'rb'`` prefix of raw bytes literals has been added as a synonym |
| of ``'br'``. |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 3.3 |
| Support for the unicode legacy literal (``u'value'``) was reintroduced |
| to simplify the maintenance of dual Python 2.x and 3.x codebases. |
| See :pep:`414` for more information. |
| |
| A string literal with ``'f'`` or ``'F'`` in its prefix is a |
| :dfn:`formatted string literal`; see :ref:`f-strings`. The ``'f'`` may be |
| combined with ``'r'``, but not with ``'b'`` or ``'u'``, therefore raw |
| formatted strings are possible, but formatted bytes literals are not. |
| |
| In triple-quoted literals, unescaped newlines and quotes are allowed (and are |
| retained), except that three unescaped quotes in a row terminate the literal. (A |
| "quote" is the character used to open the literal, i.e. either ``'`` or ``"``.) |
| |
| .. index:: physical line, escape sequence, Standard C, C |
| |
| Unless an ``'r'`` or ``'R'`` prefix is present, escape sequences in string and |
| bytes literals are interpreted according to rules similar to those used by |
| Standard C. The recognized escape sequences are: |
| |
| +-----------------+---------------------------------+-------+ |
| | Escape Sequence | Meaning | Notes | |
| +=================+=================================+=======+ |
| | ``\newline`` | Backslash and newline ignored | | |
| +-----------------+---------------------------------+-------+ |
| | ``\\`` | Backslash (``\``) | | |
| +-----------------+---------------------------------+-------+ |
| | ``\'`` | Single quote (``'``) | | |
| +-----------------+---------------------------------+-------+ |
| | ``\"`` | Double quote (``"``) | | |
| +-----------------+---------------------------------+-------+ |
| | ``\a`` | ASCII Bell (BEL) | | |
| +-----------------+---------------------------------+-------+ |
| | ``\b`` | ASCII Backspace (BS) | | |
| +-----------------+---------------------------------+-------+ |
| | ``\f`` | ASCII Formfeed (FF) | | |
| +-----------------+---------------------------------+-------+ |
| | ``\n`` | ASCII Linefeed (LF) | | |
| +-----------------+---------------------------------+-------+ |
| | ``\r`` | ASCII Carriage Return (CR) | | |
| +-----------------+---------------------------------+-------+ |
| | ``\t`` | ASCII Horizontal Tab (TAB) | | |
| +-----------------+---------------------------------+-------+ |
| | ``\v`` | ASCII Vertical Tab (VT) | | |
| +-----------------+---------------------------------+-------+ |
| | ``\ooo`` | Character with octal value | (1,3) | |
| | | *ooo* | | |
| +-----------------+---------------------------------+-------+ |
| | ``\xhh`` | Character with hex value *hh* | (2,3) | |
| +-----------------+---------------------------------+-------+ |
| |
| Escape sequences only recognized in string literals are: |
| |
| +-----------------+---------------------------------+-------+ |
| | Escape Sequence | Meaning | Notes | |
| +=================+=================================+=======+ |
| | ``\N{name}`` | Character named *name* in the | \(4) | |
| | | Unicode database | | |
| +-----------------+---------------------------------+-------+ |
| | ``\uxxxx`` | Character with 16-bit hex value | \(5) | |
| | | *xxxx* | | |
| +-----------------+---------------------------------+-------+ |
| | ``\Uxxxxxxxx`` | Character with 32-bit hex value | \(6) | |
| | | *xxxxxxxx* | | |
| +-----------------+---------------------------------+-------+ |
| |
| Notes: |
| |
| (1) |
| As in Standard C, up to three octal digits are accepted. |
| |
| (2) |
| Unlike in Standard C, exactly two hex digits are required. |
| |
| (3) |
| In a bytes literal, hexadecimal and octal escapes denote the byte with the |
| given value. In a string literal, these escapes denote a Unicode character |
| with the given value. |
| |
| (4) |
| .. versionchanged:: 3.3 |
| Support for name aliases [#]_ has been added. |
| |
| (5) |
| Exactly four hex digits are required. |
| |
| (6) |
| Any Unicode character can be encoded this way. Exactly eight hex digits |
| are required. |
| |
| |
| .. index:: unrecognized escape sequence |
| |
| Unlike Standard C, all unrecognized escape sequences are left in the string |
| unchanged, i.e., *the backslash is left in the result*. (This behavior is |
| useful when debugging: if an escape sequence is mistyped, the resulting output |
| is more easily recognized as broken.) It is also important to note that the |
| escape sequences only recognized in string literals fall into the category of |
| unrecognized escapes for bytes literals. |
| |
| Even in a raw literal, quotes can be escaped with a backslash, but the |
| backslash remains in the result; for example, ``r"\""`` is a valid string |
| literal consisting of two characters: a backslash and a double quote; ``r"\"`` |
| is not a valid string literal (even a raw string cannot end in an odd number of |
| backslashes). Specifically, *a raw literal cannot end in a single backslash* |
| (since the backslash would escape the following quote character). Note also |
| that a single backslash followed by a newline is interpreted as those two |
| characters as part of the literal, *not* as a line continuation. |
| |
| |
| .. _string-catenation: |
| |
| String literal concatenation |
| ---------------------------- |
| |
| Multiple adjacent string or bytes literals (delimited by whitespace), possibly |
| using different quoting conventions, are allowed, and their meaning is the same |
| as their concatenation. Thus, ``"hello" 'world'`` is equivalent to |
| ``"helloworld"``. This feature can be used to reduce the number of backslashes |
| needed, to split long strings conveniently across long lines, or even to add |
| comments to parts of strings, for example:: |
| |
| re.compile("[A-Za-z_]" # letter or underscore |
| "[A-Za-z0-9_]*" # letter, digit or underscore |
| ) |
| |
| Note that this feature is defined at the syntactical level, but implemented at |
| compile time. The '+' operator must be used to concatenate string expressions |
| at run time. Also note that literal concatenation can use different quoting |
| styles for each component (even mixing raw strings and triple quoted strings), |
| and formatted string literals may be concatenated with plain string literals. |
| |
| |
| .. index:: |
| single: formatted string literal |
| single: interpolated string literal |
| single: string; formatted literal |
| single: string; interpolated literal |
| single: f-string |
| .. _f-strings: |
| |
| Formatted string literals |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 3.6 |
| |
| A :dfn:`formatted string literal` or :dfn:`f-string` is a string literal |
| that is prefixed with ``'f'`` or ``'F'``. These strings may contain |
| replacement fields, which are expressions delimited by curly braces ``{}``. |
| While other string literals always have a constant value, formatted strings |
| are really expressions evaluated at run time. |
| |
| Escape sequences are decoded like in ordinary string literals (except when |
| a literal is also marked as a raw string). After decoding, the grammar |
| for the contents of the string is: |
| |
| .. productionlist:: |
| f_string: (`literal_char` | "{{" | "}}" | `replacement_field`)* |
| replacement_field: "{" `f_expression` ["!" `conversion`] [":" `format_spec`] "}" |
| f_expression: `conditional_expression` ("," `conditional_expression`)* [","] |
| : | `yield_expression` |
| conversion: "s" | "r" | "a" |
| format_spec: (`literal_char` | NULL | `replacement_field`)* |
| literal_char: <any code point except "{", "}" or NULL> |
| |
| The parts of the string outside curly braces are treated literally, |
| except that any doubled curly braces ``'{{'`` or ``'}}'`` are replaced |
| with the corresponding single curly brace. A single opening curly |
| bracket ``'{'`` marks a replacement field, which starts with a |
| Python expression. After the expression, there may be a conversion field, |
| introduced by an exclamation point ``'!'``. A format specifier may also |
| be appended, introduced by a colon ``':'``. A replacement field ends |
| with a closing curly bracket ``'}'``. |
| |
| Expressions in formatted string literals are treated like regular |
| Python expressions surrounded by parentheses, with a few exceptions. |
| An empty expression is not allowed, and a :keyword:`lambda` expression |
| must be surrounded by explicit parentheses. Replacement expressions |
| can contain line breaks (e.g. in triple-quoted strings), but they |
| cannot contain comments. Each expression is evaluated in the context |
| where the formatted string literal appears, in order from left to right. |
| |
| If a conversion is specified, the result of evaluating the expression |
| is converted before formatting. Conversion ``'!s'`` calls :func:`str` on |
| the result, ``'!r'`` calls :func:`repr`, and ``'!a'`` calls :func:`ascii`. |
| |
| The result is then formatted using the :func:`format` protocol. The |
| format specifier is passed to the :meth:`__format__` method of the |
| expression or conversion result. An empty string is passed when the |
| format specifier is omitted. The formatted result is then included in |
| the final value of the whole string. |
| |
| Top-level format specifiers may include nested replacement fields. |
| These nested fields may include their own conversion fields and |
| format specifiers, but may not include more deeply-nested replacement fields. |
| |
| Formatted string literals may be concatenated, but replacement fields |
| cannot be split across literals. |
| |
| Some examples of formatted string literals:: |
| |
| >>> name = "Fred" |
| >>> f"He said his name is {name!r}." |
| "He said his name is 'Fred'." |
| >>> f"He said his name is {repr(name)}." # repr() is equivalent to !r |
| "He said his name is 'Fred'." |
| >>> width = 10 |
| >>> precision = 4 |
| >>> value = decimal.Decimal("12.34567") |
| >>> f"result: {value:{width}.{precision}}" # nested fields |
| 'result: 12.35' |
| |
| A consequence of sharing the same syntax as regular string literals is |
| that characters in the replacement fields must not conflict with the |
| quoting used in the outer formatted string literal. Also, escape |
| sequences normally apply to the outer formatted string literal, |
| rather than inner string literals:: |
| |
| f"abc {a["x"]} def" # error: outer string literal ended prematurely |
| f"abc {a[\"x\"]} def" # workaround: escape the inner quotes |
| f"abc {a['x']} def" # workaround: use different quoting |
| |
| f"newline: {ord('\n')}" # error: literal line break in inner string |
| f"newline: {ord('\\n')}" # workaround: double escaping |
| fr"newline: {ord('\n')}" # workaround: raw outer string |
| |
| See also :pep:`498` for the proposal that added formatted string literals, |
| and :meth:`str.format`, which uses a related format string mechanism. |
| |
| |
| .. _numbers: |
| |
| Numeric literals |
| ---------------- |
| |
| .. index:: number, numeric literal, integer literal |
| floating point literal, hexadecimal literal |
| octal literal, binary literal, decimal literal, imaginary literal, complex literal |
| |
| There are three types of numeric literals: integers, floating point numbers, and |
| imaginary numbers. There are no complex literals (complex numbers can be formed |
| by adding a real number and an imaginary number). |
| |
| Note that numeric literals do not include a sign; a phrase like ``-1`` is |
| actually an expression composed of the unary operator '``-``' and the literal |
| ``1``. |
| |
| |
| .. _integers: |
| |
| Integer literals |
| ---------------- |
| |
| Integer literals are described by the following lexical definitions: |
| |
| .. productionlist:: |
| integer: `decimalinteger` | `octinteger` | `hexinteger` | `bininteger` |
| decimalinteger: `nonzerodigit` `digit`* | "0"+ |
| nonzerodigit: "1"..."9" |
| digit: "0"..."9" |
| octinteger: "0" ("o" | "O") `octdigit`+ |
| hexinteger: "0" ("x" | "X") `hexdigit`+ |
| bininteger: "0" ("b" | "B") `bindigit`+ |
| octdigit: "0"..."7" |
| hexdigit: `digit` | "a"..."f" | "A"..."F" |
| bindigit: "0" | "1" |
| |
| There is no limit for the length of integer literals apart from what can be |
| stored in available memory. |
| |
| Note that leading zeros in a non-zero decimal number are not allowed. This is |
| for disambiguation with C-style octal literals, which Python used before version |
| 3.0. |
| |
| Some examples of integer literals:: |
| |
| 7 2147483647 0o177 0b100110111 |
| 3 79228162514264337593543950336 0o377 0xdeadbeef |
| |
| |
| .. _floating: |
| |
| Floating point literals |
| ----------------------- |
| |
| Floating point literals are described by the following lexical definitions: |
| |
| .. productionlist:: |
| floatnumber: `pointfloat` | `exponentfloat` |
| pointfloat: [`intpart`] `fraction` | `intpart` "." |
| exponentfloat: (`intpart` | `pointfloat`) `exponent` |
| intpart: `digit`+ |
| fraction: "." `digit`+ |
| exponent: ("e" | "E") ["+" | "-"] `digit`+ |
| |
| Note that the integer and exponent parts are always interpreted using radix 10. |
| For example, ``077e010`` is legal, and denotes the same number as ``77e10``. The |
| allowed range of floating point literals is implementation-dependent. Some |
| examples of floating point literals:: |
| |
| 3.14 10. .001 1e100 3.14e-10 0e0 |
| |
| Note that numeric literals do not include a sign; a phrase like ``-1`` is |
| actually an expression composed of the unary operator ``-`` and the literal |
| ``1``. |
| |
| |
| .. _imaginary: |
| |
| Imaginary literals |
| ------------------ |
| |
| Imaginary literals are described by the following lexical definitions: |
| |
| .. productionlist:: |
| imagnumber: (`floatnumber` | `intpart`) ("j" | "J") |
| |
| An imaginary literal yields a complex number with a real part of 0.0. Complex |
| numbers are represented as a pair of floating point numbers and have the same |
| restrictions on their range. To create a complex number with a nonzero real |
| part, add a floating point number to it, e.g., ``(3+4j)``. Some examples of |
| imaginary literals:: |
| |
| 3.14j 10.j 10j .001j 1e100j 3.14e-10j |
| |
| |
| .. _operators: |
| |
| Operators |
| ========= |
| |
| .. index:: single: operators |
| |
| The following tokens are operators:: |
| |
| + - * ** / // % @ |
| << >> & | ^ ~ |
| < > <= >= == != |
| |
| |
| .. _delimiters: |
| |
| Delimiters |
| ========== |
| |
| .. index:: single: delimiters |
| |
| The following tokens serve as delimiters in the grammar:: |
| |
| ( ) [ ] { } |
| , : . ; @ = -> |
| += -= *= /= //= %= @= |
| &= |= ^= >>= <<= **= |
| |
| The period can also occur in floating-point and imaginary literals. A sequence |
| of three periods has a special meaning as an ellipsis literal. The second half |
| of the list, the augmented assignment operators, serve lexically as delimiters, |
| but also perform an operation. |
| |
| The following printing ASCII characters have special meaning as part of other |
| tokens or are otherwise significant to the lexical analyzer:: |
| |
| ' " # \ |
| |
| The following printing ASCII characters are not used in Python. Their |
| occurrence outside string literals and comments is an unconditional error:: |
| |
| $ ? ` |
| |
| |
| .. rubric:: Footnotes |
| |
| .. [#] http://www.unicode.org/Public/8.0.0/ucd/NameAliases.txt |