| .. _tut-informal: |
| |
| ********************************** |
| An Informal Introduction to Python |
| ********************************** |
| |
| In the following examples, input and output are distinguished by the presence or |
| absence of prompts (``>>>`` and ``...``): to repeat the example, you must type |
| everything after the prompt, when the prompt appears; lines that do not begin |
| with a prompt are output from the interpreter. Note that a secondary prompt on a |
| line by itself in an example means you must type a blank line; this is used to |
| end a multi-line command. |
| |
| Many of the examples in this manual, even those entered at the interactive |
| prompt, include comments. Comments in Python start with the hash character, |
| ``#``, and extend to the end of the physical line. A comment may appear at |
| the start of a line or following whitespace or code, but not within a string |
| literal. A hash character within a string literal is just a hash character. |
| |
| Some examples:: |
| |
| # this is the first comment |
| SPAM = 1 # and this is the second comment |
| # ... and now a third! |
| STRING = "# This is not a comment." |
| |
| |
| .. _tut-calculator: |
| |
| Using Python as a Calculator |
| ============================ |
| |
| Let's try some simple Python commands. Start the interpreter and wait for the |
| primary prompt, ``>>>``. (It shouldn't take long.) |
| |
| |
| .. _tut-numbers: |
| |
| Numbers |
| ------- |
| |
| The interpreter acts as a simple calculator: you can type an expression at it |
| and it will write the value. Expression syntax is straightforward: the |
| operators ``+``, ``-``, ``*`` and ``/`` work just like in most other languages |
| (for example, Pascal or C); parentheses can be used for grouping. For example:: |
| |
| >>> 2+2 |
| 4 |
| >>> # This is a comment |
| ... 2+2 |
| 4 |
| >>> 2+2 # and a comment on the same line as code |
| 4 |
| >>> (50-5*6)/4 |
| 5.0 |
| >>> 8/5 # Fractions aren't lost when dividing integers |
| 1.6000000000000001 |
| |
| Note: You might not see exactly the same result; floating point results can |
| differ from one machine to another. We will say more later about controlling |
| the appearance of floating point output; what we see here is the most |
| informative display but not as easy to read as we would get with:: |
| |
| >>> print(8/5) |
| 1.6 |
| |
| For clarity in this tutorial we will show the simpler floating point output |
| unless we are specifically discussing output formatting, and explain later |
| why these two ways of displaying floating point data come to be different. |
| See :ref:`tut-fp-issues` for a full discussion. |
| |
| To do integer division and get an integer result, |
| discarding any fractional result, there is another operator, ``//``:: |
| |
| >>> # Integer division returns the floor: |
| ... 7//3 |
| 2 |
| >>> 7//-3 |
| -3 |
| |
| The equal sign (``'='``) is used to assign a value to a variable. Afterwards, no |
| result is displayed before the next interactive prompt:: |
| |
| >>> width = 20 |
| >>> height = 5*9 |
| >>> width * height |
| 900 |
| |
| A value can be assigned to several variables simultaneously:: |
| |
| >>> x = y = z = 0 # Zero x, y and z |
| >>> x |
| 0 |
| >>> y |
| 0 |
| >>> z |
| 0 |
| |
| There is full support for floating point; operators with mixed type operands |
| convert the integer operand to floating point:: |
| |
| >>> 3 * 3.75 / 1.5 |
| 7.5 |
| >>> 7.0 / 2 |
| 3.5 |
| |
| Complex numbers are also supported; imaginary numbers are written with a suffix |
| of ``j`` or ``J``. Complex numbers with a nonzero real component are written as |
| ``(real+imagj)``, or can be created with the ``complex(real, imag)`` function. |
| :: |
| |
| >>> 1j * 1J |
| (-1+0j) |
| >>> 1j * complex(0, 1) |
| (-1+0j) |
| >>> 3+1j*3 |
| (3+3j) |
| >>> (3+1j)*3 |
| (9+3j) |
| >>> (1+2j)/(1+1j) |
| (1.5+0.5j) |
| |
| Complex numbers are always represented as two floating point numbers, the real |
| and imaginary part. To extract these parts from a complex number *z*, use |
| ``z.real`` and ``z.imag``. :: |
| |
| >>> a=1.5+0.5j |
| >>> a.real |
| 1.5 |
| >>> a.imag |
| 0.5 |
| |
| The conversion functions to floating point and integer (:func:`float`, |
| :func:`int`) don't work for complex numbers --- there is not one correct way to |
| convert a complex number to a real number. Use ``abs(z)`` to get its magnitude |
| (as a float) or ``z.real`` to get its real part:: |
| |
| >>> a=3.0+4.0j |
| >>> float(a) |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| File "<stdin>", line 1, in ? |
| TypeError: can't convert complex to float; use abs(z) |
| >>> a.real |
| 3.0 |
| >>> a.imag |
| 4.0 |
| >>> abs(a) # sqrt(a.real**2 + a.imag**2) |
| 5.0 |
| >>> |
| |
| In interactive mode, the last printed expression is assigned to the variable |
| ``_``. This means that when you are using Python as a desk calculator, it is |
| somewhat easier to continue calculations, for example:: |
| |
| >>> tax = 12.5 / 100 |
| >>> price = 100.50 |
| >>> price * tax |
| 12.5625 |
| >>> price + _ |
| 113.0625 |
| >>> round(_, 2) |
| 113.06 |
| >>> |
| |
| This variable should be treated as read-only by the user. Don't explicitly |
| assign a value to it --- you would create an independent local variable with the |
| same name masking the built-in variable with its magic behavior. |
| |
| |
| .. _tut-strings: |
| |
| Strings |
| ------- |
| |
| Besides numbers, Python can also manipulate strings, which can be expressed in |
| several ways. They can be enclosed in single quotes or double quotes:: |
| |
| >>> 'spam eggs' |
| 'spam eggs' |
| >>> 'doesn\'t' |
| "doesn't" |
| >>> "doesn't" |
| "doesn't" |
| >>> '"Yes," he said.' |
| '"Yes," he said.' |
| >>> "\"Yes,\" he said." |
| '"Yes," he said.' |
| >>> '"Isn\'t," she said.' |
| '"Isn\'t," she said.' |
| |
| The interpreter prints the result of string operations in the same way as they |
| are typed for input: inside quotes, and with quotes and other funny characters |
| escaped by backslashes, to show the precise value. The string is enclosed in |
| double quotes if the string contains a single quote and no double quotes, else |
| it's enclosed in single quotes. Once again, the :func:`print` function |
| produces the more readable output. |
| |
| String literals can span multiple lines in several ways. Continuation lines can |
| be used, with a backslash as the last character on the line indicating that the |
| next line is a logical continuation of the line:: |
| |
| hello = "This is a rather long string containing\n\ |
| several lines of text just as you would do in C.\n\ |
| Note that whitespace at the beginning of the line is\ |
| significant." |
| |
| print(hello) |
| |
| Note that newlines still need to be embedded in the string using ``\n``; the |
| newline following the trailing backslash is discarded. This example would print |
| the following:: |
| |
| This is a rather long string containing |
| several lines of text just as you would do in C. |
| Note that whitespace at the beginning of the line is significant. |
| |
| If we make the string literal a "raw" string, however, the ``\n`` sequences are |
| not converted to newlines, but the backslash at the end of the line, and the |
| newline character in the source, are both included in the string as data. Thus, |
| the example:: |
| |
| hello = r"This is a rather long string containing\n\ |
| several lines of text much as you would do in C." |
| |
| print(hello) |
| |
| would print:: |
| |
| This is a rather long string containing\n\ |
| several lines of text much as you would do in C. |
| |
| Or, strings can be surrounded in a pair of matching triple-quotes: ``"""`` or |
| ``'''``. End of lines do not need to be escaped when using triple-quotes, but |
| they will be included in the string. :: |
| |
| print(""" |
| Usage: thingy [OPTIONS] |
| -h Display this usage message |
| -H hostname Hostname to connect to |
| """) |
| |
| produces the following output:: |
| |
| Usage: thingy [OPTIONS] |
| -h Display this usage message |
| -H hostname Hostname to connect to |
| |
| |
| Strings can be concatenated (glued together) with the ``+`` operator, and |
| repeated with ``*``:: |
| |
| >>> word = 'Help' + 'A' |
| >>> word |
| 'HelpA' |
| >>> '<' + word*5 + '>' |
| '<HelpAHelpAHelpAHelpAHelpA>' |
| |
| Two string literals next to each other are automatically concatenated; the first |
| line above could also have been written ``word = 'Help' 'A'``; this only works |
| with two literals, not with arbitrary string expressions:: |
| |
| >>> 'str' 'ing' # <- This is ok |
| 'string' |
| >>> 'str'.strip() + 'ing' # <- This is ok |
| 'string' |
| >>> 'str'.strip() 'ing' # <- This is invalid |
| File "<stdin>", line 1, in ? |
| 'str'.strip() 'ing' |
| ^ |
| SyntaxError: invalid syntax |
| |
| Strings can be subscripted (indexed); like in C, the first character of a string |
| has subscript (index) 0. There is no separate character type; a character is |
| simply a string of size one. As in the Icon programming language, substrings |
| can be specified with the *slice notation*: two indices separated by a colon. |
| :: |
| |
| >>> word[4] |
| 'A' |
| >>> word[0:2] |
| 'He' |
| >>> word[2:4] |
| 'lp' |
| |
| Slice indices have useful defaults; an omitted first index defaults to zero, an |
| omitted second index defaults to the size of the string being sliced. :: |
| |
| >>> word[:2] # The first two characters |
| 'He' |
| >>> word[2:] # Everything except the first two characters |
| 'lpA' |
| |
| Unlike a C string, Python strings cannot be changed. Assigning to an indexed |
| position in the string results in an error:: |
| |
| >>> word[0] = 'x' |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| File "<stdin>", line 1, in ? |
| TypeError: 'str' object doesn't support item assignment |
| >>> word[:1] = 'Splat' |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| File "<stdin>", line 1, in ? |
| TypeError: 'str' object doesn't support slice assignment |
| |
| However, creating a new string with the combined content is easy and efficient:: |
| |
| >>> 'x' + word[1:] |
| 'xelpA' |
| >>> 'Splat' + word[4] |
| 'SplatA' |
| |
| Here's a useful invariant of slice operations: ``s[:i] + s[i:]`` equals ``s``. |
| :: |
| |
| >>> word[:2] + word[2:] |
| 'HelpA' |
| >>> word[:3] + word[3:] |
| 'HelpA' |
| |
| Degenerate slice indices are handled gracefully: an index that is too large is |
| replaced by the string size, an upper bound smaller than the lower bound returns |
| an empty string. :: |
| |
| >>> word[1:100] |
| 'elpA' |
| >>> word[10:] |
| '' |
| >>> word[2:1] |
| '' |
| |
| Indices may be negative numbers, to start counting from the right. For example:: |
| |
| >>> word[-1] # The last character |
| 'A' |
| >>> word[-2] # The last-but-one character |
| 'p' |
| >>> word[-2:] # The last two characters |
| 'pA' |
| >>> word[:-2] # Everything except the last two characters |
| 'Hel' |
| |
| But note that -0 is really the same as 0, so it does not count from the right! |
| :: |
| |
| >>> word[-0] # (since -0 equals 0) |
| 'H' |
| |
| Out-of-range negative slice indices are truncated, but don't try this for |
| single-element (non-slice) indices:: |
| |
| >>> word[-100:] |
| 'HelpA' |
| >>> word[-10] # error |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| File "<stdin>", line 1, in ? |
| IndexError: string index out of range |
| |
| One way to remember how slices work is to think of the indices as pointing |
| *between* characters, with the left edge of the first character numbered 0. |
| Then the right edge of the last character of a string of *n* characters has |
| index *n*, for example:: |
| |
| +---+---+---+---+---+ |
| | H | e | l | p | A | |
| +---+---+---+---+---+ |
| 0 1 2 3 4 5 |
| -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 |
| |
| The first row of numbers gives the position of the indices 0...5 in the string; |
| the second row gives the corresponding negative indices. The slice from *i* to |
| *j* consists of all characters between the edges labeled *i* and *j*, |
| respectively. |
| |
| For non-negative indices, the length of a slice is the difference of the |
| indices, if both are within bounds. For example, the length of ``word[1:3]`` is |
| 2. |
| |
| The built-in function :func:`len` returns the length of a string:: |
| |
| >>> s = 'supercalifragilisticexpialidocious' |
| >>> len(s) |
| 34 |
| |
| |
| .. seealso:: |
| |
| :ref:`typesseq` |
| Strings are examples of *sequence types*, and support the common |
| operations supported by such types. |
| |
| :ref:`string-methods` |
| Strings support a large number of methods for |
| basic transformations and searching. |
| |
| :ref:`string-formatting` |
| The formatting operations invoked by the :meth:`format` string method are |
| described in more detail here. |
| |
| |
| .. _tut-unicodestrings: |
| |
| About Unicode |
| ------------- |
| |
| .. sectionauthor:: Marc-Andre Lemburg <mal@lemburg.com> |
| |
| |
| Starting with Python 3.0 all strings support Unicode. |
| (See http://www.unicode.org/) |
| |
| Unicode has the advantage of providing one ordinal for every character in every |
| script used in modern and ancient texts. Previously, there were only 256 |
| possible ordinals for script characters. Texts were typically bound to a code |
| page which mapped the ordinals to script characters. This lead to very much |
| confusion especially with respect to internationalization (usually written as |
| ``i18n`` --- ``'i'`` + 18 characters + ``'n'``) of software. Unicode solves |
| these problems by defining one code page for all scripts. |
| |
| If you want to include special characters in a string, |
| you can do so by using the Python *Unicode-Escape* encoding. The following |
| example shows how:: |
| |
| >>> 'Hello\u0020World !' |
| 'Hello World !' |
| |
| The escape sequence ``\u0020`` indicates to insert the Unicode character with |
| the ordinal value 0x0020 (the space character) at the given position. |
| |
| Other characters are interpreted by using their respective ordinal values |
| directly as Unicode ordinals. If you have literal strings in the standard |
| Latin-1 encoding that is used in many Western countries, you will find it |
| convenient that the lower 256 characters of Unicode are the same as the 256 |
| characters of Latin-1. |
| |
| Apart from these standard encodings, Python provides a whole set of other ways |
| of creating Unicode strings on the basis of a known encoding. |
| |
| To convert a string into a sequence of bytes using a specific encoding, |
| string objects provide an :func:`encode` method that takes one argument, the |
| name of the encoding. Lowercase names for encodings are preferred. :: |
| |
| >>> "Äpfel".encode('utf-8') |
| b'\xc3\x84pfel' |
| |
| .. _tut-lists: |
| |
| Lists |
| ----- |
| |
| Python knows a number of *compound* data types, used to group together other |
| values. The most versatile is the *list*, which can be written as a list of |
| comma-separated values (items) between square brackets. List items need not all |
| have the same type. :: |
| |
| >>> a = ['spam', 'eggs', 100, 1234] |
| >>> a |
| ['spam', 'eggs', 100, 1234] |
| |
| Like string indices, list indices start at 0, and lists can be sliced, |
| concatenated and so on:: |
| |
| >>> a[0] |
| 'spam' |
| >>> a[3] |
| 1234 |
| >>> a[-2] |
| 100 |
| >>> a[1:-1] |
| ['eggs', 100] |
| >>> a[:2] + ['bacon', 2*2] |
| ['spam', 'eggs', 'bacon', 4] |
| >>> 3*a[:3] + ['Boo!'] |
| ['spam', 'eggs', 100, 'spam', 'eggs', 100, 'spam', 'eggs', 100, 'Boo!'] |
| |
| Unlike strings, which are *immutable*, it is possible to change individual |
| elements of a list:: |
| |
| >>> a |
| ['spam', 'eggs', 100, 1234] |
| >>> a[2] = a[2] + 23 |
| >>> a |
| ['spam', 'eggs', 123, 1234] |
| |
| Assignment to slices is also possible, and this can even change the size of the |
| list or clear it entirely:: |
| |
| >>> # Replace some items: |
| ... a[0:2] = [1, 12] |
| >>> a |
| [1, 12, 123, 1234] |
| >>> # Remove some: |
| ... a[0:2] = [] |
| >>> a |
| [123, 1234] |
| >>> # Insert some: |
| ... a[1:1] = ['bletch', 'xyzzy'] |
| >>> a |
| [123, 'bletch', 'xyzzy', 1234] |
| >>> # Insert (a copy of) itself at the beginning |
| >>> a[:0] = a |
| >>> a |
| [123, 'bletch', 'xyzzy', 1234, 123, 'bletch', 'xyzzy', 1234] |
| >>> # Clear the list: replace all items with an empty list |
| >>> a[:] = [] |
| >>> a |
| [] |
| |
| The built-in function :func:`len` also applies to lists:: |
| |
| >>> a = ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'] |
| >>> len(a) |
| 4 |
| |
| It is possible to nest lists (create lists containing other lists), for |
| example:: |
| |
| >>> q = [2, 3] |
| >>> p = [1, q, 4] |
| >>> len(p) |
| 3 |
| >>> p[1] |
| [2, 3] |
| >>> p[1][0] |
| 2 |
| |
| You can add something to the end of the list:: |
| |
| >>> p[1].append('xtra') |
| >>> p |
| [1, [2, 3, 'xtra'], 4] |
| >>> q |
| [2, 3, 'xtra'] |
| |
| Note that in the last example, ``p[1]`` and ``q`` really refer to the same |
| object! We'll come back to *object semantics* later. |
| |
| |
| .. _tut-firststeps: |
| |
| First Steps Towards Programming |
| =============================== |
| |
| Of course, we can use Python for more complicated tasks than adding two and two |
| together. For instance, we can write an initial sub-sequence of the *Fibonacci* |
| series as follows:: |
| |
| >>> # Fibonacci series: |
| ... # the sum of two elements defines the next |
| ... a, b = 0, 1 |
| >>> while b < 10: |
| ... print(b) |
| ... a, b = b, a+b |
| ... |
| 1 |
| 1 |
| 2 |
| 3 |
| 5 |
| 8 |
| |
| This example introduces several new features. |
| |
| * The first line contains a *multiple assignment*: the variables ``a`` and ``b`` |
| simultaneously get the new values 0 and 1. On the last line this is used again, |
| demonstrating that the expressions on the right-hand side are all evaluated |
| first before any of the assignments take place. The right-hand side expressions |
| are evaluated from the left to the right. |
| |
| * The :keyword:`while` loop executes as long as the condition (here: ``b < 10``) |
| remains true. In Python, like in C, any non-zero integer value is true; zero is |
| false. The condition may also be a string or list value, in fact any sequence; |
| anything with a non-zero length is true, empty sequences are false. The test |
| used in the example is a simple comparison. The standard comparison operators |
| are written the same as in C: ``<`` (less than), ``>`` (greater than), ``==`` |
| (equal to), ``<=`` (less than or equal to), ``>=`` (greater than or equal to) |
| and ``!=`` (not equal to). |
| |
| * The *body* of the loop is *indented*: indentation is Python's way of grouping |
| statements. Python does not (yet!) provide an intelligent input line editing |
| facility, so you have to type a tab or space(s) for each indented line. In |
| practice you will prepare more complicated input for Python with a text editor; |
| most text editors have an auto-indent facility. When a compound statement is |
| entered interactively, it must be followed by a blank line to indicate |
| completion (since the parser cannot guess when you have typed the last line). |
| Note that each line within a basic block must be indented by the same amount. |
| |
| * The :func:`print` function writes the value of the expression(s) it is |
| given. It differs from just writing the expression you want to write (as we did |
| earlier in the calculator examples) in the way it handles multiple |
| expressions, floating point quantities, |
| and strings. Strings are printed without quotes, and a space is inserted |
| between items, so you can format things nicely, like this:: |
| |
| >>> i = 256*256 |
| >>> print('The value of i is', i) |
| The value of i is 65536 |
| |
| The keyword end can be used to avoid the newline after the output:: |
| |
| >>> a, b = 0, 1 |
| >>> while b < 1000: |
| ... print(b, ' ', end='') |
| ... a, b = b, a+b |
| ... |
| >>> print() |
| 1 1 2 3 5 8 13 21 34 55 89 144 233 377 610 987 |
| |
| Note that nothing appeared after the loop ended, until we printed |
| a newline. |
| |