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Fred Drake6659c301998-03-03 22:02:19 +00001\documentclass{manual}
Fred Drake1b0b2a42001-03-13 17:56:08 +00002\usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
Fred Drakeafe73c02004-10-25 16:03:49 +00003\usepackage{textcomp}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00004
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00005% Things to do:
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00006% Should really move the Python startup file info to an appendix
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00007
Guido van Rossumdccc2981997-12-30 04:40:25 +00008\title{Python Tutorial}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00009
Guido van Rossum16cd7f91994-10-06 10:29:26 +000010\input{boilerplate}
Guido van Rossum83eb9621993-11-23 16:28:45 +000011
Skip Montanaro40d4bc52003-09-24 16:53:02 +000012\makeindex
13
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +000014\begin{document}
15
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +000016\maketitle
17
Fred Drake9f86b661998-07-28 21:55:19 +000018\ifhtml
19\chapter*{Front Matter\label{front}}
20\fi
21
Guido van Rossum16cd7f91994-10-06 10:29:26 +000022\input{copyright}
23
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +000024\begin{abstract}
25
26\noindent
Guido van Rossumdccc2981997-12-30 04:40:25 +000027Python is an easy to learn, powerful programming language. It has
28efficient high-level data structures and a simple but effective
29approach to object-oriented programming. Python's elegant syntax and
30dynamic typing, together with its interpreted nature, make it an ideal
31language for scripting and rapid application development in many areas
32on most platforms.
33
34The Python interpreter and the extensive standard library are freely
35available in source or binary form for all major platforms from the
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +000036Python Web site, \url{http://www.python.org/}, and may be freely
Guido van Rossumdccc2981997-12-30 04:40:25 +000037distributed. The same site also contains distributions of and
38pointers to many free third party Python modules, programs and tools,
39and additional documentation.
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +000040
Guido van Rossum4410c751991-06-04 20:22:18 +000041The Python interpreter is easily extended with new functions and data
Fred Drakeee84d591999-03-10 17:25:30 +000042types implemented in C or \Cpp{} (or other languages callable from C).
Guido van Rossumdccc2981997-12-30 04:40:25 +000043Python is also suitable as an extension language for customizable
44applications.
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +000045
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +000046This tutorial introduces the reader informally to the basic concepts
47and features of the Python language and system. It helps to have a
Guido van Rossumdccc2981997-12-30 04:40:25 +000048Python interpreter handy for hands-on experience, but all examples are
49self-contained, so the tutorial can be read off-line as well.
Guido van Rossum2292b8e1991-01-23 16:31:24 +000050
Guido van Rossumdccc2981997-12-30 04:40:25 +000051For a description of standard objects and modules, see the
Fred Drake37f15741999-11-10 16:21:37 +000052\citetitle[../lib/lib.html]{Python Library Reference} document. The
53\citetitle[../ref/ref.html]{Python Reference Manual} gives a more
54formal definition of the language. To write extensions in C or
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +000055\Cpp, read \citetitle[../ext/ext.html]{Extending and Embedding the
Fred Drake37f15741999-11-10 16:21:37 +000056Python Interpreter} and \citetitle[../api/api.html]{Python/C API
57Reference}. There are also several books covering Python in depth.
Guido van Rossumdccc2981997-12-30 04:40:25 +000058
59This tutorial does not attempt to be comprehensive and cover every
60single feature, or even every commonly used feature. Instead, it
61introduces many of Python's most noteworthy features, and will give
62you a good idea of the language's flavor and style. After reading it,
63you will be able to read and write Python modules and programs, and
64you will be ready to learn more about the various Python library
Fred Drake37f15741999-11-10 16:21:37 +000065modules described in the \citetitle[../lib/lib.html]{Python Library
66Reference}.
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +000067
68\end{abstract}
69
Fred Drake4d4f9e71998-01-13 22:25:02 +000070\tableofcontents
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +000071
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +000072
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +000073\chapter{Whetting Your Appetite \label{intro}}
Guido van Rossum3a26dd81996-10-24 22:12:48 +000074
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +000075If you ever wrote a large shell script, you probably know this
76feeling: you'd love to add yet another feature, but it's already so
77slow, and so big, and so complicated; or the feature involves a system
Johannes Gijsbers158df102005-01-09 00:12:48 +000078call or other function that is only accessible from C\ldots\ Usually
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +000079the problem at hand isn't serious enough to warrant rewriting the
Fred Drakeee84d591999-03-10 17:25:30 +000080script in C; perhaps the problem requires variable-length strings or
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +000081other data types (like sorted lists of file names) that are easy in
Fred Drakeee84d591999-03-10 17:25:30 +000082the shell but lots of work to implement in C, or perhaps you're not
83sufficiently familiar with C.
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +000084
Fred Drakeee84d591999-03-10 17:25:30 +000085Another situation: perhaps you have to work with several C libraries,
86and the usual C write/compile/test/re-compile cycle is too slow. You
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +000087need to develop software more quickly. Possibly you've
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +000088written a program that could use an extension language, and you don't
89want to design a language, write and debug an interpreter for it, then
90tie it into your application.
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +000091
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +000092In such cases, Python may be just the language for you. Python is
93simple to use, but it is a real programming language, offering much
94more structure and support for large programs than the shell has. On
Fred Drakeee84d591999-03-10 17:25:30 +000095the other hand, it also offers much more error checking than C, and,
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +000096being a \emph{very-high-level language}, it has high-level data types
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +000097built in, such as flexible arrays and dictionaries that would cost you
Fred Drakeee84d591999-03-10 17:25:30 +000098days to implement efficiently in C. Because of its more general data
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +000099types Python is applicable to a much larger problem domain than
100\emph{Awk} or even \emph{Perl}, yet many things are at least as easy
101in Python as in those languages.
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000102
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +0000103Python allows you to split up your program in modules that can be
104reused in other Python programs. It comes with a large collection of
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000105standard modules that you can use as the basis of your programs --- or
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +0000106as examples to start learning to program in Python. Some of these
107modules provide things like file I/O, system calls,
Fred Drake17f690f2001-07-14 02:14:42 +0000108sockets, and even interfaces to graphical user interface toolkits like Tk.
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000109
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000110Python is an interpreted language, which can save you considerable time
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000111during program development because no compilation and linking is
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +0000112necessary. The interpreter can be used interactively, which makes it
113easy to experiment with features of the language, to write throw-away
114programs, or to test functions during bottom-up program development.
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000115It is also a handy desk calculator.
116
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +0000117Python allows writing very compact and readable programs. Programs
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +0000118written in Python are typically much shorter than equivalent C or
119\Cpp{} programs, for several reasons:
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +0000120\begin{itemize}
121\item
122the high-level data types allow you to express complex operations in a
123single statement;
124\item
Raymond Hettinger57d71282003-08-30 23:21:32 +0000125statement grouping is done by indentation instead of beginning and ending
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +0000126brackets;
127\item
128no variable or argument declarations are necessary.
129\end{itemize}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000130
Fred Drakeee84d591999-03-10 17:25:30 +0000131Python is \emph{extensible}: if you know how to program in C it is easy
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000132to add a new built-in function or module to the interpreter, either to
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +0000133perform critical operations at maximum speed, or to link Python
134programs to libraries that may only be available in binary form (such
135as a vendor-specific graphics library). Once you are really hooked,
Fred Drakeee84d591999-03-10 17:25:30 +0000136you can link the Python interpreter into an application written in C
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000137and use it as an extension or command language for that application.
138
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000139By the way, the language is named after the BBC show ``Monty Python's
140Flying Circus'' and has nothing to do with nasty reptiles. Making
141references to Monty Python skits in documentation is not only allowed,
Guido van Rossumdccc2981997-12-30 04:40:25 +0000142it is encouraged!
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000143
Fred Drake2664cbb2003-06-20 14:27:27 +0000144%\section{Where From Here \label{where}}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000145
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +0000146Now that you are all excited about Python, you'll want to examine it
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000147in some more detail. Since the best way to learn a language is
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +0000148using it, you are invited to do so with this tutorial.
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000149
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +0000150In the next chapter, the mechanics of using the interpreter are
151explained. This is rather mundane information, but essential for
152trying out the examples shown later.
153
Guido van Rossum4410c751991-06-04 20:22:18 +0000154The rest of the tutorial introduces various features of the Python
Fred Drakef64f8a01999-06-10 15:30:21 +0000155language and system through examples, beginning with simple
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +0000156expressions, statements and data types, through functions and modules,
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +0000157and finally touching upon advanced concepts like exceptions
158and user-defined classes.
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000159
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +0000160\chapter{Using the Python Interpreter \label{using}}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +0000161
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +0000162\section{Invoking the Interpreter \label{invoking}}
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000163
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +0000164The Python interpreter is usually installed as
165\file{/usr/local/bin/python} on those machines where it is available;
166putting \file{/usr/local/bin} in your \UNIX{} shell's search path
167makes it possible to start it by typing the command
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000168
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000169\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000170python
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000171\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +0000172
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +0000173to the shell. Since the choice of the directory where the interpreter
174lives is an installation option, other places are possible; check with
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +0000175your local Python guru or system administrator. (E.g.,
176\file{/usr/local/python} is a popular alternative location.)
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000177
Fred Drake5d6e4022001-04-11 04:38:34 +0000178Typing an end-of-file character (\kbd{Control-D} on \UNIX,
Martin v. Löwis36a4d8c2002-10-10 18:24:54 +0000179\kbd{Control-Z} on Windows) at the primary prompt causes the
Fred Drake5443c492000-07-08 05:18:54 +0000180interpreter to exit with a zero exit status. If that doesn't work,
181you can exit the interpreter by typing the following commands:
182\samp{import sys; sys.exit()}.
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000183
184The interpreter's line-editing features usually aren't very
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000185sophisticated. On \UNIX, whoever installed the interpreter may have
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000186enabled support for the GNU readline library, which adds more
187elaborate interactive editing and history features. Perhaps the
188quickest check to see whether command line editing is supported is
189typing Control-P to the first Python prompt you get. If it beeps, you
Fred Drake5443c492000-07-08 05:18:54 +0000190have command line editing; see Appendix \ref{interacting} for an
191introduction to the keys. If nothing appears to happen, or if
192\code{\^P} is echoed, command line editing isn't available; you'll
193only be able to use backspace to remove characters from the current
194line.
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000195
Fred Drake6dc2aae1996-12-13 21:56:03 +0000196The interpreter operates somewhat like the \UNIX{} shell: when called
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +0000197with standard input connected to a tty device, it reads and executes
198commands interactively; when called with a file name argument or with
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +0000199a file as standard input, it reads and executes a \emph{script} from
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000200that file.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +0000201
Raymond Hettingerc2a5cb22003-08-23 03:49:08 +0000202A second way of starting the interpreter is
Fred Drake37f15741999-11-10 16:21:37 +0000203\samp{\program{python} \programopt{-c} \var{command} [arg] ...}, which
204executes the statement(s) in \var{command}, analogous to the shell's
205\programopt{-c} option. Since Python statements often contain spaces
206or other characters that are special to the shell, it is best to quote
207\var{command} in its entirety with double quotes.
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000208
Raymond Hettingerdb29e0f2004-10-07 06:46:25 +0000209Some Python modules are also useful as scripts. These can be invoked using
210\samp{\program{python} \programopt{-m} \var{module} [arg] ...}, which
211executes the source file for \var{module} as if you had spelled out its
212full name on the command line.
213
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +0000214Note that there is a difference between \samp{python file} and
215\samp{python <file}. In the latter case, input requests from the
Fred Drake6bab1832003-05-20 15:28:58 +0000216program, such as calls to \function{input()} and \function{raw_input()}, are
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +0000217satisfied from \emph{file}. Since this file has already been read
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +0000218until the end by the parser before the program starts executing, the
Fred Drake5d6e4022001-04-11 04:38:34 +0000219program will encounter end-of-file immediately. In the former case
220(which is usually what you want) they are satisfied from whatever file
221or device is connected to standard input of the Python interpreter.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +0000222
Guido van Rossumb2c65561993-05-12 08:53:36 +0000223When a script file is used, it is sometimes useful to be able to run
224the script and enter interactive mode afterwards. This can be done by
Fred Drake37f15741999-11-10 16:21:37 +0000225passing \programopt{-i} before the script. (This does not work if the
226script is read from standard input, for the same reason as explained
227in the previous paragraph.)
Guido van Rossumb2c65561993-05-12 08:53:36 +0000228
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +0000229\subsection{Argument Passing \label{argPassing}}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +0000230
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000231When known to the interpreter, the script name and additional
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +0000232arguments thereafter are passed to the script in the variable
233\code{sys.argv}, which is a list of strings. Its length is at least
234one; when no script and no arguments are given, \code{sys.argv[0]} is
235an empty string. When the script name is given as \code{'-'} (meaning
Fred Drake37f15741999-11-10 16:21:37 +0000236standard input), \code{sys.argv[0]} is set to \code{'-'}. When
237\programopt{-c} \var{command} is used, \code{sys.argv[0]} is set to
Raymond Hettingerdb29e0f2004-10-07 06:46:25 +0000238\code{'-c'}. When \programopt{-m} \var{module} is used, \code{sys.argv[0]}
239is set to the full name of the located module. Options found after
240\programopt{-c} \var{command} or \programopt{-m} \var{module} are not consumed
241by the Python interpreter's option processing but left in \code{sys.argv} for
242the command or module to handle.
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000243
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +0000244\subsection{Interactive Mode \label{interactive}}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000245
Guido van Rossumdd010801991-06-07 14:31:11 +0000246When commands are read from a tty, the interpreter is said to be in
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +0000247\emph{interactive mode}. In this mode it prompts for the next command
248with the \emph{primary prompt}, usually three greater-than signs
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +0000249(\samp{>\code{>}>~}); for continuation lines it prompts with the
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +0000250\emph{secondary prompt}, by default three dots (\samp{...~}).
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000251The interpreter prints a welcome message stating its version number
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +0000252and a copyright notice before printing the first prompt:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000253
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000254\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000255python
Fred Drakeee84d591999-03-10 17:25:30 +0000256Python 1.5.2b2 (#1, Feb 28 1999, 00:02:06) [GCC 2.8.1] on sunos5
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +0000257Copyright 1991-1995 Stichting Mathematisch Centrum, Amsterdam
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000258>>>
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000259\end{verbatim}
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000260
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +0000261Continuation lines are needed when entering a multi-line construct.
262As an example, take a look at this \keyword{if} statement:
263
264\begin{verbatim}
265>>> the_world_is_flat = 1
266>>> if the_world_is_flat:
267... print "Be careful not to fall off!"
268...
269Be careful not to fall off!
270\end{verbatim}
271
272
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +0000273\section{The Interpreter and Its Environment \label{interp}}
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000274
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +0000275\subsection{Error Handling \label{error}}
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000276
277When an error occurs, the interpreter prints an error
278message and a stack trace. In interactive mode, it then returns to
279the primary prompt; when input came from a file, it exits with a
280nonzero exit status after printing
Fred Drake6bab1832003-05-20 15:28:58 +0000281the stack trace. (Exceptions handled by an \keyword{except} clause in a
282\keyword{try} statement are not errors in this context.) Some errors are
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +0000283unconditionally fatal and cause an exit with a nonzero exit; this
284applies to internal inconsistencies and some cases of running out of
285memory. All error messages are written to the standard error stream;
286normal output from the executed commands is written to standard
287output.
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000288
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000289Typing the interrupt character (usually Control-C or DEL) to the
290primary or secondary prompt cancels the input and returns to the
Fred Drake93aa0f21999-04-05 21:39:17 +0000291primary prompt.\footnote{
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +0000292 A problem with the GNU Readline package may prevent this.
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000293}
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +0000294Typing an interrupt while a command is executing raises the
Fred Drake6bab1832003-05-20 15:28:58 +0000295\exception{KeyboardInterrupt} exception, which may be handled by a
296\keyword{try} statement.
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000297
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +0000298\subsection{Executable Python Scripts \label{scripts}}
Guido van Rossum4410c751991-06-04 20:22:18 +0000299
Fred Drake6dc2aae1996-12-13 21:56:03 +0000300On BSD'ish \UNIX{} systems, Python scripts can be made directly
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +0000301executable, like shell scripts, by putting the line
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000302
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000303\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake9e63faa1997-10-15 14:37:24 +0000304#! /usr/bin/env python
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000305\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +0000306
Fred Drake391564f1998-04-01 23:11:56 +0000307(assuming that the interpreter is on the user's \envvar{PATH}) at the
308beginning of the script and giving the file an executable mode. The
Fred Drakedfda8d72003-07-07 21:00:29 +0000309\samp{\#!} must be the first two characters of the file. On some
310platforms, this first line must end with a \UNIX-style line ending
311(\character{\e n}), not a Mac OS (\character{\e r}) or Windows
312(\character{\e r\e n}) line ending. Note that
Fred Drakebdadf0f1999-04-29 13:20:25 +0000313the hash, or pound, character, \character{\#}, is used to start a
314comment in Python.
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000315
Johannes Gijsbers158df102005-01-09 00:12:48 +0000316The script can be given an executable mode, or permission, using the
Fred Drakedfda8d72003-07-07 21:00:29 +0000317\program{chmod} command:
318
319\begin{verbatim}
320$ chmod +x myscript.py
321\end{verbatim} % $ <-- bow to font-lock
322
323
Martin v. Löwis7928f382003-06-28 08:11:55 +0000324\subsection{Source Code Encoding}
325
Fred Drakedfda8d72003-07-07 21:00:29 +0000326It is possible to use encodings different than \ASCII{} in Python source
Martin v. Löwis7928f382003-06-28 08:11:55 +0000327files. The best way to do it is to put one more special comment line
Skip Montanaro32a5e872003-06-29 16:01:51 +0000328right after the \code{\#!} line to define the source file encoding:
Martin v. Löwis7928f382003-06-28 08:11:55 +0000329
Fred Drakeafe73c02004-10-25 16:03:49 +0000330\begin{alltt}
331# -*- coding: \var{encoding} -*-
332\end{alltt}
Martin v. Löwis7928f382003-06-28 08:11:55 +0000333
Skip Montanaro32a5e872003-06-29 16:01:51 +0000334With that declaration, all characters in the source file will be treated as
Fred Drakeafe73c02004-10-25 16:03:49 +0000335having the encoding \var{encoding}, and it will be
Martin v. Löwis7928f382003-06-28 08:11:55 +0000336possible to directly write Unicode string literals in the selected
Skip Montanaro32a5e872003-06-29 16:01:51 +0000337encoding. The list of possible encodings can be found in the
Martin v. Löwis7928f382003-06-28 08:11:55 +0000338\citetitle[../lib/lib.html]{Python Library Reference}, in the section
Fred Drake626d4722003-09-11 04:28:13 +0000339on \ulink{\module{codecs}}{../lib/module-codecs.html}.
Martin v. Löwis7928f382003-06-28 08:11:55 +0000340
Fred Drakeafe73c02004-10-25 16:03:49 +0000341For example, to write Unicode literals including the Euro currency
342symbol, the ISO-8859-15 encoding can be used, with the Euro symbol
343having the ordinal value 164. This script will print the value 8364
344(the Unicode codepoint corresponding to the Euro symbol) and then
345exit:
346
347\begin{alltt}
348# -*- coding: iso-8859-15 -*-
349
350currency = u"\texteuro"
351print ord(currency)
352\end{alltt}
353
Fred Drake626d4722003-09-11 04:28:13 +0000354If your editor supports saving files as \code{UTF-8} with a UTF-8
355\emph{byte order mark} (aka BOM), you can use that instead of an
Skip Montanaro32a5e872003-06-29 16:01:51 +0000356encoding declaration. IDLE supports this capability if
Martin v. Löwis7928f382003-06-28 08:11:55 +0000357\code{Options/General/Default Source Encoding/UTF-8} is set. Notice
358that this signature is not understood in older Python releases (2.2
359and earlier), and also not understood by the operating system for
Fred Drakeafe73c02004-10-25 16:03:49 +0000360script files with \code{\#!} lines (only used on \UNIX{} systems).
Martin v. Löwis7928f382003-06-28 08:11:55 +0000361
Skip Montanaro32a5e872003-06-29 16:01:51 +0000362By using UTF-8 (either through the signature or an encoding
Martin v. Löwis7928f382003-06-28 08:11:55 +0000363declaration), characters of most languages in the world can be used
Fred Drakeafe73c02004-10-25 16:03:49 +0000364simultaneously in string literals and comments. Using non-\ASCII{}
Martin v. Löwis7928f382003-06-28 08:11:55 +0000365characters in identifiers is not supported. To display all these
366characters properly, your editor must recognize that the file is
367UTF-8, and it must use a font that supports all the characters in the
368file.
369
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +0000370\subsection{The Interactive Startup File \label{startup}}
Guido van Rossum9a4e3fc1992-09-03 21:27:55 +0000371
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000372% XXX This should probably be dumped in an appendix, since most people
373% don't use Python interactively in non-trivial ways.
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000374
Guido van Rossum9a4e3fc1992-09-03 21:27:55 +0000375When you use Python interactively, it is frequently handy to have some
376standard commands executed every time the interpreter is started. You
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +0000377can do this by setting an environment variable named
Fred Drake391564f1998-04-01 23:11:56 +0000378\envvar{PYTHONSTARTUP} to the name of a file containing your start-up
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +0000379commands. This is similar to the \file{.profile} feature of the
380\UNIX{} shells.
Guido van Rossum9a4e3fc1992-09-03 21:27:55 +0000381
382This file is only read in interactive sessions, not when Python reads
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +0000383commands from a script, and not when \file{/dev/tty} is given as the
Guido van Rossum9a4e3fc1992-09-03 21:27:55 +0000384explicit source of commands (which otherwise behaves like an
Fred Drake13494372000-09-12 16:23:48 +0000385interactive session). It is executed in the same namespace where
Guido van Rossum9a4e3fc1992-09-03 21:27:55 +0000386interactive commands are executed, so that objects that it defines or
387imports can be used without qualification in the interactive session.
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +0000388You can also change the prompts \code{sys.ps1} and \code{sys.ps2} in
Guido van Rossum7b3c8a11992-09-08 09:20:13 +0000389this file.
Guido van Rossum9a4e3fc1992-09-03 21:27:55 +0000390
391If you want to read an additional start-up file from the current
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +0000392directory, you can program this in the global start-up file using code
393like \samp{if os.path.isfile('.pythonrc.py'):
Fred Drake5443c492000-07-08 05:18:54 +0000394execfile('.pythonrc.py')}. If you want to use the startup file in a
395script, you must do this explicitly in the script:
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000396
397\begin{verbatim}
398import os
Fred Drake5443c492000-07-08 05:18:54 +0000399filename = os.environ.get('PYTHONSTARTUP')
400if filename and os.path.isfile(filename):
401 execfile(filename)
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000402\end{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum9a4e3fc1992-09-03 21:27:55 +0000403
Fred Drake72389881998-04-13 01:31:10 +0000404
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +0000405\chapter{An Informal Introduction to Python \label{informal}}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000406
407In the following examples, input and output are distinguished by the
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +0000408presence or absence of prompts (\samp{>\code{>}>~} and \samp{...~}): to repeat
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000409the example, you must type everything after the prompt, when the
410prompt appears; lines that do not begin with a prompt are output from
Fred Drakebdadf0f1999-04-29 13:20:25 +0000411the interpreter. %
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000412%\footnote{
413% I'd prefer to use different fonts to distinguish input
414% from output, but the amount of LaTeX hacking that would require
415% is currently beyond my ability.
416%}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +0000417Note that a secondary prompt on a line by itself in an example means
418you must type a blank line; this is used to end a multi-line command.
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000419
Fred Drakebdadf0f1999-04-29 13:20:25 +0000420Many of the examples in this manual, even those entered at the
421interactive prompt, include comments. Comments in Python start with
422the hash character, \character{\#}, and extend to the end of the
423physical line. A comment may appear at the start of a line or
424following whitespace or code, but not within a string literal. A hash
425character within a string literal is just a hash character.
426
427Some examples:
428
429\begin{verbatim}
430# this is the first comment
431SPAM = 1 # and this is the second comment
432 # ... and now a third!
433STRING = "# This is not a comment."
434\end{verbatim}
435
436
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +0000437\section{Using Python as a Calculator \label{calculator}}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000438
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +0000439Let's try some simple Python commands. Start the interpreter and wait
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +0000440for the primary prompt, \samp{>\code{>}>~}. (It shouldn't take long.)
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000441
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +0000442\subsection{Numbers \label{numbers}}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +0000443
444The interpreter acts as a simple calculator: you can type an
445expression at it and it will write the value. Expression syntax is
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +0000446straightforward: the operators \code{+}, \code{-}, \code{*} and
447\code{/} work just like in most other languages (for example, Pascal
448or C); parentheses can be used for grouping. For example:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000449
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000450\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000451>>> 2+2
4524
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +0000453>>> # This is a comment
454... 2+2
4554
456>>> 2+2 # and a comment on the same line as code
4574
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000458>>> (50-5*6)/4
4595
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +0000460>>> # Integer division returns the floor:
461... 7/3
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00004622
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +0000463>>> 7/-3
464-3
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000465\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +0000466
Raymond Hettinger88c25952004-11-18 06:14:27 +0000467The equal sign (\character{=}) is used to assign a value to a variable.
468Afterwards, no result is displayed before the next interactive prompt:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000469
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000470\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000471>>> width = 20
472>>> height = 5*9
473>>> width * height
474900
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000475\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +0000476
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +0000477A value can be assigned to several variables simultaneously:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000478
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000479\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +0000480>>> x = y = z = 0 # Zero x, y and z
481>>> x
4820
483>>> y
4840
485>>> z
4860
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000487\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +0000488
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +0000489There is full support for floating point; operators with mixed type
490operands convert the integer operand to floating point:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000491
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000492\begin{verbatim}
Tim Petersbd695a72001-05-22 06:54:14 +0000493>>> 3 * 3.75 / 1.5
4947.5
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000495>>> 7.0 / 2
4963.5
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000497\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +0000498
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000499Complex numbers are also supported; imaginary numbers are written with
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000500a suffix of \samp{j} or \samp{J}. Complex numbers with a nonzero
501real component are written as \samp{(\var{real}+\var{imag}j)}, or can
502be created with the \samp{complex(\var{real}, \var{imag})} function.
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000503
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000504\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000505>>> 1j * 1J
506(-1+0j)
507>>> 1j * complex(0,1)
508(-1+0j)
509>>> 3+1j*3
510(3+3j)
511>>> (3+1j)*3
512(9+3j)
513>>> (1+2j)/(1+1j)
514(1.5+0.5j)
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000515\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +0000516
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000517Complex numbers are always represented as two floating point numbers,
518the real and imaginary part. To extract these parts from a complex
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000519number \var{z}, use \code{\var{z}.real} and \code{\var{z}.imag}.
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000520
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000521\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000522>>> a=1.5+0.5j
523>>> a.real
5241.5
525>>> a.imag
5260.5
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000527\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +0000528
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000529The conversion functions to floating point and integer
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000530(\function{float()}, \function{int()} and \function{long()}) don't
531work for complex numbers --- there is no one correct way to convert a
532complex number to a real number. Use \code{abs(\var{z})} to get its
533magnitude (as a float) or \code{z.real} to get its real part.
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000534
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000535\begin{verbatim}
Tim Petersbd695a72001-05-22 06:54:14 +0000536>>> a=3.0+4.0j
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000537>>> float(a)
Fred Drake162c6a62001-02-14 03:20:18 +0000538Traceback (most recent call last):
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000539 File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
Raymond Hettinger57d71282003-08-30 23:21:32 +0000540TypeError: can't convert complex to float; use abs(z)
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000541>>> a.real
Tim Petersbd695a72001-05-22 06:54:14 +00005423.0
543>>> a.imag
5444.0
545>>> abs(a) # sqrt(a.real**2 + a.imag**2)
5465.0
547>>>
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000548\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +0000549
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000550In interactive mode, the last printed expression is assigned to the
551variable \code{_}. This means that when you are using Python as a
552desk calculator, it is somewhat easier to continue calculations, for
553example:
554
555\begin{verbatim}
Tim Petersbd695a72001-05-22 06:54:14 +0000556>>> tax = 12.5 / 100
557>>> price = 100.50
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000558>>> price * tax
Tim Petersbd695a72001-05-22 06:54:14 +000055912.5625
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000560>>> price + _
Tim Petersbd695a72001-05-22 06:54:14 +0000561113.0625
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000562>>> round(_, 2)
Tim Petersbd695a72001-05-22 06:54:14 +0000563113.06
564>>>
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000565\end{verbatim}
566
567This variable should be treated as read-only by the user. Don't
568explicitly assign a value to it --- you would create an independent
569local variable with the same name masking the built-in variable with
570its magic behavior.
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000571
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +0000572\subsection{Strings \label{strings}}
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000573
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000574Besides numbers, Python can also manipulate strings, which can be
575expressed in several ways. They can be enclosed in single quotes or
576double quotes:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000577
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000578\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossume5f8b601995-01-04 19:12:49 +0000579>>> 'spam eggs'
580'spam eggs'
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000581>>> 'doesn\'t'
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +0000582"doesn't"
583>>> "doesn't"
584"doesn't"
585>>> '"Yes," he said.'
586'"Yes," he said.'
587>>> "\"Yes,\" he said."
588'"Yes," he said.'
589>>> '"Isn\'t," she said.'
590'"Isn\'t," she said.'
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000591\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +0000592
Fred Drakeba5c41d2001-09-06 18:41:15 +0000593String literals can span multiple lines in several ways. Continuation
594lines can be used, with a backslash as the last character on the line
595indicating that the next line is a logical continuation of the line:
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000596
597\begin{verbatim}
598hello = "This is a rather long string containing\n\
599several lines of text just as you would do in C.\n\
600 Note that whitespace at the beginning of the line is\
Fred Drakeba5c41d2001-09-06 18:41:15 +0000601 significant."
602
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000603print hello
604\end{verbatim}
605
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +0000606Note that newlines still need to be embedded in the string using
Fred Drakeba5c41d2001-09-06 18:41:15 +0000607\code{\e n}; the newline following the trailing backslash is
608discarded. This example would print the following:
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000609
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000610\begin{verbatim}
611This is a rather long string containing
612several lines of text just as you would do in C.
613 Note that whitespace at the beginning of the line is significant.
614\end{verbatim}
615
Fred Drakeba5c41d2001-09-06 18:41:15 +0000616If we make the string literal a ``raw'' string, however, the
617\code{\e n} sequences are not converted to newlines, but the backslash
618at the end of the line, and the newline character in the source, are
619both included in the string as data. Thus, the example:
620
621\begin{verbatim}
622hello = r"This is a rather long string containing\n\
623several lines of text much as you would do in C."
624
625print hello
626\end{verbatim}
627
628would print:
629
630\begin{verbatim}
631This is a rather long string containing\n\
632several lines of text much as you would do in C.
633\end{verbatim}
634
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000635Or, strings can be surrounded in a pair of matching triple-quotes:
Fred Drakeba5c41d2001-09-06 18:41:15 +0000636\code{"""} or \code{'\code{'}'}. End of lines do not need to be escaped
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000637when using triple-quotes, but they will be included in the string.
638
639\begin{verbatim}
640print """
641Usage: thingy [OPTIONS]
642 -h Display this usage message
643 -H hostname Hostname to connect to
644"""
645\end{verbatim}
646
647produces the following output:
648
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000649\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000650Usage: thingy [OPTIONS]
651 -h Display this usage message
652 -H hostname Hostname to connect to
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000653\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +0000654
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000655The interpreter prints the result of string operations in the same way
656as they are typed for input: inside quotes, and with quotes and other
657funny characters escaped by backslashes, to show the precise
658value. The string is enclosed in double quotes if the string contains
659a single quote and no double quotes, else it's enclosed in single
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000660quotes. (The \keyword{print} statement, described later, can be used
661to write strings without quotes or escapes.)
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +0000662
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +0000663Strings can be concatenated (glued together) with the
664\code{+} operator, and repeated with \code{*}:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000665
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000666\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000667>>> word = 'Help' + 'A'
668>>> word
669'HelpA'
670>>> '<' + word*5 + '>'
671'<HelpAHelpAHelpAHelpAHelpA>'
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000672\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +0000673
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000674Two string literals next to each other are automatically concatenated;
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000675the first line above could also have been written \samp{word = 'Help'
Guido van Rossume51aa5b1999-01-06 23:14:14 +0000676'A'}; this only works with two literals, not with arbitrary string
677expressions:
678
679\begin{verbatim}
680>>> 'str' 'ing' # <- This is ok
681'string'
Fred Drakef5c87c42003-09-11 06:06:26 +0000682>>> 'str'.strip() + 'ing' # <- This is ok
Guido van Rossume51aa5b1999-01-06 23:14:14 +0000683'string'
Fred Drakef5c87c42003-09-11 06:06:26 +0000684>>> 'str'.strip() 'ing' # <- This is invalid
Fred Drake13af4282001-09-21 21:10:05 +0000685 File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
Fred Drakef5c87c42003-09-11 06:06:26 +0000686 'str'.strip() 'ing'
687 ^
Guido van Rossume51aa5b1999-01-06 23:14:14 +0000688SyntaxError: invalid syntax
689\end{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +0000690
Fred Drakeee84d591999-03-10 17:25:30 +0000691Strings can be subscripted (indexed); like in C, the first character
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000692of a string has subscript (index) 0. There is no separate character
693type; a character is simply a string of size one. Like in Icon,
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000694substrings can be specified with the \emph{slice notation}: two indices
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +0000695separated by a colon.
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000696
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000697\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000698>>> word[4]
699'A'
700>>> word[0:2]
701'He'
702>>> word[2:4]
703'lp'
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000704\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +0000705
Raymond Hettinger60de2e82003-03-12 04:46:52 +0000706Slice indices have useful defaults; an omitted first index defaults to
707zero, an omitted second index defaults to the size of the string being
708sliced.
709
710\begin{verbatim}
711>>> word[:2] # The first two characters
712'He'
Fred Drake20938f52004-07-21 17:18:19 +0000713>>> word[2:] # Everything except the first two characters
Raymond Hettinger60de2e82003-03-12 04:46:52 +0000714'lpA'
715\end{verbatim}
716
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +0000717Unlike a C string, Python strings cannot be changed. Assigning to an
718indexed position in the string results in an error:
719
720\begin{verbatim}
721>>> word[0] = 'x'
Fred Drake162c6a62001-02-14 03:20:18 +0000722Traceback (most recent call last):
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +0000723 File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
724TypeError: object doesn't support item assignment
Fred Drake67fdaa42001-03-06 07:19:34 +0000725>>> word[:1] = 'Splat'
Fred Drake162c6a62001-02-14 03:20:18 +0000726Traceback (most recent call last):
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +0000727 File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
728TypeError: object doesn't support slice assignment
729\end{verbatim}
730
731However, creating a new string with the combined content is easy and
732efficient:
733
734\begin{verbatim}
735>>> 'x' + word[1:]
736'xelpA'
Fred Drake67fdaa42001-03-06 07:19:34 +0000737>>> 'Splat' + word[4]
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +0000738'SplatA'
739\end{verbatim}
740
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +0000741Here's a useful invariant of slice operations:
742\code{s[:i] + s[i:]} equals \code{s}.
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000743
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000744\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000745>>> word[:2] + word[2:]
746'HelpA'
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000747>>> word[:3] + word[3:]
748'HelpA'
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000749\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +0000750
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000751Degenerate slice indices are handled gracefully: an index that is too
752large is replaced by the string size, an upper bound smaller than the
753lower bound returns an empty string.
754
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000755\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000756>>> word[1:100]
757'elpA'
758>>> word[10:]
759''
760>>> word[2:1]
761''
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000762\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +0000763
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000764Indices may be negative numbers, to start counting from the right.
765For example:
766
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000767\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000768>>> word[-1] # The last character
769'A'
770>>> word[-2] # The last-but-one character
771'p'
772>>> word[-2:] # The last two characters
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000773'pA'
Fred Drake4ab0e9e2004-07-21 17:36:47 +0000774>>> word[:-2] # Everything except the last two characters
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000775'Hel'
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000776\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +0000777
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000778But note that -0 is really the same as 0, so it does not count from
779the right!
780
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000781\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000782>>> word[-0] # (since -0 equals 0)
783'H'
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000784\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +0000785
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000786Out-of-range negative slice indices are truncated, but don't try this
787for single-element (non-slice) indices:
788
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000789\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000790>>> word[-100:]
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000791'HelpA'
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000792>>> word[-10] # error
Fred Drake162c6a62001-02-14 03:20:18 +0000793Traceback (most recent call last):
Fred Drake13af4282001-09-21 21:10:05 +0000794 File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +0000795IndexError: string index out of range
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000796\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +0000797
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000798The best way to remember how slices work is to think of the indices as
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +0000799pointing \emph{between} characters, with the left edge of the first
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +0000800character numbered 0. Then the right edge of the last character of a
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +0000801string of \var{n} characters has index \var{n}, for example:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000802
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000803\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000804 +---+---+---+---+---+
805 | H | e | l | p | A |
806 +---+---+---+---+---+
807 0 1 2 3 4 5
808-5 -4 -3 -2 -1
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000809\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +0000810
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +0000811The first row of numbers gives the position of the indices 0...5 in
812the string; the second row gives the corresponding negative indices.
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +0000813The slice from \var{i} to \var{j} consists of all characters between
814the edges labeled \var{i} and \var{j}, respectively.
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000815
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +0000816For non-negative indices, the length of a slice is the difference of
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +0000817the indices, if both are within bounds. For example, the length of
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +0000818\code{word[1:3]} is 2.
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000819
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000820The built-in function \function{len()} returns the length of a string:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000821
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000822\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000823>>> s = 'supercalifragilisticexpialidocious'
824>>> len(s)
82534
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000826\end{verbatim}
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000827
Fred Drake9dc30bb2000-04-06 14:17:03 +0000828
Fred Drakef5c87c42003-09-11 06:06:26 +0000829\begin{seealso}
830 \seetitle[../lib/typesseq.html]{Sequence Types}%
831 {Strings, and the Unicode strings described in the next
832 section, are examples of \emph{sequence types}, and
833 support the common operations supported by such types.}
834 \seetitle[../lib/string-methods.html]{String Methods}%
835 {Both strings and Unicode strings support a large number of
836 methods for basic transformations and searching.}
837 \seetitle[../lib/typesseq-strings.html]{String Formatting Operations}%
838 {The formatting operations invoked when strings and Unicode
839 strings are the left operand of the \code{\%} operator are
840 described in more detail here.}
841\end{seealso}
842
843
Fred Drake9dc30bb2000-04-06 14:17:03 +0000844\subsection{Unicode Strings \label{unicodeStrings}}
845\sectionauthor{Marc-Andre Lemburg}{mal@lemburg.com}
846
Fred Drake30f76ff2000-06-30 16:06:19 +0000847Starting with Python 2.0 a new data type for storing text data is
Fred Drake9dc30bb2000-04-06 14:17:03 +0000848available to the programmer: the Unicode object. It can be used to
Fred Drake17f690f2001-07-14 02:14:42 +0000849store and manipulate Unicode data (see \url{http://www.unicode.org/})
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +0000850and integrates well with the existing string objects, providing
Fred Drake9dc30bb2000-04-06 14:17:03 +0000851auto-conversions where necessary.
852
853Unicode has the advantage of providing one ordinal for every character
854in every script used in modern and ancient texts. Previously, there
Johannes Gijsbers158df102005-01-09 00:12:48 +0000855were only 256 possible ordinals for script characters. Texts were
Fred Drake9dc30bb2000-04-06 14:17:03 +0000856typically bound to a code page which mapped the ordinals to script
857characters. This lead to very much confusion especially with respect
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +0000858to internationalization (usually written as \samp{i18n} ---
859\character{i} + 18 characters + \character{n}) of software. Unicode
860solves these problems by defining one code page for all scripts.
Fred Drake9dc30bb2000-04-06 14:17:03 +0000861
862Creating Unicode strings in Python is just as simple as creating
863normal strings:
864
865\begin{verbatim}
866>>> u'Hello World !'
867u'Hello World !'
868\end{verbatim}
869
Johannes Gijsbers158df102005-01-09 00:12:48 +0000870The small \character{u} in front of the quote indicates that a
Fred Drake9dc30bb2000-04-06 14:17:03 +0000871Unicode string is supposed to be created. If you want to include
872special characters in the string, you can do so by using the Python
873\emph{Unicode-Escape} encoding. The following example shows how:
874
875\begin{verbatim}
Tim Peters657ebef2000-11-29 05:51:59 +0000876>>> u'Hello\u0020World !'
Fred Drake9dc30bb2000-04-06 14:17:03 +0000877u'Hello World !'
878\end{verbatim}
879
Fred Drake4a6f1df2000-11-29 06:03:45 +0000880The escape sequence \code{\e u0020} indicates to insert the Unicode
Ka-Ping Yee54019962001-02-13 22:20:22 +0000881character with the ordinal value 0x0020 (the space character) at the
Fred Drake9dc30bb2000-04-06 14:17:03 +0000882given position.
883
884Other characters are interpreted by using their respective ordinal
Ka-Ping Yee54019962001-02-13 22:20:22 +0000885values directly as Unicode ordinals. If you have literal strings
886in the standard Latin-1 encoding that is used in many Western countries,
887you will find it convenient that the lower 256 characters
888of Unicode are the same as the 256 characters of Latin-1.
Fred Drake9dc30bb2000-04-06 14:17:03 +0000889
Ka-Ping Yee54019962001-02-13 22:20:22 +0000890For experts, there is also a raw mode just like the one for normal
891strings. You have to prefix the opening quote with 'ur' to have
Fred Drake9dc30bb2000-04-06 14:17:03 +0000892Python use the \emph{Raw-Unicode-Escape} encoding. It will only apply
Fred Drake4a6f1df2000-11-29 06:03:45 +0000893the above \code{\e uXXXX} conversion if there is an uneven number of
Fred Drake9dc30bb2000-04-06 14:17:03 +0000894backslashes in front of the small 'u'.
895
896\begin{verbatim}
897>>> ur'Hello\u0020World !'
898u'Hello World !'
899>>> ur'Hello\\u0020World !'
900u'Hello\\\\u0020World !'
901\end{verbatim}
902
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +0000903The raw mode is most useful when you have to enter lots of
904backslashes, as can be necessary in regular expressions.
Fred Drake9dc30bb2000-04-06 14:17:03 +0000905
906Apart from these standard encodings, Python provides a whole set of
Thomas Woutersf9b526d2000-07-16 19:05:38 +0000907other ways of creating Unicode strings on the basis of a known
Fred Drake9dc30bb2000-04-06 14:17:03 +0000908encoding.
909
Ka-Ping Yee54019962001-02-13 22:20:22 +0000910The built-in function \function{unicode()}\bifuncindex{unicode} provides
911access to all registered Unicode codecs (COders and DECoders). Some of
912the more well known encodings which these codecs can convert are
913\emph{Latin-1}, \emph{ASCII}, \emph{UTF-8}, and \emph{UTF-16}.
914The latter two are variable-length encodings that store each Unicode
915character in one or more bytes. The default encoding is
Fred Drake626d4722003-09-11 04:28:13 +0000916normally set to \ASCII, which passes through characters in the range
Ka-Ping Yee54019962001-02-13 22:20:22 +00009170 to 127 and rejects any other characters with an error.
918When a Unicode string is printed, written to a file, or converted
919with \function{str()}, conversion takes place using this default encoding.
Fred Drake9dc30bb2000-04-06 14:17:03 +0000920
921\begin{verbatim}
Ka-Ping Yee54019962001-02-13 22:20:22 +0000922>>> u"abc"
923u'abc'
924>>> str(u"abc")
925'abc'
Fred Drake9dc30bb2000-04-06 14:17:03 +0000926>>> u"äöü"
Ka-Ping Yee54019962001-02-13 22:20:22 +0000927u'\xe4\xf6\xfc'
928>>> str(u"äöü")
929Traceback (most recent call last):
930 File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
Raymond Hettingera2f84ce2003-05-07 17:11:15 +0000931UnicodeEncodeError: 'ascii' codec can't encode characters in position 0-2: ordinal not in range(128)
Ka-Ping Yee54019962001-02-13 22:20:22 +0000932\end{verbatim}
933
934To convert a Unicode string into an 8-bit string using a specific
935encoding, Unicode objects provide an \function{encode()} method
936that takes one argument, the name of the encoding. Lowercase names
937for encodings are preferred.
938
939\begin{verbatim}
940>>> u"äöü".encode('utf-8')
941'\xc3\xa4\xc3\xb6\xc3\xbc'
Fred Drake9dc30bb2000-04-06 14:17:03 +0000942\end{verbatim}
943
944If you have data in a specific encoding and want to produce a
945corresponding Unicode string from it, you can use the
Ka-Ping Yee54019962001-02-13 22:20:22 +0000946\function{unicode()} function with the encoding name as the second
Fred Drake9dc30bb2000-04-06 14:17:03 +0000947argument.
948
949\begin{verbatim}
Ka-Ping Yee54019962001-02-13 22:20:22 +0000950>>> unicode('\xc3\xa4\xc3\xb6\xc3\xbc', 'utf-8')
951u'\xe4\xf6\xfc'
Fred Drake9dc30bb2000-04-06 14:17:03 +0000952\end{verbatim}
953
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +0000954\subsection{Lists \label{lists}}
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000955
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +0000956Python knows a number of \emph{compound} data types, used to group
957together other values. The most versatile is the \emph{list}, which
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000958can be written as a list of comma-separated values (items) between
959square brackets. List items need not all have the same type.
960
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000961\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossume5f8b601995-01-04 19:12:49 +0000962>>> a = ['spam', 'eggs', 100, 1234]
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000963>>> a
Guido van Rossume5f8b601995-01-04 19:12:49 +0000964['spam', 'eggs', 100, 1234]
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000965\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +0000966
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000967Like string indices, list indices start at 0, and lists can be sliced,
968concatenated and so on:
969
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000970\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000971>>> a[0]
Guido van Rossume5f8b601995-01-04 19:12:49 +0000972'spam'
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000973>>> a[3]
9741234
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000975>>> a[-2]
976100
977>>> a[1:-1]
Guido van Rossume5f8b601995-01-04 19:12:49 +0000978['eggs', 100]
979>>> a[:2] + ['bacon', 2*2]
980['spam', 'eggs', 'bacon', 4]
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +0000981>>> 3*a[:3] + ['Boo!']
982['spam', 'eggs', 100, 'spam', 'eggs', 100, 'spam', 'eggs', 100, 'Boo!']
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000983\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +0000984
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +0000985Unlike strings, which are \emph{immutable}, it is possible to change
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +0000986individual elements of a list:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000987
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000988\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000989>>> a
Guido van Rossume5f8b601995-01-04 19:12:49 +0000990['spam', 'eggs', 100, 1234]
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000991>>> a[2] = a[2] + 23
992>>> a
Guido van Rossume5f8b601995-01-04 19:12:49 +0000993['spam', 'eggs', 123, 1234]
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000994\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +0000995
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000996Assignment to slices is also possible, and this can even change the size
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +0000997of the list:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +0000998
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +0000999\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001000>>> # Replace some items:
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00001001... a[0:2] = [1, 12]
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001002>>> a
1003[1, 12, 123, 1234]
1004>>> # Remove some:
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00001005... a[0:2] = []
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001006>>> a
1007[123, 1234]
1008>>> # Insert some:
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00001009... a[1:1] = ['bletch', 'xyzzy']
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001010>>> a
1011[123, 'bletch', 'xyzzy', 1234]
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00001012>>> a[:0] = a # Insert (a copy of) itself at the beginning
1013>>> a
1014[123, 'bletch', 'xyzzy', 1234, 123, 'bletch', 'xyzzy', 1234]
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001015\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00001016
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001017The built-in function \function{len()} also applies to lists:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00001018
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001019\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001020>>> len(a)
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +000010218
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001022\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00001023
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001024It is possible to nest lists (create lists containing other lists),
1025for example:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00001026
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001027\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00001028>>> q = [2, 3]
1029>>> p = [1, q, 4]
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001030>>> len(p)
10313
1032>>> p[1]
1033[2, 3]
1034>>> p[1][0]
10352
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00001036>>> p[1].append('xtra') # See section 5.1
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001037>>> p
1038[1, [2, 3, 'xtra'], 4]
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00001039>>> q
1040[2, 3, 'xtra']
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001041\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00001042
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00001043Note that in the last example, \code{p[1]} and \code{q} really refer to
1044the same object! We'll come back to \emph{object semantics} later.
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001045
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00001046\section{First Steps Towards Programming \label{firstSteps}}
Guido van Rossum2292b8e1991-01-23 16:31:24 +00001047
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001048Of course, we can use Python for more complicated tasks than adding
1049two and two together. For instance, we can write an initial
Fred Drake979d0412001-04-03 17:41:56 +00001050sub-sequence of the \emph{Fibonacci} series as follows:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00001051
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001052\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001053>>> # Fibonacci series:
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00001054... # the sum of two elements defines the next
1055... a, b = 0, 1
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001056>>> while b < 10:
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001057... print b
1058... a, b = b, a+b
1059...
10601
10611
10622
10633
10645
10658
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001066\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00001067
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001068This example introduces several new features.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001069
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001070\begin{itemize}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001071
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001072\item
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00001073The first line contains a \emph{multiple assignment}: the variables
1074\code{a} and \code{b} simultaneously get the new values 0 and 1. On the
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001075last line this is used again, demonstrating that the expressions on
1076the right-hand side are all evaluated first before any of the
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00001077assignments take place. The right-hand side expressions are evaluated
1078from the left to the right.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001079
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001080\item
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001081The \keyword{while} loop executes as long as the condition (here:
Fred Drakeee84d591999-03-10 17:25:30 +00001082\code{b < 10}) remains true. In Python, like in C, any non-zero
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001083integer value is true; zero is false. The condition may also be a
1084string or list value, in fact any sequence; anything with a non-zero
1085length is true, empty sequences are false. The test used in the
1086example is a simple comparison. The standard comparison operators are
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00001087written the same as in C: \code{<} (less than), \code{>} (greater than),
1088\code{==} (equal to), \code{<=} (less than or equal to),
1089\code{>=} (greater than or equal to) and \code{!=} (not equal to).
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001090
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001091\item
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00001092The \emph{body} of the loop is \emph{indented}: indentation is Python's
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001093way of grouping statements. Python does not (yet!) provide an
1094intelligent input line editing facility, so you have to type a tab or
1095space(s) for each indented line. In practice you will prepare more
1096complicated input for Python with a text editor; most text editors have
1097an auto-indent facility. When a compound statement is entered
1098interactively, it must be followed by a blank line to indicate
1099completion (since the parser cannot guess when you have typed the last
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00001100line). Note that each line within a basic block must be indented by
1101the same amount.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001102
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001103\item
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001104The \keyword{print} statement writes the value of the expression(s) it is
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001105given. It differs from just writing the expression you want to write
1106(as we did earlier in the calculator examples) in the way it handles
Guido van Rossum16cd7f91994-10-06 10:29:26 +00001107multiple expressions and strings. Strings are printed without quotes,
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001108and a space is inserted between items, so you can format things nicely,
1109like this:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00001110
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001111\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001112>>> i = 256*256
1113>>> print 'The value of i is', i
1114The value of i is 65536
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001115\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00001116
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001117A trailing comma avoids the newline after the output:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00001118
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001119\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001120>>> a, b = 0, 1
1121>>> while b < 1000:
1122... print b,
1123... a, b = b, a+b
1124...
11251 1 2 3 5 8 13 21 34 55 89 144 233 377 610 987
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001126\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00001127
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001128Note that the interpreter inserts a newline before it prints the next
1129prompt if the last line was not completed.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001130
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001131\end{itemize}
1132
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00001133
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00001134\chapter{More Control Flow Tools \label{moreControl}}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001135
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001136Besides the \keyword{while} statement just introduced, Python knows
1137the usual control flow statements known from other languages, with
1138some twists.
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001139
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00001140\section{\keyword{if} Statements \label{if}}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001141
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00001142Perhaps the most well-known statement type is the
1143\keyword{if} statement. For example:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00001144
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001145\begin{verbatim}
Fred Draked3ba10f2001-08-14 19:55:42 +00001146>>> x = int(raw_input("Please enter an integer: "))
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001147>>> if x < 0:
1148... x = 0
1149... print 'Negative changed to zero'
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00001150... elif x == 0:
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001151... print 'Zero'
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00001152... elif x == 1:
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001153... print 'Single'
1154... else:
1155... print 'More'
1156...
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001157\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00001158
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00001159There can be zero or more \keyword{elif} parts, and the
1160\keyword{else} part is optional. The keyword `\keyword{elif}' is
1161short for `else if', and is useful to avoid excessive indentation. An
1162\keyword{if} \ldots\ \keyword{elif} \ldots\ \keyword{elif} \ldots\ sequence
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001163% Weird spacings happen here if the wrapping of the source text
1164% gets changed in the wrong way.
Fred Drake860106a2000-10-20 03:03:18 +00001165is a substitute for the \keyword{switch} or
1166\keyword{case} statements found in other languages.
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001167
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00001168
1169\section{\keyword{for} Statements \label{for}}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001170
Fred Drakef790b161998-11-30 20:37:24 +00001171The \keyword{for}\stindex{for} statement in Python differs a bit from
Fred Drakeee84d591999-03-10 17:25:30 +00001172what you may be used to in C or Pascal. Rather than always
Fred Drakef790b161998-11-30 20:37:24 +00001173iterating over an arithmetic progression of numbers (like in Pascal),
1174or giving the user the ability to define both the iteration step and
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00001175halting condition (as C), Python's
1176\keyword{for}\stindex{for} statement iterates over the items of any
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +00001177sequence (a list or a string), in the order that they appear in
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00001178the sequence. For example (no pun intended):
Fred Drakef790b161998-11-30 20:37:24 +00001179% One suggestion was to give a real C example here, but that may only
1180% serve to confuse non-C programmers.
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00001181
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001182\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001183>>> # Measure some strings:
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00001184... a = ['cat', 'window', 'defenestrate']
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001185>>> for x in a:
1186... print x, len(x)
1187...
1188cat 3
1189window 6
1190defenestrate 12
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001191\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00001192
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001193It is not safe to modify the sequence being iterated over in the loop
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +00001194(this can only happen for mutable sequence types, such as lists). If
1195you need to modify the list you are iterating over (for example, to
1196duplicate selected items) you must iterate over a copy. The slice
1197notation makes this particularly convenient:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00001198
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001199\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001200>>> for x in a[:]: # make a slice copy of the entire list
1201... if len(x) > 6: a.insert(0, x)
1202...
1203>>> a
1204['defenestrate', 'cat', 'window', 'defenestrate']
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001205\end{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum2292b8e1991-01-23 16:31:24 +00001206
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00001207
1208\section{The \function{range()} Function \label{range}}
Guido van Rossum2292b8e1991-01-23 16:31:24 +00001209
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001210If you do need to iterate over a sequence of numbers, the built-in
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001211function \function{range()} comes in handy. It generates lists
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +00001212containing arithmetic progressions:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00001213
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001214\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001215>>> range(10)
1216[0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001217\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00001218
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001219The given end point is never part of the generated list;
1220\code{range(10)} generates a list of 10 values, exactly the legal
1221indices for items of a sequence of length 10. It is possible to let
1222the range start at another number, or to specify a different increment
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00001223(even negative; sometimes this is called the `step'):
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00001224
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001225\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001226>>> range(5, 10)
1227[5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
1228>>> range(0, 10, 3)
1229[0, 3, 6, 9]
1230>>> range(-10, -100, -30)
1231[-10, -40, -70]
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001232\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00001233
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00001234To iterate over the indices of a sequence, combine
1235\function{range()} and \function{len()} as follows:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00001236
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001237\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001238>>> a = ['Mary', 'had', 'a', 'little', 'lamb']
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001239>>> for i in range(len(a)):
1240... print i, a[i]
1241...
12420 Mary
12431 had
12442 a
12453 little
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +000012464 lamb
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001247\end{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001248
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00001249
Fred Drake391564f1998-04-01 23:11:56 +00001250\section{\keyword{break} and \keyword{continue} Statements, and
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00001251 \keyword{else} Clauses on Loops
1252 \label{break}}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001253
Fred Drakeee84d591999-03-10 17:25:30 +00001254The \keyword{break} statement, like in C, breaks out of the smallest
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001255enclosing \keyword{for} or \keyword{while} loop.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001256
Fred Drakeee84d591999-03-10 17:25:30 +00001257The \keyword{continue} statement, also borrowed from C, continues
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001258with the next iteration of the loop.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001259
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001260Loop statements may have an \code{else} clause; it is executed when
1261the loop terminates through exhaustion of the list (with
1262\keyword{for}) or when the condition becomes false (with
1263\keyword{while}), but not when the loop is terminated by a
1264\keyword{break} statement. This is exemplified by the following loop,
1265which searches for prime numbers:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00001266
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001267\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum2292b8e1991-01-23 16:31:24 +00001268>>> for n in range(2, 10):
1269... for x in range(2, n):
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00001270... if n % x == 0:
Fred Drake236ffba2003-08-16 06:30:47 +00001271... print n, 'equals', x, '*', n/x
1272... break
Guido van Rossum2292b8e1991-01-23 16:31:24 +00001273... else:
Fred Drake236ffba2003-08-16 06:30:47 +00001274... # loop fell through without finding a factor
1275... print n, 'is a prime number'
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001276...
Guido van Rossum2292b8e1991-01-23 16:31:24 +000012772 is a prime number
12783 is a prime number
12794 equals 2 * 2
12805 is a prime number
12816 equals 2 * 3
12827 is a prime number
12838 equals 2 * 4
12849 equals 3 * 3
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001285\end{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001286
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +00001287
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00001288\section{\keyword{pass} Statements \label{pass}}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001289
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001290The \keyword{pass} statement does nothing.
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001291It can be used when a statement is required syntactically but the
1292program requires no action.
1293For example:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00001294
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001295\begin{verbatim}
Raymond Hettingera6e16a82002-08-21 04:54:00 +00001296>>> while True:
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001297... pass # Busy-wait for keyboard interrupt
1298...
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001299\end{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001300
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +00001301
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00001302\section{Defining Functions \label{functions}}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001303
1304We can create a function that writes the Fibonacci series to an
1305arbitrary boundary:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00001306
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001307\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001308>>> def fib(n): # write Fibonacci series up to n
Fred Drake23d45f42001-12-20 23:54:56 +00001309... """Print a Fibonacci series up to n."""
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001310... a, b = 0, 1
Guido van Rossum16cd7f91994-10-06 10:29:26 +00001311... while b < n:
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00001312... print b,
1313... a, b = b, a+b
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001314...
1315>>> # Now call the function we just defined:
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00001316... fib(2000)
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +000013171 1 2 3 5 8 13 21 34 55 89 144 233 377 610 987 1597
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001318\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00001319
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001320The keyword \keyword{def} introduces a function \emph{definition}. It
1321must be followed by the function name and the parenthesized list of
1322formal parameters. The statements that form the body of the function
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00001323start at the next line, and must be indented. The first statement of
1324the function body can optionally be a string literal; this string
1325literal is the function's \index{documentation strings}documentation
1326string, or \dfn{docstring}.\index{docstrings}\index{strings, documentation}
1327
1328There are tools which use docstrings to automatically produce online
1329or printed documentation, or to let the user interactively browse
1330through code; it's good practice to include docstrings in code that
1331you write, so try to make a habit of it.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001332
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00001333The \emph{execution} of a function introduces a new symbol table used
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001334for the local variables of the function. More precisely, all variable
1335assignments in a function store the value in the local symbol table;
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00001336whereas variable references first look in the local symbol table, then
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001337in the global symbol table, and then in the table of built-in names.
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001338Thus, global variables cannot be directly assigned a value within a
1339function (unless named in a \keyword{global} statement), although
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00001340they may be referenced.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001341
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001342The actual parameters (arguments) to a function call are introduced in
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001343the local symbol table of the called function when it is called; thus,
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00001344arguments are passed using \emph{call by value} (where the
1345\emph{value} is always an object \emph{reference}, not the value of
1346the object).\footnote{
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00001347 Actually, \emph{call by object reference} would be a better
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00001348 description, since if a mutable object is passed, the caller
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +00001349 will see any changes the callee makes to it (items
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00001350 inserted into a list).
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00001351} When a function calls another function, a new local symbol table is
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001352created for that call.
1353
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001354A function definition introduces the function name in the current
1355symbol table. The value of the function name
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001356has a type that is recognized by the interpreter as a user-defined
1357function. This value can be assigned to another name which can then
1358also be used as a function. This serves as a general renaming
1359mechanism:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00001360
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001361\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001362>>> fib
Raymond Hettingerd3b0bab2004-08-22 15:24:33 +00001363<function fib at 10042ed0>
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001364>>> f = fib
1365>>> f(100)
13661 1 2 3 5 8 13 21 34 55 89
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001367\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00001368
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00001369You might object that \code{fib} is not a function but a procedure. In
Fred Drakeee84d591999-03-10 17:25:30 +00001370Python, like in C, procedures are just functions that don't return a
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001371value. In fact, technically speaking, procedures do return a value,
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00001372albeit a rather boring one. This value is called \code{None} (it's a
1373built-in name). Writing the value \code{None} is normally suppressed by
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001374the interpreter if it would be the only value written. You can see it
1375if you really want to:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00001376
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001377\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001378>>> print fib(0)
1379None
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001380\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00001381
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001382It is simple to write a function that returns a list of the numbers of
1383the Fibonacci series, instead of printing it:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00001384
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001385\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001386>>> def fib2(n): # return Fibonacci series up to n
Fred Drake23d45f42001-12-20 23:54:56 +00001387... """Return a list containing the Fibonacci series up to n."""
Guido van Rossum2292b8e1991-01-23 16:31:24 +00001388... result = []
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001389... a, b = 0, 1
Guido van Rossum16cd7f91994-10-06 10:29:26 +00001390... while b < n:
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00001391... result.append(b) # see below
1392... a, b = b, a+b
Guido van Rossum2292b8e1991-01-23 16:31:24 +00001393... return result
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001394...
1395>>> f100 = fib2(100) # call it
1396>>> f100 # write the result
1397[1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89]
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001398\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +00001399
Guido van Rossum4410c751991-06-04 20:22:18 +00001400This example, as usual, demonstrates some new Python features:
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001401
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001402\begin{itemize}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001403
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001404\item
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001405The \keyword{return} statement returns with a value from a function.
Fred Drake0fe5af92001-01-19 22:34:59 +00001406\keyword{return} without an expression argument returns \code{None}.
1407Falling off the end of a procedure also returns \code{None}.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001408
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001409\item
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00001410The statement \code{result.append(b)} calls a \emph{method} of the list
1411object \code{result}. A method is a function that `belongs' to an
1412object and is named \code{obj.methodname}, where \code{obj} is some
1413object (this may be an expression), and \code{methodname} is the name
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001414of a method that is defined by the object's type. Different types
1415define different methods. Methods of different types may have the
1416same name without causing ambiguity. (It is possible to define your
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00001417own object types and methods, using \emph{classes}, as discussed later
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00001418in this tutorial.)
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001419The method \method{append()} shown in the example, is defined for
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001420list objects; it adds a new element at the end of the list. In this
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001421example it is equivalent to \samp{result = result + [b]}, but more
1422efficient.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001423
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001424\end{itemize}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001425
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00001426\section{More on Defining Functions \label{defining}}
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00001427
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00001428It is also possible to define functions with a variable number of
1429arguments. There are three forms, which can be combined.
1430
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00001431\subsection{Default Argument Values \label{defaultArgs}}
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00001432
1433The most useful form is to specify a default value for one or more
1434arguments. This creates a function that can be called with fewer
Fred Drakef0ae4272004-02-24 16:13:36 +00001435arguments than it is defined to allow. For example:
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00001436
1437\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001438def ask_ok(prompt, retries=4, complaint='Yes or no, please!'):
Raymond Hettingera6e16a82002-08-21 04:54:00 +00001439 while True:
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001440 ok = raw_input(prompt)
Raymond Hettinger25695282003-12-02 07:38:30 +00001441 if ok in ('y', 'ye', 'yes'): return True
1442 if ok in ('n', 'no', 'nop', 'nope'): return False
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001443 retries = retries - 1
1444 if retries < 0: raise IOError, 'refusenik user'
1445 print complaint
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00001446\end{verbatim}
1447
1448This function can be called either like this:
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00001449\code{ask_ok('Do you really want to quit?')} or like this:
1450\code{ask_ok('OK to overwrite the file?', 2)}.
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00001451
Martin v. Löwisf1f05602004-05-06 01:35:45 +00001452This example also introduces the \keyword{in} keyword. This tests
1453whether or not a sequence contains a certain value.
1454
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00001455The default values are evaluated at the point of function definition
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +00001456in the \emph{defining} scope, so that
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00001457
1458\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001459i = 5
Fred Drake8b09f492001-09-06 18:21:30 +00001460
1461def f(arg=i):
1462 print arg
1463
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001464i = 6
1465f()
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00001466\end{verbatim}
1467
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00001468will print \code{5}.
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00001469
Guido van Rossumaee5e261998-08-07 17:45:09 +00001470\strong{Important warning:} The default value is evaluated only once.
1471This makes a difference when the default is a mutable object such as a
Fred Drake3a8fbe72003-06-18 17:14:29 +00001472list, dictionary, or instances of most classes. For example, the
1473following function accumulates the arguments passed to it on
1474subsequent calls:
Guido van Rossumaee5e261998-08-07 17:45:09 +00001475
1476\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake8b09f492001-09-06 18:21:30 +00001477def f(a, L=[]):
1478 L.append(a)
1479 return L
1480
Guido van Rossumaee5e261998-08-07 17:45:09 +00001481print f(1)
1482print f(2)
1483print f(3)
1484\end{verbatim}
1485
1486This will print
1487
1488\begin{verbatim}
1489[1]
1490[1, 2]
1491[1, 2, 3]
1492\end{verbatim}
1493
1494If you don't want the default to be shared between subsequent calls,
1495you can write the function like this instead:
1496
1497\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake8b09f492001-09-06 18:21:30 +00001498def f(a, L=None):
1499 if L is None:
1500 L = []
1501 L.append(a)
1502 return L
Guido van Rossumaee5e261998-08-07 17:45:09 +00001503\end{verbatim}
1504
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00001505\subsection{Keyword Arguments \label{keywordArgs}}
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00001506
1507Functions can also be called using
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001508keyword arguments of the form \samp{\var{keyword} = \var{value}}. For
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00001509instance, the following function:
1510
1511\begin{verbatim}
1512def parrot(voltage, state='a stiff', action='voom', type='Norwegian Blue'):
1513 print "-- This parrot wouldn't", action,
1514 print "if you put", voltage, "Volts through it."
1515 print "-- Lovely plumage, the", type
1516 print "-- It's", state, "!"
1517\end{verbatim}
1518
1519could be called in any of the following ways:
1520
1521\begin{verbatim}
1522parrot(1000)
1523parrot(action = 'VOOOOOM', voltage = 1000000)
1524parrot('a thousand', state = 'pushing up the daisies')
1525parrot('a million', 'bereft of life', 'jump')
1526\end{verbatim}
1527
1528but the following calls would all be invalid:
1529
1530\begin{verbatim}
1531parrot() # required argument missing
1532parrot(voltage=5.0, 'dead') # non-keyword argument following keyword
1533parrot(110, voltage=220) # duplicate value for argument
1534parrot(actor='John Cleese') # unknown keyword
1535\end{verbatim}
1536
1537In general, an argument list must have any positional arguments
1538followed by any keyword arguments, where the keywords must be chosen
1539from the formal parameter names. It's not important whether a formal
Fred Drakef1ad2071999-06-30 15:32:50 +00001540parameter has a default value or not. No argument may receive a
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00001541value more than once --- formal parameter names corresponding to
1542positional arguments cannot be used as keywords in the same calls.
Fred Drakef1ad2071999-06-30 15:32:50 +00001543Here's an example that fails due to this restriction:
1544
1545\begin{verbatim}
1546>>> def function(a):
1547... pass
1548...
1549>>> function(0, a=0)
Fred Drake162c6a62001-02-14 03:20:18 +00001550Traceback (most recent call last):
Fred Drakef1ad2071999-06-30 15:32:50 +00001551 File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
Raymond Hettingera02469f2003-05-07 17:49:36 +00001552TypeError: function() got multiple values for keyword argument 'a'
Fred Drakef1ad2071999-06-30 15:32:50 +00001553\end{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00001554
1555When a final formal parameter of the form \code{**\var{name}} is
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +00001556present, it receives a \ulink{dictionary}{../lib/typesmapping.html}
1557containing all keyword arguments except for those corresponding to
1558a formal parameter. This may be
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00001559combined with a formal parameter of the form
1560\code{*\var{name}} (described in the next subsection) which receives a
1561tuple containing the positional arguments beyond the formal parameter
1562list. (\code{*\var{name}} must occur before \code{**\var{name}}.)
1563For example, if we define a function like this:
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00001564
1565\begin{verbatim}
1566def cheeseshop(kind, *arguments, **keywords):
1567 print "-- Do you have any", kind, '?'
1568 print "-- I'm sorry, we're all out of", kind
1569 for arg in arguments: print arg
1570 print '-'*40
Fred Drakec26467d2002-01-29 14:53:30 +00001571 keys = keywords.keys()
1572 keys.sort()
1573 for kw in keys: print kw, ':', keywords[kw]
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00001574\end{verbatim}
1575
1576It could be called like this:
1577
1578\begin{verbatim}
1579cheeseshop('Limburger', "It's very runny, sir.",
1580 "It's really very, VERY runny, sir.",
1581 client='John Cleese',
1582 shopkeeper='Michael Palin',
1583 sketch='Cheese Shop Sketch')
1584\end{verbatim}
1585
1586and of course it would print:
1587
1588\begin{verbatim}
1589-- Do you have any Limburger ?
1590-- I'm sorry, we're all out of Limburger
1591It's very runny, sir.
1592It's really very, VERY runny, sir.
1593----------------------------------------
1594client : John Cleese
1595shopkeeper : Michael Palin
1596sketch : Cheese Shop Sketch
1597\end{verbatim}
1598
Fred Drakec26467d2002-01-29 14:53:30 +00001599Note that the \method{sort()} method of the list of keyword argument
1600names is called before printing the contents of the \code{keywords}
1601dictionary; if this is not done, the order in which the arguments are
1602printed is undefined.
1603
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +00001604
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00001605\subsection{Arbitrary Argument Lists \label{arbitraryArgs}}
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00001606
1607Finally, the least frequently used option is to specify that a
1608function can be called with an arbitrary number of arguments. These
1609arguments will be wrapped up in a tuple. Before the variable number
1610of arguments, zero or more normal arguments may occur.
1611
1612\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001613def fprintf(file, format, *args):
1614 file.write(format % args)
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00001615\end{verbatim}
1616
Fred Drakea594baf1998-04-03 05:16:31 +00001617
Raymond Hettinger0eec0872003-08-08 23:32:46 +00001618\subsection{Unpacking Argument Lists \label{unpacking-arguments}}
1619
1620The reverse situation occurs when the arguments are already in a list
1621or tuple but need to be unpacked for a function call requiring separate
1622positional arguments. For instance, the built-in \function{range()}
1623function expects separate \var{start} and \var{stop} arguments. If they
1624are not available separately, write the function call with the
1625\code{*}-operator to unpack the arguments out of a list or tuple:
1626
1627\begin{verbatim}
1628>>> range(3, 6) # normal call with separate arguments
1629[3, 4, 5]
1630>>> args = [3, 6]
1631>>> range(*args) # call with arguments unpacked from a list
1632[3, 4, 5]
1633\end{verbatim}
1634
1635
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00001636\subsection{Lambda Forms \label{lambda}}
Fred Drakea594baf1998-04-03 05:16:31 +00001637
1638By popular demand, a few features commonly found in functional
1639programming languages and Lisp have been added to Python. With the
1640\keyword{lambda} keyword, small anonymous functions can be created.
1641Here's a function that returns the sum of its two arguments:
1642\samp{lambda a, b: a+b}. Lambda forms can be used wherever function
1643objects are required. They are syntactically restricted to a single
1644expression. Semantically, they are just syntactic sugar for a normal
1645function definition. Like nested function definitions, lambda forms
Fred Drakefcf94682001-12-03 21:47:37 +00001646can reference variables from the containing scope:
Fred Drakea594baf1998-04-03 05:16:31 +00001647
1648\begin{verbatim}
Tim Petersc1134652000-11-27 06:38:04 +00001649>>> def make_incrementor(n):
Fred Drakefcf94682001-12-03 21:47:37 +00001650... return lambda x: x + n
Tim Petersc1134652000-11-27 06:38:04 +00001651...
1652>>> f = make_incrementor(42)
1653>>> f(0)
165442
1655>>> f(1)
165643
Fred Drakea594baf1998-04-03 05:16:31 +00001657\end{verbatim}
1658
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00001659
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00001660\subsection{Documentation Strings \label{docstrings}}
Fred Drakea594baf1998-04-03 05:16:31 +00001661
1662There are emerging conventions about the content and formatting of
1663documentation strings.
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00001664\index{docstrings}\index{documentation strings}
1665\index{strings, documentation}
Fred Drakea594baf1998-04-03 05:16:31 +00001666
1667The first line should always be a short, concise summary of the
1668object's purpose. For brevity, it should not explicitly state the
1669object's name or type, since these are available by other means
1670(except if the name happens to be a verb describing a function's
1671operation). This line should begin with a capital letter and end with
1672a period.
1673
1674If there are more lines in the documentation string, the second line
1675should be blank, visually separating the summary from the rest of the
Fred Drake4b1a07a1999-03-12 18:21:32 +00001676description. The following lines should be one or more paragraphs
1677describing the object's calling conventions, its side effects, etc.
Fred Drakea594baf1998-04-03 05:16:31 +00001678
1679The Python parser does not strip indentation from multi-line string
1680literals in Python, so tools that process documentation have to strip
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00001681indentation if desired. This is done using the following convention.
1682The first non-blank line \emph{after} the first line of the string
1683determines the amount of indentation for the entire documentation
1684string. (We can't use the first line since it is generally adjacent
1685to the string's opening quotes so its indentation is not apparent in
1686the string literal.) Whitespace ``equivalent'' to this indentation is
1687then stripped from the start of all lines of the string. Lines that
1688are indented less should not occur, but if they occur all their
1689leading whitespace should be stripped. Equivalence of whitespace
1690should be tested after expansion of tabs (to 8 spaces, normally).
1691
1692Here is an example of a multi-line docstring:
1693
1694\begin{verbatim}
1695>>> def my_function():
1696... """Do nothing, but document it.
1697...
1698... No, really, it doesn't do anything.
1699... """
1700... pass
1701...
1702>>> print my_function.__doc__
1703Do nothing, but document it.
1704
1705 No, really, it doesn't do anything.
1706
1707\end{verbatim}
Fred Drakea594baf1998-04-03 05:16:31 +00001708
1709
1710
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00001711\chapter{Data Structures \label{structures}}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001712
1713This chapter describes some things you've learned about already in
1714more detail, and adds some new things as well.
1715
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00001716
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00001717\section{More on Lists \label{moreLists}}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001718
1719The list data type has some more methods. Here are all of the methods
Fred Drakeed688541998-02-11 22:29:17 +00001720of list objects:
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001721
Fred Drake55ad7f82002-06-11 02:56:17 +00001722\begin{methoddesc}[list]{append}{x}
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00001723Add an item to the end of the list;
Fred Drake55ad7f82002-06-11 02:56:17 +00001724equivalent to \code{a[len(a):] = [\var{x}]}.
1725\end{methoddesc}
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00001726
Fred Drake55ad7f82002-06-11 02:56:17 +00001727\begin{methoddesc}[list]{extend}{L}
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00001728Extend the list by appending all the items in the given list;
Fred Drake55ad7f82002-06-11 02:56:17 +00001729equivalent to \code{a[len(a):] = \var{L}}.
1730\end{methoddesc}
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00001731
Fred Drake55ad7f82002-06-11 02:56:17 +00001732\begin{methoddesc}[list]{insert}{i, x}
1733Insert an item at a given position. The first argument is the index
1734of the element before which to insert, so \code{a.insert(0, \var{x})}
1735inserts at the front of the list, and \code{a.insert(len(a), \var{x})}
1736is equivalent to \code{a.append(\var{x})}.
1737\end{methoddesc}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001738
Fred Drake55ad7f82002-06-11 02:56:17 +00001739\begin{methoddesc}[list]{remove}{x}
1740Remove the first item from the list whose value is \var{x}.
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00001741It is an error if there is no such item.
Fred Drake55ad7f82002-06-11 02:56:17 +00001742\end{methoddesc}
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00001743
Fred Drake55ad7f82002-06-11 02:56:17 +00001744\begin{methoddesc}[list]{pop}{\optional{i}}
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00001745Remove the item at the given position in the list, and return it. If
1746no index is specified, \code{a.pop()} returns the last item in the
Fred Drake55ad7f82002-06-11 02:56:17 +00001747list. The item is also removed from the list. (The square brackets
1748around the \var{i} in the method signature denote that the parameter
1749is optional, not that you should type square brackets at that
1750position. You will see this notation frequently in the
1751\citetitle[../lib/lib.html]{Python Library Reference}.)
1752\end{methoddesc}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001753
Fred Drake55ad7f82002-06-11 02:56:17 +00001754\begin{methoddesc}[list]{index}{x}
1755Return the index in the list of the first item whose value is \var{x}.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001756It is an error if there is no such item.
Fred Drake55ad7f82002-06-11 02:56:17 +00001757\end{methoddesc}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001758
Fred Drake55ad7f82002-06-11 02:56:17 +00001759\begin{methoddesc}[list]{count}{x}
1760Return the number of times \var{x} appears in the list.
1761\end{methoddesc}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001762
Fred Drake55ad7f82002-06-11 02:56:17 +00001763\begin{methoddesc}[list]{sort}{}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001764Sort the items of the list, in place.
Fred Drake55ad7f82002-06-11 02:56:17 +00001765\end{methoddesc}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001766
Fred Drake55ad7f82002-06-11 02:56:17 +00001767\begin{methoddesc}[list]{reverse}{}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001768Reverse the elements of the list, in place.
Fred Drake55ad7f82002-06-11 02:56:17 +00001769\end{methoddesc}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001770
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00001771An example that uses most of the list methods:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00001772
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001773\begin{verbatim}
Tim Peters01ba7992004-09-28 16:12:50 +00001774>>> a = [66.25, 333, 333, 1, 1234.5]
1775>>> print a.count(333), a.count(66.25), a.count('x')
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +000017762 1 0
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001777>>> a.insert(2, -1)
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001778>>> a.append(333)
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001779>>> a
Tim Peters01ba7992004-09-28 16:12:50 +00001780[66.25, 333, -1, 333, 1, 1234.5, 333]
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001781>>> a.index(333)
17821
1783>>> a.remove(333)
1784>>> a
Tim Peters01ba7992004-09-28 16:12:50 +00001785[66.25, -1, 333, 1, 1234.5, 333]
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001786>>> a.reverse()
1787>>> a
Tim Peters01ba7992004-09-28 16:12:50 +00001788[333, 1234.5, 1, 333, -1, 66.25]
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00001789>>> a.sort()
1790>>> a
Tim Peters01ba7992004-09-28 16:12:50 +00001791[-1, 1, 66.25, 333, 333, 1234.5]
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001792\end{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001793
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00001794
1795\subsection{Using Lists as Stacks \label{lists-as-stacks}}
Fred Drake67fdaa42001-03-06 07:19:34 +00001796\sectionauthor{Ka-Ping Yee}{ping@lfw.org}
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00001797
1798The list methods make it very easy to use a list as a stack, where the
1799last element added is the first element retrieved (``last-in,
1800first-out''). To add an item to the top of the stack, use
1801\method{append()}. To retrieve an item from the top of the stack, use
1802\method{pop()} without an explicit index. For example:
1803
1804\begin{verbatim}
1805>>> stack = [3, 4, 5]
1806>>> stack.append(6)
1807>>> stack.append(7)
1808>>> stack
1809[3, 4, 5, 6, 7]
1810>>> stack.pop()
18117
1812>>> stack
1813[3, 4, 5, 6]
1814>>> stack.pop()
18156
1816>>> stack.pop()
18175
1818>>> stack
1819[3, 4]
1820\end{verbatim}
1821
1822
1823\subsection{Using Lists as Queues \label{lists-as-queues}}
Fred Drake67fdaa42001-03-06 07:19:34 +00001824\sectionauthor{Ka-Ping Yee}{ping@lfw.org}
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00001825
1826You can also use a list conveniently as a queue, where the first
1827element added is the first element retrieved (``first-in,
1828first-out''). To add an item to the back of the queue, use
1829\method{append()}. To retrieve an item from the front of the queue,
1830use \method{pop()} with \code{0} as the index. For example:
1831
1832\begin{verbatim}
1833>>> queue = ["Eric", "John", "Michael"]
1834>>> queue.append("Terry") # Terry arrives
1835>>> queue.append("Graham") # Graham arrives
1836>>> queue.pop(0)
1837'Eric'
1838>>> queue.pop(0)
1839'John'
1840>>> queue
1841['Michael', 'Terry', 'Graham']
1842\end{verbatim}
1843
1844
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00001845\subsection{Functional Programming Tools \label{functional}}
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00001846
1847There are three built-in functions that are very useful when used with
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001848lists: \function{filter()}, \function{map()}, and \function{reduce()}.
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00001849
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001850\samp{filter(\var{function}, \var{sequence})} returns a sequence (of
1851the same type, if possible) consisting of those items from the
1852sequence for which \code{\var{function}(\var{item})} is true. For
1853example, to compute some primes:
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00001854
1855\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drakeee84d591999-03-10 17:25:30 +00001856>>> def f(x): return x % 2 != 0 and x % 3 != 0
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001857...
1858>>> filter(f, range(2, 25))
1859[5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23]
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00001860\end{verbatim}
1861
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001862\samp{map(\var{function}, \var{sequence})} calls
1863\code{\var{function}(\var{item})} for each of the sequence's items and
1864returns a list of the return values. For example, to compute some
1865cubes:
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00001866
1867\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001868>>> def cube(x): return x*x*x
1869...
1870>>> map(cube, range(1, 11))
1871[1, 8, 27, 64, 125, 216, 343, 512, 729, 1000]
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00001872\end{verbatim}
1873
1874More than one sequence may be passed; the function must then have as
1875many arguments as there are sequences and is called with the
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001876corresponding item from each sequence (or \code{None} if some sequence
Neil Schemenauer90b182c2003-08-14 22:57:46 +00001877is shorter than another). For example:
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00001878
1879\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001880>>> seq = range(8)
Neil Schemenauer90b182c2003-08-14 22:57:46 +00001881>>> def add(x, y): return x+y
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001882...
Neil Schemenauer90b182c2003-08-14 22:57:46 +00001883>>> map(add, seq, seq)
1884[0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14]
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00001885\end{verbatim}
1886
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +00001887\samp{reduce(\var{function}, \var{sequence})} returns a single value
1888constructed by calling the binary function \var{function} on the first two
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001889items of the sequence, then on the result and the next item, and so
1890on. For example, to compute the sum of the numbers 1 through 10:
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00001891
1892\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001893>>> def add(x,y): return x+y
1894...
1895>>> reduce(add, range(1, 11))
189655
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00001897\end{verbatim}
1898
1899If there's only one item in the sequence, its value is returned; if
1900the sequence is empty, an exception is raised.
1901
1902A third argument can be passed to indicate the starting value. In this
1903case the starting value is returned for an empty sequence, and the
1904function is first applied to the starting value and the first sequence
1905item, then to the result and the next item, and so on. For example,
1906
1907\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001908>>> def sum(seq):
1909... def add(x,y): return x+y
1910... return reduce(add, seq, 0)
1911...
1912>>> sum(range(1, 11))
191355
1914>>> sum([])
19150
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00001916\end{verbatim}
1917
Fred Drake03e929e2003-04-22 14:30:53 +00001918Don't use this example's definition of \function{sum()}: since summing
1919numbers is such a common need, a built-in function
1920\code{sum(\var{sequence})} is already provided, and works exactly like
1921this.
1922\versionadded{2.3}
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +00001923
Skip Montanaro803d6e52000-08-12 18:09:51 +00001924\subsection{List Comprehensions}
1925
Skip Montanaro46dfa5f2000-08-22 02:43:07 +00001926List comprehensions provide a concise way to create lists without resorting
1927to use of \function{map()}, \function{filter()} and/or \keyword{lambda}.
1928The resulting list definition tends often to be clearer than lists built
1929using those constructs. Each list comprehension consists of an expression
Fred Drake33fd5f72002-06-26 21:25:15 +00001930followed by a \keyword{for} clause, then zero or more \keyword{for} or
Skip Montanaro46dfa5f2000-08-22 02:43:07 +00001931\keyword{if} clauses. The result will be a list resulting from evaluating
1932the expression in the context of the \keyword{for} and \keyword{if} clauses
1933which follow it. If the expression would evaluate to a tuple, it must be
1934parenthesized.
Skip Montanaro803d6e52000-08-12 18:09:51 +00001935
1936\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake1aebadf2000-08-16 21:44:03 +00001937>>> freshfruit = [' banana', ' loganberry ', 'passion fruit ']
1938>>> [weapon.strip() for weapon in freshfruit]
1939['banana', 'loganberry', 'passion fruit']
Skip Montanaro803d6e52000-08-12 18:09:51 +00001940>>> vec = [2, 4, 6]
Fred Drake1aebadf2000-08-16 21:44:03 +00001941>>> [3*x for x in vec]
Skip Montanaro803d6e52000-08-12 18:09:51 +00001942[6, 12, 18]
Fred Drake1aebadf2000-08-16 21:44:03 +00001943>>> [3*x for x in vec if x > 3]
1944[12, 18]
1945>>> [3*x for x in vec if x < 2]
1946[]
Skip Montanaro46dfa5f2000-08-22 02:43:07 +00001947>>> [[x,x**2] for x in vec]
1948[[2, 4], [4, 16], [6, 36]]
1949>>> [x, x**2 for x in vec] # error - parens required for tuples
Fred Drake13af4282001-09-21 21:10:05 +00001950 File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
Skip Montanaro46dfa5f2000-08-22 02:43:07 +00001951 [x, x**2 for x in vec]
1952 ^
1953SyntaxError: invalid syntax
1954>>> [(x, x**2) for x in vec]
1955[(2, 4), (4, 16), (6, 36)]
Skip Montanaro803d6e52000-08-12 18:09:51 +00001956>>> vec1 = [2, 4, 6]
1957>>> vec2 = [4, 3, -9]
Fred Drake1aebadf2000-08-16 21:44:03 +00001958>>> [x*y for x in vec1 for y in vec2]
Skip Montanaro803d6e52000-08-12 18:09:51 +00001959[8, 6, -18, 16, 12, -36, 24, 18, -54]
Fred Drake1aebadf2000-08-16 21:44:03 +00001960>>> [x+y for x in vec1 for y in vec2]
Skip Montanaro803d6e52000-08-12 18:09:51 +00001961[6, 5, -7, 8, 7, -5, 10, 9, -3]
Fred Drake1da50f62001-12-03 18:54:33 +00001962>>> [vec1[i]*vec2[i] for i in range(len(vec1))]
1963[8, 12, -54]
Skip Montanaro803d6e52000-08-12 18:09:51 +00001964\end{verbatim}
1965
Raymond Hettinger57d71282003-08-30 23:21:32 +00001966List comprehensions are much more flexible than \function{map()} and can be
1967applied to functions with more than one argument and to nested functions:
1968
1969\begin{verbatim}
1970>>> [str(round(355/113.0, i)) for i in range(1,6)]
1971['3.1', '3.14', '3.142', '3.1416', '3.14159']
1972\end{verbatim}
1973
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +00001974
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00001975\section{The \keyword{del} statement \label{del}}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001976
1977There is a way to remove an item from a list given its index instead
Fred Drake81f7eb62000-08-12 20:08:04 +00001978of its value: the \keyword{del} statement. This can also be used to
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001979remove slices from a list (which we did earlier by assignment of an
1980empty list to the slice). For example:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00001981
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001982\begin{verbatim}
Tim Peters01ba7992004-09-28 16:12:50 +00001983>>> a = [-1, 1, 66.25, 333, 333, 1234.5]
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001984>>> del a[0]
1985>>> a
Tim Peters01ba7992004-09-28 16:12:50 +00001986[1, 66.25, 333, 333, 1234.5]
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001987>>> del a[2:4]
1988>>> a
Tim Peters01ba7992004-09-28 16:12:50 +00001989[1, 66.25, 1234.5]
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001990\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00001991
1992\keyword{del} can also be used to delete entire variables:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00001993
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001994\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00001995>>> del a
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00001996\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00001997
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00001998Referencing the name \code{a} hereafter is an error (at least until
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00001999another value is assigned to it). We'll find other uses for
2000\keyword{del} later.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002001
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +00002002
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00002003\section{Tuples and Sequences \label{tuples}}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002004
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +00002005We saw that lists and strings have many common properties, such as
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00002006indexing and slicing operations. They are two examples of
Fred Drakef5c87c42003-09-11 06:06:26 +00002007\ulink{\emph{sequence} data types}{../lib/typesseq.html}. Since
2008Python is an evolving language, other sequence data types may be
2009added. There is also another standard sequence data type: the
2010\emph{tuple}.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002011
2012A tuple consists of a number of values separated by commas, for
2013instance:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00002014
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002015\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002016>>> t = 12345, 54321, 'hello!'
2017>>> t[0]
201812345
2019>>> t
2020(12345, 54321, 'hello!')
2021>>> # Tuples may be nested:
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00002022... u = t, (1, 2, 3, 4, 5)
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002023>>> u
2024((12345, 54321, 'hello!'), (1, 2, 3, 4, 5))
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002025\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00002026
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002027As you see, on output tuples are alway enclosed in parentheses, so
2028that nested tuples are interpreted correctly; they may be input with
2029or without surrounding parentheses, although often parentheses are
2030necessary anyway (if the tuple is part of a larger expression).
2031
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +00002032Tuples have many uses. For example: (x, y) coordinate pairs, employee
2033records from a database, etc. Tuples, like strings, are immutable: it
2034is not possible to assign to the individual items of a tuple (you can
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002035simulate much of the same effect with slicing and concatenation,
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +00002036though). It is also possible to create tuples which contain mutable
2037objects, such as lists.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002038
2039A special problem is the construction of tuples containing 0 or 1
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00002040items: the syntax has some extra quirks to accommodate these. Empty
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002041tuples are constructed by an empty pair of parentheses; a tuple with
2042one item is constructed by following a value with a comma
2043(it is not sufficient to enclose a single value in parentheses).
2044Ugly, but effective. For example:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00002045
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002046\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002047>>> empty = ()
2048>>> singleton = 'hello', # <-- note trailing comma
2049>>> len(empty)
20500
2051>>> len(singleton)
20521
2053>>> singleton
2054('hello',)
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002055\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00002056
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00002057The statement \code{t = 12345, 54321, 'hello!'} is an example of
2058\emph{tuple packing}: the values \code{12345}, \code{54321} and
2059\code{'hello!'} are packed together in a tuple. The reverse operation
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +00002060is also possible:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00002061
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002062\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002063>>> x, y, z = t
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002064\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00002065
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +00002066This is called, appropriately enough, \emph{sequence unpacking}.
2067Sequence unpacking requires that the list of variables on the left
2068have the same number of elements as the length of the sequence. Note
2069that multiple assignment is really just a combination of tuple packing
2070and sequence unpacking!
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002071
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +00002072There is a small bit of asymmetry here: packing multiple values
2073always creates a tuple, and unpacking works for any sequence.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002074
Guido van Rossumaee5e261998-08-07 17:45:09 +00002075% XXX Add a bit on the difference between tuples and lists.
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +00002076
Guido van Rossumaee5e261998-08-07 17:45:09 +00002077
Raymond Hettinger65674b82003-11-18 17:50:34 +00002078\section{Sets \label{sets}}
2079
2080Python also includes a data type for \emph{sets}. A set is an unordered
2081collection with no duplicate elements. Basic uses include membership
2082testing and eliminating duplicate entries. Set objects also support
2083mathematical operations like union, intersection, difference, and
2084symmetric difference.
2085
2086Here is a brief demonstration:
2087
2088\begin{verbatim}
2089>>> basket = ['apple', 'orange', 'apple', 'pear', 'orange', 'banana']
2090>>> fruits = set(basket) # create a set without duplicates
2091>>> fruits
2092set(['orange', 'pear', 'apple', 'banana'])
2093>>> 'orange' in fruits # fast membership testing
2094True
2095>>> 'crabgrass' in fruits
2096False
2097
2098>>> # Demonstrate set operations on unique letters from two words
2099...
2100>>> a = set('abracadabra')
2101>>> b = set('alacazam')
2102>>> a # unique letters in a
2103set(['a', 'r', 'b', 'c', 'd'])
2104>>> a - b # letters in a but not in b
2105set(['r', 'd', 'b'])
2106>>> a | b # letters in either a or b
2107set(['a', 'c', 'r', 'd', 'b', 'm', 'z', 'l'])
2108>>> a & b # letters in both a and b
2109set(['a', 'c'])
2110>>> a ^ b # letters in a or b but not both
2111set(['r', 'd', 'b', 'm', 'z', 'l'])
2112\end{verbatim}
2113
2114
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00002115\section{Dictionaries \label{dictionaries}}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002116
Fred Drakef5c87c42003-09-11 06:06:26 +00002117Another useful data type built into Python is the
2118\ulink{\emph{dictionary}}{../lib/typesmapping.html}.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002119Dictionaries are sometimes found in other languages as ``associative
2120memories'' or ``associative arrays''. Unlike sequences, which are
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00002121indexed by a range of numbers, dictionaries are indexed by \emph{keys},
Fred Drakef1ad2071999-06-30 15:32:50 +00002122which can be any immutable type; strings and numbers can always be
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00002123keys. Tuples can be used as keys if they contain only strings,
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +00002124numbers, or tuples; if a tuple contains any mutable object either
2125directly or indirectly, it cannot be used as a key. You can't use
2126lists as keys, since lists can be modified in place using their
2127\method{append()} and \method{extend()} methods, as well as slice and
2128indexed assignments.
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00002129
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00002130It is best to think of a dictionary as an unordered set of
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +00002131\emph{key: value} pairs, with the requirement that the keys are unique
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002132(within one dictionary).
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00002133A pair of braces creates an empty dictionary: \code{\{\}}.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002134Placing a comma-separated list of key:value pairs within the
2135braces adds initial key:value pairs to the dictionary; this is also the
2136way dictionaries are written on output.
2137
2138The main operations on a dictionary are storing a value with some key
2139and extracting the value given the key. It is also possible to delete
2140a key:value pair
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00002141with \code{del}.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002142If you store using a key that is already in use, the old value
2143associated with that key is forgotten. It is an error to extract a
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00002144value using a non-existent key.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002145
Fred Drakef5c87c42003-09-11 06:06:26 +00002146The \method{keys()} method of a dictionary object returns a list of all
Johannes Gijsbers6ab4b992004-09-11 17:48:21 +00002147the keys used in the dictionary, in arbitrary order (if you want it
Fred Drakef5c87c42003-09-11 06:06:26 +00002148sorted, just apply the \method{sort()} method to the list of keys). To
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00002149check whether a single key is in the dictionary, use the
Fred Drakef5c87c42003-09-11 06:06:26 +00002150\method{has_key()} method of the dictionary.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002151
2152Here is a small example using a dictionary:
2153
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002154\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002155>>> tel = {'jack': 4098, 'sape': 4139}
2156>>> tel['guido'] = 4127
2157>>> tel
Guido van Rossum8f96f771991-11-12 15:45:03 +00002158{'sape': 4139, 'guido': 4127, 'jack': 4098}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002159>>> tel['jack']
21604098
2161>>> del tel['sape']
2162>>> tel['irv'] = 4127
2163>>> tel
Guido van Rossum8f96f771991-11-12 15:45:03 +00002164{'guido': 4127, 'irv': 4127, 'jack': 4098}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002165>>> tel.keys()
2166['guido', 'irv', 'jack']
2167>>> tel.has_key('guido')
Raymond Hettingera02469f2003-05-07 17:49:36 +00002168True
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002169\end{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002170
Walter Dörwald7bafa9f2003-12-03 10:34:57 +00002171The \function{dict()} constructor builds dictionaries directly from
Raymond Hettinger07dc9182002-06-25 15:13:18 +00002172lists of key-value pairs stored as tuples. When the pairs form a
2173pattern, list comprehensions can compactly specify the key-value list.
2174
2175\begin{verbatim}
2176>>> dict([('sape', 4139), ('guido', 4127), ('jack', 4098)])
2177{'sape': 4139, 'jack': 4098, 'guido': 4127}
Raymond Hettinger65a350d2004-12-02 07:29:43 +00002178>>> dict([(x, x**2) for x in (2, 4, 6)]) # use a list comprehension
Raymond Hettinger07dc9182002-06-25 15:13:18 +00002179{2: 4, 4: 16, 6: 36}
2180\end{verbatim}
2181
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +00002182Later in the tutorial, we will learn about Generator Expressions
2183which are even better suited for the task of supplying key-values pairs to
2184the \function{dict()} constructor.
2185
Fred Drake38f71972002-04-26 20:29:44 +00002186
2187\section{Looping Techniques \label{loopidioms}}
2188
2189When looping through dictionaries, the key and corresponding value can
Raymond Hettingerd4462302003-11-26 17:52:45 +00002190be retrieved at the same time using the \method{iteritems()} method.
Fred Drake38f71972002-04-26 20:29:44 +00002191
2192\begin{verbatim}
2193>>> knights = {'gallahad': 'the pure', 'robin': 'the brave'}
Raymond Hettingerd4462302003-11-26 17:52:45 +00002194>>> for k, v in knights.iteritems():
Fred Drake38f71972002-04-26 20:29:44 +00002195... print k, v
2196...
2197gallahad the pure
2198robin the brave
2199\end{verbatim}
2200
2201When looping through a sequence, the position index and corresponding
2202value can be retrieved at the same time using the
2203\function{enumerate()} function.
2204
2205\begin{verbatim}
2206>>> for i, v in enumerate(['tic', 'tac', 'toe']):
2207... print i, v
2208...
22090 tic
22101 tac
22112 toe
2212\end{verbatim}
2213
2214To loop over two or more sequences at the same time, the entries
2215can be paired with the \function{zip()} function.
2216
2217\begin{verbatim}
2218>>> questions = ['name', 'quest', 'favorite color']
2219>>> answers = ['lancelot', 'the holy grail', 'blue']
2220>>> for q, a in zip(questions, answers):
2221... print 'What is your %s? It is %s.' % (q, a)
2222...
Raymond Hettinger7951f602002-06-25 03:17:03 +00002223What is your name? It is lancelot.
2224What is your quest? It is the holy grail.
2225What is your favorite color? It is blue.
Fred Drake38f71972002-04-26 20:29:44 +00002226\end{verbatim}
2227
Raymond Hettingerdc62aec2003-11-07 01:30:58 +00002228To loop over a sequence in reverse, first specify the sequence
2229in a forward direction and then call the \function{reversed()}
2230function.
2231
2232\begin{verbatim}
2233>>> for i in reversed(xrange(1,10,2)):
2234... print i
2235...
22369
22377
22385
22393
22401
2241\end{verbatim}
2242
Raymond Hettingera95e87a2003-12-17 21:38:26 +00002243To loop over a sequence in sorted order, use the \function{sorted()}
2244function which returns a new sorted list while leaving the source
2245unaltered.
2246
2247\begin{verbatim}
2248>>> basket = ['apple', 'orange', 'apple', 'pear', 'orange', 'banana']
2249>>> for f in sorted(set(basket)):
2250... print f
2251...
2252apple
2253banana
2254orange
2255pear
2256\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake38f71972002-04-26 20:29:44 +00002257
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00002258\section{More on Conditions \label{conditions}}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002259
Johannes Gijsbers6ab4b992004-09-11 17:48:21 +00002260The conditions used in \code{while} and \code{if} statements can
2261contain any operators, not just comparisons.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002262
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00002263The comparison operators \code{in} and \code{not in} check whether a value
2264occurs (does not occur) in a sequence. The operators \code{is} and
2265\code{is not} compare whether two objects are really the same object; this
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002266only matters for mutable objects like lists. All comparison operators
2267have the same priority, which is lower than that of all numerical
2268operators.
2269
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +00002270Comparisons can be chained. For example, \code{a < b == c} tests
2271whether \code{a} is less than \code{b} and moreover \code{b} equals
2272\code{c}.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002273
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00002274Comparisons may be combined by the Boolean operators \code{and} and
2275\code{or}, and the outcome of a comparison (or of any other Boolean
Johannes Gijsbers6ab4b992004-09-11 17:48:21 +00002276expression) may be negated with \code{not}. These have lower
2277priorities than comparison operators; between them, \code{not} has
2278the highest priority and \code{or} the lowest, so that
2279\code{A and not B or C} is equivalent to \code{(A and (not B)) or C}.
2280As always, parentheses can be used to express the desired composition.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002281
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00002282The Boolean operators \code{and} and \code{or} are so-called
Fred Drake6cb64f92002-03-08 00:54:43 +00002283\emph{short-circuit} operators: their arguments are evaluated from
2284left to right, and evaluation stops as soon as the outcome is
2285determined. For example, if \code{A} and \code{C} are true but
2286\code{B} is false, \code{A and B and C} does not evaluate the
2287expression \code{C}. In general, the return value of a short-circuit
2288operator, when used as a general value and not as a Boolean, is the
2289last evaluated argument.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002290
2291It is possible to assign the result of a comparison or other Boolean
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00002292expression to a variable. For example,
2293
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002294\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00002295>>> string1, string2, string3 = '', 'Trondheim', 'Hammer Dance'
2296>>> non_null = string1 or string2 or string3
2297>>> non_null
2298'Trondheim'
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002299\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00002300
Fred Drakeee84d591999-03-10 17:25:30 +00002301Note that in Python, unlike C, assignment cannot occur inside expressions.
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00002302C programmers may grumble about this, but it avoids a common class of
2303problems encountered in C programs: typing \code{=} in an expression when
2304\code{==} was intended.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002305
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +00002306
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00002307\section{Comparing Sequences and Other Types \label{comparing}}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002308
2309Sequence objects may be compared to other objects with the same
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00002310sequence type. The comparison uses \emph{lexicographical} ordering:
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002311first the first two items are compared, and if they differ this
2312determines the outcome of the comparison; if they are equal, the next
2313two items are compared, and so on, until either sequence is exhausted.
2314If two items to be compared are themselves sequences of the same type,
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00002315the lexicographical comparison is carried out recursively. If all
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002316items of two sequences compare equal, the sequences are considered
Fred Drake979d0412001-04-03 17:41:56 +00002317equal. If one sequence is an initial sub-sequence of the other, the
Fred Drake20c94912001-08-01 17:17:13 +00002318shorter sequence is the smaller (lesser) one. Lexicographical
2319ordering for strings uses the \ASCII{} ordering for individual
2320characters. Some examples of comparisons between sequences with the
2321same types:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00002322
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002323\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002324(1, 2, 3) < (1, 2, 4)
2325[1, 2, 3] < [1, 2, 4]
2326'ABC' < 'C' < 'Pascal' < 'Python'
2327(1, 2, 3, 4) < (1, 2, 4)
2328(1, 2) < (1, 2, -1)
Fred Drake511281a1999-04-16 13:17:04 +00002329(1, 2, 3) == (1.0, 2.0, 3.0)
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002330(1, 2, ('aa', 'ab')) < (1, 2, ('abc', 'a'), 4)
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002331\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00002332
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002333Note that comparing objects of different types is legal. The outcome
2334is deterministic but arbitrary: the types are ordered by their name.
2335Thus, a list is always smaller than a string, a string is always
Johannes Gijsbers6ab4b992004-09-11 17:48:21 +00002336smaller than a tuple, etc. \footnote{
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00002337 The rules for comparing objects of different types should
2338 not be relied upon; they may change in a future version of
2339 the language.
Johannes Gijsbers6ab4b992004-09-11 17:48:21 +00002340} Mixed numeric types are compared according to their numeric value, so
23410 equals 0.0, etc.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002342
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00002343
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00002344\chapter{Modules \label{modules}}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002345
Guido van Rossum4410c751991-06-04 20:22:18 +00002346If you quit from the Python interpreter and enter it again, the
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002347definitions you have made (functions and variables) are lost.
2348Therefore, if you want to write a somewhat longer program, you are
2349better off using a text editor to prepare the input for the interpreter
Guido van Rossum16d6e711994-08-08 12:30:22 +00002350and running it with that file as input instead. This is known as creating a
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00002351\emph{script}. As your program gets longer, you may want to split it
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002352into several files for easier maintenance. You may also want to use a
2353handy function that you've written in several programs without copying
2354its definition into each program.
2355
Guido van Rossum4410c751991-06-04 20:22:18 +00002356To support this, Python has a way to put definitions in a file and use
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002357them in a script or in an interactive instance of the interpreter.
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00002358Such a file is called a \emph{module}; definitions from a module can be
2359\emph{imported} into other modules or into the \emph{main} module (the
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002360collection of variables that you have access to in a script
2361executed at the top level
2362and in calculator mode).
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002363
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002364A module is a file containing Python definitions and statements. The
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00002365file name is the module name with the suffix \file{.py} appended. Within
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00002366a module, the module's name (as a string) is available as the value of
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00002367the global variable \code{__name__}. For instance, use your favorite text
2368editor to create a file called \file{fibo.py} in the current directory
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00002369with the following contents:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00002370
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002371\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002372# Fibonacci numbers module
2373
2374def fib(n): # write Fibonacci series up to n
2375 a, b = 0, 1
Guido van Rossum16cd7f91994-10-06 10:29:26 +00002376 while b < n:
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00002377 print b,
2378 a, b = b, a+b
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002379
2380def fib2(n): # return Fibonacci series up to n
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002381 result = []
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002382 a, b = 0, 1
Guido van Rossum16cd7f91994-10-06 10:29:26 +00002383 while b < n:
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00002384 result.append(b)
2385 a, b = b, a+b
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002386 return result
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002387\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00002388
Guido van Rossum4410c751991-06-04 20:22:18 +00002389Now enter the Python interpreter and import this module with the
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002390following command:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00002391
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002392\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002393>>> import fibo
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002394\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00002395
Fred Drakef1ad2071999-06-30 15:32:50 +00002396This does not enter the names of the functions defined in \code{fibo}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002397directly in the current symbol table; it only enters the module name
Fred Drakef1ad2071999-06-30 15:32:50 +00002398\code{fibo} there.
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002399Using the module name you can access the functions:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00002400
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002401\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002402>>> fibo.fib(1000)
24031 1 2 3 5 8 13 21 34 55 89 144 233 377 610 987
2404>>> fibo.fib2(100)
2405[1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89]
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00002406>>> fibo.__name__
2407'fibo'
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002408\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +00002409
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002410If you intend to use a function often you can assign it to a local name:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00002411
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002412\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002413>>> fib = fibo.fib
2414>>> fib(500)
24151 1 2 3 5 8 13 21 34 55 89 144 233 377
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002416\end{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002417
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00002418
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00002419\section{More on Modules \label{moreModules}}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002420
2421A module can contain executable statements as well as function
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00002422definitions.
2423These statements are intended to initialize the module.
2424They are executed only the
2425\emph{first} time the module is imported somewhere.\footnote{
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00002426 In fact function definitions are also `statements' that are
2427 `executed'; the execution enters the function name in the
2428 module's global symbol table.
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002429}
2430
2431Each module has its own private symbol table, which is used as the
2432global symbol table by all functions defined in the module.
2433Thus, the author of a module can use global variables in the module
2434without worrying about accidental clashes with a user's global
2435variables.
2436On the other hand, if you know what you are doing you can touch a
2437module's global variables with the same notation used to refer to its
2438functions,
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00002439\code{modname.itemname}.
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002440
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00002441Modules can import other modules. It is customary but not required to
2442place all \keyword{import} statements at the beginning of a module (or
2443script, for that matter). The imported module names are placed in the
2444importing module's global symbol table.
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002445
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00002446There is a variant of the \keyword{import} statement that imports
2447names from a module directly into the importing module's symbol
2448table. For example:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00002449
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002450\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002451>>> from fibo import fib, fib2
2452>>> fib(500)
24531 1 2 3 5 8 13 21 34 55 89 144 233 377
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002454\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00002455
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002456This does not introduce the module name from which the imports are taken
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00002457in the local symbol table (so in the example, \code{fibo} is not
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002458defined).
2459
2460There is even a variant to import all names that a module defines:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00002461
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002462\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002463>>> from fibo import *
2464>>> fib(500)
24651 1 2 3 5 8 13 21 34 55 89 144 233 377
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002466\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00002467
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002468This imports all names except those beginning with an underscore
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00002469(\code{_}).
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002470
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00002471
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +00002472\subsection{The Module Search Path \label{searchPath}}
Guido van Rossumaee5e261998-08-07 17:45:09 +00002473
Fred Drake391564f1998-04-01 23:11:56 +00002474\indexiii{module}{search}{path}
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002475When a module named \module{spam} is imported, the interpreter searches
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00002476for a file named \file{spam.py} in the current directory,
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00002477and then in the list of directories specified by
Fred Drake391564f1998-04-01 23:11:56 +00002478the environment variable \envvar{PYTHONPATH}. This has the same syntax as
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +00002479the shell variable \envvar{PATH}, that is, a list of
Fred Drake391564f1998-04-01 23:11:56 +00002480directory names. When \envvar{PYTHONPATH} is not set, or when the file
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00002481is not found there, the search continues in an installation-dependent
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +00002482default path; on \UNIX, this is usually \file{.:/usr/local/lib/python}.
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00002483
2484Actually, modules are searched in the list of directories given by the
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00002485variable \code{sys.path} which is initialized from the directory
2486containing the input script (or the current directory),
Fred Drake391564f1998-04-01 23:11:56 +00002487\envvar{PYTHONPATH} and the installation-dependent default. This allows
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00002488Python programs that know what they're doing to modify or replace the
Fred Drakeecd81572001-12-04 19:47:46 +00002489module search path. Note that because the directory containing the
2490script being run is on the search path, it is important that the
2491script not have the same name as a standard module, or Python will
2492attempt to load the script as a module when that module is imported.
2493This will generally be an error. See section~\ref{standardModules},
Fred Drake626d4722003-09-11 04:28:13 +00002494``Standard Modules,'' for more information.
Fred Drakeecd81572001-12-04 19:47:46 +00002495
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00002496
2497\subsection{``Compiled'' Python files}
2498
2499As an important speed-up of the start-up time for short programs that
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00002500use a lot of standard modules, if a file called \file{spam.pyc} exists
2501in the directory where \file{spam.py} is found, this is assumed to
Guido van Rossum13c8ef61998-05-29 19:12:23 +00002502contain an already-``byte-compiled'' version of the module \module{spam}.
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002503The modification time of the version of \file{spam.py} used to create
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00002504\file{spam.pyc} is recorded in \file{spam.pyc}, and the
2505\file{.pyc} file is ignored if these don't match.
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00002506
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00002507Normally, you don't need to do anything to create the
2508\file{spam.pyc} file. Whenever \file{spam.py} is successfully
2509compiled, an attempt is made to write the compiled version to
2510\file{spam.pyc}. It is not an error if this attempt fails; if for any
2511reason the file is not written completely, the resulting
2512\file{spam.pyc} file will be recognized as invalid and thus ignored
2513later. The contents of the \file{spam.pyc} file are platform
2514independent, so a Python module directory can be shared by machines of
2515different architectures.
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00002516
Guido van Rossum13c8ef61998-05-29 19:12:23 +00002517Some tips for experts:
2518
2519\begin{itemize}
2520
2521\item
Fred Drake37f15741999-11-10 16:21:37 +00002522When the Python interpreter is invoked with the \programopt{-O} flag,
Michael W. Hudsondd32a912002-08-15 14:59:02 +00002523optimized code is generated and stored in \file{.pyo} files. The
2524optimizer currently doesn't help much; it only removes
2525\keyword{assert} statements. When \programopt{-O} is used, \emph{all}
2526bytecode is optimized; \code{.pyc} files are ignored and \code{.py}
2527files are compiled to optimized bytecode.
Guido van Rossum13c8ef61998-05-29 19:12:23 +00002528
2529\item
Fred Drake37f15741999-11-10 16:21:37 +00002530Passing two \programopt{-O} flags to the Python interpreter
2531(\programopt{-OO}) will cause the bytecode compiler to perform
2532optimizations that could in some rare cases result in malfunctioning
2533programs. Currently only \code{__doc__} strings are removed from the
2534bytecode, resulting in more compact \file{.pyo} files. Since some
2535programs may rely on having these available, you should only use this
2536option if you know what you're doing.
Guido van Rossum6b86a421999-01-28 15:07:47 +00002537
2538\item
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00002539A program doesn't run any faster when it is read from a \file{.pyc} or
2540\file{.pyo} file than when it is read from a \file{.py} file; the only
2541thing that's faster about \file{.pyc} or \file{.pyo} files is the
2542speed with which they are loaded.
Guido van Rossum13c8ef61998-05-29 19:12:23 +00002543
2544\item
Guido van Rossum002f7aa1998-06-28 19:16:38 +00002545When a script is run by giving its name on the command line, the
2546bytecode for the script is never written to a \file{.pyc} or
2547\file{.pyo} file. Thus, the startup time of a script may be reduced
2548by moving most of its code to a module and having a small bootstrap
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +00002549script that imports that module. It is also possible to name a
2550\file{.pyc} or \file{.pyo} file directly on the command line.
Guido van Rossum002f7aa1998-06-28 19:16:38 +00002551
2552\item
Guido van Rossum13c8ef61998-05-29 19:12:23 +00002553It is possible to have a file called \file{spam.pyc} (or
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +00002554\file{spam.pyo} when \programopt{-O} is used) without a file
2555\file{spam.py} for the same module. This can be used to distribute a
2556library of Python code in a form that is moderately hard to reverse
Guido van Rossum13c8ef61998-05-29 19:12:23 +00002557engineer.
2558
2559\item
Fred Drake626d4722003-09-11 04:28:13 +00002560The module \ulink{\module{compileall}}{../lib/module-compileall.html}%
2561{} \refstmodindex{compileall} can create \file{.pyc} files (or
2562\file{.pyo} files when \programopt{-O} is used) for all modules in a
2563directory.
Guido van Rossum13c8ef61998-05-29 19:12:23 +00002564
2565\end{itemize}
2566
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00002567
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00002568\section{Standard Modules \label{standardModules}}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002569
Guido van Rossum4410c751991-06-04 20:22:18 +00002570Python comes with a library of standard modules, described in a separate
Fred Drake37f15741999-11-10 16:21:37 +00002571document, the \citetitle[../lib/lib.html]{Python Library Reference}
2572(``Library Reference'' hereafter). Some modules are built into the
2573interpreter; these provide access to operations that are not part of
2574the core of the language but are nevertheless built in, either for
2575efficiency or to provide access to operating system primitives such as
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +00002576system calls. The set of such modules is a configuration option which
Martin v. Löwis95cf84a2003-10-19 07:32:24 +00002577also depends on the underlying platform For example,
Fred Drake37f15741999-11-10 16:21:37 +00002578the \module{amoeba} module is only provided on systems that somehow
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002579support Amoeba primitives. One particular module deserves some
Fred Drake626d4722003-09-11 04:28:13 +00002580attention: \ulink{\module{sys}}{../lib/module-sys.html}%
2581\refstmodindex{sys}, which is built into every
Fred Drakeee84d591999-03-10 17:25:30 +00002582Python interpreter. The variables \code{sys.ps1} and
2583\code{sys.ps2} define the strings used as primary and secondary
2584prompts:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00002585
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002586\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002587>>> import sys
2588>>> sys.ps1
2589'>>> '
2590>>> sys.ps2
2591'... '
2592>>> sys.ps1 = 'C> '
2593C> print 'Yuck!'
2594Yuck!
Raymond Hettingera02469f2003-05-07 17:49:36 +00002595C>
2596
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002597\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00002598
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002599These two variables are only defined if the interpreter is in
2600interactive mode.
2601
Fred Drakeee84d591999-03-10 17:25:30 +00002602The variable \code{sys.path} is a list of strings that determine the
2603interpreter's search path for modules. It is initialized to a default
2604path taken from the environment variable \envvar{PYTHONPATH}, or from
2605a built-in default if \envvar{PYTHONPATH} is not set. You can modify
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +00002606it using standard list operations:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00002607
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002608\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002609>>> import sys
2610>>> sys.path.append('/ufs/guido/lib/python')
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002611\end{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002612
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00002613\section{The \function{dir()} Function \label{dir}}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002614
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002615The built-in function \function{dir()} is used to find out which names
2616a module defines. It returns a sorted list of strings:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00002617
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002618\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002619>>> import fibo, sys
2620>>> dir(fibo)
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00002621['__name__', 'fib', 'fib2']
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002622>>> dir(sys)
Fred Drakeecd81572001-12-04 19:47:46 +00002623['__displayhook__', '__doc__', '__excepthook__', '__name__', '__stderr__',
Guido van Rossum46d3dc32003-03-01 03:20:41 +00002624 '__stdin__', '__stdout__', '_getframe', 'api_version', 'argv',
2625 'builtin_module_names', 'byteorder', 'callstats', 'copyright',
2626 'displayhook', 'exc_clear', 'exc_info', 'exc_type', 'excepthook',
2627 'exec_prefix', 'executable', 'exit', 'getdefaultencoding', 'getdlopenflags',
2628 'getrecursionlimit', 'getrefcount', 'hexversion', 'maxint', 'maxunicode',
2629 'meta_path', 'modules', 'path', 'path_hooks', 'path_importer_cache',
2630 'platform', 'prefix', 'ps1', 'ps2', 'setcheckinterval', 'setdlopenflags',
2631 'setprofile', 'setrecursionlimit', 'settrace', 'stderr', 'stdin', 'stdout',
2632 'version', 'version_info', 'warnoptions']
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002633\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00002634
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002635Without arguments, \function{dir()} lists the names you have defined
2636currently:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00002637
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002638\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002639>>> a = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
2640>>> import fibo, sys
2641>>> fib = fibo.fib
2642>>> dir()
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +00002643['__builtins__', '__doc__', '__file__', '__name__', 'fib', 'fib2']
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002644\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00002645
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002646Note that it lists all types of names: variables, modules, functions, etc.
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00002647
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002648\function{dir()} does not list the names of built-in functions and
2649variables. If you want a list of those, they are defined in the
Fred Drake391564f1998-04-01 23:11:56 +00002650standard module \module{__builtin__}\refbimodindex{__builtin__}:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00002651
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002652\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum4bd023f1993-10-27 13:49:20 +00002653>>> import __builtin__
2654>>> dir(__builtin__)
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +00002655['ArithmeticError', 'AssertionError', 'AttributeError', 'DeprecationWarning',
2656 'EOFError', 'Ellipsis', 'EnvironmentError', 'Exception', 'False',
2657 'FloatingPointError', 'FutureWarning', 'IOError', 'ImportError',
Fred Drakeecd81572001-12-04 19:47:46 +00002658 'IndentationError', 'IndexError', 'KeyError', 'KeyboardInterrupt',
2659 'LookupError', 'MemoryError', 'NameError', 'None', 'NotImplemented',
2660 'NotImplementedError', 'OSError', 'OverflowError', 'OverflowWarning',
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +00002661 'PendingDeprecationWarning', 'ReferenceError', 'RuntimeError',
2662 'RuntimeWarning', 'StandardError', 'StopIteration', 'SyntaxError',
2663 'SyntaxWarning', 'SystemError', 'SystemExit', 'TabError', 'True',
2664 'TypeError', 'UnboundLocalError', 'UnicodeDecodeError',
2665 'UnicodeEncodeError', 'UnicodeError', 'UnicodeTranslateError',
2666 'UserWarning', 'ValueError', 'Warning', 'WindowsError',
2667 'ZeroDivisionError', '_', '__debug__', '__doc__', '__import__',
2668 '__name__', 'abs', 'apply', 'basestring', 'bool', 'buffer',
2669 'callable', 'chr', 'classmethod', 'cmp', 'coerce', 'compile',
2670 'complex', 'copyright', 'credits', 'delattr', 'dict', 'dir', 'divmod',
Neal Norwitzd68f5172002-05-29 15:54:55 +00002671 'enumerate', 'eval', 'execfile', 'exit', 'file', 'filter', 'float',
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +00002672 'frozenset', 'getattr', 'globals', 'hasattr', 'hash', 'help', 'hex',
2673 'id', 'input', 'int', 'intern', 'isinstance', 'issubclass', 'iter',
Neal Norwitzd68f5172002-05-29 15:54:55 +00002674 'len', 'license', 'list', 'locals', 'long', 'map', 'max', 'min',
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +00002675 'object', 'oct', 'open', 'ord', 'pow', 'property', 'quit', 'range',
2676 'raw_input', 'reduce', 'reload', 'repr', 'reversed', 'round', 'set',
2677 'setattr', 'slice', 'sorted', 'staticmethod', 'str', 'sum', 'super',
Neal Norwitzd68f5172002-05-29 15:54:55 +00002678 'tuple', 'type', 'unichr', 'unicode', 'vars', 'xrange', 'zip']
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002679\end{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002680
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +00002681
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00002682\section{Packages \label{packages}}
Andrew M. Kuchling108943c1998-07-01 13:58:55 +00002683
2684Packages are a way of structuring Python's module namespace
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00002685by using ``dotted module names''. For example, the module name
2686\module{A.B} designates a submodule named \samp{B} in a package named
2687\samp{A}. Just like the use of modules saves the authors of different
2688modules from having to worry about each other's global variable names,
2689the use of dotted module names saves the authors of multi-module
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00002690packages like NumPy or the Python Imaging Library from having to worry
2691about each other's module names.
Andrew M. Kuchling108943c1998-07-01 13:58:55 +00002692
2693Suppose you want to design a collection of modules (a ``package'') for
2694the uniform handling of sound files and sound data. There are many
2695different sound file formats (usually recognized by their extension,
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +00002696for example: \file{.wav}, \file{.aiff}, \file{.au}), so you may need
2697to create and maintain a growing collection of modules for the
2698conversion between the various file formats. There are also many
2699different operations you might want to perform on sound data (such as
2700mixing, adding echo, applying an equalizer function, creating an
2701artificial stereo effect), so in addition you will be writing a
2702never-ending stream of modules to perform these operations. Here's a
2703possible structure for your package (expressed in terms of a
2704hierarchical filesystem):
Andrew M. Kuchling108943c1998-07-01 13:58:55 +00002705
2706\begin{verbatim}
2707Sound/ Top-level package
2708 __init__.py Initialize the sound package
2709 Formats/ Subpackage for file format conversions
2710 __init__.py
2711 wavread.py
2712 wavwrite.py
2713 aiffread.py
2714 aiffwrite.py
2715 auread.py
2716 auwrite.py
2717 ...
2718 Effects/ Subpackage for sound effects
2719 __init__.py
2720 echo.py
2721 surround.py
2722 reverse.py
2723 ...
2724 Filters/ Subpackage for filters
2725 __init__.py
2726 equalizer.py
2727 vocoder.py
2728 karaoke.py
2729 ...
2730\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +00002731
Martin v. Löwis95cf84a2003-10-19 07:32:24 +00002732When importing the package, Python searches through the directories
Raymond Hettinger7fbd0122002-10-26 03:13:57 +00002733on \code{sys.path} looking for the package subdirectory.
2734
Andrew M. Kuchling108943c1998-07-01 13:58:55 +00002735The \file{__init__.py} files are required to make Python treat the
2736directories as containing packages; this is done to prevent
2737directories with a common name, such as \samp{string}, from
2738unintentionally hiding valid modules that occur later on the module
2739search path. In the simplest case, \file{__init__.py} can just be an
2740empty file, but it can also execute initialization code for the
2741package or set the \code{__all__} variable, described later.
2742
2743Users of the package can import individual modules from the
2744package, for example:
2745
2746\begin{verbatim}
2747import Sound.Effects.echo
2748\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +00002749
Andrew M. Kuchling108943c1998-07-01 13:58:55 +00002750This loads the submodule \module{Sound.Effects.echo}. It must be referenced
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +00002751with its full name.
Andrew M. Kuchling108943c1998-07-01 13:58:55 +00002752
2753\begin{verbatim}
2754Sound.Effects.echo.echofilter(input, output, delay=0.7, atten=4)
2755\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +00002756
Andrew M. Kuchling108943c1998-07-01 13:58:55 +00002757An alternative way of importing the submodule is:
2758
2759\begin{verbatim}
2760from Sound.Effects import echo
2761\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +00002762
Andrew M. Kuchling108943c1998-07-01 13:58:55 +00002763This also loads the submodule \module{echo}, and makes it available without
2764its package prefix, so it can be used as follows:
2765
2766\begin{verbatim}
2767echo.echofilter(input, output, delay=0.7, atten=4)
2768\end{verbatim}
2769
2770Yet another variation is to import the desired function or variable directly:
2771
2772\begin{verbatim}
2773from Sound.Effects.echo import echofilter
2774\end{verbatim}
2775
2776Again, this loads the submodule \module{echo}, but this makes its function
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00002777\function{echofilter()} directly available:
Andrew M. Kuchling108943c1998-07-01 13:58:55 +00002778
2779\begin{verbatim}
2780echofilter(input, output, delay=0.7, atten=4)
2781\end{verbatim}
2782
2783Note that when using \code{from \var{package} import \var{item}}, the
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00002784item can be either a submodule (or subpackage) of the package, or some
Andrew M. Kuchling108943c1998-07-01 13:58:55 +00002785other name defined in the package, like a function, class or
2786variable. The \code{import} statement first tests whether the item is
2787defined in the package; if not, it assumes it is a module and attempts
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00002788to load it. If it fails to find it, an
2789\exception{ImportError} exception is raised.
Andrew M. Kuchling108943c1998-07-01 13:58:55 +00002790
2791Contrarily, when using syntax like \code{import
2792\var{item.subitem.subsubitem}}, each item except for the last must be
2793a package; the last item can be a module or a package but can't be a
2794class or function or variable defined in the previous item.
2795
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00002796\subsection{Importing * From a Package \label{pkg-import-star}}
Andrew M. Kuchling108943c1998-07-01 13:58:55 +00002797%The \code{__all__} Attribute
Fred Drake830d8b82004-08-09 14:06:58 +00002798
2799\ttindex{__all__}
Andrew M. Kuchling108943c1998-07-01 13:58:55 +00002800Now what happens when the user writes \code{from Sound.Effects import
2801*}? Ideally, one would hope that this somehow goes out to the
2802filesystem, finds which submodules are present in the package, and
2803imports them all. Unfortunately, this operation does not work very
2804well on Mac and Windows platforms, where the filesystem does not
2805always have accurate information about the case of a filename! On
2806these platforms, there is no guaranteed way to know whether a file
2807\file{ECHO.PY} should be imported as a module \module{echo},
2808\module{Echo} or \module{ECHO}. (For example, Windows 95 has the
2809annoying practice of showing all file names with a capitalized first
2810letter.) The DOS 8+3 filename restriction adds another interesting
2811problem for long module names.
2812
2813The only solution is for the package author to provide an explicit
2814index of the package. The import statement uses the following
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00002815convention: if a package's \file{__init__.py} code defines a list
2816named \code{__all__}, it is taken to be the list of module names that
2817should be imported when \code{from \var{package} import *} is
Andrew M. Kuchling108943c1998-07-01 13:58:55 +00002818encountered. It is up to the package author to keep this list
2819up-to-date when a new version of the package is released. Package
2820authors may also decide not to support it, if they don't see a use for
2821importing * from their package. For example, the file
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00002822\file{Sounds/Effects/__init__.py} could contain the following code:
Andrew M. Kuchling108943c1998-07-01 13:58:55 +00002823
2824\begin{verbatim}
2825__all__ = ["echo", "surround", "reverse"]
2826\end{verbatim}
2827
2828This would mean that \code{from Sound.Effects import *} would
2829import the three named submodules of the \module{Sound} package.
2830
2831If \code{__all__} is not defined, the statement \code{from Sound.Effects
2832import *} does \emph{not} import all submodules from the package
2833\module{Sound.Effects} into the current namespace; it only ensures that the
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +00002834package \module{Sound.Effects} has been imported (possibly running any
2835initialization code in \file{__init__.py}) and then imports whatever names are
Andrew M. Kuchling108943c1998-07-01 13:58:55 +00002836defined in the package. This includes any names defined (and
2837submodules explicitly loaded) by \file{__init__.py}. It also includes any
2838submodules of the package that were explicitly loaded by previous
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +00002839import statements. Consider this code:
Andrew M. Kuchling108943c1998-07-01 13:58:55 +00002840
2841\begin{verbatim}
2842import Sound.Effects.echo
2843import Sound.Effects.surround
2844from Sound.Effects import *
2845\end{verbatim}
2846
Andrew M. Kuchling108943c1998-07-01 13:58:55 +00002847In this example, the echo and surround modules are imported in the
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00002848current namespace because they are defined in the
2849\module{Sound.Effects} package when the \code{from...import} statement
2850is executed. (This also works when \code{__all__} is defined.)
Andrew M. Kuchling108943c1998-07-01 13:58:55 +00002851
Fred Drake55803bc2002-10-22 21:00:44 +00002852Note that in general the practice of importing \code{*} from a module or
Andrew M. Kuchling108943c1998-07-01 13:58:55 +00002853package is frowned upon, since it often causes poorly readable code.
2854However, it is okay to use it to save typing in interactive sessions,
2855and certain modules are designed to export only names that follow
2856certain patterns.
2857
2858Remember, there is nothing wrong with using \code{from Package
2859import specific_submodule}! In fact, this is the
2860recommended notation unless the importing module needs to use
2861submodules with the same name from different packages.
2862
2863
2864\subsection{Intra-package References}
2865
2866The submodules often need to refer to each other. For example, the
Fred Drake626d4722003-09-11 04:28:13 +00002867\module{surround} module might use the \module{echo} module. In fact,
2868such references
2869are so common that the \keyword{import} statement first looks in the
Andrew M. Kuchling108943c1998-07-01 13:58:55 +00002870containing package before looking in the standard module search path.
2871Thus, the surround module can simply use \code{import echo} or
2872\code{from echo import echofilter}. If the imported module is not
2873found in the current package (the package of which the current module
Fred Drake626d4722003-09-11 04:28:13 +00002874is a submodule), the \keyword{import} statement looks for a top-level
2875module with the given name.
Andrew M. Kuchling108943c1998-07-01 13:58:55 +00002876
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00002877When packages are structured into subpackages (as with the
2878\module{Sound} package in the example), there's no shortcut to refer
2879to submodules of sibling packages - the full name of the subpackage
2880must be used. For example, if the module
2881\module{Sound.Filters.vocoder} needs to use the \module{echo} module
2882in the \module{Sound.Effects} package, it can use \code{from
Andrew M. Kuchling108943c1998-07-01 13:58:55 +00002883Sound.Effects import echo}.
2884
Fred Drake55803bc2002-10-22 21:00:44 +00002885\subsection{Packages in Multiple Directories}
2886
2887Packages support one more special attribute, \member{__path__}. This
2888is initialized to be a list containing the name of the directory
2889holding the package's \file{__init__.py} before the code in that file
2890is executed. This variable can be modified; doing so affects future
2891searches for modules and subpackages contained in the package.
2892
2893While this feature is not often needed, it can be used to extend the
2894set of modules found in a package.
2895
Andrew M. Kuchling108943c1998-07-01 13:58:55 +00002896
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00002897
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00002898\chapter{Input and Output \label{io}}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002899
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00002900There are several ways to present the output of a program; data can be
2901printed in a human-readable form, or written to a file for future use.
2902This chapter will discuss some of the possibilities.
2903
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00002904
2905\section{Fancier Output Formatting \label{formatting}}
2906
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00002907So far we've encountered two ways of writing values: \emph{expression
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002908statements} and the \keyword{print} statement. (A third way is using
2909the \method{write()} method of file objects; the standard output file
2910can be referenced as \code{sys.stdout}. See the Library Reference for
2911more information on this.)
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002912
2913Often you'll want more control over the formatting of your output than
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00002914simply printing space-separated values. There are two ways to format
2915your output; the first way is to do all the string handling yourself;
2916using string slicing and concatenation operations you can create any
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +00002917layout you can imagine. The standard module
Fred Drake391564f1998-04-01 23:11:56 +00002918\module{string}\refstmodindex{string} contains some useful operations
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00002919for padding strings to a given column width; these will be discussed
2920shortly. The second way is to use the \code{\%} operator with a
2921string as the left argument. The \code{\%} operator interprets the
Fred Drakecc97f8c2001-01-01 20:33:06 +00002922left argument much like a \cfunction{sprintf()}-style format
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00002923string to be applied to the right argument, and returns the string
2924resulting from this formatting operation.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002925
2926One question remains, of course: how do you convert values to strings?
Fred Drake6016dbe2001-12-04 19:20:43 +00002927Luckily, Python has ways to convert any value to a string: pass it to
Skip Montanarob4f12422003-05-07 15:29:12 +00002928the \function{repr()} or \function{str()} functions. Reverse quotes
2929(\code{``}) are equivalent to \function{repr()}, but their use is
2930discouraged.
Fred Drake6016dbe2001-12-04 19:20:43 +00002931
2932The \function{str()} function is meant to return representations of
2933values which are fairly human-readable, while \function{repr()} is
2934meant to generate representations which can be read by the interpreter
2935(or will force a \exception{SyntaxError} if there is not equivalent
2936syntax). For objects which don't have a particular representation for
2937human consumption, \function{str()} will return the same value as
2938\function{repr()}. Many values, such as numbers or structures like
2939lists and dictionaries, have the same representation using either
2940function. Strings and floating point numbers, in particular, have two
2941distinct representations.
2942
2943Some examples:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00002944
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002945\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake6016dbe2001-12-04 19:20:43 +00002946>>> s = 'Hello, world.'
2947>>> str(s)
2948'Hello, world.'
Skip Montanarob4f12422003-05-07 15:29:12 +00002949>>> repr(s)
Fred Drake6016dbe2001-12-04 19:20:43 +00002950"'Hello, world.'"
2951>>> str(0.1)
2952'0.1'
Skip Montanarob4f12422003-05-07 15:29:12 +00002953>>> repr(0.1)
Fred Drake6016dbe2001-12-04 19:20:43 +00002954'0.10000000000000001'
Tim Petersbd695a72001-05-22 06:54:14 +00002955>>> x = 10 * 3.25
Fred Drake8b0b8402001-05-21 16:55:39 +00002956>>> y = 200 * 200
Skip Montanarob4f12422003-05-07 15:29:12 +00002957>>> s = 'The value of x is ' + repr(x) + ', and y is ' + repr(y) + '...'
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002958>>> print s
Tim Petersbd695a72001-05-22 06:54:14 +00002959The value of x is 32.5, and y is 40000...
Skip Montanarob4f12422003-05-07 15:29:12 +00002960>>> # The repr() of a string adds string quotes and backslashes:
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00002961... hello = 'hello, world\n'
Skip Montanarob4f12422003-05-07 15:29:12 +00002962>>> hellos = repr(hello)
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002963>>> print hellos
Fred Drake0c149612001-04-12 04:26:24 +00002964'hello, world\n'
Skip Montanarob4f12422003-05-07 15:29:12 +00002965>>> # The argument to repr() may be any Python object:
Skip Montanaro45a9c932003-05-07 16:01:43 +00002966... repr((x, y, ('spam', 'eggs')))
Skip Montanarob4f12422003-05-07 15:29:12 +00002967"(32.5, 40000, ('spam', 'eggs'))"
2968>>> # reverse quotes are convenient in interactive sessions:
Guido van Rossume5f8b601995-01-04 19:12:49 +00002969... `x, y, ('spam', 'eggs')`
Tim Petersbd695a72001-05-22 06:54:14 +00002970"(32.5, 40000, ('spam', 'eggs'))"
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002971\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00002972
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00002973Here are two ways to write a table of squares and cubes:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00002974
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00002975\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002976>>> for x in range(1, 11):
Fred Drakef5c87c42003-09-11 06:06:26 +00002977... print repr(x).rjust(2), repr(x*x).rjust(3),
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002978... # Note trailing comma on previous line
Fred Drakef5c87c42003-09-11 06:06:26 +00002979... print repr(x*x*x).rjust(4)
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00002980...
2981 1 1 1
2982 2 4 8
2983 3 9 27
2984 4 16 64
2985 5 25 125
2986 6 36 216
2987 7 49 343
2988 8 64 512
2989 9 81 729
299010 100 1000
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00002991>>> for x in range(1,11):
2992... print '%2d %3d %4d' % (x, x*x, x*x*x)
2993...
2994 1 1 1
2995 2 4 8
2996 3 9 27
2997 4 16 64
2998 5 25 125
2999 6 36 216
3000 7 49 343
3001 8 64 512
3002 9 81 729
300310 100 1000
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003004\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00003005
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003006(Note that one space between each column was added by the way
3007\keyword{print} works: it always adds spaces between its arguments.)
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00003008
Fred Drakef5c87c42003-09-11 06:06:26 +00003009This example demonstrates the \method{rjust()} method of string objects,
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003010which right-justifies a string in a field of a given width by padding
Fred Drakef5c87c42003-09-11 06:06:26 +00003011it with spaces on the left. There are similar methods
3012\method{ljust()} and \method{center()}. These
3013methods do not write anything, they just return a new string. If
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003014the input string is too long, they don't truncate it, but return it
3015unchanged; this will mess up your column lay-out but that's usually
3016better than the alternative, which would be lying about a value. (If
3017you really want truncation you can always add a slice operation, as in
Fred Drakef5c87c42003-09-11 06:06:26 +00003018\samp{x.ljust(~n)[:n]}.)
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00003019
Fred Drakef5c87c42003-09-11 06:06:26 +00003020There is another method, \method{zfill()}, which pads a
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003021numeric string on the left with zeros. It understands about plus and
3022minus signs:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00003023
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003024\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drakef5c87c42003-09-11 06:06:26 +00003025>>> '12'.zfill(5)
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00003026'00012'
Fred Drakef5c87c42003-09-11 06:06:26 +00003027>>> '-3.14'.zfill(7)
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00003028'-003.14'
Fred Drakef5c87c42003-09-11 06:06:26 +00003029>>> '3.14159265359'.zfill(5)
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00003030'3.14159265359'
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003031\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake31b761e2000-09-29 15:17:36 +00003032
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003033Using the \code{\%} operator looks like this:
3034
3035\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003036>>> import math
3037>>> print 'The value of PI is approximately %5.3f.' % math.pi
3038The value of PI is approximately 3.142.
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003039\end{verbatim}
3040
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +00003041If there is more than one format in the string, you need to pass a
3042tuple as right operand, as in this example:
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003043
3044\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003045>>> table = {'Sjoerd': 4127, 'Jack': 4098, 'Dcab': 7678}
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003046>>> for name, phone in table.items():
3047... print '%-10s ==> %10d' % (name, phone)
3048...
3049Jack ==> 4098
Fred Drake69fbf332000-04-04 19:53:06 +00003050Dcab ==> 7678
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003051Sjoerd ==> 4127
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003052\end{verbatim}
3053
Fred Drakeee84d591999-03-10 17:25:30 +00003054Most formats work exactly as in C and require that you pass the proper
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003055type; however, if you don't you get an exception, not a core dump.
Fred Drakedb70d061998-11-17 21:59:04 +00003056The \code{\%s} format is more relaxed: if the corresponding argument is
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003057not a string object, it is converted to string using the
3058\function{str()} built-in function. Using \code{*} to pass the width
3059or precision in as a separate (integer) argument is supported. The
Fred Drakeee84d591999-03-10 17:25:30 +00003060C formats \code{\%n} and \code{\%p} are not supported.
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003061
3062If you have a really long format string that you don't want to split
3063up, it would be nice if you could reference the variables to be
3064formatted by name instead of by position. This can be done by using
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +00003065form \code{\%(name)format}, as shown here:
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003066
3067\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003068>>> table = {'Sjoerd': 4127, 'Jack': 4098, 'Dcab': 8637678}
3069>>> print 'Jack: %(Jack)d; Sjoerd: %(Sjoerd)d; Dcab: %(Dcab)d' % table
3070Jack: 4098; Sjoerd: 4127; Dcab: 8637678
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003071\end{verbatim}
3072
3073This is particularly useful in combination with the new built-in
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003074\function{vars()} function, which returns a dictionary containing all
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003075local variables.
3076
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00003077\section{Reading and Writing Files \label{files}}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00003078
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003079% Opening files
Fred Drake391564f1998-04-01 23:11:56 +00003080\function{open()}\bifuncindex{open} returns a file
3081object\obindex{file}, and is most commonly used with two arguments:
3082\samp{open(\var{filename}, \var{mode})}.
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003083
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003084\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003085>>> f=open('/tmp/workfile', 'w')
3086>>> print f
3087<open file '/tmp/workfile', mode 'w' at 80a0960>
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003088\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00003089
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003090The first argument is a string containing the filename. The second
3091argument is another string containing a few characters describing the
3092way in which the file will be used. \var{mode} can be \code{'r'} when
3093the file will only be read, \code{'w'} for only writing (an existing
3094file with the same name will be erased), and \code{'a'} opens the file
3095for appending; any data written to the file is automatically added to
3096the end. \code{'r+'} opens the file for both reading and writing.
3097The \var{mode} argument is optional; \code{'r'} will be assumed if
3098it's omitted.
3099
Fred Drake391564f1998-04-01 23:11:56 +00003100On Windows and the Macintosh, \code{'b'} appended to the
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003101mode opens the file in binary mode, so there are also modes like
3102\code{'rb'}, \code{'wb'}, and \code{'r+b'}. Windows makes a
3103distinction between text and binary files; the end-of-line characters
3104in text files are automatically altered slightly when data is read or
3105written. This behind-the-scenes modification to file data is fine for
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003106\ASCII{} text files, but it'll corrupt binary data like that in JPEGs or
3107\file{.EXE} files. Be very careful to use binary mode when reading and
Fred Drake391564f1998-04-01 23:11:56 +00003108writing such files. (Note that the precise semantics of text mode on
Fred Drakeee84d591999-03-10 17:25:30 +00003109the Macintosh depends on the underlying C library being used.)
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003110
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00003111\subsection{Methods of File Objects \label{fileMethods}}
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003112
3113The rest of the examples in this section will assume that a file
3114object called \code{f} has already been created.
3115
3116To read a file's contents, call \code{f.read(\var{size})}, which reads
3117some quantity of data and returns it as a string. \var{size} is an
3118optional numeric argument. When \var{size} is omitted or negative,
3119the entire contents of the file will be read and returned; it's your
3120problem if the file is twice as large as your machine's memory.
3121Otherwise, at most \var{size} bytes are read and returned. If the end
3122of the file has been reached, \code{f.read()} will return an empty
3123string (\code {""}).
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003124\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003125>>> f.read()
Fred Drake0c149612001-04-12 04:26:24 +00003126'This is the entire file.\n'
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003127>>> f.read()
3128''
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003129\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00003130
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003131\code{f.readline()} reads a single line from the file; a newline
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003132character (\code{\e n}) is left at the end of the string, and is only
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003133omitted on the last line of the file if the file doesn't end in a
3134newline. This makes the return value unambiguous; if
3135\code{f.readline()} returns an empty string, the end of the file has
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003136been reached, while a blank line is represented by \code{'\e n'}, a
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003137string containing only a single newline.
3138
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003139\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003140>>> f.readline()
Fred Drake0c149612001-04-12 04:26:24 +00003141'This is the first line of the file.\n'
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003142>>> f.readline()
Fred Drake0c149612001-04-12 04:26:24 +00003143'Second line of the file\n'
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003144>>> f.readline()
3145''
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003146\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00003147
Fred Drake343ad7a2000-09-22 04:12:27 +00003148\code{f.readlines()} returns a list containing all the lines of data
3149in the file. If given an optional parameter \var{sizehint}, it reads
3150that many bytes from the file and enough more to complete a line, and
3151returns the lines from that. This is often used to allow efficient
3152reading of a large file by lines, but without having to load the
3153entire file in memory. Only complete lines will be returned.
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003154
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003155\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003156>>> f.readlines()
Fred Drake0c149612001-04-12 04:26:24 +00003157['This is the first line of the file.\n', 'Second line of the file\n']
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003158\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00003159
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003160\code{f.write(\var{string})} writes the contents of \var{string} to
3161the file, returning \code{None}.
3162
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003163\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003164>>> f.write('This is a test\n')
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003165\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00003166
Fred Drakee808c232004-11-02 18:24:26 +00003167To write something other than a string, it needs to be converted to a
3168string first:
3169
3170\begin{verbatim}
3171>>> value = ('the answer', 42)
3172>>> s = str(value)
3173>>> f.write(s)
3174\end{verbatim}
3175
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003176\code{f.tell()} returns an integer giving the file object's current
3177position in the file, measured in bytes from the beginning of the
3178file. To change the file object's position, use
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003179\samp{f.seek(\var{offset}, \var{from_what})}. The position is
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003180computed from adding \var{offset} to a reference point; the reference
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003181point is selected by the \var{from_what} argument. A
3182\var{from_what} value of 0 measures from the beginning of the file, 1
3183uses the current file position, and 2 uses the end of the file as the
3184reference point. \var{from_what} can be omitted and defaults to 0,
3185using the beginning of the file as the reference point.
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003186
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003187\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drakee808c232004-11-02 18:24:26 +00003188>>> f = open('/tmp/workfile', 'r+')
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003189>>> f.write('0123456789abcdef')
Fred Drakea8159162001-10-16 03:25:00 +00003190>>> f.seek(5) # Go to the 6th byte in the file
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003191>>> f.read(1)
3192'5'
3193>>> f.seek(-3, 2) # Go to the 3rd byte before the end
3194>>> f.read(1)
3195'd'
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003196\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00003197
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003198When you're done with a file, call \code{f.close()} to close it and
3199free up any system resources taken up by the open file. After calling
3200\code{f.close()}, attempts to use the file object will automatically fail.
3201
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003202\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003203>>> f.close()
3204>>> f.read()
Fred Drake162c6a62001-02-14 03:20:18 +00003205Traceback (most recent call last):
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003206 File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
3207ValueError: I/O operation on closed file
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003208\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00003209
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003210File objects have some additional methods, such as
3211\method{isatty()} and \method{truncate()} which are less frequently
3212used; consult the Library Reference for a complete guide to file
3213objects.
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003214
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00003215\subsection{The \module{pickle} Module \label{pickle}}
Fred Drake391564f1998-04-01 23:11:56 +00003216\refstmodindex{pickle}
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003217
3218Strings can easily be written to and read from a file. Numbers take a
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003219bit more effort, since the \method{read()} method only returns
3220strings, which will have to be passed to a function like
Fred Drakef5c87c42003-09-11 06:06:26 +00003221\function{int()}, which takes a string like \code{'123'} and
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003222returns its numeric value 123. However, when you want to save more
3223complex data types like lists, dictionaries, or class instances,
3224things get a lot more complicated.
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003225
3226Rather than have users be constantly writing and debugging code to
3227save complicated data types, Python provides a standard module called
Fred Drake626d4722003-09-11 04:28:13 +00003228\ulink{\module{pickle}}{../lib/module-pickle.html}. This is an
3229amazing module that can take almost
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003230any Python object (even some forms of Python code!), and convert it to
3231a string representation; this process is called \dfn{pickling}.
3232Reconstructing the object from the string representation is called
3233\dfn{unpickling}. Between pickling and unpickling, the string
3234representing the object may have been stored in a file or data, or
3235sent over a network connection to some distant machine.
3236
3237If you have an object \code{x}, and a file object \code{f} that's been
3238opened for writing, the simplest way to pickle the object takes only
3239one line of code:
3240
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003241\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003242pickle.dump(x, f)
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003243\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00003244
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003245To unpickle the object again, if \code{f} is a file object which has
3246been opened for reading:
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003247
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003248\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003249x = pickle.load(f)
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003250\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00003251
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003252(There are other variants of this, used when pickling many objects or
3253when you don't want to write the pickled data to a file; consult the
Fred Drake626d4722003-09-11 04:28:13 +00003254complete documentation for
3255\ulink{\module{pickle}}{../lib/module-pickle.html} in the
3256\citetitle[../lib/]{Python Library Reference}.)
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003257
Fred Drake626d4722003-09-11 04:28:13 +00003258\ulink{\module{pickle}}{../lib/module-pickle.html} is the standard way
3259to make Python objects which can be stored and reused by other
3260programs or by a future invocation of the same program; the technical
3261term for this is a \dfn{persistent} object. Because
3262\ulink{\module{pickle}}{../lib/module-pickle.html} is so widely used,
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003263many authors who write Python extensions take care to ensure that new
3264data types such as matrices can be properly pickled and unpickled.
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003265
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00003266
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003267
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00003268\chapter{Errors and Exceptions \label{errors}}
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00003269
3270Until now error messages haven't been more than mentioned, but if you
3271have tried out the examples you have probably seen some. There are
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003272(at least) two distinguishable kinds of errors:
3273\emph{syntax errors} and \emph{exceptions}.
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00003274
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00003275\section{Syntax Errors \label{syntaxErrors}}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003276
3277Syntax errors, also known as parsing errors, are perhaps the most common
Guido van Rossum4410c751991-06-04 20:22:18 +00003278kind of complaint you get while you are still learning Python:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00003279
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003280\begin{verbatim}
Raymond Hettingera6e16a82002-08-21 04:54:00 +00003281>>> while True print 'Hello world'
Fred Drake13af4282001-09-21 21:10:05 +00003282 File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
Raymond Hettingera6e16a82002-08-21 04:54:00 +00003283 while True print 'Hello world'
3284 ^
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00003285SyntaxError: invalid syntax
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003286\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00003287
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003288The parser repeats the offending line and displays a little `arrow'
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003289pointing at the earliest point in the line where the error was
3290detected. The error is caused by (or at least detected at) the token
3291\emph{preceding} the arrow: in the example, the error is detected at
3292the keyword \keyword{print}, since a colon (\character{:}) is missing
3293before it. File name and line number are printed so you know where to
3294look in case the input came from a script.
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003295
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00003296\section{Exceptions \label{exceptions}}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003297
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00003298Even if a statement or expression is syntactically correct, it may
3299cause an error when an attempt is made to execute it.
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00003300Errors detected during execution are called \emph{exceptions} and are
Guido van Rossum6fc178f1991-08-16 09:13:42 +00003301not unconditionally fatal: you will soon learn how to handle them in
3302Python programs. Most exceptions are not handled by programs,
3303however, and result in error messages as shown here:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00003304
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003305\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003306>>> 10 * (1/0)
Fred Drake162c6a62001-02-14 03:20:18 +00003307Traceback (most recent call last):
Fred Drake13af4282001-09-21 21:10:05 +00003308 File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
Raymond Hettingera02469f2003-05-07 17:49:36 +00003309ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
Guido van Rossume5f8b601995-01-04 19:12:49 +00003310>>> 4 + spam*3
Fred Drake162c6a62001-02-14 03:20:18 +00003311Traceback (most recent call last):
Fred Drake13af4282001-09-21 21:10:05 +00003312 File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
Andrew M. Kuchlinge7bd8762002-05-02 14:31:55 +00003313NameError: name 'spam' is not defined
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003314>>> '2' + 2
Fred Drake162c6a62001-02-14 03:20:18 +00003315Traceback (most recent call last):
Fred Drake13af4282001-09-21 21:10:05 +00003316 File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
Raymond Hettingera02469f2003-05-07 17:49:36 +00003317TypeError: cannot concatenate 'str' and 'int' objects
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003318\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00003319
Guido van Rossumb2c65561993-05-12 08:53:36 +00003320The last line of the error message indicates what happened.
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003321Exceptions come in different types, and the type is printed as part of
3322the message: the types in the example are
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003323\exception{ZeroDivisionError}, \exception{NameError} and
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003324\exception{TypeError}.
Guido van Rossumb2c65561993-05-12 08:53:36 +00003325The string printed as the exception type is the name of the built-in
Fred Drakef0ae4272004-02-24 16:13:36 +00003326exception that occurred. This is true for all built-in
Guido van Rossumb2c65561993-05-12 08:53:36 +00003327exceptions, but need not be true for user-defined exceptions (although
3328it is a useful convention).
3329Standard exception names are built-in identifiers (not reserved
3330keywords).
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003331
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +00003332The rest of the line provides detail based on the type of exception
3333and what caused it.
Guido van Rossumb2c65561993-05-12 08:53:36 +00003334
3335The preceding part of the error message shows the context where the
3336exception happened, in the form of a stack backtrace.
Guido van Rossum2292b8e1991-01-23 16:31:24 +00003337In general it contains a stack backtrace listing source lines; however,
3338it will not display lines read from standard input.
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003339
Fred Drake860106a2000-10-20 03:03:18 +00003340The \citetitle[../lib/module-exceptions.html]{Python Library
3341Reference} lists the built-in exceptions and their meanings.
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003342
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003343
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00003344\section{Handling Exceptions \label{handling}}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003345
3346It is possible to write programs that handle selected exceptions.
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003347Look at the following example, which asks the user for input until a
3348valid integer has been entered, but allows the user to interrupt the
3349program (using \kbd{Control-C} or whatever the operating system
3350supports); note that a user-generated interruption is signalled by
3351raising the \exception{KeyboardInterrupt} exception.
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00003352
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003353\begin{verbatim}
Raymond Hettingera6e16a82002-08-21 04:54:00 +00003354>>> while True:
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003355... try:
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003356... x = int(raw_input("Please enter a number: "))
3357... break
3358... except ValueError:
3359... print "Oops! That was no valid number. Try again..."
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003360...
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003361\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00003362
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003363The \keyword{try} statement works as follows.
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003364
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003365\begin{itemize}
3366\item
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003367First, the \emph{try clause} (the statement(s) between the
3368\keyword{try} and \keyword{except} keywords) is executed.
3369
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003370\item
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003371If no exception occurs, the \emph{except\ clause} is skipped and
3372execution of the \keyword{try} statement is finished.
3373
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003374\item
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003375If an exception occurs during execution of the try clause, the rest of
3376the clause is skipped. Then if its type matches the exception named
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +00003377after the \keyword{except} keyword, the except clause is executed, and
3378then execution continues after the \keyword{try} statement.
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003379
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003380\item
3381If an exception occurs which does not match the exception named in the
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003382except clause, it is passed on to outer \keyword{try} statements; if
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003383no handler is found, it is an \emph{unhandled exception} and execution
3384stops with a message as shown above.
3385
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003386\end{itemize}
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003387
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003388A \keyword{try} statement may have more than one except clause, to
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003389specify handlers for different exceptions. At most one handler will
3390be executed. Handlers only handle exceptions that occur in the
3391corresponding try clause, not in other handlers of the same
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +00003392\keyword{try} statement. An except clause may name multiple exceptions
3393as a parenthesized list, for example:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00003394
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003395\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003396... except (RuntimeError, TypeError, NameError):
3397... pass
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003398\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00003399
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003400The last except clause may omit the exception name(s), to serve as a
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003401wildcard. Use this with extreme caution, since it is easy to mask a
3402real programming error in this way! It can also be used to print an
3403error message and then re-raise the exception (allowing a caller to
3404handle the exception as well):
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003405
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003406\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drakef5c87c42003-09-11 06:06:26 +00003407import sys
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003408
3409try:
3410 f = open('myfile.txt')
3411 s = f.readline()
Fred Drakef5c87c42003-09-11 06:06:26 +00003412 i = int(s.strip())
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003413except IOError, (errno, strerror):
3414 print "I/O error(%s): %s" % (errno, strerror)
3415except ValueError:
3416 print "Could not convert data to an integer."
3417except:
3418 print "Unexpected error:", sys.exc_info()[0]
3419 raise
3420\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake2900ff91999-08-24 22:14:57 +00003421
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003422The \keyword{try} \ldots\ \keyword{except} statement has an optional
Fred Drakee99d1db2000-04-17 14:56:31 +00003423\emph{else clause}, which, when present, must follow all except
3424clauses. It is useful for code that must be executed if the try
3425clause does not raise an exception. For example:
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003426
3427\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossuma4289a71998-07-07 20:18:06 +00003428for arg in sys.argv[1:]:
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003429 try:
3430 f = open(arg, 'r')
3431 except IOError:
3432 print 'cannot open', arg
3433 else:
3434 print arg, 'has', len(f.readlines()), 'lines'
3435 f.close()
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003436\end{verbatim}
3437
Fred Drakee99d1db2000-04-17 14:56:31 +00003438The use of the \keyword{else} clause is better than adding additional
3439code to the \keyword{try} clause because it avoids accidentally
3440catching an exception that wasn't raised by the code being protected
3441by the \keyword{try} \ldots\ \keyword{except} statement.
3442
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003443
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003444When an exception occurs, it may have an associated value, also known as
Thomas Woutersf9b526d2000-07-16 19:05:38 +00003445the exception's \emph{argument}.
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003446The presence and type of the argument depend on the exception type.
Raymond Hettinger6122d022003-07-12 01:05:37 +00003447
3448The except clause may specify a variable after the exception name (or list).
3449The variable is bound to an exception instance with the arguments stored
3450in \code{instance.args}. For convenience, the exception instance
3451defines \method{__getitem__} and \method{__str__} so the arguments can
3452be accessed or printed directly without having to reference \code{.args}.
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00003453
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003454\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003455>>> try:
Raymond Hettinger6122d022003-07-12 01:05:37 +00003456... raise Exception('spam', 'eggs')
3457... except Exception, inst:
3458... print type(inst) # the exception instance
Raymond Hettingerb233e542003-07-15 23:16:01 +00003459... print inst.args # arguments stored in .args
Raymond Hettinger6122d022003-07-12 01:05:37 +00003460... print inst # __str__ allows args to printed directly
3461... x, y = inst # __getitem__ allows args to be unpacked directly
3462... print 'x =', x
3463... print 'y =', y
3464...
3465<type 'instance'>
3466('spam', 'eggs')
3467('spam', 'eggs')
3468x = spam
3469y = eggs
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003470\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00003471
Guido van Rossumb2c65561993-05-12 08:53:36 +00003472If an exception has an argument, it is printed as the last part
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003473(`detail') of the message for unhandled exceptions.
3474
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003475Exception handlers don't just handle exceptions if they occur
3476immediately in the try clause, but also if they occur inside functions
3477that are called (even indirectly) in the try clause.
3478For example:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00003479
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003480\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003481>>> def this_fails():
3482... x = 1/0
3483...
3484>>> try:
3485... this_fails()
Guido van Rossumb2c65561993-05-12 08:53:36 +00003486... except ZeroDivisionError, detail:
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003487... print 'Handling run-time error:', detail
3488...
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +00003489Handling run-time error: integer division or modulo by zero
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003490\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00003491
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003492
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00003493\section{Raising Exceptions \label{raising}}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003494
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003495The \keyword{raise} statement allows the programmer to force a
3496specified exception to occur.
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003497For example:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00003498
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003499\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumb2c65561993-05-12 08:53:36 +00003500>>> raise NameError, 'HiThere'
Fred Drake162c6a62001-02-14 03:20:18 +00003501Traceback (most recent call last):
Fred Drake13af4282001-09-21 21:10:05 +00003502 File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
Guido van Rossumb2c65561993-05-12 08:53:36 +00003503NameError: HiThere
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003504\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00003505
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003506The first argument to \keyword{raise} names the exception to be
3507raised. The optional second argument specifies the exception's
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +00003508argument. Alternatively, the above could be written as
3509\code{raise NameError('HiThere')}. Either form works fine, but there
3510seems to be a growing stylistic preference for the latter.
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003511
Fred Drake13af4282001-09-21 21:10:05 +00003512If you need to determine whether an exception was raised but don't
3513intend to handle it, a simpler form of the \keyword{raise} statement
3514allows you to re-raise the exception:
3515
3516\begin{verbatim}
3517>>> try:
3518... raise NameError, 'HiThere'
3519... except NameError:
3520... print 'An exception flew by!'
3521... raise
3522...
3523An exception flew by!
3524Traceback (most recent call last):
3525 File "<stdin>", line 2, in ?
3526NameError: HiThere
3527\end{verbatim}
3528
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003529
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00003530\section{User-defined Exceptions \label{userExceptions}}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003531
Fred Drake13af4282001-09-21 21:10:05 +00003532Programs may name their own exceptions by creating a new exception
3533class. Exceptions should typically be derived from the
3534\exception{Exception} class, either directly or indirectly. For
3535example:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00003536
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003537\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake13af4282001-09-21 21:10:05 +00003538>>> class MyError(Exception):
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003539... def __init__(self, value):
3540... self.value = value
3541... def __str__(self):
Skip Montanarob4f12422003-05-07 15:29:12 +00003542... return repr(self.value)
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003543...
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003544>>> try:
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003545... raise MyError(2*2)
3546... except MyError, e:
3547... print 'My exception occurred, value:', e.value
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003548...
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00003549My exception occurred, value: 4
Fred Drake13af4282001-09-21 21:10:05 +00003550>>> raise MyError, 'oops!'
Fred Drake162c6a62001-02-14 03:20:18 +00003551Traceback (most recent call last):
Fred Drake13af4282001-09-21 21:10:05 +00003552 File "<stdin>", line 1, in ?
3553__main__.MyError: 'oops!'
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003554\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00003555
Raymond Hettinger68804312005-01-01 00:28:46 +00003556In this example, the default \method{__init__} of \class{Exception}
3557has been overridden. The new behavior simply creates the \var{value}
3558attribute. This replaces the default behavior of creating the
3559\var{args} attribute.
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +00003560
Fred Drake13af4282001-09-21 21:10:05 +00003561Exception classes can be defined which do anything any other class can
3562do, but are usually kept simple, often only offering a number of
3563attributes that allow information about the error to be extracted by
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +00003564handlers for the exception. When creating a module that can raise
Fred Drake13af4282001-09-21 21:10:05 +00003565several distinct errors, a common practice is to create a base class
3566for exceptions defined by that module, and subclass that to create
3567specific exception classes for different error conditions:
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003568
Fred Drake13af4282001-09-21 21:10:05 +00003569\begin{verbatim}
3570class Error(Exception):
3571 """Base class for exceptions in this module."""
3572 pass
3573
3574class InputError(Error):
3575 """Exception raised for errors in the input.
3576
3577 Attributes:
3578 expression -- input expression in which the error occurred
3579 message -- explanation of the error
3580 """
3581
3582 def __init__(self, expression, message):
3583 self.expression = expression
3584 self.message = message
3585
3586class TransitionError(Error):
3587 """Raised when an operation attempts a state transition that's not
3588 allowed.
3589
3590 Attributes:
3591 previous -- state at beginning of transition
3592 next -- attempted new state
3593 message -- explanation of why the specific transition is not allowed
3594 """
3595
3596 def __init__(self, previous, next, message):
3597 self.previous = previous
3598 self.next = next
3599 self.message = message
3600\end{verbatim}
3601
3602Most exceptions are defined with names that end in ``Error,'' similar
3603to the naming of the standard exceptions.
3604
3605Many standard modules define their own exceptions to report errors
3606that may occur in functions they define. More information on classes
3607is presented in chapter \ref{classes}, ``Classes.''
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003608
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003609
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00003610\section{Defining Clean-up Actions \label{cleanup}}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003611
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003612The \keyword{try} statement has another optional clause which is
3613intended to define clean-up actions that must be executed under all
3614circumstances. For example:
Guido van Rossuma8d754e1992-01-07 16:44:35 +00003615
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003616\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003617>>> try:
3618... raise KeyboardInterrupt
3619... finally:
3620... print 'Goodbye, world!'
3621...
3622Goodbye, world!
Fred Drake162c6a62001-02-14 03:20:18 +00003623Traceback (most recent call last):
Fred Drake13af4282001-09-21 21:10:05 +00003624 File "<stdin>", line 2, in ?
Guido van Rossumb2c65561993-05-12 08:53:36 +00003625KeyboardInterrupt
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003626\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6c2176e1998-02-26 21:47:54 +00003627
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003628A \emph{finally clause} is executed whether or not an exception has
3629occurred in the try clause. When an exception has occurred, it is
3630re-raised after the finally clause is executed. The finally clause is
3631also executed ``on the way out'' when the \keyword{try} statement is
3632left via a \keyword{break} or \keyword{return} statement.
Guido van Rossumda8c3fd1992-08-09 13:55:25 +00003633
Fred Drake13af4282001-09-21 21:10:05 +00003634The code in the finally clause is useful for releasing external
3635resources (such as files or network connections), regardless of
3636whether or not the use of the resource was successful.
3637
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003638A \keyword{try} statement must either have one or more except clauses
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +00003639or one finally clause, but not both (because it would be unclear which
3640clause should be executed).
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00003641
Fred Drake13af4282001-09-21 21:10:05 +00003642
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00003643\chapter{Classes \label{classes}}
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003644
3645Python's class mechanism adds classes to the language with a minimum
3646of new syntax and semantics. It is a mixture of the class mechanisms
Guido van Rossum16d6e711994-08-08 12:30:22 +00003647found in \Cpp{} and Modula-3. As is true for modules, classes in Python
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003648do not put an absolute barrier between definition and user, but rather
3649rely on the politeness of the user not to ``break into the
3650definition.'' The most important features of classes are retained
3651with full power, however: the class inheritance mechanism allows
3652multiple base classes, a derived class can override any methods of its
Fred Drake391564f1998-04-01 23:11:56 +00003653base class or classes, a method can call the method of a base class with the
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003654same name. Objects can contain an arbitrary amount of private data.
3655
Guido van Rossum16d6e711994-08-08 12:30:22 +00003656In \Cpp{} terminology, all class members (including the data members) are
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00003657\emph{public}, and all member functions are \emph{virtual}. There are
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00003658no special constructors or destructors. As in Modula-3, there are no
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003659shorthands for referencing the object's members from its methods: the
3660method function is declared with an explicit first argument
3661representing the object, which is provided implicitly by the call. As
3662in Smalltalk, classes themselves are objects, albeit in the wider
3663sense of the word: in Python, all data types are objects. This
Neal Norwitz8ed69e32003-10-25 14:15:54 +00003664provides semantics for importing and renaming. Unlike
3665\Cpp{} and Modula-3, built-in types can be used as base classes for
Guido van Rossum16d6e711994-08-08 12:30:22 +00003666extension by the user. Also, like in \Cpp{} but unlike in Modula-3, most
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003667built-in operators with special syntax (arithmetic operators,
Fred Drake391564f1998-04-01 23:11:56 +00003668subscripting etc.) can be redefined for class instances.
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003669
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00003670\section{A Word About Terminology \label{terminology}}
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003671
Fred Drake391564f1998-04-01 23:11:56 +00003672Lacking universally accepted terminology to talk about classes, I will
3673make occasional use of Smalltalk and \Cpp{} terms. (I would use Modula-3
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003674terms, since its object-oriented semantics are closer to those of
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +00003675Python than \Cpp, but I expect that few readers have heard of it.)
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003676
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003677Objects have individuality, and multiple names (in multiple scopes)
3678can be bound to the same object. This is known as aliasing in other
3679languages. This is usually not appreciated on a first glance at
3680Python, and can be safely ignored when dealing with immutable basic
3681types (numbers, strings, tuples). However, aliasing has an
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00003682(intended!) effect on the semantics of Python code involving mutable
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003683objects such as lists, dictionaries, and most types representing
3684entities outside the program (files, windows, etc.). This is usually
3685used to the benefit of the program, since aliases behave like pointers
3686in some respects. For example, passing an object is cheap since only
3687a pointer is passed by the implementation; and if a function modifies
3688an object passed as an argument, the caller will see the change --- this
Raymond Hettingerccd615c2003-06-30 04:27:31 +00003689eliminates the need for two different argument passing mechanisms as in
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003690Pascal.
3691
3692
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00003693\section{Python Scopes and Name Spaces \label{scopes}}
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003694
3695Before introducing classes, I first have to tell you something about
3696Python's scope rules. Class definitions play some neat tricks with
Fred Drake13494372000-09-12 16:23:48 +00003697namespaces, and you need to know how scopes and namespaces work to
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003698fully understand what's going on. Incidentally, knowledge about this
3699subject is useful for any advanced Python programmer.
3700
3701Let's begin with some definitions.
3702
Fred Drake13494372000-09-12 16:23:48 +00003703A \emph{namespace} is a mapping from names to objects. Most
3704namespaces are currently implemented as Python dictionaries, but
3705that's normally not noticeable in any way (except for performance),
3706and it may change in the future. Examples of namespaces are: the set
3707of built-in names (functions such as \function{abs()}, and built-in
3708exception names); the global names in a module; and the local names in
3709a function invocation. In a sense the set of attributes of an object
3710also form a namespace. The important thing to know about namespaces
3711is that there is absolutely no relation between names in different
3712namespaces; for instance, two different modules may both define a
3713function ``maximize'' without confusion --- users of the modules must
3714prefix it with the module name.
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003715
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00003716By the way, I use the word \emph{attribute} for any name following a
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003717dot --- for example, in the expression \code{z.real}, \code{real} is
3718an attribute of the object \code{z}. Strictly speaking, references to
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003719names in modules are attribute references: in the expression
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003720\code{modname.funcname}, \code{modname} is a module object and
3721\code{funcname} is an attribute of it. In this case there happens to
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003722be a straightforward mapping between the module's attributes and the
Fred Drake13494372000-09-12 16:23:48 +00003723global names defined in the module: they share the same namespace!
3724\footnote{
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00003725 Except for one thing. Module objects have a secret read-only
Fred Drake13494372000-09-12 16:23:48 +00003726 attribute called \member{__dict__} which returns the dictionary
3727 used to implement the module's namespace; the name
3728 \member{__dict__} is an attribute but not a global name.
3729 Obviously, using this violates the abstraction of namespace
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00003730 implementation, and should be restricted to things like
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003731 post-mortem debuggers.
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003732}
3733
3734Attributes may be read-only or writable. In the latter case,
3735assignment to attributes is possible. Module attributes are writable:
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003736you can write \samp{modname.the_answer = 42}. Writable attributes may
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +00003737also be deleted with the \keyword{del} statement. For example,
3738\samp{del modname.the_answer} will remove the attribute
3739\member{the_answer} from the object named by \code{modname}.
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003740
3741Name spaces are created at different moments and have different
Fred Drake13494372000-09-12 16:23:48 +00003742lifetimes. The namespace containing the built-in names is created
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003743when the Python interpreter starts up, and is never deleted. The
Fred Drake13494372000-09-12 16:23:48 +00003744global namespace for a module is created when the module definition
3745is read in; normally, module namespaces also last until the
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003746interpreter quits. The statements executed by the top-level
3747invocation of the interpreter, either read from a script file or
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003748interactively, are considered part of a module called
Fred Drake13494372000-09-12 16:23:48 +00003749\module{__main__}, so they have their own global namespace. (The
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003750built-in names actually also live in a module; this is called
3751\module{__builtin__}.)
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003752
Fred Drake13494372000-09-12 16:23:48 +00003753The local namespace for a function is created when the function is
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003754called, and deleted when the function returns or raises an exception
3755that is not handled within the function. (Actually, forgetting would
3756be a better way to describe what actually happens.) Of course,
Fred Drake13494372000-09-12 16:23:48 +00003757recursive invocations each have their own local namespace.
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003758
Fred Drake13494372000-09-12 16:23:48 +00003759A \emph{scope} is a textual region of a Python program where a
3760namespace is directly accessible. ``Directly accessible'' here means
3761that an unqualified reference to a name attempts to find the name in
3762the namespace.
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003763
3764Although scopes are determined statically, they are used dynamically.
Raymond Hettinger861bb022002-08-07 16:09:48 +00003765At any time during execution, there are at least three nested scopes whose
3766namespaces are directly accessible: the innermost scope, which is searched
Raymond Hettingerae7ef572002-08-07 20:20:52 +00003767first, contains the local names; the namespaces of any enclosing
3768functions, which are searched starting with the nearest enclosing scope;
3769the middle scope, searched next, contains the current module's global names;
3770and the outermost scope (searched last) is the namespace containing built-in
3771names.
Raymond Hettinger861bb022002-08-07 16:09:48 +00003772
3773If a name is declared global, then all references and assignments go
3774directly to the middle scope containing the module's global names.
3775Otherwise, all variables found outside of the innermost scope are read-only.
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003776
3777Usually, the local scope references the local names of the (textually)
Guido van Rossum96628a91995-04-10 11:34:00 +00003778current function. Outside of functions, the local scope references
Fred Drake13494372000-09-12 16:23:48 +00003779the same namespace as the global scope: the module's namespace.
3780Class definitions place yet another namespace in the local scope.
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003781
3782It is important to realize that scopes are determined textually: the
Fred Drake13494372000-09-12 16:23:48 +00003783global scope of a function defined in a module is that module's
3784namespace, no matter from where or by what alias the function is
3785called. On the other hand, the actual search for names is done
3786dynamically, at run time --- however, the language definition is
3787evolving towards static name resolution, at ``compile'' time, so don't
3788rely on dynamic name resolution! (In fact, local variables are
3789already determined statically.)
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003790
3791A special quirk of Python is that assignments always go into the
3792innermost scope. Assignments do not copy data --- they just
3793bind names to objects. The same is true for deletions: the statement
Fred Drake13494372000-09-12 16:23:48 +00003794\samp{del x} removes the binding of \code{x} from the namespace
Fred Drake391564f1998-04-01 23:11:56 +00003795referenced by the local scope. In fact, all operations that introduce
3796new names use the local scope: in particular, import statements and
3797function definitions bind the module or function name in the local
3798scope. (The \keyword{global} statement can be used to indicate that
3799particular variables live in the global scope.)
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003800
3801
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00003802\section{A First Look at Classes \label{firstClasses}}
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003803
3804Classes introduce a little bit of new syntax, three new object types,
3805and some new semantics.
3806
3807
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00003808\subsection{Class Definition Syntax \label{classDefinition}}
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003809
3810The simplest form of class definition looks like this:
3811
3812\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003813class ClassName:
3814 <statement-1>
3815 .
3816 .
3817 .
3818 <statement-N>
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003819\end{verbatim}
3820
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003821Class definitions, like function definitions
3822(\keyword{def} statements) must be executed before they have any
3823effect. (You could conceivably place a class definition in a branch
3824of an \keyword{if} statement, or inside a function.)
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003825
3826In practice, the statements inside a class definition will usually be
3827function definitions, but other statements are allowed, and sometimes
3828useful --- we'll come back to this later. The function definitions
3829inside a class normally have a peculiar form of argument list,
3830dictated by the calling conventions for methods --- again, this is
3831explained later.
3832
Fred Drake13494372000-09-12 16:23:48 +00003833When a class definition is entered, a new namespace is created, and
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003834used as the local scope --- thus, all assignments to local variables
Fred Drake13494372000-09-12 16:23:48 +00003835go into this new namespace. In particular, function definitions bind
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003836the name of the new function here.
3837
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00003838When a class definition is left normally (via the end), a \emph{class
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003839object} is created. This is basically a wrapper around the contents
Fred Drake13494372000-09-12 16:23:48 +00003840of the namespace created by the class definition; we'll learn more
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003841about class objects in the next section. The original local scope
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +00003842(the one in effect just before the class definitions were entered) is
Fred Drakea594baf1998-04-03 05:16:31 +00003843reinstated, and the class object is bound here to the class name given
3844in the class definition header (\class{ClassName} in the example).
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003845
3846
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00003847\subsection{Class Objects \label{classObjects}}
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003848
3849Class objects support two kinds of operations: attribute references
3850and instantiation.
3851
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00003852\emph{Attribute references} use the standard syntax used for all
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003853attribute references in Python: \code{obj.name}. Valid attribute
Fred Drake13494372000-09-12 16:23:48 +00003854names are all the names that were in the class's namespace when the
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003855class object was created. So, if the class definition looked like
3856this:
3857
3858\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003859class MyClass:
3860 "A simple example class"
3861 i = 12345
Fred Drake88e66252001-06-29 17:50:57 +00003862 def f(self):
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003863 return 'hello world'
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003864\end{verbatim}
3865
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003866then \code{MyClass.i} and \code{MyClass.f} are valid attribute
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003867references, returning an integer and a method object, respectively.
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00003868Class attributes can also be assigned to, so you can change the value
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003869of \code{MyClass.i} by assignment. \member{__doc__} is also a valid
3870attribute, returning the docstring belonging to the class: \code{"A
Raymond Hettingerfa6cce12003-07-11 18:58:11 +00003871simple example class"}.
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003872
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00003873Class \emph{instantiation} uses function notation. Just pretend that
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003874the class object is a parameterless function that returns a new
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003875instance of the class. For example (assuming the above class):
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003876
3877\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003878x = MyClass()
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003879\end{verbatim}
3880
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00003881creates a new \emph{instance} of the class and assigns this object to
3882the local variable \code{x}.
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003883
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003884The instantiation operation (``calling'' a class object) creates an
3885empty object. Many classes like to create objects in a known initial
3886state. Therefore a class may define a special method named
3887\method{__init__()}, like this:
3888
3889\begin{verbatim}
3890 def __init__(self):
3891 self.data = []
3892\end{verbatim}
3893
3894When a class defines an \method{__init__()} method, class
3895instantiation automatically invokes \method{__init__()} for the
3896newly-created class instance. So in this example, a new, initialized
3897instance can be obtained by:
3898
3899\begin{verbatim}
3900x = MyClass()
3901\end{verbatim}
3902
3903Of course, the \method{__init__()} method may have arguments for
3904greater flexibility. In that case, arguments given to the class
3905instantiation operator are passed on to \method{__init__()}. For
3906example,
3907
3908\begin{verbatim}
3909>>> class Complex:
3910... def __init__(self, realpart, imagpart):
3911... self.r = realpart
3912... self.i = imagpart
3913...
Tim Petersbd695a72001-05-22 06:54:14 +00003914>>> x = Complex(3.0, -4.5)
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003915>>> x.r, x.i
3916(3.0, -4.5)
3917\end{verbatim}
3918
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003919
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00003920\subsection{Instance Objects \label{instanceObjects}}
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003921
3922Now what can we do with instance objects? The only operations
3923understood by instance objects are attribute references. There are
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +00003924two kinds of valid attribute names, data attributes and methods.
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003925
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +00003926\emph{data attributes} correspond to
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003927``instance variables'' in Smalltalk, and to ``data members'' in
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +00003928\Cpp. Data attributes need not be declared; like local variables,
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003929they spring into existence when they are first assigned to. For
3930example, if \code{x} is the instance of \class{MyClass} created above,
3931the following piece of code will print the value \code{16}, without
3932leaving a trace:
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003933
3934\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003935x.counter = 1
3936while x.counter < 10:
3937 x.counter = x.counter * 2
3938print x.counter
3939del x.counter
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003940\end{verbatim}
3941
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +00003942The other kind of instance attribute references is a \emph{method}.
3943A method is a function that ``belongs to'' an
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003944object. (In Python, the term method is not unique to class instances:
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +00003945other object types can have methods as well. For example, list objects have
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003946methods called append, insert, remove, sort, and so on. However,
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +00003947in the following discussion, we'll use the term method exclusively to mean
3948methods of class instance objects, unless explicitly stated otherwise.)
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003949
3950Valid method names of an instance object depend on its class. By
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +00003951definition, all attributes of a class that are function
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003952objects define corresponding methods of its instances. So in our
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00003953example, \code{x.f} is a valid method reference, since
3954\code{MyClass.f} is a function, but \code{x.i} is not, since
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003955\code{MyClass.i} is not. But \code{x.f} is not the same thing as
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00003956\code{MyClass.f} --- it is a \obindex{method}\emph{method object}, not
3957a function object.
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003958
3959
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00003960\subsection{Method Objects \label{methodObjects}}
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003961
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +00003962Usually, a method is called immediately:
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003963
3964\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003965x.f()
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003966\end{verbatim}
3967
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003968In our example, this will return the string \code{'hello world'}.
Fred Drakeee84d591999-03-10 17:25:30 +00003969However, it is not necessary to call a method right away:
3970\code{x.f} is a method object, and can be stored away and called at a
3971later time. For example:
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003972
3973\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003974xf = x.f
Raymond Hettingera6e16a82002-08-21 04:54:00 +00003975while True:
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003976 print xf()
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003977\end{verbatim}
3978
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003979will continue to print \samp{hello world} until the end of time.
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003980
3981What exactly happens when a method is called? You may have noticed
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003982that \code{x.f()} was called without an argument above, even though
3983the function definition for \method{f} specified an argument. What
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003984happened to the argument? Surely Python raises an exception when a
3985function that requires an argument is called without any --- even if
3986the argument isn't actually used...
3987
3988Actually, you may have guessed the answer: the special thing about
3989methods is that the object is passed as the first argument of the
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00003990function. In our example, the call \code{x.f()} is exactly equivalent
3991to \code{MyClass.f(x)}. In general, calling a method with a list of
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00003992\var{n} arguments is equivalent to calling the corresponding function
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00003993with an argument list that is created by inserting the method's object
3994before the first argument.
3995
3996If you still don't understand how methods work, a look at the
3997implementation can perhaps clarify matters. When an instance
3998attribute is referenced that isn't a data attribute, its class is
3999searched. If the name denotes a valid class attribute that is a
4000function object, a method object is created by packing (pointers to)
4001the instance object and the function object just found together in an
4002abstract object: this is the method object. When the method object is
4003called with an argument list, it is unpacked again, a new argument
4004list is constructed from the instance object and the original argument
4005list, and the function object is called with this new argument list.
4006
4007
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00004008\section{Random Remarks \label{remarks}}
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004009
Raymond Hettingerd4462302003-11-26 17:52:45 +00004010% [These should perhaps be placed more carefully...]
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004011
4012
4013Data attributes override method attributes with the same name; to
4014avoid accidental name conflicts, which may cause hard-to-find bugs in
4015large programs, it is wise to use some kind of convention that
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +00004016minimizes the chance of conflicts. Possible conventions include
4017capitalizing method names, prefixing data attribute names with a small
4018unique string (perhaps just an underscore), or using verbs for methods
4019and nouns for data attributes.
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004020
4021
4022Data attributes may be referenced by methods as well as by ordinary
4023users (``clients'') of an object. In other words, classes are not
4024usable to implement pure abstract data types. In fact, nothing in
4025Python makes it possible to enforce data hiding --- it is all based
4026upon convention. (On the other hand, the Python implementation,
Fred Drakeee84d591999-03-10 17:25:30 +00004027written in C, can completely hide implementation details and control
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004028access to an object if necessary; this can be used by extensions to
Fred Drakeee84d591999-03-10 17:25:30 +00004029Python written in C.)
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004030
4031
4032Clients should use data attributes with care --- clients may mess up
4033invariants maintained by the methods by stamping on their data
4034attributes. Note that clients may add data attributes of their own to
4035an instance object without affecting the validity of the methods, as
4036long as name conflicts are avoided --- again, a naming convention can
4037save a lot of headaches here.
4038
4039
4040There is no shorthand for referencing data attributes (or other
4041methods!) from within methods. I find that this actually increases
4042the readability of methods: there is no chance of confusing local
4043variables and instance variables when glancing through a method.
4044
4045
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +00004046Conventionally, the first argument of a method is often called
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00004047\code{self}. This is nothing more than a convention: the name
4048\code{self} has absolutely no special meaning to Python. (Note,
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004049however, that by not following the convention your code may be less
Raymond Hettingeraa2b2aa2004-12-02 06:08:42 +00004050readable to other Python programmers, and it is also conceivable that
4051a \emph{class browser} program might be written that relies upon such a
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004052convention.)
4053
4054
4055Any function object that is a class attribute defines a method for
4056instances of that class. It is not necessary that the function
4057definition is textually enclosed in the class definition: assigning a
4058function object to a local variable in the class is also ok. For
4059example:
4060
4061\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00004062# Function defined outside the class
4063def f1(self, x, y):
4064 return min(x, x+y)
4065
4066class C:
4067 f = f1
4068 def g(self):
4069 return 'hello world'
4070 h = g
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004071\end{verbatim}
4072
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00004073Now \code{f}, \code{g} and \code{h} are all attributes of class
4074\class{C} that refer to function objects, and consequently they are all
4075methods of instances of \class{C} --- \code{h} being exactly equivalent
4076to \code{g}. Note that this practice usually only serves to confuse
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004077the reader of a program.
4078
4079
4080Methods may call other methods by using method attributes of the
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +00004081\code{self} argument:
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004082
4083\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00004084class Bag:
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00004085 def __init__(self):
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00004086 self.data = []
4087 def add(self, x):
4088 self.data.append(x)
4089 def addtwice(self, x):
4090 self.add(x)
4091 self.add(x)
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004092\end{verbatim}
4093
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004094Methods may reference global names in the same way as ordinary
4095functions. The global scope associated with a method is the module
4096containing the class definition. (The class itself is never used as a
4097global scope!) While one rarely encounters a good reason for using
4098global data in a method, there are many legitimate uses of the global
4099scope: for one thing, functions and modules imported into the global
4100scope can be used by methods, as well as functions and classes defined
4101in it. Usually, the class containing the method is itself defined in
4102this global scope, and in the next section we'll find some good
4103reasons why a method would want to reference its own class!
4104
4105
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00004106\section{Inheritance \label{inheritance}}
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004107
4108Of course, a language feature would not be worthy of the name ``class''
4109without supporting inheritance. The syntax for a derived class
4110definition looks as follows:
4111
4112\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00004113class DerivedClassName(BaseClassName):
4114 <statement-1>
4115 .
4116 .
4117 .
4118 <statement-N>
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004119\end{verbatim}
4120
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00004121The name \class{BaseClassName} must be defined in a scope containing
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004122the derived class definition. Instead of a base class name, an
4123expression is also allowed. This is useful when the base class is
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +00004124defined in another module,
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004125
4126\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00004127class DerivedClassName(modname.BaseClassName):
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004128\end{verbatim}
4129
4130Execution of a derived class definition proceeds the same as for a
4131base class. When the class object is constructed, the base class is
4132remembered. This is used for resolving attribute references: if a
4133requested attribute is not found in the class, it is searched in the
4134base class. This rule is applied recursively if the base class itself
4135is derived from some other class.
4136
4137There's nothing special about instantiation of derived classes:
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00004138\code{DerivedClassName()} creates a new instance of the class. Method
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004139references are resolved as follows: the corresponding class attribute
4140is searched, descending down the chain of base classes if necessary,
4141and the method reference is valid if this yields a function object.
4142
4143Derived classes may override methods of their base classes. Because
4144methods have no special privileges when calling other methods of the
4145same object, a method of a base class that calls another method
4146defined in the same base class, may in fact end up calling a method of
Guido van Rossum16d6e711994-08-08 12:30:22 +00004147a derived class that overrides it. (For \Cpp{} programmers: all methods
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00004148in Python are effectively \keyword{virtual}.)
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004149
4150An overriding method in a derived class may in fact want to extend
4151rather than simply replace the base class method of the same name.
4152There is a simple way to call the base class method directly: just
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00004153call \samp{BaseClassName.methodname(self, arguments)}. This is
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004154occasionally useful to clients as well. (Note that this only works if
4155the base class is defined or imported directly in the global scope.)
4156
4157
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00004158\subsection{Multiple Inheritance \label{multiple}}
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004159
Guido van Rossum6938f061994-08-01 12:22:53 +00004160Python supports a limited form of multiple inheritance as well. A
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004161class definition with multiple base classes looks as follows:
4162
4163\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00004164class DerivedClassName(Base1, Base2, Base3):
4165 <statement-1>
4166 .
4167 .
4168 .
4169 <statement-N>
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004170\end{verbatim}
4171
4172The only rule necessary to explain the semantics is the resolution
4173rule used for class attribute references. This is depth-first,
4174left-to-right. Thus, if an attribute is not found in
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00004175\class{DerivedClassName}, it is searched in \class{Base1}, then
4176(recursively) in the base classes of \class{Base1}, and only if it is
4177not found there, it is searched in \class{Base2}, and so on.
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004178
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00004179(To some people breadth first --- searching \class{Base2} and
4180\class{Base3} before the base classes of \class{Base1} --- looks more
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004181natural. However, this would require you to know whether a particular
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00004182attribute of \class{Base1} is actually defined in \class{Base1} or in
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004183one of its base classes before you can figure out the consequences of
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00004184a name conflict with an attribute of \class{Base2}. The depth-first
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004185rule makes no differences between direct and inherited attributes of
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00004186\class{Base1}.)
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004187
4188It is clear that indiscriminate use of multiple inheritance is a
4189maintenance nightmare, given the reliance in Python on conventions to
4190avoid accidental name conflicts. A well-known problem with multiple
4191inheritance is a class derived from two classes that happen to have a
4192common base class. While it is easy enough to figure out what happens
4193in this case (the instance will have a single copy of ``instance
4194variables'' or data attributes used by the common base class), it is
4195not clear that these semantics are in any way useful.
4196
Raymond Hettinger65a350d2004-12-02 07:29:43 +00004197%% XXX Add rules for new-style MRO?
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004198
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00004199\section{Private Variables \label{private}}
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00004200
Fred Drakea594baf1998-04-03 05:16:31 +00004201There is limited support for class-private
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00004202identifiers. Any identifier of the form \code{__spam} (at least two
Andrew M. Kuchlingcbddabf2004-03-21 22:12:45 +00004203leading underscores, at most one trailing underscore) is textually
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00004204replaced with \code{_classname__spam}, where \code{classname} is the
4205current class name with leading underscore(s) stripped. This mangling
Raymond Hettinger65a350d2004-12-02 07:29:43 +00004206is done without regard to the syntactic position of the identifier, so
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00004207it can be used to define class-private instance and class variables,
Raymond Hettinger65a350d2004-12-02 07:29:43 +00004208methods, variables stored in globals, and even variables stored in instances.
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00004209private to this class on instances of \emph{other} classes. Truncation
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00004210may occur when the mangled name would be longer than 255 characters.
4211Outside classes, or when the class name consists of only underscores,
4212no mangling occurs.
4213
4214Name mangling is intended to give classes an easy way to define
4215``private'' instance variables and methods, without having to worry
4216about instance variables defined by derived classes, or mucking with
4217instance variables by code outside the class. Note that the mangling
4218rules are designed mostly to avoid accidents; it still is possible for
4219a determined soul to access or modify a variable that is considered
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +00004220private. This can even be useful in special circumstances, such as in
4221the debugger, and that's one reason why this loophole is not closed.
4222(Buglet: derivation of a class with the same name as the base class
4223makes use of private variables of the base class possible.)
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00004224
4225Notice that code passed to \code{exec}, \code{eval()} or
4226\code{evalfile()} does not consider the classname of the invoking
4227class to be the current class; this is similar to the effect of the
4228\code{global} statement, the effect of which is likewise restricted to
4229code that is byte-compiled together. The same restriction applies to
4230\code{getattr()}, \code{setattr()} and \code{delattr()}, as well as
4231when referencing \code{__dict__} directly.
4232
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00004233
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00004234\section{Odds and Ends \label{odds}}
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004235
4236Sometimes it is useful to have a data type similar to the Pascal
Raymond Hettinger65a350d2004-12-02 07:29:43 +00004237``record'' or C ``struct'', bundling together a few named data
Fred Drakeed514942001-07-06 17:28:39 +00004238items. An empty class definition will do nicely:
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004239
4240\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00004241class Employee:
4242 pass
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004243
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00004244john = Employee() # Create an empty employee record
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004245
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00004246# Fill the fields of the record
4247john.name = 'John Doe'
4248john.dept = 'computer lab'
4249john.salary = 1000
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004250\end{verbatim}
4251
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004252A piece of Python code that expects a particular abstract data type
4253can often be passed a class that emulates the methods of that data
4254type instead. For instance, if you have a function that formats some
4255data from a file object, you can define a class with methods
Raymond Hettinger65a350d2004-12-02 07:29:43 +00004256\method{read()} and \method{readline()} that get the data from a string
Fred Drake391564f1998-04-01 23:11:56 +00004257buffer instead, and pass it as an argument.% (Unfortunately, this
4258%technique has its limitations: a class can't define operations that
4259%are accessed by special syntax such as sequence subscripting or
4260%arithmetic operators, and assigning such a ``pseudo-file'' to
4261%\code{sys.stdin} will not cause the interpreter to read further input
4262%from it.)
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004263
4264
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00004265Instance method objects have attributes, too: \code{m.im_self} is the
Raymond Hettinger65a350d2004-12-02 07:29:43 +00004266instance object with the method \method{m}, and \code{m.im_func} is the
Guido van Rossum5e0759d1992-08-07 16:06:24 +00004267function object corresponding to the method.
4268
Raymond Hettingerfa6cce12003-07-11 18:58:11 +00004269
4270\section{Exceptions Are Classes Too\label{exceptionClasses}}
Guido van Rossum194e57c1995-02-15 15:51:38 +00004271
Raymond Hettinger8ee00602003-07-01 06:19:34 +00004272User-defined exceptions are identified by classes as well. Using this
4273mechanism it is possible to create extensible hierarchies of exceptions.
Guido van Rossum194e57c1995-02-15 15:51:38 +00004274
4275There are two new valid (semantic) forms for the raise statement:
4276
4277\begin{verbatim}
4278raise Class, instance
4279
4280raise instance
4281\end{verbatim}
4282
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00004283In the first form, \code{instance} must be an instance of
4284\class{Class} or of a class derived from it. The second form is a
4285shorthand for:
Guido van Rossum194e57c1995-02-15 15:51:38 +00004286
4287\begin{verbatim}
4288raise instance.__class__, instance
4289\end{verbatim}
4290
Raymond Hettinger8ee00602003-07-01 06:19:34 +00004291A class in an except clause is compatible with an exception if it is the same
Guido van Rossum194e57c1995-02-15 15:51:38 +00004292class or a base class thereof (but not the other way around --- an
4293except clause listing a derived class is not compatible with a base
4294class). For example, the following code will print B, C, D in that
4295order:
4296
4297\begin{verbatim}
4298class B:
4299 pass
4300class C(B):
4301 pass
4302class D(C):
4303 pass
4304
4305for c in [B, C, D]:
4306 try:
4307 raise c()
4308 except D:
4309 print "D"
4310 except C:
4311 print "C"
4312 except B:
4313 print "B"
4314\end{verbatim}
4315
Fred Drakeee84d591999-03-10 17:25:30 +00004316Note that if the except clauses were reversed (with
4317\samp{except B} first), it would have printed B, B, B --- the first
4318matching except clause is triggered.
Guido van Rossum194e57c1995-02-15 15:51:38 +00004319
4320When an error message is printed for an unhandled exception which is a
4321class, the class name is printed, then a colon and a space, and
4322finally the instance converted to a string using the built-in function
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00004323\function{str()}.
Guido van Rossum194e57c1995-02-15 15:51:38 +00004324
Guido van Rossum194e57c1995-02-15 15:51:38 +00004325
Raymond Hettingerfa6cce12003-07-11 18:58:11 +00004326\section{Iterators\label{iterators}}
4327
Raymond Hettingerb1e5b502004-02-12 09:50:42 +00004328By now, you've probably noticed that most container objects can be looped
Fred Drakee6ed33a2004-02-12 14:35:18 +00004329over using a \keyword{for} statement:
Raymond Hettingerfa6cce12003-07-11 18:58:11 +00004330
4331\begin{verbatim}
4332for element in [1, 2, 3]:
4333 print element
4334for element in (1, 2, 3):
4335 print element
4336for key in {'one':1, 'two':2}:
4337 print key
4338for char in "123":
4339 print char
4340for line in open("myfile.txt"):
4341 print line
4342\end{verbatim}
4343
4344This style of access is clear, concise, and convenient. The use of iterators
Fred Drakee6ed33a2004-02-12 14:35:18 +00004345pervades and unifies Python. Behind the scenes, the \keyword{for}
4346statement calls \function{iter()} on the container object. The
4347function returns an iterator object that defines the method
4348\method{next()} which accesses elements in the container one at a
4349time. When there are no more elements, \method{next()} raises a
4350\exception{StopIteration} exception which tells the \keyword{for} loop
Raymond Hettingerfa6cce12003-07-11 18:58:11 +00004351to terminate. This example shows how it all works:
4352
4353\begin{verbatim}
4354>>> s = 'abc'
4355>>> it = iter(s)
4356>>> it
4357<iterator object at 0x00A1DB50>
4358>>> it.next()
4359'a'
4360>>> it.next()
4361'b'
4362>>> it.next()
4363'c'
4364>>> it.next()
4365
4366Traceback (most recent call last):
4367 File "<pyshell#6>", line 1, in -toplevel-
4368 it.next()
4369StopIteration
4370\end{verbatim}
4371
4372Having seen the mechanics behind the iterator protocol, it is easy to add
4373iterator behavior to your classes. Define a \method{__iter__()} method
4374which returns an object with a \method{next()} method. If the class defines
4375\method{next()}, then \method{__iter__()} can just return \code{self}:
4376
4377\begin{verbatim}
Raymond Hettinger68a37ac2004-07-01 12:56:54 +00004378class Reverse:
Raymond Hettingerfa6cce12003-07-11 18:58:11 +00004379 "Iterator for looping over a sequence backwards"
4380 def __init__(self, data):
4381 self.data = data
4382 self.index = len(data)
4383 def __iter__(self):
4384 return self
4385 def next(self):
4386 if self.index == 0:
4387 raise StopIteration
4388 self.index = self.index - 1
4389 return self.data[self.index]
4390
4391>>> for char in Reverse('spam'):
Raymond Hettinger68a37ac2004-07-01 12:56:54 +00004392... print char
4393...
Raymond Hettingerfa6cce12003-07-11 18:58:11 +00004394m
4395a
4396p
4397s
4398\end{verbatim}
4399
4400
4401\section{Generators\label{generators}}
4402
4403Generators are a simple and powerful tool for creating iterators. They are
4404written like regular functions but use the \keyword{yield} statement whenever
Raymond Hettinger21f9fce2004-07-10 16:11:03 +00004405they want to return data. Each time \method{next()} is called, the
Raymond Hettingerfa6cce12003-07-11 18:58:11 +00004406generator resumes where it left-off (it remembers all the data values and
4407which statement was last executed). An example shows that generators can
4408be trivially easy to create:
4409
4410\begin{verbatim}
Raymond Hettinger68a37ac2004-07-01 12:56:54 +00004411def reverse(data):
4412 for index in range(len(data)-1, -1, -1):
4413 yield data[index]
4414
Raymond Hettingerfa6cce12003-07-11 18:58:11 +00004415>>> for char in reverse('golf'):
Raymond Hettinger68a37ac2004-07-01 12:56:54 +00004416... print char
4417...
Raymond Hettingerfa6cce12003-07-11 18:58:11 +00004418f
4419l
4420o
4421g
4422\end{verbatim}
4423
4424Anything that can be done with generators can also be done with class based
4425iterators as described in the previous section. What makes generators so
4426compact is that the \method{__iter__()} and \method{next()} methods are
4427created automatically.
4428
Raymond Hettingerb233e542003-07-15 23:16:01 +00004429Another key feature is that the local variables and execution state
Raymond Hettingerfa6cce12003-07-11 18:58:11 +00004430are automatically saved between calls. This made the function easier to write
Raymond Hettinger29eb40c2004-12-01 04:22:38 +00004431and much more clear than an approach using instance variables like
Raymond Hettingerfa6cce12003-07-11 18:58:11 +00004432\code{self.index} and \code{self.data}.
4433
4434In addition to automatic method creation and saving program state, when
4435generators terminate, they automatically raise \exception{StopIteration}.
4436In combination, these features make it easy to create iterators with no
4437more effort than writing a regular function.
4438
Raymond Hettinger170a6222004-05-19 19:45:19 +00004439\section{Generator Expressions\label{genexps}}
4440
4441Some simple generators can be coded succinctly as expressions using a syntax
Raymond Hettinger2d1a2aa2004-06-03 14:13:04 +00004442similar to list comprehensions but with parentheses instead of brackets. These
Raymond Hettinger170a6222004-05-19 19:45:19 +00004443expressions are designed for situations where the generator is used right
4444away by an enclosing function. Generator expressions are more compact but
Fred Drake22ec5c32004-06-03 17:19:25 +00004445less versatile than full generator definitions and tend to be more memory
Raymond Hettinger170a6222004-05-19 19:45:19 +00004446friendly than equivalent list comprehensions.
4447
4448Examples:
4449
4450\begin{verbatim}
4451>>> sum(i*i for i in range(10)) # sum of squares
4452285
4453
4454>>> xvec = [10, 20, 30]
4455>>> yvec = [7, 5, 3]
4456>>> sum(x*y for x,y in zip(xvec, yvec)) # dot product
4457260
4458
4459>>> from math import pi, sin
4460>>> sine_table = dict((x, sin(x*pi/180)) for x in range(0, 91))
4461
4462>>> unique_words = set(word for line in page for word in line.split())
4463
4464>>> valedictorian = max((student.gpa, student.name) for student in graduates)
4465
4466>>> data = 'golf'
4467>>> list(data[i] for i in range(len(data)-1,-1,-1))
4468['f', 'l', 'o', 'g']
4469
4470\end{verbatim}
4471
Raymond Hettingerfa6cce12003-07-11 18:58:11 +00004472
Raymond Hettinger8772d4e2003-12-03 22:23:46 +00004473
4474\chapter{Brief Tour of the Standard Library \label{briefTour}}
4475
4476
4477\section{Operating System Interface\label{os-interface}}
4478
4479The \ulink{\module{os}}{../lib/module-os.html}
4480module provides dozens of functions for interacting with the
4481operating system:
4482
4483\begin{verbatim}
4484>>> import os
Raymond Hettingerb7a10d12003-12-06 20:12:00 +00004485>>> os.system('time 0:02')
Raymond Hettinger8772d4e2003-12-03 22:23:46 +000044860
4487>>> os.getcwd() # Return the current working directory
4488'C:\\Python24'
4489>>> os.chdir('/server/accesslogs')
4490\end{verbatim}
4491
4492Be sure to use the \samp{import os} style instead of
4493\samp{from os import *}. This will keep \function{os.open()} from
4494shadowing the builtin \function{open()} function which operates much
4495differently.
4496
Raymond Hettingerdf8a0032004-10-26 03:53:35 +00004497\bifuncindex{help}
Raymond Hettinger8772d4e2003-12-03 22:23:46 +00004498The builtin \function{dir()} and \function{help()} functions are useful
4499as interactive aids for working with large modules like \module{os}:
4500
4501\begin{verbatim}
4502>>> import os
4503>>> dir(os)
Raymond Hettingerf62444a2003-12-05 07:53:50 +00004504<returns a list of all module functions>
Raymond Hettinger8772d4e2003-12-03 22:23:46 +00004505>>> help(os)
4506<returns an extensive manual page created from the module's docstrings>
4507\end{verbatim}
4508
4509For daily file and directory management tasks, the
4510\ulink{\module{shutil}}{../lib/module-shutil.html}
4511module provides a higher level interface that is easier to use:
4512
4513\begin{verbatim}
4514>>> import shutil
4515>>> shutil.copyfile('data.db', 'archive.db')
Raymond Hettingerf62444a2003-12-05 07:53:50 +00004516>>> shutil.move('/build/executables', 'installdir')
Raymond Hettinger8772d4e2003-12-03 22:23:46 +00004517\end{verbatim}
4518
4519
4520\section{File Wildcards\label{file-wildcards}}
4521
4522The \ulink{\module{glob}}{../lib/module-glob.html}
4523module provides a function for making file lists from directory
4524wildcard searches:
4525
4526\begin{verbatim}
4527>>> import glob
4528>>> glob.glob('*.py')
4529['primes.py', 'random.py', 'quote.py']
4530\end{verbatim}
4531
4532
4533\section{Command Line Arguments\label{command-line-arguments}}
4534
Raymond Hettinger65a350d2004-12-02 07:29:43 +00004535Common utility scripts often need to process command line arguments.
Raymond Hettinger8772d4e2003-12-03 22:23:46 +00004536These arguments are stored in the
4537\ulink{\module{sys}}{../lib/module-sys.html}\ module's \var{argv}
4538attribute as a list. For instance the following output results from
4539running \samp{python demo.py one two three} at the command line:
4540
4541\begin{verbatim}
4542>>> import sys
Raymond Hettingerec3402f2003-12-05 06:39:54 +00004543>>> print sys.argv
Raymond Hettinger8772d4e2003-12-03 22:23:46 +00004544['demo.py', 'one', 'two', 'three']
4545\end{verbatim}
4546
4547The \ulink{\module{getopt}}{../lib/module-getopt.html}
4548module processes \var{sys.argv} using the conventions of the \UNIX{}
4549\function{getopt()} function. More powerful and flexible command line
4550processing is provided by the
4551\ulink{\module{optparse}}{../lib/module-optparse.html} module.
4552
4553
4554\section{Error Output Redirection and Program Termination\label{stderr}}
4555
4556The \ulink{\module{sys}}{../lib/module-sys.html}
4557module also has attributes for \var{stdin}, \var{stdout}, and
4558\var{stderr}. The latter is useful for emitting warnings and error
4559messages to make them visible even when \var{stdout} has been redirected:
4560
4561\begin{verbatim}
Raymond Hettinger65a350d2004-12-02 07:29:43 +00004562>>> sys.stderr.write('Warning, log file not found starting a new one\n')
Raymond Hettinger8772d4e2003-12-03 22:23:46 +00004563Warning, log file not found starting a new one
4564\end{verbatim}
4565
4566The most direct way to terminate a script is to use \samp{sys.exit()}.
4567
4568
4569\section{String Pattern Matching\label{string-pattern-matching}}
4570
4571The \ulink{\module{re}}{../lib/module-re.html}
4572module provides regular expression tools for advanced string processing.
Raymond Hettingerb7a10d12003-12-06 20:12:00 +00004573For complex matching and manipulation, regular expressions offer succinct,
Raymond Hettinger8772d4e2003-12-03 22:23:46 +00004574optimized solutions:
4575
4576\begin{verbatim}
4577>>> import re
4578>>> re.findall(r'\bf[a-z]*', 'which foot or hand fell fastest')
4579['foot', 'fell', 'fastest']
4580>>> re.sub(r'(\b[a-z]+) \1', r'\1', 'cat in the the hat')
4581'cat in the hat'
4582\end{verbatim}
4583
Raymond Hettingerb7a10d12003-12-06 20:12:00 +00004584When only simple capabilities are needed, string methods are preferred
4585because they are easier to read and debug:
4586
4587\begin{verbatim}
4588>>> 'tea for too'.replace('too', 'two')
4589'tea for two'
4590\end{verbatim}
Raymond Hettinger8772d4e2003-12-03 22:23:46 +00004591
4592\section{Mathematics\label{mathematics}}
4593
Raymond Hettingerec3402f2003-12-05 06:39:54 +00004594The \ulink{\module{math}}{../lib/module-math.html} module gives
Raymond Hettinger8772d4e2003-12-03 22:23:46 +00004595access to the underlying C library functions for floating point math:
4596
4597\begin{verbatim}
4598>>> import math
4599>>> math.cos(math.pi / 4.0)
46000.70710678118654757
4601>>> math.log(1024, 2)
460210.0
4603\end{verbatim}
4604
4605The \ulink{\module{random}}{../lib/module-random.html}
4606module provides tools for making random selections:
4607
4608\begin{verbatim}
4609>>> import random
4610>>> random.choice(['apple', 'pear', 'banana'])
4611'apple'
4612>>> random.sample(xrange(100), 10) # sampling without replacement
4613[30, 83, 16, 4, 8, 81, 41, 50, 18, 33]
4614>>> random.random() # random float
46150.17970987693706186
4616>>> random.randrange(6) # random integer chosen from range(6)
46174
4618\end{verbatim}
4619
4620
4621\section{Internet Access\label{internet-access}}
4622
4623There are a number of modules for accessing the internet and processing
4624internet protocols. Two of the simplest are
4625\ulink{\module{urllib2}}{../lib/module-urllib2.html}
4626for retrieving data from urls and
4627\ulink{\module{smtplib}}{../lib/module-smtplib.html}
4628for sending mail:
4629
4630\begin{verbatim}
4631>>> import urllib2
4632>>> for line in urllib2.urlopen('http://tycho.usno.navy.mil/cgi-bin/timer.pl'):
Raymond Hettingere1485952004-05-31 22:53:25 +00004633... if 'EST' in line: # look for Eastern Standard Time
4634... print line
Raymond Hettinger8772d4e2003-12-03 22:23:46 +00004635
4636<BR>Nov. 25, 09:43:32 PM EST
4637
4638>>> import smtplib
4639>>> server = smtplib.SMTP('localhost')
Raymond Hettinger68804312005-01-01 00:28:46 +00004640>>> server.sendmail('soothsayer@example.org', 'jcaesar@example.org',
Raymond Hettinger65a350d2004-12-02 07:29:43 +00004641"""To: jcaesar@example.org
Raymond Hettingera8aebce2004-05-25 16:08:28 +00004642From: soothsayer@example.org
Raymond Hettinger8772d4e2003-12-03 22:23:46 +00004643
4644Beware the Ides of March.
4645""")
4646>>> server.quit()
4647\end{verbatim}
4648
4649
4650\section{Dates and Times\label{dates-and-times}}
4651
4652The \ulink{\module{datetime}}{../lib/module-datetime.html} module
4653supplies classes for manipulating dates and times in both simple
4654and complex ways. While date and time arithmetic is supported, the
4655focus of the implementation is on efficient member extraction for
4656output formatting and manipulation. The module also supports objects
Raymond Hettinger784ab762004-12-04 10:50:51 +00004657that are timezone aware.
Raymond Hettinger8772d4e2003-12-03 22:23:46 +00004658
4659\begin{verbatim}
4660# dates are easily constructed and formatted
4661>>> from datetime import date
4662>>> now = date.today()
4663>>> now
4664datetime.date(2003, 12, 2)
Raymond Hettinger65a350d2004-12-02 07:29:43 +00004665>>> now.strftime("%m-%d-%y. %d %b %Y is a %A on the %d day of %B.")
4666'12-02-03. 02 Dec 2003 is a Tuesday on the 02 day of December.'
Raymond Hettinger8772d4e2003-12-03 22:23:46 +00004667
4668# dates support calendar arithmetic
4669>>> birthday = date(1964, 7, 31)
4670>>> age = now - birthday
4671>>> age.days
467214368
4673\end{verbatim}
4674
4675
4676\section{Data Compression\label{data-compression}}
4677
4678Common data archiving and compression formats are directly supported
Raymond Hettingerf62444a2003-12-05 07:53:50 +00004679by modules including:
4680\ulink{\module{zlib}}{../lib/module-zlib.html},
4681\ulink{\module{gzip}}{../lib/module-gzip.html},
4682\ulink{\module{bz2}}{../lib/module-bz2.html},
4683\ulink{\module{zipfile}}{../lib/module-zipfile.html}, and
4684\ulink{\module{tarfile}}{../lib/module-tarfile.html}.
Raymond Hettinger8772d4e2003-12-03 22:23:46 +00004685
4686\begin{verbatim}
4687>>> import zlib
4688>>> s = 'witch which has which witches wrist watch'
4689>>> len(s)
469041
4691>>> t = zlib.compress(s)
4692>>> len(t)
469337
4694>>> zlib.decompress(t)
4695'witch which has which witches wrist watch'
Raymond Hettinger65a350d2004-12-02 07:29:43 +00004696>>> zlib.crc32(s)
4697226805979
Raymond Hettinger8772d4e2003-12-03 22:23:46 +00004698\end{verbatim}
4699
4700
4701\section{Performance Measurement\label{performance-measurement}}
4702
4703Some Python users develop a deep interest in knowing the relative
4704performance between different approaches to the same problem.
4705Python provides a measurement tool that answers those questions
4706immediately.
4707
4708For example, it may be tempting to use the tuple packing and unpacking
4709feature instead of the traditional approach to swapping arguments.
4710The \ulink{\module{timeit}}{../lib/module-timeit.html} module
Raymond Hettinger707483f2004-03-26 07:56:23 +00004711quickly demonstrates a modest performance advantage:
Raymond Hettinger8772d4e2003-12-03 22:23:46 +00004712
4713\begin{verbatim}
4714>>> from timeit import Timer
Raymond Hettingerec3402f2003-12-05 06:39:54 +00004715>>> Timer('t=a; a=b; b=t', 'a=1; b=2').timeit()
Raymond Hettinger707483f2004-03-26 07:56:23 +000047160.57535828626024577
Raymond Hettingerec3402f2003-12-05 06:39:54 +00004717>>> Timer('a,b = b,a', 'a=1; b=2').timeit()
Raymond Hettinger707483f2004-03-26 07:56:23 +000047180.54962537085770791
Raymond Hettinger8772d4e2003-12-03 22:23:46 +00004719\end{verbatim}
4720
4721In contrast to \module{timeit}'s fine level of granularity, the
Johannes Gijsbers24f141a2004-09-25 00:55:38 +00004722\ulink{\module{profile}}{../lib/module-profile.html} and \module{pstats}
4723modules provide tools for identifying time critical sections in larger blocks
4724of code.
Raymond Hettinger8772d4e2003-12-03 22:23:46 +00004725
4726
4727\section{Quality Control\label{quality-control}}
4728
4729One approach for developing high quality software is to write tests for
4730each function as it is developed and to run those tests frequently during
4731the development process.
4732
4733The \ulink{\module{doctest}}{../lib/module-doctest.html} module provides
4734a tool for scanning a module and validating tests embedded in a program's
4735docstrings. Test construction is as simple as cutting-and-pasting a
4736typical call along with its results into the docstring. This improves
4737the documentation by providing the user with an example and it allows the
4738doctest module to make sure the code remains true to the documentation:
4739
4740\begin{verbatim}
4741def average(values):
4742 """Computes the arithmetic mean of a list of numbers.
4743
4744 >>> print average([20, 30, 70])
4745 40.0
4746 """
4747 return sum(values, 0.0) / len(values)
4748
4749import doctest
4750doctest.testmod() # automatically validate the embedded tests
4751\end{verbatim}
4752
4753The \ulink{\module{unittest}}{../lib/module-unittest.html} module is not
4754as effortless as the \module{doctest} module, but it allows a more
4755comprehensive set of tests to be maintained in a separate file:
4756
4757\begin{verbatim}
4758import unittest
4759
4760class TestStatisticalFunctions(unittest.TestCase):
4761
4762 def test_average(self):
4763 self.assertEqual(average([20, 30, 70]), 40.0)
4764 self.assertEqual(round(average([1, 5, 7]), 1), 4.3)
4765 self.assertRaises(ZeroDivisionError, average, [])
4766 self.assertRaises(TypeError, average, 20, 30, 70)
4767
4768unittest.main() # Calling from the command line invokes all tests
4769\end{verbatim}
4770
4771\section{Batteries Included\label{batteries-included}}
4772
Raymond Hettingerf62444a2003-12-05 07:53:50 +00004773Python has a ``batteries included'' philosophy. This is best seen
4774through the sophisticated and robust capabilities of its larger
Raymond Hettinger8772d4e2003-12-03 22:23:46 +00004775packages. For example:
4776
Johannes Gijsbers27ebcae2004-09-24 23:25:25 +00004777\begin{itemize}
4778\item The \ulink{\module{xmlrpclib}}{../lib/module-xmlrpclib.html} and
4779 \ulink{\module{SimpleXMLRPCServer}}{../lib/module-SimpleXMLRPCServer.html}
4780 modules make implementing remote procedure calls into an almost trivial task.
Raymond Hettinger784ab762004-12-04 10:50:51 +00004781 Despite the modules names, no direct knowledge or handling of XML is needed.
Johannes Gijsbers27ebcae2004-09-24 23:25:25 +00004782\item The \ulink{\module{email}}{../lib/module-email.html} package is a library
4783 for managing email messages, including MIME and other RFC 2822-based message
Fred Drake2f8c6582005-01-12 19:11:45 +00004784 documents. Unlike \module{smtplib} and \module{poplib} which actually send
Johannes Gijsbers24f141a2004-09-25 00:55:38 +00004785 and receive messages, the email package has a complete toolset for building
4786 or decoding complex message structures (including attachments) and for
Johannes Gijsbers27ebcae2004-09-24 23:25:25 +00004787 implementing internet encoding and header protocols.
4788\item The \ulink{\module{xml.dom}}{../lib/module-xml.dom.html} and
4789 \ulink{\module{xml.sax}}{../lib/module-xml.sax.html} packages provide robust
4790 support for parsing this popular data interchange format. Likewise, the
4791 \ulink{\module{csv}}{../lib/module-csv.html} module supports direct reads and
4792 writes in a common database format. Together, these modules and packages
4793 greatly simplify data interchange between python applications and other
4794 tools.
4795\item Internationalization is supported by a number of modules including
4796 \ulink{\module{gettext}}{../lib/module-gettext.html},
4797 \ulink{\module{locale}}{../lib/module-locale.html}, and the
4798 \ulink{\module{codecs}}{../lib/module-codecs.html} package.
4799\end{itemize}
Raymond Hettinger8772d4e2003-12-03 22:23:46 +00004800
Raymond Hettinger846865b2004-05-26 13:52:59 +00004801\chapter{Brief Tour of the Standard Library -- Part II\label{briefTourTwo}}
4802
Raymond Hettinger4ccf3362004-05-26 13:57:54 +00004803This second tour covers more advanced modules that support professional
4804programming needs. These modules rarely occur in small scripts.
4805
Raymond Hettinger846865b2004-05-26 13:52:59 +00004806
4807\section{Output Formatting\label{output-formatting}}
4808
Raymond Hettinger784ab762004-12-04 10:50:51 +00004809The \ulink{\module{repr}}{../lib/module-repr.html} module provides a
4810version of \function{repr()} customized for abbreviated displays of large
4811or deeply nested containers:
Raymond Hettinger846865b2004-05-26 13:52:59 +00004812
4813\begin{verbatim}
4814 >>> import repr
4815 >>> repr.repr(set('supercalifragilisticexpialidocious'))
4816 "set(['a', 'c', 'd', 'e', 'f', 'g', ...])"
4817\end{verbatim}
4818
4819The \ulink{\module{pprint}}{../lib/module-pprint.html} module offers
4820more sophisticated control over printing both built-in and user defined
4821objects in a way that is readable by the interpreter. When the result
4822is longer than one line, the ``pretty printer'' adds line breaks and
4823indentation to more clearly reveal data structure:
4824
4825\begin{verbatim}
4826 >>> import pprint
4827 >>> t = [[[['black', 'cyan'], 'white', ['green', 'red']], [['magenta',
4828 ... 'yellow'], 'blue']]]
4829 ...
4830 >>> pprint.pprint(t, width=30)
4831 [[[['black', 'cyan'],
4832 'white',
4833 ['green', 'red']],
4834 [['magenta', 'yellow'],
4835 'blue']]]
4836\end{verbatim}
4837
4838The \ulink{\module{textwrap}}{../lib/module-textwrap.html} module
4839formats paragraphs of text to fit a given screen width:
4840
4841\begin{verbatim}
4842 >>> import textwrap
4843 >>> doc = """The wrap() method is just like fill() except that it returns
4844 ... a list of strings instead of one big string with newlines to separate
4845 ... the wrapped lines."""
4846 ...
4847 >>> print textwrap.fill(doc, width=40)
4848 The wrap() method is just like fill()
4849 except that it returns a list of strings
4850 instead of one big string with newlines
4851 to separate the wrapped lines.
4852\end{verbatim}
4853
4854The \ulink{\module{locale}}{../lib/module-locale.html} module accesses
4855a database of culture specific data formats. The grouping attribute
4856of locale's format function provides a direct way of formatting numbers
4857with group separators:
4858
4859\begin{verbatim}
4860 >>> import locale
4861 >>> locale.setlocale(locale.LC_ALL, 'English_United States.1252')
4862 'English_United States.1252'
4863 >>> conv = locale.localeconv() # get a mapping of conventions
4864 >>> x = 1234567.8
4865 >>> locale.format("%d", x, grouping=True)
4866 '1,234,567'
4867 >>> locale.format("%s%.*f", (conv['currency_symbol'],
4868 ... conv['int_frac_digits'], x), grouping=True)
4869 '$1,234,567.80'
4870\end{verbatim}
4871
4872
Raymond Hettinger29c6a792004-09-14 05:21:42 +00004873\section{Templating\label{templating}}
4874
4875The \ulink{\module{string}}{../lib/module-string.html} module includes a
4876versatile \class{Template} class with a simplified syntax suitable for
4877editing by end-users. This allows users to customize their applications
Raymond Hettinger879ddf32004-09-14 06:32:20 +00004878without having to alter the application.
Raymond Hettinger29c6a792004-09-14 05:21:42 +00004879
Raymond Hettinger879ddf32004-09-14 06:32:20 +00004880The format uses placeholder names formed by \samp{\$} with valid Python
Raymond Hettinger29c6a792004-09-14 05:21:42 +00004881identifiers (alphanumeric characters and underscores). Surrounding the
4882placeholder with braces allows it to be followed by more alphanumeric letters
Raymond Hettinger879ddf32004-09-14 06:32:20 +00004883with no intervening spaces. Writing \samp{\$\$} creates a single escaped
Raymond Hettinger29c6a792004-09-14 05:21:42 +00004884\samp{\$}:
4885
4886\begin{verbatim}
4887>>> from string import Template
4888>>> t = Template('${village}folk send $$10 to $cause.')
Raymond Hettinger879ddf32004-09-14 06:32:20 +00004889>>> t.substitute(village='Nottingham', cause='the ditch fund')
4890'Nottinghamfolk send $10 to the ditch fund.'
Raymond Hettinger29c6a792004-09-14 05:21:42 +00004891\end{verbatim}
4892
4893The \method{substitute} method raises a \exception{KeyError} when a
Raymond Hettinger879ddf32004-09-14 06:32:20 +00004894placeholder is not supplied in a dictionary or a keyword argument. For
4895mail-merge style applications, user supplied data may be incomplete and the
4896\method{safe_substitute} method may be more appropriate --- it will leave
4897placeholders unchanged if data is missing:
Raymond Hettinger29c6a792004-09-14 05:21:42 +00004898
4899\begin{verbatim}
4900>>> t = Template('Return the $item to $owner.')
4901>>> d = dict(item='unladen swallow')
4902>>> t.substitute(d)
4903Traceback (most recent call last):
4904 . . .
4905KeyError: 'owner'
4906>>> t.safe_substitute(d)
4907'Return the unladen swallow to $owner.'
4908\end{verbatim}
4909
4910Template subclasses can specify a custom delimiter. For example, a batch
4911renaming utility for a photo browser may elect to use percent signs for
Raymond Hettinger879ddf32004-09-14 06:32:20 +00004912placeholders such as the current date, image sequence number, or file format:
Raymond Hettinger29c6a792004-09-14 05:21:42 +00004913
4914\begin{verbatim}
4915>>> import time, os.path
4916>>> photofiles = ['img_1074.jpg', 'img_1076.jpg', 'img_1077.jpg']
4917>>> class BatchRename(Template):
4918... delimiter = '%'
4919>>> fmt = raw_input('Enter rename style (%d-date %n-seqnum %f-format): ')
4920Enter rename style (%d-date %n-seqnum %f-format): Ashley_%n%f
4921
Raymond Hettinger879ddf32004-09-14 06:32:20 +00004922>>> t = BatchRename(fmt)
Raymond Hettinger29c6a792004-09-14 05:21:42 +00004923>>> date = time.strftime('%d%b%y')
4924>>> for i, filename in enumerate(photofiles):
4925... base, ext = os.path.splitext(filename)
Raymond Hettinger879ddf32004-09-14 06:32:20 +00004926... newname = t.substitute(d=date, n=i, f=ext)
Raymond Hettinger29c6a792004-09-14 05:21:42 +00004927... print '%s --> %s' % (filename, newname)
4928
4929img_1074.jpg --> Ashley_0.jpg
4930img_1076.jpg --> Ashley_1.jpg
4931img_1077.jpg --> Ashley_2.jpg
4932\end{verbatim}
4933
Raymond Hettinger879ddf32004-09-14 06:32:20 +00004934Another application for templating is separating program logic from the
4935details of multiple output formats. The makes it possible to substitute
4936custom templates for XML files, plain text reports, and HMTL web reports.
Raymond Hettinger29c6a792004-09-14 05:21:42 +00004937
4938
Raymond Hettinger846865b2004-05-26 13:52:59 +00004939\section{Working with Binary Data Record Layouts\label{binary-formats}}
4940
4941The \ulink{\module{struct}}{../lib/module-struct.html} module provides
4942\function{pack()} and \function{unpack()} functions for working with
4943variable length binary record formats. The following example shows how
4944to loop through header information in a ZIP file (with pack codes
4945\code{"H"} and \code{"L"} representing two and four byte unsigned
4946numbers respectively):
4947
4948\begin{verbatim}
4949 import struct
4950
4951 data = open('myfile.zip', 'rb').read()
4952 start = 0
4953 for i in range(3): # show the first 3 file headers
4954 start += 14
4955 fields = struct.unpack('LLLHH', data[start:start+16])
4956 crc32, comp_size, uncomp_size, filenamesize, extra_size = fields
4957
4958 start += 16
4959 filename = data[start:start+filenamesize]
4960 start += filenamesize
4961 extra = data[start:start+extra_size]
4962 print filename, hex(crc32), comp_size, uncomp_size
4963
4964 start += extra_size + comp_size # skip to the next header
4965\end{verbatim}
4966
4967
4968\section{Multi-threading\label{multi-threading}}
4969
4970Threading is a technique for decoupling tasks which are not sequentially
Raymond Hettingerd3fe2392004-08-16 05:11:04 +00004971dependent. Threads can be used to improve the responsiveness of
4972applications that accept user input while other tasks run in the
4973background. A related use case is running I/O in parallel with
4974computations in another thread.
Raymond Hettinger846865b2004-05-26 13:52:59 +00004975
Raymond Hettingerd3fe2392004-08-16 05:11:04 +00004976The following code shows how the high level
Raymond Hettinger846865b2004-05-26 13:52:59 +00004977\ulink{\module{threading}}{../lib/module-threading.html} module can run
4978tasks in background while the main program continues to run:
4979
4980\begin{verbatim}
4981 import threading, zipfile
4982
4983 class AsyncZip(threading.Thread):
4984 def __init__(self, infile, outfile):
4985 threading.Thread.__init__(self)
4986 self.infile = infile
4987 self.outfile = outfile
4988 def run(self):
4989 f = zipfile.ZipFile(self.outfile, 'w', zipfile.ZIP_DEFLATED)
4990 f.write(self.infile)
4991 f.close()
4992 print 'Finished background zip of: ', self.infile
4993
Raymond Hettingerd3fe2392004-08-16 05:11:04 +00004994 background = AsyncZip('mydata.txt', 'myarchive.zip')
4995 background.start()
4996 print 'The main program continues to run in foreground.'
4997
4998 background.join() # Wait for the background task to finish
4999 print 'Main program waited until background was done.'
Raymond Hettinger846865b2004-05-26 13:52:59 +00005000\end{verbatim}
5001
Raymond Hettinger68a37ac2004-07-01 12:56:54 +00005002The principal challenge of multi-threaded applications is coordinating
Raymond Hettinger846865b2004-05-26 13:52:59 +00005003threads that share data or other resources. To that end, the threading
5004module provides a number of synchronization primitives including locks,
5005events, condition variables, and semaphores.
5006
5007While those tools are powerful, minor design errors can result in
Raymond Hettingerd3fe2392004-08-16 05:11:04 +00005008problems that are difficult to reproduce. So, the preferred approach
5009to task coordination is to concentrate all access to a resource
Raymond Hettinger846865b2004-05-26 13:52:59 +00005010in a single thread and then using the
5011\ulink{\module{Queue}}{../lib/module-Queue.html} module to feed that
Raymond Hettingerd3fe2392004-08-16 05:11:04 +00005012thread with requests from other threads. Applications using
Raymond Hettinger846865b2004-05-26 13:52:59 +00005013\class{Queue} objects for inter-thread communication and coordination
Raymond Hettingerd3fe2392004-08-16 05:11:04 +00005014are easier to design, more readable, and more reliable.
Raymond Hettinger846865b2004-05-26 13:52:59 +00005015
5016
5017\section{Logging\label{logging}}
5018
5019The \ulink{\module{logging}}{../lib/module-logging.html} module offers
5020a full featured and flexible logging system. At its simplest, log
5021messages are sent to a file or to \code{sys.stderr}:
5022
5023\begin{verbatim}
5024 import logging
5025 logging.debug('Debugging information')
5026 logging.info('Informational message')
5027 logging.warning('Warning:config file %s not found', 'server.conf')
5028 logging.error('Error occurred')
5029 logging.critical('Critical error -- shutting down')
5030\end{verbatim}
5031
5032This produces the following output:
5033
5034\begin{verbatim}
5035 WARNING:root:Warning:config file server.conf not found
5036 ERROR:root:Error occurred
5037 CRITICAL:root:Critical error -- shutting down
5038\end{verbatim}
5039
5040By default, informational and debugging messages are suppressed and the
5041output is sent to standard error. Other output options include routing
5042messages through email, datagrams, sockets, or to an HTTP Server. New
Fred Drake1b896562004-07-01 14:26:31 +00005043filters can select different routing based on message priority:
5044\constant{DEBUG}, \constant{INFO}, \constant{WARNING}, \constant{ERROR},
5045and \constant{CRITICAL}.
Raymond Hettinger846865b2004-05-26 13:52:59 +00005046
5047The logging system can be configured directly from Python or can be
5048loaded from a user editable configuration file for customized logging
5049without altering the application.
5050
5051
5052\section{Weak References\label{weak-references}}
5053
5054Python does automatic memory management (reference counting for most
5055objects and garbage collection to eliminate cycles). The memory is
5056freed shortly after the last reference to it has been eliminated.
5057
5058This approach works fine for most applications but occasionally there
5059is a need to track objects only as long as they are being used by
5060something else. Unfortunately, just tracking them creates a reference
5061that makes them permanent. The
5062\ulink{\module{weakref}}{../lib/module-weakref.html} module provides
5063tools for tracking objects without creating a reference. When the
5064object is no longer needed, it is automatically removed from a weakref
5065table and a callback is triggered for weakref objects. Typical
5066applications include caching objects that are expensive to create:
5067
5068\begin{verbatim}
5069 >>> import weakref, gc
5070 >>> class A:
5071 ... def __init__(self, value):
5072 ... self.value = value
5073 ... def __repr__(self):
5074 ... return str(self.value)
5075 ...
Raymond Hettinger68a37ac2004-07-01 12:56:54 +00005076 >>> a = A(10) # create a reference
Raymond Hettinger846865b2004-05-26 13:52:59 +00005077 >>> d = weakref.WeakValueDictionary()
5078 >>> d['primary'] = a # does not create a reference
Raymond Hettinger68a37ac2004-07-01 12:56:54 +00005079 >>> d['primary'] # fetch the object if it is still alive
Raymond Hettinger846865b2004-05-26 13:52:59 +00005080 10
Raymond Hettinger68a37ac2004-07-01 12:56:54 +00005081 >>> del a # remove the one reference
Raymond Hettinger846865b2004-05-26 13:52:59 +00005082 >>> gc.collect() # run garbage collection right away
5083 0
5084 >>> d['primary'] # entry was automatically removed
5085 Traceback (most recent call last):
5086 File "<pyshell#108>", line 1, in -toplevel-
5087 d['primary'] # entry was automatically removed
5088 File "C:/PY24/lib/weakref.py", line 46, in __getitem__
5089 o = self.data[key]()
5090 KeyError: 'primary'
5091\end{verbatim}
5092
5093\section{Tools for Working with Lists\label{list-tools}}
5094
5095Many data structure needs can be met with the built-in list type.
5096However, sometimes there is a need for alternative implementations
5097with different performance trade-offs.
5098
5099The \ulink{\module{array}}{../lib/module-array.html} module provides an
5100\class{array()} object that is like a list that stores only homogenous
Raymond Hettinger784ab762004-12-04 10:50:51 +00005101data and stores it more compactly. The following example shows an array
Raymond Hettinger846865b2004-05-26 13:52:59 +00005102of numbers stored as two byte unsigned binary numbers (typecode
5103\code{"H"}) rather than the usual 16 bytes per entry for regular lists
5104of python int objects:
5105
5106\begin{verbatim}
5107 >>> from array import array
5108 >>> a = array('H', [4000, 10, 700, 22222])
5109 >>> sum(a)
5110 26932
5111 >>> a[1:3]
5112 array('H', [10, 700])
5113\end{verbatim}
5114
5115The \ulink{\module{collections}}{../lib/module-collections.html} module
5116provides a \class{deque()} object that is like a list with faster
5117appends and pops from the left side but slower lookups in the middle.
5118These objects are well suited for implementing queues and breadth first
5119tree searches:
5120
5121\begin{verbatim}
5122 >>> from collections import deque
5123 >>> d = deque(["task1", "task2", "task3"])
5124 >>> d.append("task4")
5125 >>> print "Handling", d.popleft()
5126 Handling task1
5127
5128 unsearched = deque([starting_node])
5129 def breadth_first_search(unsearched):
5130 node = unsearched.popleft()
5131 for m in gen_moves(node):
5132 if is_goal(m):
5133 return m
5134 unsearched.append(m)
5135\end{verbatim}
5136
5137In addition to alternative list implementations, the library also offers
5138other tools such as the \ulink{\module{bisect}}{../lib/module-bisect.html}
5139module with functions for manipulating sorted lists:
5140
5141\begin{verbatim}
5142 >>> import bisect
5143 >>> scores = [(100, 'perl'), (200, 'tcl'), (400, 'lua'), (500, 'python')]
5144 >>> bisect.insort(scores, (300, 'ruby'))
5145 >>> scores
5146 [(100, 'perl'), (200, 'tcl'), (300, 'ruby'), (400, 'lua'), (500, 'python')]
5147\end{verbatim}
5148
5149The \ulink{\module{heapq}}{../lib/module-heapq.html} module provides
5150functions for implementing heaps based on regular lists. The lowest
5151valued entry is always kept at position zero. This is useful for
5152applications which repeatedly access the smallest element but do not
5153want to run a full list sort:
5154
5155\begin{verbatim}
5156 >>> from heapq import heapify, heappop, heappush
5157 >>> data = [1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 2, 4, 6, 8, 0]
5158 >>> heapify(data) # rearrange the list into heap order
5159 >>> heappush(data, -5) # add a new entry
5160 >>> [heappop(data) for i in range(3)] # fetch the three smallest entries
5161 [-5, 0, 1]
5162\end{verbatim}
5163
5164
Raymond Hettinger081483c2004-07-08 09:33:00 +00005165\section{Decimal Floating Point Arithmetic\label{decimal-fp}}
Raymond Hettinger68a37ac2004-07-01 12:56:54 +00005166
Raymond Hettinger94996582004-07-09 06:00:32 +00005167The \ulink{\module{decimal}}{../lib/module-decimal.html} module offers a
5168\class{Decimal} datatype for decimal floating point arithmetic. Compared to
5169the built-in \class{float} implementation of binary floating point, the new
5170class is especially helpful for financial applications and other uses which
5171require exact decimal representation, control over precision, control over
5172rounding to meet legal or regulatory requirements, tracking of significant
5173decimal places, or for applications where the user expects the results to
Raymond Hettinger44dc13b2004-07-11 12:49:47 +00005174match calculations done by hand.
Raymond Hettinger68a37ac2004-07-01 12:56:54 +00005175
Raymond Hettinger081483c2004-07-08 09:33:00 +00005176For example, calculating a 5\%{} tax on a 70 cent phone charge gives
5177different results in decimal floating point and binary floating point.
5178The difference becomes significant if the results are rounded to the
5179nearest cent:
Raymond Hettinger68a37ac2004-07-01 12:56:54 +00005180
5181\begin{verbatim}
5182>>> from decimal import *
5183>>> Decimal('0.70') * Decimal('1.05')
5184Decimal("0.7350")
5185>>> .70 * 1.05
51860.73499999999999999
5187\end{verbatim}
5188
Raymond Hettinger44dc13b2004-07-11 12:49:47 +00005189The \class{Decimal} result keeps a trailing zero, automatically inferring four
5190place significance from the two digit multiplicands. Decimal reproduces
5191mathematics as done by hand and avoids issues that can arise when binary
5192floating point cannot exactly represent decimal quantities.
Raymond Hettinger68a37ac2004-07-01 12:56:54 +00005193
5194Exact representation enables the \class{Decimal} class to perform
5195modulo calculations and equality tests that are unsuitable for binary
5196floating point:
5197
5198\begin{verbatim}
5199>>> Decimal('1.00') % Decimal('.10')
5200Decimal("0.00")
5201>>> 1.00 % 0.10
52020.09999999999999995
5203
5204>>> sum([Decimal('0.1')]*10) == Decimal('1.0')
5205True
5206>>> sum([0.1]*10) == 1.0
5207False
5208\end{verbatim}
5209
Raymond Hettinger44dc13b2004-07-11 12:49:47 +00005210The \module{decimal} module provides arithmetic with as much precision as
5211needed:
Raymond Hettinger68a37ac2004-07-01 12:56:54 +00005212
5213\begin{verbatim}
5214>>> getcontext().prec = 36
5215>>> Decimal(1) / Decimal(7)
5216Decimal("0.142857142857142857142857142857142857")
5217\end{verbatim}
5218
5219
5220
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00005221\chapter{What Now? \label{whatNow}}
Guido van Rossum194e57c1995-02-15 15:51:38 +00005222
Fred Drake979d0412001-04-03 17:41:56 +00005223Reading this tutorial has probably reinforced your interest in using
Raymond Hettinger65a350d2004-12-02 07:29:43 +00005224Python --- you should be eager to apply Python to solving your
Fred Drake979d0412001-04-03 17:41:56 +00005225real-world problems. Now what should you do?
Guido van Rossum194e57c1995-02-15 15:51:38 +00005226
Fred Drake979d0412001-04-03 17:41:56 +00005227You should read, or at least page through, the
5228\citetitle[../lib/lib.html]{Python Library Reference},
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00005229which gives complete (though terse) reference material about types,
5230functions, and modules that can save you a lot of time when writing
5231Python programs. The standard Python distribution includes a
Fred Drakeee84d591999-03-10 17:25:30 +00005232\emph{lot} of code in both C and Python; there are modules to read
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00005233\UNIX{} mailboxes, retrieve documents via HTTP, generate random
5234numbers, parse command-line options, write CGI programs, compress
5235data, and a lot more; skimming through the Library Reference will give
5236you an idea of what's available.
Guido van Rossum194e57c1995-02-15 15:51:38 +00005237
Fred Drake518e55c2000-07-27 20:55:12 +00005238The major Python Web site is \url{http://www.python.org/}; it contains
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00005239code, documentation, and pointers to Python-related pages around the
Fred Drake17f690f2001-07-14 02:14:42 +00005240Web. This Web site is mirrored in various places around the
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00005241world, such as Europe, Japan, and Australia; a mirror may be faster
5242than the main site, depending on your geographical location. A more
Fred Drakec0fcbc11999-04-29 02:30:04 +00005243informal site is \url{http://starship.python.net/}, which contains a
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00005244bunch of Python-related personal home pages; many people have
Raymond Hettinger8ee00602003-07-01 06:19:34 +00005245downloadable software there. Many more user-created Python modules
Fred Drake626d4722003-09-11 04:28:13 +00005246can be found in the \ulink{Python Package
5247Index}{http://www.python.org/pypi} (PyPI).
Guido van Rossum194e57c1995-02-15 15:51:38 +00005248
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00005249For Python-related questions and problem reports, you can post to the
Fred Drake391564f1998-04-01 23:11:56 +00005250newsgroup \newsgroup{comp.lang.python}, or send them to the mailing
Fred Drake518e55c2000-07-27 20:55:12 +00005251list at \email{python-list@python.org}. The newsgroup and mailing list
Fred Drake391564f1998-04-01 23:11:56 +00005252are gatewayed, so messages posted to one will automatically be
Raymond Hettinger8ee00602003-07-01 06:19:34 +00005253forwarded to the other. There are around 120 postings a day (with peaks
5254up to several hundred),
Fred Drake391564f1998-04-01 23:11:56 +00005255% Postings figure based on average of last six months activity as
Fred Drake518e55c2000-07-27 20:55:12 +00005256% reported by www.egroups.com; Jan. 2000 - June 2000: 21272 msgs / 182
5257% days = 116.9 msgs / day and steadily increasing.
Fred Drake391564f1998-04-01 23:11:56 +00005258asking (and answering) questions, suggesting new features, and
5259announcing new modules. Before posting, be sure to check the list of
Fred Drake626d4722003-09-11 04:28:13 +00005260\ulink{Frequently Asked Questions}{http://www.python.org/doc/faq/} (also called the FAQ), or look for it in the
Fred Drake518e55c2000-07-27 20:55:12 +00005261\file{Misc/} directory of the Python source distribution. Mailing
5262list archives are available at \url{http://www.python.org/pipermail/}.
5263The FAQ answers many of the questions that come up again and again,
5264and may already contain the solution for your problem.
Guido van Rossum194e57c1995-02-15 15:51:38 +00005265
Guido van Rossum194e57c1995-02-15 15:51:38 +00005266
Fred Drakea594baf1998-04-03 05:16:31 +00005267\appendix
Guido van Rossum194e57c1995-02-15 15:51:38 +00005268
Fred Draked0c71372002-10-28 19:28:22 +00005269\chapter{Interactive Input Editing and History Substitution\label{interacting}}
Guido van Rossum194e57c1995-02-15 15:51:38 +00005270
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00005271Some versions of the Python interpreter support editing of the current
5272input line and history substitution, similar to facilities found in
5273the Korn shell and the GNU Bash shell. This is implemented using the
Fred Drakeeee08cd1997-12-04 15:43:15 +00005274\emph{GNU Readline} library, which supports Emacs-style and vi-style
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00005275editing. This library has its own documentation which I won't
Fred Drakecc09e8d1998-12-28 21:21:36 +00005276duplicate here; however, the basics are easily explained. The
5277interactive editing and history described here are optionally
5278available in the \UNIX{} and CygWin versions of the interpreter.
5279
5280This chapter does \emph{not} document the editing facilities of Mark
5281Hammond's PythonWin package or the Tk-based environment, IDLE,
5282distributed with Python. The command line history recall which
5283operates within DOS boxes on NT and some other DOS and Windows flavors
5284is yet another beast.
Guido van Rossum194e57c1995-02-15 15:51:38 +00005285
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00005286\section{Line Editing \label{lineEditing}}
Guido van Rossum194e57c1995-02-15 15:51:38 +00005287
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00005288If supported, input line editing is active whenever the interpreter
5289prints a primary or secondary prompt. The current line can be edited
5290using the conventional Emacs control characters. The most important
Fred Drake5443c492000-07-08 05:18:54 +00005291of these are: \kbd{C-A} (Control-A) moves the cursor to the beginning
5292of the line, \kbd{C-E} to the end, \kbd{C-B} moves it one position to
5293the left, \kbd{C-F} to the right. Backspace erases the character to
5294the left of the cursor, \kbd{C-D} the character to its right.
5295\kbd{C-K} kills (erases) the rest of the line to the right of the
5296cursor, \kbd{C-Y} yanks back the last killed string.
5297\kbd{C-underscore} undoes the last change you made; it can be repeated
5298for cumulative effect.
Guido van Rossum194e57c1995-02-15 15:51:38 +00005299
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00005300\section{History Substitution \label{history}}
Guido van Rossum194e57c1995-02-15 15:51:38 +00005301
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00005302History substitution works as follows. All non-empty input lines
5303issued are saved in a history buffer, and when a new prompt is given
Fred Drake5443c492000-07-08 05:18:54 +00005304you are positioned on a new line at the bottom of this buffer.
5305\kbd{C-P} moves one line up (back) in the history buffer,
5306\kbd{C-N} moves one down. Any line in the history buffer can be
5307edited; an asterisk appears in front of the prompt to mark a line as
5308modified. Pressing the \kbd{Return} key passes the current line to
5309the interpreter. \kbd{C-R} starts an incremental reverse search;
5310\kbd{C-S} starts a forward search.
Guido van Rossum194e57c1995-02-15 15:51:38 +00005311
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00005312\section{Key Bindings \label{keyBindings}}
Guido van Rossum194e57c1995-02-15 15:51:38 +00005313
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00005314The key bindings and some other parameters of the Readline library can
5315be customized by placing commands in an initialization file called
Fred Drake5443c492000-07-08 05:18:54 +00005316\file{\~{}/.inputrc}. Key bindings have the form
Guido van Rossum194e57c1995-02-15 15:51:38 +00005317
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00005318\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00005319key-name: function-name
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00005320\end{verbatim}
5321
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00005322or
Guido van Rossum194e57c1995-02-15 15:51:38 +00005323
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00005324\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00005325"string": function-name
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00005326\end{verbatim}
5327
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00005328and options can be set with
Guido van Rossum194e57c1995-02-15 15:51:38 +00005329
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00005330\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00005331set option-name value
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00005332\end{verbatim}
5333
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00005334For example:
Guido van Rossum194e57c1995-02-15 15:51:38 +00005335
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00005336\begin{verbatim}
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00005337# I prefer vi-style editing:
5338set editing-mode vi
Fred Drake5443c492000-07-08 05:18:54 +00005339
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00005340# Edit using a single line:
5341set horizontal-scroll-mode On
Fred Drake5443c492000-07-08 05:18:54 +00005342
Guido van Rossum02455691997-07-17 16:21:52 +00005343# Rebind some keys:
5344Meta-h: backward-kill-word
5345"\C-u": universal-argument
5346"\C-x\C-r": re-read-init-file
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00005347\end{verbatim}
5348
Fred Drake5443c492000-07-08 05:18:54 +00005349Note that the default binding for \kbd{Tab} in Python is to insert a
5350\kbd{Tab} character instead of Readline's default filename completion
5351function. If you insist, you can override this by putting
Guido van Rossum194e57c1995-02-15 15:51:38 +00005352
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00005353\begin{verbatim}
Fred Drake5443c492000-07-08 05:18:54 +00005354Tab: complete
Fred Drake8842e861998-02-13 07:16:30 +00005355\end{verbatim}
5356
Fred Drake5443c492000-07-08 05:18:54 +00005357in your \file{\~{}/.inputrc}. (Of course, this makes it harder to
Fred Drakef5c87c42003-09-11 06:06:26 +00005358type indented continuation lines if you're accustomed to using
5359\kbd{Tab} for that purpose.)
Guido van Rossum194e57c1995-02-15 15:51:38 +00005360
Fred Drake72389881998-04-13 01:31:10 +00005361Automatic completion of variable and module names is optionally
5362available. To enable it in the interpreter's interactive mode, add
Fred Drake5443c492000-07-08 05:18:54 +00005363the following to your startup file:\footnote{
5364 Python will execute the contents of a file identified by the
5365 \envvar{PYTHONSTARTUP} environment variable when you start an
5366 interactive interpreter.}
Fred Drake20082d92000-04-03 04:26:58 +00005367\refstmodindex{rlcompleter}\refbimodindex{readline}
Fred Drake72389881998-04-13 01:31:10 +00005368
5369\begin{verbatim}
5370import rlcompleter, readline
5371readline.parse_and_bind('tab: complete')
5372\end{verbatim}
5373
Fred Drake01815522001-07-18 19:21:12 +00005374This binds the \kbd{Tab} key to the completion function, so hitting
5375the \kbd{Tab} key twice suggests completions; it looks at Python
5376statement names, the current local variables, and the available module
5377names. For dotted expressions such as \code{string.a}, it will
Raymond Hettingerc7a26562003-08-12 00:01:17 +00005378evaluate the expression up to the final \character{.} and then
Fred Drake01815522001-07-18 19:21:12 +00005379suggest completions from the attributes of the resulting object. Note
5380that this may execute application-defined code if an object with a
Fred Drake72389881998-04-13 01:31:10 +00005381\method{__getattr__()} method is part of the expression.
5382
Fred Drake01815522001-07-18 19:21:12 +00005383A more capable startup file might look like this example. Note that
5384this deletes the names it creates once they are no longer needed; this
5385is done since the startup file is executed in the same namespace as
5386the interactive commands, and removing the names avoids creating side
Raymond Hettinger65a350d2004-12-02 07:29:43 +00005387effects in the interactive environment. You may find it convenient
Fred Drake626d4722003-09-11 04:28:13 +00005388to keep some of the imported modules, such as
5389\ulink{\module{os}}{../lib/module-os.html}, which turn
Fred Drake01815522001-07-18 19:21:12 +00005390out to be needed in most sessions with the interpreter.
5391
5392\begin{verbatim}
5393# Add auto-completion and a stored history file of commands to your Python
5394# interactive interpreter. Requires Python 2.0+, readline. Autocomplete is
5395# bound to the Esc key by default (you can change it - see readline docs).
5396#
5397# Store the file in ~/.pystartup, and set an environment variable to point
Raymond Hettingerfa6cce12003-07-11 18:58:11 +00005398# to it: "export PYTHONSTARTUP=/max/home/itamar/.pystartup" in bash.
Fred Drake01815522001-07-18 19:21:12 +00005399#
5400# Note that PYTHONSTARTUP does *not* expand "~", so you have to put in the
5401# full path to your home directory.
5402
5403import atexit
5404import os
5405import readline
5406import rlcompleter
5407
5408historyPath = os.path.expanduser("~/.pyhistory")
5409
5410def save_history(historyPath=historyPath):
5411 import readline
5412 readline.write_history_file(historyPath)
5413
5414if os.path.exists(historyPath):
5415 readline.read_history_file(historyPath)
5416
5417atexit.register(save_history)
5418del os, atexit, readline, rlcompleter, save_history, historyPath
5419\end{verbatim}
5420
Fred Drake72389881998-04-13 01:31:10 +00005421
Fred Drakeb7833d31998-09-11 16:21:55 +00005422\section{Commentary \label{commentary}}
Guido van Rossum194e57c1995-02-15 15:51:38 +00005423
Fred Drake5443c492000-07-08 05:18:54 +00005424This facility is an enormous step forward compared to earlier versions
5425of the interpreter; however, some wishes are left: It would be nice if
5426the proper indentation were suggested on continuation lines (the
5427parser knows if an indent token is required next). The completion
5428mechanism might use the interpreter's symbol table. A command to
5429check (or even suggest) matching parentheses, quotes, etc., would also
5430be useful.
Guido van Rossum194e57c1995-02-15 15:51:38 +00005431
Guido van Rossum97662c81996-08-23 15:35:47 +00005432
Fred Draked0c71372002-10-28 19:28:22 +00005433\chapter{Floating Point Arithmetic: Issues and Limitations\label{fp-issues}}
Fred Drake42713102003-12-30 16:15:35 +00005434\sectionauthor{Tim Peters}{tim_one@users.sourceforge.net}
Fred Drake417d6672001-06-08 16:24:58 +00005435
5436Floating-point numbers are represented in computer hardware as
5437base 2 (binary) fractions. For example, the decimal fraction
5438
5439\begin{verbatim}
54400.125
5441\end{verbatim}
5442
5443has value 1/10 + 2/100 + 5/1000, and in the same way the binary fraction
5444
5445\begin{verbatim}
54460.001
5447\end{verbatim}
5448
5449has value 0/2 + 0/4 + 1/8. These two fractions have identical values,
5450the only real difference being that the first is written in base 10
5451fractional notation, and the second in base 2.
5452
5453Unfortunately, most decimal fractions cannot be represented exactly as
5454binary fractions. A consequence is that, in general, the decimal
5455floating-point numbers you enter are only approximated by the binary
5456floating-point numbers actually stored in the machine.
5457
5458The problem is easier to understand at first in base 10. Consider the
5459fraction 1/3. You can approximate that as a base 10 fraction:
5460
5461\begin{verbatim}
54620.3
5463\end{verbatim}
5464
5465or, better,
5466
5467\begin{verbatim}
54680.33
5469\end{verbatim}
5470
5471or, better,
5472
5473\begin{verbatim}
54740.333
5475\end{verbatim}
5476
5477and so on. No matter how many digits you're willing to write down, the
5478result will never be exactly 1/3, but will be an increasingly better
Raymond Hettinger65a350d2004-12-02 07:29:43 +00005479approximation of 1/3.
Fred Drake417d6672001-06-08 16:24:58 +00005480
5481In the same way, no matter how many base 2 digits you're willing to
5482use, the decimal value 0.1 cannot be represented exactly as a base 2
5483fraction. In base 2, 1/10 is the infinitely repeating fraction
5484
5485\begin{verbatim}
54860.0001100110011001100110011001100110011001100110011...
5487\end{verbatim}
5488
5489Stop at any finite number of bits, and you get an approximation. This
5490is why you see things like:
5491
5492\begin{verbatim}
5493>>> 0.1
54940.10000000000000001
5495\end{verbatim}
5496
5497On most machines today, that is what you'll see if you enter 0.1 at
5498a Python prompt. You may not, though, because the number of bits
5499used by the hardware to store floating-point values can vary across
5500machines, and Python only prints a decimal approximation to the true
5501decimal value of the binary approximation stored by the machine. On
5502most machines, if Python were to print the true decimal value of
5503the binary approximation stored for 0.1, it would have to display
5504
5505\begin{verbatim}
5506>>> 0.1
55070.1000000000000000055511151231257827021181583404541015625
5508\end{verbatim}
5509
5510instead! The Python prompt (implicitly) uses the builtin
5511\function{repr()} function to obtain a string version of everything it
5512displays. For floats, \code{repr(\var{float})} rounds the true
5513decimal value to 17 significant digits, giving
5514
5515\begin{verbatim}
55160.10000000000000001
5517\end{verbatim}
5518
5519\code{repr(\var{float})} produces 17 significant digits because it
5520turns out that's enough (on most machines) so that
5521\code{eval(repr(\var{x})) == \var{x}} exactly for all finite floats
5522\var{x}, but rounding to 16 digits is not enough to make that true.
5523
5524Note that this is in the very nature of binary floating-point: this is
Raymond Hettinger65a350d2004-12-02 07:29:43 +00005525not a bug in Python, it is not a bug in your code either. You'll
Fred Drake417d6672001-06-08 16:24:58 +00005526see the same kind of thing in all languages that support your
Tim Petersfa9e2732001-06-17 21:57:17 +00005527hardware's floating-point arithmetic (although some languages may
5528not \emph{display} the difference by default, or in all output modes).
Fred Drake417d6672001-06-08 16:24:58 +00005529
5530Python's builtin \function{str()} function produces only 12
5531significant digits, and you may wish to use that instead. It's
5532unusual for \code{eval(str(\var{x}))} to reproduce \var{x}, but the
5533output may be more pleasant to look at:
5534
5535\begin{verbatim}
5536>>> print str(0.1)
55370.1
5538\end{verbatim}
5539
5540It's important to realize that this is, in a real sense, an illusion:
5541the value in the machine is not exactly 1/10, you're simply rounding
5542the \emph{display} of the true machine value.
5543
5544Other surprises follow from this one. For example, after seeing
5545
5546\begin{verbatim}
5547>>> 0.1
55480.10000000000000001
5549\end{verbatim}
5550
5551you may be tempted to use the \function{round()} function to chop it
5552back to the single digit you expect. But that makes no difference:
5553
5554\begin{verbatim}
5555>>> round(0.1, 1)
55560.10000000000000001
5557\end{verbatim}
5558
5559The problem is that the binary floating-point value stored for "0.1"
5560was already the best possible binary approximation to 1/10, so trying
5561to round it again can't make it better: it was already as good as it
5562gets.
5563
5564Another consequence is that since 0.1 is not exactly 1/10, adding 0.1
5565to itself 10 times may not yield exactly 1.0, either:
5566
5567\begin{verbatim}
5568>>> sum = 0.0
5569>>> for i in range(10):
5570... sum += 0.1
5571...
5572>>> sum
55730.99999999999999989
5574\end{verbatim}
5575
5576Binary floating-point arithmetic holds many surprises like this. The
5577problem with "0.1" is explained in precise detail below, in the
5578"Representation Error" section. See
5579\citetitle[http://www.lahey.com/float.htm]{The Perils of Floating
5580Point} for a more complete account of other common surprises.
5581
5582As that says near the end, ``there are no easy answers.'' Still,
5583don't be unduly wary of floating-point! The errors in Python float
5584operations are inherited from the floating-point hardware, and on most
5585machines are on the order of no more than 1 part in 2**53 per
5586operation. That's more than adequate for most tasks, but you do need
5587to keep in mind that it's not decimal arithmetic, and that every float
5588operation can suffer a new rounding error.
5589
5590While pathological cases do exist, for most casual use of
5591floating-point arithmetic you'll see the result you expect in the end
5592if you simply round the display of your final results to the number of
5593decimal digits you expect. \function{str()} usually suffices, and for
Tim Peters74979662004-07-07 02:32:36 +00005594finer control see the discussion of Python's \code{\%} format
Fred Drake417d6672001-06-08 16:24:58 +00005595operator: the \code{\%g}, \code{\%f} and \code{\%e} format codes
5596supply flexible and easy ways to round float results for display.
5597
5598
5599\section{Representation Error
5600 \label{fp-error}}
5601
5602This section explains the ``0.1'' example in detail, and shows how
5603you can perform an exact analysis of cases like this yourself. Basic
5604familiarity with binary floating-point representation is assumed.
5605
5606\dfn{Representation error} refers to that some (most, actually)
5607decimal fractions cannot be represented exactly as binary (base 2)
5608fractions. This is the chief reason why Python (or Perl, C, \Cpp,
5609Java, Fortran, and many others) often won't display the exact decimal
5610number you expect:
5611
5612\begin{verbatim}
5613>>> 0.1
56140.10000000000000001
5615\end{verbatim}
5616
5617Why is that? 1/10 is not exactly representable as a binary fraction.
5618Almost all machines today (November 2000) use IEEE-754 floating point
5619arithmetic, and almost all platforms map Python floats to IEEE-754
5620"double precision". 754 doubles contain 53 bits of precision, so on
5621input the computer strives to convert 0.1 to the closest fraction it can
5622of the form \var{J}/2**\var{N} where \var{J} is an integer containing
5623exactly 53 bits. Rewriting
5624
5625\begin{verbatim}
5626 1 / 10 ~= J / (2**N)
5627\end{verbatim}
5628
5629as
5630
5631\begin{verbatim}
5632J ~= 2**N / 10
5633\end{verbatim}
5634
5635and recalling that \var{J} has exactly 53 bits (is \code{>= 2**52} but
5636\code{< 2**53}), the best value for \var{N} is 56:
5637
5638\begin{verbatim}
Raymond Hettinger65a350d2004-12-02 07:29:43 +00005639>>> 2**52
Fred Drake417d6672001-06-08 16:24:58 +000056404503599627370496L
5641>>> 2L**53
56429007199254740992L
5643>>> 2L**56/10
56447205759403792793L
5645\end{verbatim}
5646
5647That is, 56 is the only value for \var{N} that leaves \var{J} with
5648exactly 53 bits. The best possible value for \var{J} is then that
5649quotient rounded:
5650
5651\begin{verbatim}
5652>>> q, r = divmod(2L**56, 10)
5653>>> r
56546L
5655\end{verbatim}
5656
5657Since the remainder is more than half of 10, the best approximation is
5658obtained by rounding up:
5659
5660\begin{verbatim}
5661>>> q+1
56627205759403792794L
5663\end{verbatim}
5664
5665Therefore the best possible approximation to 1/10 in 754 double
5666precision is that over 2**56, or
5667
5668\begin{verbatim}
56697205759403792794 / 72057594037927936
5670\end{verbatim}
5671
5672Note that since we rounded up, this is actually a little bit larger than
56731/10; if we had not rounded up, the quotient would have been a little
Tim Petersfa9e2732001-06-17 21:57:17 +00005674bit smaller than 1/10. But in no case can it be \emph{exactly} 1/10!
Fred Drake417d6672001-06-08 16:24:58 +00005675
5676So the computer never ``sees'' 1/10: what it sees is the exact
5677fraction given above, the best 754 double approximation it can get:
5678
5679\begin{verbatim}
5680>>> .1 * 2L**56
56817205759403792794.0
5682\end{verbatim}
5683
5684If we multiply that fraction by 10**30, we can see the (truncated)
5685value of its 30 most significant decimal digits:
5686
5687\begin{verbatim}
5688>>> 7205759403792794L * 10L**30 / 2L**56
5689100000000000000005551115123125L
5690\end{verbatim}
5691
5692meaning that the exact number stored in the computer is approximately
5693equal to the decimal value 0.100000000000000005551115123125. Rounding
5694that to 17 significant digits gives the 0.10000000000000001 that Python
5695displays (well, will display on any 754-conforming platform that does
5696best-possible input and output conversions in its C library --- yours may
5697not!).
5698
Fred Draked5df09c2001-06-20 21:37:34 +00005699\chapter{History and License}
5700\input{license}
5701
Skip Montanaro40d4bc52003-09-24 16:53:02 +00005702\input{glossary}
5703
5704\input{tut.ind}
5705
Guido van Rossumd9bf55d1991-01-11 16:35:08 +00005706\end{document}