Python
Python
http://www.ucs.cam.ac.uk/docs/course-notes/unix-courses/PythonAB
Welcome to the Computing Service's course Introduction to Python. This course is designed for people with absolutely no experience of programming. If you have any experience in programming other languages you are going to find this course extremely boring and you would be better off attending our course "Python for Programmers" where we teach you how to convert what you know from other programming languages to Python. This course is based around Python version 3. Python has recently undergone a change from Python 2 to Python 3 and there are some incompatibilities between the two versions. The older versions of this course were based around Python 2 but this course is built on Python 3. Python is named after Monty Python and its famous flying circus, not the snake. It is a trademark of the Python Software Foundation.
Course outline 1
Who uses Python & what for What sort of language it is How to launch Python Python scripts Text Names for values Reading in user data Numbers Conversions Comparisons Truth & Falsehood
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Course outline 2
Assignment Names Our first real program Loops if else Indentation Comments
Course outline 3
Lists Indices Lengths Changing items Extending lists Methods Creating lists Testing lists Removing from lists for loop Iterables Slices
Course outline 4
Files Reading & writing Writing our own functions Tuples Modules System modules External modules Dictionaries Formatted text
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So who uses Python and what for? Python is used for everything! For example: massively multiplayer online role-playing games like Eve Online, science fictions answer to World of Warcraft, web applications written in a framework built on Python called Django, desktop applications like Blender, the 3-d animation suite which makes considerable use of Python scripts, the Scientific Python libraries (SciPy), instrument control and embedded systems.
Shell, Perl
What sort of language is Python? The nave view of computer languages is that they come as either compiled languages or interpreted languages. At the strictly compiled end languages like C, C++ or Fortran are "compiled" (converted) into raw machine code for your computer. You point your CPU at that code and it runs. Slightly separate from the strictly compiled languages are languages like Java and C# (or anything running in the .net framework). You do need to explicitly compile these programming languages but they are compiled to machine code for a fake CPU which is then emulated on whichever system you run on. Then there is Python. Python does not have to be explicitly compiled but behind the scenes there is a system that compiles Python into an intermediate code which is stashed away to make things faster in future. But it does this without you having to do anything explicit yourself. So from the point of view of how you use it you can treat it as a purely interpreted language like the shell or Perl.
Running Python 1
We are going to use Python from the command line either directly or indirectly. So, first I need a Unix command line. I will get that from the GUI by clicking on the terminal icon in the desktop application bar.
Running Python 2
Unix prompt Unix command Introductory blurb $ python3 Python 3.2.3 (default, May [GCC 4.6.3] on linux2 >>> 3 2012, 15:54:42) Python version Python prompt
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Now, the Unix interpreter prompts you to give it a Unix command with a short bit of text that ends with a dollar. In the slides this will be represented simply as a dollar. This is a Unix prompt asking for a Unix command. The Unix command we are going to give is python3. Please note that trailing 3. The command python gives you either Python 2 or Python 3 depending on what system you are on. With this command we are insisting on getting a version of Python 3. The Python interpreter then runs, starting with a couple of lines of blurb. In particular it identifies the specific version of Python it is running. (3.2.3 in this slide.) Then it gives a prompt of its own, three greater than characters. The Python 3 program is now running and it is prompting us to give a Python command. You cannot give a Unix command at a Python prompt (or vice versa).
Quitting Python
>>> exit()
>>> quit()
>>> Ctrl + D
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There are various ways to quit interactive Python. There are two commands which are equivalent for our purposes: quit() and exit(), but the simplest is the key sequence [Ctrl]+[D].
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There is a tradition that the first program you ever run in any language generates the output Hello, world!. I see no reason to buck tradition. Welcome to your first Python command; we are going to output Hello, world!. We type this command at the Python prompt. The convention in these slides is that the typewriter text in bold face is what you type and the text in regular face is what the computer prints. We type print followed by an opening round brackets and the text Hello, world! surrounded by single quotes, ending with a closing round bracket and hitting the Return key, [ ], to indicate that we are done with that line of instruction. The computer responds by outputting Hello, world! without the quotes. Once it has done that it prompts us again asking for another Python command with another Python prompt, >>>.
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Python commands
Python function Round brackets parentheses print('Hello, world!') Functions argument
Case sensitive
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This is our first Python function. A function takes some input, does something with it and (optionally) returns a value. The nomenclature derives from the mathematics of functions, but we dont need to fixate on the mathematical underpinnings of computer science in this course. Our function in this case is print and the command necessarily starts with the name of the function. The inputs to the function are called its arguments and follow the function inside round brackets (parentheses). In this case there is a single argument, the text to print. Note that Python, as with many but not all programming languages, is case sensitive. The word print is not the same as Print or PRINT.
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Python text
Quotation marks
The text itself is presented within single quotation marks. (We will discuss the choice of quotation marks later.) The body of the text comes within the quotes. The quotes are not part of the text; they merely indicate to the Python interpreter that hey, this is text! Recall that the the printed output does not have quotes.
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Quotes?
print Command
'print'
Text
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So what do the quotes do? If there are no quotes then Python will try to interpret the letters as something it should know about. With the quotes Python simply interprets it as literal text. For example, without quotes the string of characters p-r-i-n-t are a command; with quotes they are the text to be printed.
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Python scripts
File in home directory Run from Unix prompt hello1.py Unix prompt Unix command to run Python $ python3 hello1.py Hello, world! $ Python script Python scripts output Unix prompt
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print('Hello, world!')
So we understand the hello, world command and how to run it from an interactive Python. But serious Python programs cant be typed in live; they need to be kept in a file and Python needs to be directed to run the commands from that file. These files are called scripts and we are now going to look at the Python script version of hello, world. In your home directories we have put a file called hello1.py. It is conventional that Python scripts have file names ending with a .py suffix. Some tools actually require it. We will follow this convention and you should too. This contains exactly the same as we were typing manually: a single line with the print command on it. We are going to make Python run the instructions out of the script. We call this running the script. Scripts are run from the Unix command line. We issue the Unix command python3 to execute Python again, but this time we add an extra word: the name of the script, hello1.py. When it runs commands from a script, python doesnt bother with the lines of blurb and as soon as it has run the commands (hence the output) it exists immediately, returning control to the Unix environment, so we get a Unix prompt back.
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To edit scripts we will need a plain text editor. For the purposes of this course we will use an editor called gedit. You are welcome to use any text editor you are comfortable with (e.g. vi or emacs). Unfortunately the route to launch the editor the first time is a bit clunky. Actually, its a lot clunky. 1. Click on the Dash Home icon at the top of the icon list. This launches a selection tool that starts blank. If you have been using some other files then these may show as recent files. 2. At the bottom of the widget you will see the house icon highlighted. Click on the three library books icon next to it. This switches the selector to the library of applications.
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3. Click on the see more results text to expose the complete set of supported applications. 4. Scroll down until you see the Text Editor application. (The scroll mouse tends to work better than dragging the rather thin scroll bar.) 5. Click the Text Editor icon.
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Future launches wont be anything like as painful. In future the text editor will be immediately available in Recent Apps.
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Progress
Interactive Python Python scripts print() command Simple Python text
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Exercise 1
1. Print Goodbye, cruel world! from interactive Python. 2. Edit exercise1.py to print the same text. 3. Run the modified exercise1.py script.
2 minutes
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During this course there will be some lightning exercises. These are very quick exercises just to check that you have understood whats been covered in the course up to that point. Here is your first. First, make sure you can print text from interactive Python and quit it afterwards. Second, edit the exercise1.py script and run the edited version with the different output. This is really a test of whether you can get the basic tools running. Please ask if you have any problems!
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www.unicode.org/charts/
hello2.py
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Now lets look at a slightly different script just to see what Python can do. Python 3 has excellent support for fully international text. (So did Python 2 but it was concealed.) Python 3 supports what is called the Unicode standard, a standard designed to allow for characters from almost every language in the world. If you are interested in international text you need to know about the Unicode standard. The URL shown will introduce you to the wide range of characters supported. The example in the slide contains the following characters: PLANCKS CONSTANT DIVIDED BY TWO PI CYRILLIC SMALL LETTER E LATIN SMALL LETTER L WITH BAR CHEROKEE LETTER DA
ETHIOPIC SYLLABLE PHARYNGEAL A GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WHITE SMILING FACE ARMENIAN SMALL LETTER REH COPTIC SMALL LETTER LAUDA PARTIAL DIFFERENTIAL DOUBLE EXCLAMATION MARK
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Getting characters
AltGr + Shift + # g Linux
Character Selector
\u011f
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I dont want to get too distracted by international characters, but I ought to mention that the hardest part of using them in Python is typically getting them into Python in the first place. There are three easy ways. There are key combinations that generate special characters. On Linux, for example, the combination of the three keys [AltGr], [Shift], and [#] set up the breve accent to be applied to the next key pressed. Perhaps easier is the Character Selector application. This runs like a freestanding insert special character function from a word processor. You can select a character from it, copy it to the clipboard and paste it into any document you want. Finally, Python supports the idea of Unicode codes. The two characters \u followed by the hexadecimal (base 16) code for the character in the Unicode tables will represent that character. You have all memorized your code tables, havent you?
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str
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We will quickly look at how Python stores text, because it will give us an introduction to how Python stores everything. Every object in Python has a type (also known as a class). The type for text is called str. This is short for string of characters and is the conventional computing name for text. We typically call them strings. Internally, Python allocates a chunk of computer memory to store our text. It stores certain items together to do this. First it records that the object is a string, because that will determine how memory is allocated subsequently. Then it records how long the string is. Then it records the text itself.
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011f16
28710
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In these slides Im going to represent the stored text as characters because thats easier to read. In reality, all computers can store are numbers. Every character has a number associated with it. You can get the number corresponding to any character by using the ord() function and you can get the character corresponding to any number with the chr() function. Mathematical note: The subscript 10 and 16 indicate the base of the numbers.
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Now lets do something with strings. If we add two strings together Python joins them together to form a longer string. Python actually permits you to omit the +. Dont do this.
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Pure concatenation
>>> 'Hello,' 'Hello, world!' >>> 'Hello,' + 'world!' Only simple concatenation + 'world!'
'world!'
This joining together is very simple. If you want words split by a space you have to put the space in.
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It doesnt matter whether we write our strings with single or double quotes (so long as they match at the two ends). Python simply notes that we are defining a string.
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'Hello, world!'
Internally there are no quotes, just a record that the object is text. When Python comes to display the string and declares this is text itself it uses single quotes.
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Having two sorts of quotes can be useful in certain circumstances. If you want the text itself to include quotes of one type you can define it surrounded by the other type.
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You must mix the quotes like that. If you do not then Python will be unable to make sense of the command. We will look at Pythons error messages in more detail later.
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\' \"
' "
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There is a more general solution to the quotes within quotes problem. Preceding each quote within the body of the text signals to Python that this is just an ordinary quote character and should not be treated specially. Note that what is encoded in the string is a single character. The backslash is a signal to the Python interpreter as its constructs the string. Once the string is constructed, with quotes in it, the backslashs work is done. This process of flagging a character to be treated differently than normal is called escaping the character.
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Try this
>>> print('Hello, File "<stdin>", line 1 print('Hello, ^ SyntaxError: EOL while scanning string literal
We will follow the theme of inserting awkward characters into strings by looking at line breaks. We cannot insert a line break by hitting the [ ] key. This signals to Python that it should process the line so far and Python cannot; it is incomplete.
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str 13 H e l l o , w o r l d !
>>> len('Hello,\nworld!') 13
Again, the backslash character comes to our rescue. If we create a string with the sequence \n then Python interprets this as the single character . Python can tell us exactly how many characters there are in a string. The len() function tells us the length of the string in characters. There are 13 characters in the string created by 'Hello,\nworld!'. The quotes are not part of the text and the \n becomes a single character.
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The backslash
Special Ordinary
\' \"
' "
Ordinary
Special
\n \t
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We have used backslash again, this time for a slightly different result. Backslash before a character with special significance, such as the quote character, makes the character ordinary. Used before an ordinary character, such as n, it produces something special. Only a few ordinary characters have special characters associated with them but the two most commonly useful are these: \n new line \t tab stop
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The \n trick is useful for the occasional new line. It is no use for long texts where we want to control the formatting ourselves.
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Python has a special trick precisely for convenient definition of long, multiline text. If you start the text with a triple quote then the special treatment of hitting the [] key is turned off. This lets you enter text free form with natural line breaks. The triple quote is three quote characters with no spaces between them. The quote character used can be either one but the triple use at one end must match the one used at the other end.
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The triple quote lets us see another Python feature. If we type a long string raw then after we hit we see Pythons secondary prompt. The three dots indicate that Python is expecting more input before it will process what it has in hand.
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It is also important to note that triple quotes are just a trick for input. The text object created is still a standard Python string. It has no memory of how it was created. Also note that when Python is representing the content of a string object (as opposed to printing it) it displays new lines as \n.
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We have now seen four different ways to create a string with an embedded new line. They all produce the same string object.
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Progress
International text print() Concatenation of strings Special characters Long strings
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Exercise 2
1. Replace XXXX in exercise2.py so it prints the following text (with the line breaks) and then run the script. coffee caf caff Kaffee
\u00e8 \u00e9
AltGr + ; AltGr + #
e e 3 minutes
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There is more than one way to do this. You can get the line breaks with \n in a single-quoted string or with literal line breaks in a triple-quoted string. An alternative, but not in keeping with the exercise, is to have four print() statements. You can get the accented characters by using the \u sequences or you can type them in literally with the keyboard combinations shown. (Linux only)
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message
str 13 H e l l o , w o r l d !
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Now we will move on to a serious issue in learning any computing language: how to handle names for values. Compare the two scripts hello1.py and hello4.py. They both do exactly the same thing. We can enter the text of hello4.py manually if we want using interactive Python, it will work equally well there. The first line of hello4.py creates the string Hello, world! but instead of printing it out directly the way that hello1.py does, it attaches a name, message, to it. The second line runs the print() function, but instead of a literal string as its argument it has this name instead. Now the name has no quotes around it, and as I said earlier this means that Python tries to interpret it as something it should do something with. What it does is to look up the name and substitute in the attached value. Whenever the name is used, Python will look it up and substitute in the attached value.
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print message
function str 13 H e l l o , w o r l d !
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Both print and message are the same this way. Both are names attached to Python objects. print is attached to a chunk of memory containing the definition of a function and message is attached to a chunk of memory containing the text.
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$ python3 input1.py
input1.py input('Yes?')
message = print(message)
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Now that we know how to attach names to values we can start receiving input from the user of our script. For this we will use the cunningly named input() function. This function takes some (typically short) text as its argument. It prints this text as a prompt and then waits for the user to type something back (and press []. It then returns whatever the user typed (without the [ ]) as its value. We can use this function on the right hand side of an assignment. Recall that the assignment completely evaluates the right hand side first. This means that it has to evaluate the input() function, so it prompts the user for input and evaluates to whatever it was that the user typed. Then the left hand side is processed and the name message is attached to this value. We can then print this input text by using the attached name.
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Traceback (most recent call last): File "input2.py", line 2, in <module> print(number + 1 ) TypeError: Can't convert 'int' object to str implicitly string integer
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In the previous example script input1.py we simply took what we were given by input() and printed it. The print() function is a flexible beast; it can cope with almost anything. The script hello2.py attempts to take what is given and do arithmetic with it, namely add 1 to it. It fails, even though we type a number at input()s prompt. This also gives us an error message and its time to investigate Pythons error messages in more detail. The first (the trace back) tells us where the error was. It was on line 2 of the file input2.py. It also tells us what was on the line. Recall that with syntax errors it also pointed out where in the line it realized something was going wrong. The second part tells us what the error was: we tried to add a string (text) and an integer (a number). More precisely, Python couldnt convert the things we were adding together into things that we could add.
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input2.py
input('N?')
str
2 1 0
int
10
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The problem is that the input() function always returns a string and the string character 1 followed by character 0 is not the same as the integer ten. We will need to convert from the string to the integer explicitly.
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string of characters
integer
To date we have seen only two types: str and builtin_function_or_method. Here are some more. Integers (whole numbers) are a type called int. Floating point numbers (how computers approximate real numbers) are a type called float. The input() function gave is a str. We want an int.
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str
6 - 1 0 0 int -100
>>> int('100-10')
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There is a function also called int() that converts the textual representation of an integer into a genuine integer. It copes with extraneous spaces and other junk around the integer but it does not parse general expressions. It will take the textual form of a number, but that's it.
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There is a similar function called float() which creates floating point numbers.
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The functions can take more than just strings, though. They can take other numbers, for example. Note that the int() function truncates floating point numbers.
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In general there is a function for each type that converts whatever it can into that type.
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$ python3 input3.py N? 10 11
input3.py
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So finally we can see what we have to do to make our failing script work: we need to add a type conversion line.
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Progress
Names Types Values name = value strings integers floating point numbers Reading in text Type conversions input(prompt) str() int() float()
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Exercise 3
Replace the two XXXX in exercise3.py to do the following: 1. Prompt the user with the text How much?. 2. Convert the users answer to a floating point number. 3. Print 2.5 plus that number.
3 minutes
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Integers
{ -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 }
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Now that we have some rudimentary understanding of Python its time to dive in a little deeper to the three types we have met so far. We are going to start with the whole numbers, integers in technical language. Mathematical note: The fancy Z is the mathematical symbol for the integers based on the German word Zahlen.
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>>> 20-5 15
No surprises
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We can start our handling of integers with some very basic arithmetic. Note that spaces around the plus and minus character are ignored. Adding or subtracting two integers simply gives a third integer.
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Integer multiplication
There is no on the keyboard. Use * instead >>> 20*5 100 Linux: AltGr + Shift + ,
Still no surprises
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The arithmetical operations addition and subtraction have their usual mathematical symbols reflected on the standard keyboard. We have a plus sign and a minus sign (actually a hyphen) character and we use them. There is no multiplication symbol on the standard keyboard. You can generate it as one of the octopus-friendly key combinations, but its not a simple key. Instead, the computing profession has settled on using the asterisk (*) to represent multiplication. On your keyboards this is [Shift]+[8]. Multiplying two integers gives a third integer.
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Integer division
There is no on the keyboard. Use / instead >>> 20/5 4.0 This is a floating point number! Linux: AltGr + Shift + .
Surprise!
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There is no division symbol on the keyboard without holding three keys down at the same time. Again a convention has arisen to use the forward slash character (strictly called a solidus) for division. So far there have been no surprises in Pythons integer arithmetic. That changes with division. Not all integer division can be achieved precisely. You cannot divide 3 into 5 exactly. Because of this Python 3 always returns a type of number capable of representing fractional values (a floating point number) even when the division would have been exact.
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The designers of Python decided that consistency of output was important and therefore because it might sometimes need to use a float it should always use a float. Note that even floating point numbers cannot exactly represent all fractions. can be precisely represented but cannot. We will return to the imprecision of floating point numbers when we look at them in detail. (If you really want to stick to integers then Python 3 offers the // operator which returns an integer answer, rounded strictly down in case of fractional answers.)
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Integer powers
There is no 42 on the keyboard. Use ** instead >>> 4**2 16 >>> 4**2 SyntaxError: invalid syntax Spaces around the operator dont matter. Spaces in the operator do!
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Just as there is no mathematical symbol on the keyboard for multiplication and division, there is no symbol at all for raising to powers. Mathematically we represent it by superscripting the power after the number being raised. We cant do this on the keyboard so instead we cheat and invent our own symbol for the operation. Computing has split for this operation. Some languages use the circumflex accent (^) and others, including Python, use a double asterisk, **. Note that while spaces around the operator are ignored you cant split the two asterisks.
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Integer remainders
e.g. Is a number even or odd? Use % >>> 4%2 0 >>> 5%2 1 >>> -5%2 1 Remainder is always non-negative
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Theres one last integer arithmetic operator we will use once in a while. Another way to look at division is to ask what the remainder is after a division. Python represents this concept by using the percent sign between to numbers to represent the remainder when the first number is divided by the second. We will use it for one purpose only in this course: to determine if a number is even or odd. If a numbers remainder when divided by 2 is 0 then its even and if the remainder is 1 then its odd.
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Now we will look at the numbers themselves. We can ask the question how big can an integer be? Mathematically, of course, there is no limit. In a computer there are always limits. Each computer has only a finite amount of memory to store information so there has to be a limit. We will see that Python has no limits in principle and it is only the technical limit of the computer that can restrict us. In practice this is never an issue for the size of integers. We will experiment with large integers by repeated squaring. We start with a 2 and keep squaring.
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There is no limit!
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Big integers
C / C++ Fortran 2 4 16 int INTEGER*4 long INTEGER*8 long long INTEGER*16 Out of the reach of C or Fortran! 256 65536 4294967296 18446744073709551616 3402823669209384634 63374607431768211456
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This may sound rather trivial but, in fact, Python is quite exceptional in this regard. The compiled languages have to allocate space for their integers in advance and so place limits on how large they can grow.
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And thats it for whole numbers. Now we will look at floating point numbers, a computers way of storing fractional values. This is a computers approximation to the real numbers. As we will see it is a problematic approximation. The fancy is the mathematical symbol for the real numbers, from the English word Real.
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Basic operations
>>> 20.0 + 5.0 25.0 >>> 20.0 * 5.0 100.0 >>> 20.0 ** 5.0 3200000.0 >>> 20.0 - 5.0 15.0 >>> 20.0 / 5.0 4.0 Equivalent to integer arithmetic
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For our basic operations, floating point numbers behave just the same as integers, using the same operators to achieve the same results. Floating point division creates a floating point number.
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If you are relying on this last decimal place, you are doing it wrong!
17 significant figures
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So lets see our first problem. Floating point arithmetic is not exact, and cannot be. Floating point numbers on modern hardware tends to give a precision of 17 significant figures. You do see the occasional issue as shown on the slide but, frankly, if you are relying on the exact value of the final decimal place you are doing it wroing.
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Hidden imprecision
>>> 0.1 0.1
Really: if you are relying on this last decimal place, you are doing it wrong!
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Not all imprecision is overt. Some of it can creep up on you. Computers work in base 2. They can store numbers like and exactly. But they cannot store numbers like 1/10 exactly, just like we cant represent exactly in a decimal expansion. The errors in storing 1/10 are small enough, though, that they are invisible at first. However, if they accumulate they become large enough to show through. Really: dont depend on precise values.
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Lets ask the same question about floats as we asked about integers: how large can they be? We will repeat our approach of repeated squaring. We fast-forward to start at 65536.0 squared and notice that we soon get anomolous responses. When we square 4,294,967,296 we get a number with the letter e in it. Users of pocket calculators at school may recognise this representation: it indicates a number between 1.0 and 9.999 multiplied by a power of 10. Floating point numbers can only hold roughly 17 significant figures of accuracy. This means that when the integer needs more than 17 digits something has to give.
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Integer
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The approximation isnt bad. The error is 384 in 18446744073709551616, or approximately 210-17.
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If we accept that our answers are now only approximate we can keep squaring. The e-number representation of scientific notation is accepted on input by Python. When we come to square 1.340780792994259710 154, though, we hit another issue, this one fatal. We get an overflow error. This means we have tried to create a floating point number larger than Python can cope with. Under some circumstances the too big problem gives rise to a sort-of-number called inf (standing for infinity).
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Just for the record, floating point numbers have limits both in terms of the largest and smallest numbers they can contain.
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Complex numbers
z2 z
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Python also supports complex numbers, using j for the square root of -1. We will not use them in this course, but you ought to know they exist.
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Progress
Arithmetic Integers Floating point numbers + - * / ** No limits! Limited size Limited precision Complex numbers
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Exercise 4
Replace the XXXX in exercise4.py to evaluate and print out the following calculations: 1. 223 71 2. (1 + 1/10)10 3. (1 + 1/100)100 4. (1 + 1/1000)1000 3 minutes
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Comparisons
5 < 10 5 > 10
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We can do arithmetic on numbers. What else? We need to be able to compare numbers. Is 5 less than 10? Yes it is. Is 5 greater than 10? No it isnt.
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Comparisons
>>> True 5 < 10 Asking the question
>>>
5 > 10
False
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Now lets see that in Python. The less than character appears on the keyboard so we dont need anything special to express the concept like ** for powers. Python seems to answer the questions with True and False.
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5 + 10
int int
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int
5 < 10
True
bool
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The important thing to understand is that this is not just Python reporting on a test but rather the value generated by the test. True and False are (the only) two values of a special Python type called a Boolean used for recording whether something is true or not. Just as the + operator takes two integers and returns an integer value, the < operator takes two integers and returns a Boolean. Booleans are named after George Boole, whose work laid the ground for modern algebraic logic. (His classic books full title is An Investigation of the Laws of Thought on Which are Founded the Mathematical Theories of Logic and Probabilities, in true Victorian style.)
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bool bool
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Six comparisons
Maths Python
= < >
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There are six comparison operations in Python. The equality comparison is defined in Python with a double equals sign, ==. The sign is doubled to distinguish comparison from assignment. There is no not equals symbol on the standard keyboard. Instead, Python uses the != pair of characters. (As with ** there must be no space between the two characters.) Less than and greater than we have already covered. These are implemented directly by the < and > characters. There are no less than or equal to or greater than or equal to keys, though, so Python resorts to double character sequences again.
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= ==
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If ever there was a classic typo in programming it is the confusion of = and ==. Be careful.
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Textual comparisons
>>> 'cat' < 'dog' True >>> 'Cat' < 'cat' True >>> 'Dog' < 'cat' True All uppercase before lowercase
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Alphabetic ordering
Booleans typically arise from comparisons. We can compare more than numbers (integers or floating point). We can also compare strings. Text comparisons are based around the ordering of characters in the Unicode character set. Note that all the uppercase letters in the Latin alphabet precede all the lowercase letters. So any text that starts with an uppercase letter counts as less than any text that starts with a lowercase letter.
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Please note, however, that this is just a comparison of strings. It is not a general comparison of text. Ordering text is called collation and is a very compicated field. For example, different languages order characters differently. Some countries have different orderings for different purposes. If you want to learn more about this field, start with the Unicode page on collation: http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr10/
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Converting to booleans
float() int() str() Converts to floating point numbers <class 'float'> Converts to integers <class 'int'> Converts to strings <class 'str'>
bool()
As with all Python types there is a function named after the type that tries to convert arbitrary inputs into Booleans. Given that there are only two Boolean values this tends to be a very simple function.
87
Useful conversions
'' 'Fred' False True Empty string Non-empty string
0 1 12 -1
Zero Non-zero
88
The empty string is mapped to False. Every other string is mapped to True. For integers, 0 is mapped to False and every other value to True. For floating point numbers, 0.0 is mapped to False and every other value to True.
88
Boolean operations
bool
?
bool
bool
bool bool
89
Boolean types have their own arithmetic just like ordinary numbers. It was the algebra of these that George Boole developed.
89
True True
90
The first operation on Booleans is the and operator. The and of two booleans values is True if (and only if) both its inputs are True. If either is False then its output is False. >>> True and False False >>> True and True True
90
4 < 5 6 > 7
False
We are much more likely to encounter the input booleans as the results of comparisons that as literal values.
91
Boolean operations or
bool or bool bool
True True
or or
False or False or
92
The next boolean operation to look at is or. The results of this operation is True if either of its inputs are True and False only if both its inputs are False.
92
Boolean operations or
>>> 4 < 5 or 6 < 7 True 4 < 5 6 < 7 True or True True
4 < 5 6 > 7
True or False
93
True
Again, we tend to encounter it more often with other tests than with literal booleans.
93
False True
94
The final operation is not. This takes only one input and flips it. True becomes False and vice versa.
94
6 > 7
False
not
True
95
95
Ambiguity in expressions
3+6/3
5
96
(3 + 6) / 3 3
3 + (6 / 3)
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3+6/3
Division first
3+ 2
Addition second
5
97
97
Order of precedence
First x**y -x +x x%y x/y x*y x-y x+y
x==y
x!=y
x>=y
x>y
x<=y
x<y
not x
x and y
x or y Last
98
98
Progress
Comparisons Numerical comparison Alphabetical ordering Booleans Boolean operators Order of precedence
99
== != < > <= >= 5 < 7 'dig' < 'dug' True False
and or not
99
Exercise 5
Predict whether these expressions will evaluate to True or False. Then try them. 1. 2. 3. 'sparrow' > 'eagle' 'dog' < 'Cat' or 45 % 3 == 15 60 - 45 / 5 + 10 == 1 3 minutes
100
100
1.
alpha = 100
int
100
2.
Now lets go back to the attaching of names to values that we saw with our hello3.py script. Consider the simple Python instruction shown. Python does two things, strictly in this order: First, it notices the literal value 100 (an integer). So Python allocates a chunk of memory large enough and creates a Python object in it that contains a Python integer with value 100. Second, it creates the name alpha and attaches it to the integer.
101
RHS: right hand side Evaluated first LHS: left hand side Processed second
102
The key thing to note is that the processing happens right to left. Everything to the right hand side is processed first. Only after that processing is done is the left hand side considered. In this example its trivial. It will become less trivial very soon so remember that the right hand side is evaluated before the left hand side is even looked at. ps: Computing uses the phrases left hand side and right hand side so often that they are typically written as LHS and RHS.
102
Simple evaluations
>>> beta = 100 + 20 1. int 100 100 + function + int 20 20 RHS
2.
int
120
3.
beta
int
120
LHS
103
We can see a slightly more involved example if we put some arithmetic on the RHS. Again, the RHS is evaluated first. First, Python notices three tokens: the 100, the name + and the 20. It creates two integer objects just as it did with the previous example and it looks up a pre-existing function object that does addition of integers. Second, Python triggers the addition function to generate a third integer with the value 120. This completes the evaluation of the RHS. Third, Python creates a name beta and attaches it to the freshly created integer 120.
103
40
RHS
100
function +
int
40
Now we will consider a more significantly involved example, one with a name on the RHS. First, Python recognizes the three tokens on the RHS. These are the name alpha the + and the literal integer 40. Second, it looks up the names. The alpha is replaced by the integer 100 and the name + is replaced by the actual function that does addition. The token 40 is replaced by the actual integer 40 in memory. Third, it runs the function to give an integer 140 object in memory.
104
Only after all that is the LHS considered, and the name gamma is created and attached to the newly minted integer.
105
106
Now (finally!) we get to the interesting case. We start with the name gamma being attached to the value 140.
106
3.
int
140
function +
int
10
4.
int
150
107
Then we run an assignment that has the name gamma on both the left and right hand sides. Again, first of all Python focuses exclusively on the RHS. The expression gamma + 10 is evaluated to give rise to an integer 150 in Python memory.
107
150 140
RHS
108
Only once that evaluation is complete does Python turn its attention to the LHS. The name gamma is going to be attached to the integer 150 in Python memory. No attention is paid to where the integer 150 came from. The name gamma is already in use and is attached to the integer 140. Its attachment is changed to the new integer 150.
108
140
No longer used.
8.
gamma
int
150
109
Once that is done there are no remaining references to the old integer 140. Python automatically cleans it up, freeing the space for re-use. This is a process called garbage collection. In some languages you have to free up unused space yourself; in Python the system does it for you automatically.
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Syntactic sugar
thing += 10 thing -= 10 thing *= 10 thing /= 10 thing **= 10 thing %= 10 thing = thing + 10 thing = thing - 10 thing = thing * 10 thing = thing / 10 thing = thing ** 10 thing = thing % 10
110
The operation of modifying a value is so common that Python, and some other languages, have short-cuts in their syntax to make the operations shorter to write. These operations are called augmented assignments. This sort of short-cut for an operation which could already be written in the language is sometimes called syntactic sugar.
110
111
111
Deleting a name 1
>>> print(thing) Traceback (most recent call last): File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> NameError: name 'thing' is not defined Unknown variable >>> thing = 1 >>> print(thing) 1
112
Theres one last aspect of attaching names to values hat we need to consider. How do we delete the attachment? First of all, lets see what it looks like when we refer to a name that isnt known to the system. The error message is quite straightforward: name 'thing' is not defined If we then create the name and attach it to a value, the integer 1 in this example, we can then use the name without error message.
112
Deleting a name 2
>>> print(thing) 1 >>> del thing >>> print(thing) Traceback (most recent call last): File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> NameError: name 'thing' is not defined Unknown variable
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Known variable
To delete the attachment we use the Python command del. The command del thing returns us to the state where the name is no longer known. You can delete multiple names with the slightly extended syntax del thing1, thing2, thing3 This is equivalent to del thing1 del thing2 del thing3 but slightly shorter.
113
Common mistake
a = 10 b = 7 a = a + b b = a - b a = 17 b = a - b = 17 - 7 = 10
!
a has now changed! b 10 - 7 = 3
114
While we are looking at attaching names to values and changing those values, we will take the time to review a common rookie mistake especially among people who do linear transformations. Suppose we want to encode the mapping
a+b (a)( ab) b
we need to be careful not to use a half-transformed state in the second half of the transformation. If we calculate the new value for one coordinate we cant (trivially) use it in the calculation of the new value of the second coordinate. Later in this course when we look at tuples we will see a slick Python way to fix this problem.
114
Progress
Assignment Deletion Strictly right to left thing = thing + 10 del thing thing = thing + 10 2nd += etc. syntactic sugar thing += 10
115
1st
115
116
We now have enough to make a start on real programming. We will need some more Python elements but we can meet them as we need them rather than up front. We are going to write a program that prompts for a number and then calculates and prints out its square root. First we will review the maths of calculating square roots so that we know what we are coding. Then we will do it in Python.
116
The technique we are going to use is called bisection. If you know this technique you can relax for the next few slides. Please dont snore. We are going to go through it by hand for a few iterations because when we come to implement it in Python it is important that any confusion is due to the Python, and not the maths the Python is implementing. The trick is to identify a range of values that must contain the actual value of 2. That is, we identify a lower bound that is less than 2 and an upper bound that is greater than 2. We then have some way (which we will explain in the following slides) to improve that estimate by reducing the length of that interval of uncertainty. To be precise, we will cut the uncertainty in half which is why the process is called bisection. We start by taking a lower bound of x=0, which is definitely lower than x=2 because y=02=0<2, and an upper bound of x=2, which is definitely higher than x=2 because y=22=4>2.
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1.0**2 1.0
Mid-point: 1.0
118
So, what's the trick for halving the interval of uncertainty? We find the midpoint of the interval. In this case its obvious: the half-way point between x=0 and x=2 is x=1. Then we square it to find its corresponding value of y. In this case y=12=1.
118
So what? Well, y=1 is less than y=2 so the corresponding x-value, x=1 makes an acceptable lower bound for the interval of uncertainty. And if we change our lower bound to this value then our interval only runs from x=1 to x=2 with total length 1, rather than its original length 2. We have halved our uncertainty. If we can do this trick multiple times then we will reduce the interval of uncertainty very quickly to a length so small as to be irrelevant.
119
1.5**2 2.25
Mid-point: 1.5
120
So we do it again. The new mid-point lies at x=1.5. This has a corresponding y-value of y=2.25.
120
y=2.25 is greater than y=2 so we can use the corresponding x-value of x=1.5 as our new upper bound. Now the interval of uncertainty is halved in length again to be .
121
1.25**2 1.5625
Mid-point: 1.25
122
We find the new mid-point again, x=1.25. Squaring this gives the corresponding y-value y=1.5625.
122
y=1.5625 is less than y=2 so we change the lower bound. Our interval of uncertainty now has length .
123
1.375**2 1.890625
Mid-point: 1.375
124
And again
124
125
Exercise 6
One more iteration. Find the mid-point. Square it. Compare the square to 2.0. Do you change the lower or upper bound?
Please make sure that you understand the principle and do one more iteration by hand.
126
127
Apologies for spending so long on the maths but this is a general situation. You must understand the situation before you can program it.
127
128
So now let's start the implementation of this process in Python. We will do exactly the same maths, but this time with Python syntax. First we set the end points for the interval of uncertainty and attach names to the two x-values. The names lower and upper are attached to the end points: lower = 0.0 upper = 2.0 We establish the x-value of the mid-point and attach the name middle to it: middle = (lower+upper)/2 This is exactly where we started last time, but we have attached Python names to the values.
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Next, we find the yvalue corresponding to the mid-point (by squaring the xvalue 1.0) and ask if it is less than 2.0, the number whose square root we are looking for. middle**2 < 2.0 Recall that this will return a Python boolean value: True or False. The squared value is 1.0 which is less than 2.0 (i.e. we get True) so we raise the lower limit of the interval to the mid-point. lower = middle In this example we print the xvalue at each end of the interval to track our progress.
129
So we do it again. We re-calculate the xvalue for the mid-point. Note that because we changed the value the name lower was attached to the Python instruction is identical to the one we gave first time round: middle = (lower+upper)/2 We do some additional printing to track progress.
130
Again, we ask if the mid-points yvalue (i.e. its xvalue squared) is above or below our target of 2.0: middle**2 < 2.0 and this time get a boolean False. Because the value is greater than 2.0 (our test evaluates to False) we change the value of the upper bound of the interval by attaching the name upper to the xvalue of the mid-point: upper = middle The values being handled are exactly the same as they were when we did it as raw maths but this time they have names.
131
132
133
Fourth iteration.
134
And another True so we change lower again. And that's enough of stepping through it manually.
135
print(lower, upper)
136
Lets look at the Python code we have used. We started by initializing our interval of uncertainty: lower = 0.0 upper = 2.0 Then we started the operations we would repeat by calculating the xvalue of the mid-point: middle = (lower+upper)/2 We squared this and compared the squared yvalue with 2.0, our target value: middle**2 < 2.0 and, based on whether this evaluated to True or False we ran either: lower = middle or: upper = middle Then we ran the iteration again.
136
print(lower, upper)
137
Structurally, we need to be able to do two things beyond our current knowledge of Python. We need to be able to run certain instructions time and time again (looping) and we need to be able to choose one of two different actions depending on whether a boolean value is True or False.
137
Looping
Before
After
138
We will address looping first. A loop has a number of components. Strictly not part of the loop are the before and after sections but these give context and may use values needed by the loop. The loop itself must have some sort of test to indicate whether the loop should run again or whether the looping can stop and control can pass to the after code. Then there must be the set of instructions that will be run each time the loop repeats. We call this the body of the loop.
138
number <= 10
print(number) number += 1
After
print('Done!')
139
Lets consider an example thats simpler than our square root loop: counting from 1 to 10. Our before block initializes the attachment of a name number to a value 1: number = 1 Our test sees if number is attached to a value less than or equal to 10 (our final value): number <= 10 Recall that this evaluates to a boolean value. If the test evaluates to True then we run the loop body. This has two lines, the first to print the value of number and the second to increase it by one: print(number) number += 1 If the test evaluates to False then we dont loop and exit the structure. We have a pointless print statement as a place-holder for more substantive code in serious scripts: print('Done!') This is what we want to encode in Python.
139
number <= 10
print(number) number += 1
print(number) number += 1
print('Done!')
print('Done!')
140
This is how we encode the structure in Python. We will examine it element by element, but at first glance we observe a while keyword and a colon on either wise of the test and the loop body being indented four spaces.
140
print(number) number += 1
print('Done!')
141
We will start by looking at what we have done to the test. The test itself is number <= 1 which is a Python expression that evaluates to a boolean, True or False. We precede the test expression with the Python keyword while. This is what tells Python that theres a loop coming. It must be directly followed by an expression that evaluates to a Boolean. We follow the test expression with a colon. This is the marker that the expression is over and must be the last element on the line. Note that the test evaluates to True for the loop to be run and False for the loop to quit. We are testing for shall the loop keep going not shall the loop stop. Python tests for while, not until.
141
print(number) number += 1
print('Done!')
142
The loop body, the code that is repeated, appears on the lines following the while line. Both its lines are indented by four spaces each. Note that the after section is not indented.
142
while1.py
First lets check that this really works. In the file while1.py in your home directories you will find exactly the code shown in the slide. Run it and watch Python count from 1 to 10.
143
The four spaces of indentation are not cosmetic. A sequence of lines that have the same indentation form blocks in Python and can be thought of as a single unit of code. In this case both lines get run (again) or neither of them do. The indented block is ended by the first line that follows it with no indentation.
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c.f. legalese
1
1(a) 1(b)
1(c) 2 3
145
If this seems a little alien consider the legalese of complex documents. They have paragraphs, sub-paragraphs and sub-sub-paragraphs etc., each indented relative to the one containing them.
145
Other languages
Shell while ... do ... ... done do ... done ... Syntax Clarity
{ ... } ...
Syntax Clarity
146
Marking blocks of code is one of the places where computing languages differ from one another. Some have special words that appear at the start and end of blocks like do and done. Others use various forms of brackets like { and }. Interestingly, programmers in these languages typically also indent code within the blocks for visual clarity. Python simply uses the indentation for its core syntax rather than just for ease of reading. Purely for interest, the Shell and C versions of while1.py are also in your home directory as while1.sh and while1.c.
146
Progress
while ... : test to keep looping code blocks indentation before while test : action1 action2 action3 afterwards
147
147
Exercise 7
For each script: Predict what it will do. Run the script. Were you right? while2.py while3.py while4.py while5.py while6.py To kill a running script: Ctrl + C
5 minutes
148
148
tolerance
What we want
What we get
149
Now lets return to our square root example. We have a loop the body of which halves the length of the interval of uncertainty. We need to put this into a Python loop so we need a corresponding loop test. One typical approach is to test to see if the interval is longer than some acceptable value. In this case we will demand that the interval have length no longer than 10-15. (It will take 51 halvings to get from an initial length of 2.0 to something less than 10-15.) A common name for an acceptable uncertainty is a tolerance: the amount of uncertainty we are prepared to tolerate.
149
150
We need a Python test for this. Recall that Python needs a test that evaluates to True for the loop body to run. Our test then is is the current uncertainty larger than the acceptable tolerance? We will set a name, tolerance, to have the value 1.0e-15, calculate an uncertainty each loop and perform the test uncertainty > tolerance If this is True then we need to keep going. If it is False then we can stop.
150
Set up
Loop
151
So, if we return to our basic structure we can now see how Pythons while syntax fits in. We establish a tolerance. We establish an initial uncertainty. We test for uncertainty > tolerance as the loop test. We recalculate the uncertainty at the end of the loop block for use in the next round of the test. All we have to do now is to add in the choice block.
151
Choosing
Choice middle**2 < 2.0 lower = middle ? upper = middle
Once again we have a test followed by some actions. This time, however, the test doesnt decide whether or not to run a block of code again, but rather which of two blocks of code to run once. Our test a Python expression that evaluates to a boolean is simply: middle**2 < 2.0 and if this evaluates to True then we change the lower bound: lower = middle and if it evaluates to False then we change the upper bound: upper = middle Either way, once one or the other has run we move on and do not return to the test.
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Simple example
text = input('Number? ') number = int(text) if number % 2 == 0: print('Even number') else: print('Odd number') print('That was fun!')
$ python3 ifthenelse1.py Number? 8 Even number That was fun $ python3 ifthenelse1.py Number? 7 Odd number That was fun
ifthenelse1.py
153
Again, we will look at an example that demonstrates just the structure. There is a script in your home directories called ifthenelse1.py which illustrates the structure on its own. Mathematical note: The script tests for a number being even by using the remainder operator % to calculate the remainder if we divide by 2 and testing for that remainder being 0.
153
ifthen else 1
if keyword Test if number % 2 == 0 : print('Even number') else : upper = middle print('That was fun!')
154
Colon
The first line of the test looks very similar to the while syntax we have already seen. In this case, however, it uses a new keyword: if. The if keyword is followed by the test: a Python expression that evaluates to a boolean. The line ends with a colon.
154
ifthen else 2
The test line is immediately followed by the block of code that is run if the test evaluates as True. Because it is a block of code it is indented by four spaces to mark it as a block. This example has a single line, but the block can be as long as you want. This block is sometimes called the then-block because if the test is True then run this block.
155
ifthen else 3
if number % 2 == 0 : print('Even number') else : upper = middle print('That was fun!') else: keyword Run if test is False Indentation
156
After the then-block comes another new keyword, else:. This is not indented and is level with the if to indicate that it is not part of the thenblock. It is then followed by a second block of code, know as the else-block. This is the code that is run if the test evaluates as False. Again, because it is a block of code it is indented. The else keyword and its corresponding block are optional. You can do nothing if the test returns False. The then-block is compulsory.
156
ifthen else 4
if number % 2 == 0 : print('Even number') else : upper = middle print('That was fun!') Run afterwards regardless of test
157
After the else-block the script continues. The print line is unindented so is not part of the else-block. This line is run regardless of the result of the test.
157
Before
if block
Lets return to our square root example. Here we have the creation of a mid-point x-value followed by an if-test on it: middle = (lower+upper)/2 if middle**2 < 2.0: This switches between two single-line code blocks. If the test evaluates to True then the then-block is run: lower = middle and if it evaluates to False then the else-block is run: else: upper = middle After one or other is run the print statement is always run: print(lower, upper) All we have to do now is to fit it inside our while loop.
158
Progress
if ... : else: choice of two code blocks indentation before if test : action1 action2 else: action3 afterwards
159
159
Exercise 8
For each script: Predict what it will do. Run the script. Were you right? ifthenelse2.py ifthenelse3.py ifthenelse4.py ifthenelse5.py
5 minutes
160
160
So how do we embed an if-test with its two code blocks inside a while-loop as the loops body? The body of the while-loop is indented four spaces. So we start the if-test indented four spaces and make its indented blocks doubly indented.
161
Levels of indentation
tolerance = 1.0e-15 lower = 0.0 upper = 2.0 uncertainty = upper - lower while uncertainty > tolerance : middle = (lower + upper)/2 if middle**2 < 2.0 : lower = middle else : upper = middle print(lower, upper) uncertainty = upper - lower
162
4 spaces 8 spaces
So if our standard indentation is four spaces then the doubly indented sections are indented eight spaces. This is a simple example with only two levels of indentation. Python can nest blocks much further than this.
162
Trying it out
tolerance = 1.0e-15 lower = 0.0 upper = 2.0 uncertainty = upper - lower while uncertainty > tolerance : middle = (lower + upper)/2 if middle**2 < 2.0: lower = middle else: upper = middle print(lower, upper) uncertainty = upper - lower
$ python3 sqrt1.py 1.0 2.0 1.0 1.5 1.25 1.5 1.375 1.5 1.375 1.4375 1.40625 1.4375 1.40625 1.421875 ... 1.414213... 1.414213...
sqrt1.py
163
The file sqrt1.py in your home directories contains the code as described in the slide. It produces a very nice approximation to the square root of 2.
163
2.0
2.0
So now we have the script for the square root of 2. The next thing to do is to generalize it to produce square roots of any number.
164
Input target
text = input('Number? ') number = float(text) if middle**2 < number :
165
Obviously we have to input the number whose square root we want. We have already seen how to do this and to convert it from a string into a floating point number: text = input('Number? ') number = float(text) Once we have the number the test middle**2 < 2.0 is straightforwardly extended to middle**2 < number
165
Initial bounds?
lower = ? upper = ?
if...then...else...
166
We have to set initial bounds for our interval of uncertainty. This is where it is important that you think about the problem before coding. If the number whose square root is sought is less than 1 then the square root is bigger than the number and less than 1. If it is larger than 1 then its square root is less than the number and bigger than 1. In Python terms this means we can test for the number being less than 1 and set the bounds accordingly.
166
Initial bounds
if number lower upper else : lower upper < 1.0 : = number = 1.0 = 1.0 = number
167
167
tolerance = 1.0e-15 uncertainty = upper - lower while uncertainty > tolerance: middle = (lower+upper)/2.0 if middle**2 < number: lower = middle else: upper = middle print(lower, upper)
Processing
Output
sqrt2.py
168
This gives us enough of a script to see the overarching structure of a script: We start with getting the data we need from the outside world. (input) Then we set up any initial state we need based on that. (initialization) Then we do our processing. Finally we reveal our results. (output) Typically the processing phase takes longest to run, but note that, as here, it is often not the majority of the lines of code.
168
Negative numbers?
Need to catch negative numbers
169
We can improve our code. A step missing from the previous script is input validation where we check that the input makes sense. We ought to check that we have not been asked to generate the square root of a negative number.
169
Chained tests
text = input('Number?') number = float(text) if number < 0.0: print('Number must be positive!') exit() if number lower upper else: lower upper ...
170
Initialization
The input validation phase comes straight after the input itself.
170
elif: else if
sqrt3.py
However, it can be integrated with the initialization phase, and often is. After all, if you cant initialize from the input then the input isnt valid. This leads us to a multi-stage test of the number whose square root we want: Is it less than 0? If not, is it less than 1? If not then Python has an extension to the simple ifelse test to allow for the if not then is it situation. elif introduces a test and a corresponding block of code. The code is called only if the previous if test failed and its own test passes.
171
Without elif
text = input('Number?') number = float(text) if number < 0.0: print('Number is negative.') else: if number < 1.0: print('Number is between zero and one.') else: if number < 2.0: print('Number is between one and two.') else: if number < 3.0: print('Number is between two and three.') else: print('Number is three or more.')
172
To take an extreme example, consider this multi-level test. The continual nesting inside the else clauses causes the whole script to drift to the right.
172
With elif
text = input('Number?') number = float(text) if number < 0.0: print('Number is elif number < 1.0: print('Number is elif number < 2.0: print('Number is elif number < 3.0: print('Number is else: print('Number is negative.') between zero and one.') between one and two.') between two and three.') three or more.')
173
173
Progress
Nested structures while : if : if : elif : elif : else: exit()
174
Chained tests
174
Exercise 9
Only do the second part after you have the first part working! exercise9.py
1. Edit the square root script to catch negative numbers. 2. Edit the square root script to ask for the tolerance. The tolerance must be bigger than 51016. Test for that. 5 minutes
175
175
Comments
We have written our first real Python script What did it do? Why did it do it? Need to annotate the script
176
sqrt3.py is a real program. Now imagine you pass it to someone else or put it away for twelve months and come back to it forgetting how you wrote it in the first place. Chances are that the reader of your script might like some hints as to what it is doing and why. Comments in computer programs are pieces of text that describe what ios going on without getting in the way of the lines of code that are executed.
176
#
177
Python, in common with most other scripting languages, uses the hash character to introduce comments. The hash character and everything beyond it on the line is ignored. (Strictly speaking the musical sharp character is not the same as # but people get very sloppy with similar characters these days. This isnt at all relevant to Python but the author is an annoying pedant on the correct use of characters. And dont get him started on people who use a hyphen when they should use an en-dash or em-dash.)
177
178
You may encounter a hash pling first line in many imported Python scripts. This is part of some Unix magic that lets us simplify our command lines. We cant demonstrate it here because the MCS file server doesnt support Unix semantics.
179
Progress
Comments # character
#
180
180
Exercise 10
Comment your square root script from exercise 9.
2 minutes
181
181
We are about to introduce a new Python type, so we will take a moment to remind ourseoves of the various Python types we have met already.
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Lists
[ 'hydrogen', 'helium', 'lithium', 'beryllium', 'boron', , 'thorium', 'protactinium', 'uranium' ]
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What is a list?
hydrogen, helium, lithium, beryllium, , protactinium, uranium
A sequence of values
So what is a list? A list is simply a sequence of values stored in a specific order with each value identified by its position in that order. So for an example consider the list of names of the elements up to uranium.
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What is a list?
2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31, 37, 41, 43, 47, 53, 59
A sequence of values
Numerical order
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A Python type
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So how might we do this in Python? We will create a list in Python of the primes less than 20. We can do this in a single line as shown. A list in Python is a single Python object, albeit with multiple contents, and has its own type, unsurprisingly called list.
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Python presents (and accepts) lists as a series of values separated by commas, surrounded by square brackets.
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Square brackets
primes = [2, 3, 5, 7, 11] Literal list
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We are going to meet square brackets used fr a lot of things so I will build up a summary slide of their various uses. Here is use 1.
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value
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We still need to get at individual items in the list. Each is identified by its position in the list. Python, in common with many programming languages (but not all) starts its count from zero. The leading element in the list is item number zero. The one that follows it is item number one and so on. This number, the position in the list counting from zero, is called the index into the list. The plural of index is indices. To keep yourself sane, we strongly recommend the language item number 3 instead of the fourth item.
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So, how do we get item number 5 from a list? We can follow the list (or, more usually, a name attached to the list) with the index in square brackets.
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Square brackets
primes = [2, 3, 5, 7, 11] primes[3] Literal list Index into list
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Python has a trick for getting at the last element of the list. Negative indices are also valid and count backwards from the end of the list. Typically the only case of this that is used in paractice is that the index -1 gets the last element of the list.
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2 3
primes[0] primes[1]
Weve seen these box diagrams for simple Python types already. The structures for lists are a little more complicated but only a little. The list type records how long it is and an ordered set of references to the actual objects it contains.
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Length of a list
list 8 0 primes >>> len(primes) 8 len() function: length of list
Maximum index is 7
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Note that the length of a list is the number of items it contains. The largest legitimate index is one less than that because indices count from zero.
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So far we have created lists all in one go by quoting a literal list. We can use the indexing notation (square brackets) to change items in a list too.
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We can track what happens in that example in some detail. We will start with the first line, defining the initial list. As ever, Python assignment is done right to left. The right hand side is evaluated as a list of three items, all of themstrings.
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Now we come to the second line which changes one of these list items. The right hand side is evaluated as a string containing a single characters. That object gets created.
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The assignment causes the reference within the string to be changed to refer to the new string and to stop referring to the previous one, gamma. In this case there are now no references to the gamma string.
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str 1
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Python then clears out the memory used for that old string so that it can reuse it for something else. This process is called garbage collection in computing.
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We can remove entries from the list too with the del keyword, just as we removed names. The del keyword removes the reference from the list.
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str 5
g a m m a
data[1]
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2 3
We have remarked on a couple of occasions that the largest valid index is a number one less than the length of the list. So what happens if you ask for an index greater than the largest legal value?
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You get an error unsurprisingly. The type of the error is an IndexError something went wrong with an index. The error message specifies that the index asked for was outside the valid range.
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Note that we cant use indicies beyond the limit to extend a list either.
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Progress
Lists index Count from zero Deletion Length Over-running [2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19] primes[4] primes[0] del primes[6] len(primes) primes[8]
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Exercise 11
Track what is happening to this list at each stage.
>>> numbers = [5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 29, 31] >>> numbers[1] = 3 >>> del numbers[3] >>> numbers[3] = 37 >>> numbers[4] = numbers[5] 5 minutes
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Do this yb hand. The script exercise11.py will tell you if you were right.
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Appending to a list
>>> primes [2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19] A function built into a list >>> primes.append(23)
>>> primes
This is the Python syntax for appending an item to the end of a list. You wont recognise the syntax; it is something new.
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primes.append() ?
The list A connecting dot >>> primes.append(23) append() The value to append All lists have this function built in.
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So we need to look at this new construction. We have the list, primes, followed by a dot which acts as a connector. This is followed by the name of a function, append. This function is not a standard Python function like print() or len(). Instead it is a function that is built in to the list itself. The list has its own function which appends to that list. Alternatively, think of primes.append() as a function that appends to primes.
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Methods
Behaves just like a function
object
function
(arguments)
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These built in functions are called methods or, more precisely, methods of the object are used all over Python and are a general concept across an entire type of programming called object oriented programming.
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We can use the append() method repeatedly to extend the list as far as we want.
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append() is not the only method built into lists. For example reverse() takes the list and reverses its contents. Note that it doesnt return a reversed list as a value; t doesnt return anything at all. It silently reverses the content of the list itself. Also note that it takes no argument; the brackets on the end of the function are empty.
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The function does not return the sorted list. It sorts the list itself.
Similarly, the sort() method doesnt return a sorted list but silently sorts the list internally.
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More or less any type can be sorted. Text sorting carries all the cautions about the complexities of collation that we covered under comparisons.
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Where to insert it
The append() method sticks an item on the end of a list. If you want to insert an item elsewhere in the list we have the insert() method. The insert() method takes two arguments: The first is the item to be inserted. The second is in index where it should go. This does not replace the original item but rather shuffles up all the items beyond it by one place to make room.
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c.f.
del numbers[2]
Index to remove
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There is a remove() method. This is passed a value to remove from the list. It then removes that value from the list, wherever it is in the list. Contrast with with del where you had to know the index to remove.
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If the value appears more than once in a list then only the first instance is removed. Trying to remove something that isnt there will lead to an error.
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Thats a lot of methods, and its only some of them. How can we know all of them? You can always ask for help on any Python object and you will be told all about the methods it possesses. It is a very formal documentation but the information is there. Incidentally, Python uses a program to paginate its help output. press the space bar to move on one page, B to move back a page and Q to quit.
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You can also get help on a single method which is often simpler to deal with.
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We noted that the sort() method sorts the list itself. Experience shows that sorting is one of those operations where people want a sorted copy of the list quite often.
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and leaves the list alone ['alpha', 'beta', 'gamma', 'delta'] >>> print(greek)
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To assist with this, Python 3 offers a standalone function called sorted() which makes a copy of the list and sorts that copy, leaving the original unchanged.
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List to add
The list method we saw first appended a single item to the end of a list. What happens if we want to add a whole list of items at the end? In this regard, lists are like strings. The + operator performs concatenation and creates a new list which is one concatenated after the other.
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Concatenation
Create a new list >>> newlist = primes + [23, 29, 31] Update the list >>> primes = primes + [23, 29, 31] Augmented assignment >>> primes += [23, 29, 31]
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We can use this to update a list in place. Note that the augmented assignment operator += also works and is more than syntactic sugar this time. It is actually more efficient than the long hand version because it updates the list in place rather than creating a new one.
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We ought to look at a couple of ways to create lists from text. The first is to simply convert a string into a list with the list() function. (As with all Python types, there is a function of the same name as the type that converts into the type.) Applying list() to a string gives a list of the characters in the string.
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The string type has methods of its own. One of these is split() which returns a list of the components of the string as separated by white space. The split() method can take an argument identifying other characters to split on. If you want to get into more complex splitting of text we recommend you investigate regular expressions or format-specific techniques (e.g. for comma-separated values.
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Progress
Methods append(item) reverse() sort() insert(item,index) remove(item) Help Sorting Concatenation + += [1,2,3] + [4,5,6] primes += [29, 31]
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object.method(arguments)
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Exercise 12
5 minutes
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Is an item in a list? 1
>>> odds = [3, 5, 7, 9] >>> odds.remove(2) Does not include 2 Try to remove 2
Traceback (most recent call last): Hard error File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> ValueError: list.remove(x): x not in list
Recall that a lists remove() method will give an error if the value to be removed is not in the list to start with. We need to be able to test for whether an item is in a list or not.
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Is an item in a list? 2
>>> odds = [3, 5, 7, 9] >>> 2 in odds False >>> 3 in odds True >>> 2 not in odds True
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Python uses the keyword in for this purpose. It can be used on its own or as part of not in. value in list evaluates to a boolean: True or False.
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Precedence
First x**y x==y -x x!=y +x x>=y x%y x>y x/y x<=y x*y x<y x-y x+y
x in y x or y Last
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These operators fit naturally into the order of precedence. While Python does contain other operators that belong in this list, we will not be meeting them in this introductory course.
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Safe removal
if number in numbers : numbers.remove(number) Whats the difference? while number in numbers : numbers.remove(number)
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We now have a safe way to remove values from lists, testing before we remove them. Quick question: Whats the difference between the two code snippets in the slide?
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There is an obvious thing to want to do with a list, and that is to work through each item in a list, in order, and perform some operation or set of operations on each item. In the most trivial case, we might want to print each item. The slide shows a list of strings, probably from the split() of a string. How do we print each item one after the other?
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[]
?
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Alternatively, we might want to accumulate the items in a list in some way. For example, we might want to sum the numbers in a list. This is another example of applying an operation to each item in a list. This time the operation is folding the list items values into some final result. In this case we would probably need an initial value of the result that it takes before any items get folded into it. What is the sum of an empty list? Zero? Is that an integer zero, a floating point zero, or a complex zero?
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Finally, we might want to convert one list into another where each item in the output list is the result of some operation on the corresponding item in the input list.
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A new Python looping construct print: What we want to do with the list items.
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Python has a construct precisely for stepping through the elements of a list. This is the third and final construct we will meet in this course. We have already seen if and while in this course. Now we meet for. This a looping construct, but rather than repeat while a test evaluates to True, it loops once for each item in a list. Furthermore it defines a name which it attaches to one item after another in the list as it repeats the loop.
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words = ['The', 'cat', 'sat', 'on', 'the', 'mat.'] keywords for word in words : print(word) colon followed by an indented block
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We'll look at the expression one step at a time. The expression is introduced by the for keyword. This is followed by the name of a variable. We will return to this in the next slide. After the name comes the keyword in. We have met this word in the context of lists before when we tested for an item's presence in a list. This is a different use. We aren't asking if a specific value is in a list but rather we are asserting that we are going to be processing those values that are in it. After this comes the list itself, or more often the name of a list. All it has to be is an expression that evaluates to a list. The line ends with a colon. The lines following the colon are indented marking the block of code that is to be run once for each item in the list.
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words = ['The', 'cat', 'sat', 'on', 'the', 'mat.'] Defining the loop variable for word in words : print(word) Using the loop variable
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Now let's return to the name between for and in. This is called the loop variable. Each time the loop block is run this name is attached to on item of the list. Each tim the loop is run the name is attached to the next item in the list. The looping stops after the name has been attached to the last item I nthe list.
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There is a simple example of this in the file for1.py in your home directories. $ python3 for1.py The cat sat on the mat. $
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print(sum)
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Our second case was an accumulator adding the elements in a list. Here we establish an initial start value for our total of 0 and give it the name sum. Then we loop through the elements in the list, adding their values to the running total as we move through them. The unindented line after the loop block marks the end of the loop block and is only run after all the looping is completed. This prints out the value of the total now that all the numbers in the list have been added into it. $ python3 for2.py 203 $
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print(squares)
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Our third example made a new list from the elements of an old list. For example, we might want to take a list of numbers and produce the list of their squares. In this case the usual process is that rather than have an accumulator with an initial value we start with an empty list and, as we loop through the input values, we append() the corresponding output values. $ python3 for3.py [16, 49, 4, 81, 1] $
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There is one nicety we should observe. The loop variable was created for the purpose of running through the elements in the list. But it is just a Python name, no different from the ones we establish by direct assignment. While the for loop creates the name it does not clean it up afterwards.
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It is good practice to delete the name after we have finished using it. So we will follow our for loops with a del statement. This is not required by the Python language but we recommend it as good practice.
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Progress
Testing items in lists 3 in [1,2,3,4] True
for loops
loop variables
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Exercise 13
What does this print? numbers = [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5] sum = 0 sum_so_far = [] for number in numbers: sum += number sum_so_far.append(sum) print(sum_so_far) 5 minutes
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Sort-of-lists
Python magic:
We have seen already that every Python type comes with a function that attempts to convert other Python objects into that type. So the list type has a list() function. However, with lists Python goes further and puts a lot of work into making this transparent and convenient. In very many cases in Python you can drop an object into a list construct and it will act as if it was a list, and a convenient list at that.
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Strings as lists
Recall: list('Hello') ['H', 'e', 'l', 'l', 'o']
H e l l o
for4.py
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For example, we know that if we apply the list() function to a string we get the list of characters. But the Python treat it like a list magic means that if we simply drop a string into the list slot in a for loop then it is treated as exactly that list of characters automatically. $ python for4.py H e l l o $
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3 4 5 6 7
8 not included
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There are other Python objects which, while not lists exactly, can be treated like lists in a for loop. A very important case is a range object. Note that the range defined by 3 and 8 starts at 3 but ends one short. This is part of the whole count from zero business.
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ranges of numbers
Not actually lists: >>> range(0,5) range(0,5)
>>> list(range(0,5)) [0, 1, 2, 3, 4] Treat it like a list and it will behave like a list
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Strictly speaking a range is not a list. But it is close enough to a list that when you drop it into a for loop, which is its most common use by far, then it behaves like the list of numbers.
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list(iterable)
Explicit list
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So why does the range() function not just produce a list? Well, its most common use is in a for loop. Only one value is required at a time. If the list was explicitly created t would waste computer memory for all the items not in use at the time and computer time for creating them all at once. (Truth be told, for the purposes of this course you wouldnt notice.)
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The range() function can be used with different numbers of arguments. A single argument gives a list running from zero to the number. Two arguments gives the lists we have already seen. A third argument acts as a stride and can be negative.
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Indices of lists
>>> primes = [ 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19] >>> len(primes) 8 >>> list(range(8)) [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7] valid indices
7
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Now that we have the range object we can move on to one of the most important uses of it. So far we have used a for loop to step through the values in a list. From time to time it is important to be able to step through the valid indices of the list. Observe that if we apply the range() function to a single number which is the length of a list then we get a list of the valid indices for that list.
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Simpler
Equivalent
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What good is a list of valid indices? There are two ways to step through the values in a list. One is directly; this is the method we have met already. The second is to step through the indices and to look up the corresponding value in the list. These are equivalent and the first method we have already seen is shorter to write. So why bother with the second?
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list2 = [ 0.2,
0.6
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Consider operations on two lists. A concrete example might be the dot product of two lists. This is the sum of the products of matching elements. So [0.3, 0.0, 0.4] [0.2, 0.5, 0.6] = 0.30.2 + 0.00.5 + 0.40.6 = 0.06 + 0.0 + 0.24 = 0.6 How might we implement this in Python?
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list1 = [0.3, 0.0, 0.4] list2 = [0.2, 0.5, 0.6] sum = 0.0 for index in range(len(list1)) : sum += list1[index]*list2[index] print(sum)
Dealing with values from both lists at the same time. 256
We can approach this problem by running through the valid indices and looking up the corresponding values from each list in the body of the for loop.
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Iterables
range(from,to,stride) Not a list but close enough Iterable
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The range object is one of the most commonly met examples of an iterable, something that isnt a list but is close enough.
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str 5
a l p h a
We will look a little more closely at iterables so that we can recognise them when we meet them later. If we start with a list then we can turn it into an iterable with the iter() function. An iterable ceated from a list is essentially the same as the list with a note of how far through the list we have read. This reference starts at zero, obviously. Python provides a next() function which can act on any iterable which returns the next value (or the first if weve not started) and increments this internal counter.
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Note that next() complains vigorously if we try to run off the end. For this course, where these errors are all fatal it means that we cant use next() directly. we dont need to; we have the for loop which handles the error for us.
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Progress
Non-lists as lists range() for letter in 'Hello': ... range(limit) range(start,limit) range(start,limit,step) range(3,7) Iterables Indices of lists Parallel lists [3,4,5,6]
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Exercise 14
Complete exercise14.py list1 = [ 0.3, list2 = [ 0.2, 0.1 0.0, 0.5, -0.5 0.4] 0.6] Subtract -0.2 Square 0.01 + 0.25 + 0.04 Add 0.3 5 minutes
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This exercise develops the Python to calculate the square of the distance between two 3D points. We could use our square root Python from earlier to calculate the distance itself but we will meet the real square root function later in this course so well hold back from that for now.
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List slices
>>> primes = [2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29] >>> primes [2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29] >>> primes[3] 7 >>> primes[3:9] [7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23] Part of the list
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The list
An item
There is one last piece of list Pythonry we need to see. Python has a syntax for making copies of parts of lists, which it calls slices. If, instead of a simple index we put two indices separated by a colon then we get the sub-list running from the first index up to but excluding the seocnd index.
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Slices 1
from to primes[3:9] 3 9 Up to but not including
primes[3:9]
The last index is omitted as part of the count from zero thing.
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Slices 2
primes [2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31]
[7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23] [2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23] [7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31] [2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31]
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We can omit either or both of the numbers. Missing the first number means from the start and missing the second means right up to the end.
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Slices 3
primes [2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19, 23, 29, 31]
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We can also add a second colon which is followed by a stride, just as with range().
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a b c
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Slices allow us to make copies of entire lists. If we use simple name attachment then we just get two names for the same list.
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str 1 str 1
A b
Changing an item in the list via one name shows up via the other name.
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letters
list 3
list 3
a b c
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Slices are copies, though, so if we attach a name to a slice from a list even if that slice is the entire list then we have two separate lists each with their own name attached.
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str 1
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So changes in one dont show in the other because they are not the same list.
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Progress
Slices End-limit excluded Slices are copies items[from:to] items[:to] items[from:] items[:] items[from:to:stride] items[:to:stride] items[from::stride] items[::stride]
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Exercise 15
Predict what this Python will do. Then run it. Were you right? exercise15.py
foo = [4, 6, 2, 7, 3, 1, 9, 4, 2, 7, 4, 6, 0, 2] bar = foo[3:-1:3] bar[2] += foo[4] foo[0] = bar[1] print(bar) 5 minutes
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Files
Input .txt Output
.dat
.csv
Reading
Writing
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Now we will look at something completely different that will turn out to be just like a list: Files. We want our Python scripts to be able to read in and write out files of text or data. We will consider reading files first and writing them second.
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'treasure.txt'
string
book
file
'TREASURE ISLAND'
string
Reading from a file involves four operations bracketing three phases. We start with a file name. This is a string of characters. I want to be pedantic about something in this course: a file name is not a file. A file is a lump of data in the computers long-term store. A file name is a short piece of text. We link a file name to a file by a process called opening the file. This takes the file name and creates a Python file object which will act as our conduit to the file proper. We will use this file object to read data from the file into the Python script. When we are done reading data out of the file (via the file object) we will signal to both python and the operating system that we are done with it by closing it. This disconnects us from the file and we would have to re-open it if we wanted more data.
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We will start with opening a file. We start with just the file name. This is passed into the open() function with a second argument, 'r', indicating that we only want to read the file. The function hooks into the operating system, which looks up the file by name, checks that we have permission to read it, records the fact that we are reading it, and hands us back a handle the file object by which we can access its contents.
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Now that we have this hook into the file itself, how do we read the data from it? File objects are iterators, so we can apply the next() function to them to get the next line, starting with the first.
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A blank line
Note that a blank line actually contains the end of line character. It has length 1, and is not an empty string, length 0.
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Method built in to file object >>> book.close() Frees the file for other programs to write to it.
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When we are done reading the data we need to signal that we are done with it. Python file objects have a close() method built into them which does precisely this.
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Text Input/Output File name Character encoding: how to represent letters as numbers.
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UTF-8 means UCS Transformation Format 8-bit. UCS means Universal Character Set. This is defined by International Standard ISO/IEC 10646, Information technology Universal multiple-octet coded character set (UCS). For more information than you could possibly want on this topic visit the Unicode web pages: www.unicode.org.
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The Python file object contains a lot of different bits of information. There are also lots of different sorts of file object, but we are glossing over that in this introductory course. What they share is a reference into the operating systems file system that identifies the specific file and acts as the declaration to the operating system that the Python process is using the file. They also share an offset. This is a number that identifies how far into the file the program has read so far. The next() function reads from the offset to the next new line and increases the offset to be the distance into the file of the new line character. The file object also records the name it was opened from and the text encoding it is using to convert bytes in the file to characters in the program.
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list(file_object)
Given that a file is an iterable, we can smply convert it into a list and we get the list of lines.
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Note, however, that the act of reading the file to get the lines reads through the file, so doing it twice gives an empty result second time round.
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>>> lines_b = list(book) >>> print(lines_b) [] Operation reads entire file from offset. So there's nothing left to read.
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recall that the reading starts at the offset and reads forwards to the end of the file in this example. It also moves the offset to what was last read. So the offset is changed to refer to the end of the file.
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We can deliberately change the offset. For text files with lines of different lengths this can be more complex that you would imagine. The only safe value to change the offset to is zero which takes us back to the start of the file.
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There are other ways to read in the data. Earlier versions of Python only supported a couple of built-in methods. You may still see these in other peoples scripts but we don recommend writing them in scripts that you create.
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Being able to read a single line of a file is all very well. Converting an entire book into a list of its lines might prove to be unwieldy. What is the typical way to do it? Given that files can be treated like lists the easiest way to process each line of a file is with a for loop.
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For example, we could just increment a counter for each line to count the number of lines.
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We could measure the length of the line and increment the counter by the number of characters in the line to count the total number of characters in the file.
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Progress
Reading files Opening file Reading file Closing file File offset book = open(filename, 'r') for line in book: ... book.close() book.seek(0)
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Exercise 16
Complete a script to count lines, words and characters of a file. exercise16.py
5 minutes
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Writing files
File name opening the file Data to write writing to the file File object closing the file Finished with the file
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'treasure.txt'
string
'TREASURE ISLAND'
string
book
file
Enough of reading files Robert Louis Stephenson has prepared for us. Lets write our own. This is again a three phase process. We will open a file for writing, write to it and then close it.
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Opening a file for writing is the same as opening it for reading except that the mode is 'w' for writing. If the file already exists then this overwrites it. The file gets truncated to zero bytes long because you havent written to it yet.
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A writeable file object has a method write() which takes a text string (typically but not necessarily a line) and writes it to the file.
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>>> output.close()
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Importance of closing
Data flushed to disc on closure. write flush
Python script
File object
File system
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Closing files is even more important for written files that read ones. It is only when a file is closed that the data you have written to the Python file object is definitely sent to the operating systems file. This is a process called flushing the file to disc. Writing to disc is slow by computing standards so, for efficiency reasons, systems like Python tend to wait until they have at least a certain amount of data for a file before they flush it to disc. If your program exists before flushing then the data may be lost. Closing a file signals that there will be no more data coming for it so Python flushes whatever it has in hand to the disc as part of the closure process.
295
open ['r']
296
Theres more to it than just flushing, though. Holding a file open signals to the underlying computer operating system that you have an interest in the file. How the operating system reacts to this varies from system to system, but Microsoft Windows will lock a file so that if you have it open for writing nobody else can open it for reading, even if you dont plan to write any more to it than you have already.
296
Progress
Writing files Opening files for writing Writing data Closing file important Flushing book = open(filename, 'w') book.write(data) book.close() book.flush()
297
297
Exercise 17
5 minutes
298
298
Functions
y = f(x)
299
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This is the complete set of Python functions that we have met to date. Actually its surprising how few there are, not how many. Pythons philosophy leads to functions that only make sense for a particular sort of object being methods of that object, not free-standing functions. We are now going to write our own functions.
300
Structured programming
Why? Moving our scripts functionality into functions and then calling those functions is going to make everything better. This is the first step towards structured programming which is where programming goes when your scripts get too long to write in one go without really thinking about it.
301
Defining a function
302
So what do we need to do? Well any functions starts by defining what inputs it needs, what it does with those inputs to generate the results and exactly what results/outputs it generates.
302
Sum a list
[1, 2, 3] [7, -4, 1, 6, 0] [] 6 10 0
Edge case
303
To give ourselves a simple but concrete example to keep in mind we will set ourselves the challenge of writing a function that sums the elements of a list. This may sound trivial but immediately raises some interesting cases that need to be considered. What is the sum of an empty list? Zero? Is that an integer zero or a floating point zero? (Or a complex zero?) We will say it should sum to an integer zero.
303
304
We will plunge straight into the Python. The Python keyword to define a function is def. This is followed by the name of the function, total in this case. This is followed by a pair of round brackets which will contain all the input values for the function. Finally there is a colon to mark the end of the line and the beginning of the body of the function.
304
name for the input def total(numbers): This name is internal to the function.
305
Our function takes a single input: the list of numbers to be summed. What goes inside the brackets on the def line is the name that this list will have inside the functions definition. This is the x in maths. This internal names is typically unrelated to the name the list has in the main body of the script. It is always a good idea to name your inputs (and other variables) meaningfully. Please try to avoid calling them x, y, or z. We will call ours numbers.
305
def total(numbers):
306
As ever with Python a colon at the end of a line is followed by an indented block of code. This will be the body of the function where we write the Python that defines what the function actually does with the input(s) it is given.
306
def total(numbers): sum_so_far = 0 for number in numbers: sum_so_far += number Body of function
307
307
def total(numbers): sum_so_far = 0 for number in numbers: sum_so_far += number These variables exist only within the functions body.
308
The numbers name we specified on the def line is visible to Python only within the function definition. Similarly any names that get created within the function body exist only within that function body and will not be visible outside. Nor will they clash with any other uses of those names outside the function body. In our example code the name numbers is defined in the def line, the sum_so_far name is defined explicitly in the function body and the number name is defined by the for loop as its loop variable. None of these interact with the Python outside the function definition.
308
def total(numbers): sum_so_far = 0 for number in numbers: sum_so_far += number return sum_so_far This value is returned return this value
309
Finally we need to specify exactly what value the function is going to return. We do this with another Python keyword, return. The value that follows the return keyword is the value returned by the function. When Python reaches the return statement in a function definition it hands back the value and ends the execution of the function body itself.
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Note that because of this isolation of names we dont have to worry about not using names that are used elsewhere in the script. Also, as part of this isolation all these function-internal names are automatically cleared when the function finishes. We do not need to worry about deleting them.
311
We use this function we have defined in exactly the same way as we would use a function provided by Python.
312
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print(total([1, 2, 3]))
total1.py
315
The file total1.py in your home directories contains exactly the code you see here.
315
316
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Progress
Functions Structured programming Defining a function Returning a value def function(input): ... return output
317
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Exercise 18
Take the script from exercise 16 and turn it into: 1. the definition of a function file_stats() that takes a file name and returns a triple (n_lines, n_words, n_chars) 2. a call to that function for file name treasure.txt 3. a print of that triple.
5 minutes
318
318
total2.py
Equivalent def total(numbers): sum_so_far = 0 for index in range(len(numbers)): sum_so_far += numbers[index] return sum_so_far
total3.py
319
Lets quickly remind ourselves about how we can uses indices for lists rather than values from lists directly. We found this particularly useful when we were traversing more than one list at once.
319
Two inputs
320
So how do we build functions that take in more than one input at once?
320
The Python syntax for multiple inputs is much the same as it is for a mathemtical function: we separate the inputs by commas.
321
Note that functions that take in more than one list typically need to use indices.
322
Multiple outputs
Write a function to find minimum and maximum value in a list
1 -5 1
3 10 7
Two outputs
323
But what if we want to return multiple values? We can write a function that determines the minimum value in a list, and we can write a function that returns the maximum. What do we do if we want to find both?
323
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324
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Finding both
def minmax_list(a_list): min_so_far = a_list[0] max_so_far = a_list[0] for a in a_list : if a < min_so_far: min_so_far = a if a > max_so_far: max_so_far = a return what?
326 This is the real question
Combining the bodies of these two functions is quite straightforward. But what do we return?
326
Returning both
def minmax_list(a_list): min_so_far = a_list[0] max_so_far = a_list[0] for a in a_list : if a < min_so_far: min_so_far = a if a > max_so_far: max_so_far = a return min_so_far, max_so_far
327 A pair of values
minmax.py
Two return two values we simply put them both after the return statement separated by a comma, just as we would have done with the inputs.
327
Tuples
e.g. min_value, max_value Pair
min_value, avg_value, max_value Triple Commas Often written with parentheses: (min_value, max_value) (min_value, avg_value, max_value)
328
These sets of values separated by commas (but not in square brackets to make a list) are called tuples in Python. Sometimes they are written with round brackets around them to make it clearer that they come together. But its the comma that is the active ingredient making them a tuple, not the brackets.
328
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If we return a pair of values in a tuple, we can also attach a pair of names to them as a tuple too.
329
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We can do this outside the context of functions returning values, of course. We can do it anywhere.
330
Swapping values
>>> alpha = 12 >>> beta = 56 >>> (alpha, beta) = (beta, alpha) >>> print(alpha) 56 >>> print(beta) 12
331
Swapping values
Because the entire right hand side is evaluated before the left hand side is considered this lets us use tuples for some particularly useful tricks. perhaps the most useful is swapping two values.
331
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The values associated with the names are evaluated first. Then the names get reattached to those values, regardless of what names they might have had before.
332
!
a has now changed! b 10 - 7 = 3
333
333
(a, b) = (17, 3)
334
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Progress
Multiple inputs Multiple outputs Tuples Simultaneous assignment def thing(in1, in2, in3): return (in1, in2, in3) (a, b, c) (a, b) = (a+b, a-b)
335
335
Exercise 19
Script exercise19.py has a function to return the minimum and maximum of a list as a pair.
5 minutes
336
336
two objects
a pair of objects
one object
337
Tuples tend to blur the boundary between multiple objects and a single object.
337
We can treat a tuple as a single object. It has a type called , tuple unsurprisingly.
338
339
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Splitting up a tuple
>>> print(z) (20, 3.14) >>> (a,b) = z >>> print(a) 20 >>> print(b) 3.14
340
But a tuple is fundamentally made of separable pieces and can be split up.
340
Indices
Length
Concatenation
341
Immutable
342
They have one critical difference, though. A tuple is immutable. You cannot change individual elements in a tuple. You get the whole tuple and you cant fiddle with it.
342
Progress
Tuples as single objects Splitting up a tuple Tuples as lists thing = (a, b, c) (x, y, z) = thing thing[0] len(thing) thing + thing Immutability thing[0] = 10
343
343
344
To date we have written a small number of functions ourselves. Once we become serious Python programmers using the computer for our day job then we would expect to write many more.
344
One definition
Easy!
345
Within a script reusing a function is easy. We simply call the function whenever we want it.
345
One definition
How?
346
But what happens if we want to use a function in more than one script?
346
Modules
def square(limit): ... def cubes(limit): ... Definition ... five = squares(5) ...
Use
Python has a mechanism to assist with this called modules. A module is a collection of functions (and other material) which can then be imported into a script and used within that script. If we can write our own module with our own functions then we can import them into our own scripts.
347
Starts empty
sum_squares.py
348
We will start with a file called sum_squares.py which uses two functions to add up the squares of numbers from zero to some limit. We want to transfer those function definitions into a different file which we will call utils.py (which starts empty) but still be able to use them in our original file.
348
= 0 + 1 + 4 + 9 + 16
Just to prove Im not fibbing, here it is working before we move anything about.
349
text = input('Number? ') number = int(text) squares_n = squares(number) total_n = total(squares_n) print(total_n)
utils.py
Using the text editor we move the definitions from sum_squares.py to utils.py.
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We need to import the functioned defined in utils.py into sum_squares.py. First, we add the instruction import utils to the top of the stm_squares.py file. Note that we import utils, not utils.py.
352
353
353
text = input('Number? ') number = int(text) squares_n = utils.squares(number) total_n = utils.total(squares_n) print(total_n)
354
We have to indicate to Python that these functions it is looking for in sum_squares.py come from the utils module. To do this we include utils. at the start of their names.
354
355
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Progress
Sharing functions between scripts Modules Importing modules Using functions from modules import module module.function()
356
356
Exercise 20
Move the function file_stats() from exercise18.py into utils.py and edit exercise18.py so that it still works.
5 minutes
357
357
math sys
Batteries included
string
358
We have met the majority of the Python language already! But obviously Python has facilities to do much more than we have seen so far. The trick is that Python comes with a large number of modules of its own which have functions for performing no end of useful things. This philosophy is called batteries included. You probably already have the module you need to do your specialist application.
358
Run the sqrt() function >>> math.sqrt(2.0) from the math module. 1.4142135623730951
359
Lets see an example of an included battery. At the very start of this course we write ourselves a square root program. Now lets see what Python offers as an alternative. We import the math module. (No trailing s; this is the American spelling.) In the math module is a sqrt() function. We can access this as math.sqrt(). Most of the fundamental mathematical operations can be found in the math moWe will see how to find out exactly what is in a module in a few slides time.
359
Alias
360
There are those who object to typing. If math is too long then we can use an aliasing trick to give the module a shorter name. (The problem is rarely with math. There is a built-in module called multiprocessing though which might get tiresome.)
360
Dont do these
>>> from math import sqrt >>> sqrt(2.0) 1.4142135623730951 Much better to track the module.
! !!
361
python does permit you to do slightly more than that. You can suppress the name of the module altogether. You are beginners so please take it from an old hand on trust that this turns out to be a very bad idea. You want to keep track of where your functions came from!
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Batteries included
>>> help('modules') Please wait a moment while I gather a list of all available modules... CDROM bdb binascii importlib inspect shelve shlex 263 modules
Enter any module name to get more help. Or, type "modules spam" to search for modules whose descriptions contain the word "spam". Not quite this simple
363
To find out exactly what modules come with your version of Python ask the help system. A word of warning, though. The text at the bottom Enter any module name is not quite right. If you give the help() command with no argument then you are dropped into an interactive help system. There you can type the name of a module or type modules spam, etc. >>> help() Welcome to Python 3.1! This is the online help utility. help> modules subprocess Here is a list of matching modules. name to get more help. Enter any module
subprocess - subprocess - Subprocesses with accessible I/O streams help> quit >>>
363
But, of course, theres never the particular module you want. There are modules provided by people who want Python to interoperate with whatever it is they are offering. There are three sets of additional modules that you may end up needing to know about. The numerical and scientific world has a collection of modules called Numerical Python (numpy) and scientific python (scipy) which contain enormous amounts of useful functions and types for numerical processing. Every database under the sun offers a module to let Python access it. Finally there is a module to offer very powerful 2D graphics for data visualisation and presentation.
364
$ python3 argv.py one two three ['argv.py', 'one', 'two', 'three'] index 0 1 2 3
We will take a brief look at another commonly used module to illustrate some of the things Python has hidden away in its standard set. The sys module contains many systems-y things. For example, it contains a list called sys.argv which contains the argument values passed on the command line when the script was launched. Note two things: 1. that item zero in this list is always the name of the script itself, 2. the items are always strings
365
sys.exit()
exit() sys.exit(rc) What we have been using What we should use
Also tucked away in the sys module is the sys.exit() function. Up to this point we have been using the exit() function to quit our scripts early. However this function is something of a filthy hack and sys.exit() provides superior quitting and an extra facility we will be able to make use of. The sys.exit() function takes an integer argument. This is the programs return code which is a very short message back to the operating system to indicate whether the program completed successfully or not. A return code of 0 means success. A non-zero return code means failure. Some programs use different non-zero codes for different failures but many (most?) simply use a value of 1 to mean something went wrong. If your script simply stops because it reached the end then Python does an automatic sys.exit(0).
366
367
Modules in Python
How do I do X in Python? Whats the Python module to do X? Where do I find Python modules?
368
So the Python philosophy places a lot of functionality into its modules. This means that we have to be able to find modules and know what they can do.
368
Finding modules
Python: Built-in modules
SciPy:
PyPI:
Search:
Some useful URLs: http://docs.python.org/py3k/py-modindex.html This contains the list of all the batteries included modules that come with Python. For each module it links through to their documentation. http://www.scipy.org/Topical_Software http://numpy.scipy.org/ Scientific Python contains very many subject-specific modules for Python. Most depend on the Numerical Python module numpy. http://pypi.python.org/pypi (do check for Python3 packages) This is the semi-official dumping ground for everything else. http://www.google.co.uk/ And for everything else theres Google (who are big Python users, by the way).
369
I promised information on how to find out what is in a module. Here it is. Once a module has been imported you can ask it for help.
370
The help will always include information on every function in the module
371
372
>>> import utils >>> help(utils) NAME utils FUNCTIONS squares(limit) total(numbers) FILE /home/y550/utils.py
373
What help can we get from our own module? By now you should have a utils.py file with some functions of your own in it. The help simply lists the functions the module contains and the file it is defined in.
373
Fresh start
DESCRIPTION Some utility functions from the Python for Absolute Beginners course FUNCTIONS squares(limit)
374
utils.py
total(numbers)
But we can do better than that. If we simply put a Python string (typically in long text triple quotes) at the top of the file before any used Python (but after comments is fine) then this becomes the description text in the help. Note: You need to restart Python and re-import the module to see changes.
374
Fresh start
utils.py
If we put text immediately after a def line and before the body of the function it becomes the help text for that function, both in the module-as-awhole help text
375
Fresh start
376
utils.py
376
Progress
Python a small language with many, many modules System modules Foreign modules Modules provide help Doc strings help(module) help(module.function)
377
Functionality
Module
377
Exercise 21
Add help text to your utils.py file.
378 5 minutes
378
str 5
a l p h a
greek[0]
379
We have one last Python type to learn about. To give it some context, we will recap the list type that we have spent so much time using. A list is basically an ordered sequence of values. The position in that sequence is known as the index.
379
index
Must be a number
list
value
greek[1]
'beta'
380
If we now forget about the internals of a list, though, we can think of it as some sort of Python object that takes in a number (the index) and spits out a value.
380
English
dictionary
Spanish
'gato'
dictionary
'perro' 'ratn'
381
Can we generalise on this idea by moving away from the input (the index) needing to be a number? Can we model a dictionary where we take in a string (a word in English, say) and give out a different string (the corresponding word in Spanish, say). (Note: the author is fully aware that translation is not as simple as this. This is just a toy example.)
381
(x, y)
dictionary
Objects
(2,5) (4,5)
dictionary
'Treasure' 'Fortress'
382
382
Python dictionaries
>>> en_to_es = { 'cat':'gato' , 'dog':'perro' }
383
Python does have exactly such a general purpose mapper which it calls a dict, short for dictionary. Here is the Python for establishing a (very small) English to Spanish dictionary that knows about two words. We also see the Python for looking up a word in the dictionary. We will review this syntax in some detail
383
Creating a dictionary 1
Curly brackets Comma { 'cat':'gato' , 'dog':'perro' } 'cat' 'gato' 'dog' 'perro'
384
First we will look at creating a dictionary. In the same way that we can create a list with square brackets, we can create a dictionary with curly ones. Each item in a dictionary is a pair of values separated by a colo They are separated by commas.n.
384
Creating a dictionary 2
'cat' : 'gato'
The pairs of items separated by colons are known as the key and value. The key is what you put in (the English word in this example) that you look up in the dictionary and the value is what you get out (the translation into Spanish in this example).
385
Using a dictionary 1
>>> en_to_es = { 'cat':'gato' , 'dog':'perro' } Creating the dictionary >>> en_to_es['cat'] 'gato' Using the dictionary
386
Now we have seen how to create a (small) dictionary we should look at how to use it.
386
Using a dictionary 2
Square brackets
en_to_es[ 'cat' ]
'gato'
dictionary
key
value
387
To look something up in a dictionary we pass it to the dictionary in exactly the same way as we passed the index to a list: in square brackets. Curly brackets are just for creating a dictionary; after that it square brackets again.
387
Missing keys
>>> en_to_es = { 'cat':'gato' , 'dog':'perro' } >>> en_to_es['dog'] 'perro' >>> en_to_es['mouse']
Traceback (most recent call last): File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> KeyError: 'mouse' Error message
388
The equivalent to shooting off the end of a list is asking for a key thats not in a dictionary.
388
Traceback (most recent call last): File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> KeyError: 'perro' Looking for a key
389
389
Adding to a dictionary
>>> en_to_es = { 'cat':'gato' , 'dog':'perro' } Initial dictionary has no 'mouse' >>> en_to_es['mouse'] = 'ratn' Adding 'mouse' to the dictionary >>> en_to_es['mouse'] 'ratn'
390
Adding key-value pairs to a dictionary is a lot easier than it is with lists. With lists we needed to append on the end of a list. With dictionaries, because there is no inherent order, we can simply define them with a simple expression on the left hand side.
390
We can use del to remove from a dictionary just as we did with lists.
391
Progress
Dictionaries Key Value
{ key1:value1 , key2:value2, key3:value3 } Looking up values Setting values Removing keys dictionary[key] value
392
Exercise 22
Complete exercise22.py to create an English to French dictionary.
393
Whats in a dictionary? 1
>>> en_to_es {'mouse': 'ratn', 'dog': 'perror', 'cat': 'gato'}
>>> en_to_es.values() dict_values(['ratn', 'perro', 'gato']) Just treat them like lists (or convert them to lists)
394
To date we have created our own dictionaries. If we are handed one how do we find out what keys and values are in it? Dictionaries support two methods which return the sort-of-lists of the keys and values. We mention them here only for completeness. Dont forget that you can always convert a sort-of-list into a list with the list() function.
394
Whats in a dictionary? 2
>>> en_to_es.items() Most useful method dict_items([('mouse', 'ratn'), ('dog', 'perro'), ('cat', 'gato')]) (Key,Value) pairs/tuples >>> for (k, v) in en_to_es.items(): ... ... ratn mouse perro dog gato cat
395
print(v,k)
By far the best way to get at the contents of a dictionary is to use the items() method which generates a sort-of-list of the key-value pairs as tuples. Running a for loop over this list is the easiest way to process the contents of a directory.
395
Whats in a dictionary? 3
Common simplification >>> list(en_to_es.items()) [('mouse','ratn'), ('dog','perro'),('cat','gato')]
396
Dont be afraid to convert it explicitly into a list. Unless you dictionary is huge you wont see any problem with this.
396
dictionary
list()
list of keys
Unfortunately when you convert a dictionary directly into a list you get the list of keys not the list of )(key,value) pairs. This is a shame but is a compromise for back compatibility with previous versions.
397
Is a key in a dictionary?
>>> en_to_es['snake'] Traceback (most recent call last): File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> KeyError: 'snake' Want to avoid this
Because of this conversion to the list of keys we can ask if a key is in a dictionary using the in keyword without having to know its corresponding value.
398
words = ['the','cat','sat','on','the','mat']
counts = {'the':2,'cat':1,'sat':1,'on':1,'mat':1}
399
Lets have a serious worked example. We might be given a list of words and want to count the words by how many times they appear in the list.
399
400
We start by creating an empty dictionary. Its empty because we havent read any words yet. Then we loop through the list of words using a standard for loop. For each word we have to do something to increment the count in the dictionary.
400
counts[word] += 1
counter1.py
401
401
counts['sat'] += 1
counts['sat'] = counts['sat'] + 1
402
We cannot increment a value that isnt there. Until the program meets a word for the first time it has no entry in the dictionary, and certainly not an entry with numerical value 0.
402
So we have to test to see if the word is already in the dictionary to increment it if it is there and to do something else if it is not. Note how we use the if key in dictionary test.
403
That something else is to create it with its initial value of 1 (because we have met the word once now).
404
You cannot predict the order of the keys when a dictionary prints out.
405
Dictionaries are unordered entities. You cannot predict the order that the keys will appear when you print a dictionary or step through its keys.
405
Too ugly
Better
counter3.py
406
Simply printing a dictionary gives ugly output. We can pull out the (key,value) pairs and print them individually if we want. Notice the use of pulling out the items, converting them into a list and then sorting them.
406
407
407
Progress
Inspection methods dictionary.keys() dictionary.values() dictionary.items()
keys = list(dictionary)
408
408
Exercise 23
Complete exercise23.py to write a function that reverses a dictionary.
409 10 minutes
409
Formatted output
$ python3 counter3.py cat 1 mat 1 on 1 sat 1 the 2 cat mat on sat the 1 1 1 1 2
Ugly!
We have one last topic to cover. The output from our word counter is not as pretty as it might be. The last topic we will cover is Python text formatting. Full details of the formatting system can be found online at docs.python.org/py3k/library/string.html#formatspec
410
'xxx{}yyy{}zzz' 'xxxAyyy100zzz'
411
In Python 3 the string type has a method called format() which takes arguments and returns another string which is the original with the methods arguments inserted into it in certain places. Those places are marked with curly brackets in the string. Curly brackets are otherwise quite normal characters. Its only the format() method that cares about them. In its simplest form, the format() method replaces each pair of curly brackets with the corresponding argument.
411
String formatting 1
>>> 'xxx{:5s}yyy'.format('A') 'xxxAyyy'
{:5s}
s substitute a string 5 pad to 5 spaces (left aligns by default) 412
The real fun starts when we put something inside those curly brackets. These are the formatting instructions. The simplest examples start with a colon followed by some layout instructions. (We will see what comes in front of the colon in a few slides time.) The number indicates how many spaces to allocate for the insertion and the letter that follows tells it what type ob object to expect. s stands for string.
412
String formatting 2
>>> 'xxx{:<5s}yyy'.format('A') 'xxxAyyy'
{:<5s}
< align to the left ()
413
By default strings align to the left of their space. We can be explicit about this by inserting a left angle bracket, which you can think of as an arrow head pointing the direction of the alignment.
413
String formatting 3
>>> 'xxx{:>5s}yyy'.format('A') 'xxxAyyy'
{:>5s}
> align to the right ()
414
If we want right aligned strings then we have to use the alignment marker.
414
Integer formatting 1
>>> 'xxx{:5d}yyy'.format(123) 'xxx123yyy'
{:5d}
d substitute an integer (digits) 5 pad to 5 spaces (right aligns by default)
415
If we change the letter to a d we are telling the format() method to insert an integer (digits). These align to the right by default.
415
Integer formatting 2
>>> 'xxx{:>5d}yyy'.format(123) 'xxx123yyy'
{:>5d}
> align to the right ()
416
416
Integer formatting 3
>>> 'xxx{:>5d}yyy'.format(123) 'xxx123yyy'
{:<5d}
< align to the left ()
417
417
Integer formatting 4
>>> 'xxx{:05d}yyy'.format(123) 'xxx123yyy'
{:05d}
0 pad with zeroes
418
If we precede the width number with a zero then the number is padded with zeroes rather than spaces and alignment is automatic.
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Integer formatting 5
>>> 'xxx{:+5d}yyy'.format(123) 'xxx+123yyy'
{:05d}
+ always show sign
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If we put a plus sign in front of the number then its sign is always shown, even if it is positive.
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Integer formatting 6
>>> 'xxx{:+05d}yyy'.format(123) 'xxx+0123yyy'
{:05d}
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Integer formatting 7
>>> 'xxx{:5,d}yyy'.format(1234) 'xxx1,234yyy'
{:5,d}
, 1,000s
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Adding a comma between the width and the d adds comma breaks to large numbers.
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{:5.2f}
Floating point numbers are slightly more complicated. The width parameter has two parts, separated by a decimal point. The first number is the width of the entire number (just as it is for strings and integers). The number after the decimal point is the number of decimal points of precision that should be included in the formatted output.
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{:f} {:.6f}
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The default is to have six decimal points of precision and to make the field as wide as it needs to be.
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What comes before the colon? This is a selection parameter detailing what argument to insert. The arguments to format() are given numbers starting at zero. We can put these numbers in front of the colon.
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We can also use them to change the order that items appear in or to have them appear more than once (or not at all).
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Formatting in practice
... formatting = '{:3} {:1}' for (word, number) in items: print(formatting.format(word,number))
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The script counter4.py is the same as counter3.py but with the new formatting for its output.
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Progress
Formatting Numbered parameters Substitutions string.format(args) {0} {1} {2}
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Exercise 24
Complete exercise24.py to format the output as shown:
5 minutes
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And congratulations! You have completed an introductory course on Python. Well done. It is only an introductory course and there is more. But do not let that dishearten you; just take a look at what you have accomplished. You now have a firm grounding to go further with Python or to start learning other programming languages. (But the author would like you to stick with Python.)
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If you do want more Python the UCS offers a selection of self-paced courses on some additional language features and on various Python modules to let you learn how to use Python for a specific purpose. We also offer a taught course introducing you to the world of object-oriented programming where you get to write your own methods and types.
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Congratulations!
Text Prompting Numbers Arithmetic Comparisons Booleans Variables Deleting names while loop if test Indented blocks Lists Indices Object methods Built-in help for loops Treat it like a list Values direct/via index Reading files Writing files Functions Structured programming Tuples for loops Modules Dictionaries Formatting
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