Python Questions
Python Questions
LIST vs TUPLES
LIST TUPLES
Lists are mutable i.e they can be Tuples are immutable (tuples are lists which
edited. can’t be edited).
Lists are slower than tuples. Tuples are faster than list.
Syntax: list_1 = [10, ‘Chelsea’, 20] Syntax: tup_1 = (10, ‘Chelsea’ , 20)
Deep copy is used to store the values that are already copied. Deep copy doesn’t copy
the reference pointers to the objects. It makes the reference to an object and the new
object that is pointed by some other object gets stored. The changes made in the original
copy won’t affect any other copy that uses the object. Deep copy makes execution of the
program slower due to making certain copies for each object that is been called.
1. Python has a multi-threading package but if you want to multi-thread to speed your
code up, then it’s usually not a good idea to use it.
2. Python has a construct called the Global Interpreter Lock (GIL). The GIL makes
sure that only one of your ‘threads’ can execute at any one time. A thread acquires
the GIL, does a little work, then passes the GIL onto the next thread.
3. This happens very quickly so to the human eye it may seem like your threads are
executing in parallel, but they are really just taking turns using the same CPU core.
4. All this GIL passing adds overhead to execution. This means that if you want to
make your code run faster then using the threading package often isn’t a good
idea.
Syntax:
Example:
The expression gets evaluated like if x<y else y, in this case if x<y is true then the value
is returned as big=x and if it is incorrect then big=y will be sent as a result.
1. Single Inheritance – where a derived class acquires the members of a single super
class.
2. Multi-level inheritance – a derived class d1 in inherited from base class base1, and
d2 are inherited from base2.
3. Hierarchical inheritance – from one base class you can inherit any number of child
classes
4. Multiple inheritance – a derived class is inherited from more than one base class.
A session basically allows you to remember information from one request to another. In
a flask, a session uses a signed cookie so the user can look at the session contents and
modify. The user can modify the session if only it has the secret key Flask.secret_key.
1. Help() function: The help() function is used to display the documentation string and
also facilitates you to see the help related to modules, keywords, attributes, etc.
2. Dir() function: The dir() function is used to display the defined symbols.
Q10. Whenever Python exits, why isn’t all the memory de-
allocated?
Ans:
1. Whenever Python exits, especially those Python modules which are having circular
references to other objects or the objects that are referenced from the global
namespaces are not always de-allocated or freed.
2. It is impossible to de-allocate those portions of memory that are reserved by the C
library.
3. On exit, because of having its own efficient clean up mechanism, Python would try
to de-allocate/destroy every other object.
The following example contains some keys. Country, Capital & PM. Their corresponding
values are India, Delhi and Modi respectively.
1 dict={'Country':'India','Capital':'Delhi','PM':'Modi'}
1 print dict[Country]
India
1 print dict[Capital]
Delhi
1 print dict[PM]
Modi
Q12. What is monkey patching in Python?
Ans: In Python, the term monkey patch only refers to dynamic modifications of a class or
module at run-time.
1 # m.py
2 class MyClass:
3 def f(self):
4 print "f()"
We can then run the monkey-patch testing like this:
1 import m
2 def monkey_f(self):
3 print "monkey_f()"
4
5 m.MyClass.f = monkey_f
obj = m.MyClass()
6 obj.f()
7
The output will be as below:
monkey_f()
As we can see, we did make some changes in the behavior of f() in MyClass using the
function we defined, monkey_f(), outside of the module m.
Q13. What does this mean: *args, **kwargs? And why would we use
it?
Ans: We use *args when we aren’t sure how many arguments are going to be passed to
a function, or if we want to pass a stored list or tuple of arguments to a function. **kwargsis
used when we don’t know how many keyword arguments will be passed to a function, or
it can be used to pass the values of a dictionary as keyword arguments. The
identifiers args and kwargs are a convention, you could also use*bob and **billy but that
would not be wise.
Q14. Write a one-liner that will count the number of capital letters
in a file. Your code should work even if the file is too big to fit in
memory.
Ans: Let us first write a multiple line solution and then convert it to one liner code.
Explore Curriculum
The index for the negative number starts from ‘-1’ that represents the last index in the
sequence and ‘-2’ as the penultimate index and the sequence carries forward like the
positive number.
The negative index is used to remove any new-line spaces from the string and allow the
string to except the last character that is given as S[:-1]. The negative index is also used
to show the index to represent the string in correct order.
1. Create a file with any name and in any language that is supported by the compiler
of your system. For example file.c or file.cpp
2. Place this file in the Modules/ directory of the distribution which is getting used.
3. Add a line in the file Setup.local that is present in the Modules/ directory.
4. Run the file using spam file.o
5. After successful run of this rebuild the interpreter by using the make command on
the top-level directory.
6. If the file is changed then run rebuildMakefile by using the command as ‘make
Makefile’.
Q19. Looking at the below code, write down the final values of
A0, A1, …An.
1
A0 = dict(zip(('a','b','c','d','e'),(1,2,3,4,5)))
2 A1 = range(10)A2 = sorted([i for i in A1 if i in A0])
3 A3 = sorted([A0[s] for s in A0])
4 A4 = [i for i in A1 if i in A3]
5 A5 = {i:i*i for i in A1}
A6 = [[i,i*i] for i in A1]
6 print(A0,A1,A2,A3,A4,A5,A6)
7
Ans: The following will be the final outputs of A0, A1, … A6
1 import random
2 random.random
The statement random.random() method return the floating point number that is in the
range of [0, 1). The function generates the random float numbers. The methods that are
used with the random class are the bound methods of the hidden instances. The
instances of the Random can be done to show the multi-threading programs that creates
different instance of individual threads. The other random generators that are used in this
are:
1. randrange(a, b): it chooses an integer and define the range in-between [a, b). It
returns the elements by selecting it randomly from the range that is specified. It
doesn’t build a range object.
2. uniform(a, b): it chooses a floating point number that is defined in the range of
[a,b).Iyt returns the floating point number
3. normalvariate(mean, sdev): it is used for the normal distribution where the mu is a
mean and the sdev is a sigma that is used for standard deviation.
4. The Random class that is used and instantiated creates an independent multiple
random number generators.
This means that xrange doesn’t actually generate a static list at run-time like range does.
It creates the values as you need them with a special technique called yielding. This
technique is used with a type of object known as generators. That means that if you have
a really gigantic range you’d like to generate a list for, say one billion, xrange is the
function to use.
This is especially true if you have a really memory sensitive system such as a cell phone
that you are working with, as range will use as much memory as it can to create your
array of integers, which can result in a Memory Error and crash your program. It’s a
memory hungry beast.
The developer provides the Model, the view and the template then just maps it to a URL
and Django does the magic to serve it to the user.
Django uses SQLite by default; it is easy for Django users as such it won’t require any
other type of installation. In the case your database choice is different that you have to
the following keys in the DATABASE ‘default’ item to match your database connection
settings.
Engines: you can change database by using ‘django.db.backends.sqlite3’ ,
‘django.db.backeneds.mysql’, ‘django.db.backends.postgresql_psycopg2’,
‘django.db.backends.oracle’ and so on
Name: The name of your database. In the case if you are using SQLite as your
database, in that case database will be a file on your computer, Name should be
a full absolute path, including file name of that file.
If you are not choosing SQLite as your database then settings like Password, Host,
User, etc. must be added.
Django uses SQLite as default database, it stores data as a single file in the filesystem.
If you do have a database server—PostgreSQL, MySQL, Oracle, MSSQL—and want to
use it rather than SQLite, then use your database’s administration tools to create a new
database for your Django project. Either way, with your (empty) database in place, all that
remains is to tell Django how to use it. This is where your project’s settings.py file comes
in.
1 DATABASES = {
2 'default': {
3 'ENGINE' : 'django.db.backends.sqlite3',
4 'NAME' : os.path.join(BASE_DIR, 'db.sqlite3'),
5 }
}
6
Q27. Give an example how you can write a VIEW in Django?
Ans: This is how we can use write a view in Django:
So the data itself is not stored client side. This is nice from a security perspective.
1. Abstract Base Classes: This style is used when you only wants parent’s class to
hold information that you don’t want to type out for each child model.
2. Multi-table Inheritance: This style is used If you are sub-classing an existing model
and need each model to have its own database table.
3. Proxy models: You can use this model, If you only want to modify the Python level
behavior of the model, without changing the model’s fields.
1 import urllib.request
2 urllib.request.urlretrieve("URL", "local-filename.jpg")
Q32. How can you Get the Google cache age of any URL or web
page?
Ans: Use the following URL format:
http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:URLGOESHERE
Be sure to replace “URLGOESHERE” with the proper web address of the page or site
whose cache you want to retrieve and see the time for. For example, to check the Google
Webcache age of edureka.co you’d use the following URL:
http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:edureka.co
Q33. You are required to scrap data from IMDb top 250 movies
page. It should only have fields movie name, year, and rating.
Ans: We will use the following lines of code:
1 import numpy as np
2 arr = np.array([1, 3, 2, 4, 5])
3 print(arr.argsort()[-3:][::-1])
Output
[431]
Q36. How do you calculate percentiles with Python/ NumPy?
Ans: We can calculate percentiles with the following code
1 import numpy as np
2 a = np.array([1,2,3,4,5])
3 p = np.percentile(a, 50) #Returns 50th percentile, e.g. median
4 print(p)
Output
3
Q37. What advantages do NumPy arrays offer over (nested)
Python lists?
Ans:
1. In an ideal world, NumPy would contain nothing but the array data type and the
most basic operations: indexing, sorting, reshaping, basic elementwise functions,
et cetera.
2. All numerical code would reside in SciPy. However, one of NumPy’s important
goals is compatibility, so NumPy tries to retain all features supported by either of
its predecessors.
3. Thus NumPy contains some linear algebra functions, even though these more
properly belong in SciPy. In any case, SciPy contains more fully-featured versions
of the linear algebra modules, as well as many other numerical algorithms.
4. If you are doing scientific computing with python, you should probably install both
NumPy and SciPy. Most new features belong in SciPy rather than NumPy.
Answer: b, c & d.
a) /
b) //
c) %
d) None of the mentioned
Answer: b) //
When both of the operands are integer then python chops out the fraction part and gives
you the round off value, to get the accurate answer use floor division. For ex, 5/2 = 2.5
but both of the operands are integer so answer of this expression in python is 2. To get
the 2.5 as the answer, use floor division using //. So, 5//2 = 2.5
a) 31 characters
b) 63 characters
c) 79 characters
d) None of the above
As Python has no concept of private variables, leading underscores are used to indicate
variables that must not be accessed from outside the class.
a) abc = 1,000,000
b) a b c = 1000 2000 3000
c) a,b,c = 1000, 2000, 3000
d) a_b_c = 1,000,000
A new exception class must inherit from a BaseException. There is no such inheritance
here.
Q47. Suppose list1 is [2, 33, 222, 14, 25], What is list1[-1] ?
a) Error
b) None
c) 25
d) 2
Answer: c) 25
Answer: b) The location contains double slashes ( \\ ) and w is used to indicate that file
is being written to.
Answer: a) True
The WITH statement when used with open file guarantees that the file object is closed
when the with block exits.
a) always
b) when an exception occurs
c) when no exception occurs
d) when an exception occurs in to except block