Learn Python in Three Hours: Some Material Adapted From Upenn Cmpe391 Slides and Other Sources
Learn Python in Three Hours: Some Material Adapted From Upenn Cmpe391 Slides and Other Sources
in three hours
Some material adapted
from Upenn cmpe391
slides and other sources
Overview
· History
· Installing & Running Python
· Names & Assignment
· Sequences types: Lists, Tuples, and
Strings
· Mutability
Brief History of Python
· Invented in the Netherlands, early 90s
by Guido van Rossum
· Named after Monty Python
· Open sourced from the beginning
· Considered a scripting language, but is
much more
· Scalable, object oriented and functional
from the beginning
· Used by Google from the beginning
· Increasingly popular
http://docs.python.org/
The Python tutorial is good!
Running
Python
The Python Interpreter
· Typical Python implementations offer
both an interpreter and compiler
· Interactive interface to Python with a
read-eval-print loop
[finin@linux2 ~]$ python
Python 2.4.3 (#1, Jan 14 2008, 18:32:40)
[GCC 4.1.2 20070626 (Red Hat 4.1.2-14)] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> def square(x):
... return x * x
...
>>> map(square, [1, 2, 3, 4])
[1, 4, 9, 16]
>>>
Installing
· Python is pre-installed on most Unix systems,
including Linux and MAC OS X
· The pre-installed version may not be the most
recent one (2.6.2 and 3.1.1 as of Sept 09)
· Download from http://python.org/download/
· Python comes with a large library of standard
modules
· There are several options for an IDE
• IDLE – works well with Windows
• Emacs with python-mode or your favorite text editor
• Eclipse with Pydev (http://pydev.sourceforge.net/)
IDLE Development Environment
·IDLE is an Integrated DeveLopment Environ-
ment for Python, typically used on Windows
·Multi-window text editor with syntax
highlighting, auto-completion, smart indent
and other.
·Python shell with syntax highlighting.
·Integrated debugger
with stepping, persis-
tent breakpoints,
and call stack visi-
bility
Running Interactively on UNIX
On Unix…
% python
>>> 3+3
6
· Python prompts with ‘>>>’.
· To exit Python (not Idle):
• In Unix, type CONTROL-D
• In Windows, type CONTROL-Z + <Enter>
• Evaluate exit()
Example ‘script’: fact.py
#! /usr/bin/python
def fact(x):
"""Returns the factorial of its argument, assumed to be a posint"""
if x == 0:
return 1
return x * fact(x - 1)
print
print ’N fact(N)’
print "---------"
for n in range(10):
print n, fact(n)
The Basics
A Code Sample (in IDLE)
x = 34 - 23 # A comment.
y = “Hello” # Another one.
z = 3.45
if z == 3.45 or y == “Hello”:
x=x+1
y = y + “ World” # String concat.
print x
print y
Enough to Understand the Code
· Indentation matters to code meaning
• Block structure indicated by indentation
· First assignment to a variable creates it
• Variable types don’t need to be declared.
• Python figures out the variable types on its own.
· Assignment is = and comparison is ==
· For numbers + - * / % are as expected
• Special use of + for string concatenation and % for
string formatting (as in C’s printf)
· Logical operators are words (and, or,
not) not symbols
· The basic printing command is print
Basic Datatypes
· Integers (default for numbers)
z = 5 / 2 # Answer 2, integer division
· Floats
x = 3.456
· Strings
• Can use “” or ‘’ to specify with “abc” == ‘abc’
• Unmatched can occur within the string: “matt’s”
• Use triple double-quotes for multi-line strings or
strings than contain both ‘ and “ inside of them:
“““a‘b“c”””
Whitespace
Whitespace is meaningful in Python: especially
indentation and placement of newlines
·Use a newline to end a line of code
Use \ when must go to next line prematurely
·No braces {} to mark blocks of code, use
consistent indentation instead
• First line with less indentation is outside of the block
• First line with more indentation starts a nested block
·Colons start of a new block in many constructs,
e.g. function definitions, then clauses
Comments
·Start comments with #, rest of line is ignored
·Can include a “documentation string” as the
first line of a new function or class you define
·Development environments, debugger, and
other tools use it: it’s good style to include one
def fact(n):
“““fact(n) assumes n is a positive
integer and returns facorial of n.”””
assert(n>0)
return 1 if n==1 else n*fact(n-1)
Assignment
· Binding a variable in Python means setting a name to
hold a reference to some object
• Assignment creates references, not copies
· Names in Python do not have an intrinsic type,
objects have types
• Python determines the type of the reference automatically
based on what data is assigned to it
· You create a name the first time it appears on the left
side of an assignment expression:
x=3
· A reference is deleted via garbage collection after
any names bound to it have passed out of scope
· Python uses reference semantics (more later)
Naming Rules
· Names are case sensitive and cannot start
with a number. They can contain letters,
numbers, and underscores.
bob Bob _bob _2_bob_ bob_2 BoB
· There are some reserved words:
and, assert, break, class, continue,
def, del, elif, else, except, exec,
finally, for, from, global, if,
import, in, is, lambda, not, or,
pass, print, raise, return, try,
while
Naming conventions
The Python community has these recommend-
ed naming conventions
·joined_lower for functions, methods and,
attributes
·joined_lower or ALL_CAPS for constants
·StudlyCaps for classes
·camelCase only to conform to pre-existing
conventions
·Attributes: interface, _internal, __private
Assignment
·You can assign to multiple names at the
same time
>>> x, y = 2, 3
>>> x
2
>>> y
3
This makes it easy to swap values
>>> x, y = y, x
·Assignments can be chained
>>> a = b = x = 2
Accessing Non-Existent Name
Accessing a name before it’s been properly
created (by placing it on the left side of an
assignment), raises an error
>>> y
>>> [1, 2, 3] * 3
[1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3]
>>> “Hello” * 3
‘HelloHelloHello’
Mutability:
Tuples vs. Lists
Lists are mutable
>>> li.sort(some_function)
# sort in place using user-defined comparison
Tuple details
· The comma is the tuple creation operator, not parens
>>> 1,
(1,)
· Python shows parens for clarity (best practice)
>>> (1,)
(1,)
· Don't forget the comma!
>>> (1)
1
· Trailing comma only required for singletons others
· Empty tuples have a special syntactic form
>>> ()
()
>>> tuple()
()
Summary: Tuples vs. Lists
· Lists slower but more powerful than tuples
• Lists can be modified, and they have lots of
handy operations and mehtods
• Tuples are immutable and have fewer
features
· To convert between tuples and lists use the
list() and tuple() functions:
li = list(tu)
tu = tuple(li)