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Introduction to Python Programming

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9 views

Introduction to Python Programming

Uploaded by

priyadharshini
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 121

Introduction to Python

1
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Run
with some input

Write/Edit
OK?
NO
YES

YES
NO More
Inputs?
2
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
User Program
Filename, preferred extension is py
3
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
IN[1]: Python Shell Prompt

IN[2]:
User Commands
IN[3]: (Statements)

IN[4]: ( )

Outputs

Python Shell is Interactive


4
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Interacting with Python Programs
• Python program communicates its results to
user using print
• Most useful programs require information
from users
– Name and age for a travel reservation system
• Python 3 uses input to read user input as a
string (str)

5
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
input
• Take as argument a string to print as a prompt
• Returns the user typed value as a string
– details of how to process user string later

IN[1]:

IN[2]: ( )

IN[3]:

Jan 21, 2025 Programming 6


Elements of Python
• A Python program is a sequence of definitions
and commands (statements)
• Commands manipulate objects
• Each object is associated with a Type
• Type:
– A set of values
– A set of operations on these values
• Expressions: An operation (combination of
objects and operators)
7
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Types in Python
• int
– Bounded integers, e.g. 732 or -5
• float
– Real numbers, e.g. 3.14 or 2.0
• long
– Long integers with unlimited precision
• str
– Strings, e.g. ‘hello’ or ‘C’

8
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Types in Python
• Scalar
– Indivisible objects that do not have internal
structure
– int (signed integers), float (floating point), bool
(Boolean), NoneType
• NoneType is a special type with a single value
• The value is called None
• Non-Scalar
– Objects having internal structure
– str (strings)
9
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Example of Types

10
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Type Conversion (Type Cast)

• Conversion of value of one type to other


• We are used to int float conversion in Math
– Integer 3 is treated as float 3.0 when a real
number is expected
– Float 3.6 is truncated as 3, or rounded off as 4 for
integer contexts
• Type names are used as type converter
functions

11
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Type Conversion Examples
Note that float to int conversion
is truncation, not rounding off

12
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Type Conversion and Input

13
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Operators
• Arithmetic + - * // / % **

• Comparison == != > < >= <=

• Assignment = += -= *= //= /= %= **=


• Logical and or not
• Bitwise & | ^ ~ >> <<
• Membership in not in
• Identity is is not

14
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Variables
• A name associated with an m
object 64
• Assignment used for binding Acads
m = 64; c
3.1416
c = ‘Acads’;
f = 3.1416; f

• Variables can change their 2.7183


bindings
f = 2.7183;
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
15
Assignment Statement
• A simple assignment statement
Variable = Expression;
• Computes the value (object) of the expression
on the right hand side expression (RHS)
• Associates the name (variable) on the left
hand side (LHS) with the RHS value
• = is known as the assignment operator.

16
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Multiple Assignments
• Python allows multiple assignments
x, y = 10, 20 Binds x to 10 and y to 20

• Evaluation of multiple assignment statement:


– All the expressions on the RHS of the = are first
evaluated before any binding happens.
– Values of the expressions are bound to the
corresponding variable on the LHS.
x, y = 10, 20 x is bound to 21
x, y = y+1, x+1 and y to 11 at the
end of the program
17
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Programming using Python

Operators and Expressions

18
01/21/2025 Programming
Binary Operations
Op Meaning Example Remarks

+ Addition 9+2 is 11
9.1+2.0 is 11.1
- Subtraction 9-2 is 7
9.1-2.0 is 7.1
* Multiplication 9*2 is 18
9.1*2.0 is 18.2
/ Division 9/2 is 4.25 In Python3
9.1/2.0 is 4.55 Real div.
// Integer Division 9//2 is 4
% Remainder 9%2 is 1

19
01/21/2025 Programming
The // operator
• Also referred to as “integer division”
• Result is a whole integer (floor of real
division)
– But the type need not be int
– the integral part of the real division
– rounded towards minus infinity
• Examples
9//4 is 2 (-1)//2 is -1 (-1)//(-2) is 0
1//2 is 0 1//(-2) is -1 9//4.5 is 2.0
20
01/21/2025 Programming
The % operator
• The remainder operator % returns the
remainder of the result of dividing its
first operand by its second.
9%4 is 1 (-1)%2 is 1 (-1)//(-2) is 0
9%4.5 is 0.0 1%(-2) is 1 1%0.6 is 0.4

Ideally: x == (x//y)*y + x %y
21
01/21/2025 Programming
Conditional Statements
• In daily routine
– If it is very hot, I will skip
exercise.
– If there is a quiz tomorrow, I will
first study and then sleep.
Otherwise I will sleep now.
– If I have to buy coffee, I will
go left. Else I will go
straight. 22
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
if-else statement
• Compare two integers and print the min.

if x < y: 1. Check if x is less


print (x) than y.
2. If so, print x
else: 3. Otherwise, print y.
print (y)
print (‘is the minimum’)

23
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Indentation
• Indentation is important in Python
– grouping of statement (block of statements)
– no explicit brackets, e.g. { }, to group statements
x,y = 6,10 Run
x the program
y

if x < y: 6 10
print (x)
else:
print (y) ed Output
i p p
sk the min’)
print (‘is 6 24
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
if statement (no else!)
• General form of the if statement
e
if boolean-expr : tru

fals
e
S1
S1
S2
• Execution of if statement S2
– First the expression is evaluated.
– If it evaluates to a true value, then S1 is
executed and then control moves to the S2.
– If expression evaluates to false, then control
moves to the S2 directly.
25
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
if-else statement
• General form of the if-else statement
if boolean-expr : rt u
e

fa
S1

ls
e
else: S1 S2
S2
S3 S3
• Execution of if-else statement
– First the expression is evaluated.
– If it evaluates to a true value, then S1 is executed and
then control moves to S3.
– If expression evaluates to false, then S2 is executed
and then control moves to S3.
– S1/S2 can be blocks of statements! 26
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Nested if, if-else

if a <= b:
if a <= c:

else:

else:
if b <= c) :

else:
… 27
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Elif
• A special kind of nesting is the chain of if-
else-if-else-… statements
• Can be written elegantly using if-elif-..-else
if cond1: if cond1:
s1 s1
else: elif cond2:
if cond2: s2
s2 elif cond3:
else: s3
if cond3: elif …
s3 else
else: last-block-of-stmt

28
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Summary of if, if-else
• if-else, nested if's, elif.
• Multiple ways to solve a problem
–issues of readability,
maintainability
–and efficiency

29
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Class Quiz
• What is the value of expression:
(5<2) and (3/0 > 1)

a) Run time crash/error

b) I don’t know / I don’t care

c) False
The correct answer is
False
d) True
30
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Short-circuit Evaluation
• Do not evaluate the second operand of binary
short-circuit logical operator if the result can be
deduced from the first operand
– Also applies to nested logical operators

true false false true

not( (2>5) and (3/0 > 1) ) or (4/0 < 2)


Evaluates to true
31
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
3 Factors for Expr Evaluation
• Precedence
– Applied to two different class of operators
– + and *, - and *, and and or, …
• Associativity
– Applied to operators of same class
– * and *, + and -, * and /, …
• Order
– Precedence and associativity identify the operands for
each operator
– Not which operand is evaluated first
– Python evaluates expressions from left to right
– While evaluating an assignment, the right-hand side is32
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
evaluated before the left-hand side.
Class Quiz
• What is the output of the following program:
y = 0.1*3
if y != 0.3:
print ('Launch a Missile')
else:
print ("Let's have peace")
Launch a Missile
33
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Caution about Using Floats
• Representation of real numbers in a computer
can not be exact
– Computers have limited memory to store data
– Between any two distinct real numbers, there are
infinitely many real numbers.
• On a typical machine running Python, there are
53 bits of precision available for a Python float

34
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Caution about Using Floats
• The value stored internally for the decimal
number 0.1 is the binary fraction
0.00011001100110011001100110011001100110011001100110011010

• Equivalent to decimal value


0.1000000000000000055511151231257827021181583404541015625

• Approximation is similar to decimal


approximation 1/3 = 0.333333333...
• No matter how many digits you use, you have
an approximation
35
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Comparing Floats
• Because of the approximations, comparison of
floats is not exact.
• Solution?
• Instead of
x == y
use
abs(x-y) <= epsilon
where epsilon is a suitably chosen small value

36
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Programming using Python

Loops
37
Jan 21, 2025 Python Programming
Printing Multiplication Table
5 X 1 = 5
5 X 2 = 10
5 X 3 = 15
5 X 4 = 20
5 X 5 = 25
5 X 6 = 30
5 X 7 = 35
5 X 8 = 40
5 X 9 = 45
5 X 10 = 50

38
Jan 21, 2025 Python Programming
Program…
n = int(input('Enter a number:
Too much'))
print (n, 'X', 1, '=', n*1)
repetition!
print (n, 'X', 2, '=', n*2)
Can I avoid
print (n, 'X', 3, '=', n*3) it?
print (n, 'X', 4, '=', n*4)
print (n, 'X', 5, '=', n*5)
print (n, 'X', 6, '=', n*6)
….

39
Jan 21, 2025 Python Programming
Printing Multiplication Table

Input n Loop Entry


i=1

Loop Exit
i <=10
TRUE FALSE

Print n X i = n*i Stop


i = i+1

Loop 40
Jan 21, 2025 Python Programming
Printing Multiplication Table
Input n
i=1

TRUE
i <=10
FALSE n = int(input('n=? '))
i=1
Print n x i = ni Stop
i = i+1

while (i <= 10) :


print (n ,'X', i, '=', n*i)
i=i+1
print ('done‘)

41
Jan 21, 2025 Python Programming
While Statement
while (expression):
S1 expression
FALSE

S2
TRUE

S1 S2
1. Evaluate expression
2. If TRUE then
a) execute statement1
b) goto step 1.
3. If FALSE then execute statement2.
42
Jan 21, 2025 Python Programming
For Loop
• Print the sum of the reciprocals of the
first 100 natural numbers.

rsum=0.0# the reciprocal sum

# the for loop


for i in range(1,101):
rsum = rsum + 1.0/i
print ('sum is', rsum)
43
Jan 21, 2025 Python Programming
For loop in Python
• General form

for variable in sequence:


stmt

44
Jan 21, 2025 Python Programming
range
• range(s, e, d)
– generates the list:
[s, s+d, s+2*d, …, s+k*d]
where s+k*d < e <= s+(k+1)*d
• range(s, e) is equivalent to range(s, e, 1)
• range(e) is equivalent to range(0, e)
Exercise: What if d is negative? Use python
interpreter to find out. 45
Jan 21, 2025 Python Programming
Quiz
• What will be the output of the following
program

# print all odd numbers < 10


i = 1
while i <= 10:
if i%2==0: # even
continue
print (i, end=‘ ‘)
i = i+1
46
Jan 21, 2025 Python Programming
Continue and Update Expr
• Make sure continue does not bypass update-
expression for while loops

# print all odd numbers < 10


i = 1 i is not incremented
while i <= 10: when even number
if i%2==0: # even encountered.
continue Infinite loop!!
print (i, end=‘ ‘)
i = i+1
47
Jan 21, 2025 Python Programming
Programming using Python

f(unctions)
48
Jan 21, 2025 Programming, Functions
Parts of a function

Input

49
Jan 21, 2025 Output
Programming, Functions
def max (a, b):
‘’’return maximum among a and b’’’
keyword if (a > b):
return a 2 arguments
else: a and b
Function Name return b (formal args)

x = max(6, 4) Body of thefunction,


indented w.r.t the
def keyword

Call to the function. Documentation comment


Actual args are 6 and 4.(docstring), type
help <function-name>
on prompt to get help for the function
50
Jan 21, 2025 Programming, Functions
def max (a, b):
‘‘‘return maximum among a and b’’’
if (a > b):
return a
else:
return b

In[3] : help(max)
Help on function max in module __main__:

max(a, b)
return maximum among a and b
51
Jan 21, 2025 Programming, Functions
Keyword Arguments
Note use of [0]
def printName(first, last, initials) : to get the first
if initials: character of a
string. More on
print (first[0] + '. ' + last[0] + '.') this later.
else:
print (first, last)
Call Output
printName('Acads', 'Institute', False) Acads Institute
printName('Acads', 'Institute', True) A. I.
printName(last='Institute', initials=False, first='Acads') Acads Institute
printName('Acads', initials=True, last='Institute') A. I.

52
Jan 21, 2025 Programming, Functions
Keyword Arguments
• Parameter passing where formal is bound to
actual using formal's name
• Can mix keyword and non-keyword arguments
– All non-keyword arguments precede keyword
arguments in the call
– Non-keyword arguments are matched by position
(order is important)
– Order of keyword arguments is not important

53
Jan 21, 2025 Programming, Functions
Default Values
def printName(first, last, initials=False) :
if initials:
print (first[0] + '. ' + last[0] + '.')
Note the use
else: of “default”
value
print (first, last)
Call Output
printName('Acads', 'Institute') Acads Institute
printName(first='Acads', last='Institute', initials=True) A. I.
printName(last='Institute', first='Acads') Acads Institute
printName('Acads', last='Institute') Acads Institute

54
Jan 21, 2025 Programming, Functions
Default Values
• Allows user to call a function with fewer
arguments
• Useful when some argument has a fixed value
for most of the calls
• All arguments with default values must be at
the end of argument list
– non-default argument can not follow default
argument

55
Jan 21, 2025 Programming, Functions
Globals
• Globals allow functions to communicate with
each other indirectly
– Without parameter passing/return value
• Convenient when two seemingly “far-apart”
functions want to share data
– No direct caller/callee relation
• If a function has to update a global, it must re-
declare the global variable with global
keyword.
56
Jan 21, 2025 Programming, Functions
Globals
PI = 3.14 >>> print(area (100))
def perimeter(r): 31400.0
return 2 * PI * r >>> print(perimeter(10))
def area(r): 62.800000000000004
return PI * r * r >>> update_pi()
def update_pi(): >>> print(area(100))
global PI 31415.999999999996
PI = 3.14159 >>> print(perimeter(10))
62.832
defines PI to be of float type with value
3.14. PI can be used across functions. Any
change to PI in update_pi will be visible to 57
all due to the use of global.
Jan 21, 2025 Programming, Functions
Programming with Python

S T R I NGS
T UP L E S
L I S T S
58
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Strings
• Strings in Python have type str
• They represent sequence of characters
– Python does not have a type corresponding to
character.
• Strings are enclosed in single quotes(') or
double quotes(“)
– Both are equivalent
• Backslash (\) is used to escape quotes and
special characters
59
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Strings

• More readable when print is used

60
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Length of a String
• len function gives the length of a string

\n is a single character:
the special character
representing newline 61
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Concatenate and Repeat
• In Python, + and * operations have special
meaning when operating on strings
• + is used for concatenation of (two) strings
• * is used to repeat a string, an int number of
time
• Function/Operator Overloading

62
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Concatenate and Repeat

63
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Indexing
• Strings can be indexed
• First character has index 0

64
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Indexing
• Negative indices start counting from the right
• Negatives indices start from -1
• -1 means last, -2 second last, ...

65
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Indexing
• Using an index that is too large or too small
results in “index out of range” error

66
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Slicing
• To obtain a substring
• s[start:end] means substring of s starting at
index start and ending at index end-1
• s[0:len(s)] is same as s
• Both start and end are optional
– If start is omitted, it defaults to 0
– If end is omitted, it defaults to the length of string
• s[:] is same as s[0:len(s)], that is same as s

67
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Slicing

68
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
More Slicing

Understanding Indices for slicing


A c a d s
0 1 2 3 4 5
-5 -4 -3 -2 -1
69
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
A c a d s

Out of Range Slicing 0


-5
1
-4
2
-3
3
-2
4
-1

• Out of range indices are ignored for slicing


• when start and end have the same sign, if start
>=end, empty slice is returned
Why?

70
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Tuples
• A tuple consists of a number of values
separated by commas

• Empty and Singleton Tuples

71
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Nested Tuples
• Tuples can be nested

• Note that course tuple is copied into student.


– Changing course does not affect student

72
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Length of a Tuple
• len function gives the length of a tuple

73
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
More Operations on Tuples
• Tuples can be concatenated, repeated,
indexed and sliced

74
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Unpacking Sequences
• Strings and Tuples are examples of sequences
– Indexing, slicing, concatenation, repetition
operations applicable on sequences
• Sequence Unpacking operation can be applied
to sequences to get the components
– Multiple assignment statement
– LHS and RHS must have equal length

75
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Unpacking Sequences

( )

76
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Lists
• Ordered sequence of values
• Written as a sequence of comma-separated
values between square brackets
• Values can be of different types
– usually the items all have the same type

77
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Lists
• List is also a sequence type
– Sequence operations are applicable

78
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Lists
• List is also a sequence type
– Sequence operations are applicable

Repetition

( )

79
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
More Operations on Lists
• L.append(x) • L.pop()
• L.extend(seq) • L.index(x)
• L.insert(i, x) • L.count(x)
• L.remove(x) • L.sort()
• L.pop(i) • L.reverse()
x is any value, seq is a sequence value (list, string, tuple, …),
i is an integer value
80
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Mutable and Immutable Types
• Tuples and List types look very similar
• However, there is one major difference: Lists
are mutable
– Contents of a list can be modified
• Tuples and Strings are immutable
– Contents can not be modified

81
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Summary of Sequences
Operation Meaning
seq[i] i-th element of the sequence
len(seq) Length of the sequence
seq1 + seq2 Concatenate the two sequences
num*seq
seq*num Repeat seq num times

seq[start:end] slice starting from start, and ending at end-1


e in seq True if e is present is seq, False otherwise
e not in seq True if e is not present is seq, False otherwise
for e in seq Iterate over all elements in seq (e is bound to one element per
iteration)

Sequence types include String, Tuple and List.


Lists are mutable, Tuple and Strings immutable. 82
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Summary of Sequences
• For details and many useful functions, refer to:
https://docs.python.org/3.2/tutorial/datastruct
ures.html

83
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Programming with Python

Sets and Dictionaries

84
Jan 21, 2025 Esc101, Strings
Sets
• An unordered collection with no duplicate
elements
• Supports
– membership testing
– eliminating duplicate entries
– Set operations: union, intersection, difference, and
symmetric difference.

85
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Sets

{ }

Create a set from


a sequence

86
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Set Operations

{ }

{ }

{ }

{ }

{ }

87
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Dictionaries
• Unordered set of key:value pairs,
• Keys have to be unique and immutable
• Key:value pairs enclosed inside curly braces
{...}
• Empty dictionary is created by writing {}
• Dictionaries are mutable
– add new key:value pairs,
– change the pairing
– delete a key (and associated value) 88
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Operations on Dictionaries
Operation Meaning
len(d) Number of key:value pairs in d
d.keys() List containing the keys in d
d.values() List containing the values in d
k in d True if key k is in d
d[k] Value associated with key k in d
d.get(k, v) If k is present in d, then d[k] else v
d[k] = v Map the value v to key k in d
(replace d[k] if present)
del d[k] Remove key k (and associated value) from d
for k in d Iterate over the keys in d

89
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Operations on Dictionaries

90
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Operations on Dictionaries

91
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Operations on Dictionaries

# Remember: for ... in iterates over keys only


# Sort values in a list

92
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Dictionary Construction
• The dict constructor: builds dictionaries
directly from sequences of key-value pairs

93
Jan 21, 2025 Esc101, Strings
Programming with Python

File I/O

94
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
File I/O
• Files are persistent storage
• Allow data to be stored beyond program
lifetime
• The basic operations on files are
– open, close, read, write
• Python treat files as sequence of lines
– sequence operations work for the data read from
files

95
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
File I/O: open and close
open(filename, mode)
• While opening a file, you need to supply
– The name of the file, including the path
– The mode in which you want to open a file
– Common modes are r (read), w (write), a (append)
• Mode is optional, defaults to r
• open(..) returns a file object
• close() on the file object closes the file
– finishes any buffered operations
96
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
File I/O: Example

• Do some writing
• How to do it?
• see the next few slides

97
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
File I/O: read, write and append
• Reading from an open file returns the
contents of the file
– as sequence of lines in the program
• Writing to a file
– IMPORTANT: If opened with mode 'w', clears the
existing contents of the file
– Use append mode ('a') to preserve the contents
– Writing happens at the end

98
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
File I/O: Examples

99
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
File I/O: Examples
( )

( )

100
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
File I/O: Examples
( )

Note empty line due to '\n'

101
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
File I/O: Examples
Note the use of for ... in
for sequence

( )

]
102
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
File I/O: Examples

( )

( )

( )
103
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Programming using Python

Modules and Packages


Amey Karkare
Dept. of CSE
IIT Kanpur

104
Welcome Python Programming
Modules
• As program gets longer, need to organize them for
easier access and easier maintenance.
• Reuse same functions across programs without
copying its definition into each program.
• Python allows putting definitions in a file
– use them in a script or in an interactive instance of the
interpreter
• Such a file is called a module
– definitions from a module can be imported into other
modules or into the main module
105
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Modules
• A module is a file containing Python
definitions and statements.
• The file name is the module name with the
suffix .py appended.
• Within a module, the module’s name is
available in the global variable __name__.

106
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Modules Example
fib.py - C:\

107
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Modules Example

Within a module, the


module’s name is
available as the value of
the global variable
Jan 21, 2025 Programming __name__. 108
Importing Specific Functions
• To import specific functions from a module

• This brings only the imported functions in the current symbol


table
– No need of modulename. (absence of fib. in the example)

109
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Importing ALL Functions
• To import all functions from a module, in the current
symbol table

• This imports all names except those beginning with


an underscore (_).
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Jan 21, 2025 Programming
__main__ in Modules
• When you run a module on the command line with
python fib.py <arguments>
the code in the module will be executed, just as if
you imported it, but with the __name__ set to
"__main__".
• By adding this code at the end of your module
if __name__ == "__main__":
... # Some code here
you can make the file usable as a script as well as an
importable module
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Jan 21, 2025 Programming
__main__ in Modules
if __name__ == "__main__":
import sys
print (fib_iter(int(sys.argv[1])))
• This code parses the command line only if the
module is executed as the “main” file:
$ python fib.py 10
55
• If the module is imported, the code is not run:
>>> import fib
>>>
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Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Package
• A Python package is a collection of Python modules.
• Another level of organization.
• Packages are a way of structuring Python’s module
namespace by using dotted module names.
– The module name A.B designates a submodule
named B in a package named A.
– The use of dotted module names saves the authors of
multi-module packages like NumPy or Pillow from having
to worry about each other’s module names.

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Jan 21, 2025 Programming
A sound Package

https://docs.python.org/3/tutorial/modules.html
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Jan 21, 2025 Programming
A sound Package

What are these files


with funny names?

https://docs.python.org/3/tutorial/modules.html
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Jan 21, 2025xs Programming
__init.py__
• The __init__.py files are required to make
Python treat directories containing the file as
packages.
• This prevents directories with a common name,
such as string, unintentionally hiding valid
modules that occur later on the module search
path.
• __init__.py can just be an empty file
• It can also execute initialization code for the
package
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Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Importing Modules from Packages

https://docs.python.org/3/tutorial/
modules.html 117
Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Importing Modules from Packages
import sound.effects.echo

• Loads the submodule sound.effects.echo


• It must be referenced with its full name:

sound.effects.echo.echofilter(
input, output,
delay=0.7, atten=4
)
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Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Importing Modules from Packages
from sound.effects import echo
• This also loads the submodule echo
• Makes it available without package prefix
• It can be used as:
echo.echofilter(
input, output,
delay=0.7, atten=4
)
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Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Importing Modules from Packages
from sound.effects.echo import echofilter

• This loads the submodule echo, but this makes its


function echofilter() directly available.

echofilter(input, output,
delay=0.7, atten=4)

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Jan 21, 2025 Programming
Popular Packages
• pandas, numpy, scipy, matplotlib, …
• Provide a lot of useful functions

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Jan 21, 2025 Programming

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