Python Quick Guide - Tutorialspoint
Python Quick Guide - Tutorialspoint
Python Overview
Python is a high-level, interpreted, interactive and object-oriented scripting language. Python is designed to be highly readable. It uses English
keywords frequently where as other languages use punctuation, and it has fewer syntactical constructions than other languages.
Python is Interpreted − Python is processed at runtime by the interpreter. You do not need to compile your program before
executing it. This is similar to PERL and PHP.
Python is Interactive − You can actually sit at a Python prompt and interact with the interpreter directly to write your programs.
Python is Object-Oriented − Python supports Object-Oriented style or technique of programming that encapsulates code within
objects.
Python is a Beginner's Language − Python is a great language for the beginner-level programmers and supports the development
of a wide range of applications from simple text processing to WWW browsers to games.
History of Python
Python was developed by Guido van Rossum in the late eighties and early nineties at the National Research Institute for Mathematics and
Computer Science in the Netherlands.
Python is derived from many other languages, including ABC, Modula-3, C, C++, Algol-68, SmallTalk, and Unix shell and other scripting
languages.
Python is copyrighted. Like Perl, Python source code is now available under the GNU General Public License (GPL).
Python is now maintained by a core development team at the institute, although Guido van Rossum still holds a vital role in directing its
progress.
Python Features
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Easy-to-read − Python code is more clearly defined and visible to the eyes.
A broad standard library − Python's bulk of the library is very portable and cross-platform compatible on UNIX, Windows, and
Macintosh.
Interactive Mode − Python has support for an interactive mode which allows interactive testing and debugging of snippets of code.
Portable − Python can run on a wide variety of hardware platforms and has the same interface on all platforms.
Extendable − You can add low-level modules to the Python interpreter. These modules enable programmers to add to or customize
their tools to be more efficient.
GUI Programming − Python supports GUI applications that can be created and ported to many system calls, libraries and windows
systems, such as Windows MFC, Macintosh, and the X Window system of Unix.
Scalable − Python provides a better structure and support for large programs than shell scripting.
Apart from the above-mentioned features, Python has a big list of good features, few are listed below −
It can be used as a scripting language or can be compiled to byte-code for building large applications.
It provides very high-level dynamic data types and supports dynamic type checking.
It can be easily integrated with C, C++, COM, ActiveX, CORBA, and Java.
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Getting Python
The most up-to-date and current source code, binaries, documentation, news, etc., is available on the official website of Python
https://www.python.org/
You can download Python documentation from https://www.python.org/doc/ . The documentation is available in HTML, PDF, and PostScript
formats.
Installing Python
Python distribution is available for a wide variety of platforms. You need to download only the binary code applicable for your platform and
install Python.
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If the binary code for your platform is not available, you need a C compiler to compile the source code manually. Compiling the source code
offers more flexibility in terms of choice of features that you require in your installation.
Here is a quick overview of installing Python on various platforms −
Follow the link to download zipped source code available for Unix/Linux.
Download and extract files.
make
make install
This installs Python at standard location /usr/local/bin and its libraries at /usr/local/lib/pythonXX where XX is the version of Python.
Windows Installation
Here are the steps to install Python on Windows machine.
To use this installer python-XYZ.msi, the Windows system must support Microsoft Installer 2.0. Save the installer file to your local
machine and then run it to find out if your machine supports MSI.
Run the downloaded file. This brings up the Python install wizard, which is really easy to use. Just accept the default settings, wait
until the install is finished, and you are done.
Macintosh Installation
Recent Macs come with Python installed, but it may be several years out of date. See http://www.python.org/download/mac/ for
instructions on getting the current version along with extra tools to support development on the Mac. For older Mac OS's before Mac OS X
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Jack Jansen maintains it and you can have full access to the entire documentation at his website −
http://www.cwi.nl/~jack/macpython.html . You can find complete installation details for Mac OS installation.
Setting up PATH
Programs and other executable files can be in many directories, so operating systems provide a search path that lists the directories that the
OS searches for executables.
The path is stored in an environment variable, which is a named string maintained by the operating system. This variable contains information
available to the command shell and other programs.
The path variable is named as PATH in Unix or Path in Windows (Unix is case sensitive; Windows is not).
In Mac OS, the installer handles the path details. To invoke the Python interpreter from any particular directory, you must add the Python
directory to your path.
In the csh shell − type setenv PATH "$PATH:/usr/local/bin/python" and press Enter.
In the bash shell (Linux) − type export PATH="$PATH:/usr/local/bin/python" and press Enter.
In the sh or ksh shell − type PATH="$PATH:/usr/local/bin/python" and press Enter.
1
PYTHONPATH
It has a role similar to PATH. This variable tells the Python interpreter where to locate the module files imported into a program. It
should include the Python source library directory and the directories containing Python source code. PYTHONPATH is sometimes
preset by the Python installer.
2
PYTHONSTARTUP
It contains the path of an initialization file containing Python source code. It is executed every time you start the interpreter. It is
named as .pythonrc.py in Unix and it contains commands that load utilities or modify PYTHONPATH.
3
PYTHONCASEOK
It is used in Windows to instruct Python to find the first case-insensitive match in an import statement. Set this variable to any value
to activate it.
4
PYTHONHOME
It is an alternative module search path. It is usually embedded in the PYTHONSTARTUP or PYTHONPATH directories to make
switching module libraries easy.
Running Python
There are three different ways to start Python −
Interactive Interpreter
You can start Python from Unix, DOS, or any other system that provides you a command-line interpreter or shell window.
Enter python the command line.
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$python # Unix/Linux
or
python% # Unix/Linux
or
C:> python # Windows/DOS
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1
-d
2
-O
3
-S
4
-v
5
-X
disable class-based built-in exceptions (just use strings); obsolete starting with version 1.6.
6
-c cmd
7
file
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or
or
Windows − PythonWin is the first Windows interface for Python and is an IDE with a GUI.
Macintosh − The Macintosh version of Python along with the IDLE IDE is available from the main website, downloadable as either
MacBinary or BinHex'd files.
If you are not able to set up the environment properly, then you can take help from your system admin. Make sure the Python environment is
properly set up and working perfectly fine.
Note − All the examples given in subsequent chapters are executed with Python 2.4.3 version available on CentOS flavor of Linux.
We already have set up Python Programming environment online, so that you can execute all the available examples online at the same time
when you are learning theory. Feel free to modify any example and execute it online.
$ python
Python 2.4.3 (#1, Nov 11 2010, 13:34:43)
[GCC 4.1.2 20080704 (Red Hat 4.1.2-48)] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>>
Type the following text at the Python prompt and press the Enter −
If you are running new version of Python, then you would need to use print statement with parenthesis as in print ("Hello, Python!");.
However in Python version 2.4.3, this produces the following result −
Hello, Python!
Let us write a simple Python program in a script. Python files have extension .py. Type the following source code in a test.py file −
Live Demo
print "Hello, Python!"
We assume that you have Python interpreter set in PATH variable. Now, try to run this program as follows −
$ python test.py
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Hello, Python!
Let us try another way to execute a Python script. Here is the modified test.py file −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
We assume that you have Python interpreter available in /usr/bin directory. Now, try to run this program as follows −
Hello, Python!
Python Identifiers
A Python identifier is a name used to identify a variable, function, class, module or other object. An identifier starts with a letter A to Z or a to z
or an underscore (_) followed by zero or more letters, underscores and digits (0 to 9).
Python does not allow punctuation characters such as @, $, and % within identifiers. Python is a case sensitive programming language. Thus,
Manpower and manpower are two different identifiers in Python.
Class names start with an uppercase letter. All other identifiers start with a lowercase letter.
Starting an identifier with a single leading underscore indicates that the identifier is private.
Starting an identifier with two leading underscores indicates a strongly private identifier.
If the identifier also ends with two trailing underscores, the identifier is a language-defined special name.
Reserved Words
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The following list shows the Python keywords. These are reserved words and you cannot use them as constant or variable or any other
identifier names. All the Python keywords contain lowercase letters only.
assert finally or
def if return
elif in while
else is with
The number of spaces in the indentation is variable, but all statements within the block must be indented the same amount. For example −
if True:
print "True"
else:
print "False"
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if True:
print "Answer"
print "True"
else:
print "Answer"
print "False"
Thus, in Python all the continuous lines indented with same number of spaces would form a block. The following example has various
statement blocks −
Note − Do not try to understand the logic at this point of time. Just make sure you understood various blocks even if they are without braces.
#!/usr/bin/python
import sys
try:
# open file stream
file = open(file_name, "w")
except IOError:
print "There was an error writing to", file_name
sys.exit()
print "Enter '", file_finish,
print "' When finished"
while file_text != file_finish:
file_text = raw_input("Enter text: ")
if file_text == file_finish:
# close the file
file.close
break
file.write(file_text)
file.write("\n")
file.close()
file_name = raw_input("Enter filename: ")
if len(file_name) == 0:
print "Next time please enter something"
sys.exit()
try:
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Multi-Line Statements
Statements in Python typically end with a new line. Python does, however, allow the use of the line continuation character (\) to denote that the
line should continue. For example −
total = item_one + \
item_two + \
item_three
Statements contained within the [], {}, or () brackets do not need to use the line continuation character. For example −
Quotation in Python
Python accepts single ('), double (") and triple (''' or """) quotes to denote string literals, as long as the same type of quote starts and ends the
string.
The triple quotes are used to span the string across multiple lines. For example, all the following are legal −
word = 'word'
sentence = "This is a sentence."
paragraph = """This is a paragraph. It is
made up of multiple lines and sentences."""
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Comments in Python
A hash sign (#) that is not inside a string literal begins a comment. All characters after the # and up to the end of the physical line are part of
the comment and the Python interpreter ignores them.
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
# First comment
print "Hello, Python!" # second comment
Hello, Python!
You can type a comment on the same line after a statement or expression −
# This is a comment.
# This is a comment, too.
# This is a comment, too.
# I said that already.
In an interactive interpreter session, you must enter an empty physical line to terminate a multiline statement.
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The following line of the program displays the prompt, the statement saying “Press the enter key to exit”, and waits for the user to take action
−
#!/usr/bin/python
Here, "\n\n" is used to create two new lines before displaying the actual line. Once the user presses the key, the program ends. This is a nice
trick to keep a console window open until the user is done with an application.
Header lines begin the statement (with the keyword) and terminate with a colon ( : ) and are followed by one or more lines which make up the
suite. For example −
if expression :
suite
elif expression :
suite
else :
suite
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$ python -h
usage: python [option] ... [-c cmd | -m mod | file | -] [arg] ...
Options and arguments (and corresponding environment variables):
-c cmd : program passed in as string (terminates option list)
-d : debug output from parser (also PYTHONDEBUG=x)
-E : ignore environment variables (such as PYTHONPATH)
-h : print this help message and exit
[ etc. ]
You can also program your script in such a way that it should accept various options. Command Line Arguments is an advanced topic and
should be studied a bit later once you have gone through rest of the Python concepts.
Based on the data type of a variable, the interpreter allocates memory and decides what can be stored in the reserved memory. Therefore, by
assigning different data types to variables, you can store integers, decimals or characters in these variables.
The operand to the left of the = operator is the name of the variable and the operand to the right of the = operator is the value stored in the
variable. For example −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
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print counter
print miles
print name
Here, 100, 1000.0 and "John" are the values assigned to counter, miles, and name variables, respectively. This produces the following result −
100
1000.0
John
Multiple Assignment
Python allows you to assign a single value to several variables simultaneously. For example −
a = b = c = 1
Here, an integer object is created with the value 1, and all three variables are assigned to the same memory location. You can also assign
multiple objects to multiple variables. For example −
a,b,c = 1,2,"john"
Here, two integer objects with values 1 and 2 are assigned to variables a and b respectively, and one string object with the value "john" is
assigned to the variable c.
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List
Tuple
Dictionary
Python Numbers
Number data types store numeric values. Number objects are created when you assign a value to them. For example −
var1 = 1
var2 = 10
You can also delete the reference to a number object by using the del statement. The syntax of the del statement is −
del var1[,var2[,var3[....,varN]]]]
You can delete a single object or multiple objects by using the del statement. For example −
del var
del var_a, var_b
Examples
Here are some examples of numbers −
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Python allows you to use a lowercase l with long, but it is recommended that you use only an uppercase L to avoid confusion with the
number 1. Python displays long integers with an uppercase L.
A complex number consists of an ordered pair of real floating-point numbers denoted by x + yj, where x and y are the real numbers
and j is the imaginary unit.
Python Strings
Strings in Python are identified as a contiguous set of characters represented in the quotation marks. Python allows for either pairs of single or
double quotes. Subsets of strings can be taken using the slice operator ([ ] and [:] ) with indexes starting at 0 in the beginning of the string and
working their way from -1 at the end.
The plus (+) sign is the string concatenation operator and the asterisk (*) is the repetition operator. For example −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
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Hello World!
H
llo
llo World!
Hello World!Hello World!
Hello World!TEST
Python Lists
Lists are the most versatile of Python's compound data types. A list contains items separated by commas and enclosed within square brackets
([]). To some extent, lists are similar to arrays in C. One difference between them is that all the items belonging to a list can be of different data
type.
The values stored in a list can be accessed using the slice operator ([ ] and [:]) with indexes starting at 0 in the beginning of the list and
working their way to end -1. The plus (+) sign is the list concatenation operator, and the asterisk (*) is the repetition operator. For example −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
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Python Tuples
A tuple is another sequence data type that is similar to the list. A tuple consists of a number of values separated by commas. Unlike lists,
however, tuples are enclosed within parentheses.
The main differences between lists and tuples are: Lists are enclosed in brackets ( [ ] ) and their elements and size can be changed, while
tuples are enclosed in parentheses ( ( ) ) and cannot be updated. Tuples can be thought of as read-only lists. For example −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
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The following code is invalid with tuple, because we attempted to update a tuple, which is not allowed. Similar case is possible with lists −
#!/usr/bin/python
Python Dictionary
Python's dictionaries are kind of hash table type. They work like associative arrays or hashes found in Perl and consist of key-value pairs. A
dictionary key can be almost any Python type, but are usually numbers or strings. Values, on the other hand, can be any arbitrary Python
object.
Dictionaries are enclosed by curly braces ({ }) and values can be assigned and accessed using square braces ([]). For example −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
dict = {}
dict['one'] = "This is one"
dict[2] = "This is two"
This is one
This is two
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Dictionaries have no concept of order among elements. It is incorrect to say that the elements are "out of order"; they are simply unordered.
There are several built-in functions to perform conversion from one data type to another. These functions return a new object representing the
converted value.
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1
int(x [,base])
2
long(x [,base] )
3
float(x)
Converts x to a floating-point number.
4
complex(real [,imag])
5
str(x)
6
repr(x)
7
eval(str)
8
tuple(s)
Converts s to a tuple.
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9 list(s)
Converts s to a list.
10
set(s)
Converts s to a set.
11
dict(d)
12
frozenset(s)
Converts s to a frozen set.
13
chr(x)
14
unichr(x)
15
ord(x)
16
hex(x)
17
oct(x)
Consider the expression 4 + 5 = 9. Here, 4 and 5 are called operands and + is called operator.
Types of Operator
Python language supports the following types of operators.
Arithmetic Operators
Comparison (Relational) Operators
Assignment Operators
Logical Operators
Bitwise Operators
Membership Operators
Identity Operators
[ Show Example ]
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- Subtraction Subtracts right hand operand from left hand operand. a – b = -10
% Modulus Divides left hand operand by right hand operand and returns b%a=0
remainder
** Exponent Performs exponential (power) calculation on operators a**b =10 to the power 20
// Floor Division - The division of operands where the result is the 9//2 = 4 and 9.0//2.0 = 4.0, -11//3 = -4, -11.0//3 = -4.0
quotient in which the digits after the decimal point are removed.
But if one of the operands is negative, the result is floored, i.e.,
rounded away from zero (towards negative infinity) −
[ Show Example ]
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== If the values of two operands are equal, then the condition (a == b) is not true.
becomes true.
!= If values of two operands are not equal, then condition becomes (a != b) is true.
true.
<> If values of two operands are not equal, then condition becomes (a <> b) is true. This is similar to != operator.
true.
> If the value of left operand is greater than the value of right (a > b) is not true.
operand, then condition becomes true.
< If the value of left operand is less than the value of right operand, (a < b) is true.
then condition becomes true.
>= If the value of left operand is greater than or equal to the value of (a >= b) is not true.
right operand, then condition becomes true.
<= If the value of left operand is less than or equal to the value of (a <= b) is true.
right operand, then condition becomes true.
[ Show Example ]
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= Assigns values from right side operands to left side operand c = a + b assigns value of a + b into c
+= Add It adds right operand to the left operand and assign the result to
c += a is equivalent to c = c + a
AND left operand
-= Subtract It subtracts right operand from the left operand and assign the
c -= a is equivalent to c = c - a
AND result to left operand
*= Multiply It multiplies right operand with the left operand and assign the
c *= a is equivalent to c = c * a
AND result to left operand
/= Divide It divides left operand with the right operand and assign the result
c /= a is equivalent to c = c / a
AND to left operand
%= It takes modulus using two operands and assign the result to left
Modulus operand c %= a is equivalent to c = c % a
AND
//= Floor It performs floor division on operators and assign value to the left
c //= a is equivalent to c = c // a
Division operand
a = 0011 1100
b = 0000 1101
-----------------
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~a = 1100 0011
[ Show Example ]
& Binary Operator copies a bit to the result if it exists in both operands
(a & b) (means 0000 1100)
AND
^ Binary It copies the bit if it is set in one operand but not both.
(a ^ b) = 49 (means 0011 0001)
XOR
~ Binary
(~a ) = -61 (means 1100 0011 in 2's complement form due to a
Ones It is unary and has the effect of 'flipping' bits.
signed binary number.
Complement
<< Binary The left operands value is moved left by the number of bits
a << 2 = 240 (means 1111 0000)
Left Shift specified by the right operand.
>> Binary The left operands value is moved right by the number of bits
a >> 2 = 15 (means 0000 1111)
Right Shift specified by the right operand.
[ Show Example ]
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and Logical If both the operands are true then condition becomes true. (a and b) is true.
AND
or Logical If any of the two operands are non-zero then condition becomes (a or b) is true.
OR true.
not Logical Used to reverse the logical state of its operand. Not(a and b) is false.
NOT
[ Show Example ]
not in Evaluates to true if it does not finds a variable in the specified x not in y, here not in results in a 1 if x is not a member of
sequence and false otherwise. sequence y.
[ Show Example ]
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[ Show Example ]
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1
**
2
~+-
Complement, unary plus and minus (method names for the last two are +@ and -@)
3
* / % //
4
+-
5
>> <<
6
&
Bitwise 'AND'
7
^|
Bitwise exclusive `OR' and regular `OR'
8
<= < > >=
Comparison operators
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9 <> == !=
Equality operators
10
= %= /= //= -= += *= **=
Assignment operators
11
is is not
Identity operators
12
in not in
Membership operators
13
not or and
Logical operators
Decision structures evaluate multiple expressions which produce TRUE or FALSE as outcome. You need to determine which action to take
and which statements to execute if outcome is TRUE or FALSE otherwise.
Following is the general form of a typical decision making structure found in most of the programming languages −
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Python programming language assumes any non-zero and non-null values as TRUE, and if it is either zero or null, then it is assumed as
FALSE value.
Python programming language provides following types of decision making statements. Click the following links to check their detail.
1 if statements
2 if...else statements
An if statement can be followed by an optional else statement, which executes when the boolean expression is FALSE.
3 nested if statements
You can use one if or else if statement inside another if or else if statement(s).
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Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
var = 100
if ( var == 100 ) : print "Value of expression is 100"
print "Good bye!"
Python - Loops
In general, statements are executed sequentially: The first statement in a function is executed first, followed by the second, and so on. There
may be a situation when you need to execute a block of code several number of times.
Programming languages provide various control structures that allow for more complicated execution paths.
A loop statement allows us to execute a statement or group of statements multiple times. The following diagram illustrates a loop statement −
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Python programming language provides following types of loops to handle looping requirements.
1 while loop
Repeats a statement or group of statements while a given condition is TRUE. It tests the condition before executing the loop body.
2 for loop
Executes a sequence of statements multiple times and abbreviates the code that manages the loop variable.
3 nested loops
You can use one or more loop inside any another while, for or do..while loop.
Loop control statements change execution from its normal sequence. When execution leaves a scope, all automatic objects that were created
in that scope are destroyed.
Python supports the following control statements. Click the following links to check their detail.
1 break statement
Terminates the loop statement and transfers execution to the statement immediately following the loop.
2 continue statement
Causes the loop to skip the remainder of its body and immediately retest its condition prior to reiterating.
3 pass statement
The pass statement in Python is used when a statement is required syntactically but you do not want any command or code to
execute.
Python - Numbers
Number data types store numeric values. They are immutable data types, means that changing the value of a number data type results in a
newly allocated object.
Number objects are created when you assign a value to them. For example −
var1 = 1
var2 = 10
You can also delete the reference to a number object by using the del statement. The syntax of the del statement is −
del var1[,var2[,var3[....,varN]]]]
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You can delete a single object or multiple objects by using the del statement. For example −
del var
del var_a, var_b
int (signed integers) − They are often called just integers or ints, are positive or negative whole numbers with no decimal point.
long (long integers ) − Also called longs, they are integers of unlimited size, written like integers and followed by an uppercase or
lowercase L.
float (floating point real values) − Also called floats, they represent real numbers and are written with a decimal point dividing the
integer and fractional parts. Floats may also be in scientific notation, with E or e indicating the power of 10 (2.5e2 = 2.5 x 102 = 250).
complex (complex numbers) − are of the form a + bJ, where a and b are floats and J (or j) represents the square root of -1 (which
is an imaginary number). The real part of the number is a, and the imaginary part is b. Complex numbers are not used much in
Python programming.
Examples
Here are some examples of numbers
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Python allows you to use a lowercase L with long, but it is recommended that you use only an uppercase L to avoid confusion with
the number 1. Python displays long integers with an uppercase L.
A complex number consists of an ordered pair of real floating point numbers denoted by a + bj, where a is the real part and b is the
imaginary part of the complex number.
Type complex(x) to convert x to a complex number with real part x and imaginary part zero.
Type complex(x, y) to convert x and y to a complex number with real part x and imaginary part y. x and y are numeric expressions
Mathematical Functions
Python includes following functions that perform mathematical calculations.
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1 abs(x)
2 ceil(x)
3 cmp(x, y)
-1 if x < y, 0 if x == y, or 1 if x > y
4 exp(x)
The exponential of x: ex
5 fabs(x)
6 floor(x)
7 log(x)
8 log10(x)
9 max(x1, x2,...)
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10 min(x1, x2,...)
11 modf(x)
The fractional and integer parts of x in a two-item tuple. Both parts have the same sign as x. The integer part is returned as a
float.
12 pow(x, y)
13 round(x [,n])
x rounded to n digits from the decimal point. Python rounds away from zero as a tie-breaker: round(0.5) is 1.0 and
round(-0.5) is -1.0.
14 sqrt(x)
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1 choice(seq)
3 random()
A random float r, such that 0 is less than or equal to r and r is less than 1
4 seed([x])
Sets the integer starting value used in generating random numbers. Call this function before calling any other random module
function. Returns None.
5 shuffle(lst)
6 uniform(x, y)
A random float r, such that x is less than or equal to r and r is less than y
Trigonometric Functions
Python includes following functions that perform trigonometric calculations.
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1 acos(x)
2 asin(x)
3 atan(x)
4 atan2(y, x)
5 cos(x)
6 hypot(x, y)
7 sin(x)
8 tan(x)
9 degrees(x)
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10 radians(x)
Mathematical Constants
The module also defines two mathematical constants −
1
pi
2
e
Python - Strings
Strings are amongst the most popular types in Python. We can create them simply by enclosing characters in quotes. Python treats single
quotes the same as double quotes. Creating strings is as simple as assigning a value to a variable. For example −
To access substrings, use the square brackets for slicing along with the index or indices to obtain your substring. For example −
Live Demo
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#!/usr/bin/python
var1[0]: H
var2[1:5]: ytho
Updating Strings
You can "update" an existing string by (re)assigning a variable to another string. The new value can be related to its previous value or to a
completely different string altogether. For example −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
Escape Characters
Following table is a list of escape or non-printable characters that can be represented with backslash notation.
An escape character gets interpreted; in a single quoted as well as double quoted strings.
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\b 0x08 Backspace
\cx Control-x
\C-x Control-x
\e 0x1b Escape
\f 0x0c Formfeed
\M-\C-x Meta-Control-x
\n 0x0a Newline
\s 0x20 Space
\t 0x09 Tab
\x Character x
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+ Concatenation - Adds values on either side of the operator a + b will give HelloPython
* Repetition - Creates new strings, concatenating multiple copies of a*2 will give -HelloHello
the same string
[] Slice - Gives the character from the given index a[1] will give e
[:] Range Slice - Gives the characters from the given range a[1:4] will give ell
in Membership - Returns true if a character exists in the given string H in a will give 1
not in Membership - Returns true if a character does not exist in the M not in a will give 1
given string
r/R Raw String - Suppresses actual meaning of Escape characters. print r'\n' prints \n and print R'\n'prints \n
The syntax for raw strings is exactly the same as for normal
strings with the exception of the raw string operator, the letter "r,"
which precedes the quotation marks. The "r" can be lowercase (r)
or uppercase (R) and must be placed immediately preceding the
first quote mark.
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
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Here is the list of complete set of symbols which can be used along with % −
%c character
%o octal integer
Other supported symbols and functionality are listed in the following table −
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Symbol Functionality
- left justification
# add the octal leading zero ( '0' ) or hexadecimal leading '0x' or '0X', depending on whether 'x' or 'X' were
used.
m.n. m is the minimum total width and n is the number of digits to display after the decimal point (if appl.)
Triple Quotes
Python's triple quotes comes to the rescue by allowing strings to span multiple lines, including verbatim NEWLINEs, TABs, and any other
special characters.
The syntax for triple quotes consists of three consecutive single or double quotes.
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
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"""
print para_str
When the above code is executed, it produces the following result. Note how every single special character has been converted to its printed
form, right down to the last NEWLINE at the end of the string between the "up." and closing triple quotes. Also note that NEWLINEs occur
either with an explicit carriage return at the end of a line or its escape code (\n) −
Raw strings do not treat the backslash as a special character at all. Every character you put into a raw string stays the way you wrote it −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
print 'C:\\nowhere'
C:\nowhere
Now let's make use of raw string. We would put expression in r'expression' as follows −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
print r'C:\\nowhere'
C:\\nowhere
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Unicode String
Normal strings in Python are stored internally as 8-bit ASCII, while Unicode strings are stored as 16-bit Unicode. This allows for a more varied
set of characters, including special characters from most languages in the world. I'll restrict my treatment of Unicode strings to the following −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
Hello, world!
As you can see, Unicode strings use the prefix u, just as raw strings use the prefix r.
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1 capitalize()
2 center(width, fillchar)
Returns a space-padded string with the original string centered to a total of width columns.
Counts how many times str occurs in string or in a substring of string if starting index beg and ending index end are given.
4 decode(encoding='UTF-8',errors='strict')
Decodes the string using the codec registered for encoding. encoding defaults to the default string encoding.
5 encode(encoding='UTF-8',errors='strict')
Returns encoded string version of string; on error, default is to raise a ValueError unless errors is given with 'ignore' or
'replace'.
Determines if string or a substring of string (if starting index beg and ending index end are given) ends with suffix; returns true
if so and false otherwise.
7 expandtabs(tabsize=8)
Expands tabs in string to multiple spaces; defaults to 8 spaces per tab if tabsize not provided.
Determine if str occurs in string or in a substring of string if starting index beg and ending index end are given returns index if
found and -1 otherwise.
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10 isalnum()
Returns true if string has at least 1 character and all characters are alphanumeric and false otherwise.
11 isalpha()
Returns true if string has at least 1 character and all characters are alphabetic and false otherwise.
12 isdigit()
13 islower()
Returns true if string has at least 1 cased character and all cased characters are in lowercase and false otherwise.
14 isnumeric()
Returns true if a unicode string contains only numeric characters and false otherwise.
15 isspace()
Returns true if string contains only whitespace characters and false otherwise.
16 istitle()
17 isupper()
Returns true if string has at least one cased character and all cased characters are in uppercase and false otherwise.
18 join(seq)
Merges (concatenates) the string representations of elements in sequence seq into a string, with separator string.
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19 len(string)
20 ljust(width[, fillchar])
Returns a space-padded string with the original string left-justified to a total of width columns.
21 lower()
22 lstrip()
23 maketrans()
24 max(str)
25 min(str)
Replaces all occurrences of old in string with new or at most max occurrences if max given.
27 rfind(str, beg=0,end=len(string))
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29 rjust(width,[, fillchar])
Returns a space-padded string with the original string right-justified to a total of width columns.
30 rstrip()
31 split(str="", num=string.count(str))
Splits string according to delimiter str (space if not provided) and returns list of substrings; split into at most num substrings if
given.
32 splitlines( num=string.count('\n'))
Splits string at all (or num) NEWLINEs and returns a list of each line with NEWLINEs removed.
33 startswith(str, beg=0,end=len(string))
Determines if string or a substring of string (if starting index beg and ending index end are given) starts with substring str;
returns true if so and false otherwise.
34 strip([chars])
35 swapcase()
36 title()
Returns "titlecased" version of string, that is, all words begin with uppercase and the rest are lowercase.
37 translate(table, deletechars="")
Translates string according to translation table str(256 chars), removing those in the del string.
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38 upper()
39 zfill (width)
Returns original string leftpadded with zeros to a total of width characters; intended for numbers, zfill() retains any sign given
(less one zero).
40 isdecimal()
Returns true if a unicode string contains only decimal characters and false otherwise.
Python - Lists
The most basic data structure in Python is the sequence. Each element of a sequence is assigned a number - its position or index. The first
index is zero, the second index is one, and so forth.
Python has six built-in types of sequences, but the most common ones are lists and tuples, which we would see in this tutorial.
There are certain things you can do with all sequence types. These operations include indexing, slicing, adding, multiplying, and checking for
membership. In addition, Python has built-in functions for finding the length of a sequence and for finding its largest and smallest elements.
Python Lists
The list is a most versatile datatype available in Python which can be written as a list of comma-separated values (items) between square
brackets. Important thing about a list is that items in a list need not be of the same type.
Creating a list is as simple as putting different comma-separated values between square brackets. For example −
Similar to string indices, list indices start at 0, and lists can be sliced, concatenated and so on.
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Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
list1[0]: physics
list2[1:5]: [2, 3, 4, 5]
Updating Lists
You can update single or multiple elements of lists by giving the slice on the left-hand side of the assignment operator, and you can add to
elements in a list with the append() method. For example −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
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Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
In fact, lists respond to all of the general sequence operations we used on strings in the prior chapter.
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1 cmp(list1, list2)
2 len(list)
3 max(list)
4 min(list)
5 list(seq)
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1 list.append(obj)
2 list.count(obj)
3 list.extend(seq)
4 list.index(obj)
5 list.insert(index, obj)
6 list.pop(obj=list[-1])
7 list.remove(obj)
8 list.reverse()
9 list.sort([func])
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Python - Tuples
A tuple is a sequence of immutable Python objects. Tuples are sequences, just like lists. The differences between tuples and lists are, the
tuples cannot be changed unlike lists and tuples use parentheses, whereas lists use square brackets.
Creating a tuple is as simple as putting different comma-separated values. Optionally you can put these comma-separated values between
parentheses also. For example −
tup1 = ();
To write a tuple containing a single value you have to include a comma, even though there is only one value −
tup1 = (50,);
Like string indices, tuple indices start at 0, and they can be sliced, concatenated, and so on.
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
tup1[0]: physics
tup2[1:5]: [2, 3, 4, 5]
Updating Tuples
Tuples are immutable which means you cannot update or change the values of tuple elements. You are able to take portions of existing tuples
to create new tuples as the following example demonstrates −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
To explicitly remove an entire tuple, just use the del statement. For example −
Live Demo
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#!/usr/bin/python
This produces the following result. Note an exception raised, this is because after del tup tuple does not exist any more −
In fact, tuples respond to all of the general sequence operations we used on strings in the prior chapter −
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No Enclosing Delimiters
Any set of multiple objects, comma-separated, written without identifying symbols, i.e., brackets for lists, parentheses for tuples, etc., default to
tuples, as indicated in these short examples −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
1 cmp(tuple1, tuple2)
2 len(tuple)
3 max(tuple)
4 min(tuple)
5 tuple(seq)
Python - Dictionary
Each key is separated from its value by a colon (:), the items are separated by commas, and the whole thing is enclosed in curly braces. An
empty dictionary without any items is written with just two curly braces, like this: {}.
Keys are unique within a dictionary while values may not be. The values of a dictionary can be of any type, but the keys must be of an
immutable data type such as strings, numbers, or tuples.
Live Demo
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#!/usr/bin/python
dict['Name']: Zara
dict['Age']: 7
If we attempt to access a data item with a key, which is not part of the dictionary, we get an error as follows −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
dict['Alice']:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "test.py", line 4, in <module>
print "dict['Alice']: ", dict['Alice'];
KeyError: 'Alice'
Updating Dictionary
You can update a dictionary by adding a new entry or a key-value pair, modifying an existing entry, or deleting an existing entry as shown
below in the simple example −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
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dict['Age']: 8
dict['School']: DPS School
To explicitly remove an entire dictionary, just use the del statement. Following is a simple example −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
This produces the following result. Note that an exception is raised because after del dict dictionary does not exist any more −
dict['Age']:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "test.py", line 8, in <module>
print "dict['Age']: ", dict['Age'];
TypeError: 'type' object is unsubscriptable
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(a) More than one entry per key not allowed. Which means no duplicate key is allowed. When duplicate keys encountered during assignment,
the last assignment wins. For example −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
dict['Name']: Manni
(b) Keys must be immutable. Which means you can use strings, numbers or tuples as dictionary keys but something like ['key'] is not allowed.
Following is a simple example −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
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1 cmp(dict1, dict2)
2 len(dict)
Gives the total length of the dictionary. This would be equal to the number of items in the dictionary.
3 str(dict)
4 type(variable)
Returns the type of the passed variable. If passed variable is dictionary, then it would return a dictionary type.
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1 dict.clear()
2 dict.copy()
3 dict.fromkeys()
Create a new dictionary with keys from seq and values set to value.
4 dict.get(key, default=None)
5 dict.has_key(key)
6 dict.items()
7 dict.keys()
8 dict.setdefault(key, default=None)
Similar to get(), but will set dict[key]=default if key is not already in dict
9 dict.update(dict2)
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10 dict.values()
What is Tick?
Time intervals are floating-point numbers in units of seconds. Particular instants in time are expressed in seconds since 12:00am, January 1,
1970(epoch).
There is a popular time module available in Python which provides functions for working with times, and for converting between
representations. The function time.time() returns the current system time in ticks since 12:00am, January 1, 1970(epoch).
Example
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
import time; # This is required to include time module.
ticks = time.time()
print "Number of ticks since 12:00am, January 1, 1970:", ticks
Date arithmetic is easy to do with ticks. However, dates before the epoch cannot be represented in this form. Dates in the far future also
cannot be represented this way - the cutoff point is sometime in 2038 for UNIX and Windows.
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What is TimeTuple?
Many of Python's time functions handle time as a tuple of 9 numbers, as shown below −
1 Month 1 to 12
2 Day 1 to 31
3 Hour 0 to 23
4 Minute 0 to 59
The above tuple is equivalent to struct_time structure. This structure has following attributes −
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0 tm_year 2008
1 tm_mon 1 to 12
2 tm_mday 1 to 31
3 tm_hour 0 to 23
4 tm_min 0 to 59
6 tm_wday 0 to 6 (0 is Monday)
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
import time;
localtime = time.localtime(time.time())
print "Local current time :", localtime
This would produce the following result, which could be formatted in any other presentable form −
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Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
import time;
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
import calendar
cal = calendar.month(2008, 1)
print "Here is the calendar:"
print cal
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21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31
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1 time.altzone
The offset of the local DST timezone, in seconds west of UTC, if one is defined. This is negative if the local DST timezone is east
of UTC (as in Western Europe, including the UK). Only use this if daylight is nonzero.
2 time.asctime([tupletime])
Accepts a time-tuple and returns a readable 24-character string such as 'Tue Dec 11 18:07:14 2008'.
3 time.clock( )
Returns the current CPU time as a floating-point number of seconds. To measure computational costs of different approaches, the
value of time.clock is more useful than that of time.time().
4 time.ctime([secs])
5 time.gmtime([secs])
Accepts an instant expressed in seconds since the epoch and returns a time-tuple t with the UTC time. Note : t.tm_isdst is always
0
6 time.localtime([secs])
Accepts an instant expressed in seconds since the epoch and returns a time-tuple t with the local time (t.tm_isdst is 0 or 1,
depending on whether DST applies to instant secs by local rules).
7 time.mktime(tupletime)
Accepts an instant expressed as a time-tuple in local time and returns a floating-point value with the instant expressed in seconds
since the epoch.
8 time.sleep(secs)
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9 time.strftime(fmt[,tupletime])
Accepts an instant expressed as a time-tuple in local time and returns a string representing the instant as specified by string fmt.
Parses str according to format string fmt and returns the instant in time-tuple format.
11 time.time( )
Returns the current time instant, a floating-point number of seconds since the epoch.
12 time.tzset()
Resets the time conversion rules used by the library routines. The environment variable TZ specifies how this is done.
There are following two important attributes available with time module −
1
time.timezone
Attribute time.timezone is the offset in seconds of the local time zone (without DST) from UTC (>0 in the Americas; <=0 in most of
Europe, Asia, Africa).
2
time.tzname
Attribute time.tzname is a pair of locale-dependent strings, which are the names of the local time zone without and with DST,
respectively.
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By default, calendar takes Monday as the first day of the week and Sunday as the last one. To change this, call calendar.setfirstweekday()
function.
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1
calendar.calendar(year,w=2,l=1,c=6)
Returns a multiline string with a calendar for year year formatted into three columns separated by c spaces. w is the width in
characters of each date; each line has length 21*w+18+2*c. l is the number of lines for each week.
2
calendar.firstweekday( )
Returns the current setting for the weekday that starts each week. By default, when calendar is first imported, this is 0, meaning
Monday.
3
calendar.isleap(year)
4
calendar.leapdays(y1,y2)
Returns the total number of leap days in the years within range(y1,y2).
5
calendar.month(year,month,w=2,l=1)
Returns a multiline string with a calendar for month month of year year, one line per week plus two header lines. w is the width in
characters of each date; each line has length 7*w+6. l is the number of lines for each week.
6
calendar.monthcalendar(year,month)
Returns a list of lists of ints. Each sublist denotes a week. Days outside month month of year year are set to 0; days within the
month are set to their day-of-month, 1 and up.
7
calendar.monthrange(year,month)
Returns two integers. The first one is the code of the weekday for the first day of the month month in year year; the second one is
the number of days in the month. Weekday codes are 0 (Monday) to 6 (Sunday); month numbers are 1 to 12.
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8
calendar.prcal(year,w=2,l=1,c=6)
9
calendar.prmonth(year,month,w=2,l=1)
10
calendar.setfirstweekday(weekday)
Sets the first day of each week to weekday code weekday. Weekday codes are 0 (Monday) to 6 (Sunday).
11
calendar.timegm(tupletime)
The inverse of time.gmtime: accepts a time instant in time-tuple form and returns the same instant as a floating-point number of
seconds since the epoch.
12
calendar.weekday(year,month,day)
Returns the weekday code for the given date. Weekday codes are 0 (Monday) to 6 (Sunday); month numbers are 1 (January) to
12 (December).
Python - Functions
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A function is a block of organized, reusable code that is used to perform a single, related action. Functions provide better modularity for your
application and a high degree of code reusing.
As you already know, Python gives you many built-in functions like print(), etc. but you can also create your own functions. These functions
are called user-defined functions.
Defining a Function
You can define functions to provide the required functionality. Here are simple rules to define a function in Python.
Function blocks begin with the keyword def followed by the function name and parentheses ( ( ) ).
Any input parameters or arguments should be placed within these parentheses. You can also define parameters inside these
parentheses.
The first statement of a function can be an optional statement - the documentation string of the function or docstring.
The code block within every function starts with a colon (:) and is indented.
The statement return [expression] exits a function, optionally passing back an expression to the caller. A return statement with no
arguments is the same as return None.
Syntax
def functionname( parameters ):
"function_docstring"
function_suite
return [expression]
By default, parameters have a positional behavior and you need to inform them in the same order that they were defined.
Example
The following function takes a string as input parameter and prints it on standard screen.
Calling a Function
Defining a function only gives it a name, specifies the parameters that are to be included in the function and structures the blocks of code.
Once the basic structure of a function is finalized, you can execute it by calling it from another function or directly from the Python prompt.
Following is the example to call printme() function −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
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Here, we are maintaining reference of the passed object and appending values in the same object. So, this would produce the following result
−
There is one more example where argument is being passed by reference and the reference is being overwritten inside the called function.
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
The parameter mylist is local to the function changeme. Changing mylist within the function does not affect mylist. The function accomplishes
nothing and finally this would produce the following result −
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Function Arguments
You can call a function by using the following types of formal arguments −
Required arguments
Keyword arguments
Default arguments
Variable-length arguments
Required arguments
Required arguments are the arguments passed to a function in correct positional order. Here, the number of arguments in the function call
should match exactly with the function definition.
To call the function printme(), you definitely need to pass one argument, otherwise it gives a syntax error as follows −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
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printme();
TypeError: printme() takes exactly 1 argument (0 given)
Keyword arguments
Keyword arguments are related to the function calls. When you use keyword arguments in a function call, the caller identifies the arguments
by the parameter name.
This allows you to skip arguments or place them out of order because the Python interpreter is able to use the keywords provided to match the
values with parameters. You can also make keyword calls to the printme() function in the following ways −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
My string
The following example gives more clear picture. Note that the order of parameters does not matter.
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
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return;
Name: miki
Age 50
Default arguments
A default argument is an argument that assumes a default value if a value is not provided in the function call for that argument. The following
example gives an idea on default arguments, it prints default age if it is not passed −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
Name: miki
Age 50
Name: miki
Age 35
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Variable-length arguments
You may need to process a function for more arguments than you specified while defining the function. These arguments are called variable-
length arguments and are not named in the function definition, unlike required and default arguments.
An asterisk (*) is placed before the variable name that holds the values of all nonkeyword variable arguments. This tuple remains empty if no
additional arguments are specified during the function call. Following is a simple example −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
Output is:
10
Output is:
70
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60
50
Lambda forms can take any number of arguments but return just one value in the form of an expression. They cannot contain
commands or multiple expressions.
An anonymous function cannot be a direct call to print because lambda requires an expression
Lambda functions have their own local namespace and cannot access variables other than those in their parameter list and those in
the global namespace.
Although it appears that lambda's are a one-line version of a function, they are not equivalent to inline statements in C or C++, whose
purpose is by passing function stack allocation during invocation for performance reasons.
Syntax
The syntax of lambda functions contains only a single statement, which is as follows −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
Value of total : 30
Value of total : 40
All the above examples are not returning any value. You can return a value from a function as follows −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
Scope of Variables
All variables in a program may not be accessible at all locations in that program. This depends on where you have declared a variable.
The scope of a variable determines the portion of the program where you can access a particular identifier. There are two basic scopes of
variables in Python −
Global variables
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Local variables
This means that local variables can be accessed only inside the function in which they are declared, whereas global variables can be
accessed throughout the program body by all functions. When you call a function, the variables declared inside it are brought into scope.
Following is a simple example −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
Python - Modules
A module allows you to logically organize your Python code. Grouping related code into a module makes the code easier to understand and
use. A module is a Python object with arbitrarily named attributes that you can bind and reference.
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Simply, a module is a file consisting of Python code. A module can define functions, classes and variables. A module can also include
runnable code.
Example
The Python code for a module named aname normally resides in a file named aname.py. Here's an example of a simple module, support.py
When the interpreter encounters an import statement, it imports the module if the module is present in the search path. A search path is a list
of directories that the interpreter searches before importing a module. For example, to import the module support.py, you need to put the
following command at the top of the script −
#!/usr/bin/python
Hello : Zara
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A module is loaded only once, regardless of the number of times it is imported. This prevents the module execution from happening over and
over again if multiple imports occur.
For example, to import the function fibonacci from the module fib, use the following statement −
This statement does not import the entire module fib into the current namespace; it just introduces the item fibonacci from the module fib into
the global symbol table of the importing module.
This provides an easy way to import all the items from a module into the current namespace; however, this statement should be used
sparingly.
Locating Modules
When you import a module, the Python interpreter searches for the module in the following sequences −
If the module isn't found, Python then searches each directory in the shell variable PYTHONPATH.
If all else fails, Python checks the default path. On UNIX, this default path is normally /usr/local/lib/python/.
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The module search path is stored in the system module sys as the sys.path variable. The sys.path variable contains the current directory,
PYTHONPATH, and the installation-dependent default.
A Python statement can access variables in a local namespace and in the global namespace. If a local and a global variable have the same
name, the local variable shadows the global variable.
Each function has its own local namespace. Class methods follow the same scoping rule as ordinary functions.
Python makes educated guesses on whether variables are local or global. It assumes that any variable assigned a value in a function is local.
Therefore, in order to assign a value to a global variable within a function, you must first use the global statement.
The statement global VarName tells Python that VarName is a global variable. Python stops searching the local namespace for the variable.
For example, we define a variable Money in the global namespace. Within the function Money, we assign Money a value, therefore Python
assumes Money as a local variable. However, we accessed the value of the local variable Money before setting it, so an UnboundLocalError is
the result. Uncommenting the global statement fixes the problem.
#!/usr/bin/python
Money = 2000
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def AddMoney():
# Uncomment the following line to fix the code:
# global Money
Money = Money + 1
print Money
AddMoney()
print Money
The list contains the names of all the modules, variables and functions that are defined in a module. Following is a simple example −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
content = dir(math)
print content
Here, the special string variable __name__ is the module's name, and __file__ is the filename from which the module was loaded.
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The globals() and locals() functions can be used to return the names in the global and local namespaces depending on the location from
where they are called.
If locals() is called from within a function, it will return all the names that can be accessed locally from that function.
If globals() is called from within a function, it will return all the names that can be accessed globally from that function.
The return type of both these functions is dictionary. Therefore, names can be extracted using the keys() function.
Therefore, if you want to reexecute the top-level code in a module, you can use the reload() function. The reload() function imports a
previously imported module again. The syntax of the reload() function is this −
reload(module_name)
Here, module_name is the name of the module you want to reload and not the string containing the module name. For example, to reload
hello module, do the following −
reload(hello)
Packages in Python
A package is a hierarchical file directory structure that defines a single Python application environment that consists of modules and
subpackages and sub-subpackages, and so on.
Consider a file Pots.py available in Phone directory. This file has following line of source code −
#!/usr/bin/python
def Pots():
print "I'm Pots Phone"
Similar way, we have another two files having different functions with the same name as above −
To make all of your functions available when you've imported Phone, you need to put explicit import statements in __init__.py as follows −
After you add these lines to __init__.py, you have all of these classes available when you import the Phone package.
#!/usr/bin/python
Phone.Pots()
Phone.Isdn()
Phone.G3()
In the above example, we have taken example of a single functions in each file, but you can keep multiple functions in your files. You can also
define different Python classes in those files and then you can create your packages out of those classes.
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Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
#!/usr/bin/python
This prompts you to enter any string and it would display same string on the screen. When I typed "Hello Python!", its output is like this −
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#!/usr/bin/python
This would produce the following result against the entered input −
Python provides basic functions and methods necessary to manipulate files by default. You can do most of the file manipulation using a file
object.
Syntax
file_name − The file_name argument is a string value that contains the name of the file that you want to access.
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access_mode − The access_mode determines the mode in which the file has to be opened, i.e., read, write, append, etc. A
complete list of possible values is given below in the table. This is optional parameter and the default file access mode is read (r).
buffering − If the buffering value is set to 0, no buffering takes place. If the buffering value is 1, line buffering is performed while
accessing a file. If you specify the buffering value as an integer greater than 1, then buffering action is performed with the indicated
buffer size. If negative, the buffer size is the system default(default behavior).
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1
r
Opens a file for reading only. The file pointer is placed at the beginning of the file. This is the default mode.
2
rb
Opens a file for reading only in binary format. The file pointer is placed at the beginning of the file. This is the default mode.
3
r+
Opens a file for both reading and writing. The file pointer placed at the beginning of the file.
4
rb+
Opens a file for both reading and writing in binary format. The file pointer placed at the beginning of the file.
5
w
Opens a file for writing only. Overwrites the file if the file exists. If the file does not exist, creates a new file for writing.
6
wb
Opens a file for writing only in binary format. Overwrites the file if the file exists. If the file does not exist, creates a new file for
writing.
7
w+
Opens a file for both writing and reading. Overwrites the existing file if the file exists. If the file does not exist, creates a new file for
reading and writing.
8
wb+
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Opens a file for both writing and reading in binary format. Overwrites the existing file if the file exists. If the file does not exist,
creates a new file for reading and writing.
9
a
Opens a file for appending. The file pointer is at the end of the file if the file exists. That is, the file is in the append mode. If the file
does not exist, it creates a new file for writing.
10
ab
Opens a file for appending in binary format. The file pointer is at the end of the file if the file exists. That is, the file is in the append
mode. If the file does not exist, it creates a new file for writing.
11
a+
Opens a file for both appending and reading. The file pointer is at the end of the file if the file exists. The file opens in the append
mode. If the file does not exist, it creates a new file for reading and writing.
12
ab+
Opens a file for both appending and reading in binary format. The file pointer is at the end of the file if the file exists. The file opens
in the append mode. If the file does not exist, it creates a new file for reading and writing.
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1
file.closed
2
file.mode
3
file.name
4
file.softspace
Example
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
# Open a file
fo = open("foo.txt", "wb")
print "Name of the file: ", fo.name
print "Closed or not : ", fo.closed
print "Opening mode : ", fo.mode
print "Softspace flag : ", fo.softspace
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Opening mode : wb
Softspace flag : 0
Python automatically closes a file when the reference object of a file is reassigned to another file. It is a good practice to use the close()
method to close a file.
Syntax
fileObject.close()
Example
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
# Open a file
fo = open("foo.txt", "wb")
print "Name of the file: ", fo.name
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The write() method does not add a newline character ('\n') to the end of the string −
Syntax
fileObject.write(string)
Here, passed parameter is the content to be written into the opened file.
Example
#!/usr/bin/python
# Open a file
fo = open("foo.txt", "wb")
fo.write( "Python is a great language.\nYeah its great!!\n")
The above method would create foo.txt file and would write given content in that file and finally it would close that file. If you would open this
file, it would have following content.
Syntax
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fileObject.read([count])
Here, passed parameter is the number of bytes to be read from the opened file. This method starts reading from the beginning of the file and if
count is missing, then it tries to read as much as possible, maybe until the end of file.
Example
Let's take a file foo.txt, which we created above.
#!/usr/bin/python
# Open a file
fo = open("foo.txt", "r+")
str = fo.read(10);
print "Read String is : ", str
# Close opend file
fo.close()
File Positions
The tell() method tells you the current position within the file; in other words, the next read or write will occur at that many bytes from the
beginning of the file.
The seek(offset[, from]) method changes the current file position. The offset argument indicates the number of bytes to be moved. The from
argument specifies the reference position from where the bytes are to be moved.
If from is set to 0, it means use the beginning of the file as the reference position and 1 means use the current position as the reference
position and if it is set to 2 then the end of the file would be taken as the reference position.
Example
Let us take a file foo.txt, which we created above.
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#!/usr/bin/python
# Open a file
fo = open("foo.txt", "r+")
str = fo.read(10)
print "Read String is : ", str
To use this module you need to import it first and then you can call any related functions.
Syntax
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os.rename(current_file_name, new_file_name)
Example
Following is the example to rename an existing file test1.txt −
#!/usr/bin/python
import os
Syntax
os.remove(file_name)
Example
Following is the example to delete an existing file test2.txt −
#!/usr/bin/python
import os
Directories in Python
All files are contained within various directories, and Python has no problem handling these too. The os module has several methods that help
you create, remove, and change directories.
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Syntax
os.mkdir("newdir")
Example
Following is the example to create a directory test in the current directory −
#!/usr/bin/python
import os
Syntax
os.chdir("newdir")
Example
Following is the example to go into "/home/newdir" directory −
#!/usr/bin/python
import os
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Syntax
os.getcwd()
Example
Following is the example to give current directory −
#!/usr/bin/python
import os
Syntax
os.rmdir('dirname')
Example
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Following is the example to remove "/tmp/test" directory. It is required to give fully qualified name of the directory, otherwise it would search for
that directory in the current directory.
#!/usr/bin/python
import os
File Object Methods : The file object provides functions to manipulate files.
Exception Handling − This would be covered in this tutorial. Here is a list standard Exceptions available in Python: Standard
Exceptions .
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1
Exception
2
StopIteration
Raised when the next() method of an iterator does not point to any object.
3
SystemExit
4
StandardError
Base class for all built-in exceptions except StopIteration and SystemExit.
5
ArithmeticError
Base class for all errors that occur for numeric calculation.
6
OverflowError
7
FloatingPointError
8
ZeroDivisionError
Raised when division or modulo by zero takes place for all numeric types.
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9 AssertionError
10
AttributeError
11
EOFError
Raised when there is no input from either the raw_input() or input() function and the end of file is reached.
12
ImportError
13
KeyboardInterrupt
Raised when the user interrupts program execution, usually by pressing Ctrl+c.
14
LookupError
15
IndexError
16
KeyError
17
NameError
18
UnboundLocalError
Raised when trying to access a local variable in a function or method but no value has been assigned to it.
19
EnvironmentError
Base class for all exceptions that occur outside the Python environment.
20
IOError
Raised when an input/ output operation fails, such as the print statement or the open() function when trying to open a file that does
not exist.
21
IOError
22
SyntaxError
23
IndentationError
24
SystemError
Raised when the interpreter finds an internal problem, but when this error is encountered the Python interpreter does not exit.
25
SystemExit
Raised when Python interpreter is quit by using the sys.exit() function. If not handled in the code, causes the interpreter to exit.
26
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TypeError
Raised when an operation or function is attempted that is invalid for the specified data type.
27
ValueError
Raised when the built-in function for a data type has the valid type of arguments, but the arguments have invalid values specified.
28
RuntimeError
Raised when a generated error does not fall into any category.
29
NotImplementedError
Raised when an abstract method that needs to be implemented in an inherited class is not actually implemented.
Assertions in Python
An assertion is a sanity-check that you can turn on or turn off when you are done with your testing of the program.
The easiest way to think of an assertion is to liken it to a raise-if statement (or to be more accurate, a raise-if-not statement). An expression is
tested, and if the result comes up false, an exception is raised.
Assertions are carried out by the assert statement, the newest keyword to Python, introduced in version 1.5.
Programmers often place assertions at the start of a function to check for valid input, and after a function call to check for valid output.
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If the assertion fails, Python uses ArgumentExpression as the argument for the AssertionError. AssertionError exceptions can be caught and
handled like any other exception using the try-except statement, but if not handled, they will terminate the program and produce a traceback.
Example
Here is a function that converts a temperature from degrees Kelvin to degrees Fahrenheit. Since zero degrees Kelvin is as cold as it gets, the
function bails out if it sees a negative temperature −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
def KelvinToFahrenheit(Temperature):
assert (Temperature >= 0),"Colder than absolute zero!"
return ((Temperature-273)*1.8)+32
print KelvinToFahrenheit(273)
print int(KelvinToFahrenheit(505.78))
print KelvinToFahrenheit(-5)
32.0
451
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "test.py", line 9, in <module>
print KelvinToFahrenheit(-5)
File "test.py", line 4, in KelvinToFahrenheit
assert (Temperature >= 0),"Colder than absolute zero!"
AssertionError: Colder than absolute zero!
What is Exception?
An exception is an event, which occurs during the execution of a program that disrupts the normal flow of the program's instructions. In
general, when a Python script encounters a situation that it cannot cope with, it raises an exception. An exception is a Python object that
represents an error.
When a Python script raises an exception, it must either handle the exception immediately otherwise it terminates and quits.
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Handling an exception
If you have some suspicious code that may raise an exception, you can defend your program by placing the suspicious code in a try: block.
After the try: block, include an except: statement, followed by a block of code which handles the problem as elegantly as possible.
Syntax
Here is simple syntax of try....except...else blocks −
try:
You do your operations here;
......................
except ExceptionI:
If there is ExceptionI, then execute this block.
except ExceptionII:
If there is ExceptionII, then execute this block.
......................
else:
If there is no exception then execute this block.
You can also provide a generic except clause, which handles any exception.
After the except clause(s), you can include an else-clause. The code in the else-block executes if the code in the try: block does not
raise an exception.
The else-block is a good place for code that does not need the try: block's protection.
Example
This example opens a file, writes content in the, file and comes out gracefully because there is no problem at all −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
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try:
fh = open("testfile", "w")
fh.write("This is my test file for exception handling!!")
except IOError:
print "Error: can\'t find file or read data"
else:
print "Written content in the file successfully"
fh.close()
Example
This example tries to open a file where you do not have write permission, so it raises an exception −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
try:
fh = open("testfile", "r")
fh.write("This is my test file for exception handling!!")
except IOError:
print "Error: can\'t find file or read data"
else:
print "Written content in the file successfully"
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try:
You do your operations here;
......................
except:
If there is any exception, then execute this block.
......................
else:
If there is no exception then execute this block.
This kind of a try-except statement catches all the exceptions that occur. Using this kind of try-except statement is not considered a good
programming practice though, because it catches all exceptions but does not make the programmer identify the root cause of the problem that
may occur.
try:
You do your operations here;
......................
except(Exception1[, Exception2[,...ExceptionN]]]):
If there is any exception from the given exception list,
then execute this block.
......................
else:
If there is no exception then execute this block.
try:
You do your operations here;
......................
Due to any exception, this may be skipped.
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finally:
This would always be executed.
......................
You cannot use else clause as well along with a finally clause.
Example
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
try:
fh = open("testfile", "w")
fh.write("This is my test file for exception handling!!")
finally:
print "Error: can\'t find file or read data"
If you do not have permission to open the file in writing mode, then this will produce the following result −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
try:
fh = open("testfile", "w")
try:
fh.write("This is my test file for exception handling!!")
finally:
print "Going to close the file"
fh.close()
except IOError:
print "Error: can\'t find file or read data"
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When an exception is thrown in the try block, the execution immediately passes to the finally block. After all the statements in the finally block
are executed, the exception is raised again and is handled in the except statements if present in the next higher layer of the try-except
statement.
Argument of an Exception
An exception can have an argument, which is a value that gives additional information about the problem. The contents of the argument vary
by exception. You capture an exception's argument by supplying a variable in the except clause as follows −
try:
You do your operations here;
......................
except ExceptionType, Argument:
You can print value of Argument here...
If you write the code to handle a single exception, you can have a variable follow the name of the exception in the except statement. If you are
trapping multiple exceptions, you can have a variable follow the tuple of the exception.
This variable receives the value of the exception mostly containing the cause of the exception. The variable can receive a single value or
multiple values in the form of a tuple. This tuple usually contains the error string, the error number, and an error location.
Example
Following is an example for a single exception −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
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Raising an Exceptions
You can raise exceptions in several ways by using the raise statement. The general syntax for the raise statement is as follows.
Syntax
Here, Exception is the type of exception (for example, NameError) and argument is a value for the exception argument. The argument is
optional; if not supplied, the exception argument is None.
The final argument, traceback, is also optional (and rarely used in practice), and if present, is the traceback object used for the exception.
Example
An exception can be a string, a class or an object. Most of the exceptions that the Python core raises are classes, with an argument that is an
instance of the class. Defining new exceptions is quite easy and can be done as follows −
Note: In order to catch an exception, an "except" clause must refer to the same exception thrown either class object or simple string. For
example, to capture above exception, we must write the except clause as follows −
try:
Business Logic here...
except "Invalid level!":
Exception handling here...
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else:
Rest of the code here...
User-Defined Exceptions
Python also allows you to create your own exceptions by deriving classes from the standard built-in exceptions.
Here is an example related to RuntimeError. Here, a class is created that is subclassed from RuntimeError. This is useful when you need to
display more specific information when an exception is caught.
In the try block, the user-defined exception is raised and caught in the except block. The variable e is used to create an instance of the class
Networkerror.
class Networkerror(RuntimeError):
def __init__(self, arg):
self.args = arg
So once you defined above class, you can raise the exception as follows −
try:
raise Networkerror("Bad hostname")
except Networkerror,e:
print e.args
If you do not have any previous experience with object-oriented (OO) programming, you may want to consult an introductory course on it or at
least a tutorial of some sort so that you have a grasp of the basic concepts.
However, here is small introduction of Object-Oriented Programming (OOP) to bring you at speed −
Class − A user-defined prototype for an object that defines a set of attributes that characterize any object of the class. The attributes
are data members (class variables and instance variables) and methods, accessed via dot notation.
Class variable − A variable that is shared by all instances of a class. Class variables are defined within a class but outside any of the
class's methods. Class variables are not used as frequently as instance variables are.
Data member − A class variable or instance variable that holds data associated with a class and its objects.
Function overloading − The assignment of more than one behavior to a particular function. The operation performed varies by the
types of objects or arguments involved.
Instance variable − A variable that is defined inside a method and belongs only to the current instance of a class.
Inheritance − The transfer of the characteristics of a class to other classes that are derived from it.
Instance − An individual object of a certain class. An object obj that belongs to a class Circle, for example, is an instance of the class
Circle.
Object − A unique instance of a data structure that's defined by its class. An object comprises both data members (class variables
and instance variables) and methods.
Operator overloading − The assignment of more than one function to a particular operator.
Creating Classes
The class statement creates a new class definition. The name of the class immediately follows the keyword class followed by a colon as
follows −
class ClassName:
'Optional class documentation string'
class_suite
The class has a documentation string, which can be accessed via ClassName.__doc__.
The class_suite consists of all the component statements defining class members, data attributes and functions.
Example
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class Employee:
'Common base class for all employees'
empCount = 0
def displayCount(self):
print "Total Employee %d" % Employee.empCount
def displayEmployee(self):
print "Name : ", self.name, ", Salary: ", self.salary
The variable empCount is a class variable whose value is shared among all instances of a this class. This can be accessed as
Employee.empCount from inside the class or outside the class.
The first method __init__() is a special method, which is called class constructor or initialization method that Python calls when you
create a new instance of this class.
You declare other class methods like normal functions with the exception that the first argument to each method is self. Python adds
the self argument to the list for you; you do not need to include it when you call the methods.
Accessing Attributes
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You access the object's attributes using the dot operator with object. Class variable would be accessed using class name as follows −
emp1.displayEmployee()
emp2.displayEmployee()
print "Total Employee %d" % Employee.empCount
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
class Employee:
'Common base class for all employees'
empCount = 0
def displayCount(self):
print "Total Employee %d" % Employee.empCount
def displayEmployee(self):
print "Name : ", self.name, ", Salary: ", self.salary
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You can add, remove, or modify attributes of classes and objects at any time −
Instead of using the normal statements to access attributes, you can use the following functions −
The setattr(obj,name,value) − to set an attribute. If attribute does not exist, then it would be created.
The delattr(obj, name) − to delete an attribute.
__module__ − Module name in which the class is defined. This attribute is "__main__" in interactive mode.
__bases__ − A possibly empty tuple containing the base classes, in the order of their occurrence in the base class list.
For the above class let us try to access all these attributes −
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Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
class Employee:
'Common base class for all employees'
empCount = 0
def displayCount(self):
print "Total Employee %d" % Employee.empCount
def displayEmployee(self):
print "Name : ", self.name, ", Salary: ", self.salary
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Python's garbage collector runs during program execution and is triggered when an object's reference count reaches zero. An object's
reference count changes as the number of aliases that point to it changes.
An object's reference count increases when it is assigned a new name or placed in a container (list, tuple, or dictionary). The object's
reference count decreases when it's deleted with del, its reference is reassigned, or its reference goes out of scope. When an object's
reference count reaches zero, Python collects it automatically.
You normally will not notice when the garbage collector destroys an orphaned instance and reclaims its space. But a class can implement the
special method __del__(), called a destructor, that is invoked when the instance is about to be destroyed. This method might be used to clean
up any non memory resources used by an instance.
Example
This __del__() destructor prints the class name of an instance that is about to be destroyed −
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
class Point:
def __init__( self, x=0, y=0):
self.x = x
self.y = y
def __del__(self):
class_name = self.__class__.__name__
print class_name, "destroyed"
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pt1 = Point()
pt2 = pt1
pt3 = pt1
print id(pt1), id(pt2), id(pt3) # prints the ids of the obejcts
del pt1
del pt2
del pt3
Note − Ideally, you should define your classes in separate file, then you should import them in your main program file using import statement.
Class Inheritance
Instead of starting from scratch, you can create a class by deriving it from a preexisting class by listing the parent class in parentheses after
the new class name.
The child class inherits the attributes of its parent class, and you can use those attributes as if they were defined in the child class. A child
class can also override data members and methods from the parent.
Syntax
Derived classes are declared much like their parent class; however, a list of base classes to inherit from is given after the class name −
Example
Live Demo
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#!/usr/bin/python
def parentMethod(self):
print 'Calling parent method'
def getAttr(self):
print "Parent attribute :", Parent.parentAttr
def childMethod(self):
print 'Calling child method'
Similar way, you can drive a class from multiple parent classes as follows −
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You can use issubclass() or isinstance() functions to check a relationships of two classes and instances.
The issubclass(sub, sup) boolean function returns true if the given subclass sub is indeed a subclass of the superclass sup.
The isinstance(obj, Class) boolean function returns true if obj is an instance of class Class or is an instance of a subclass of Class
Overriding Methods
You can always override your parent class methods. One reason for overriding parent's methods is because you may want special or different
functionality in your subclass.
Example
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
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1
__init__ ( self [,args...] )
2
__del__( self )
3
__repr__( self )
Evaluable string representation
4
__str__( self )
5
__cmp__ ( self, x )
Object comparison
Overloading Operators
Suppose you have created a Vector class to represent two-dimensional vectors, what happens when you use the plus operator to add them?
Most likely Python will yell at you.
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You could, however, define the __add__ method in your class to perform vector addition and then the plus operator would behave as per
expectation −
Example
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
class Vector:
def __init__(self, a, b):
self.a = a
self.b = b
def __str__(self):
return 'Vector (%d, %d)' % (self.a, self.b)
def __add__(self,other):
return Vector(self.a + other.a, self.b + other.b)
v1 = Vector(2,10)
v2 = Vector(5,-2)
print v1 + v2
Vector(7,8)
Data Hiding
An object's attributes may or may not be visible outside the class definition. You need to name attributes with a double underscore prefix, and
those attributes then are not be directly visible to outsiders.
Example
Live Demo
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#!/usr/bin/python
class JustCounter:
__secretCount = 0
def count(self):
self.__secretCount += 1
print self.__secretCount
counter = JustCounter()
counter.count()
counter.count()
print counter.__secretCount
1
2
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "test.py", line 12, in <module>
print counter.__secretCount
AttributeError: JustCounter instance has no attribute '__secretCount'
Python protects those members by internally changing the name to include the class name. You can access such attributes as
object._className__attrName. If you would replace your last line as following, then it works for you −
.........................
print counter._JustCounter__secretCount
1
2
2
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The module re provides full support for Perl-like regular expressions in Python. The re module raises the exception re.error if an error occurs
while compiling or using a regular expression.
We would cover two important functions, which would be used to handle regular expressions. But a small thing first: There are various
characters, which would have special meaning when they are used in regular expression. To avoid any confusion while dealing with regular
expressions, we would use Raw Strings as r'expression'.
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1
pattern
2
string
This is the string, which would be searched to match the pattern at the beginning of string.
3
flags
You can specify different flags using bitwise OR (|). These are modifiers, which are listed in the table below.
The re.match function returns a match object on success, None on failure. We usegroup(num) or groups() function of match object to get
matched expression.
1
group(num=0)
2
groups()
This method returns all matching subgroups in a tuple (empty if there weren't any)
Example
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
import re
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if matchObj:
print "matchObj.group() : ", matchObj.group()
print "matchObj.group(1) : ", matchObj.group(1)
print "matchObj.group(2) : ", matchObj.group(2)
else:
print "No match!!"
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1
pattern
This is the regular expression to be matched.
2
string
This is the string, which would be searched to match the pattern anywhere in the string.
3
flags
You can specify different flags using bitwise OR (|). These are modifiers, which are listed in the table below.
The re.search function returns a match object on success, none on failure. We use group(num) or groups() function of match object to get
matched expression.
1
group(num=0)
This method returns entire match (or specific subgroup num)
2
groups()
This method returns all matching subgroups in a tuple (empty if there weren't any)
Example
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
import re
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if searchObj:
print "searchObj.group() : ", searchObj.group()
print "searchObj.group(1) : ", searchObj.group(1)
print "searchObj.group(2) : ", searchObj.group(2)
else:
print "Nothing found!!"
Example
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
import re
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if searchObj:
print "search --> searchObj.group() : ", searchObj.group()
else:
print "Nothing found!!"
No match!!
search --> searchObj.group() : dogs
Syntax
This method replaces all occurrences of the RE pattern in string with repl, substituting all occurrences unless max provided. This method
returns modified string.
Example
Live Demo
#!/usr/bin/python
import re
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1
re.I
2
re.L
Interprets words according to the current locale. This interpretation affects the alphabetic group (\w and \W), as well as word
boundary behavior(\b and \B).
3
re.M
Makes $ match the end of a line (not just the end of the string) and makes ^ match the start of any line (not just the start of
the string).
4
re.S
5
re.U
Interprets letters according to the Unicode character set. This flag affects the behavior of \w, \W, \b, \B.
6
re.X
Permits "cuter" regular expression syntax. It ignores whitespace (except inside a set [] or when escaped by a backslash) and
treats unescaped # as a comment marker.
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Following table lists the regular expression syntax that is available in Python −
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1
^
2
$
3
.
Matches any single character except newline. Using m option allows it to match newline as well.
4
[...]
Matches any single character in brackets.
5
[^...]
Matches any single character not in brackets
6
re*
Matches 0 or more occurrences of preceding expression.
7
re+
Matches 1 or more occurrence of preceding expression.
8
re?
Matches 0 or 1 occurrence of preceding expression.
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9 re{ n}
Matches exactly n number of occurrences of preceding expression.
10
re{ n,}
11
re{ n, m}
12
a| b
Matches either a or b.
13
(re)
14
(?imx)
Temporarily toggles on i, m, or x options within a regular expression. If in parentheses, only that area is affected.
15
(?-imx)
Temporarily toggles off i, m, or x options within a regular expression. If in parentheses, only that area is affected.
16
(?: re)
Groups regular expressions without remembering matched text.
17
(?imx: re)
Temporarily toggles on i, m, or x options within parentheses.
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18
(?-imx: re)
Temporarily toggles off i, m, or x options within parentheses.
19
(?#...)
Comment.
20
(?= re)
21
(?! re)
22
(?> re)
23
\w
24
\W
Matches nonword characters.
25
\s
Matches whitespace. Equivalent to [\t\n\r\f].
26
\S
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Matches nonwhitespace.
27
\d
28
\D
Matches nondigits.
29
\A
Matches beginning of string.
30
\Z
Matches end of string. If a newline exists, it matches just before newline.
31
\z
Matches end of string.
32
\G
Matches point where last match finished.
33
\b
Matches word boundaries when outside brackets. Matches backspace (0x08) when inside brackets.
34
\B
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36
\1...\9
Matches nth grouped subexpression.
37
\10
Matches nth grouped subexpression if it matched already. Otherwise refers to the octal representation of a character code.
Literal characters
1
python
Match "python".
Character classes
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1
[Pp]ython
Match "Python" or "python"
2
rub[ye]
Match "ruby" or "rube"
3
[aeiou]
Match any one lowercase vowel
4
[0-9]
Match any digit; same as [0123456789]
5
[a-z]
6
[A-Z]
7
[a-zA-Z0-9]
8
[^aeiou]
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9 [^0-9]
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1
.
2
\d
Match a digit: [0-9]
3
\D
Match a nondigit: [^0-9]
4
\s
Match a whitespace character: [ \t\r\n\f]
5
\S
Match nonwhitespace: [^ \t\r\n\f]
6
\w
Match a single word character: [A-Za-z0-9_]
7
\W
Repetition Cases
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1
ruby?
2
ruby*
3
ruby+
Match "rub" plus 1 or more ys
4
\d{3}
Match exactly 3 digits
5
\d{3,}
Match 3 or more digits
6
\d{3,5}
Match 3, 4, or 5 digits
Nongreedy repetition
This matches the smallest number of repetitions −
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1
<.*>
2
<.*?>
1
\D\d+
No group: + repeats \d
2
(\D\d)+
Grouped: + repeats \D\d pair
3
([Pp]ython(, )?)+
Match "Python", "Python, python, python", etc.
Backreferences
This matches a previously matched group again −
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1
([Pp])ython&\1ails
2
(['"])[^\1]*\1
Single or double-quoted string. \1 matches whatever the 1st group matched. \2 matches whatever the 2nd group matched, etc.
Alternatives
Sr.No. Example & Description
1
python|perl
Match "python" or "perl"
2
rub(y|le))
Match "ruby" or "ruble"
3
Python(!+|\?)
"Python" followed by one or more ! or one ?
Anchors
This needs to specify match position.
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1
^Python
Match "Python" at the start of a string or internal line
2
Python$
3
\APython
4
Python\Z
5
\bPython\b
6
\brub\B
\B is nonword boundary: match "rub" in "rube" and "ruby" but not alone
7
Python(?=!)
Match "Python", if followed by an exclamation point.
8
Python(?!!)
Match "Python", if not followed by an exclamation point.
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1
R(?#comment)
2
R(?i)uby
3
R(?i:uby)
Same as above
4
rub(?:y|le))
What is CGI?
The Common Gateway Interface, or CGI, is a standard for external gateway programs to interface with information servers such as
HTTP servers.
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Web Browsing
To understand the concept of CGI, let us see what happens when we click a hyper link to browse a particular web page or URL.
Your browser contacts the HTTP web server and demands for the URL, i.e., filename.
Web Server parses the URL and looks for the filename. If it finds that file then sends it back to the browser, otherwise sends an error
message indicating that you requested a wrong file.
Web browser takes response from web server and displays either the received file or error message.
However, it is possible to set up the HTTP server so that whenever a file in a certain directory is requested that file is not sent back; instead it
is executed as a program, and whatever that program outputs is sent back for your browser to display. This function is called the Common
Gateway Interface or CGI and the programs are called CGI scripts. These CGI programs can be a Python Script, PERL Script, Shell Script, C
or C++ program, etc.
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<Directory "/var/www/cgi-bin">
AllowOverride None
Options ExecCGI
Order allow,deny
Allow from all
</Directory>
<Directory "/var/www/cgi-bin">
Options All
</Directory>
Here, we assume that you have Web Server up and running successfully and you are able to run any other CGI program like Perl or Shell,
etc.
#!/usr/bin/python
print "Content-type:text/html\r\n\r\n"
print '<html>'
print '<head>'
print '<title>Hello Word - First CGI Program</title>'
print '</head>'
print '<body>'
print '<h2>Hello Word! This is my first CGI program</h2>'
print '</body>'
print '</html>'
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This hello.py script is a simple Python script, which writes its output on STDOUT file, i.e., screen. There is one important and extra feature
available which is first line to be printed Content-type:text/html\r\n\r\n. This line is sent back to the browser and it specifies the content type
to be displayed on the browser screen.
By now you must have understood basic concept of CGI and you can write many complicated CGI programs using Python. This script can
interact with any other external system also to exchange information such as RDBMS.
HTTP Header
The line Content-type:text/html\r\n\r\n is part of HTTP header which is sent to the browser to understand the content. All the HTTP header
will be in the following form −
For Example
Content-type: text/html\r\n\r\n
There are few other important HTTP headers, which you will use frequently in your CGI Programming.
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1
Content-type:
A MIME string defining the format of the file being returned. Example is Content-type:text/html
2
Expires: Date
The date the information becomes invalid. It is used by the browser to decide when a page needs to be refreshed. A valid date
string is in the format 01 Jan 1998 12:00:00 GMT.
3
Location: URL
The URL that is returned instead of the URL requested. You can use this field to redirect a request to any file.
4
Last-modified: Date
The date of last modification of the resource.
5
Content-length: N
The length, in bytes, of the data being returned. The browser uses this value to report the estimated download time for a file.
6
Set-Cookie: String
Set the cookie passed through the string
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1
CONTENT_TYPE
The data type of the content. Used when the client is sending attached content to the server. For example, file upload.
2
CONTENT_LENGTH
The length of the query information. It is available only for POST requests.
3
HTTP_COOKIE
Returns the set cookies in the form of key & value pair.
4
HTTP_USER_AGENT
The User-Agent request-header field contains information about the user agent originating the request. It is name of the web
browser.
5
PATH_INFO
The path for the CGI script.
6
QUERY_STRING
The URL-encoded information that is sent with GET method request.
7
REMOTE_ADDR
The IP address of the remote host making the request. This is useful logging or for authentication.
8
REMOTE_HOST
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The fully qualified name of the host making the request. If this information is not available, then REMOTE_ADDR can be
used to get IR address.
9
REQUEST_METHOD
The method used to make the request. The most common methods are GET and POST.
10
SCRIPT_FILENAME
The full path to the CGI script.
11
SCRIPT_NAME
The name of the CGI script.
12
SERVER_NAME
13
SERVER_SOFTWARE
Here is small CGI program to list out all the CGI variables. Click this link to see the result Get Environment
#!/usr/bin/python
import os
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http://www.test.com/cgi-bin/hello.py?key1=value1&key2=value2
The GET method is the default method to pass information from browser to web server and it produces a long string that appears in your
browser's Location:box. Never use GET method if you have password or other sensitive information to pass to the server. The GET method
has size limitation: only 1024 characters can be sent in a request string. The GET method sends information using QUERY_STRING header
and will be accessible in your CGI Program through QUERY_STRING environment variable.
You can pass information by simply concatenating key and value pairs along with any URL or you can use HTML <FORM> tags to pass
information using GET method.
Below is hello_get.py script to handle input given by web browser. We are going to use cgi module, which makes it very easy to access
passed information −
#!/usr/bin/python
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print "Content-type:text/html\r\n\r\n"
print "<html>"
print "<head>"
print "<title>Hello - Second CGI Program</title>"
print "</head>"
print "<body>"
print "<h2>Hello %s %s</h2>" % (first_name, last_name)
print "</body>"
print "</html>"
Here is the actual output of the above form, you enter First and Last Name and then click submit button to see the result.
First Name:
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Below is same hello_get.py script which handles GET as well as POST method.
#!/usr/bin/python
print "Content-type:text/html\r\n\r\n"
print "<html>"
print "<head>"
print "<title>Hello - Second CGI Program</title>"
print "</head>"
print "<body>"
print "<h2>Hello %s %s</h2>" % (first_name, last_name)
print "</body>"
print "</html>"
Let us take again same example as above which passes two values using HTML FORM and submit button. We use same CGI script
hello_get.py to handle this input.
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Here is the actual output of the above form. You enter First and Last Name and then click submit button to see the result.
First Name:
Below is checkbox.cgi script to handle input given by web browser for checkbox button.
#!/usr/bin/python
math_flag = "OFF"
if form.getvalue('physics'):
physics_flag = "ON"
else:
physics_flag = "OFF"
print "Content-type:text/html\r\n\r\n"
print "<html>"
print "<head>"
print "<title>Checkbox - Third CGI Program</title>"
print "</head>"
print "<body>"
print "<h2> CheckBox Maths is : %s</h2>" % math_flag
print "<h2> CheckBox Physics is : %s</h2>" % physics_flag
print "</body>"
print "</html>"
Below is radiobutton.py script to handle input given by web browser for radio button −
#!/usr/bin/python
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print "Content-type:text/html\r\n\r\n"
print "<html>"
print "<head>"
print "<title>Radio - Fourth CGI Program</title>"
print "</head>"
print "<body>"
print "<h2> Selected Subject is %s</h2>" % subject
print "</body>"
print "</html>"
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Submit
#!/usr/bin/python
print "Content-type:text/html\r\n\r\n"
print "<html>"
print "<head>";
print "<title>Text Area - Fifth CGI Program</title>"
print "</head>"
print "<body>"
print "<h2> Entered Text Content is %s</h2>" % text_content
print "</body>"
Here is example HTML code for a form with one drop down box −
Maths Submit
#!/usr/bin/python
print "Content-type:text/html\r\n\r\n"
print "<html>"
print "<head>"
print "<title>Dropdown Box - Sixth CGI Program</title>"
print "</head>"
print "<body>"
print "<h2> Selected Subject is %s</h2>" % subject
print "</body>"
print "</html>"
HTTP protocol is a stateless protocol. For a commercial website, it is required to maintain session information among different pages. For
example, one user registration ends after completing many pages. How to maintain user's session information across all the web pages?
In many situations, using cookies is the most efficient method of remembering and tracking preferences, purchases, commissions, and other
information required for better visitor experience or site statistics.
How It Works?
Your server sends some data to the visitor's browser in the form of a cookie. The browser may accept the cookie. If it does, it is stored as a
plain text record on the visitor's hard drive. Now, when the visitor arrives at another page on your site, the cookie is available for retrieval.
Once retrieved, your server knows/remembers what was stored.
Secure − If this field contains the word "secure", then the cookie may only be retrieved with a secure server. If this field is blank, no
such restriction exists.
Name=Value − Cookies are set and retrieved in the form of key and value pairs.
Setting up Cookies
It is very easy to send cookies to browser. These cookies are sent along with HTTP Header before to Content-type field. Assuming you want
to set UserID and Password as cookies. Setting the cookies is done as follows −
#!/usr/bin/python
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From this example, you must have understood how to set cookies. We use Set-Cookie HTTP header to set cookies.
It is optional to set cookies attributes like Expires, Domain, and Path. It is notable that cookies are set before sending magic line "Content-
type:text/html\r\n\r\n.
Retrieving Cookies
It is very easy to retrieve all the set cookies. Cookies are stored in CGI environment variable HTTP_COOKIE and they will have following form
−
#!/usr/bin/python
if environ.has_key('HTTP_COOKIE'):
for cookie in map(strip, split(environ['HTTP_COOKIE'], ';')):
(key, value ) = split(cookie, '=');
if key == "UserID":
user_id = value
if key == "Password":
password = value
This produces the following result for the cookies set by above script −
User ID = XYZ
Password = XYZ123
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<html>
<body>
<form enctype = "multipart/form-data"
action = "save_file.py" method = "post">
<p>File: <input type = "file" name = "filename" /></p>
<p><input type = "submit" value = "Upload" /></p>
</form>
</body>
</html>
Upload
Above example has been disabled intentionally to save people uploading file on our server, but you can try above code with your server.
#!/usr/bin/python
import cgi, os
import cgitb; cgitb.enable()
form = cgi.FieldStorage()
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fn = os.path.basename(fileitem.filename)
open('/tmp/' + fn, 'wb').write(fileitem.file.read())
else:
message = 'No file was uploaded'
print """\
Content-Type: text/html\n
<html>
<body>
<p>%s</p>
</body>
</html>
""" % (message,)
If you run the above script on Unix/Linux, then you need to take care of replacing file separator as follows, otherwise on your windows
machine above open() statement should work fine.
fn = os.path.basename(fileitem.filename.replace("\\", "/" ))
For example, if you want make a FileName file downloadable from a given link, then its syntax is as follows −
#!/usr/bin/python
# HTTP Header
print "Content-Type:application/octet-stream; name = \"FileName\"\r\n";
print "Content-Disposition: attachment; filename = \"FileName\"\r\n\n";
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fo = open("foo.txt", "rb")
str = fo.read();
print str
Hope you enjoyed this tutorial. If yes, please send me your feedback at: Contact Us
You can choose the right database for your application. Python Database API supports a wide range of database servers such as −
GadFly
mSQL
MySQL
PostgreSQL
Microsoft SQL Server 2000
Informix
Interbase
Oracle
Sybase
Here is the list of available Python database interfaces: Python Database Interfaces and APIs . You must download a separate DB API
module for each database you need to access. For example, if you need to access an Oracle database as well as a MySQL database, you
must download both the Oracle and the MySQL database modules.
The DB API provides a minimal standard for working with databases using Python structures and syntax wherever possible. This API includes
the following −
Importing the API module.
Acquiring a connection with the database.
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We would learn all the concepts using MySQL, so let us talk about MySQLdb module.
What is MySQLdb?
MySQLdb is an interface for connecting to a MySQL database server from Python. It implements the Python Database API v2.0 and is built on
top of the MySQL C API.
#!/usr/bin/python
import MySQLdb
If it produces the following result, then it means MySQLdb module is not installed −
Note − Make sure you have root privilege to install above module.
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Database Connection
Before connecting to a MySQL database, make sure of the followings −
You have created a database TESTDB.
Example
Following is the example of connecting with MySQL database "TESTDB"
#!/usr/bin/python
import MySQLdb
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While running this script, it is producing the following result in my Linux machine.
If a connection is established with the datasource, then a Connection Object is returned and saved into db for further use, otherwise db is set
to None. Next, db object is used to create a cursor object, which in turn is used to execute SQL queries. Finally, before coming out, it ensures
that database connection is closed and resources are released.
Example
Let us create Database table EMPLOYEE −
#!/usr/bin/python
import MySQLdb
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cursor.execute(sql)
INSERT Operation
It is required when you want to create your records into a database table.
Example
The following example, executes SQL INSERT statement to create a record into EMPLOYEE table −
#!/usr/bin/python
import MySQLdb
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#!/usr/bin/python
import MySQLdb
Example
Following code segment is another form of execution where you can pass parameters directly −
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..................................
user_id = "test123"
password = "password"
READ Operation
READ Operation on any database means to fetch some useful information from the database.
Once our database connection is established, you are ready to make a query into this database. You can use either fetchone() method to
fetch single record or fetchall() method to fetech multiple values from a database table.
fetchone() − It fetches the next row of a query result set. A result set is an object that is returned when a cursor object is used to
query a table.
fetchall() − It fetches all the rows in a result set. If some rows have already been extracted from the result set, then it retrieves the
remaining rows from the result set.
rowcount − This is a read-only attribute and returns the number of rows that were affected by an execute() method.
Example
The following procedure queries all the records from EMPLOYEE table having salary more than 1000 −
#!/usr/bin/python
import MySQLdb
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Update Operation
UPDATE Operation on any database means to update one or more records, which are already available in the database.
The following procedure updates all the records having SEX as 'M'. Here, we increase AGE of all the males by one year.
Example
#!/usr/bin/python
import MySQLdb
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DELETE Operation
DELETE operation is required when you want to delete some records from your database. Following is the procedure to delete all the records
from EMPLOYEE where AGE is more than 20 −
Example
#!/usr/bin/python
import MySQLdb
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Performing Transactions
Transactions are a mechanism that ensures data consistency. Transactions have the following four properties −
Durability − Once a transaction was committed, the effects are persistent, even after a system failure.
The Python DB API 2.0 provides two methods to either commit or rollback a transaction.
Example
You already know how to implement transactions. Here is again similar example −
except:
# Rollback in case there is any error
db.rollback()
COMMIT Operation
Commit is the operation, which gives a green signal to database to finalize the changes, and after this operation, no change can be reverted
back.
db.commit()
ROLLBACK Operation
If you are not satisfied with one or more of the changes and you want to revert back those changes completely, then use rollback() method.
db.rollback()
Disconnecting Database
To disconnect Database connection, use close() method.
db.close()
If the connection to a database is closed by the user with the close() method, any outstanding transactions are rolled back by the DB.
However, instead of depending on any of DB lower level implementation details, your application would be better off calling commit or rollback
explicitly.
Handling Errors
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There are many sources of errors. A few examples are a syntax error in an executed SQL statement, a connection failure, or calling the fetch
method for an already canceled or finished statement handle.
The DB API defines a number of errors that must exist in each database module. The following table lists these exceptions.
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1
Warning
2
Error
3
InterfaceError
Used for errors in the database module, not the database itself. Must subclass Error.
4
DatabaseError
Used for errors in the database. Must subclass Error.
5
DataError
Subclass of DatabaseError that refers to errors in the data.
6
OperationalError
Subclass of DatabaseError that refers to errors such as the loss of a connection to the database. These errors are generally
outside of the control of the Python scripter.
7
IntegrityError
Subclass of DatabaseError for situations that would damage the relational integrity, such as uniqueness constraints or foreign
keys.
8
InternalError
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Subclass of DatabaseError that refers to errors internal to the database module, such as a cursor no longer being active.
9
ProgrammingError
Subclass of DatabaseError that refers to errors such as a bad table name and other things that can safely be blamed on you.
10
NotSupportedError
Subclass of DatabaseError that refers to trying to call unsupported functionality.
Your Python scripts should handle these errors, but before using any of the above exceptions, make sure your MySQLdb has support for that
exception. You can get more information about them by reading the DB API 2.0 specification.
This chapter gives you understanding on most famous concept in Networking - Socket Programming.
What is Sockets?
Sockets are the endpoints of a bidirectional communications channel. Sockets may communicate within a process, between processes on the
same machine, or between processes on different continents.
Sockets may be implemented over a number of different channel types: Unix domain sockets, TCP, UDP, and so on. The socket library
provides specific classes for handling the common transports as well as a generic interface for handling the rest.
Sockets have their own vocabulary −
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1
Domain
The family of protocols that is used as the transport mechanism. These values are constants such as AF_INET, PF_INET,
PF_UNIX, PF_X25, and so on.
2
type
The type of communications between the two endpoints, typically SOCK_STREAM for connection-oriented protocols and
SOCK_DGRAM for connectionless protocols.
3
protocol
Typically zero, this may be used to identify a variant of a protocol within a domain and type.
4
hostname
The identifier of a network interface −
A string, which can be a host name, a dotted-quad address, or an IPV6 address in colon (and possibly dot) notation
A string "<broadcast>", which specifies an INADDR_BROADCAST address.
5
port
Each server listens for clients calling on one or more ports. A port may be a Fixnum port number, a string containing a port
number, or the name of a service.
Once you have socket object, then you can use required functions to create your client or server program. Following is the list of functions
required −
1
s.bind()
This method binds address (hostname, port number pair) to socket.
2
s.listen()
3
s.accept()
This passively accept TCP client connection, waiting until connection arrives (blocking).
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1
s.connect()
This method actively initiates TCP server connection.
1
s.recv()
2
s.send()
3
s.recvfrom()
This method receives UDP message
4
s.sendto()
This method transmits UDP message
5
s.close()
This method closes socket
6
socket.gethostname()
Returns the hostname.
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A Simple Server
To write Internet servers, we use the socket function available in socket module to create a socket object. A socket object is then used to call
other functions to setup a socket server.
Now call bind(hostname, port) function to specify a port for your service on the given host.
Next, call the accept method of the returned object. This method waits until a client connects to the port you specified, and then returns a
connection object that represents the connection to that client.
A Simple Client
Let us write a very simple client program which opens a connection to a given port 12345 and given host. This is very simple to create a
socket client using Python's socket module function.
The socket.connect(hosname, port ) opens a TCP connection to hostname on the port. Once you have a socket open, you can read from it
like any IO object. When done, remember to close it, as you would close a file.
The following code is a very simple client that connects to a given host and port, reads any available data from the socket, and then exits −
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s.connect((host, port))
print s.recv(1024)
s.close() # Close the socket when done
Now run this server.py in background and then run above client.py to see the result.
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Please check all the libraries mentioned above to work with FTP, SMTP, POP, and IMAP protocols.
Further Readings
This was a quick start with Socket Programming. It is a vast subject. It is recommended to go through the following link to find more detail −
Unix Socket Programming .
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import smtplib
port − If you are providing host argument, then you need to specify a port, where SMTP server is listening. Usually this port would be
25.
local_hostname − If your SMTP server is running on your local machine, then you can specify just localhost as of this option.
An SMTP object has an instance method called sendmail, which is typically used to do the work of mailing a message. It takes three
parameters −
The sender − A string with the address of the sender.
Example
Here is a simple way to send one e-mail using Python script. Try it once −
#!/usr/bin/python
import smtplib
sender = 'from@fromdomain.com'
receivers = ['to@todomain.com']
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try:
smtpObj = smtplib.SMTP('localhost')
smtpObj.sendmail(sender, receivers, message)
print "Successfully sent email"
except SMTPException:
print "Error: unable to send email"
Here, you have placed a basic e-mail in message, using a triple quote, taking care to format the headers correctly. An e-mail requires a From,
To, and Subject header, separated from the body of the e-mail with a blank line.
To send the mail you use smtpObj to connect to the SMTP server on the local machine and then use the sendmail method along with the
message, the from address, and the destination address as parameters (even though the from and to addresses are within the e-mail itself,
these aren't always used to route mail).
If you are not running an SMTP server on your local machine, you can use smtplib client to communicate with a remote SMTP server. Unless
you are using a webmail service (such as Hotmail or Yahoo! Mail), your e-mail provider must have provided you with outgoing mail server
details that you can supply them, as follows −
smtplib.SMTP('mail.your-domain.com', 25)
Example
Following is the example to send HTML content as an e-mail. Try it once −
#!/usr/bin/python
import smtplib
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try:
smtpObj = smtplib.SMTP('localhost')
smtpObj.sendmail(sender, receivers, message)
print "Successfully sent email"
except SMTPException:
print "Error: unable to send email"
Example
Following is the example, which sends a file /tmp/test.txt as an attachment. Try it once −
#!/usr/bin/python
import smtplib
import base64
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filename = "/tmp/test.txt"
sender = 'webmaster@tutorialpoint.com'
reciever = 'amrood.admin@gmail.com'
marker = "AUNIQUEMARKER"
body ="""
This is a test email to send an attachement.
"""
# Define the main headers.
part1 = """From: From Person <me@fromdomain.net>
To: To Person <amrood.admin@gmail.com>
Subject: Sending Attachement
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary=%s
--%s
""" % (marker, marker)
%s
--%s
""" % (body,marker)
%s
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--%s--
""" %(filename, filename, encodedcontent, marker)
message = part1 + part2 + part3
try:
smtpObj = smtplib.SMTP('localhost')
smtpObj.sendmail(sender, reciever, message)
print "Successfully sent email"
except Exception:
print "Error: unable to send email"
Multiple threads within a process share the same data space with the main thread and can therefore share information or
communicate with each other more easily than if they were separate processes.
Threads sometimes called light-weight processes and they do not require much memory overhead; they are cheaper than processes.
A thread has a beginning, an execution sequence, and a conclusion. It has an instruction pointer that keeps track of where within its context it
is currently running.
It can be pre-empted (interrupted)
It can temporarily be put on hold (also known as sleeping) while other threads are running - this is called yielding.
This method call enables a fast and efficient way to create new threads in both Linux and Windows.
The method call returns immediately and the child thread starts and calls function with the passed list of args. When function returns, the
thread terminates.
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Here, args is a tuple of arguments; use an empty tuple to call function without passing any arguments. kwargs is an optional dictionary of
keyword arguments.
Example
#!/usr/bin/python
import thread
import time
while 1:
pass
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Although it is very effective for low-level threading, but the thread module is very limited compared to the newer threading module.
The threading module exposes all the methods of the thread module and provides some additional methods −
threading.activeCount() − Returns the number of thread objects that are active.
threading.currentThread() − Returns the number of thread objects in the caller's thread control.
threading.enumerate() − Returns a list of all thread objects that are currently active.
In addition to the methods, the threading module has the Thread class that implements threading. The methods provided by the Thread class
are as follows −
Once you have created the new Thread subclass, you can create an instance of it and then start a new thread by invoking the start(), which in
turn calls run() method.
Example
#!/usr/bin/python
import threading
import time
exitFlag = 0
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Starting Thread-1
Starting Thread-2
Exiting Main Thread
Thread-1: Thu Mar 21 09:10:03 2013
Thread-1: Thu Mar 21 09:10:04 2013
Thread-2: Thu Mar 21 09:10:04 2013
Thread-1: Thu Mar 21 09:10:05 2013
Thread-1: Thu Mar 21 09:10:06 2013
Thread-2: Thu Mar 21 09:10:06 2013
Thread-1: Thu Mar 21 09:10:07 2013
Exiting Thread-1
Thread-2: Thu Mar 21 09:10:08 2013
Thread-2: Thu Mar 21 09:10:10 2013
Thread-2: Thu Mar 21 09:10:12 2013
Exiting Thread-2
Synchronizing Threads
The threading module provided with Python includes a simple-to-implement locking mechanism that allows you to synchronize threads. A new
lock is created by calling the Lock() method, which returns the new lock.
The acquire(blocking) method of the new lock object is used to force threads to run synchronously. The optional blocking parameter enables
you to control whether the thread waits to acquire the lock.
If blocking is set to 0, the thread returns immediately with a 0 value if the lock cannot be acquired and with a 1 if the lock was acquired. If
blocking is set to 1, the thread blocks and wait for the lock to be released.
The release() method of the new lock object is used to release the lock when it is no longer required.
Example
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#!/usr/bin/python
import threading
import time
threadLock = threading.Lock()
threads = []
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threads.append(thread2)
Starting Thread-1
Starting Thread-2
Thread-1: Thu Mar 21 09:11:28 2013
Thread-1: Thu Mar 21 09:11:29 2013
Thread-1: Thu Mar 21 09:11:30 2013
Thread-2: Thu Mar 21 09:11:32 2013
Thread-2: Thu Mar 21 09:11:34 2013
Thread-2: Thu Mar 21 09:11:36 2013
Exiting Main Thread
get() − The get() removes and returns an item from the queue.
put() − The put adds item to a queue.
qsize() − The qsize() returns the number of items that are currently in the queue.
empty() − The empty( ) returns True if queue is empty; otherwise, False.
Example
#!/usr/bin/python
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import Queue
import threading
import time
exitFlag = 0
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thread.start()
threads.append(thread)
threadID += 1
Starting Thread-1
Starting Thread-2
Starting Thread-3
Thread-1 processing One
Thread-2 processing Two
Thread-3 processing Three
Thread-1 processing Four
Thread-2 processing Five
Exiting Thread-3
Exiting Thread-1
Exiting Thread-2
Exiting Main Thread
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What is XML?
The Extensible Markup Language (XML) is a markup language much like HTML or SGML. This is recommended by the World Wide Web
Consortium and available as an open standard.
XML is extremely useful for keeping track of small to medium amounts of data without requiring a SQL-based backbone.
The two most basic and broadly used APIs to XML data are the SAX and DOM interfaces.
Simple API for XML (SAX) − Here, you register callbacks for events of interest and then let the parser proceed through the
document. This is useful when your documents are large or you have memory limitations, it parses the file as it reads it from disk and
the entire file is never stored in memory.
Document Object Model (DOM) API − This is a World Wide Web Consortium recommendation wherein the entire file is read into
memory and stored in a hierarchical (tree-based) form to represent all the features of an XML document.
SAX obviously cannot process information as fast as DOM can when working with large files. On the other hand, using DOM exclusively can
really kill your resources, especially if used on a lot of small files.
SAX is read-only, while DOM allows changes to the XML file. Since these two different APIs literally complement each other, there is no
reason why you cannot use them both for large projects.
For all our XML code examples, let's use a simple XML file movies.xml as an input −
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<year>2003</year>
<rating>PG</rating>
<stars>10</stars>
<description>Talk about a US-Japan war</description>
</movie>
<movie title="Transformers">
<type>Anime, Science Fiction</type>
<format>DVD</format>
<year>1989</year>
<rating>R</rating>
<stars>8</stars>
<description>A schientific fiction</description>
</movie>
<movie title="Trigun">
<type>Anime, Action</type>
<format>DVD</format>
<episodes>4</episodes>
<rating>PG</rating>
<stars>10</stars>
<description>Vash the Stampede!</description>
</movie>
<movie title="Ishtar">
<type>Comedy</type>
<format>VHS</format>
<rating>PG</rating>
<stars>2</stars>
<description>Viewable boredom</description>
</movie>
</collection>
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The methods startDocument and endDocument are called at the start and the end of the XML file. The method characters(text) is passed
character data of the XML file via the parameter text.
The ContentHandler is called at the start and end of each element. If the parser is not in namespace mode, the methods startElement(tag,
attributes) and endElement(tag) are called; otherwise, the corresponding methods startElementNS and endElementNS are called. Here, tag is
the element tag, and attributes is an Attributes object.
Here are other important methods to understand before proceeding −
xml.sax.make_parser( [parser_list] )
parser_list − The optional argument consisting of a list of parsers to use which must all implement the make_parser method.
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Example
#!/usr/bin/python
import xml.sax
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if ( __name__ == "__main__"):
# create an XMLReader
parser = xml.sax.make_parser()
# turn off namepsaces
parser.setFeature(xml.sax.handler.feature_namespaces, 0)
parser.parse("movies.xml")
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*****Movie*****
Title: Enemy Behind
Type: War, Thriller
Format: DVD
Year: 2003
Rating: PG
Stars: 10
Description: Talk about a US-Japan war
*****Movie*****
Title: Transformers
Type: Anime, Science Fiction
Format: DVD
Year: 1989
Rating: R
Stars: 8
Description: A schientific fiction
*****Movie*****
Title: Trigun
Type: Anime, Action
Format: DVD
Rating: PG
Stars: 10
Description: Vash the Stampede!
*****Movie*****
Title: Ishtar
Type: Comedy
Format: VHS
Rating: PG
Stars: 2
Description: Viewable boredom
For a complete detail on SAX API documentation, please refer to standard Python SAX APIs .
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The Document Object Model ("DOM") is a cross-language API from the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) for accessing and modifying XML
documents.
The DOM is extremely useful for random-access applications. SAX only allows you a view of one bit of the document at a time. If you are
looking at one SAX element, you have no access to another.
Here is the easiest way to quickly load an XML document and to create a minidom object using the xml.dom module. The minidom object
provides a simple parser method that quickly creates a DOM tree from the XML file.
The sample phrase calls the parse( file [,parser] ) function of the minidom object to parse the XML file designated by file into a DOM tree
object.
#!/usr/bin/python
type = movie.getElementsByTagName('type')[0]
print "Type: %s" % type.childNodes[0].data
format = movie.getElementsByTagName('format')[0]
print "Format: %s" % format.childNodes[0].data
rating = movie.getElementsByTagName('rating')[0]
print "Rating: %s" % rating.childNodes[0].data
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description = movie.getElementsByTagName('description')[0]
print "Description: %s" % description.childNodes[0].data
For a complete detail on DOM API documentation, please refer to standard Python DOM APIs .
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Python provides various options for developing graphical user interfaces (GUIs). Most important are listed below.
Tkinter − Tkinter is the Python interface to the Tk GUI toolkit shipped with Python. We would look this option in this chapter.
wxPython − This is an open-source Python interface for wxWindows http://wxpython.org .
JPython − JPython is a Python port for Java which gives Python scripts seamless access to Java class libraries on the local machine
http://www.jython.org .
There are many other interfaces available, which you can find them on the net.
Tkinter Programming
Tkinter is the standard GUI library for Python. Python when combined with Tkinter provides a fast and easy way to create GUI applications.
Tkinter provides a powerful object-oriented interface to the Tk GUI toolkit.
Creating a GUI application using Tkinter is an easy task. All you need to do is perform the following steps −
Import the Tkinter module.
Enter the main event loop to take action against each event triggered by the user.
Example
#!/usr/bin/python
import Tkinter
top = Tkinter.Tk()
# Code to add widgets will go here...
top.mainloop()
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Tkinter Widgets
Tkinter provides various controls, such as buttons, labels and text boxes used in a GUI application. These controls are commonly called
widgets.
There are currently 15 types of widgets in Tkinter. We present these widgets as well as a brief description in the following table −
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1 Button
2 Canvas
The Canvas widget is used to draw shapes, such as lines, ovals, polygons and rectangles, in your application.
3 Checkbutton
The Checkbutton widget is used to display a number of options as checkboxes. The user can select multiple options at a time.
4 Entry
The Entry widget is used to display a single-line text field for accepting values from a user.
5 Frame
6 Label
The Label widget is used to provide a single-line caption for other widgets. It can also contain images.
7 Listbox
8 Menubutton
9 Menu
The Menu widget is used to provide various commands to a user. These commands are contained inside Menubutton.
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10 Message
The Message widget is used to display multiline text fields for accepting values from a user.
11 Radiobutton
The Radiobutton widget is used to display a number of options as radio buttons. The user can select only one option at a time.
12 Scale
13 Scrollbar
The Scrollbar widget is used to add scrolling capability to various widgets, such as list boxes.
14 Text
15 Toplevel
16 Spinbox
The Spinbox widget is a variant of the standard Tkinter Entry widget, which can be used to select from a fixed number of values.
17 PanedWindow
A PanedWindow is a container widget that may contain any number of panes, arranged horizontally or vertically.
18 LabelFrame
A labelframe is a simple container widget. Its primary purpose is to act as a spacer or container for complex window layouts.
19 tkMessageBox
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Standard attributes
Let us take a look at how some of their common attributes.such as sizes, colors and fonts are specified.
Dimensions
Colors
Fonts
Anchors
Relief styles
Bitmaps
Cursors
Geometry Management
All Tkinter widgets have access to specific geometry management methods, which have the purpose of organizing widgets throughout the
parent widget area. Tkinter exposes the following geometry manager classes: pack, grid, and place.
The pack() Method − This geometry manager organizes widgets in blocks before placing them in the parent widget.
The grid() Method − This geometry manager organizes widgets in a table-like structure in the parent widget.
The place() Method − This geometry manager organizes widgets by placing them in a specific position in the parent widget.
A Python extension module is nothing more than a normal C library. On Unix machines, these libraries usually end in .so (for shared object).
On Windows machines, you typically see .dll (for dynamically linked library).
Windows users get these headers as part of the package when they use the binary Python installer.
Additionally, it is assumed that you have good knowledge of C or C++ to write any Python Extension using C programming.
The C functions you want to expose as the interface from your module.
A table mapping the names of your functions as Python developers see them to C functions inside the extension module.
An initialization function.
Make sure to include Python.h before any other headers you might need. You need to follow the includes with the functions you want to call
from Python.
The C Functions
The signatures of the C implementation of your functions always takes one of the following three forms −
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PyObject *args,
PyObject *kw);
Each one of the preceding declarations returns a Python object. There is no such thing as a void function in Python as there is in C. If you do
not want your functions to return a value, return the C equivalent of Python's None value. The Python headers define a macro,
Py_RETURN_NONE, that does this for us.
The names of your C functions can be whatever you like as they are never seen outside of the extension module. They are defined as static
function.
Your C functions usually are named by combining the Python module and function names together, as shown here −
This is a Python function called func inside of the module module. You will be putting pointers to your C functions into the method table for the
module that usually comes next in your source code.
struct PyMethodDef {
char *ml_name;
PyCFunction ml_meth;
int ml_flags;
char *ml_doc;
};
ml_meth − This must be the address to a function that has any one of the signatures described in previous seection.
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ml_flags − This tells the interpreter which of the three signatures ml_meth is using.
This can also have a value of METH_NOARGS that indicates you do not want to accept any arguments.
ml_doc − This is the docstring for the function, which could be NULL if you do not feel like writing one.
This table needs to be terminated with a sentinel that consists of NULL and 0 values for the appropriate members.
Example
For the above-defined function, we have following method mapping table −
PyMODINIT_FUNC initModule() {
Py_InitModule3(func, module_methods, "docstring...");
}
#include <Python.h>
PyMODINIT_FUNC initModule() {
Py_InitModule3(func, module_methods, "docstring...");
}
Example
A simple example that makes use of all the above concepts −
#include <Python.h>
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void inithelloworld(void) {
Py_InitModule3("helloworld", helloworld_funcs,
"Extension module example!");
}
Here the Py_BuildValue function is used to build a Python value. Save above code in hello.c file. We would see how to compile and install this
module to be called from Python script.
For the above module, you need to prepare following setup.py script −
Now, use the following command, which would perform all needed compilation and linking steps, with the right compiler and linker commands
and flags, and copies the resulting dynamic library into an appropriate directory −
On Unix-based systems, you'll most likely need to run this command as root in order to have permissions to write to the site-packages
directory. This usually is not a problem on Windows.
Importing Extensions
Once you installed your extension, you would be able to import and call that extension in your Python script as follows −
#!/usr/bin/python
import helloworld
print helloworld.helloworld()
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The method table containing an entry for the new function would look like this −
You can use API PyArg_ParseTuple function to extract the arguments from the one PyObject pointer passed into your C function.
The first argument to PyArg_ParseTuple is the args argument. This is the object you will be parsing. The second argument is a format string
describing the arguments as you expect them to appear. Each argument is represented by one or more characters in the format string as
follows.
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Compiling the new version of your module and importing it enables you to invoke the new function with any number of arguments of any type
−
This function returns 0 for errors, and a value not equal to 0 for success. tuple is the PyObject* that was the C function's second argument.
Here format is a C string that describes mandatory and optional arguments.
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(...) as per ... A Python sequence is treated as one argument per item.
Returning Values
Py_BuildValue takes in a format string much like PyArg_ParseTuple does. Instead of passing in the addresses of the values you are building,
you pass in the actual values. Here's an example showing how to implement an add function −
You can return two values from your function as follows, this would be cauptured using a list in Python.
Here format is a C string that describes the Python object to build. The following arguments of Py_BuildValue are C values from which the
result is built. The PyObject* result is a new reference.
Following table lists the commonly used code strings, of which zero or more are joined into string format.
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{...} as per ... Builds Python dictionary from C values, alternating keys and values.
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Code {...} builds dictionaries from an even number of C values, alternately keys and values. For example, Py_BuildValue("
{issi}",23,"zig","zag",42) returns a dictionary like Python's {23:'zig','zag':42}.
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