| 1 | Python 2.3 Quick Reference | 
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| 2 |  | 
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| 3 |  | 
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| 4 | 25 Jan 2003  upgraded by Raymond Hettinger for Python 2.3 | 
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| 5 | 16 May 2001  upgraded by Richard Gruet and Simon Brunning for Python 2.0 | 
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| 6 | 2000/07/18  upgraded by Richard Gruet, rgruet@intraware.com for Python 1.5.2 | 
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| 7 | from V1.3 ref | 
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| 8 | 1995/10/30, by Chris Hoffmann, choffman@vicorp.com | 
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| 9 |  | 
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| 10 | Based on: | 
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| 11 | Python Bestiary, Author: Ken Manheimer, ken.manheimer@nist.gov | 
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| 12 | Python manuals, Authors: Guido van Rossum and Fred Drake | 
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| 13 | What's new in Python 2.0, Authors: A.M. Kuchling and Moshe Zadka | 
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| 14 | python-mode.el, Author: Tim Peters, tim_one@email.msn.com | 
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| 15 |  | 
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| 16 | and the readers of comp.lang.python | 
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| 17 |  | 
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| 18 | Python's nest: http://www.python.org     Developement: http:// | 
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| 19 | python.sourceforge.net/    ActivePython : http://www.ActiveState.com/ASPN/ | 
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| 20 | Python/ | 
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| 21 | newsgroup: comp.lang.python  Help desk: help@python.org | 
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| 22 | Resources: http://starship.python.net/ | 
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| 23 | http://www.vex.net/parnassus/ | 
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| 24 | http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python | 
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| 25 | FAQ:       http://www.python.org/cgi-bin/faqw.py | 
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| 26 | Full documentation: http://www.python.org/doc/ | 
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| 27 | Excellent reference books: | 
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| 28 | Python Essential Reference by David Beazley (New Riders) | 
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| 29 | Python Pocket Reference by Mark Lutz (O'Reilly) | 
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| 30 |  | 
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| 31 |  | 
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| 32 | Invocation Options | 
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| 33 |  | 
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| 34 | python [-diOStuUvxX?] [-c command | script | - ] [args] | 
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| 35 |  | 
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| 36 | Invocation Options | 
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| 37 | Option                                  Effect | 
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| 38 | -c cmd  program passed in as string (terminates option list) | 
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| 39 | -d      Outputs parser debugging information (also PYTHONDEBUG=x) | 
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| 40 | -E      ignore environment variables (such as PYTHONPATH) | 
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| 41 | -h      print this help message and exit | 
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| 42 | -i      Inspect interactively after running script (also PYTHONINSPECT=x) and | 
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| 43 | force prompts, even if stdin appears not to be a terminal | 
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| 44 | -m mod  run library module as a script (terminates option list | 
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| 45 | -O      optimize generated bytecode (a tad; also PYTHONOPTIMIZE=x) | 
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| 46 | -OO     remove doc-strings in addition to the -O optimizations | 
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| 47 | -Q arg  division options: -Qold (default), -Qwarn, -Qwarnall, -Qnew | 
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| 48 | -S      Don't perform 'import site' on initialization | 
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| 49 | -t      Issue warnings about inconsistent tab usage (-tt: issue errors) | 
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| 50 | -u      Unbuffered binary stdout and stderr (also PYTHONUNBUFFERED=x). | 
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| 51 | -v      Verbose (trace import statements) (also PYTHONVERBOSE=x) | 
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| 52 | -W arg : warning control (arg is action:message:category:module:lineno) | 
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| 53 | -x      Skip first line of source, allowing use of non-unix Forms of #!cmd | 
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| 54 | -?      Help! | 
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| 55 | -3      warn about Python 3.x incompatibilities | 
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| 56 | -c      Specify the command to execute (see next section). This terminates the | 
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| 57 | command option list (following options are passed as arguments to the command). | 
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| 58 | the name of a python file (.py) to execute read from stdin. | 
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| 59 | script  Anything afterward is passed as options to python script or command, | 
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| 60 | not interpreted as an option to interpreter itself. | 
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| 61 | args    passed to script or command (in sys.argv[1:]) | 
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| 62 | If no script or command, Python enters interactive mode. | 
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| 63 |  | 
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| 64 | * Available IDEs in std distrib: IDLE (tkinter based, portable), Pythonwin | 
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| 65 | (Windows). | 
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| 66 |  | 
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| 67 |  | 
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| 68 |  | 
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| 69 | Environment variables | 
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| 70 |  | 
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| 71 | Environment variables | 
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| 72 | Variable                                 Effect | 
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| 73 | PYTHONHOME       Alternate prefix directory (or prefix;exec_prefix). The | 
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| 74 | default module search path uses prefix/lib | 
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| 75 | Augments the default search path for module files. The format | 
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| 76 | is the same as the shell's $PATH: one or more directory | 
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| 77 | pathnames separated by ':' or ';' without spaces around | 
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| 78 | (semi-)colons! | 
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| 79 | PYTHONPATH       On Windows first search for Registry key HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\ | 
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| 80 | Software\Python\PythonCore\x.y\PythonPath (default value). You | 
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| 81 | may also define a key named after your application with a | 
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| 82 | default string value giving the root directory path of your | 
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| 83 | app. | 
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| 84 | If this is the name of a readable file, the Python commands in | 
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| 85 | PYTHONSTARTUP    that file are executed before the first prompt is displayed in | 
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| 86 | interactive mode (no default). | 
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| 87 | PYTHONDEBUG      If non-empty, same as -d option | 
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| 88 | PYTHONINSPECT    If non-empty, same as -i option | 
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| 89 | PYTHONSUPPRESS   If non-empty, same as -s option | 
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| 90 | PYTHONUNBUFFERED If non-empty, same as -u option | 
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| 91 | PYTHONVERBOSE    If non-empty, same as -v option | 
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| 92 | PYTHONCASEOK     If non-empty, ignore case in file/module names (imports) | 
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| 93 |  | 
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| 94 |  | 
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| 95 |  | 
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| 96 |  | 
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| 97 | Notable lexical entities | 
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| 98 |  | 
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| 99 | Keywords | 
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| 100 |  | 
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| 101 | and       del       for       is        raise | 
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| 102 | assert    elif      from      lambda    return | 
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| 103 | break     else      global    not       try | 
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| 104 | class     except    if        or        while | 
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| 105 | continue  exec      import    pass      yield | 
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| 106 | def       finally   in        print | 
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| 107 |  | 
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| 108 | * (list of keywords in std module: keyword) | 
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| 109 | * Illegitimate Tokens (only valid in strings): @ $ ? | 
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| 110 | * A statement must all be on a single line. To break a statement over | 
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| 111 | multiple lines use "\", as with the C preprocessor. | 
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| 112 | Exception: can always break when inside any (), [], or {} pair, or in | 
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| 113 | triple-quoted strings. | 
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| 114 | * More than one statement can appear on a line if they are separated with | 
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| 115 | semicolons (";"). | 
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| 116 | * Comments start with "#" and continue to end of line. | 
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| 117 |  | 
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| 118 | Identifiers | 
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| 119 |  | 
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| 120 | (letter | "_")  (letter | digit | "_")* | 
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| 121 |  | 
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| 122 | * Python identifiers keywords, attributes, etc. are case-sensitive. | 
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| 123 | * Special forms: _ident (not imported by 'from module import *'); __ident__ | 
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| 124 | (system defined name); | 
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| 125 | __ident (class-private name mangling) | 
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| 126 |  | 
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| 127 | Strings | 
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| 128 |  | 
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| 129 | "a string enclosed by double quotes" | 
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| 130 | 'another string delimited by single quotes and with a " inside' | 
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| 131 | '''a string containing embedded newlines and quote (') marks, can be | 
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| 132 | delimited with triple quotes.''' | 
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| 133 | """ may also use 3- double quotes as delimiters """ | 
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| 134 | u'a unicode string'   U"Another unicode string" | 
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| 135 | r'a raw string where \ are kept (literalized): handy for regular | 
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| 136 | expressions and windows paths!' | 
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| 137 | R"another raw string"    -- raw strings cannot end with a \ | 
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| 138 | ur'a unicode raw string'   UR"another raw unicode" | 
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| 139 |  | 
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| 140 | Use \ at end of line to continue a string on next line. | 
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| 141 | adjacent strings are concatened, e.g. 'Monty' ' Python' is the same as | 
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| 142 | 'Monty Python'. | 
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| 143 | u'hello' + ' world'  --> u'hello world'   (coerced to unicode) | 
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| 144 |  | 
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| 145 | String Literal Escapes | 
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| 146 |  | 
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| 147 | \newline  Ignored (escape newline) | 
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| 148 | \\ Backslash (\)        \e Escape (ESC)        \v Vertical Tab (VT) | 
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| 149 | \' Single quote (')     \f Formfeed (FF)       \OOO char with octal value OOO | 
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| 150 | \" Double quote (")     \n Linefeed (LF) | 
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| 151 | \a Bell (BEL)           \r Carriage Return (CR) \xHH  char with hex value HH | 
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| 152 | \b Backspace (BS)       \t Horizontal Tab (TAB) | 
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| 153 | \uHHHH  unicode char with hex value HHHH, can only be used in unicode string | 
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| 154 | \UHHHHHHHH  unicode char with hex value HHHHHHHH, can only be used in unicode string | 
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| 155 | \AnyOtherChar is left as-is | 
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| 156 |  | 
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| 157 | * NUL byte (\000) is NOT an end-of-string marker; NULs may be embedded in | 
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| 158 | strings. | 
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| 159 | * Strings (and tuples) are immutable: they cannot be modified. | 
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| 160 |  | 
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| 161 | Numbers | 
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| 162 |  | 
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| 163 | Decimal integer: 1234, 1234567890546378940L        (or l) | 
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| 164 | Octal integer: 0177, 0177777777777777777 (begin with a 0) | 
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| 165 | Hex integer: 0xFF, 0XFFFFffffFFFFFFFFFF (begin with 0x or 0X) | 
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| 166 | Long integer (unlimited precision): 1234567890123456 | 
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| 167 | Float (double precision): 3.14e-10, .001, 10., 1E3 | 
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| 168 | Complex: 1J, 2+3J, 4+5j (ends with J or j, + separates (float) real and | 
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| 169 | imaginary parts) | 
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| 170 |  | 
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| 171 | Sequences | 
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| 172 |  | 
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| 173 | * String of length 0, 1, 2 (see above) | 
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| 174 | '', '1', "12", 'hello\n' | 
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| 175 | * Tuple of length 0, 1, 2, etc: | 
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| 176 | () (1,) (1,2)     # parentheses are optional if len > 0 | 
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| 177 | * List of length 0, 1, 2, etc: | 
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| 178 | [] [1] [1,2] | 
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| 179 |  | 
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| 180 | Indexing is 0-based. Negative indices (usually) mean count backwards from end | 
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| 181 | of sequence. | 
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| 182 |  | 
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| 183 | Sequence slicing [starting-at-index : but-less-than-index]. Start defaults to | 
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| 184 | '0'; End defaults to 'sequence-length'. | 
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| 185 |  | 
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| 186 | a = (0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7) | 
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| 187 | a[3] ==> 3 | 
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| 188 | a[-1] ==> 7 | 
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| 189 | a[2:4] ==> (2, 3) | 
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| 190 | a[1:] ==> (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7) | 
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| 191 | a[:3] ==> (0, 1, 2) | 
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| 192 | a[:] ==> (0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7)  # makes a copy of the sequence. | 
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| 193 |  | 
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| 194 | Dictionaries (Mappings) | 
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| 195 |  | 
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| 196 | {}                              # Zero length empty dictionary | 
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| 197 | {1 : 'first'}                   # Dictionary with one (key, value) pair | 
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| 198 | {1 : 'first',  'next': 'second'} | 
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| 199 | dict([('one',1),('two',2)])     # Construct a dict from an item list | 
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| 200 | dict('one'=1, 'two'=2)          # Construct a dict using keyword args | 
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| 201 | dict.fromkeys(['one', 'keys'])  # Construct a dict from a sequence | 
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| 202 |  | 
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| 203 | Operators and their evaluation order | 
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| 204 |  | 
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| 205 | Operators and their evaluation order | 
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| 206 | Highest             Operator                             Comment | 
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| 207 | (...) [...] {...} `...`           Tuple, list & dict. creation; string | 
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| 208 | conv. | 
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| 209 | s[i]  s[i:j]  s.attr f(...)       indexing & slicing; attributes, fct | 
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| 210 | calls | 
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| 211 | +x, -x, ~x                        Unary operators | 
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| 212 | x**y                              Power | 
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| 213 | x*y  x/y  x%y x//y                mult, division, modulo, floor division | 
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| 214 | x+y  x-y                          addition, subtraction | 
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| 215 | x<<y   x>>y                       Bit shifting | 
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| 216 | x&y                               Bitwise and | 
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| 217 | x^y                               Bitwise exclusive or | 
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| 218 | x|y                               Bitwise or | 
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| 219 | x<y  x<=y  x>y  x>=y  x==y x!=y   Comparison, | 
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| 220 | x<>y                              identity, | 
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| 221 | x is y   x is not y               membership | 
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| 222 | x in s   x not in s | 
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| 223 | not x                             boolean negation | 
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| 224 | x and y                           boolean and | 
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| 225 | x or y                            boolean or | 
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| 226 | Lowest  lambda args: expr                 anonymous function | 
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| 227 |  | 
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| 228 | Alternate names are defined in module operator (e.g. __add__ and add for +) | 
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| 229 | Most operators are overridable. | 
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| 230 |  | 
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| 231 | Many binary operators also support augmented assignment: | 
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| 232 | x += 1                            # Same as x = x + 1 | 
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| 233 |  | 
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| 234 |  | 
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| 235 | Basic Types and Their Operations | 
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| 236 |  | 
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| 237 | Comparisons (defined between *any* types) | 
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| 238 |  | 
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| 239 | Comparisons | 
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| 240 | Comparison         Meaning          Notes | 
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| 241 | <          strictly less than        (1) | 
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| 242 | <=         less than or equal to | 
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| 243 | >          strictly greater than | 
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| 244 | >=         greater than or equal to | 
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| 245 | ==         equal to | 
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| 246 | != or <>   not equal to | 
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| 247 | is         object identity           (2) | 
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| 248 | is not     negated object identity   (2) | 
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| 249 |  | 
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| 250 | Notes : | 
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| 251 | Comparison behavior can be overridden for a given class by defining special | 
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| 252 | method __cmp__. | 
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| 253 | The above comparisons return True or False which are of type bool | 
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| 254 | (a subclass of int) and behave exactly as 1 or 0 except for their type and | 
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| 255 | that they print as True or False instead of 1 or 0. | 
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| 256 | (1) X < Y < Z < W has expected meaning, unlike C | 
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| 257 | (2) Compare object identities (i.e. id(object)), not object values. | 
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| 258 |  | 
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| 259 | Boolean values and operators | 
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| 260 |  | 
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| 261 | Boolean values and operators | 
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| 262 | Value or Operator                         Returns           Notes | 
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| 263 | None, numeric zeros, empty sequences and      False | 
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| 264 | mappings | 
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| 265 | all other values                              True | 
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| 266 | not x                                         True if x is False, else | 
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| 267 | True | 
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| 268 | x or y                                        if x is False then y, else   (1) | 
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| 269 | x | 
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| 270 | x and y                                       if x is False then x, else   (1) | 
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| 271 | y | 
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| 272 |  | 
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| 273 | Notes : | 
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| 274 | Truth testing behavior can be overridden for a given class by defining | 
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| 275 | special method __nonzero__. | 
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| 276 | (1) Evaluate second arg only if necessary to determine outcome. | 
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| 277 |  | 
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| 278 | None | 
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| 279 |  | 
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| 280 | None is used as default return value on functions. Built-in single object | 
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| 281 | with type NoneType. | 
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| 282 | Input that evaluates to None does not print when running Python | 
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| 283 | interactively. | 
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| 284 |  | 
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| 285 | Numeric types | 
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| 286 |  | 
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| 287 | Floats, integers and long integers. | 
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| 288 |  | 
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| 289 | Floats are implemented with C doubles. | 
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| 290 | Integers are implemented with C longs. | 
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| 291 | Long integers have unlimited size (only limit is system resources) | 
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| 292 |  | 
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| 293 | Operators on all numeric types | 
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| 294 |  | 
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| 295 | Operators on all numeric types | 
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| 296 | Operation                    Result | 
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| 297 | abs(x)       the absolute value of x | 
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| 298 | int(x)       x converted to integer | 
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| 299 | long(x)      x converted to long integer | 
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| 300 | float(x)     x converted to floating point | 
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| 301 | -x           x negated | 
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| 302 | +x           x unchanged | 
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| 303 | x + y        the sum of x and y | 
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| 304 | x - y        difference of x and y | 
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| 305 | x * y        product of x and y | 
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| 306 | x / y        quotient of x and y | 
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| 307 | x % y        remainder of x / y | 
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| 308 | divmod(x, y) the tuple (x/y, x%y) | 
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| 309 | x ** y       x to the power y (the same as pow(x, y)) | 
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| 310 |  | 
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| 311 | Bit operators on integers and long integers | 
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| 312 |  | 
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| 313 | Bit operators | 
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| 314 | Operation             >Result | 
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| 315 | ~x        the bits of x inverted | 
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| 316 | x ^ y     bitwise exclusive or of x and y | 
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| 317 | x & y     bitwise and of x and y | 
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| 318 | x | y     bitwise or of x and y | 
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| 319 | x << n    x shifted left by n bits | 
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| 320 | x >> n    x shifted right by n bits | 
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| 321 |  | 
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| 322 | Complex Numbers | 
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| 323 |  | 
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| 324 | * represented as a pair of machine-level double precision floating point | 
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| 325 | numbers. | 
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| 326 | * The real and imaginary value of a complex number z can be retrieved through | 
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| 327 | the attributes z.real and z.imag. | 
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| 328 |  | 
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| 329 | Numeric exceptions | 
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| 330 |  | 
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| 331 | TypeError | 
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| 332 | raised on application of arithmetic operation to non-number | 
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| 333 | OverflowError | 
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| 334 | numeric bounds exceeded | 
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| 335 | ZeroDivisionError | 
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| 336 | raised when zero second argument of div or modulo op | 
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| 337 | FloatingPointError | 
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| 338 | raised when a floating point operation fails | 
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| 339 |  | 
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| 340 | Operations on all sequence types (lists, tuples, strings) | 
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| 341 |  | 
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| 342 | Operations on all sequence types | 
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| 343 | Operation                     Result                     Notes | 
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| 344 | x in s     True if an item of s is equal to x, else False | 
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| 345 | x not in s False if an item of s is equal to x, else True | 
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| 346 | for x in s: loops over the sequence | 
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| 347 | s + t      the concatenation of s and t | 
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| 348 | s * n, n*s n copies of s concatenated | 
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| 349 | s[i]       i'th item of s, origin 0                       (1) | 
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| 350 | s[i:j]     slice of s from i (included) to j (excluded) (1), (2) | 
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| 351 | len(s)     length of s | 
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| 352 | min(s)     smallest item of s | 
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| 353 | max(s)     largest item of (s) | 
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| 354 | iter(s)    returns an iterator over s.  iterators define __iter__ and next() | 
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| 355 |  | 
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| 356 | Notes : | 
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| 357 | (1) if i or j is negative, the index is relative to the end of the string, | 
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| 358 | ie len(s)+ i or len(s)+j is | 
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| 359 | substituted. But note that -0 is still 0. | 
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| 360 | (2) The slice of s from i to j is defined as the sequence of items with | 
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| 361 | index k such that i <= k < j. | 
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| 362 | If i or j is greater than len(s), use len(s). If i is omitted, use | 
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| 363 | len(s). If i is greater than or | 
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| 364 | equal to j, the slice is empty. | 
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| 365 |  | 
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| 366 | Operations on mutable (=modifiable) sequences (lists) | 
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| 367 |  | 
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| 368 | Operations on mutable sequences | 
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| 369 | Operation                      Result                   Notes | 
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| 370 | s[i] =x          item i of s is replaced by x | 
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| 371 | s[i:j] = t       slice of s from i to j is replaced by t | 
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| 372 | del s[i:j]       same as s[i:j] = [] | 
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| 373 | s.append(x)      same as s[len(s) : len(s)] = [x] | 
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| 374 | s.count(x)       return number of i's for which s[i] == x | 
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| 375 | s.extend(x)      same as s[len(s):len(s)]= x | 
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| 376 | s.index(x)       return smallest i such that s[i] == x      (1) | 
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| 377 | s.insert(i, x)   same as s[i:i] = [x] if i >= 0 | 
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| 378 | s.pop([i])       same as x = s[i]; del s[i]; return x       (4) | 
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| 379 | s.remove(x)      same as del s[s.index(x)]                  (1) | 
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| 380 | s.reverse()      reverse the items of s in place            (3) | 
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| 381 | s.sort([cmpFct]) sort the items of s in place             (2), (3) | 
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| 382 |  | 
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| 383 | Notes : | 
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| 384 | (1) raise a ValueError exception when x is not found in s (i.e. out of | 
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| 385 | range). | 
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| 386 | (2) The sort() method takes an optional argument specifying a comparison | 
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| 387 | fct of 2 arguments (list items) which should | 
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| 388 | return -1, 0, or 1 depending on whether the 1st argument is | 
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| 389 | considered smaller than, equal to, or larger than the 2nd | 
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| 390 | argument. Note that this slows the sorting process down considerably. | 
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| 391 | (3) The sort() and reverse() methods modify the list in place for economy | 
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| 392 | of space when sorting or reversing a large list. | 
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| 393 | They don't return the sorted or reversed list to remind you of this | 
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| 394 | side effect. | 
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| 395 | (4) [New 1.5.2] The optional  argument i defaults to -1, so that by default the last | 
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| 396 | item is removed and returned. | 
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| 397 |  | 
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| 398 |  | 
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| 399 |  | 
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| 400 | Operations on mappings (dictionaries) | 
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| 401 |  | 
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| 402 | Operations on mappings | 
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| 403 | Operation                          Result                  Notes | 
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| 404 | len(d)                     the number of items in d | 
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| 405 | d[k]                       the item of d with key k                 (1) | 
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| 406 | d[k] = x                   set d[k] to x | 
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| 407 | del d[k]                   remove d[k] from d                       (1) | 
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| 408 | d.clear()                  remove all items from d | 
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| 409 | d.copy()                   a shallow copy of d | 
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| 410 | d.get(k,defaultval)        the item of d with key k                 (4) | 
|---|
| 411 | d.has_key(k)               True if d has key k, else False | 
|---|
| 412 | d.items()                  a copy of d's list of (key, item) pairs  (2) | 
|---|
| 413 | d.iteritems()              an iterator over (key, value) pairs      (7) | 
|---|
| 414 | d.iterkeys()               an iterator over the keys of d           (7) | 
|---|
| 415 | d.itervalues()             an iterator over the values of d         (7) | 
|---|
| 416 | d.keys()                   a copy of d's list of keys               (2) | 
|---|
| 417 | d1.update(d2)              for k, v in d2.items(): d1[k] = v        (3) | 
|---|
| 418 | d.values()                 a copy of d's list of values             (2) | 
|---|
| 419 | d.pop(k)                   remove d[k] and return its value | 
|---|
| 420 | d.popitem()                remove and return an arbitrary           (6) | 
|---|
| 421 | (key, item) pair | 
|---|
| 422 | d.setdefault(k,defaultval) the item of d with key k                 (5) | 
|---|
| 423 |  | 
|---|
| 424 | Notes : | 
|---|
| 425 | TypeError is raised if key is not acceptable | 
|---|
| 426 | (1) KeyError is raised if key k is not in the map | 
|---|
| 427 | (2) Keys and values are listed in random order | 
|---|
| 428 | (3) d2 must be of the same type as d1 | 
|---|
| 429 | (4) Never raises an exception if k is not in the map, instead it returns | 
|---|
| 430 | defaultVal. | 
|---|
| 431 | defaultVal is optional, when not provided and k is not in the map, | 
|---|
| 432 | None is returned. | 
|---|
| 433 | (5) Never raises an exception if k is not in the map, instead it returns | 
|---|
| 434 | defaultVal, and adds k to map with value defaultVal. defaultVal is | 
|---|
| 435 | optional. When not provided and k is not in the map, None is returned and | 
|---|
| 436 | added to map. | 
|---|
| 437 | (6) Raises a KeyError if the dictionary is emtpy. | 
|---|
| 438 | (7) While iterating over a dictionary, the values may be updated but | 
|---|
| 439 | the keys cannot be changed. | 
|---|
| 440 |  | 
|---|
| 441 | Operations on strings | 
|---|
| 442 |  | 
|---|
| 443 | Note that these string methods largely (but not completely) supersede the | 
|---|
| 444 | functions available in the string module. | 
|---|
| 445 |  | 
|---|
| 446 |  | 
|---|
| 447 | Operations on strings | 
|---|
| 448 | Operation                             Result                          Notes | 
|---|
| 449 | s.capitalize()    return a copy of s with only its first character | 
|---|
| 450 | capitalized. | 
|---|
| 451 | s.center(width)   return a copy of s centered in a string of length width  (1) | 
|---|
| 452 | . | 
|---|
| 453 | s.count(sub[      return the number of occurrences of substring sub in     (2) | 
|---|
| 454 | ,start[,end]])    string s. | 
|---|
| 455 | s.decode(([       return a decoded version of s.                           (3) | 
|---|
| 456 | encoding | 
|---|
| 457 | [,errors]]) | 
|---|
| 458 | s.encode([        return an encoded version of s. Default encoding is the | 
|---|
| 459 | encoding        current default string encoding.                         (3) | 
|---|
| 460 | [,errors]]) | 
|---|
| 461 | s.endswith(suffix return true if s ends with the specified suffix,         (2) | 
|---|
| 462 | [,start[,end]]) otherwise return False. | 
|---|
| 463 | s.expandtabs([    return a copy of s where all tab characters are          (4) | 
|---|
| 464 | tabsize])         expanded using spaces. | 
|---|
| 465 | s.find(sub[,start return the lowest index in s where substring sub is      (2) | 
|---|
| 466 | [,end]])          found. Return -1 if sub is not found. | 
|---|
| 467 | s.index(sub[      like find(), but raise ValueError when the substring is  (2) | 
|---|
| 468 | ,start[,end]])    not found. | 
|---|
| 469 | s.isalnum()       return True if all characters in s are alphanumeric,     (5) | 
|---|
| 470 | False otherwise. | 
|---|
| 471 | s.isalpha()       return True if all characters in s are alphabetic,       (5) | 
|---|
| 472 | False otherwise. | 
|---|
| 473 | s.isdigit()       return True if all characters in s are digit             (5) | 
|---|
| 474 | characters, False otherwise. | 
|---|
| 475 | s.islower()       return True if all characters in s are lowercase, False  (6) | 
|---|
| 476 | otherwise. | 
|---|
| 477 | s.isspace()       return True if all characters in s are whitespace        (5) | 
|---|
| 478 | characters, False otherwise. | 
|---|
| 479 | s.istitle()       return True if string s is a titlecased string, False    (7) | 
|---|
| 480 | otherwise. | 
|---|
| 481 | s.isupper()       return True if all characters in s are uppercase, False  (6) | 
|---|
| 482 | otherwise. | 
|---|
| 483 | s.join(seq)       return a concatenation of the strings in the sequence | 
|---|
| 484 | seq, separated by 's's. | 
|---|
| 485 | s.ljust(width)    return s left justified in a string of length width.    (1), | 
|---|
| 486 | (8) | 
|---|
| 487 | s.lower()         return a copy of s converted to lowercase. | 
|---|
| 488 | s.lstrip()        return a copy of s with leading whitespace removed. | 
|---|
| 489 | s.replace(old,    return a copy of s with all occurrences of substring     (9) | 
|---|
| 490 | new[, maxsplit])  old replaced by new. | 
|---|
| 491 | s.rfind(sub[      return the highest index in s where substring sub is     (2) | 
|---|
| 492 | ,start[,end]])    found. Return -1 if sub is not found. | 
|---|
| 493 | s.rindex(sub[     like rfind(), but raise ValueError when the substring    (2) | 
|---|
| 494 | ,start[,end]])    is not found. | 
|---|
| 495 | s.rjust(width)    return s right justified in a string of length width.   (1), | 
|---|
| 496 | (8) | 
|---|
| 497 | s.rstrip()        return a copy of s with trailing whitespace removed. | 
|---|
| 498 | s.split([sep[     return a list of the words in s, using sep as the       (10) | 
|---|
| 499 | ,maxsplit]])      delimiter string. | 
|---|
| 500 | s.splitlines([    return a list of the lines in s, breaking at line       (11) | 
|---|
| 501 | keepends])        boundaries. | 
|---|
| 502 | s.startswith      return true if s starts with the specified prefix, | 
|---|
| 503 | (prefix[,start[   otherwise return false.                                  (2) | 
|---|
| 504 | ,end]]) | 
|---|
| 505 | s.strip()         return a copy of s with leading and trailing whitespace | 
|---|
| 506 | removed. | 
|---|
| 507 | s.swapcase()      return a copy of s with uppercase characters converted | 
|---|
| 508 | to lowercase and vice versa. | 
|---|
| 509 | return a titlecased copy of s, i.e. words start with | 
|---|
| 510 | s.title()         uppercase characters, all remaining cased characters | 
|---|
| 511 | are lowercase. | 
|---|
| 512 | s.translate(table return a copy of s mapped through translation table     (12) | 
|---|
| 513 | [,deletechars])   table. | 
|---|
| 514 | s.upper()         return a copy of s converted to uppercase. | 
|---|
| 515 | s.zfill(width)    return a string padded with zeroes on the left side and | 
|---|
| 516 | sliding a minus sign left if necessary.  never truncates. | 
|---|
| 517 |  | 
|---|
| 518 | Notes : | 
|---|
| 519 | (1) Padding is done using spaces. | 
|---|
| 520 | (2) If optional argument start is supplied, substring s[start:] is | 
|---|
| 521 | processed. If optional arguments start and end are supplied, substring s[start: | 
|---|
| 522 | end] is processed. | 
|---|
| 523 | (3) Optional argument errors may be given to set a different error handling | 
|---|
| 524 | scheme. The default for errors is 'strict', meaning that encoding errors raise | 
|---|
| 525 | a ValueError. Other possible values are 'ignore' and 'replace'. | 
|---|
| 526 | (4) If optional argument tabsize is not given, a tab size of 8 characters | 
|---|
| 527 | is assumed. | 
|---|
| 528 | (5) Returns false if string s does not contain at least one character. | 
|---|
| 529 | (6) Returns false if string s does not contain at least one cased | 
|---|
| 530 | character. | 
|---|
| 531 | (7) A titlecased string is a string in which uppercase characters may only | 
|---|
| 532 | follow uncased characters and lowercase characters only cased ones. | 
|---|
| 533 | (8) s is returned if width is less than len(s). | 
|---|
| 534 | (9) If the optional argument maxsplit is given, only the first maxsplit | 
|---|
| 535 | occurrences are replaced. | 
|---|
| 536 | (10) If sep is not specified or None, any whitespace string is a separator. | 
|---|
| 537 | If maxsplit is given, at most maxsplit splits are done. | 
|---|
| 538 | (11) Line breaks are not included in the resulting list unless keepends is | 
|---|
| 539 | given and true. | 
|---|
| 540 | (12) table must be a string of length 256. All characters occurring in the | 
|---|
| 541 | optional argument deletechars are removed prior to translation. | 
|---|
| 542 |  | 
|---|
| 543 | String formatting with the % operator | 
|---|
| 544 |  | 
|---|
| 545 | formatString % args--> evaluates to a string | 
|---|
| 546 |  | 
|---|
| 547 | * formatString uses C printf format codes : %, c, s, i, d, u, o, x, X, e, E, | 
|---|
| 548 | f, g, G, r (details below). | 
|---|
| 549 | * Width and precision may be a * to specify that an integer argument gives | 
|---|
| 550 | the actual width or precision. | 
|---|
| 551 | * The flag characters -, +, blank, # and 0 are understood. (details below) | 
|---|
| 552 | * %s will convert any type argument to string (uses str() function) | 
|---|
| 553 | * args may be a single arg or a tuple of args | 
|---|
| 554 |  | 
|---|
| 555 | '%s has %03d quote types.' % ('Python', 2)  # => 'Python has 002 quote types.' | 
|---|
| 556 |  | 
|---|
| 557 | * Right-hand-side can also be a mapping: | 
|---|
| 558 |  | 
|---|
| 559 | a = '%(lang)s has %(c)03d quote types.' % {'c':2, 'lang':'Python} | 
|---|
| 560 | (vars() function very handy to use on right-hand-side.) | 
|---|
| 561 |  | 
|---|
| 562 | Format codes | 
|---|
| 563 | Conversion                               Meaning | 
|---|
| 564 | d          Signed integer decimal. | 
|---|
| 565 | i          Signed integer decimal. | 
|---|
| 566 | o          Unsigned octal. | 
|---|
| 567 | u          Unsigned decimal. | 
|---|
| 568 | x          Unsigned hexadecimal (lowercase). | 
|---|
| 569 | X          Unsigned hexadecimal (uppercase). | 
|---|
| 570 | e          Floating point exponential format (lowercase). | 
|---|
| 571 | E          Floating point exponential format (uppercase). | 
|---|
| 572 | f          Floating point decimal format. | 
|---|
| 573 | F          Floating point decimal format. | 
|---|
| 574 | g          Same as "e" if exponent is greater than -4 or less than precision, | 
|---|
| 575 | "f" otherwise. | 
|---|
| 576 | G          Same as "E" if exponent is greater than -4 or less than precision, | 
|---|
| 577 | "F" otherwise. | 
|---|
| 578 | c          Single character (accepts integer or single character string). | 
|---|
| 579 | r          String (converts any python object using repr()). | 
|---|
| 580 | s          String (converts any python object using str()). | 
|---|
| 581 | %          No argument is converted, results in a "%" character in the result. | 
|---|
| 582 | (The complete specification is %%.) | 
|---|
| 583 |  | 
|---|
| 584 | Conversion flag characters | 
|---|
| 585 | Flag                                  Meaning | 
|---|
| 586 | #    The value conversion will use the ``alternate form''. | 
|---|
| 587 | 0    The conversion will be zero padded. | 
|---|
| 588 | -    The converted value is left adjusted (overrides "-"). | 
|---|
| 589 | (a space) A blank should be left before a positive number (or empty | 
|---|
| 590 | string) produced by a signed conversion. | 
|---|
| 591 | +    A sign character ("+" or "-") will precede the conversion (overrides a | 
|---|
| 592 | "space" flag). | 
|---|
| 593 |  | 
|---|
| 594 | File Objects | 
|---|
| 595 |  | 
|---|
| 596 | Created with built-in function open; may be created by other modules' functions | 
|---|
| 597 | as well. | 
|---|
| 598 |  | 
|---|
| 599 | Operators on file objects | 
|---|
| 600 |  | 
|---|
| 601 | File operations | 
|---|
| 602 | Operation                                Result | 
|---|
| 603 | f.close()         Close file f. | 
|---|
| 604 | f.fileno()        Get fileno (fd) for file f. | 
|---|
| 605 | f.flush()         Flush file f's internal buffer. | 
|---|
| 606 | f.isatty()        True if file f is connected to a tty-like dev, else False. | 
|---|
| 607 | f.read([size])    Read at most size bytes from file f and return as a string | 
|---|
| 608 | object. If size omitted, read to EOF. | 
|---|
| 609 | f.readline()      Read one entire line from file f. | 
|---|
| 610 | f.readlines()     Read until EOF with readline() and return list of lines read. | 
|---|
| 611 | Set file f's position, like "stdio's fseek()". | 
|---|
| 612 | f.seek(offset[,   whence == 0 then use absolute indexing. | 
|---|
| 613 | whence=0])        whence == 1 then offset relative to current pos. | 
|---|
| 614 | whence == 2 then offset relative to file end. | 
|---|
| 615 | f.tell()          Return file f's current position (byte offset). | 
|---|
| 616 | f.write(str)      Write string to file f. | 
|---|
| 617 | f.writelines(list Write list of strings to file f. | 
|---|
| 618 | ) | 
|---|
| 619 |  | 
|---|
| 620 | File Exceptions | 
|---|
| 621 |  | 
|---|
| 622 | EOFError | 
|---|
| 623 | End-of-file hit when reading (may be raised many times, e.g. if f is a | 
|---|
| 624 | tty). | 
|---|
| 625 | IOError | 
|---|
| 626 | Other I/O-related I/O operation failure. | 
|---|
| 627 | OSError | 
|---|
| 628 | OS system call failed. | 
|---|
| 629 |  | 
|---|
| 630 |  | 
|---|
| 631 | Advanced Types | 
|---|
| 632 |  | 
|---|
| 633 | -See manuals for more details - | 
|---|
| 634 | + Module objects | 
|---|
| 635 | + Class objects | 
|---|
| 636 | + Class instance objects | 
|---|
| 637 | + Type objects (see module: types) | 
|---|
| 638 | + File objects (see above) | 
|---|
| 639 | + Slice objects | 
|---|
| 640 | + XRange objects | 
|---|
| 641 | + Callable types: | 
|---|
| 642 | o User-defined (written in Python): | 
|---|
| 643 | # User-defined Function objects | 
|---|
| 644 | # User-defined Method objects | 
|---|
| 645 | o Built-in (written in C): | 
|---|
| 646 | # Built-in Function objects | 
|---|
| 647 | # Built-in Method objects | 
|---|
| 648 | + Internal Types: | 
|---|
| 649 | o Code objects (byte-compile executable Python code: bytecode) | 
|---|
| 650 | o Frame objects (execution frames) | 
|---|
| 651 | o Traceback objects (stack trace of an exception) | 
|---|
| 652 |  | 
|---|
| 653 |  | 
|---|
| 654 | Statements | 
|---|
| 655 |  | 
|---|
| 656 | pass            -- Null statement | 
|---|
| 657 | del name[,name]* -- Unbind name(s) from object. Object will be indirectly | 
|---|
| 658 | (and automatically) deleted only if no longer referenced. | 
|---|
| 659 | print [>> fileobject,] [s1 [, s2 ]* [,] | 
|---|
| 660 | -- Writes to sys.stdout, or to fileobject if supplied. | 
|---|
| 661 | Puts spaces between arguments. Puts newline at end | 
|---|
| 662 | unless statement ends with comma. | 
|---|
| 663 | Print is not required when running interactively, | 
|---|
| 664 | simply typing an expression will print its value, | 
|---|
| 665 | unless the value is None. | 
|---|
| 666 | exec x [in globals [,locals]] | 
|---|
| 667 | -- Executes x in namespaces provided. Defaults | 
|---|
| 668 | to current namespaces. x can be a string, file | 
|---|
| 669 | object or a function object. | 
|---|
| 670 | callable(value,... [id=value], [*args], [**kw]) | 
|---|
| 671 | -- Call function callable with parameters. Parameters can | 
|---|
| 672 | be passed by name or be omitted if function | 
|---|
| 673 | defines default values. E.g. if callable is defined as | 
|---|
| 674 | "def callable(p1=1, p2=2)" | 
|---|
| 675 | "callable()"       <=>  "callable(1, 2)" | 
|---|
| 676 | "callable(10)"     <=>  "callable(10, 2)" | 
|---|
| 677 | "callable(p2=99)"  <=>  "callable(1, 99)" | 
|---|
| 678 | *args is a tuple of positional arguments. | 
|---|
| 679 | **kw is a dictionary of keyword arguments. | 
|---|
| 680 |  | 
|---|
| 681 | Assignment operators | 
|---|
| 682 |  | 
|---|
| 683 | Caption | 
|---|
| 684 | Operator                    Result                     Notes | 
|---|
| 685 | a = b    Basic assignment - assign object b to label a  (1) | 
|---|
| 686 | a += b   Roughly equivalent to a = a + b                (2) | 
|---|
| 687 | a -= b   Roughly equivalent to a = a - b                (2) | 
|---|
| 688 | a *= b   Roughly equivalent to a = a * b                (2) | 
|---|
| 689 | a /= b   Roughly equivalent to a = a / b                (2) | 
|---|
| 690 | a %= b   Roughly equivalent to a = a % b                (2) | 
|---|
| 691 | a **= b  Roughly equivalent to a = a ** b               (2) | 
|---|
| 692 | a &= b   Roughly equivalent to a = a & b                (2) | 
|---|
| 693 | a |= b   Roughly equivalent to a = a | b                (2) | 
|---|
| 694 | a ^= b   Roughly equivalent to a = a ^ b                (2) | 
|---|
| 695 | a >>= b  Roughly equivalent to a = a >> b               (2) | 
|---|
| 696 | a <<= b  Roughly equivalent to a = a << b               (2) | 
|---|
| 697 |  | 
|---|
| 698 | Notes : | 
|---|
| 699 | (1) Can unpack tuples, lists, and strings. | 
|---|
| 700 | first, second = a[0:2]; [f, s] = range(2); c1,c2,c3='abc' | 
|---|
| 701 | Tip: x,y = y,x swaps x and y. | 
|---|
| 702 | (2) Not exactly equivalent - a is evaluated only once. Also, where | 
|---|
| 703 | possible, operation performed in-place - a is modified rather than | 
|---|
| 704 | replaced. | 
|---|
| 705 |  | 
|---|
| 706 | Control Flow | 
|---|
| 707 |  | 
|---|
| 708 | if condition: suite | 
|---|
| 709 | [elif condition: suite]* | 
|---|
| 710 | [else: suite]   -- usual if/else_if/else statement | 
|---|
| 711 | while condition: suite | 
|---|
| 712 | [else: suite] | 
|---|
| 713 | -- usual while statement. "else" suite is executed | 
|---|
| 714 | after loop exits, unless the loop is exited with | 
|---|
| 715 | "break" | 
|---|
| 716 | for element in sequence: suite | 
|---|
| 717 | [else: suite] | 
|---|
| 718 | -- iterates over sequence, assigning each element to element. | 
|---|
| 719 | Use built-in range function to iterate a number of times. | 
|---|
| 720 | "else" suite executed at end unless loop exited | 
|---|
| 721 | with "break" | 
|---|
| 722 | break           -- immediately exits "for" or "while" loop | 
|---|
| 723 | continue        -- immediately does next iteration of "for" or "while" loop | 
|---|
| 724 | return [result] -- Exits from function (or method) and returns result (use a tuple to | 
|---|
| 725 | return more than one value). If no result given, then returns None. | 
|---|
| 726 | yield result    -- Freezes the execution frame of a generator and returns the result | 
|---|
| 727 | to the iterator's .next() method.  Upon the next call to next(), | 
|---|
| 728 | resumes execution at the frozen point with all of the local variables | 
|---|
| 729 | still intact. | 
|---|
| 730 |  | 
|---|
| 731 | Exception Statements | 
|---|
| 732 |  | 
|---|
| 733 | assert expr[, message] | 
|---|
| 734 | -- expr is evaluated. if false, raises exception AssertionError | 
|---|
| 735 | with message. Inhibited if __debug__ is 0. | 
|---|
| 736 | try: suite1 | 
|---|
| 737 | [except [exception [, value]: suite2]+ | 
|---|
| 738 | [else: suite3] | 
|---|
| 739 | -- statements in suite1 are executed. If an exception occurs, look | 
|---|
| 740 | in "except" clauses for matching <exception>. If matches or bare | 
|---|
| 741 | "except" execute suite of that clause. If no exception happens | 
|---|
| 742 | suite in "else" clause is executed after suite1. | 
|---|
| 743 | If exception has a value, it is put in value. | 
|---|
| 744 | exception can also be tuple of exceptions, e.g. | 
|---|
| 745 | "except (KeyError, NameError), val: print val" | 
|---|
| 746 | try: suite1 | 
|---|
| 747 | finally: suite2 | 
|---|
| 748 | -- statements in suite1 are executed. If no | 
|---|
| 749 | exception, execute suite2 (even if suite1 is | 
|---|
| 750 | exited with a "return", "break" or "continue" | 
|---|
| 751 | statement). If exception did occur, executes | 
|---|
| 752 | suite2 and then immediately reraises exception. | 
|---|
| 753 | raise exception [,value [, traceback]] | 
|---|
| 754 | -- raises exception with optional value | 
|---|
| 755 | value. Arg traceback specifies a traceback object to | 
|---|
| 756 | use when printing the exception's backtrace. | 
|---|
| 757 | raise           -- a raise statement without arguments re-raises | 
|---|
| 758 | the last exception raised in the current function | 
|---|
| 759 | An exception is either a string (object) or a class instance. | 
|---|
| 760 | Can create a new one simply by creating a new string: | 
|---|
| 761 |  | 
|---|
| 762 | my_exception = 'You did something wrong' | 
|---|
| 763 | try: | 
|---|
| 764 | if bad: | 
|---|
| 765 | raise my_exception, bad | 
|---|
| 766 | except my_exception, value: | 
|---|
| 767 | print 'Oops', value | 
|---|
| 768 |  | 
|---|
| 769 | Exception classes must be derived from the predefined class: Exception, e.g.: | 
|---|
| 770 | class text_exception(Exception): pass | 
|---|
| 771 | try: | 
|---|
| 772 | if bad: | 
|---|
| 773 | raise text_exception() | 
|---|
| 774 | # This is a shorthand for the form | 
|---|
| 775 | # "raise <class>, <instance>" | 
|---|
| 776 | except Exception: | 
|---|
| 777 | print 'Oops' | 
|---|
| 778 | # This will be printed because | 
|---|
| 779 | # text_exception is a subclass of Exception | 
|---|
| 780 | When an error message is printed for an unhandled exception which is a | 
|---|
| 781 | class, the class name is printed, then a colon and a space, and | 
|---|
| 782 | finally the instance converted to a string using the built-in function | 
|---|
| 783 | str(). | 
|---|
| 784 | All built-in exception classes derives from StandardError, itself | 
|---|
| 785 | derived from Exception. | 
|---|
| 786 |  | 
|---|
| 787 | Name Space Statements | 
|---|
| 788 |  | 
|---|
| 789 | [1.51: On Mac & Windows, the case of module file names must now match the case | 
|---|
| 790 | as used | 
|---|
| 791 | in the import statement] | 
|---|
| 792 | Packages (>1.5): a package is a name space which maps to a directory including | 
|---|
| 793 | module(s) and the special initialization module '__init__.py' | 
|---|
| 794 | (possibly empty). Packages/dirs can be nested. You address a | 
|---|
| 795 | module's symbol via '[package.[package...]module.symbol's. | 
|---|
| 796 | import module1 [as name1] [, module2]* | 
|---|
| 797 | -- imports modules. Members of module must be | 
|---|
| 798 | referred to by qualifying with [package.]module name: | 
|---|
| 799 | "import sys; print sys.argv:" | 
|---|
| 800 | "import package1.subpackage.module; package1.subpackage.module.foo()" | 
|---|
| 801 | module1 renamed as name1, if supplied. | 
|---|
| 802 | from module import name1 [as othername1] [, name2]* | 
|---|
| 803 | -- imports names from module module in current namespace. | 
|---|
| 804 | "from sys import argv; print argv" | 
|---|
| 805 | "from package1 import module; module.foo()" | 
|---|
| 806 | "from package1.module import foo; foo()" | 
|---|
| 807 | name1 renamed as othername1, if supplied. | 
|---|
| 808 | from module import * | 
|---|
| 809 | -- imports all names in module, except those starting with "_"; | 
|---|
| 810 | *to be used sparsely, beware of name clashes* : | 
|---|
| 811 | "from sys import *; print argv" | 
|---|
| 812 | "from package.module import *; print x' | 
|---|
| 813 | NB: "from package import *" only imports the symbols defined | 
|---|
| 814 | in the package's __init__.py file, not those in the | 
|---|
| 815 | template modules! | 
|---|
| 816 | global name1 [, name2]* | 
|---|
| 817 | -- names are from global scope (usually meaning from module) | 
|---|
| 818 | rather than local (usually meaning only in function). | 
|---|
| 819 | -- E.g. in fct without "global" statements, assuming | 
|---|
| 820 | "a" is name that hasn't been used in fct or module | 
|---|
| 821 | so far: | 
|---|
| 822 | -Try to read from "a" -> NameError | 
|---|
| 823 | -Try to write to "a" -> creates "a" local to fcn | 
|---|
| 824 | -If "a" not defined in fct, but is in module, then | 
|---|
| 825 | -Try to read from "a", gets value from module | 
|---|
| 826 | -Try to write to "a", creates "a" local to fct | 
|---|
| 827 | But note "a[0]=3" starts with search for "a", | 
|---|
| 828 | will use to global "a" if no local "a". | 
|---|
| 829 |  | 
|---|
| 830 | Function Definition | 
|---|
| 831 |  | 
|---|
| 832 | def func_id ([param_list]): suite | 
|---|
| 833 | -- Creates a function object & binds it to name func_id. | 
|---|
| 834 |  | 
|---|
| 835 | param_list ::= [id [, id]*] | 
|---|
| 836 | id ::= value | id = value | *id | **id | 
|---|
| 837 | [Args are passed by value.Thus only args representing a mutable object | 
|---|
| 838 | can be modified (are inout parameters). Use a tuple to return more than | 
|---|
| 839 | one value] | 
|---|
| 840 |  | 
|---|
| 841 | Example: | 
|---|
| 842 | def test (p1, p2 = 1+1, *rest, **keywords): | 
|---|
| 843 | -- Parameters with "=" have default value (v is | 
|---|
| 844 | evaluated when function defined). | 
|---|
| 845 | If list has "*id" then id is assigned a tuple of | 
|---|
| 846 | all remaining args passed to function (like C vararg) | 
|---|
| 847 | If list has "**id" then id is assigned a dictionary of | 
|---|
| 848 | all extra arguments passed as keywords. | 
|---|
| 849 |  | 
|---|
| 850 | Class Definition | 
|---|
| 851 |  | 
|---|
| 852 | class <class_id> [(<super_class1> [,<super_class2>]*)]: <suite> | 
|---|
| 853 | -- Creates a class object and assigns it name <class_id> | 
|---|
| 854 | <suite> may contain local "defs" of class methods and | 
|---|
| 855 | assignments to class attributes. | 
|---|
| 856 | Example: | 
|---|
| 857 | class my_class (class1, class_list[3]): ... | 
|---|
| 858 | Creates a class object inheriting from both "class1" and whatever | 
|---|
| 859 | class object "class_list[3]" evaluates to. Assigns new | 
|---|
| 860 | class object to name "my_class". | 
|---|
| 861 | - First arg to class methods is always instance object, called 'self' | 
|---|
| 862 | by convention. | 
|---|
| 863 | - Special method __init__() is called when instance is created. | 
|---|
| 864 | - Special method __del__() called when no more reference to object. | 
|---|
| 865 | - Create instance by "calling" class object, possibly with arg | 
|---|
| 866 | (thus instance=apply(aClassObject, args...) creates an instance!) | 
|---|
| 867 | - In current implementation, can't subclass off built-in | 
|---|
| 868 | classes. But can "wrap" them, see UserDict & UserList modules, | 
|---|
| 869 | and see __getattr__() below. | 
|---|
| 870 | Example: | 
|---|
| 871 | class c (c_parent): | 
|---|
| 872 | def __init__(self, name): self.name = name | 
|---|
| 873 | def print_name(self): print "I'm", self.name | 
|---|
| 874 | def call_parent(self): c_parent.print_name(self) | 
|---|
| 875 | instance = c('tom') | 
|---|
| 876 | print instance.name | 
|---|
| 877 | 'tom' | 
|---|
| 878 | instance.print_name() | 
|---|
| 879 | "I'm tom" | 
|---|
| 880 | Call parent's super class by accessing parent's method | 
|---|
| 881 | directly and passing "self" explicitly (see "call_parent" | 
|---|
| 882 | in example above). | 
|---|
| 883 | Many other special methods available for implementing | 
|---|
| 884 | arithmetic operators, sequence, mapping indexing, etc. | 
|---|
| 885 |  | 
|---|
| 886 | Documentation Strings | 
|---|
| 887 |  | 
|---|
| 888 | Modules, classes and functions may be documented by placing a string literal by | 
|---|
| 889 | itself as the first statement in the suite. The documentation can be retrieved | 
|---|
| 890 | by getting the '__doc__' attribute from the module, class or function. | 
|---|
| 891 | Example: | 
|---|
| 892 | class C: | 
|---|
| 893 | "A description of C" | 
|---|
| 894 | def __init__(self): | 
|---|
| 895 | "A description of the constructor" | 
|---|
| 896 | # etc. | 
|---|
| 897 | Then c.__doc__ == "A description of C". | 
|---|
| 898 | Then c.__init__.__doc__ == "A description of the constructor". | 
|---|
| 899 |  | 
|---|
| 900 | Others | 
|---|
| 901 |  | 
|---|
| 902 | lambda [param_list]: returnedExpr | 
|---|
| 903 | -- Creates an anonymous function. returnedExpr must be | 
|---|
| 904 | an expression, not a statement (e.g., not "if xx:...", | 
|---|
| 905 | "print xxx", etc.) and thus can't contain newlines. | 
|---|
| 906 | Used mostly for filter(), map(), reduce() functions, and GUI callbacks.. | 
|---|
| 907 | List comprehensions | 
|---|
| 908 | result = [expression for item1 in sequence1  [if condition1] | 
|---|
| 909 | [for item2 in sequence2 ... for itemN in sequenceN] | 
|---|
| 910 | ] | 
|---|
| 911 | is equivalent to: | 
|---|
| 912 | result = [] | 
|---|
| 913 | for item1 in sequence1: | 
|---|
| 914 | for item2 in sequence2: | 
|---|
| 915 | ... | 
|---|
| 916 | for itemN in sequenceN: | 
|---|
| 917 | if (condition1) and furthur conditions: | 
|---|
| 918 | result.append(expression) | 
|---|
| 919 |  | 
|---|
| 920 |  | 
|---|
| 921 |  | 
|---|
| 922 | Built-In Functions | 
|---|
| 923 |  | 
|---|
| 924 | Built-In Functions | 
|---|
| 925 | Function                                 Result | 
|---|
| 926 | __import__(name[,   Imports module within the given context (see lib ref for | 
|---|
| 927 | globals[, locals[,  more details) | 
|---|
| 928 | fromlist]]]) | 
|---|
| 929 | abs(x)              Return the absolute value of number x. | 
|---|
| 930 | apply(f, args[,     Calls func/method f with arguments args and optional | 
|---|
| 931 | keywords])          keywords. | 
|---|
| 932 | bool(x)             Returns True when the argument x is true and False otherwise. | 
|---|
| 933 | buffer(obj)         Creates a buffer reference to an object. | 
|---|
| 934 | callable(x)         Returns True if x callable, else False. | 
|---|
| 935 | chr(i)              Returns one-character string whose ASCII code isinteger i | 
|---|
| 936 | classmethod(f)      Converts a function f, into a method with the class as the | 
|---|
| 937 | first argument.  Useful for creating alternative constructors. | 
|---|
| 938 | cmp(x,y)            Returns negative, 0, positive if x <, ==, > to y | 
|---|
| 939 | coerce(x,y)         Returns a tuple of the two numeric arguments converted to a | 
|---|
| 940 | common type. | 
|---|
| 941 | Compiles string into a code object.filename is used in | 
|---|
| 942 | error message, can be any string. It isusually the file | 
|---|
| 943 | compile(string,     from which the code was read, or eg. '<string>'if not read | 
|---|
| 944 | filename, kind)     from file.kind can be 'eval' if string is a single stmt, or | 
|---|
| 945 | 'single' which prints the output of expression statements | 
|---|
| 946 | thatevaluate to something else than None, or be 'exec'. | 
|---|
| 947 | complex(real[,      Builds a complex object (can also be done using J or j | 
|---|
| 948 | image])             suffix,e.g. 1+3J) | 
|---|
| 949 | delattr(obj, name)  deletes attribute named name of object obj <=> del obj.name | 
|---|
| 950 | If no args, returns the list of names in current | 
|---|
| 951 | dict([items])       Create a new dictionary from the specified item list. | 
|---|
| 952 | dir([object])       localsymbol table. With a module, class or class | 
|---|
| 953 | instanceobject as arg, returns list of names in its attr. | 
|---|
| 954 | dict. | 
|---|
| 955 | divmod(a,b)         Returns tuple of (a/b, a%b) | 
|---|
| 956 | enumerate(seq)      Return a iterator giving:  (0, seq[0]), (1, seq[1]), ... | 
|---|
| 957 | eval(s[, globals[,  Eval string s in (optional) globals, locals contexts.s must | 
|---|
| 958 | locals]])           have no NUL's or newlines. s can also be acode object. | 
|---|
| 959 | Example: x = 1; incr_x = eval('x + 1') | 
|---|
| 960 | execfile(file[,     Executes a file without creating a new module, unlike | 
|---|
| 961 | globals[, locals]]) import. | 
|---|
| 962 | file()              Synonym for open(). | 
|---|
| 963 | filter(function,    Constructs a list from those elements of sequence for which | 
|---|
| 964 | sequence)           function returns true. function takes one parameter. | 
|---|
| 965 | float(x)            Converts a number or a string to floating point. | 
|---|
| 966 | getattr(object,     [<default> arg added in 1.5.2]Gets attribute called name | 
|---|
| 967 | name[, default]))   from object,e.g. getattr(x, 'f') <=> x.f). If not found, | 
|---|
| 968 | raisesAttributeError or returns default if specified. | 
|---|
| 969 | globals()           Returns a dictionary containing current global variables. | 
|---|
| 970 | hasattr(object,     Returns true if object has attr called name. | 
|---|
| 971 | name) | 
|---|
| 972 | hash(object)        Returns the hash value of the object (if it has one) | 
|---|
| 973 | help(f)             Display documentation on object f. | 
|---|
| 974 | hex(x)              Converts a number x to a hexadecimal string. | 
|---|
| 975 | id(object)          Returns a unique 'identity' integer for an object. | 
|---|
| 976 | input([prompt])     Prints prompt if given. Reads input and evaluates it. | 
|---|
| 977 | Converts a number or a string to a plain integer. Optional | 
|---|
| 978 | int(x[, base])      base paramenter specifies base from which to convert string | 
|---|
| 979 | values. | 
|---|
| 980 | intern(aString)     Enters aString in the table of "interned strings" | 
|---|
| 981 | andreturns the string. Interned strings are 'immortals'. | 
|---|
| 982 | isinstance(obj,     returns true if obj is an instance of class. Ifissubclass | 
|---|
| 983 | class)              (A,B) then isinstance(x,A) => isinstance(x,B) | 
|---|
| 984 | issubclass(class1,  returns true if class1 is derived from class2 | 
|---|
| 985 | class2) | 
|---|
| 986 | Returns the length (the number of items) of an object | 
|---|
| 987 | iter(collection)    Returns an iterator over the collection. | 
|---|
| 988 | len(obj)            (sequence, dictionary, or instance of class implementing | 
|---|
| 989 | __len__). | 
|---|
| 990 | list(sequence)      Converts sequence into a list. If already a list,returns a | 
|---|
| 991 | copy of it. | 
|---|
| 992 | locals()            Returns a dictionary containing current local variables. | 
|---|
| 993 | Converts a number or a string to a long integer. Optional | 
|---|
| 994 | long(x[, base])     base paramenter specifies base from which to convert string | 
|---|
| 995 | values. | 
|---|
| 996 | Applies function to every item of list and returns a listof | 
|---|
| 997 | map(function, list, the results. If additional arguments are passed,function | 
|---|
| 998 | ...)                must take that many arguments and it is givento function on | 
|---|
| 999 | each call. | 
|---|
| 1000 | max(seq)            Returns the largest item of the non-empty sequence seq. | 
|---|
| 1001 | min(seq)            Returns the smallest item of a non-empty sequence seq. | 
|---|
| 1002 | oct(x)              Converts a number to an octal string. | 
|---|
| 1003 | open(filename [,    Returns a new file object. First two args are same asthose | 
|---|
| 1004 | mode='r', [bufsize= for C's "stdio open" function. bufsize is 0for unbuffered, | 
|---|
| 1005 | implementation      1 for line-buffered, negative forsys-default, all else, of | 
|---|
| 1006 | dependent]])        (about) given size. | 
|---|
| 1007 | ord(c)              Returns integer ASCII value of c (a string of len 1). Works | 
|---|
| 1008 | with Unicode char. | 
|---|
| 1009 | object()            Create a base type.  Used as a superclass for new-style objects. | 
|---|
| 1010 | open(name           Open a file. | 
|---|
| 1011 | [, mode | 
|---|
| 1012 | [, buffering]]) | 
|---|
| 1013 | pow(x, y [, z])     Returns x to power y [modulo z]. See also ** operator. | 
|---|
| 1014 | property()          Created a property with access controlled by functions. | 
|---|
| 1015 | range(start [,end   Returns list of ints from >= start and < end.With 1 arg, | 
|---|
| 1016 | [, step]])          list from 0..arg-1With 2 args, list from start..end-1With 3 | 
|---|
| 1017 | args, list from start up to end by step | 
|---|
| 1018 | raw_input([prompt]) Prints prompt if given, then reads string from stdinput (no | 
|---|
| 1019 | trailing \n). See also input(). | 
|---|
| 1020 | reduce(f, list [,   Applies the binary function f to the items oflist so as to | 
|---|
| 1021 | init])              reduce the list to a single value.If init given, it is | 
|---|
| 1022 | "prepended" to list. | 
|---|
| 1023 | Re-parses and re-initializes an already imported module. | 
|---|
| 1024 | Useful in interactive mode, if you want to reload amodule | 
|---|
| 1025 | reload(module)      after fixing it. If module was syntacticallycorrect but had | 
|---|
| 1026 | an error in initialization, mustimport it one more time | 
|---|
| 1027 | before calling reload(). | 
|---|
| 1028 | Returns a string containing a printable and if possible | 
|---|
| 1029 | repr(object)        evaluable representation of an object. <=> `object` | 
|---|
| 1030 | (usingbackquotes). Class redefinissable (__repr__). See | 
|---|
| 1031 | also str() | 
|---|
| 1032 | round(x, n=0)       Returns the floating point value x rounded to n digitsafter | 
|---|
| 1033 | the decimal point. | 
|---|
| 1034 | setattr(object,     This is the counterpart of getattr().setattr(o, 'foobar', | 
|---|
| 1035 | name, value)        3) <=> o.foobar = 3Creates attribute if it doesn't exist! | 
|---|
| 1036 | slice([start,] stop Returns a slice object representing a range, with R/ | 
|---|
| 1037 | [, step])           Oattributes: start, stop, step. | 
|---|
| 1038 | Returns a string containing a nicely | 
|---|
| 1039 | staticmethod()      Convert a function to method with no self or class | 
|---|
| 1040 | argument.  Useful for methods associated with a class that | 
|---|
| 1041 | do not need access to an object's internal state. | 
|---|
| 1042 | str(object)         printablerepresentation of an object. Class overridable | 
|---|
| 1043 | (__str__).See also repr(). | 
|---|
| 1044 | super(type)         Create an unbound super object.  Used to call cooperative | 
|---|
| 1045 | superclass methods. | 
|---|
| 1046 | sum(sequence,       Add the values in the sequence and return the sum. | 
|---|
| 1047 | [start]) | 
|---|
| 1048 | tuple(sequence)     Creates a tuple with same elements as sequence. If already | 
|---|
| 1049 | a tuple, return itself (not a copy). | 
|---|
| 1050 | Returns a type object [see module types] representing | 
|---|
| 1051 | thetype of obj. Example: import typesif type(x) == | 
|---|
| 1052 | type(obj)           types.StringType: print 'It is a string'NB: it is | 
|---|
| 1053 | recommanded to use the following form:if isinstance(x, | 
|---|
| 1054 | types.StringType): etc... | 
|---|
| 1055 | unichr(code)        code. | 
|---|
| 1056 | unicode(string[,    Creates a Unicode string from a 8-bit string, using | 
|---|
| 1057 | encoding[, error    thegiven encoding name and error treatment ('strict', | 
|---|
| 1058 | ]]])                'ignore',or 'replace'}. | 
|---|
| 1059 | Without arguments, returns a dictionary correspondingto the | 
|---|
| 1060 | current local symbol table. With a module,class or class | 
|---|
| 1061 | vars([object])      instance object as argumentreturns a dictionary | 
|---|
| 1062 | corresponding to the object'ssymbol table. Useful with "%" | 
|---|
| 1063 | formatting operator. | 
|---|
| 1064 | xrange(start [, end Like range(), but doesn't actually store entire listall at | 
|---|
| 1065 | [, step]])          once. Good to use in "for" loops when there is abig range | 
|---|
| 1066 | and little memory. | 
|---|
| 1067 | zip(seq1[, seq2,    Returns a list of tuples where each tuple contains the nth | 
|---|
| 1068 | ...])               element of each of the argument sequences. | 
|---|
| 1069 |  | 
|---|
| 1070 |  | 
|---|
| 1071 |  | 
|---|
| 1072 |  | 
|---|
| 1073 | Built-In Exceptions | 
|---|
| 1074 |  | 
|---|
| 1075 | Exception> | 
|---|
| 1076 | Root class for all exceptions | 
|---|
| 1077 | SystemExit | 
|---|
| 1078 | On 'sys.exit()' | 
|---|
| 1079 | StopIteration | 
|---|
| 1080 | Signal the end from iterator.next() | 
|---|
| 1081 | StandardError | 
|---|
| 1082 | Base class for all built-in exceptions; derived from Exception | 
|---|
| 1083 | root class. | 
|---|
| 1084 | ArithmeticError | 
|---|
| 1085 | Base class for OverflowError, ZeroDivisionError, | 
|---|
| 1086 | FloatingPointError | 
|---|
| 1087 | FloatingPointError | 
|---|
| 1088 | When a floating point operation fails. | 
|---|
| 1089 | OverflowError | 
|---|
| 1090 | On excessively large arithmetic operation | 
|---|
| 1091 | ZeroDivisionError | 
|---|
| 1092 | On division or modulo operation with 0 as 2nd arg | 
|---|
| 1093 | AssertionError | 
|---|
| 1094 | When an assert statement fails. | 
|---|
| 1095 | AttributeError | 
|---|
| 1096 | On attribute reference or assignment failure | 
|---|
| 1097 | EnvironmentError    [new in 1.5.2] | 
|---|
| 1098 | On error outside Python; error arg tuple is (errno, errMsg...) | 
|---|
| 1099 | IOError    [changed in 1.5.2] | 
|---|
| 1100 | I/O-related operation failure | 
|---|
| 1101 | OSError    [new in 1.5.2] | 
|---|
| 1102 | used by the os module's os.error exception. | 
|---|
| 1103 | EOFError | 
|---|
| 1104 | Immediate end-of-file hit by input() or raw_input() | 
|---|
| 1105 | ImportError | 
|---|
| 1106 | On failure of `import' to find module or name | 
|---|
| 1107 | KeyboardInterrupt | 
|---|
| 1108 | On user entry of the interrupt key (often `Control-C') | 
|---|
| 1109 | LookupError | 
|---|
| 1110 | base class for IndexError, KeyError | 
|---|
| 1111 | IndexError | 
|---|
| 1112 | On out-of-range sequence subscript | 
|---|
| 1113 | KeyError | 
|---|
| 1114 | On reference to a non-existent mapping (dict) key | 
|---|
| 1115 | MemoryError | 
|---|
| 1116 | On recoverable memory exhaustion | 
|---|
| 1117 | NameError | 
|---|
| 1118 | On failure to find a local or global (unqualified) name | 
|---|
| 1119 | RuntimeError | 
|---|
| 1120 | Obsolete catch-all; define a suitable error instead | 
|---|
| 1121 | NotImplementedError   [new in 1.5.2] | 
|---|
| 1122 | On method not implemented | 
|---|
| 1123 | SyntaxError | 
|---|
| 1124 | On parser encountering a syntax error | 
|---|
| 1125 | IndentationError | 
|---|
| 1126 | On parser encountering an indentation syntax error | 
|---|
| 1127 | TabError | 
|---|
| 1128 | On parser encountering an indentation syntax error | 
|---|
| 1129 | SystemError | 
|---|
| 1130 | On non-fatal interpreter error - bug - report it | 
|---|
| 1131 | TypeError | 
|---|
| 1132 | On passing inappropriate type to built-in op or func | 
|---|
| 1133 | ValueError | 
|---|
| 1134 | On arg error not covered by TypeError or more precise | 
|---|
| 1135 | Warning | 
|---|
| 1136 | UserWarning | 
|---|
| 1137 | DeprecationWarning | 
|---|
| 1138 | PendingDeprecationWarning | 
|---|
| 1139 | SyntaxWarning | 
|---|
| 1140 | RuntimeWarning | 
|---|
| 1141 | FutureWarning | 
|---|
| 1142 |  | 
|---|
| 1143 |  | 
|---|
| 1144 |  | 
|---|
| 1145 | Standard methods & operators redefinition in classes | 
|---|
| 1146 |  | 
|---|
| 1147 | Standard methods & operators map to special '__methods__' and thus may be | 
|---|
| 1148 | redefined (mostly in user-defined classes), e.g.: | 
|---|
| 1149 | class x: | 
|---|
| 1150 | def __init__(self, v): self.value = v | 
|---|
| 1151 | def __add__(self, r): return self.value + r | 
|---|
| 1152 | a = x(3) # sort of like calling x.__init__(a, 3) | 
|---|
| 1153 | a + 4    # is equivalent to a.__add__(4) | 
|---|
| 1154 |  | 
|---|
| 1155 | Special methods for any class | 
|---|
| 1156 |  | 
|---|
| 1157 | (s: self, o: other) | 
|---|
| 1158 | __init__(s, args) instance initialization (on construction) | 
|---|
| 1159 | __del__(s)        called on object demise (refcount becomes 0) | 
|---|
| 1160 | __repr__(s)       repr() and `...` conversions | 
|---|
| 1161 | __str__(s)        str() and 'print' statement | 
|---|
| 1162 | __cmp__(s, o)     Compares s to o and returns <0, 0, or >0. | 
|---|
| 1163 | Implements >, <, == etc... | 
|---|
| 1164 | __hash__(s)       Compute a 32 bit hash code; hash() and dictionary ops | 
|---|
| 1165 | __nonzero__(s)    Returns False or True for truth value testing | 
|---|
| 1166 | __getattr__(s, name)  called when attr lookup doesn't find <name> | 
|---|
| 1167 | __setattr__(s, name, val) called when setting an attr | 
|---|
| 1168 | (inside, don't use "self.name = value" | 
|---|
| 1169 | use "self.__dict__[name] = val") | 
|---|
| 1170 | __delattr__(s, name)  called to delete attr <name> | 
|---|
| 1171 | __call__(self, *args) called when an instance is called as function. | 
|---|
| 1172 |  | 
|---|
| 1173 | Operators | 
|---|
| 1174 |  | 
|---|
| 1175 | See list in the operator module. Operator function names are provided with | 
|---|
| 1176 | 2 variants, with or without | 
|---|
| 1177 | ading & trailing '__' (eg. __add__ or add). | 
|---|
| 1178 |  | 
|---|
| 1179 | Numeric operations special methods | 
|---|
| 1180 | (s: self, o: other) | 
|---|
| 1181 |  | 
|---|
| 1182 | s+o       =  __add__(s,o)         s-o        =  __sub__(s,o) | 
|---|
| 1183 | s*o       =  __mul__(s,o)         s/o        =  __div__(s,o) | 
|---|
| 1184 | s%o       =  __mod__(s,o)         divmod(s,o) = __divmod__(s,o) | 
|---|
| 1185 | s**o      =  __pow__(s,o) | 
|---|
| 1186 | s&o       =  __and__(s,o) | 
|---|
| 1187 | s^o       =  __xor__(s,o)         s|o        =  __or__(s,o) | 
|---|
| 1188 | s<<o      =  __lshift__(s,o)      s>>o       =  __rshift__(s,o) | 
|---|
| 1189 | nonzero(s) = __nonzero__(s) (used in boolean testing) | 
|---|
| 1190 | -s        =  __neg__(s)           +s         =  __pos__(s) | 
|---|
| 1191 | abs(s)    =  __abs__(s)           ~s         =  __invert__(s)  (bitwise) | 
|---|
| 1192 | s+=o      =  __iadd__(s,o)        s-=o       =  __isub__(s,o) | 
|---|
| 1193 | s*=o      =  __imul__(s,o)        s/=o       =  __idiv__(s,o) | 
|---|
| 1194 | s%=o      =  __imod__(s,o) | 
|---|
| 1195 | s**=o     =  __ipow__(s,o) | 
|---|
| 1196 | s&=o      =  __iand__(s,o) | 
|---|
| 1197 | s^=o      =  __ixor__(s,o)        s|=o       =  __ior__(s,o) | 
|---|
| 1198 | s<<=o     =  __ilshift__(s,o)     s>>=o      =  __irshift__(s,o) | 
|---|
| 1199 | Conversions | 
|---|
| 1200 | int(s)    =  __int__(s)           long(s)    =  __long__(s) | 
|---|
| 1201 | float(s)  =  __float__(s)         complex(s)    =  __complex__(s) | 
|---|
| 1202 | oct(s)    =  __oct__(s)           hex(s)     =  __hex__(s) | 
|---|
| 1203 | coerce(s,o) = __coerce__(s,o) | 
|---|
| 1204 | Right-hand-side equivalents for all binary operators exist; | 
|---|
| 1205 | are called when class instance is on r-h-s of operator: | 
|---|
| 1206 | a + 3  calls __add__(a, 3) | 
|---|
| 1207 | 3 + a  calls __radd__(a, 3) | 
|---|
| 1208 |  | 
|---|
| 1209 | All seqs and maps, general operations plus: | 
|---|
| 1210 | (s: self, i: index or key) | 
|---|
| 1211 |  | 
|---|
| 1212 | len(s)    = __len__(s)        length of object, >= 0.  Length 0 == false | 
|---|
| 1213 | s[i]      = __getitem__(s,i)  Element at index/key i, origin 0 | 
|---|
| 1214 |  | 
|---|
| 1215 | Sequences, general methods, plus: | 
|---|
| 1216 | s[i]=v           = __setitem__(s,i,v) | 
|---|
| 1217 | del s[i]         = __delitem__(s,i) | 
|---|
| 1218 | s[i:j]           = __getslice__(s,i,j) | 
|---|
| 1219 | s[i:j]=seq       = __setslice__(s,i,j,seq) | 
|---|
| 1220 | del s[i:j]       = __delslice__(s,i,j)   == s[i:j] = [] | 
|---|
| 1221 | seq * n          = __repeat__(seq, n) | 
|---|
| 1222 | s1 + s2          = __concat__(s1, s2) | 
|---|
| 1223 | i in s           = __contains__(s, i) | 
|---|
| 1224 | Mappings, general methods, plus | 
|---|
| 1225 | hash(s)          = __hash__(s) - hash value for dictionary references | 
|---|
| 1226 | s[k]=v           = __setitem__(s,k,v) | 
|---|
| 1227 | del s[k]         = __delitem__(s,k) | 
|---|
| 1228 |  | 
|---|
| 1229 | Special informative state attributes for some types: | 
|---|
| 1230 |  | 
|---|
| 1231 | Modules: | 
|---|
| 1232 | __doc__ (string/None, R/O): doc string (<=> __dict__['__doc__']) | 
|---|
| 1233 | __name__(string, R/O): module name (also in __dict__['__name__']) | 
|---|
| 1234 | __dict__ (dict, R/O): module's name space | 
|---|
| 1235 | __file__(string/undefined, R/O): pathname of .pyc, .pyo or .pyd (undef for | 
|---|
| 1236 | modules statically linked to the interpreter) | 
|---|
| 1237 |  | 
|---|
| 1238 | Classes:    [in bold: writable since 1.5.2] | 
|---|
| 1239 | __doc__ (string/None, R/W): doc string (<=> __dict__['__doc__']) | 
|---|
| 1240 | __module__ is the module name in which the class was defined | 
|---|
| 1241 | __name__(string, R/W): class name (also in __dict__['__name__']) | 
|---|
| 1242 | __bases__ (tuple, R/W): parent classes | 
|---|
| 1243 | __dict__ (dict, R/W): attributes (class name space) | 
|---|
| 1244 |  | 
|---|
| 1245 | Instances: | 
|---|
| 1246 | __class__ (class, R/W): instance's class | 
|---|
| 1247 | __dict__ (dict, R/W): attributes | 
|---|
| 1248 |  | 
|---|
| 1249 | User-defined functions: [bold: writable since 1.5.2] | 
|---|
| 1250 | __doc__ (string/None, R/W): doc string | 
|---|
| 1251 | __name__(string, R/O): function name | 
|---|
| 1252 | func_doc (R/W): same as __doc__ | 
|---|
| 1253 | func_name (R/O): same as __name__ | 
|---|
| 1254 | func_defaults (tuple/None, R/W): default args values if any | 
|---|
| 1255 | func_code (code, R/W): code object representing the compiled function body | 
|---|
| 1256 | func_globals (dict, R/O): ref to dictionary of func global variables | 
|---|
| 1257 | func_dict (dict, R/W):  same as __dict__ contains the namespace supporting | 
|---|
| 1258 | arbitrary function attributes | 
|---|
| 1259 | func_closure (R/O): None or a tuple of cells that contain bindings | 
|---|
| 1260 | for the function's free variables. | 
|---|
| 1261 |  | 
|---|
| 1262 |  | 
|---|
| 1263 | User-defined Methods: | 
|---|
| 1264 | __doc__ (string/None, R/O): doc string | 
|---|
| 1265 | __name__(string, R/O): method name (same as im_func.__name__) | 
|---|
| 1266 | im_class (class, R/O): class defining the method (may be a base class) | 
|---|
| 1267 | im_self (instance/None, R/O): target instance object (None if unbound) | 
|---|
| 1268 | im_func (function, R/O): function object | 
|---|
| 1269 |  | 
|---|
| 1270 | Built-in Functions & methods: | 
|---|
| 1271 | __doc__ (string/None, R/O): doc string | 
|---|
| 1272 | __name__ (string, R/O): function name | 
|---|
| 1273 | __self__ : [methods only] target object | 
|---|
| 1274 |  | 
|---|
| 1275 | Codes: | 
|---|
| 1276 | co_name (string, R/O): function name | 
|---|
| 1277 | co_argcount (int, R/0): number of positional args | 
|---|
| 1278 | co_nlocals (int, R/O): number of local vars (including args) | 
|---|
| 1279 | co_varnames (tuple, R/O): names of local vars (starting with args) | 
|---|
| 1280 | co_cellvars (tuple, R/O)) the names of local variables referenced by | 
|---|
| 1281 | nested functions | 
|---|
| 1282 | co_freevars (tuple, R/O)) names of free variables | 
|---|
| 1283 | co_code (string, R/O): sequence of bytecode instructions | 
|---|
| 1284 | co_consts (tuple, R/O): litterals used by the bytecode, 1st one is | 
|---|
| 1285 | fct doc (or None) | 
|---|
| 1286 | co_names (tuple, R/O): names used by the bytecode | 
|---|
| 1287 | co_filename (string, R/O): filename from which the code was compiled | 
|---|
| 1288 | co_firstlineno (int, R/O): first line number of the function | 
|---|
| 1289 | co_lnotab (string, R/O): string encoding bytecode offsets to line numbers. | 
|---|
| 1290 | co_stacksize (int, R/O): required stack size (including local vars) | 
|---|
| 1291 | co_flags (int, R/O): flags for the interpreter | 
|---|
| 1292 | bit 2 set if fct uses "*arg" syntax | 
|---|
| 1293 | bit 3 set if fct uses '**keywords' syntax | 
|---|
| 1294 | Frames: | 
|---|
| 1295 | f_back (frame/None, R/O): previous stack frame (toward the caller) | 
|---|
| 1296 | f_code (code, R/O): code object being executed in this frame | 
|---|
| 1297 | f_locals (dict, R/O): local vars | 
|---|
| 1298 | f_globals (dict, R/O): global vars | 
|---|
| 1299 | f_builtins (dict, R/O): built-in (intrinsic) names | 
|---|
| 1300 | f_restricted (int, R/O): flag indicating whether fct is executed in | 
|---|
| 1301 | restricted mode | 
|---|
| 1302 | f_lineno (int, R/O): current line number | 
|---|
| 1303 | f_lasti (int, R/O): precise instruction (index into bytecode) | 
|---|
| 1304 | f_trace (function/None, R/W): debug hook called at start of each source line | 
|---|
| 1305 | f_exc_type (Type/None, R/W): Most recent exception type | 
|---|
| 1306 | f_exc_value (any, R/W): Most recent exception value | 
|---|
| 1307 | f_exc_traceback (traceback/None, R/W): Most recent exception traceback | 
|---|
| 1308 | Tracebacks: | 
|---|
| 1309 | tb_next (frame/None, R/O): next level in stack trace (toward the frame where | 
|---|
| 1310 | the exception occurred) | 
|---|
| 1311 | tb_frame (frame, R/O): execution frame of the current level | 
|---|
| 1312 | tb_lineno (int, R/O): line number where the exception occurred | 
|---|
| 1313 | tb_lasti (int, R/O): precise instruction (index into bytecode) | 
|---|
| 1314 |  | 
|---|
| 1315 | Slices: | 
|---|
| 1316 | start (any/None, R/O): lowerbound | 
|---|
| 1317 | stop (any/None, R/O): upperbound | 
|---|
| 1318 | step (any/None, R/O): step value | 
|---|
| 1319 |  | 
|---|
| 1320 | Complex numbers: | 
|---|
| 1321 | real (float, R/O): real part | 
|---|
| 1322 | imag (float, R/O): imaginary part | 
|---|
| 1323 |  | 
|---|
| 1324 |  | 
|---|
| 1325 | Important Modules | 
|---|
| 1326 |  | 
|---|
| 1327 | sys | 
|---|
| 1328 |  | 
|---|
| 1329 | Some sys variables | 
|---|
| 1330 | Variable                                Content | 
|---|
| 1331 | argv                 The list of command line arguments passed to aPython | 
|---|
| 1332 | script. sys.argv[0] is the script name. | 
|---|
| 1333 | builtin_module_names A list of strings giving the names of all moduleswritten | 
|---|
| 1334 | in C that are linked into this interpreter. | 
|---|
| 1335 | check_interval       How often to check for thread switches or signals(measured | 
|---|
| 1336 | in number of virtual machine instructions) | 
|---|
| 1337 | exc_type, exc_value, Deprecated since release 1.5. Use exc_info() instead. | 
|---|
| 1338 | exc_traceback | 
|---|
| 1339 | exitfunc             User can set to a parameterless fcn. It will getcalled | 
|---|
| 1340 | before interpreter exits. | 
|---|
| 1341 | last_type,           Set only when an exception not handled andinterpreter | 
|---|
| 1342 | last_value,          prints an error. Used by debuggers. | 
|---|
| 1343 | last_traceback | 
|---|
| 1344 | maxint               maximum positive value for integers | 
|---|
| 1345 | modules              Dictionary of modules that have already been loaded. | 
|---|
| 1346 | path                 Search path for external modules. Can be modifiedby | 
|---|
| 1347 | program. sys.path[0] == dir of script executing | 
|---|
| 1348 | platform             The current platform, e.g. "sunos5", "win32" | 
|---|
| 1349 | ps1, ps2             prompts to use in interactive mode. | 
|---|
| 1350 | File objects used for I/O. One can redirect byassigning a | 
|---|
| 1351 | stdin, stdout,       new file object to them (or any object:.with a method | 
|---|
| 1352 | stderr               write(string) for stdout/stderr,.with a method readline() | 
|---|
| 1353 | for stdin) | 
|---|
| 1354 | version              string containing version info about Python interpreter. | 
|---|
| 1355 | (and also: copyright, dllhandle, exec_prefix, prefix) | 
|---|
| 1356 | version_info         tuple containing Python version info - (major, minor, | 
|---|
| 1357 | micro, level, serial). | 
|---|
| 1358 |  | 
|---|
| 1359 | Some sys functions | 
|---|
| 1360 | Function                                 Result | 
|---|
| 1361 | exit(n)            Exits with status n. Raises SystemExit exception.(Hence can | 
|---|
| 1362 | be caught and ignored by program) | 
|---|
| 1363 | getrefcount(object Returns the reference count of the object. Generally one | 
|---|
| 1364 | )                  higher than you might expect, because of object arg temp | 
|---|
| 1365 | reference. | 
|---|
| 1366 | setcheckinterval(  Sets the interpreter's thread switching interval (in number | 
|---|
| 1367 | interval)          of virtual code instructions, default:100). | 
|---|
| 1368 | settrace(func)     Sets a trace function: called before each line ofcode is | 
|---|
| 1369 | exited. | 
|---|
| 1370 | setprofile(func)   Sets a profile function for performance profiling. | 
|---|
| 1371 | Info on exception currently being handled; this is atuple | 
|---|
| 1372 | (exc_type, exc_value, exc_traceback).Warning: assigning the | 
|---|
| 1373 | exc_info()         traceback return value to a local variable in a | 
|---|
| 1374 | function handling an exception will cause a circular | 
|---|
| 1375 | reference. | 
|---|
| 1376 | setdefaultencoding Change default Unicode encoding - defaults to 7-bit ASCII. | 
|---|
| 1377 | (encoding) | 
|---|
| 1378 | getrecursionlimit  Retrieve maximum recursion depth. | 
|---|
| 1379 | () | 
|---|
| 1380 | setrecursionlimit  Set maximum recursion depth. (Defaults to 1000.) | 
|---|
| 1381 | () | 
|---|
| 1382 |  | 
|---|
| 1383 |  | 
|---|
| 1384 |  | 
|---|
| 1385 | os | 
|---|
| 1386 | "synonym" for whatever O/S-specific module is proper for current environment. | 
|---|
| 1387 | this module uses posix whenever possible. | 
|---|
| 1388 | (see also M.A. Lemburg's utility http://www.lemburg.com/files/python/ | 
|---|
| 1389 | platform.py) | 
|---|
| 1390 |  | 
|---|
| 1391 | Some os variables | 
|---|
| 1392 | Variable                                 Meaning | 
|---|
| 1393 | name                name of O/S-specific module (e.g. "posix", "mac", "nt") | 
|---|
| 1394 | path                O/S-specific module for path manipulations. | 
|---|
| 1395 | On Unix, os.path.split() <=> posixpath.split() | 
|---|
| 1396 | curdir              string used to represent current directory ('.') | 
|---|
| 1397 | pardir              string used to represent parent directory ('..') | 
|---|
| 1398 | sep                 string used to separate directories ('/' or '\'). Tip: use | 
|---|
| 1399 | os.path.join() to build portable paths. | 
|---|
| 1400 | altsep              Alternate sep | 
|---|
| 1401 | if applicable (None | 
|---|
| 1402 | otherwise) | 
|---|
| 1403 | pathsep             character used to separate search path components (as in | 
|---|
| 1404 | $PATH), eg. ';' for windows. | 
|---|
| 1405 | linesep             line separator as used in binary files, ie '\n' on Unix, '\ | 
|---|
| 1406 | r\n' on Dos/Win, '\r' | 
|---|
| 1407 |  | 
|---|
| 1408 | Some os functions | 
|---|
| 1409 | Function                                 Result | 
|---|
| 1410 | makedirs(path[,     Recursive directory creation (create required intermediary | 
|---|
| 1411 | mode=0777])         dirs); os.error if fails. | 
|---|
| 1412 | removedirs(path)    Recursive directory delete (delete intermediary empty | 
|---|
| 1413 | dirs); if fails. | 
|---|
| 1414 | renames(old, new)   Recursive directory or file renaming; os.error if fails. | 
|---|
| 1415 |  | 
|---|
| 1416 |  | 
|---|
| 1417 |  | 
|---|
| 1418 | posix | 
|---|
| 1419 | don't import this module directly, import os instead ! | 
|---|
| 1420 | (see also module: shutil for file copy & remove fcts) | 
|---|
| 1421 |  | 
|---|
| 1422 | posix Variables | 
|---|
| 1423 | Variable                             Meaning | 
|---|
| 1424 | environ  dictionary of environment variables, e.g.posix.environ['HOME']. | 
|---|
| 1425 | error    exception raised on POSIX-related error. | 
|---|
| 1426 | Corresponding value is tuple of errno code and perror() string. | 
|---|
| 1427 |  | 
|---|
| 1428 | Some posix functions | 
|---|
| 1429 | Function                                 Result | 
|---|
| 1430 | chdir(path)     Changes current directory to path. | 
|---|
| 1431 | chmod(path,     Changes the mode of path to the numeric mode | 
|---|
| 1432 | mode) | 
|---|
| 1433 | close(fd)       Closes file descriptor fd opened with posix.open. | 
|---|
| 1434 | _exit(n)        Immediate exit, with no cleanups, no SystemExit,etc. Should use | 
|---|
| 1435 | this to exit a child process. | 
|---|
| 1436 | execv(p, args)  "Become" executable p with args args | 
|---|
| 1437 | getcwd()        Returns a string representing the current working directory | 
|---|
| 1438 | getpid()        Returns the current process id | 
|---|
| 1439 | fork()          Like C's fork(). Returns 0 to child, child pid to parent.[Not | 
|---|
| 1440 | on Windows] | 
|---|
| 1441 | kill(pid,       Like C's kill [Not on Windows] | 
|---|
| 1442 | signal) | 
|---|
| 1443 | listdir(path)   Lists (base)names of entries in directory path, excluding '.' | 
|---|
| 1444 | and '..' | 
|---|
| 1445 | lseek(fd, pos,  Sets current position in file fd to position pos, expressedas | 
|---|
| 1446 | how)            an offset relative to beginning of file (how=0), tocurrent | 
|---|
| 1447 | position (how=1), or to end of file (how=2) | 
|---|
| 1448 | mkdir(path[,    Creates a directory named path with numeric mode (default 0777) | 
|---|
| 1449 | mode]) | 
|---|
| 1450 | open(file,      Like C's open(). Returns file descriptor. Use file object | 
|---|
| 1451 | flags, mode)    fctsrather than this low level ones. | 
|---|
| 1452 | pipe()          Creates a pipe. Returns pair of file descriptors (r, w) [Not on | 
|---|
| 1453 | Windows]. | 
|---|
| 1454 | popen(command,  Opens a pipe to or from command. Result is a file object to | 
|---|
| 1455 | mode='r',       read to orwrite from, as indicated by mode being 'r' or 'w'. | 
|---|
| 1456 | bufSize=0)      Use it to catch acommand output ('r' mode) or to feed it ('w' | 
|---|
| 1457 | mode). | 
|---|
| 1458 | remove(path)    See unlink. | 
|---|
| 1459 | rename(src, dst Renames/moves the file or directory src to dst. [error iftarget | 
|---|
| 1460 | )               name already exists] | 
|---|
| 1461 | rmdir(path)     Removes the empty directory path | 
|---|
| 1462 | read(fd, n)     Reads n bytes from file descriptor fd and return as string. | 
|---|
| 1463 | Returns st_mode, st_ino, st_dev, st_nlink, st_uid,st_gid, | 
|---|
| 1464 | stat(path)      st_size, st_atime, st_mtime, st_ctime.[st_ino, st_uid, st_gid | 
|---|
| 1465 | are dummy on Windows] | 
|---|
| 1466 | system(command) Executes string command in a subshell. Returns exitstatus of | 
|---|
| 1467 | subshell (usually 0 means OK). | 
|---|
| 1468 | Returns accumulated CPU times in sec (user, system, children's | 
|---|
| 1469 | times()         user,children's sys, elapsed real time). [3 last not on | 
|---|
| 1470 | Windows] | 
|---|
| 1471 | unlink(path)    Unlinks ("deletes") the file (not dir!) path. same as: remove | 
|---|
| 1472 | utime(path, (   Sets the access & modified time of the file to the given tuple | 
|---|
| 1473 | aTime, mTime))  of values. | 
|---|
| 1474 | wait()          Waits for child process completion. Returns tuple ofpid, | 
|---|
| 1475 | exit_status [Not on Windows] | 
|---|
| 1476 | waitpid(pid,    Waits for process pid to complete. Returns tuple ofpid, | 
|---|
| 1477 | options)        exit_status [Not on Windows] | 
|---|
| 1478 | write(fd, str)  Writes str to file fd. Returns nb of bytes written. | 
|---|
| 1479 |  | 
|---|
| 1480 |  | 
|---|
| 1481 |  | 
|---|
| 1482 | posixpath | 
|---|
| 1483 | Do not import this module directly, import os instead and refer to this module | 
|---|
| 1484 | as os.path. (e.g. os.path.exists(p)) ! | 
|---|
| 1485 |  | 
|---|
| 1486 | Some posixpath functions | 
|---|
| 1487 | Function                                 Result | 
|---|
| 1488 | abspath(p) Returns absolute path for path p, taking current working dir in | 
|---|
| 1489 | account. | 
|---|
| 1490 | dirname/ | 
|---|
| 1491 | basename(p directory and name parts of the path p. See also split. | 
|---|
| 1492 | ) | 
|---|
| 1493 | exists(p)  True if string p is an existing path (file or directory) | 
|---|
| 1494 | expanduser Returns string that is (a copy of) p with "~" expansion done. | 
|---|
| 1495 | (p) | 
|---|
| 1496 | expandvars Returns string that is (a copy of) p with environment vars expanded. | 
|---|
| 1497 | (p)        [Windows: case significant; must use Unix: $var notation, not %var%] | 
|---|
| 1498 | getsize(   return the size in bytes of filename. raise os.error. | 
|---|
| 1499 | filename) | 
|---|
| 1500 | getmtime(  return last modification time of filename (integer nb of seconds | 
|---|
| 1501 | filename)  since epoch). | 
|---|
| 1502 | getatime(  return last access time of filename (integer nb of seconds since | 
|---|
| 1503 | filename)  epoch). | 
|---|
| 1504 | isabs(p)   True if string p is an absolute path. | 
|---|
| 1505 | isdir(p)   True if string p is a directory. | 
|---|
| 1506 | islink(p)  True if string p is a symbolic link. | 
|---|
| 1507 | ismount(p) True if string p is a mount point [true for all dirs on Windows]. | 
|---|
| 1508 | join(p[,q  Joins one or more path components intelligently. | 
|---|
| 1509 | [,...]]) | 
|---|
| 1510 | Splits p into (head, tail) where tail is lastpathname component and | 
|---|
| 1511 | split(p)   <head> is everything leadingup to that. <=> (dirname(p), basename | 
|---|
| 1512 | (p)) | 
|---|
| 1513 | splitdrive Splits path p in a pair ('drive:', tail) [Windows] | 
|---|
| 1514 | (p) | 
|---|
| 1515 | splitext(p Splits into (root, ext) where last comp of root contains no periods | 
|---|
| 1516 | )          and ext is empty or startswith a period. | 
|---|
| 1517 | Calls the function visit with arguments(arg, dirname, names) for | 
|---|
| 1518 | each directory recursively inthe directory tree rooted at p | 
|---|
| 1519 | walk(p,    (including p itself if it's a dir)The argument dirname specifies the | 
|---|
| 1520 | visit, arg visited directory, the argumentnames lists the files in the | 
|---|
| 1521 | )          directory. The visit function maymodify names to influence the set | 
|---|
| 1522 | of directories visited belowdirname, e.g., to avoid visiting certain | 
|---|
| 1523 | parts of the tree. | 
|---|
| 1524 |  | 
|---|
| 1525 |  | 
|---|
| 1526 |  | 
|---|
| 1527 | shutil | 
|---|
| 1528 | high-level file operations (copying, deleting). | 
|---|
| 1529 |  | 
|---|
| 1530 | Main shutil functions | 
|---|
| 1531 | Function                                 Result | 
|---|
| 1532 | copy(src, dst)     Copies the contents of file src to file dst, retaining file | 
|---|
| 1533 | permissions. | 
|---|
| 1534 | copytree(src, dst  Recursively copies an entire directory tree rooted at src | 
|---|
| 1535 | [, symlinks])      into dst (which should not already exist). If symlinks is | 
|---|
| 1536 | true, links insrc are kept as such in dst. | 
|---|
| 1537 | rmtree(path[,      Deletes an entire directory tree, ignoring errors if | 
|---|
| 1538 | ignore_errors[,    ignore_errors true,or calling onerror(func, path, | 
|---|
| 1539 | onerror]])         sys.exc_info()) if supplied with | 
|---|
| 1540 |  | 
|---|
| 1541 | (and also: copyfile, copymode, copystat, copy2) | 
|---|
| 1542 |  | 
|---|
| 1543 | time | 
|---|
| 1544 |  | 
|---|
| 1545 | Variables | 
|---|
| 1546 | Variable                               Meaning | 
|---|
| 1547 | altzone  signed offset of local DST timezone in sec west of the 0th meridian. | 
|---|
| 1548 | daylight nonzero if a DST timezone is specified | 
|---|
| 1549 |  | 
|---|
| 1550 | Functions | 
|---|
| 1551 | Function                                 Result | 
|---|
| 1552 | time()        return a float representing UTC time in seconds since the epoch. | 
|---|
| 1553 | gmtime(secs), return a tuple representing time : (year aaaa, month(1-12),day | 
|---|
| 1554 | localtime(    (1-31), hour(0-23), minute(0-59), second(0-59), weekday(0-6, 0 is | 
|---|
| 1555 | secs)         monday), Julian day(1-366), daylight flag(-1,0 or 1)) | 
|---|
| 1556 | asctime( | 
|---|
| 1557 | timeTuple), | 
|---|
| 1558 | strftime( | 
|---|
| 1559 | format,       return a formatted string representing time. | 
|---|
| 1560 | timeTuple) | 
|---|
| 1561 | mktime(tuple) inverse of localtime(). Return a float. | 
|---|
| 1562 | strptime(     parse a formatted string representing time, return tuple as in | 
|---|
| 1563 | string[,      gmtime(). | 
|---|
| 1564 | format]) | 
|---|
| 1565 | sleep(secs)   Suspend execution for <secs> seconds. <secs> can be a float. | 
|---|
| 1566 |  | 
|---|
| 1567 | and also: clock, ctime. | 
|---|
| 1568 |  | 
|---|
| 1569 | string | 
|---|
| 1570 |  | 
|---|
| 1571 | As of Python 2.0, much (though not all) of the functionality provided by the | 
|---|
| 1572 | string module have been superseded by built-in string methods - see Operations | 
|---|
| 1573 | on strings for details. | 
|---|
| 1574 |  | 
|---|
| 1575 | Some string variables | 
|---|
| 1576 | Variable                                Meaning | 
|---|
| 1577 | digits                               The string '0123456789' | 
|---|
| 1578 | hexdigits, octdigits                 legal hexadecimal & octal digits | 
|---|
| 1579 | letters, uppercase, lowercase,       Strings containing the appropriate | 
|---|
| 1580 | whitespace                           characters | 
|---|
| 1581 | index_error                          Exception raised by index() if substr not | 
|---|
| 1582 | found. | 
|---|
| 1583 |  | 
|---|
| 1584 | Some string functions | 
|---|
| 1585 | Function                                 Result | 
|---|
| 1586 | expandtabs(s,      returns a copy of string <s> with tabs expanded. | 
|---|
| 1587 | tabSize) | 
|---|
| 1588 | find/rfind(s, sub  Return the lowest/highest index in <s> where the substring | 
|---|
| 1589 | [, start=0[, end=  <sub> is found such that <sub> is wholly contained ins | 
|---|
| 1590 | 0])                [start:end]. Return -1 if <sub> not found. | 
|---|
| 1591 | ljust/rjust/center Return a copy of string <s> left/right justified/centerd in | 
|---|
| 1592 | (s, width)         afield of given width, padded with spaces. <s> is | 
|---|
| 1593 | nevertruncated. | 
|---|
| 1594 | lower/upper(s)     Return a string that is (a copy of) <s> in lowercase/ | 
|---|
| 1595 | uppercase | 
|---|
| 1596 | split(s[, sep=     Return a list containing the words of the string <s>,using | 
|---|
| 1597 | whitespace[,       the string <sep> as a separator. | 
|---|
| 1598 | maxsplit=0]]) | 
|---|
| 1599 | join(words[, sep=' Concatenate a list or tuple of words with | 
|---|
| 1600 | '])                interveningseparators; inverse of split. | 
|---|
| 1601 | replace(s, old,    Returns a copy of string <s> with all occurrences of | 
|---|
| 1602 | new[, maxsplit=0]  substring<old> replaced by <new>. Limits to <maxsplit> | 
|---|
| 1603 | firstsubstitutions if specified. | 
|---|
| 1604 | strip(s)           Return a string that is (a copy of) <s> without leadingand | 
|---|
| 1605 | trailing whitespace. see also lstrip, rstrip. | 
|---|
| 1606 |  | 
|---|
| 1607 |  | 
|---|
| 1608 |  | 
|---|
| 1609 | re (sre) | 
|---|
| 1610 |  | 
|---|
| 1611 | Handles Unicode strings. Implemented in new module sre, re now a mere front-end | 
|---|
| 1612 | for compatibility. | 
|---|
| 1613 | Patterns are specified as strings. Tip: Use raw strings (e.g. r'\w*') to | 
|---|
| 1614 | litteralize backslashes. | 
|---|
| 1615 |  | 
|---|
| 1616 |  | 
|---|
| 1617 | Regular expression syntax | 
|---|
| 1618 | Form                                Description | 
|---|
| 1619 | .          matches any character (including newline if DOTALL flag specified) | 
|---|
| 1620 | ^          matches start of the string (of every line in MULTILINE mode) | 
|---|
| 1621 | $          matches end of the string (of every line in MULTILINE mode) | 
|---|
| 1622 | *          0 or more of preceding regular expression (as many as possible) | 
|---|
| 1623 | +          1 or more of preceding regular expression (as many as possible) | 
|---|
| 1624 | ?          0 or 1 occurrence of preceding regular expression | 
|---|
| 1625 | *?, +?, ?? Same as *, + and ? but matches as few characters as possible | 
|---|
| 1626 | {m,n}      matches from m to n repetitions of preceding RE | 
|---|
| 1627 | {m,n}?     idem, attempting to match as few repetitions as possible | 
|---|
| 1628 | [ ]        defines character set: e.g. '[a-zA-Z]' to match all letters(see also | 
|---|
| 1629 | \w \S) | 
|---|
| 1630 | [^ ]       defines complemented character set: matches if char is NOT in set | 
|---|
| 1631 | escapes special chars '*?+&$|()' and introduces special sequences | 
|---|
| 1632 | \          (see below). Due to Python string rules, write as '\\' orr'\' in the | 
|---|
| 1633 | pattern string. | 
|---|
| 1634 | \\         matches a litteral '\'; due to Python string rules, write as '\\\\ | 
|---|
| 1635 | 'in pattern string, or better using raw string: r'\\'. | 
|---|
| 1636 | |          specifies alternative: 'foo|bar' matches 'foo' or 'bar' | 
|---|
| 1637 | (...)      matches any RE inside (), and delimits a group. | 
|---|
| 1638 | (?:...)    idem but doesn't delimit a group. | 
|---|
| 1639 | matches if ... matches next, but doesn't consume any of the string | 
|---|
| 1640 | (?=...)    e.g. 'Isaac (?=Asimov)' matches 'Isaac' only if followed by | 
|---|
| 1641 | 'Asimov'. | 
|---|
| 1642 | (?!...)    matches if ... doesn't match next. Negative of (?=...) | 
|---|
| 1643 | (?P<name   matches any RE inside (), and delimits a named group. (e.g. r'(?P | 
|---|
| 1644 | >...)      <id>[a-zA-Z_]\w*)' defines a group named id) | 
|---|
| 1645 | (?P=name)  matches whatever text was matched by the earlier group named name. | 
|---|
| 1646 | (?#...)    A comment; ignored. | 
|---|
| 1647 | (?letter)  letter is one of 'i','L', 'm', 's', 'x'. Set the corresponding flags | 
|---|
| 1648 | (re.I, re.L, re.M, re.S, re.X) for the entire RE. | 
|---|
| 1649 |  | 
|---|
| 1650 | Special sequences | 
|---|
| 1651 | Sequence                              Description | 
|---|
| 1652 | number   matches content of the group of the same number; groups are numbered | 
|---|
| 1653 | starting from 1 | 
|---|
| 1654 | \A       matches only at the start of the string | 
|---|
| 1655 | \b       empty str at beg or end of word: '\bis\b' matches 'is', but not 'his' | 
|---|
| 1656 | \B       empty str NOT at beginning or end of word | 
|---|
| 1657 | \d       any decimal digit (<=> [0-9]) | 
|---|
| 1658 | \D       any non-decimal digit char (<=> [^O-9]) | 
|---|
| 1659 | \s       any whitespace char (<=> [ \t\n\r\f\v]) | 
|---|
| 1660 | \S       any non-whitespace char (<=> [^ \t\n\r\f\v]) | 
|---|
| 1661 | \w       any alphaNumeric char (depends on LOCALE flag) | 
|---|
| 1662 | \W       any non-alphaNumeric char (depends on LOCALE flag) | 
|---|
| 1663 | \Z       matches only at the end of the string | 
|---|
| 1664 |  | 
|---|
| 1665 | Variables | 
|---|
| 1666 | Variable                       Meaning | 
|---|
| 1667 | error    Exception when pattern string isn't a valid regexp. | 
|---|
| 1668 |  | 
|---|
| 1669 | Functions | 
|---|
| 1670 | Function                                 Result | 
|---|
| 1671 | Compile a RE pattern string into a regular expression object. | 
|---|
| 1672 | Flags (combinable by |): | 
|---|
| 1673 |  | 
|---|
| 1674 | I or IGNORECASE or (?i) | 
|---|
| 1675 | case insensitive matching | 
|---|
| 1676 | compile(       L or LOCALE or (?L) | 
|---|
| 1677 | pattern[,          make \w, \W, \b, \B dependent on thecurrent locale | 
|---|
| 1678 | flags=0])      M or MULTILINE or (?m) | 
|---|
| 1679 | matches every new line and not onlystart/end of the whole | 
|---|
| 1680 | string | 
|---|
| 1681 | S or DOTALL or (?s) | 
|---|
| 1682 | '.' matches ALL chars, including newline | 
|---|
| 1683 | X or VERBOSE or (?x) | 
|---|
| 1684 | Ignores whitespace outside character sets | 
|---|
| 1685 | escape(string) return (a copy of) string with all non-alphanumerics | 
|---|
| 1686 | backslashed. | 
|---|
| 1687 | match(pattern, if 0 or more chars at beginning of <string> match the RE pattern | 
|---|
| 1688 | string[, flags string,return a corresponding MatchObject instance, or None if | 
|---|
| 1689 | ])             no match. | 
|---|
| 1690 | search(pattern scan thru <string> for a location matching <pattern>, return | 
|---|
| 1691 | , string[,     acorresponding MatchObject instance, or None if no match. | 
|---|
| 1692 | flags]) | 
|---|
| 1693 | split(pattern, split <string> by occurrences of <pattern>. If capturing () are | 
|---|
| 1694 | string[,       used inpattern, then occurrences of patterns or subpatterns are | 
|---|
| 1695 | maxsplit=0])   also returned. | 
|---|
| 1696 | findall(       return a list of non-overlapping matches in <pattern>, either a | 
|---|
| 1697 | pattern,       list ofgroups or a list of tuples if the pattern has more than 1 | 
|---|
| 1698 | string)        group. | 
|---|
| 1699 | return string obtained by replacing the (<count> first) lefmost | 
|---|
| 1700 | sub(pattern,   non-overlapping occurrences of <pattern> (a string or a RE | 
|---|
| 1701 | repl, string[, object) in <string>by <repl>; <repl> can be a string or a fct | 
|---|
| 1702 | count=0])      called with a single MatchObj arg, which must return the | 
|---|
| 1703 | replacement string. | 
|---|
| 1704 | subn(pattern, | 
|---|
| 1705 | repl, string[, same as sub(), but returns a tuple (newString, numberOfSubsMade) | 
|---|
| 1706 | count=0]) | 
|---|
| 1707 |  | 
|---|
| 1708 | Regular Expression Objects | 
|---|
| 1709 |  | 
|---|
| 1710 |  | 
|---|
| 1711 | (RE objects are returned by the compile fct) | 
|---|
| 1712 |  | 
|---|
| 1713 | re object attributes | 
|---|
| 1714 | Attribute                            Descrition | 
|---|
| 1715 | flags      flags arg used when RE obj was compiled, or 0 if none provided | 
|---|
| 1716 | groupindex dictionary of {group name: group number} in pattern | 
|---|
| 1717 | pattern    pattern string from which RE obj was compiled | 
|---|
| 1718 |  | 
|---|
| 1719 | re object methods | 
|---|
| 1720 | Method                                  Result | 
|---|
| 1721 | If zero or more characters at the beginning of string match this | 
|---|
| 1722 | regular expression, return a corresponding MatchObject instance. | 
|---|
| 1723 | Return None if the string does not match the pattern; note that | 
|---|
| 1724 | this is different from a zero-length match. | 
|---|
| 1725 | The optional second parameter pos gives an index in the string | 
|---|
| 1726 | match(      where the search is to start; it defaults to 0. This is not | 
|---|
| 1727 | string[,    completely equivalent to slicing the string; the '' pattern | 
|---|
| 1728 | pos][,      character matches at the real beginning of the string and at | 
|---|
| 1729 | endpos])    positions just after a newline, but not necessarily at the index | 
|---|
| 1730 | where the search is to start. | 
|---|
| 1731 | The optional parameter endpos limits how far the string will be | 
|---|
| 1732 | searched; it will be as if the string is endpos characters long, so | 
|---|
| 1733 | only the characters from pos to endpos will be searched for a | 
|---|
| 1734 | match. | 
|---|
| 1735 | Scan through string looking for a location where this regular | 
|---|
| 1736 | search(     expression produces a match, and return a corresponding MatchObject | 
|---|
| 1737 | string[,    instance. Return None if no position in the string matches the | 
|---|
| 1738 | pos][,      pattern; note that this is different from finding a zero-length | 
|---|
| 1739 | endpos])    match at some point in the string. | 
|---|
| 1740 | The optional pos and endpos parameters have the same meaning as for | 
|---|
| 1741 | the match() method. | 
|---|
| 1742 | split( | 
|---|
| 1743 | string[,    Identical to the split() function, using the compiled pattern. | 
|---|
| 1744 | maxsplit= | 
|---|
| 1745 | 0]) | 
|---|
| 1746 | findall(    Identical to the findall() function, using the compiled pattern. | 
|---|
| 1747 | string) | 
|---|
| 1748 | sub(repl, | 
|---|
| 1749 | string[,    Identical to the sub() function, using the compiled pattern. | 
|---|
| 1750 | count=0]) | 
|---|
| 1751 | subn(repl, | 
|---|
| 1752 | string[,    Identical to the subn() function, using the compiled pattern. | 
|---|
| 1753 | count=0]) | 
|---|
| 1754 |  | 
|---|
| 1755 | Match Objects | 
|---|
| 1756 |  | 
|---|
| 1757 |  | 
|---|
| 1758 | (Match objects are returned by the match & search functions) | 
|---|
| 1759 |  | 
|---|
| 1760 | Match object attributes | 
|---|
| 1761 | Attribute                              Description | 
|---|
| 1762 | pos       value of pos passed to search or match functions; index intostring at | 
|---|
| 1763 | which RE engine started search. | 
|---|
| 1764 | endpos    value of endpos passed to search or match functions; index intostring | 
|---|
| 1765 | beyond which RE engine won't go. | 
|---|
| 1766 | re        RE object whose match or search fct produced this MatchObj instance | 
|---|
| 1767 | string    string passed to match() or search() | 
|---|
| 1768 |  | 
|---|
| 1769 | Match object functions | 
|---|
| 1770 | Function                                 Result | 
|---|
| 1771 | returns one or more groups of the match. If one arg, result is a | 
|---|
| 1772 | group([g1 string;if multiple args, result is a tuple with one item per arg. If | 
|---|
| 1773 | , g2,     gi is 0,return value is entire matching string; if 1 <= gi <= 99, | 
|---|
| 1774 | ...])     returnstring matching group #gi (or None if no such group); gi may | 
|---|
| 1775 | also bea group name. | 
|---|
| 1776 | returns a tuple of all groups of the match; groups not | 
|---|
| 1777 | groups()  participatingto the match have a value of None. Returns a string | 
|---|
| 1778 | instead of tupleif len(tuple)=1 | 
|---|
| 1779 | start( | 
|---|
| 1780 | group),   returns indices of start & end of substring matched by group (or | 
|---|
| 1781 | end(group Noneif group exists but doesn't contribute to the match) | 
|---|
| 1782 | ) | 
|---|
| 1783 | span(     returns the 2-tuple (start(group), end(group)); can be (None, None)if | 
|---|
| 1784 | group)    group didn't contibute to the match. | 
|---|
| 1785 |  | 
|---|
| 1786 |  | 
|---|
| 1787 |  | 
|---|
| 1788 | math | 
|---|
| 1789 |  | 
|---|
| 1790 | Variables: | 
|---|
| 1791 | pi | 
|---|
| 1792 | e | 
|---|
| 1793 | Functions (see ordinary C man pages for info): | 
|---|
| 1794 | acos(x) | 
|---|
| 1795 | asin(x) | 
|---|
| 1796 | atan(x) | 
|---|
| 1797 | atan2(x, y) | 
|---|
| 1798 | ceil(x) | 
|---|
| 1799 | cos(x) | 
|---|
| 1800 | cosh(x) | 
|---|
| 1801 | degrees(x) | 
|---|
| 1802 | exp(x) | 
|---|
| 1803 | fabs(x) | 
|---|
| 1804 | floor(x) | 
|---|
| 1805 | fmod(x, y) | 
|---|
| 1806 | frexp(x)        -- Unlike C: (float, int) = frexp(float) | 
|---|
| 1807 | ldexp(x, y) | 
|---|
| 1808 | log(x [,base]) | 
|---|
| 1809 | log10(x) | 
|---|
| 1810 | modf(x)         -- Unlike C: (float, float) = modf(float) | 
|---|
| 1811 | pow(x, y) | 
|---|
| 1812 | radians(x) | 
|---|
| 1813 | sin(x) | 
|---|
| 1814 | sinh(x) | 
|---|
| 1815 | sqrt(x) | 
|---|
| 1816 | tan(x) | 
|---|
| 1817 | tanh(x) | 
|---|
| 1818 |  | 
|---|
| 1819 | getopt | 
|---|
| 1820 |  | 
|---|
| 1821 | Functions: | 
|---|
| 1822 | getopt(list, optstr)    -- Similar to C. <optstr> is option | 
|---|
| 1823 | letters to look for. Put ':' after letter | 
|---|
| 1824 | if option takes arg. E.g. | 
|---|
| 1825 | # invocation was "python test.py -c hi -a arg1 arg2" | 
|---|
| 1826 | opts, args =  getopt.getopt(sys.argv[1:], 'ab:c:') | 
|---|
| 1827 | # opts would be | 
|---|
| 1828 | [('-c', 'hi'), ('-a', '')] | 
|---|
| 1829 | # args would be | 
|---|
| 1830 | ['arg1', 'arg2'] | 
|---|
| 1831 |  | 
|---|
| 1832 |  | 
|---|
| 1833 | List of modules and packages in base distribution | 
|---|
| 1834 |  | 
|---|
| 1835 | (built-ins and content of python Lib directory) | 
|---|
| 1836 | (Python NT distribution, may be slightly different in other distributions) | 
|---|
| 1837 |  | 
|---|
| 1838 | Standard library modules | 
|---|
| 1839 | Operation                                 Result | 
|---|
| 1840 | aifc             Stuff to parse AIFF-C and AIFF files. | 
|---|
| 1841 | anydbm           Generic interface to all dbm clones. (dbhash, gdbm, | 
|---|
| 1842 | dbm,dumbdbm) | 
|---|
| 1843 | asynchat         Support for 'chat' style protocols | 
|---|
| 1844 | asyncore         Asynchronous File I/O (in select style) | 
|---|
| 1845 | atexit           Register functions to be called at exit of Python interpreter. | 
|---|
| 1846 | audiodev         Audio support for a few platforms. | 
|---|
| 1847 | base64           Conversions to/from base64 RFC-MIME transport encoding . | 
|---|
| 1848 | BaseHTTPServer   Base class forhttp services. | 
|---|
| 1849 | Bastion          "Bastionification" utility (control access to instance vars) | 
|---|
| 1850 | bdb              A generic Python debugger base class. | 
|---|
| 1851 | binhex           Macintosh binhex compression/decompression. | 
|---|
| 1852 | bisect           List bisection algorithms. | 
|---|
| 1853 | bz2              Support for bz2 compression/decompression. | 
|---|
| 1854 | calendar         Calendar printing functions. | 
|---|
| 1855 | cgi              Wraps the WWW Forms Common Gateway Interface (CGI). | 
|---|
| 1856 | cgitb            Utility for handling CGI tracebacks. | 
|---|
| 1857 | CGIHTTPServer    CGI http services. | 
|---|
| 1858 | cmd              A generic class to build line-oriented command interpreters. | 
|---|
| 1859 | datetime         Basic date and time types. | 
|---|
| 1860 | code             Utilities needed to emulate Python's interactive interpreter | 
|---|
| 1861 | codecs           Lookup existing Unicode encodings and register new ones. | 
|---|
| 1862 | colorsys         Conversion functions between RGB and other color systems. | 
|---|
| 1863 | commands         Tools for executing UNIX commands . | 
|---|
| 1864 | compileall       Force "compilation" of all .py files in a directory. | 
|---|
| 1865 | ConfigParser     Configuration file parser (much like windows .ini files) | 
|---|
| 1866 | copy             Generic shallow and deep copying operations. | 
|---|
| 1867 | copy_reg         Helper to provide extensibility for pickle/cPickle. | 
|---|
| 1868 | csv              Read and write files with comma separated values. | 
|---|
| 1869 | dbhash           (g)dbm-compatible interface to bsdhash.hashopen. | 
|---|
| 1870 | dircache         Sorted list of files in a dir, using a cache. | 
|---|
| 1871 | [DEL:dircmp:DEL] [DEL:Defines a class to build directory diff tools on.:DEL] | 
|---|
| 1872 | difflib          Tool for creating delta between sequences. | 
|---|
| 1873 | dis              Bytecode disassembler. | 
|---|
| 1874 | distutils        Package installation system. | 
|---|
| 1875 | doctest          Tool for running and verifying tests inside doc strings. | 
|---|
| 1876 | dospath          Common operations on DOS pathnames. | 
|---|
| 1877 | dumbdbm          A dumb and slow but simple dbm clone. | 
|---|
| 1878 | [DEL:dump:DEL]   [DEL:Print python code that reconstructs a variable.:DEL] | 
|---|
| 1879 | email            Comprehensive support for internet email. | 
|---|
| 1880 | exceptions       Class based built-in exception hierarchy. | 
|---|
| 1881 | filecmp          File comparison. | 
|---|
| 1882 | fileinput        Helper class to quickly write a loop over all standard input | 
|---|
| 1883 | files. | 
|---|
| 1884 | [DEL:find:DEL]   [DEL:Find files directory hierarchy matching a pattern.:DEL] | 
|---|
| 1885 | fnmatch          Filename matching with shell patterns. | 
|---|
| 1886 | formatter        A test formatter. | 
|---|
| 1887 | fpformat         General floating point formatting functions. | 
|---|
| 1888 | ftplib           An FTP client class. Based on RFC 959. | 
|---|
| 1889 | gc               Perform garbacge collection, obtain GC debug stats, and tune | 
|---|
| 1890 | GC parameters. | 
|---|
| 1891 | getopt           Standard command line processing. See also ftp:// | 
|---|
| 1892 | www.pauahtun.org/pub/getargspy.zip | 
|---|
| 1893 | getpass          Utilities to get a password and/or the current user name. | 
|---|
| 1894 | glob             filename globbing. | 
|---|
| 1895 | gopherlib        Gopher protocol client interface. | 
|---|
| 1896 | [DEL:grep:DEL]   [DEL:'grep' utilities.:DEL] | 
|---|
| 1897 | gzip             Read & write gzipped files. | 
|---|
| 1898 | heapq            Priority queue implemented using lists organized as heaps. | 
|---|
| 1899 | HMAC             Keyed-Hashing for Message Authentication -- RFC 2104. | 
|---|
| 1900 | htmlentitydefs   Proposed entity definitions for HTML. | 
|---|
| 1901 | htmllib          HTML parsing utilities. | 
|---|
| 1902 | HTMLParser       A parser for HTML and XHTML. | 
|---|
| 1903 | httplib          HTTP client class. | 
|---|
| 1904 | ihooks           Hooks into the "import" mechanism. | 
|---|
| 1905 | imaplib          IMAP4 client.Based on RFC 2060. | 
|---|
| 1906 | imghdr           Recognizing image files based on their first few bytes. | 
|---|
| 1907 | imputil          Privides a way of writing customised import hooks. | 
|---|
| 1908 | inspect          Tool for probing live Python objects. | 
|---|
| 1909 | keyword          List of Python keywords. | 
|---|
| 1910 | knee             A Python re-implementation of hierarchical module import. | 
|---|
| 1911 | linecache        Cache lines from files. | 
|---|
| 1912 | linuxaudiodev    Lunix /dev/audio support. | 
|---|
| 1913 | locale           Support for number formatting using the current locale | 
|---|
| 1914 | settings. | 
|---|
| 1915 | logging          Python logging facility. | 
|---|
| 1916 | macpath          Pathname (or related) operations for the Macintosh. | 
|---|
| 1917 | macurl2path      Mac specific module for conversion between pathnames and URLs. | 
|---|
| 1918 | mailbox          A class to handle a unix-style or mmdf-style mailbox. | 
|---|
| 1919 | mailcap          Mailcap file handling (RFC 1524). | 
|---|
| 1920 | mhlib            MH (mailbox) interface. | 
|---|
| 1921 | mimetools        Various tools used by MIME-reading or MIME-writing programs. | 
|---|
| 1922 | mimetypes        Guess the MIME type of a file. | 
|---|
| 1923 | MimeWriter       Generic MIME writer. | 
|---|
| 1924 | mimify           Mimification and unmimification of mail messages. | 
|---|
| 1925 | mmap             Interface to memory-mapped files - they behave like mutable | 
|---|
| 1926 | strings./font> | 
|---|
| 1927 | multifile        Class to make multi-file messages easier to handle. | 
|---|
| 1928 | mutex            Mutual exclusion -- for use with module sched. | 
|---|
| 1929 | netrc | 
|---|
| 1930 | nntplib          An NNTP client class. Based on RFC 977. | 
|---|
| 1931 | ntpath           Common operations on DOS pathnames. | 
|---|
| 1932 | nturl2path       Mac specific module for conversion between pathnames and URLs. | 
|---|
| 1933 | optparse         A comprehensive tool for processing command line options. | 
|---|
| 1934 | os               Either mac, dos or posix depending system. | 
|---|
| 1935 | [DEL:packmail:   [DEL:Create a self-unpacking shell archive.:DEL] | 
|---|
| 1936 | DEL] | 
|---|
| 1937 | pdb              A Python debugger. | 
|---|
| 1938 | pickle           Pickling (save and restore) of Python objects (a faster | 
|---|
| 1939 | Cimplementation exists in built-in module: cPickle). | 
|---|
| 1940 | pipes            Conversion pipeline templates. | 
|---|
| 1941 | pkgunil          Utilities for working with Python packages. | 
|---|
| 1942 | popen2           variations on pipe open. | 
|---|
| 1943 | poplib           A POP3 client class. Based on the J. Myers POP3 draft. | 
|---|
| 1944 | posixfile        Extended (posix) file operations. | 
|---|
| 1945 | posixpath        Common operations on POSIX pathnames. | 
|---|
| 1946 | pprint           Support to pretty-print lists, tuples, & dictionaries | 
|---|
| 1947 | recursively. | 
|---|
| 1948 | profile          Class for profiling python code. | 
|---|
| 1949 | pstats           Class for printing reports on profiled python code. | 
|---|
| 1950 | pydoc            Utility for generating documentation from source files. | 
|---|
| 1951 | pty              Pseudo terminal utilities. | 
|---|
| 1952 | pyexpat          Interface to the Expay XML parser. | 
|---|
| 1953 | py_compile       Routine to "compile" a .py file to a .pyc file. | 
|---|
| 1954 | pyclbr           Parse a Python file and retrieve classes and methods. | 
|---|
| 1955 | Queue            A multi-producer, multi-consumer queue. | 
|---|
| 1956 | quopri           Conversions to/from quoted-printable transport encoding. | 
|---|
| 1957 | rand             Don't use unless you want compatibility with C's rand(). | 
|---|
| 1958 | random           Random variable generators | 
|---|
| 1959 | re               Regular Expressions. | 
|---|
| 1960 | repr             Redo repr() but with limits on most sizes. | 
|---|
| 1961 | rexec            Restricted execution facilities ("safe" exec, eval, etc). | 
|---|
| 1962 | rfc822           RFC-822 message manipulation class. | 
|---|
| 1963 | rlcompleter      Word completion for GNU readline 2.0. | 
|---|
| 1964 | robotparser      Parse robots.txt files, useful for web spiders. | 
|---|
| 1965 | sched            A generally useful event scheduler class. | 
|---|
| 1966 | sets             Module for a set datatype. | 
|---|
| 1967 | sgmllib          A parser for SGML. | 
|---|
| 1968 | shelve           Manage shelves of pickled objects. | 
|---|
| 1969 | shlex            Lexical analyzer class for simple shell-like syntaxes. | 
|---|
| 1970 | shutil           Utility functions usable in a shell-like program. | 
|---|
| 1971 | SimpleHTTPServer Simple extension to base http class | 
|---|
| 1972 | site             Append module search paths for third-party packages to | 
|---|
| 1973 | sys.path. | 
|---|
| 1974 | smtplib          SMTP Client class (RFC 821) | 
|---|
| 1975 | sndhdr           Several routines that help recognizing sound. | 
|---|
| 1976 | SocketServer     Generic socket server classes. | 
|---|
| 1977 | stat             Constants and functions for interpreting stat/lstat struct. | 
|---|
| 1978 | statcache        Maintain a cache of file stats. | 
|---|
| 1979 | statvfs          Constants for interpreting statvfs struct as returned by | 
|---|
| 1980 | os.statvfs()and os.fstatvfs() (if they exist). | 
|---|
| 1981 | string           A collection of string operations. | 
|---|
| 1982 | StringIO         File-like objects that read/write a string buffer (a fasterC | 
|---|
| 1983 | implementation exists in built-in module: cStringIO). | 
|---|
| 1984 | sunau            Stuff to parse Sun and NeXT audio files. | 
|---|
| 1985 | sunaudio         Interpret sun audio headers. | 
|---|
| 1986 | symbol           Non-terminal symbols of Python grammar (from "graminit.h"). | 
|---|
| 1987 | tabnanny,/font>  Check Python source for ambiguous indentation. | 
|---|
| 1988 | tarfile          Facility for reading and writing to the *nix tarfile format. | 
|---|
| 1989 | telnetlib        TELNET client class. Based on RFC 854. | 
|---|
| 1990 | tempfile         Temporary file name allocation. | 
|---|
| 1991 | textwrap         Object for wrapping and filling text. | 
|---|
| 1992 | threading        Proposed new higher-level threading interfaces | 
|---|
| 1993 | threading_api    (doc of the threading module) | 
|---|
| 1994 | toaiff           Convert "arbitrary" sound files to AIFF files . | 
|---|
| 1995 | token            Tokens (from "token.h"). | 
|---|
| 1996 | tokenize         Compiles a regular expression that recognizes Python tokens. | 
|---|
| 1997 | traceback        Format and print Python stack traces. | 
|---|
| 1998 | tty              Terminal utilities. | 
|---|
| 1999 | turtle           LogoMation-like turtle graphics | 
|---|
| 2000 | types            Define names for all type symbols in the std interpreter. | 
|---|
| 2001 | tzparse          Parse a timezone specification. | 
|---|
| 2002 | unicodedata      Interface to unicode properties. | 
|---|
| 2003 | urllib           Open an arbitrary URL. | 
|---|
| 2004 | urlparse         Parse URLs according to latest draft of standard. | 
|---|
| 2005 | user             Hook to allow user-specified customization code to run. | 
|---|
| 2006 | UserDict         A wrapper to allow subclassing of built-in dict class. | 
|---|
| 2007 | UserList         A wrapper to allow subclassing of built-in list class. | 
|---|
| 2008 | UserString       A wrapper to allow subclassing of built-in string class. | 
|---|
| 2009 | [DEL:util:DEL]   [DEL:some useful functions that don't fit elsewhere !!:DEL] | 
|---|
| 2010 | uu               UUencode/UUdecode. | 
|---|
| 2011 | unittest         Utilities for implementing unit testing. | 
|---|
| 2012 | wave             Stuff to parse WAVE files. | 
|---|
| 2013 | weakref          Tools for creating and managing weakly referenced objects. | 
|---|
| 2014 | webbrowser       Platform independent URL launcher. | 
|---|
| 2015 | [DEL:whatsound:  [DEL:Several routines that help recognizing sound files.:DEL] | 
|---|
| 2016 | DEL] | 
|---|
| 2017 | whichdb          Guess which db package to use to open a db file. | 
|---|
| 2018 | xdrlib           Implements (a subset of) Sun XDR (eXternal Data | 
|---|
| 2019 | Representation) | 
|---|
| 2020 | xmllib           A parser for XML, using the derived class as static DTD. | 
|---|
| 2021 | xml.dom          Classes for processing XML using the Document Object Model. | 
|---|
| 2022 | xml.sax          Classes for processing XML using the SAX API. | 
|---|
| 2023 | xmlrpclib        Support for remote procedure calls using XML. | 
|---|
| 2024 | zipfile          Read & write PK zipped files. | 
|---|
| 2025 | [DEL:zmod:DEL]   [DEL:Demonstration of abstruse mathematical concepts.:DEL] | 
|---|
| 2026 |  | 
|---|
| 2027 |  | 
|---|
| 2028 |  | 
|---|
| 2029 | * Built-ins * | 
|---|
| 2030 |  | 
|---|
| 2031 | sys                 Interpreter state vars and functions | 
|---|
| 2032 | __built-in__        Access to all built-in python identifiers | 
|---|
| 2033 | __main__            Scope of the interpreters main program, script or stdin | 
|---|
| 2034 | array               Obj efficiently representing arrays of basic values | 
|---|
| 2035 | math                Math functions of C standard | 
|---|
| 2036 | time                Time-related functions (also the newer datetime module) | 
|---|
| 2037 | marshal             Read and write some python values in binary format | 
|---|
| 2038 | struct              Convert between python values and C structs | 
|---|
| 2039 |  | 
|---|
| 2040 | * Standard * | 
|---|
| 2041 |  | 
|---|
| 2042 | getopt              Parse cmd line args in sys.argv.  A la UNIX 'getopt'. | 
|---|
| 2043 | os                  A more portable interface to OS dependent functionality | 
|---|
| 2044 | re                  Functions useful for working with regular expressions | 
|---|
| 2045 | string              Useful string and characters functions and exceptions | 
|---|
| 2046 | random              Mersenne Twister pseudo-random number generator | 
|---|
| 2047 | thread              Low-level primitives for working with process threads | 
|---|
| 2048 | threading           idem, new recommanded interface. | 
|---|
| 2049 |  | 
|---|
| 2050 | * Unix/Posix * | 
|---|
| 2051 |  | 
|---|
| 2052 | dbm                 Interface to Unix ndbm database library | 
|---|
| 2053 | grp                 Interface to Unix group database | 
|---|
| 2054 | posix               OS functionality standardized by C and POSIX standards | 
|---|
| 2055 | posixpath           POSIX pathname functions | 
|---|
| 2056 | pwd                 Access to the Unix password database | 
|---|
| 2057 | select              Access to Unix select multiplex file synchronization | 
|---|
| 2058 | socket              Access to BSD socket interface | 
|---|
| 2059 |  | 
|---|
| 2060 | * Tk User-interface Toolkit * | 
|---|
| 2061 |  | 
|---|
| 2062 | tkinter             Main interface to Tk | 
|---|
| 2063 |  | 
|---|
| 2064 | * Multimedia * | 
|---|
| 2065 |  | 
|---|
| 2066 | audioop             Useful operations on sound fragments | 
|---|
| 2067 | imageop             Useful operations on images | 
|---|
| 2068 | jpeg                Access to jpeg image compressor and decompressor | 
|---|
| 2069 | rgbimg              Access SGI imglib image files | 
|---|
| 2070 |  | 
|---|
| 2071 | * Cryptographic Extensions * | 
|---|
| 2072 |  | 
|---|
| 2073 | md5         Interface to RSA's MD5 message digest algorithm | 
|---|
| 2074 | sha         Interface to the SHA message digest algorithm | 
|---|
| 2075 | HMAC        Keyed-Hashing for Message Authentication -- RFC 2104. | 
|---|
| 2076 |  | 
|---|
| 2077 | * SGI IRIX * (4 & 5) | 
|---|
| 2078 |  | 
|---|
| 2079 | al          SGI audio facilities | 
|---|
| 2080 | AL          al constants | 
|---|
| 2081 | fl          Interface to FORMS library | 
|---|
| 2082 | FL          fl constants | 
|---|
| 2083 | flp Functions for form designer | 
|---|
| 2084 | fm          Access to font manager library | 
|---|
| 2085 | gl          Access to graphics library | 
|---|
| 2086 | GL          Constants for gl | 
|---|
| 2087 | DEVICE      More constants for gl | 
|---|
| 2088 | imgfile     Imglib image file interface | 
|---|
| 2089 |  | 
|---|
| 2090 | * Suns * | 
|---|
| 2091 |  | 
|---|
| 2092 | sunaudiodev Access to sun audio interface | 
|---|
| 2093 |  | 
|---|
| 2094 |  | 
|---|
| 2095 | Workspace exploration and idiom hints | 
|---|
| 2096 |  | 
|---|
| 2097 | dir(<module>)   list functions, variables in <module> | 
|---|
| 2098 | dir()           get object keys, defaults to local name space | 
|---|
| 2099 | if __name__ == '__main__': main()            invoke main if running as script | 
|---|
| 2100 | map(None, lst1, lst2, ...)                   merge lists | 
|---|
| 2101 | b = a[:]                                     create copy of seq structure | 
|---|
| 2102 | _                       in interactive mode, is last value printed | 
|---|
| 2103 |  | 
|---|
| 2104 |  | 
|---|
| 2105 |  | 
|---|
| 2106 |  | 
|---|
| 2107 |  | 
|---|
| 2108 |  | 
|---|
| 2109 |  | 
|---|
| 2110 | Python Mode for Emacs | 
|---|
| 2111 |  | 
|---|
| 2112 | (Not revised, possibly not up to date) | 
|---|
| 2113 | Type C-c ? when in python-mode for extensive help. | 
|---|
| 2114 | INDENTATION | 
|---|
| 2115 | Primarily for entering new code: | 
|---|
| 2116 | TAB      indent line appropriately | 
|---|
| 2117 | LFD      insert newline, then indent | 
|---|
| 2118 | DEL      reduce indentation, or delete single character | 
|---|
| 2119 | Primarily for reindenting existing code: | 
|---|
| 2120 | C-c :    guess py-indent-offset from file content; change locally | 
|---|
| 2121 | C-u C-c :        ditto, but change globally | 
|---|
| 2122 | C-c TAB  reindent region to match its context | 
|---|
| 2123 | C-c <    shift region left by py-indent-offset | 
|---|
| 2124 | C-c >    shift region right by py-indent-offset | 
|---|
| 2125 | MARKING & MANIPULATING REGIONS OF CODE | 
|---|
| 2126 | C-c C-b         mark block of lines | 
|---|
| 2127 | M-C-h           mark smallest enclosing def | 
|---|
| 2128 | C-u M-C-h       mark smallest enclosing class | 
|---|
| 2129 | C-c #           comment out region of code | 
|---|
| 2130 | C-u C-c #       uncomment region of code | 
|---|
| 2131 | MOVING POINT | 
|---|
| 2132 | C-c C-p         move to statement preceding point | 
|---|
| 2133 | C-c C-n         move to statement following point | 
|---|
| 2134 | C-c C-u         move up to start of current block | 
|---|
| 2135 | M-C-a           move to start of def | 
|---|
| 2136 | C-u M-C-a       move to start of class | 
|---|
| 2137 | M-C-e           move to end of def | 
|---|
| 2138 | C-u M-C-e       move to end of class | 
|---|
| 2139 | EXECUTING PYTHON CODE | 
|---|
| 2140 | C-c C-c sends the entire buffer to the Python interpreter | 
|---|
| 2141 | C-c |   sends the current region | 
|---|
| 2142 | C-c !   starts a Python interpreter window; this will be used by | 
|---|
| 2143 | subsequent C-c C-c or C-c | commands | 
|---|
| 2144 | C-c C-w runs PyChecker | 
|---|
| 2145 |  | 
|---|
| 2146 | VARIABLES | 
|---|
| 2147 | py-indent-offset        indentation increment | 
|---|
| 2148 | py-block-comment-prefix comment string used by py-comment-region | 
|---|
| 2149 | py-python-command       shell command to invoke Python interpreter | 
|---|
| 2150 | py-scroll-process-buffer        t means always scroll Python process buffer | 
|---|
| 2151 | py-temp-directory       directory used for temp files (if needed) | 
|---|
| 2152 | py-beep-if-tab-change   ring the bell if tab-width is changed | 
|---|
| 2153 |  | 
|---|
| 2154 |  | 
|---|
| 2155 | The Python Debugger | 
|---|
| 2156 |  | 
|---|
| 2157 | (Not revised, possibly not up to date, see 1.5.2 Library Ref section 9.1; in 1.5.2, you may also use debugger integrated in IDLE) | 
|---|
| 2158 |  | 
|---|
| 2159 | Accessing | 
|---|
| 2160 |  | 
|---|
| 2161 | import pdb      (it's a module written in Python) | 
|---|
| 2162 | -- defines functions : | 
|---|
| 2163 | run(statement[,globals[, locals]]) | 
|---|
| 2164 | -- execute statement string under debugger control, with optional | 
|---|
| 2165 | global & local environment. | 
|---|
| 2166 | runeval(expression[,globals[, locals]]) | 
|---|
| 2167 | -- same as run, but evaluate expression and return value. | 
|---|
| 2168 | runcall(function[, argument, ...]) | 
|---|
| 2169 | -- run function object with given arg(s) | 
|---|
| 2170 | pm()         -- run postmortem on last exception (like debugging a core file) | 
|---|
| 2171 | post_mortem(t) | 
|---|
| 2172 | -- run postmortem on traceback object <t> | 
|---|
| 2173 |  | 
|---|
| 2174 | -- defines class Pdb : | 
|---|
| 2175 | use Pdb to create reusable debugger objects. Object | 
|---|
| 2176 | preserves state (i.e. break points) between calls. | 
|---|
| 2177 |  | 
|---|
| 2178 | runs until a breakpoint hit, exception, or end of program | 
|---|
| 2179 | If exception, variable '__exception__' holds (exception,value). | 
|---|
| 2180 |  | 
|---|
| 2181 | Commands | 
|---|
| 2182 |  | 
|---|
| 2183 | h, help | 
|---|
| 2184 | brief reminder of commands | 
|---|
| 2185 | b, break [<arg>] | 
|---|
| 2186 | if <arg> numeric, break at line <arg> in current file | 
|---|
| 2187 | if <arg> is function object, break on entry to fcn <arg> | 
|---|
| 2188 | if no arg, list breakpoints | 
|---|
| 2189 | cl, clear [<arg>] | 
|---|
| 2190 | if <arg> numeric, clear breakpoint at <arg> in current file | 
|---|
| 2191 | if no arg, clear all breakpoints after confirmation | 
|---|
| 2192 | w, where | 
|---|
| 2193 | print current call stack | 
|---|
| 2194 | u, up | 
|---|
| 2195 | move up one stack frame (to top-level caller) | 
|---|
| 2196 | d, down | 
|---|
| 2197 | move down one stack frame | 
|---|
| 2198 | s, step | 
|---|
| 2199 | advance one line in the program, stepping into calls | 
|---|
| 2200 | n, next | 
|---|
| 2201 | advance one line, stepping over calls | 
|---|
| 2202 | r, return | 
|---|
| 2203 | continue execution until current function returns | 
|---|
| 2204 | (return value is saved in variable "__return__", which | 
|---|
| 2205 | can be printed or manipulated from debugger) | 
|---|
| 2206 | c, continue | 
|---|
| 2207 | continue until next breakpoint | 
|---|
| 2208 | j, jump lineno | 
|---|
| 2209 | Set the next line that will be executed | 
|---|
| 2210 | a, args | 
|---|
| 2211 | print args to current function | 
|---|
| 2212 | rv, retval | 
|---|
| 2213 | prints return value from last function that returned | 
|---|
| 2214 | p, print <arg> | 
|---|
| 2215 | prints value of <arg> in current stack frame | 
|---|
| 2216 | l, list [<first> [, <last>]] | 
|---|
| 2217 | List source code for the current file. | 
|---|
| 2218 | Without arguments, list 11 lines around the current line | 
|---|
| 2219 | or continue the previous listing. | 
|---|
| 2220 | With one argument, list 11 lines starting at that line. | 
|---|
| 2221 | With two arguments, list the given range; | 
|---|
| 2222 | if the second argument is less than the first, it is a count. | 
|---|
| 2223 | whatis <arg> | 
|---|
| 2224 | prints type of <arg> | 
|---|
| 2225 | ! | 
|---|
| 2226 | executes rest of line as a Python statement in the current stack frame | 
|---|
| 2227 | q quit | 
|---|
| 2228 | immediately stop execution and leave debugger | 
|---|
| 2229 | <return> | 
|---|
| 2230 | executes last command again | 
|---|
| 2231 | Any input debugger doesn't recognize as a command is assumed to be a | 
|---|
| 2232 | Python statement to execute in the current stack frame, the same way | 
|---|
| 2233 | the exclamation mark ("!") command does. | 
|---|
| 2234 |  | 
|---|
| 2235 | Example | 
|---|
| 2236 |  | 
|---|
| 2237 | (1394) python | 
|---|
| 2238 | Python 1.0.3 (Sep 26 1994) | 
|---|
| 2239 | Copyright 1991-1994 Stichting Mathematisch Centrum, Amsterdam | 
|---|
| 2240 | >>> import rm | 
|---|
| 2241 | >>> rm.run() | 
|---|
| 2242 | Traceback (innermost last): | 
|---|
| 2243 | File "<stdin>", line 1 | 
|---|
| 2244 | File "./rm.py", line 7 | 
|---|
| 2245 | x = div(3) | 
|---|
| 2246 | File "./rm.py", line 2 | 
|---|
| 2247 | return a / r | 
|---|
| 2248 | ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo | 
|---|
| 2249 | >>> import pdb | 
|---|
| 2250 | >>> pdb.pm() | 
|---|
| 2251 | > ./rm.py(2)div: return a / r | 
|---|
| 2252 | (Pdb) list | 
|---|
| 2253 | 1     def div(a): | 
|---|
| 2254 | 2  ->     return a / r | 
|---|
| 2255 | 3 | 
|---|
| 2256 | 4     def run(): | 
|---|
| 2257 | 5         global r | 
|---|
| 2258 | 6         r = 0 | 
|---|
| 2259 | 7         x = div(3) | 
|---|
| 2260 | 8         print x | 
|---|
| 2261 | [EOF] | 
|---|
| 2262 | (Pdb) print r | 
|---|
| 2263 | 0 | 
|---|
| 2264 | (Pdb) q | 
|---|
| 2265 | >>> pdb.runcall(rm.run) | 
|---|
| 2266 | etc. | 
|---|
| 2267 |  | 
|---|
| 2268 | Quirks | 
|---|
| 2269 |  | 
|---|
| 2270 | Breakpoints are stored as filename, line number tuples. If a module is reloaded | 
|---|
| 2271 | after editing, any remembered breakpoints are likely to be wrong. | 
|---|
| 2272 |  | 
|---|
| 2273 | Always single-steps through top-most stack frame. That is, "c" acts like "n". | 
|---|