Python
Python
Python is a high-level, interpreted, interactive and object-oriented scripting language. Python is designed to be
highly readable. It uses English keywords frequently where as other languages use punctuation, and it has fewer
syntactical constructions than other languages.
Python is Interpreted − Python is processed at runtime by the interpreter. You do not need to compile
your program before executing it. This is similar to PERL and PHP.
Python is Interactive − You can actually sit at a Python prompt and interact with the interpreter directly
to write your programs.
Python is a Beginner's Language − Python is a great language for the beginner-level programmers and
supports the development of a wide range of applications from simple text processing to WWW
browsers to games.
History of Python
Python was developed by Guido van Rossum in the late eighties and early nineties at the National Research
Institute for Mathematics and Computer Science in the Netherlands.
Python is derived from many other languages, including ABC, Modula-3, C, C++, Algol-68, SmallTalk, and Unix shell
and other scripting languages.
Python is copyrighted. Like Perl, Python source code is now available under the GNU General Public License (GPL).
Python is now maintained by a core development team at the institute, although Guido van Rossum still holds a
vital role in directing its progress.
Python Features
Easy-to-learn − Python has few keywords, simple structure, and a clearly defined syntax. This allows the
student to pick up the language quickly.
Easy-to-read − Python code is more clearly defined and visible to the eyes.
A broad standard library − Python's bulk of the library is very portable and cross-platform compatible on
UNIX, Windows, and Macintosh.
Interactive Mode − Python has support for an interactive mode which allows interactive testing and
debugging of snippets of code.
Portable − Python can run on a wide variety of hardware platforms and has the same interface on all
platforms.
Extendable − You can add low-level modules to the Python interpreter. These modules enable
programmers to add to or customize their tools to be more efficient.
GUI Programming − Python supports GUI applications that can be created and ported to many system
calls, libraries and windows systems, such as Windows MFC, Macintosh, and the X Window system of
Unix.
Scalable − Python provides a better structure and support for large programs than shell scripting.
Apart from the above-mentioned features, Python has a big list of good features, few are listed below −
It can be used as a scripting language or can be compiled to byte-code for building large applications.
It provides very high-level dynamic data types and supports dynamic type checking.
It can be easily integrated with C, C++, COM, ActiveX, CORBA, and Java.
Python is available on a wide variety of platforms including Linux and Mac OS X. Let's understand how to set up
our Python environment.
Open a terminal window and type "python" to find out if it is already installed and which version is installed.
Win 9x/NT/2000
OS/2
PalmOS
Windows CE
Acorn/RISC OS
BeOS
Amiga
VMS/OpenVMS
QNX
VxWorks
Psion
Python has also been ported to the Java and .NET virtual machines
Getting Python
The most up-to-date and current source code, binaries, documentation, news, etc., is available on the official
website of Python https://www.python.org/
You can download Python documentation from https://www.python.org/doc/. The documentation is available in
HTML, PDF, and PostScript formats.
Installing Python
Python distribution is available for a wide variety of platforms. You need to download only the binary code
applicable for your platform and install Python.
If the binary code for your platform is not available, you need a C compiler to compile the source code manually.
Compiling the source code offers more flexibility in terms of choice of features that you require in your
installation.
Follow the link to download zipped source code available for Unix/Linux.
make
make install
This installs Python at standard location /usr/local/bin and its libraries at /usr/local/lib/pythonXX where XX is the
version of Python.
Windows Installation
Follow the link for the Windows installer python-XYZ.msi file where XYZ is the version you need to install.
To use this installer python-XYZ.msi, the Windows system must support Microsoft Installer 2.0. Save the
installer file to your local machine and then run it to find out if your machine supports MSI.
Run the downloaded file. This brings up the Python install wizard, which is really easy to use. Just accept
the default settings, wait until the install is finished, and you are done.
Macintosh Installation
Recent Macs come with Python installed, but it may be several years out of date.
See http://www.python.org/download/mac/ for instructions on getting the current version along with extra tools
to support development on the Mac. For older Mac OS's before Mac OS X 10.3 (released in 2003), MacPython is
available.
Jack Jansen maintains it and you can have full access to the entire documentation at his website
− http://www.cwi.nl/~jack/macpython.html. You can find complete installation details for Mac OS installation.
Setting up PATH
Programs and other executable files can be in many directories, so operating systems provide a search path that
lists the directories that the OS searches for executables.
The path is stored in an environment variable, which is a named string maintained by the operating system. This
variable contains information available to the command shell and other programs.
The path variable is named as PATH in Unix or Path in Windows (Unix is case sensitive; Windows is not).
In Mac OS, the installer handles the path details. To invoke the Python interpreter from any particular directory,
you must add the Python directory to your path.
To add the Python directory to the path for a particular session in Unix −
In the csh shell − type setenv PATH "$PATH:/usr/local/bin/python" and press Enter.
In the bash shell (Linux) − type export ATH="$PATH:/usr/local/bin/python" and press Enter.
To add the Python directory to the path for a particular session in Windows −
2
PYTHONSTARTUP:It contains the path of an initialization file containing Python source code. It is
executed every time you start the interpreter. It is named as .pythonrc.py in Unix and it contains
commands that load utilities or modify PYTHONPATH.
3
PYTHONCASEOK:It is used in Windows to instruct Python to find the first case-insensitive match
in an import statement. Set this variable to any value to activate it.
4
PYTHONHOME:It is an alternative module search path. It is usually embedded in the
PYTHONSTARTUP or PYTHONPATH directories to make switching module libraries easy.
Running Python
Interactive Interpreter
You can start Python from Unix, DOS, or any other system that provides you a command-line interpreter or shell
window.
$python # Unix/Linux
or
python% # Unix/Linux
or
C:> python # Windows/DOS
1
-d It provides debug output.
2
-O It generates optimized bytecode (resulting in .pyo files).
3
-S Do not run import site to look for Python paths on startup.
4
-v verbose output (detailed trace on import statements).
5
-X disable class-based built-in exceptions (just use strings); obsolete starting with version 1.6.
6
-c cmd run Python script sent in as cmd string
7
File run Python script from given file
A Python script can be executed at command line by invoking the interpreter on your application, as in the
following −
or
or
You can run Python from a Graphical User Interface (GUI) environment as well, if you have a GUI application on
your system that supports Python.
Windows − PythonWin is the first Windows interface for Python and is an IDE with a GUI.
Macintosh − The Macintosh version of Python along with the IDLE IDE is available from the main website,
downloadable as either MacBinary or BinHex'd files.
If you are not able to set up the environment properly, then you can take help from your system admin. Make
sure the Python environment is properly set up and working perfectly fine.
Note − All the examples given in subsequent chapters are executed with Python 2.4.3 version available on CentOS
flavor of Linux.
We already have set up Python Programming environment online, so that you can execute all the available
examples online at the same time when you are learning theory. Feel free to modify any example and execute it
online.
The Python language has many similarities to Perl, C, and Java. However, there are some definite differences
between the languages.
Invoking the interpreter without passing a script file as a parameter brings up the following prompt −
$ python
>>>
Type the following text at the Python prompt and press the Enter −
If you are running new version of Python, then you would need to use print statement with parenthesis as
in print ("Hello, Python!");. However in Python version 2.4.3, this produces the following result −
Hello, Python!
Invoking the interpreter with a script parameter begins execution of the script and continues until the script is
finished. When the script is finished, the interpreter is no longer active.
Let us write a simple Python program in a script. Python files have extension .py. Type the following source code
in a test.py file −
We assume that you have Python interpreter set in PATH variable. Now, try to run this program as follows −
$ python test.py
Hello, Python!
Let us try another way to execute a Python script. Here is the modified test.py file −
#!/usr/bin/python
We assume that you have Python interpreter available in /usr/bin directory. Now, try to run this program as
follows −
$./test.py
This produces the following result −
Hello, Python!
Python Identifiers
A Python identifier is a name used to identify a variable, function, class, module or other object. An identifier
starts with a letter A to Z or a to z or an underscore (_) followed by zero or more letters, underscores and digits (0
to 9).
Python does not allow punctuation characters such as @, $, and % within identifiers. Python is a case sensitive
programming language. Thus, Manpower and manpower are two different identifiers in Python.
Class names start with an uppercase letter. All other identifiers start with a lowercase letter.
Starting an identifier with a single leading underscore indicates that the identifier is private.
Starting an identifier with two leading underscores indicates a strongly private identifier.
If the identifier also ends with two trailing underscores, the identifier is a language-defined special name.
Reserved Words
The following list shows the Python keywords. These are reserved words and you cannot use them as constant or
variable or any other identifier names. All the Python keywords contain lowercase letters only.
assert finally or
def if return
elif in while
else is with
except lambda yield
Python provides no braces to indicate blocks of code for class and function definitions or flow control. Blocks of
code are denoted by line indentation, which is rigidly enforced.
The number of spaces in the indentation is variable, but all statements within the block must be indented the
same amount. For example −
if True:
print "True"
else:
print "False"
if True:
print "Answer"
print "True"
else:
print "Answer"
print "False"
Thus, in Python all the continuous lines indented with same number of spaces would form a block. The following
example has various statement blocks −
Note − Do not try to understand the logic at this point of time. Just make sure you understood various blocks
even if they are without braces.
#!/usr/bin/python
import sys
try:
except IOError:
sys.exit()
if file_text == file_finish:
file.close
break
file.write(file_text)
file.write("\n")
file.close()
if len(file_name) == 0:
sys.exit()
try:
except IOError:
sys.exit()
file_text = file.read()
file.close()
print file_text
Multi-Line Statements
Statements in Python typically end with a new line. Python does, however, allow the use of the line continuation
character (\) to denote that the line should continue. For example −
total = item_one + \
item_two + \
item_three
Statements contained within the [], {}, or () brackets do not need to use the line continuation character. For
example −
Quotation in Python
Python accepts single ('), double (") and triple (''' or """) quotes to denote string literals, as long as the same type
of quote starts and ends the string.
The triple quotes are used to span the string across multiple lines. For example, all the following are legal −
word = 'word'
sentence = "This is a sentence."
paragraph = """This is a paragraph. It is
made up of multiple lines and sentences."""
Comments in Python
A hash sign (#) that is not inside a string literal begins a comment. All characters after the # and up to the end of
the physical line are part of the comment and the Python interpreter ignores them.
#!/usr/bin/python
# First comment
Hello, Python!
You can type a comment on the same line after a statement or expression −
# This is a comment.
# This is a comment, too.
# This is a comment, too.
# I said that already.
A line containing only whitespace, possibly with a comment, is known as a blank line and Python totally ignores it.
In an interactive interpreter session, you must enter an empty physical line to terminate a multiline statement.
The following line of the program displays the prompt, the statement saying “Press the enter key to exit”, and
waits for the user to take action −
#!/usr/bin/python
Here, "\n\n" is used to create two new lines before displaying the actual line. Once the user presses the key, the
program ends. This is a nice trick to keep a console window open until the user is done with an application.
The semicolon ( ; ) allows multiple statements on the single line given that neither statement starts a new code
block. Here is a sample snip using the semicolon −
import sys; x = 'foo'; sys.stdout.write(x + '\n')
A group of individual statements, which make a single code block are called suites in Python. Compound or
complex statements, such as if, while, def, and class require a header line and a suite.
Header lines begin the statement (with the keyword) and terminate with a colon ( : ) and are followed by one or
more lines which make up the suite. For example −
if expression :
suite
elif expression :
suite
else :
suite
Many programs can be run to provide you with some basic information about how they should be run. Python
enables you to do this with -h −
$ python -h
usage: python [option] ... [-c cmd | -m mod | file | -] [arg] ...
[ etc. ]
You can also program your script in such a way that it should accept various options. Command Line Arguments is
an advanced topic and should be studied a bit later once you have gone through rest of the Python concepts.