Python Basics:StatementsExpressionsLoopsStringsFunctions
Program• A program is a sequence of instructions or
statements.• To run a program is to:
– create the sequence of instructions according to your design and the language rules
– turn that program into the binary commands the processor understands
– give the binary code to the OS, so it can give it to the processor
– OS tells the processor to run the program– when finished (or it dies :-), OS cleans up.
Example Code Listing# 1. prompt user for the radius, # 2. apply the area formula# 3. print the results
import mathradiusString = input("Enter the radius of your circle:")radiusFloat = float(radiusString)circumference = 2 * math.pi * radiusFloatarea = math.pi * radiusFloat * radiusFloatprint()print("The cirumference of your circle is:",circumference,\
", and the area is:",area)
Getting InputThe function: input(“Give me a value”)• prints “Give me a value” on the screen and
waits until the user types something (anything), ending with [Enter] key
• Warning! Input() returns a string (sequence of characters), no matter what is given. (‘1’ is not the same as 1, different types)
Convert from string to integer• Python requires that you must convert a sequence
of characters to an integer• Once converted, we can do math on the integers
Import of Math
• One thing we did was to import the math module with import math
• This brought in python statements to support math (try it in the python window)
• We precede all operations of math with math.xxx
• math.pi, for example, is pi. math.pow(x,y) raises x to the yth power.
Assignment StatementThe = sign is the assignment symbol• The value on the right is associated with the
variable name on the left• A variable is a named location that can store
values (information). A variable is somewhat like a file, but is in memory not on the HD.
• = Does not stand for equality here!• What “assignment” means is:
– evaluate all the “stuff” on the rhs (right-hand-side) of the = and take the resulting value and associate it with the name on the lhs (left-h-s)
Printing OutputmyVar = 12print(‘My var has a value of:’,myVar)• print() function takes a list of elements to
print, separated by commas– if the element is a string, prints it as is– if the element is a variable, prints the value
associated with the variable– after printing, moves on to a new line of output
Syntax• Lexical components.• A Python program is (like a hierarchy):.
– A module (perhaps more than one)– A module is just a file of python commands– Each module has python statements– Statements may have expressions– Statements are commands in Python.– They perform some action, often called a side
effect, but do not return any values– Expressions perform some operation and return
a value
Side Effects and Returns
• Make sure you understand the difference. What is the difference between a side effect and a return?
• 1 + 2 returns a value (it’s an expression). You can “catch” the return value. However, nothing else changed as a result
• print “hello” doesn’t return anything, but something else - the side effect - did happen. Something printed!
Whitespace• white space are characters that don’t print
(blanks, tabs, carriage returns etc.• For the most part, you can place “white
space” (spaces) anywhere in your program• use it to make a program more readable• However, python is sensitive to end of line
stuff. To make a line continue, use the \print “this is a test”, \“ of continuation”printsthis is a test of continuation
Python Tokens
Keywords:You are prevented from using them in a variable name
and del from not while
as elif global or with
assert else if pass yield
break except import print
class exec in raise
continue finally is return
def for lambda try
Reserved operators in Python (expressions):+ - * ** / // %
<< >> & | ^ ~
< > <= >= == != <>
Python Punctuators
• Python punctuation/delimiters ($ and ? not allowed).
‘ “ # \
( ) [ ] { } @
, : . ` = ;
+= -= *= /= //= %=
&= |= ^= >>= <<= **=
Operators• Integer
– addition and subtraction: +, -– multiplication: *– division
• quotient: //• remainder: %
• Floating point– add, subtract, multiply, divide: +, -, *, /
Loops: Repeating Statements
from turtle import *forward(100)left(90)forward(100)left(90)forward(100)left(90)forward(100)
Draw Square:Repeat the following steps 4 times:
• Draw a line• Turn left
from turtle import *for count in range(4):
forward(100)left(90)
While and For Statements
• The for statement is useful for iteration, moving through all the elements of data structure, one at a time.
• The while statement is the more general repetition construct. It repeats a set of statements while some condition is True.
from turtle import *for count in range(4):
forward(100)left(90)
from turtle import *count=1while count<=4:
forward(100)left(90)count=count+1
Range Function• The range function generates a sequence
of integers• range(5) => [0, 1, 2, 3, 4]
– assumed to start at 0– goes up to, but does not include, the provided
number argument.• range(3,10) => [3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9]
– first argument is the number to begin with– second argument is the end limit (not included!)
Iterating Through the Sequence
for num in range(1,5): print(num)
• range generates the sequence [1, 2, 3, 4]• for loop assigns num each of the values in
the sequence, one at a time in sequence• prints each number (one number per line)• list(range(-5,5)) # in shell to show range
Sequence of Characters
• We’ve talked about strings being a sequence of characters.
• A string is indicated between ‘ ‘ or “ “• The exact sequence of characters is
maintained, including spaces.• Does NOT include multiple lines• Use backslash \ for line continuation
And Then There is “““ ”””• Triple quotes preserve both vertical
and horizontal formatting of the string• Allow you to type tables, paragraphs,
whatever and preserve the formatting (like <pre> tag in html)
“““this isa testof multiple lines”””
StringsCan use single or double quotes:• S = “spam”• s = ‘spam’Just don’t mix them!• myStr = ‘hi mom” ERRORInserting an apostrophe:• A = “knight’s” # mix up the quotes• B = ‘knight\’s’ # escape single
quote
The Index• Because the elements of a string are a
sequence, we can associate each element with an index, a location in the sequence:– positive values count up from the left,
beginning with index 0
Accessing an Element• A particular element of the string is accessed by
the index of the element surrounded by square brackets [ ]
helloStr = ‘Hello World’print helloStr[1] => prints ‘e’print helloStr[-1] => prints ‘d’print helloStr[11] => ERROR
Basic String Operations
• + is concatenationnewStr = ‘spam’ + ‘-’ + ‘spam-’print newStr spam-spam-
• * is repeat, the number is how many times
newStr * 3 spam-spam-spam-spam-spam-
spam-
String Function: len• The len function takes as an
argument a string and returns an integer, the length of a string.
myStr = ‘Hello World’len(myStr) 11 # space counts
Example• A method represents a special program
(function) that is applied in the context of a particular object.
• upper is the name of a string method. It generates a new string of all upper case characters of the string it was called with.
myStr = ‘Python Rules!’myStr.upper() ‘PYTHON RULES!’
• The string myStr called the upper() method, indicated by the dot between them.
FunctionsFrom mathematics we know that functions
perform some operation and return one value.Why to use them?• Support divide-and-conquer strategy• Abstraction of an operation• Reuse: once written, use again• Sharing: if tested, others can use• Security: if well tested, then secure for reuse• Simplify code: more readable
Python Invocation• Consider a function which converts temps. in
Celsius to temperatures in Fahrenheit:–Formula: F = C * 1.8 + 32.0
• Math: f(C) = C*1.8 + 32.0• Python
def celsius2Fahrenheit (C):
return C*1.8 + 32.0
Terminology: “C” is an argument to the function
Return Statement
• Functions can have input (also called arguments) and output (optional)
• The return statement indicates the value that is returned by the function.
• The return statement is optional (a function can return nothing). If no return, the function may be called a procedure.
from turtle import *
def draw_square (size): for i in range (4): forward (size) right(90)
draw_square(25)draw_square(125)draw_square(75)draw_square(55)