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authorAdam Brenecki <adam@brenecki.id.au>2013-09-20 19:49:38 +0930
committerAdam Brenecki <adam@brenecki.id.au>2013-09-20 19:49:38 +0930
commitde36671ac194983a0b18d6a93b9f20f58f23be8f (patch)
treeb4cf5ce2d85ea94122fa7f720e79b9cc79a18100
parent6d8ffb19b4858d88fc33599aab279a849991c0d8 (diff)
[python] Change to print function, as per #119
-rw-r--r--python.html.markdown34
1 files changed, 18 insertions, 16 deletions
diff --git a/python.html.markdown b/python.html.markdown
index ff6781da..08e68407 100644
--- a/python.html.markdown
+++ b/python.html.markdown
@@ -112,8 +112,10 @@ None is None #=> True
## 2. Variables and Collections
####################################################
-# Printing is pretty easy
-print "I'm Python. Nice to meet you!"
+# Python has a print function, available in versions 2.7 and 3...
+print("I'm Python. Nice to meet you!")
+# and an older print statement, in all 2.x versions but removed from 3.
+print "I'm also Python!"
# No need to declare variables before assigning to them.
@@ -265,11 +267,11 @@ some_var = 5
# Here is an if statement. Indentation is significant in python!
# prints "some_var is smaller than 10"
if some_var > 10:
- print "some_var is totally bigger than 10."
+ print("some_var is totally bigger than 10.")
elif some_var < 10: # This elif clause is optional.
- print "some_var is smaller than 10."
+ print("some_var is smaller than 10.")
else: # This is optional too.
- print "some_var is indeed 10."
+ print("some_var is indeed 10.")
"""
@@ -281,7 +283,7 @@ prints:
"""
for animal in ["dog", "cat", "mouse"]:
# You can use % to interpolate formatted strings
- print "%s is a mammal" % animal
+ print("%s is a mammal" % animal)
"""
"range(number)" returns a list of numbers
@@ -293,7 +295,7 @@ prints:
3
"""
for i in range(4):
- print i
+ print(i)
"""
While loops go until a condition is no longer met.
@@ -305,7 +307,7 @@ prints:
"""
x = 0
while x < 4:
- print x
+ print(x)
x += 1 # Shorthand for x = x + 1
# Handle exceptions with a try/except block
@@ -324,7 +326,7 @@ except IndexError as e:
# Use "def" to create new functions
def add(x, y):
- print "x is %s and y is %s" % (x, y)
+ print("x is %s and y is %s" % (x, y))
return x + y # Return values with a return statement
# Calling functions with parameters
@@ -351,8 +353,8 @@ keyword_args(big="foot", loch="ness") #=> {"big": "foot", "loch": "ness"}
# You can do both at once, if you like
def all_the_args(*args, **kwargs):
- print args
- print kwargs
+ print(args)
+ print(kwargs)
"""
all_the_args(1, 2, a=3, b=4) prints:
(1, 2)
@@ -420,10 +422,10 @@ class Human(object):
# Instantiate a class
i = Human(name="Ian")
-print i.say("hi") # prints out "Ian: hi"
+print(i.say("hi")) # prints out "Ian: hi"
j = Human("Joel")
-print j.say("hello") #prints out "Joel: hello"
+print(j.say("hello")) #prints out "Joel: hello"
# Call our class method
i.get_species() #=> "H. sapiens"
@@ -443,12 +445,12 @@ Human.grunt() #=> "*grunt*"
# You can import modules
import math
-print math.sqrt(16) #=> 4
+print(math.sqrt(16) )#=> 4
# You can get specific functions from a module
from math import ceil, floor
-print ceil(3.7) #=> 4.0
-print floor(3.7) #=> 3.0
+print(ceil(3.7)) #=> 4.0
+print(floor(3.7)) #=> 3.0
# You can import all functions from a module.
# Warning: this is not recommended