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-rw-r--r-- | python3.html.markdown | 16 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 16 deletions
diff --git a/python3.html.markdown b/python3.html.markdown index 2b7c9490..f69ffb14 100644 --- a/python3.html.markdown +++ b/python3.html.markdown @@ -16,8 +16,6 @@ Python was created by Guido van Rossum in the early 90s. It is now one of the mo languages in existence. I fell in love with Python for its syntactic clarity. It's basically executable pseudocode. -Feedback would be highly appreciated! You can reach me at [@louiedinh](http://twitter.com/louiedinh) or louiedinh [at] [google's email service] - Note: This article applies to Python 3 specifically. Check out [here](http://learnxinyminutes.com/docs/python/) if you want to learn the old Python 2.7 ```python @@ -139,20 +137,6 @@ b == a # => True, a's and b's objects are equal # You can find the length of a string len("This is a string") # => 16 -# .format can be used to format strings, like this: -"{} can be {}".format("Strings", "interpolated") # => "Strings can be interpolated" - -# You can repeat the formatting arguments to save some typing. -"{0} be nimble, {0} be quick, {0} jump over the {1}".format("Jack", "candle stick") -# => "Jack be nimble, Jack be quick, Jack jump over the candle stick" - -# You can use keywords if you don't want to count. -"{name} wants to eat {food}".format(name="Bob", food="lasagna") # => "Bob wants to eat lasagna" - -# If your Python 3 code also needs to run on Python 2.5 and below, you can also -# still use the old style of formatting: -"%s can be %s the %s way" % ("Strings", "interpolated", "old") # => "Strings can be interpolated the old way" - # You can also format using f-strings or formatted string literals (in Python 3.6+) name = "Reiko" f"She said her name is {name}." # => "She said her name is Reiko" |