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Diffstat (limited to 'python3.html.markdown')
| -rw-r--r-- | python3.html.markdown | 333 | 
1 files changed, 203 insertions, 130 deletions
| diff --git a/python3.html.markdown b/python3.html.markdown index cd1a83cc..ea29fdba 100644 --- a/python3.html.markdown +++ b/python3.html.markdown @@ -5,6 +5,7 @@ contributors:      - ["Steven Basart", "http://github.com/xksteven"]      - ["Andre Polykanine", "https://github.com/Oire"]      - ["Zachary Ferguson", "http://github.com/zfergus2"] +    - ["evuez", "http://github.com/evuez"]  filename: learnpython3.py  --- @@ -33,27 +34,27 @@ Note: This article applies to Python 3 specifically. Check out [here](http://lea  3  # => 3  # Math is what you would expect -1 + 1  # => 2 -8 - 1  # => 7 +1 + 1   # => 2 +8 - 1   # => 7  10 * 2  # => 20  # Except division which returns floats, real numbers, by default  35 / 5  # => 7.0  # Result of integer division truncated down both for positive and negative. -5 // 3     # => 1 -5.0 // 3.0 # => 1.0 # works on floats too --5 // 3  # => -2 --5.0 // 3.0 # => -2.0 +5 // 3       # => 1 +5.0 // 3.0   # => 1.0 # works on floats too +-5 // 3      # => -2 +-5.0 // 3.0  # => -2.0  # When you use a float, results are floats -3 * 2.0 # => 6.0 +3 * 2.0  # => 6.0  # Modulo operation -7 % 3 # => 1 +7 % 3  # => 1  # Exponentiation (x**y, x to the yth power) -2**4 # => 16 +2**4  # => 16  # Enforce precedence with parentheses  (1 + 3) * 2  # => 8 @@ -63,20 +64,20 @@ True  False  # negate with not -not True  # => False +not True   # => False  not False  # => True  # Boolean Operators  # Note "and" and "or" are case-sensitive -True and False #=> False -False or True #=> True +True and False  # => False +False or True   # => True  # Note using Bool operators with ints -0 and 2 #=> 0 --5 or 0 #=> -5 -0 == False #=> True -2 == True #=> False -1 == True #=> True +0 and 2     # => 0 +-5 or 0     # => -5 +0 == False  # => True +2 == True   # => False +1 == True   # => True  # Equality is ==  1 == 1  # => True @@ -96,15 +97,15 @@ False or True #=> True  1 < 2 < 3  # => True  2 < 3 < 2  # => False -# (is vs. ==) is checks if two variable refer to the same object, but == checks +# (is vs. ==) is checks if two variables refer to the same object, but == checks  # if the objects pointed to have the same values. -a = [1, 2, 3, 4] # Point a at a new list, [1, 2, 3, 4] -b = a # Point b at what a is pointing to -b is a # => True, a and b refer to the same object -b == a # => True, a's and b's objects are equal -b = [1, 2, 3, 4] # Point a at a new list, [1, 2, 3, 4] -b is a # => False, a and b do not refer to the same object -b == a # => True, a's and b's objects are equal +a = [1, 2, 3, 4]  # Point a at a new list, [1, 2, 3, 4] +b = a             # Point b at what a is pointing to +b is a            # => True, a and b refer to the same object +b == a            # => True, a's and b's objects are equal +b = [1, 2, 3, 4]  # Point b at a new list, [1, 2, 3, 4] +b is a            # => False, a and b do not refer to the same object +b == a            # => True, a's and b's objects are equal  # Strings are created with " or '  "This is a string." @@ -113,24 +114,24 @@ b == a # => True, a's and b's objects are equal  # Strings can be added too! But try not to do this.  "Hello " + "world!"  # => "Hello world!"  # Strings can be added without using '+' -"Hello " "world!"  # => "Hello world!" +"Hello " "world!"    # => "Hello world!"  # A string can be treated like a list of characters  "This is a string"[0]  # => 'T'  # .format can be used to format strings, like this: -"{} can be {}".format("strings", "interpolated") +"{} 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" +# => "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" +"{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") +"%s can be %s the %s way" % ("Strings", "interpolated", "old")  # => "Strings can be interpolated the old way"  # None is an object @@ -139,14 +140,14 @@ None  # => None  # Don't use the equality "==" symbol to compare objects to None  # Use "is" instead. This checks for equality of object identity.  "etc" is None  # => False -None is None  # => True +None is None   # => True  # None, 0, and empty strings/lists/dicts all evaluate to False.  # All other values are True -bool(0)  # => False +bool(0)   # => False  bool("")  # => False -bool([]) #=> False -bool({}) #=> False +bool([])  # => False +bool({})  # => False  #################################################### @@ -154,11 +155,15 @@ bool({}) #=> False  ####################################################  # Python has a print function -print("I'm Python. Nice to meet you!") +print("I'm Python. Nice to meet you!")  # => I'm Python. Nice to meet you!  # By default the print function also prints out a newline at the end.  # Use the optional argument end to change the end character. -print("Hello, World", end="!") # => Hello, World! +print("Hello, World", end="!")  # => Hello, World! + +# Simple way to get input data from console +input_string_var = input("Enter some data: ") # Returns the data as a string +# Note: In earlier versions of Python, input() method was named as raw_input()  # No need to declare variables before assigning to them.  # Convention is to use lower_case_with_underscores @@ -169,6 +174,10 @@ some_var  # => 5  # See Control Flow to learn more about exception handling.  some_unknown_var  # Raises a NameError +# if can be used as an expression +# Equivalent of C's '?:' ternary operator +"yahoo!" if 3 > 2 else 2  # => "yahoo!" +  # Lists store sequences  li = []  # You can start with a prefilled list @@ -185,7 +194,7 @@ li.pop()        # => 3 and li is now [1, 2, 4]  li.append(3)    # li is now [1, 2, 4, 3] again.  # Access a list like you would any array -li[0]  # => 1 +li[0]   # => 1  # Look at the last element  li[-1]  # => 3 @@ -194,61 +203,74 @@ li[4]  # Raises an IndexError  # You can look at ranges with slice syntax.  # (It's a closed/open range for you mathy types.) -li[1:3]  # => [2, 4] +li[1:3]   # => [2, 4]  # Omit the beginning -li[2:]  # => [4, 3] +li[2:]    # => [4, 3]  # Omit the end -li[:3]  # => [1, 2, 4] +li[:3]    # => [1, 2, 4]  # Select every second entry  li[::2]   # =>[1, 4]  # Return a reversed copy of the list -li[::-1]   # => [3, 4, 2, 1] +li[::-1]  # => [3, 4, 2, 1]  # Use any combination of these to make advanced slices  # li[start:end:step]  # Make a one layer deep copy using slices -li2 = li[:] # => li2 = [1, 2, 4, 3] but (li2 is li) will result in false. +li2 = li[:]  # => li2 = [1, 2, 4, 3] but (li2 is li) will result in false.  # Remove arbitrary elements from a list with "del" -del li[2]   # li is now [1, 2, 3] +del li[2]  # li is now [1, 2, 3] + +# Remove first occurrence of a value +li.remove(2)  # li is now [1, 3] +li.remove(2)  # Raises a ValueError as 2 is not in the list + +# Insert an element at a specific index +li.insert(1, 2)  # li is now [1, 2, 3] again + +# Get the index of the first item found matching the argument +li.index(2)  # => 1 +li.index(4)  # Raises a ValueError as 4 is not in the list  # You can add lists  # Note: values for li and for other_li are not modified. -li + other_li   # => [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6] +li + other_li  # => [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]  # Concatenate lists with "extend()" -li.extend(other_li)   # Now li is [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6] +li.extend(other_li)  # Now li is [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]  # Check for existence in a list with "in" -1 in li   # => True +1 in li  # => True  # Examine the length with "len()" -len(li)   # => 6 +len(li)  # => 6  # Tuples are like lists but are immutable.  tup = (1, 2, 3) -tup[0]   # => 1 +tup[0]      # => 1  tup[0] = 3  # Raises a TypeError  # Note that a tuple of length one has to have a comma after the last element but  # tuples of other lengths, even zero, do not. -type((1))  # => <class 'int'> -type((1,)) # => <class 'tuple'> -type(())   # => <class 'tuple'> +type((1))   # => <class 'int'> +type((1,))  # => <class 'tuple'> +type(())    # => <class 'tuple'>  # You can do most of the list operations on tuples too -len(tup)   # => 3 -tup + (4, 5, 6)   # => (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6) -tup[:2]   # => (1, 2) -2 in tup   # => True +len(tup)         # => 3 +tup + (4, 5, 6)  # => (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6) +tup[:2]          # => (1, 2) +2 in tup         # => True  # You can unpack tuples (or lists) into variables -a, b, c = (1, 2, 3)     # a is now 1, b is now 2 and c is now 3 +a, b, c = (1, 2, 3)  # a is now 1, b is now 2 and c is now 3 +# You can also do extended unpacking +a, *b, c = (1, 2, 3, 4)  # a is now 1, b is now [2, 3] and c is now 4  # Tuples are created by default if you leave out the parentheses  d, e, f = 4, 5, 6  # Now look how easy it is to swap two values -e, d = d, e     # d is now 5 and e is now 4 +e, d = d, e  # d is now 5 and e is now 4  # Dictionaries store mappings @@ -259,78 +281,92 @@ filled_dict = {"one": 1, "two": 2, "three": 3}  # Note keys for dictionaries have to be immutable types. This is to ensure that  # the key can be converted to a constant hash value for quick look-ups.  # Immutable types include ints, floats, strings, tuples. -invalid_dict = {[1,2,3]: "123"} # => Raises a TypeError: unhashable type: 'list' -valid_dict = {(1,2,3):[1,2,3]}  # Values can be of any type, however. +invalid_dict = {[1,2,3]: "123"}  # => Raises a TypeError: unhashable type: 'list' +valid_dict = {(1,2,3):[1,2,3]}   # Values can be of any type, however.  # Look up values with [] -filled_dict["one"]   # => 1 +filled_dict["one"]  # => 1  # Get all keys as an iterable with "keys()". We need to wrap the call in list()  # to turn it into a list. We'll talk about those later.  Note - Dictionary key  # ordering is not guaranteed. Your results might not match this exactly. -list(filled_dict.keys())   # => ["three", "two", "one"] +list(filled_dict.keys())  # => ["three", "two", "one"]  # Get all values as an iterable with "values()". Once again we need to wrap it  # in list() to get it out of the iterable. Note - Same as above regarding key  # ordering. -list(filled_dict.values())   # => [3, 2, 1] +list(filled_dict.values())  # => [3, 2, 1]  # Check for existence of keys in a dictionary with "in" -"one" in filled_dict   # => True -1 in filled_dict   # => False +"one" in filled_dict  # => True +1 in filled_dict      # => False  # Looking up a non-existing key is a KeyError -filled_dict["four"]   # KeyError +filled_dict["four"]  # KeyError  # Use "get()" method to avoid the KeyError -filled_dict.get("one")   # => 1 -filled_dict.get("four")   # => None +filled_dict.get("one")      # => 1 +filled_dict.get("four")     # => None  # The get method supports a default argument when the value is missing  filled_dict.get("one", 4)   # => 1 -filled_dict.get("four", 4)   # => 4 +filled_dict.get("four", 4)  # => 4  # "setdefault()" inserts into a dictionary only if the given key isn't present  filled_dict.setdefault("five", 5)  # filled_dict["five"] is set to 5  filled_dict.setdefault("five", 6)  # filled_dict["five"] is still 5  # Adding to a dictionary -filled_dict.update({"four":4}) #=> {"one": 1, "two": 2, "three": 3, "four": 4} -#filled_dict["four"] = 4  #another way to add to dict +filled_dict.update({"four":4})  # => {"one": 1, "two": 2, "three": 3, "four": 4} +#filled_dict["four"] = 4        #another way to add to dict  # Remove keys from a dictionary with del  del filled_dict["one"]  # Removes the key "one" from filled dict +# From Python 3.5 you can also use the additional unpacking options +{'a': 1, **{'b': 2}}  # => {'a': 1, 'b': 2} +{'a': 1, **{'a': 2}}  # => {'a': 2} + +  # Sets store ... well sets  empty_set = set()  # Initialize a set with a bunch of values. Yeah, it looks a bit like a dict. Sorry. -some_set = {1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 4}   # some_set is now {1, 2, 3, 4} +some_set = {1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 4}  # some_set is now {1, 2, 3, 4}  # Similar to keys of a dictionary, elements of a set have to be immutable. -invalid_set = {[1], 1} # => Raises a TypeError: unhashable type: 'list' +invalid_set = {[1], 1}  # => Raises a TypeError: unhashable type: 'list'  valid_set = {(1,), 1}  # Can set new variables to a set  filled_set = some_set  # Add one more item to the set -filled_set.add(5)   # filled_set is now {1, 2, 3, 4, 5} +filled_set.add(5)  # filled_set is now {1, 2, 3, 4, 5}  # Do set intersection with &  other_set = {3, 4, 5, 6} -filled_set & other_set   # => {3, 4, 5} +filled_set & other_set  # => {3, 4, 5}  # Do set union with | -filled_set | other_set   # => {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6} +filled_set | other_set  # => {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6}  # Do set difference with - -{1, 2, 3, 4} - {2, 3, 5}   # => {1, 4} +{1, 2, 3, 4} - {2, 3, 5}  # => {1, 4} + +# Do set symmetric difference with ^ +{1, 2, 3, 4} ^ {2, 3, 5}  # => {1, 4, 5} + +# Check if set on the left is a superset of set on the right +{1, 2} >= {1, 2, 3} # => False + +# Check if set on the left is a subset of set on the right +{1, 2} <= {1, 2, 3} # => True  # Check for existence in a set with in  2 in filled_set   # => True -10 in filled_set   # => False +10 in filled_set  # => False @@ -393,7 +429,6 @@ by step. If step is not indicated, the default value is 1.  prints:      4      6 -    8  """  for i in range(4, 8, 2):      print(i) @@ -416,12 +451,12 @@ try:      # Use "raise" to raise an error      raise IndexError("This is an index error")  except IndexError as e: -    pass    # Pass is just a no-op. Usually you would do recovery here. +    pass                 # Pass is just a no-op. Usually you would do recovery here.  except (TypeError, NameError): -    pass    # Multiple exceptions can be handled together, if required. -else:   # Optional clause to the try/except block. Must follow all except blocks +    pass                 # Multiple exceptions can be handled together, if required. +else:                    # Optional clause to the try/except block. Must follow all except blocks      print("All good!")   # Runs only if the code in try raises no exceptions -finally: #  Execute under all circumstances +finally:                 #  Execute under all circumstances      print("We can clean up resources here")  # Instead of try/finally to cleanup resources you can use a with statement @@ -435,11 +470,11 @@ with open("myfile.txt") as f:  filled_dict = {"one": 1, "two": 2, "three": 3}  our_iterable = filled_dict.keys() -print(our_iterable) #=> range(1,10). This is an object that implements our Iterable interface +print(our_iterable)  # => dict_keys(['one', 'two', 'three']). This is an object that implements our Iterable interface.  # We can loop over it.  for i in our_iterable: -    print(i)    # Prints one, two, three +    print(i)  # Prints one, two, three  # However we cannot address elements by index.  our_iterable[1]  # Raises a TypeError @@ -449,17 +484,17 @@ our_iterator = iter(our_iterable)  # Our iterator is an object that can remember the state as we traverse through it.  # We get the next object with "next()". -next(our_iterator)  #=> "one" +next(our_iterator)  # => "one"  # It maintains state as we iterate. -next(our_iterator)  #=> "two" -next(our_iterator)  #=> "three" +next(our_iterator)  # => "two" +next(our_iterator)  # => "three"  # After the iterator has returned all of its data, it gives you a StopIterator Exception -next(our_iterator) # Raises StopIteration +next(our_iterator)  # Raises StopIteration  # You can grab all the elements of an iterator by calling list() on it. -list(filled_dict.keys())  #=> Returns ["one", "two", "three"] +list(filled_dict.keys())  # => Returns ["one", "two", "three"]  #################################################### @@ -469,20 +504,20 @@ list(filled_dict.keys())  #=> Returns ["one", "two", "three"]  # Use "def" to create new functions  def add(x, y):      print("x is {} and y is {}".format(x, y)) -    return x + y    # Return values with a return statement +    return x + y  # Return values with a return statement  # Calling functions with parameters -add(5, 6)   # => prints out "x is 5 and y is 6" and returns 11 +add(5, 6)  # => prints out "x is 5 and y is 6" and returns 11  # Another way to call functions is with keyword arguments -add(y=6, x=5)   # Keyword arguments can arrive in any order. +add(y=6, x=5)  # Keyword arguments can arrive in any order.  # You can define functions that take a variable number of  # positional arguments  def varargs(*args):      return args -varargs(1, 2, 3)   # => (1, 2, 3) +varargs(1, 2, 3)  # => (1, 2, 3)  # You can define functions that take a variable number of  # keyword arguments, as well @@ -490,7 +525,7 @@ def keyword_args(**kwargs):      return kwargs  # Let's call it to see what happens -keyword_args(big="foot", loch="ness")   # => {"big": "foot", "loch": "ness"} +keyword_args(big="foot", loch="ness")  # => {"big": "foot", "loch": "ness"}  # You can do both at once, if you like @@ -507,36 +542,36 @@ all_the_args(1, 2, a=3, b=4) prints:  # Use * to expand tuples and use ** to expand kwargs.  args = (1, 2, 3, 4)  kwargs = {"a": 3, "b": 4} -all_the_args(*args)   # equivalent to foo(1, 2, 3, 4) -all_the_args(**kwargs)   # equivalent to foo(a=3, b=4) -all_the_args(*args, **kwargs)   # equivalent to foo(1, 2, 3, 4, a=3, b=4) +all_the_args(*args)            # equivalent to foo(1, 2, 3, 4) +all_the_args(**kwargs)         # equivalent to foo(a=3, b=4) +all_the_args(*args, **kwargs)  # equivalent to foo(1, 2, 3, 4, a=3, b=4)  # Returning multiple values (with tuple assignments)  def swap(x, y): -    return y, x # Return multiple values as a tuple without the parenthesis. -                # (Note: parenthesis have been excluded but can be included) +    return y, x  # Return multiple values as a tuple without the parenthesis. +                 # (Note: parenthesis have been excluded but can be included)  x = 1  y = 2 -x, y = swap(x, y) # => x = 2, y = 1 -# (x, y) = swap(x,y) # Again parenthesis have been excluded but can be included. +x, y = swap(x, y)     # => x = 2, y = 1 +# (x, y) = swap(x,y)  # Again parenthesis have been excluded but can be included.  # Function Scope  x = 5 -def setX(num): +def set_x(num):      # Local var x not the same as global variable x -    x = num # => 43 -    print (x) # => 43 +    x = num    # => 43 +    print (x)  # => 43 -def setGlobalX(num): +def set_global_x(num):      global x -    print (x) # => 5 -    x = num # global var x is now set to 6 -    print (x) # => 6 +    print (x)  # => 5 +    x = num    # global var x is now set to 6 +    print (x)  # => 6 -setX(43) -setGlobalX(6) +set_x(43) +set_global_x(6)  # Python has first class functions @@ -549,28 +584,28 @@ add_10 = create_adder(10)  add_10(3)   # => 13  # There are also anonymous functions -(lambda x: x > 2)(3)   # => True -(lambda x, y: x ** 2 + y ** 2)(2, 1) # => 5 +(lambda x: x > 2)(3)                  # => True +(lambda x, y: x ** 2 + y ** 2)(2, 1)  # => 5  # TODO - Fix for iterables  # There are built-in higher order functions -map(add_10, [1, 2, 3])   # => [11, 12, 13] -map(max, [1, 2, 3], [4, 2, 1])   # => [4, 2, 3] +map(add_10, [1, 2, 3])          # => [11, 12, 13] +map(max, [1, 2, 3], [4, 2, 1])  # => [4, 2, 3] -filter(lambda x: x > 5, [3, 4, 5, 6, 7])   # => [6, 7] +filter(lambda x: x > 5, [3, 4, 5, 6, 7])  # => [6, 7]  # We can use list comprehensions for nice maps and filters  # List comprehension stores the output as a list which can itself be a nested list -[add_10(i) for i in [1, 2, 3]]  # => [11, 12, 13] -[x for x in [3, 4, 5, 6, 7] if x > 5]   # => [6, 7] +[add_10(i) for i in [1, 2, 3]]         # => [11, 12, 13] +[x for x in [3, 4, 5, 6, 7] if x > 5]  # => [6, 7]  ####################################################  ## 5. Classes  #################################################### -# We subclass from object to get a class. -class Human(object): +# We use the "class" operator to get a class +class Human:      # A class attribute. It is shared by all instances of this class      species = "H. sapiens" @@ -585,6 +620,9 @@ class Human(object):          # Assign the argument to the instance's name attribute          self.name = name +        # Initialize property +        self.age = 0 +      # An instance method. All methods take "self" as the first argument      def say(self, msg):          return "{name}: {message}".format(name=self.name, message=msg) @@ -600,6 +638,23 @@ class Human(object):      def grunt():          return "*grunt*" +    # A property is just like a getter. +    # It turns the method age() into an read-only attribute +    # of the same name. +    @property +    def age(self): +        return self._age + +    # This allows the property to be set +    @age.setter +    def age(self, age): +        self._age = age + +    # This allows the property to be deleted +    @age.deleter +    def age(self): +        del self._age +  # Instantiate a class  i = Human(name="Ian") @@ -609,15 +664,26 @@ j = Human("Joel")  print(j.say("hello"))  # prints out "Joel: hello"  # Call our class method -i.get_species()   # => "H. sapiens" +i.get_species()  # => "H. sapiens"  # Change the shared attribute  Human.species = "H. neanderthalensis" -i.get_species()   # => "H. neanderthalensis" -j.get_species()   # => "H. neanderthalensis" +i.get_species()  # => "H. neanderthalensis" +j.get_species()  # => "H. neanderthalensis"  # Call the static method -Human.grunt()   # => "*grunt*" +Human.grunt()    # => "*grunt*" + +# Update the property +i.age = 42 + +# Get the property +i.age # => 42 + +# Delete the property +del i.age +i.age  # => raises an AttributeError +  #################################################### @@ -626,12 +692,12 @@ Human.grunt()   # => "*grunt*"  # You can import modules  import math -print(math.sqrt(16))  # => 4 +print(math.sqrt(16))  # => 4.0  # 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 @@ -639,7 +705,7 @@ from math import *  # You can shorten module names  import math as m -math.sqrt(16) == m.sqrt(16)   # => True +math.sqrt(16) == m.sqrt(16)  # => True  # Python modules are just ordinary python files. You  # can write your own, and import them. The name of the @@ -650,6 +716,11 @@ math.sqrt(16) == m.sqrt(16)   # => True  import math  dir(math) +# If you have a Python script named math.py in the same +# folder as your current script, the file math.py will +# be loaded instead of the built-in Python module. +# This happens because the local folder has priority +# over Python's built-in libraries.  ####################################################  ## 7. Advanced @@ -664,8 +735,6 @@ def double_numbers(iterable):  # Instead of generating and returning all values at once it creates one in each  # iteration.  This means values bigger than 15 wont be processed in  # double_numbers. -# Note range is a generator too. Creating a list 1-900000000 would take lot of -# time to be made  # We use a trailing underscore in variable names when we want to use a name that  # would normally collide with a python keyword  range_ = range(1, 900000000) @@ -700,7 +769,7 @@ def say(say_please=False):      return msg, say_please -print(say())  # Can you buy me a beer? +print(say())                 # Can you buy me a beer?  print(say(say_please=True))  # Can you buy me a beer? Please! I am poor :(  ``` @@ -717,6 +786,10 @@ print(say(say_please=True))  # Can you buy me a beer? Please! I am poor :(  * [A Crash Course in Python for Scientists](http://nbviewer.ipython.org/5920182)  * [Python Course](http://www.python-course.eu/index.php)  * [First Steps With Python](https://realpython.com/learn/python-first-steps/) +* [A curated list of awesome Python frameworks, libraries and software](https://github.com/vinta/awesome-python) +* [30 Python Language Features and Tricks You May Not Know About](http://sahandsaba.com/thirty-python-language-features-and-tricks-you-may-not-know.html) +* [Official Style Guide for Python](https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/) +* [Python 3 Computer Science Circles](http://cscircles.cemc.uwaterloo.ca/)  ### Dead Tree | 
