This is a discussion on Can some one show me some Python coding within the Python forums, part of the Programming Talk category; It is a little stupid question but can some one show me some Python coding I have never seen it ...
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Can some one show me some Python coding
It is a little stupid question but can some one show me some Python coding I have never seen it and have noticed that people dont really use it well what I can, so what use does it have?
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check out this thread http://www.exforsys.com/forum/python...-solution.html
Otherwise google uses python for their services and search engine so it is quite powerfull |
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Why are they hiring so much python programmers then
Just for the proof http://www.google.com/support/bin/topic.py?topic=367 see that little .py at the end
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This is the thing you need
# a selection of simple Python code to give you a taste of the language ... # # Just a few notes about Python: # Python has a very efficient built-in memory manager. # Python does not need variable types declared, it is smart enough to figure that out! # Python uses whitespaces to group statements, this avoids the begin/ends and {} # of other languages. Let's face it, you use whitespaces anyway in these # languages to make the code more readable! In other words, Python forces you # to make code more readable. You get used to the indentations naturally. # Use the number of spaces you like, the de facto standard is four spaces. # Important caveat: # keep the spacing uniform for the group of statements # that belong together, and don't mix tabs and spaces. Avoid tabs! # # I used Python-2.3.4.exe (the Windows installer package for Python23) # from http://www.python.org/2.3.4/ # code tested with Python23 vegaseat 16jan2005 print "Simple math like 12345679*63 = ", 12345679*63 # print just an empty line # display numbers 0 to 9 # the indentation before print makes it part of the loop for number in range(10): print number # print also adds a newline, use a comma to prevent the newline for number in range(10): print number, # import the math module for the sqrt() function import math # a little more complex this time # \n is the newline character, % starts the format specifier # Python does have its roots in the C language # notice how we use the sqrt() function from the math module # CYA: more specifically, sqrt() is a function in module math print "\nSquare root of integers 0 to 9 formatted as a float with 4 decimals:" for value in range(10): squareRoot = math.sqrt(value) print "sqrt(%d) = %.4f" % (value, squareRoot) # now it gets a bit more hairy print "\nDisplay integers 0 to 15 formatted to use 6 spaces ..." print "(plain, zero-padded, hex and octal)" print " %s %s %s %s" % ('%6d', '%06d', '%6x', '%6o') for value in range(16): print "%6d %06d %6x %6o" % (value, value, value, value) print "\nA not so typical for loop:" for food in "spam", "eggs", "cumquats": print "I love", food # a short intro to string slicing # a little cryptic at first blush, but very powerful # [begin : < end : step] end is exclusive, step is optional # defaults are index begin = 0, index end = length, step = 1 animal = "hippopotamus" print "this is the string = ", animal print "length of string = ", len(animal) print "exclude first 3 char = ", animal[3: ] print "exclude last 4 char = ", animal[:-4] print "reverse the string = ", animal[::-1] # define/create a function # the indented lines are part of the function def convertFahrenheit2Celsius(fahrenheit): celcius = 0.555 * (fahrenheit - 32) return celcius # and use the function # (make sure you define/create the function before you call it) print "A Fahrenheit to Celcius table:" # range is from -40 to < 220 in steps of 10 for tf in range(-40, 220, 10): print "%5.1fF = %5.1fC" % ( tf, convertFahrenheit2Celsius(tf) ) print "A limited set:" # another variation of the for loop for tf in -40,0,32,98.6: print "%5.1fF = %5.1fC" % ( tf, convertFahrenheit2Celsius(tf) ) # test boolean results print "Is 3 > 5? Result =", 3 > 5 # result = False print "Is 3 < 5? Result =", 3 < 5 # result = True # optional wait for keypress raw_input('Press Enter...') |
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What does a PYTHON file do anyway? I am very confused here
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