Difference between revisions of "Python"

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(Variables)
(Operations)
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</source>
 
</source>
==== Operations ====
+
==== Mathematical operations ====
 +
<source lang="python">
 +
####
 +
# Integers and floats support most arithmetic operations
 +
a = 15
 +
b = 6
 +
 
 +
c = a + b # c = 21
 +
c = a - b # c = 9
 +
c = a * b # c = 90
 +
c = a / b # c = 2.5
 +
 
 +
# There are some special operators:
 +
# modulus (%) returns what is left after division
 +
# floor division (//) throws away the decimal place
 +
c = a % b  # c = 3
 +
c = a // b # c = 2
 +
####
 +
 
 +
####
 +
# Strings only support 2 mathematical operators
 +
# The addition (+) is used to concatenate strings
 +
# The multiplication (*) returns multiples of a string
 +
a = "Hello"
 +
b = "World"
 +
 
 +
c = a + b # c = "HelloWorld"
 +
c = a * 3 # c = "HelloHelloHello"
 +
####
 +
</source>
  
 
=== Conditionals ===
 
=== Conditionals ===

Revision as of 14:09, 26 June 2019

Variables

Declaration and typing

####
# Boolean variables can only contain one of two values: True or False
#     Boolean values are annotated by using the "bool" keyword
a: bool = True
####
 
####
# Integers are variables that contain any positive or negative whole number
#     Integers are annotated using the "int" keyword
# Floats are variables that contains any positive or negative decimal
#     Floats are annotated using the "float" keyword
a: int = 15
b: int = -23
 
c: float = 6.4
d: float = -9.5
####
 
####
# Strings are variables that contain text
#     Strings are annotated using the "str" keyword
a: str = "This is a string"
b: str = 'Strings can be enclosed using single quotes'
 
# Initializing an empty string:
a = ""
####
 
####
# Lists are collections of other variables
#     Lists are annotated using the "list" keyword
a: list = ["Some string", 15, 9.6, True]
 
# Initializing an empty list:
a = []
####
 
####
# Sets are lists that cannot contain duplicate values
# They also do not keep the order of the variables
# Sets are a lot faster than lists when looking for specific values
#    Sets are annotated using the "set" keyword
a: set = {"Some string", 15, 9.6, True}
 
# Initializing an empty set:
a = set()
####
 
####
# Tuples are lists that cannot be changed after being created
# They are useful when returning multiple values from a function
#     Tuples are annotated using the "tuple" keyword
a: tuple = ("Some string", 15, 9.6, True)
 
# Because tuples cannot be changed there is no point in initializing an empty one
####
 
####
# Dictionaries work of Key - Value pairs
# Keys can be any immutable type - integers, floats, strings and tuples
# Dictionaries do not keep the their order
#     Dictionaries are annotated using the "dict" keyword
a: dict = {"A": "Some string", "B": 15, "C": 9.6, "D": True}
 
# Initializing an empty dictionary:
a = {}
####

Mathematical operations

####
# Integers and floats support most arithmetic operations
a = 15
b = 6
 
c = a + b # c = 21
c = a - b # c = 9
c = a * b # c = 90
c = a / b # c = 2.5
 
# There are some special operators:
# modulus (%) returns what is left after division
# floor division (//) throws away the decimal place
c = a % b  # c = 3
c = a // b # c = 2
####
 
####
# Strings only support 2 mathematical operators
# The addition (+) is used to concatenate strings
# The multiplication (*) returns multiples of a string
a = "Hello"
b = "World"
 
c = a + b # c = "HelloWorld"
c = a * 3 # c = "HelloHelloHello"
####

Conditionals

Loops

Functions

Classes