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Comment: Add version 3 Hello World example
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print 'Hello world!' print 'Hello world!' # Python 2 syntax

# or

print('Hello world!') # Python 3 syntax

Here are some samples to help get a better idea of Python's syntax:

Hello World (the traditional first program)

print 'Hello world!'  # Python 2 syntax

# or

print('Hello world!')  # Python 3 syntax

String formatting

name = 'Monty'
print('Hello, %s' % name)  # string interpolation
print('Hello, {}'.format(name))  # string formatting

Defining a function

def add_one(x):
    return x + 1

Testing variable equality

x=1
y=2
print 'x is equal to y: %s' % (x==y)
z=1
print 'x is equal to z: %s' % (x==z)
names=['Donald','Jake','Phil']
words=['Random','Words','Dogs']
if names==words:
    print 'Names list is equal to words'
else:
    print 'Names list isn\'t equal to words'
new_names=['Donald','Jake','Phil']
print 'New names list is equal to names: %s' % (new_names==names)

Defining a class with two methods

class Talker(object):
    def greet(self, name):
        print 'Hello, %s!' % name
    def farewell(self, name):
        print 'Farewell, %s!' % name

Defining a list

dynamic_languages = ['Python', 'Ruby', 'Groovy']
dynamic_languages.append('Lisp')

Defining a dictionary

numbered_words=dict()
numbered_words[2]='world'
numbered_words[1]='Hello'
numbered_words[3]='!'

Defining a while loop

while True:
    if value==wanted_value:
        break
    else:
        pass

Defining multiline strings

string = '''This is a string with embedded newlines.
Also known as a tripled-quoted string.
    Whitespace at the beginning of lines is included,
so the above line is indented but the others are not.
'''

Defining long strings over multiple lines

string = ('This is a single long, long string'
          ' written over many lines for convenience'
          ' using implicit concatenation to join each'
          ' piece into a single string without extra'
          ' newlines (unless you add them yourself).')

Defining a for loop

for x in xrange(1,4):
    print ('Hello, new Python user!'
           'This is time number %d') % (x)


CategoryDocumentation

BeginnersGuide/Programmers/SimpleExamples (last edited 2020-03-20 17:37:52 by MarcAndreLemburg)

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