Variables are nothing but reserved memory locations to store values.
This means that when you create a variable you reserve some space in
memory.
Based on the data type of a variable, the interpreter allocates
memory and decides what can be stored in the reserved memory. Therefore,
by assigning different data types to variables, you can store integers,
decimals or characters in these variables.
Assigning Values to Variables
Python variables do not need explicit declaration to reserve memory
space. The declaration happens automatically when you assign a value to a
variable. The equal sign (=) is used to assign values to variables.
The operand to the left of the = operator is the name of the variable
and the operand to the right of the = operator is the value stored in
the variable. For example −
#!/usr/bin/python counter = 100 # An integer assignment miles = 1000.0 # A floating point name = "John" # A string print counter print miles print name
Here, 100, 1000.0 and "John" are the values assigned to counter, miles, and name variables, respectively. This produces the following result −
100 1000.0 John
Multiple Assignment
Python allows you to assign a single value to several variables simultaneously. For example −
a = b = c = 1
Here, an integer object is created with the value 1, and all three
variables are assigned to the same memory location. You can also assign
multiple objects to multiple variables. For example −
a, b, c = 1, 2, "john"
Here, two integer objects with values 1 and 2 are assigned to
variables a and b respectively, and one string object with the value
"john" is assigned to the variable c.
Standard Data Types
The data stored in memory can be of many types. For example, a
person's age is stored as a numeric value and his or her address is
stored as alphanumeric characters. Python has various standard data
types that are used to define the operations possible on them and the
storage method for each of them.
Python has five standard data types −
- Numbers
- String
- List
- Tuple
- Dictionary
Python Numbers
Number data types store numeric values. Number objects are created when you assign a value to them. For example −
var1 = 1 var2 = 10
You can also delete the reference to a number object by using the del statement. The syntax of the del statement is −
del var1[,var2[,var3[....,varN]]]]
You can delete a single object or multiple objects by using the del statement. For example −
del var del var_a, var_b
Python supports four different numerical types −
- int (signed integers)
- long (long integers, they can also be represented in octal and hexadecimal)
- float (floating point real values)
- complex (complex numbers)
Examples
Here are some examples of numbers −
| int | long | float | complex |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 | 51924361L | 0.0 | 3.14j |
| 100 | -0x19323L | 15.20 | 45.j |
| -786 | 0122L | -21.9 | 9.322e-36j |
| 080 | 0xDEFABCECBDAECBFBAEl | 32.3+e18 | .876j |
| -0490 | 535633629843L | -90. | -.6545+0J |
| -0x260 | -052318172735L | -32.54e100 | 3e+26J |
| 0x69 | -4721885298529L | 70.2-E12 | 4.53e-7j |
- Python allows you to use a lowercase L with long, but it is recommended that you use only an uppercase L to avoid confusion with the number 1. Python displays long integers with an uppercase L.
- A complex number consists of an ordered pair of real floating-point numbers denoted by x + yj, where x and y are the real numbers and j is the imaginary unit.
Python Strings
Strings in Python are identified as a contiguous set of characters
represented in the quotation marks. Python allows for either pairs of
single or double quotes. Subsets of strings can be taken using the slice
operator ([ ] and [:] ) with indexes starting at 0 in the beginning of
the string and working their way from -1 at the end.
The plus (+) sign is the string concatenation operator and the asterisk (*) is the repetition operator. For example −
#!/usr/bin/python str = 'Hello World!' print str # Prints complete string print str[0] # Prints first character of the string print str[2:5] # Prints characters starting from 3rd to 5th print str[2:] # Prints string starting from 3rd character print str * 2 # Prints string two times print str + "TEST" # Prints concatenated string
This will produce the following result −
Hello World! H llo llo World! Hello World!Hello World! Hello World!TEST
Python Lists
Lists are the most versatile of Python's compound data types. A list
contains items separated by commas and enclosed within square brackets
([]). To some extent, lists are similar to arrays in C. One difference
between them is that all the items belonging to a list can be of
different data type.
The values stored in a list can be accessed using the slice operator
([ ] and [:]) with indexes starting at 0 in the beginning of the list
and working their way to end -1. The plus (+) sign is the list
concatenation operator, and the asterisk (*) is the repetition operator.
For example −
#!/usr/bin/python list = [ 'abcd', 786 , 2.23, 'john', 70.2 ] tinylist = [123, 'john'] print list # Prints complete list print list[0] # Prints first element of the list print list[1:3] # Prints elements starting from 2nd till 3rd print list[2:] # Prints elements starting from 3rd element print tinylist * 2 # Prints list two times print list + tinylist # Prints concatenated lists
This produce the following result −
['abcd', 786, 2.23, 'john', 70.200000000000003] abcd [786, 2.23] [2.23, 'john', 70.200000000000003] [123, 'john', 123, 'john'] ['abcd', 786, 2.23, 'john', 70.200000000000003, 123, 'john']
Python Tuples
A tuple is another sequence data type that is similar to the list. A
tuple consists of a number of values separated by commas. Unlike lists,
however, tuples are enclosed within parentheses.
The main differences between lists and tuples are: Lists are enclosed
in brackets ( [ ] ) and their elements and size can be changed, while
tuples are enclosed in parentheses ( ( ) ) and cannot be updated. Tuples
can be thought of as read-only lists. For example −
#!/usr/bin/python tuple = ( 'abcd', 786 , 2.23, 'john', 70.2 ) tinytuple = (123, 'john') print tuple # Prints complete list print tuple[0] # Prints first element of the list print tuple[1:3] # Prints elements starting from 2nd till 3rd print tuple[2:] # Prints elements starting from 3rd element print tinytuple * 2 # Prints list two times print tuple + tinytuple # Prints concatenated lists
This produce the following result −
('abcd', 786, 2.23, 'john', 70.200000000000003)
abcd
(786, 2.23)
(2.23, 'john', 70.200000000000003)
(123, 'john', 123, 'john')
('abcd', 786, 2.23, 'john', 70.200000000000003, 123, 'john')
The following code is invalid with tuple, because we attempted to
update a tuple, which is not allowed. Similar case is possible with
lists −
#!/usr/bin/python tuple = ( 'abcd', 786 , 2.23, 'john', 70.2 ) list = [ 'abcd', 786 , 2.23, 'john', 70.2 ] tuple[2] = 1000 # Invalid syntax with tuple list[2] = 1000 # Valid syntax with list
Python Dictionary
Python's dictionaries are kind of hash table type. They work like
associative arrays or hashes found in Perl and consist of key-value
pairs. A dictionary key can be almost any Python type, but are usually
numbers or strings. Values, on the other hand, can be any arbitrary
Python object.
Dictionaries are enclosed by curly braces ({ }) and values can be assigned and accessed using square braces ([]). For example −
#!/usr/bin/python dict = {} dict['one'] = "This is one" dict[2] = "This is two" tinydict = {'name': 'john','code':6734, 'dept': 'sales'} print dict['one'] # Prints value for 'one' key print dict[2] # Prints value for 2 key print tinydict # Prints complete dictionary print tinydict.keys() # Prints all the keys print tinydict.values() # Prints all the values
This produce the following result −
This is one
This is two
{'dept': 'sales', 'code': 6734, 'name': 'john'}
['dept', 'code', 'name']
['sales', 6734, 'john']
Dictionaries have no concept of order among elements. It is incorrect
to say that the elements are "out of order"; they are simply unordered.
Data Type Conversion
Sometimes, you may need to perform conversions between the built-in
types. To convert between types, you simply use the type name as a
function.
There are several built-in functions to perform conversion from one
data type to another. These functions return a new object representing
the converted value.
| Function | Description |
|---|---|
|
int(x [,base]) |
Converts x to an integer. base specifies the base if x is a string. |
|
long(x [,base] ) |
Converts x to a long integer. base specifies the base if x is a string. |
|
float(x) |
Converts x to a floating-point number. |
|
complex(real [,imag]) |
Creates a complex number. |
|
str(x) |
Converts object x to a string representation. |
|
repr(x) |
Converts object x to an expression string. |
|
eval(str) |
Evaluates a string and returns an object. |
|
tuple(s) |
Converts s to a tuple. |
|
list(s) |
Converts s to a list. |
|
set(s) |
Converts s to a set. |
|
dict(d) |
Creates a dictionary. d must be a sequence of (key,value) tuples. |
|
frozenset(s) |
Converts s to a frozen set. |
|
chr(x) |
Converts an integer to a character. |
|
unichr(x) |
Converts an integer to a Unicode character. |
|
ord(x) |
Converts a single character to its integer value. |
|
hex(x) |
Converts an integer to a hexadecimal string. |
|
oct(x) |
Converts an integer to an octal string. |
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