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Programming with
Python
                    Week 3
Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Academic Year 2010-2011
Week 2 - Highlights


• Dictionaries:
  {key:value,...}
• Lists:
  [12,4,56,...]
• Tuples:
  (firstname,lastname)=(“Programming”,”Python”)
4.1 The power of
Introspection
• Introspection is code looking at other modules and
  functions in memory as objects, getting information
  about them, and manipulating them.
• Along the way:
  i. you'll define functions with no name,
  ii. you’ll call functions with arguments out of order,
  iii. you’ll reference functions whose names you don't
  even know ahead of time.
Introspection at work

def info(object, spacing=10, collapse=1):
  """Print methods and doc strings.

  Takes module, class, list, dictionary, or string."""
  methodList = [method for method in dir(object) if callable(getattr(object, method))]
  processFunc = collapse and (lambda s: " ".join(s.split())) or (lambda s: s)
  print "n".join(["%s %s" %
               (method.ljust(spacing),
                processFunc(str(getattr(object, method).__doc__)))
              for method in methodList])
(setup)


• >>> import apihelper
• >>> apihelper.info.__doc__
  'Print methods and doc strings.n      n Takes module,
  class, list, dictionary, or string.'
4.2 Using Optional and
Named Arguments

• Python allows function arguments to have default values.
• If the function is called without the argument, the
  argument gets its default value.
• Arguments can be specified
  - in any order
  - by using named arguments.
spacing and collapse are
optional arguments.


def info(object, spacing=10, collapse=1):
This looks totally whacked
until you realize that
arguments are simply a
dictionary.
• info(spacing=15, object=odbchelper)
4.3 Some built-in functions


• type
• str
• dir
• callable
type function


• The type function returns the datatype of any arbitrary
  object.
• The possible types are listed in the types module. This is
  useful for helper functions that can handle several types
  of data.
Examples

• >>> type(apihelper)
  <type 'module'>
• >>> type(info)
  <type 'function'>
• >>> type("hello")
  <type 'str'>
• >>> type(1)
  <type 'int'>
types module


• >>> import types
• >>> types.ModuleType == type(apihelper)
  True
str function
• The str coerces data into a string. Every datatype can be
  coerced into a string.
• >>> str(1)
  '1'
• >>> str(apihelper)
  "<module 'apihelper' from '.../Week 3/Code/
  apihelper.py'>"
• >>> str([“mortal”, “kombat”, “go and fight”])
  ask in class..
dir function


• dir returns a list of the attributes and methods
  of any object: modules, functions, strings, lists,
  dictionaries...

  pretty much anything.
Examples


• >>> dir([])
• >>> dir({})
• >>> dir(apihelper)
callable function

• The callable function takes any object and returns
  True if the object can be called,
  or False otherwise.
                                      example class
• Callable objects include
  functions,
  class methods,
  even classes themselves.
callable is beautiful:

• By using the callable function on each of an object's
  attributes, you can determine which attributes you care
  about (methods, functions, classes) and which you want
  to ignore (constants and so on)
  without knowing anything about the object
  ahead of time.

  HINT: Introspection
Examples

• >>> import string
• >>> string.punctuation
   '!"#$%&'()*+,-./:;<=>?@[]^_`{|}~'
• >>> string.join
   <function join at 0x6efaf0>
• >>> callable(string.punctuation)
   False
• >>> ask in class for string.join test..
4.4 Getting object
references with getattr

• You already know that Python functions are
  objects.
• What you don't know is that you can get a reference to
  a function without knowing its name until run-time, by
  using the getattr function.
Examples

• >>> li = [“Larry”, “Brackety”]
• >>> li.pop
• >>> getattr(li, “pop”)
• >>> getattr(li, “append”)(“Junior”)
• >>> li
Ask in class..



• 1. First import the ask_in_class module
  and then;
  2. call the mockfunction using getattr function.
4.4.2 Introspection,
Dispatching



• what is the typical use of getattr-like functionality?
Dispatching..
Dispatcher
Model, View, Controller (MVC)
Model, View, Controller (MVC)

So, what the hell is MVC?
Dispatcher


             Dispatcher
             sitting here
Model, View, Controller (MVC)
Front Controller
4.4.2 Introspection,
Dispatching

• A common usage pattern of getattr is as a dispatcher.
• For example, if you had a program that could output
  data in a variety of different formats, you could define
  separate functions for each output format and use a
  single dispatch function to call the right one.
Example

• For example, let's imagine a program that prints site
  statistics in HTML, XML, and plain text formats.
• The choice of output format could be specified on the
  command line, or stored in a configuration file.
• A statsout module defines three functions,
  output_html, output_xml, and output_text. Then the
  main program defines a single output function, like this:
Example

  import statsout

  def output(data, format="text"):
    output_function = getattr(statsout, "output_%s" % format)
    return output_function(data)
Default value
in case, the method or
attribute is not found.
 import statsout

 def output(data, format="text"):
   output_function = getattr(statsout, "output_%s" % format, statsout.output_text)
   return output_function(data)
4.5 Filtering Lists


• Python has powerful capabilities for mapping lists into
  other lists, via list comprehensions.
• This can be combined with a filtering mechanism, where
  some elements in the list are mapped while others are
  skipped entirely.
Filtering syntax:
[mapping-expression for element in source-list if filter-expression]


         Any element for which the filter expression
         evaluates true will be included in the mapping.

         All other elements are ignored, so they are never
         put through the mapping expression and
         are not included in the output list.
Example



• >>> li = [“aaa”, “aa”, “a”, “b”]
• >>> [elem for elem in li if len(elem) == 1]
Ask in class..


methodList = [method for method in dir(object) if callable(getattr(object, method))]




         interpretation
            please?!?
4.6 The Peculiar Nature
    of and and or


• In Python, and and or perform boolean logic as you
  would expect, but they do not return boolean values;
  instead, they return one of the actual values
  they are comparing.
and

• If all values are true, the last value is returned.
• If not all values are true, then it returns the first false
  value.
• >>> “a” and “b”
  'b'
• >>> “” and “b”
  ''
or



• if any value is true, that value is returned immediately.
• if all values are false, then the last value is returned.
4.7 Using lambda functions

• Python supports an interesting syntax that lets you
  define one-line mini-functions on the fly.
• Borrowed from Lisp, these so-called lambda functions
  can be used anywhere a function is required.
• The entire function can only be one expression.
• A lambda is just an in-line function.
Example

• >>> def f(x):
           return x*2
• >>> f(3)
• >>> g = lambda x: x*2
• >>> g(3)
• >>> (lambda x: x*2)(3)
Remember:

• To generalize, a lambda function is a function that takes
  any number of arguments (including optional arguments)
  and returns the value of a single expression.
• Don't try to squeeze too much into a lambda function; if
  you need something more complex, define a normal
  function instead and make it as long as you want.
• Use them in places where you want to encapsulate
  specific, non-reusable code without littering your code
  with a lot of little one-line functions.
apihelper.py
Happy holidays

Programming with Python - Week 3

  • 1.
    Programming with Python Week 3 Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Academic Year 2010-2011
  • 2.
    Week 2 -Highlights • Dictionaries: {key:value,...} • Lists: [12,4,56,...] • Tuples: (firstname,lastname)=(“Programming”,”Python”)
  • 4.
    4.1 The powerof Introspection • Introspection is code looking at other modules and functions in memory as objects, getting information about them, and manipulating them. • Along the way: i. you'll define functions with no name, ii. you’ll call functions with arguments out of order, iii. you’ll reference functions whose names you don't even know ahead of time.
  • 5.
    Introspection at work definfo(object, spacing=10, collapse=1): """Print methods and doc strings. Takes module, class, list, dictionary, or string.""" methodList = [method for method in dir(object) if callable(getattr(object, method))] processFunc = collapse and (lambda s: " ".join(s.split())) or (lambda s: s) print "n".join(["%s %s" % (method.ljust(spacing), processFunc(str(getattr(object, method).__doc__))) for method in methodList])
  • 6.
    (setup) • >>> importapihelper • >>> apihelper.info.__doc__ 'Print methods and doc strings.n n Takes module, class, list, dictionary, or string.'
  • 7.
    4.2 Using Optionaland Named Arguments • Python allows function arguments to have default values. • If the function is called without the argument, the argument gets its default value. • Arguments can be specified - in any order - by using named arguments.
  • 8.
    spacing and collapseare optional arguments. def info(object, spacing=10, collapse=1):
  • 9.
    This looks totallywhacked until you realize that arguments are simply a dictionary. • info(spacing=15, object=odbchelper)
  • 10.
    4.3 Some built-infunctions • type • str • dir • callable
  • 11.
    type function • Thetype function returns the datatype of any arbitrary object. • The possible types are listed in the types module. This is useful for helper functions that can handle several types of data.
  • 12.
    Examples • >>> type(apihelper) <type 'module'> • >>> type(info) <type 'function'> • >>> type("hello") <type 'str'> • >>> type(1) <type 'int'>
  • 13.
    types module • >>>import types • >>> types.ModuleType == type(apihelper) True
  • 14.
    str function • Thestr coerces data into a string. Every datatype can be coerced into a string. • >>> str(1) '1' • >>> str(apihelper) "<module 'apihelper' from '.../Week 3/Code/ apihelper.py'>" • >>> str([“mortal”, “kombat”, “go and fight”]) ask in class..
  • 15.
    dir function • dirreturns a list of the attributes and methods of any object: modules, functions, strings, lists, dictionaries... pretty much anything.
  • 16.
    Examples • >>> dir([]) •>>> dir({}) • >>> dir(apihelper)
  • 17.
    callable function • Thecallable function takes any object and returns True if the object can be called, or False otherwise. example class • Callable objects include functions, class methods, even classes themselves.
  • 18.
    callable is beautiful: •By using the callable function on each of an object's attributes, you can determine which attributes you care about (methods, functions, classes) and which you want to ignore (constants and so on) without knowing anything about the object ahead of time. HINT: Introspection
  • 19.
    Examples • >>> importstring • >>> string.punctuation '!"#$%&'()*+,-./:;<=>?@[]^_`{|}~' • >>> string.join <function join at 0x6efaf0> • >>> callable(string.punctuation) False • >>> ask in class for string.join test..
  • 20.
    4.4 Getting object referenceswith getattr • You already know that Python functions are objects. • What you don't know is that you can get a reference to a function without knowing its name until run-time, by using the getattr function.
  • 21.
    Examples • >>> li= [“Larry”, “Brackety”] • >>> li.pop • >>> getattr(li, “pop”) • >>> getattr(li, “append”)(“Junior”) • >>> li
  • 22.
    Ask in class.. •1. First import the ask_in_class module and then; 2. call the mockfunction using getattr function.
  • 23.
    4.4.2 Introspection, Dispatching • whatis the typical use of getattr-like functionality?
  • 24.
  • 25.
  • 26.
  • 27.
    Model, View, Controller(MVC) So, what the hell is MVC?
  • 28.
    Dispatcher Dispatcher sitting here
  • 29.
  • 30.
  • 31.
    4.4.2 Introspection, Dispatching • Acommon usage pattern of getattr is as a dispatcher. • For example, if you had a program that could output data in a variety of different formats, you could define separate functions for each output format and use a single dispatch function to call the right one.
  • 32.
    Example • For example,let's imagine a program that prints site statistics in HTML, XML, and plain text formats. • The choice of output format could be specified on the command line, or stored in a configuration file. • A statsout module defines three functions, output_html, output_xml, and output_text. Then the main program defines a single output function, like this:
  • 33.
    Example importstatsout def output(data, format="text"): output_function = getattr(statsout, "output_%s" % format) return output_function(data)
  • 34.
    Default value in case,the method or attribute is not found. import statsout def output(data, format="text"): output_function = getattr(statsout, "output_%s" % format, statsout.output_text) return output_function(data)
  • 36.
    4.5 Filtering Lists •Python has powerful capabilities for mapping lists into other lists, via list comprehensions. • This can be combined with a filtering mechanism, where some elements in the list are mapped while others are skipped entirely.
  • 37.
    Filtering syntax: [mapping-expression forelement in source-list if filter-expression] Any element for which the filter expression evaluates true will be included in the mapping. All other elements are ignored, so they are never put through the mapping expression and are not included in the output list.
  • 38.
    Example • >>> li= [“aaa”, “aa”, “a”, “b”] • >>> [elem for elem in li if len(elem) == 1]
  • 39.
    Ask in class.. methodList= [method for method in dir(object) if callable(getattr(object, method))] interpretation please?!?
  • 40.
    4.6 The PeculiarNature of and and or • In Python, and and or perform boolean logic as you would expect, but they do not return boolean values; instead, they return one of the actual values they are comparing.
  • 41.
    and • If allvalues are true, the last value is returned. • If not all values are true, then it returns the first false value. • >>> “a” and “b” 'b' • >>> “” and “b” ''
  • 42.
    or • if anyvalue is true, that value is returned immediately. • if all values are false, then the last value is returned.
  • 43.
    4.7 Using lambdafunctions • Python supports an interesting syntax that lets you define one-line mini-functions on the fly. • Borrowed from Lisp, these so-called lambda functions can be used anywhere a function is required. • The entire function can only be one expression. • A lambda is just an in-line function.
  • 44.
    Example • >>> deff(x): return x*2 • >>> f(3) • >>> g = lambda x: x*2 • >>> g(3) • >>> (lambda x: x*2)(3)
  • 45.
    Remember: • To generalize,a lambda function is a function that takes any number of arguments (including optional arguments) and returns the value of a single expression. • Don't try to squeeze too much into a lambda function; if you need something more complex, define a normal function instead and make it as long as you want. • Use them in places where you want to encapsulate specific, non-reusable code without littering your code with a lot of little one-line functions.
  • 46.
  • 47.