Book Image

Learn Python Programming - Second Edition

By : Fabrizio Romano
4.5 (2)
Book Image

Learn Python Programming - Second Edition

4.5 (2)
By: Fabrizio Romano

Overview of this book

Learn Python Programming is a quick, thorough, and practical introduction to Python - an extremely flexible and powerful programming language that can be applied to many disciplines. Unlike other books, it doesn't bore you with elaborate explanations of the basics but gets you up-and-running, using the language. You will begin by learning the fundamentals of Python so that you have a rock-solid foundation to build upon. You will explore the foundations of Python programming and learn how Python can be manipulated to achieve results. Explore different programming paradigms and find the best approach to a situation; understand how to carry out performance optimization and effective debugging; control the flow of a program; and utilize an interchange format to exchange data. You'll also walk through cryptographic services in Python and understand secure tokens. Learn Python Programming will give you a thorough understanding of the Python language. You'll learn how to write programs, build websites, and work with data by harnessing Python's renowned data science libraries. Filled with real-world examples and projects, the book covers various types of applications, and concludes by building real-world projects based on the concepts you have learned.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)

Comprehensions

Comprehensions are a concise notation, both perform some operation for a collection of elements, and/or select a subset of them that meet some condition. They are borrowed from the functional programming language Haskell (https://www.haskell.org/), and contribute to giving Python a functional flavor, together with iterators and generators.

Python offers you different types of comprehensions: list, dict, and set. We'll concentrate on the first one for now, and then it will be easy to explain the other two.

Let's start with a very simple example. I want to calculate a list with the squares of the first 10 natural numbers. How would you do it? There are a couple of equivalent ways:

# squares.map.py
# If you code like this you are not a Python dev! ;)
>>> squares = []
>>> for n in range(10):
... squares.append(n ** 2)
...
>>> squares...