Book Image

Mastering Python 2E - Second Edition

By : Rick van Hattem
5 (1)
Book Image

Mastering Python 2E - Second Edition

5 (1)
By: Rick van Hattem

Overview of this book

Even if you find writing Python code easy, writing code that is efficient, maintainable, and reusable is not so straightforward. Many of Python’s capabilities are underutilized even by more experienced programmers. Mastering Python, Second Edition, is an authoritative guide to understanding advanced Python programming so you can write the highest quality code. This new edition has been extensively revised and updated with exercises, four new chapters and updates up to Python 3.10. Revisit important basics, including Pythonic style and syntax and functional programming. Avoid common mistakes made by programmers of all experience levels. Make smart decisions about the best testing and debugging tools to use, optimize your code’s performance across multiple machines and Python versions, and deploy often-forgotten Python features to your advantage. Get fully up to speed with asyncio and stretch the language even further by accessing C functions with simple Python calls. Finally, turn your new-and-improved code into packages and share them with the wider Python community. If you are a Python programmer wanting to improve your code quality and readability, this Python book will make you confident in writing high-quality scripts and taking on bigger challenges
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
19
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20
Index

Using documentation as tests with doctest

The doctest module is one of the most useful modules within Python. It allows you to combine documenting your code with tests to make sure that it keeps working as it is supposed to.

By now the format should be very familiar to you; most of the code samples in this book use the doctest format, which offers the advantage that both the input and the output are shown intertwined. Especially in demonstrations, this is much more convenient than having a block of code followed by the output.

A simple doctest example

Let’s start with a quick example: a function that squares the input. The following example is a fully functional command-line application, containing not only code but also functioning tests. The first few tests cover how the function is supposed to behave when executing normally, followed by a few tests to demonstrate the expected errors:

def square(n: int) -> int:
    '''
    Returns the input...