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- A short introduction to…
Command line
You can save your code in a file (usually with the extension .py) and run that file in the Windows command prompt or Linux shell. The file can be executed by specifying its name after the python keyword.
Here is an example. Type the following code in the text editor of your choice (it can even be Notepad) and save the file as example.py:
x = 5 y = 10 z = x + y print (z)
The code above will simply add two numbers and print the result. To execute the code, open the Windows command prompt (or Linux shell) and enter python example.py:
You might need to use the full path to the file example.py (e.g. python c:\Python34\Scripts\example.py). If the Python directory is not listed in the PATH variable, you will also need to enter the full path to the python.exe program (C:\Python34\python.exe\example.py).
You can provide a number of options to the python command. You can display them by typing python /? in the Command prompt:
For example, to display the Python version, use the python -V command:
C:\Python34\Scripts>python -V Python 3.4.3
Python course
- Introduction
- Python overview
- Install Python on Windows
- Install Python on Linux
- Add Python to the Windows Path
- Run Python code
- Interactive prompt
- IDLE editor
- Command line
- Help mode
- Basic programs
- Write your first program
- Use comments
- What are variables?
- Variable data types
- Variable names
- Numeric variables
- Strings
- Get the current date and time
- Operators overview
- Arithmetic operators
- Comparison operators
- Logical operators
- Assignment operators
- Membership operators
- Identity operators
- Conditional statements
- The if statement
- Get user input
- The if...else statement
- The if...elif statement
- Nested if statements
- Use logical operators
- Loops
- The for loop
- Use for loop with the range() function
- The break statement
- The continue statement
- The pass statement
- Use else statement in loops
- The while loop
- Nested loop statements
- Errors
- Types of errors
- Syntax and logical errors
- The try...except statements
- The try...except...else statements
- The try...except...finally statements
- Catch specific exceptions
- Raise exception
- Nest exception handling statements
- Modules
- What are modules?
- Import modules
- Find files on disk
- Display module content
- Strings
- What are strings?
- Escape characters
- Access individual characters
- String functions
- Search strings
- Concatenating strings
- Lists, sets, tuples, dictionaries
- What are lists?
- Modify lists
- Loop through a list
- Check whether a value is in a list
- Sorting lists temporarily
- Sorting lists permanently
- Obtaining the list length
- What are sets?
- What are dictionaries?
- Add new key-value pair to a dictionary
- Modify a value in a dictionary
- Delete a key-value pair in a dictionary
- Loop through a dictionary
- What are tuples?
- Looping over a tuple
- Working with files
- How to read and write files
- Read a file
- Read and write – with statement
- Make a list of lines from a file
- Functions
- What are functions?
- Return statement
- Positional arguments
- Keyword arguments
- Default values for parameters
- Flexible number of arguments
- Variable scopes