Programs in a file, and variables
Introduction
Well, we can make one-liner
programs. So What? You want to
send programs to other people, so
that they can use them, without
knowing how to write them.
Editing in Notepad
Writing programs in python to a
file is VERY easy. Python programs
are simply text documents - you
can open them up in notepad, and
have a look at them, just like
that. So, go and open notepad.
Type the following:
|
Code Example 1 - mary.py |
#A simple program.
print "Mary had a little
lamb,"
print "it's fleece was white
as snow;"
print "and everywhere that
Mary went",
print "her lamb was sure to
go." |
Keep this exactly the same,
down to where the commas are
placed. Save the file as 'mary.py'
- and make sure notepad doesn't
add .txt to the end of the
filename - You will have to tell
it to save as any file, to avoid
this. Turn off 'Hide known file
extensions' in Windows Explorer,
if it makes it easier.
Using the IDLE Environment
Now, open up the Python IDLE
program (should be in your start
menu). Click 'File > Open' and
find mary.py and open it. if you
cant find mary.py, set the open
dialogue to 'Files of type: All
Files (*)'. A new window will
open, showing the program you just
wrote. To run your program, click
'Run>Run Module' (or just press
F5). Your program will now run in
the main Python screen (Titled
*Python Shell*) and will look like
this:
|
Code Example 2 - mary.py
output |
Mary had a little lamb,
it's fleece was white as snow;
and everywhere that Mary went
her lamb was sure to go.
|
You can also use IDLE to create
Python programs, like what you did
in notepad. Simply click 'File >
New'. We will be writing all of
our programs now in the python
IDLE program - the notepad thing
is just a demonstration to tell
you that a .py file is just a
simple text file, which anyone can
see.
There are a couple of things to
notice here:
- First of all, the comment
wasn't shown. That is good,
because remember - comments
aren't compiled. (try compiling
it after removing the # - it
comes out messy)
- Second, is that the 3rd and
4th line got joined. This is
because there is a comma just
outside the inverted commas that
surround the text. In the
'print' command, this stops the
program from starting a new line
on the screen when showing text.
- You can also run the program
from your command line program
(e.g. MSDOS) - Open the prompt
up, type 'cd path\to\your\file'
then type 'python mary.py'. Your
program will now execute in the
command line.
Variables
Now lets start introducing
variables. Variables store a
value, that can be looked at or
changed at a later time. Let's
make a program that uses
variables. Open up IDLE, click
'File>New Window' - a new window
now appears, and it is easy to
type in programs. Type the
following (or just copy and paste
- just read very carefully, and
compare the code to the output
that the program will make):
|
Code Example 3 - Variables |
#variables demonstrated
print "This program is a demo
of variables"
v = 1
print "The value of v is now",
v
v = v + 1
print "v now equals itself
plus one, making it worth", v
v = 51
print "v can store any
numerical value, to be used
elsewhere."
print "for example, in a
sentence. v is now worth", v
print "v times 5 equals", v*5
print "but v still only
remains", v
print "to make v five times
bigger, you would have to type
v = v * 5"
v = v * 5
print "there you go, now v
equals", v, "and not", v / 5
|
Strings
As you can see, variables store
values, for use at a later time.
You can change them at any time.
You can put in more than numbers,
though. Variables can hold things
like text. A variable that holds
text is called a string. Try this
program:
|
Code Example 4 - Strings |
#giving variables text, and
adding text.
word1 = "Good"
word2 = "Morning"
word3 = "to you too!"
print word1, word2
sentence = word1 + " " + word2
+ " " +word3
print sentence
|
The output will be:
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Code Example 5 - String output |
Good Morning
Good Morning to you too!
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As you see, the variables above
were holding text. Variable
names can also be longer than
one letter - here, we had word1,
word2, and word3. As you can
also see, strings can be added
together to make longer words
or sentences. However, it doesn't
add spaces in between the words
- hence me putting in the "
" things (there is one
space between those).
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