安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
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- What is Pythons equivalent of (logical-and) in an if-statement?
There is no bitwise negation in Python (just the bitwise inverse operator ~ - but that is not equivalent to not) See also 6 6 Unary arithmetic and bitwise binary operations and 6 7 Binary arithmetic operations The logical operators (like in many other languages) have the advantage that these are short-circuited
- What does colon equal (:=) in Python mean? - Stack Overflow
In Python this is simply = To translate this pseudocode into Python you would need to know the data structures being referenced, and a bit more of the algorithm implementation Some notes about psuedocode::= is the assignment operator or = in Python = is the equality operator or == in Python ; There are certain styles, and your mileage may vary:
- python - What is the purpose of the -m switch? - Stack Overflow
You must run python my_script py from the directory where the file is located Alternatively - python path to my_script py However, you can run python -m my_script (ie refer to the script by module name by omitting the py) from anywhere, as long as Python can find it! Python searches as follows (not 100% sure about the order): Current directory
- Is there a not equal operator in Python? - Stack Overflow
Python is dynamically, but strongly typed, and other statically typed languages would complain about comparing different types There's also the else clause: # This will always print either "hi" or "no hi" unless something unforeseen happens if hi == "hi": # The variable hi is being compared to the string "hi", strings are immutable in Python, so you could use the 'is' operator
- python - What exactly does += do? - Stack Overflow
In Python, += is sugar coating for the __iadd__ special method, or __add__ or __radd__ if __iadd__ isn't present The __iadd__ method of a class can do anything it wants The list object implements it and uses it to iterate over an iterable object appending each element to itself in the same way that the list's extend method does
- math - ` ` vs ` ` for division in Python - Stack Overflow
In Python 2 2 or later in the 2 x line, there is no difference for integers unless you perform a from __future__ import division, which causes Python 2 x to adopt the 3 x behavior Regardless of the future import, 5 0 2 will return 2 0 since that's the floor division result of the operation
- python - Iterating over dictionaries using for loops - Stack Overflow
In Python 3 x, iteritems() was replaced with simply items(), which returns a set-like view backed by the dict, like iteritems() but even better This is also available in 2 7 as viewitems() The operation items() will work for both 2 and 3, but in 2 it will return a list of the dictionary's (key, value) pairs, which will not reflect changes to the dict that happen after the items() call
- What is the reason for having in Python? [duplicate]
In Python 3, they made the operator do a floating-point division, and added the operator to do integer division (i e , quotient without remainder); whereas in Python 2, the operator was simply integer division, unless one of the operands was already a floating point number In Python 2 X:
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