This function is invoked by the import statement. It mainly exists so that you can replace it with another
function that has a compatible interface, in order to change the
semantics of the import statement. For examples of why
and how you would do this, see the standard library modules
ihooksand
rexec. See also the built-in
module imp, which defines some useful
operations out of which you can build your own
__import__() function.
For example, the statement "import spam" results in the
following call: __import__('spam',globals(),locals(), []); the statement "from spam.ham import eggs" results in "__import__('spam.ham', globals(), locals(),
['eggs'])". Note that even though locals() and
['eggs'] are passed in as arguments, the
__import__() function does not set the local variable
named eggs; this is done by subsequent code that is generated
for the import statement. (In fact, the standard implementation
does not use its locals argument at all, and uses its
globals only to determine the package context of the
import statement.)
When the name variable is of the form package.module,
normally, the top-level package (the name up till the first dot) is
returned, not the module named by name. However, when
a non-empty fromlist argument is given, the module named by
name is returned. This is done for compatibility with the
bytecode generated for the different kinds of import statement; when
using "import spam.ham.eggs", the top-level package spam
must be placed in the importing namespace, but when using "from
spam.ham import eggs", the spam.ham subpackage must be used
to find the eggs variable. As a workaround for this
behavior, use getattr() to extract the desired
components. For example, you could define the following helper:
import string
def my_import(name):
mod = __import__(name)
components = string.split(name, '.')
for comp in components[1:]:
mod = getattr(mod, comp)
return mod
Return the absolute value of a number. The argument may be a plain
or long integer or a floating point number. If the argument is a
complex number, its magnitude is returned.
The function argument must be a callable object (a
user-defined or built-in function or method, or a class object) and
the args argument must be a sequence. The function is
called with args as the argument list; the number of arguments
is the the length of the tuple.
If the optional keywords argument is present, it must be a
dictionary whose keys are strings. It specifies keyword arguments
to be added to the end of the the argument list.
Calling apply() is different from just calling
function(args), since in that case there is always
exactly one argument. The use of apply() is equivalent
to function(*args, **keywords).
The object argument must be an object that supports the buffer
call interface (such as strings, arrays, and buffers). A new buffer
object will be created which references the object argument.
The buffer object will be a slice from the beginning of object
(or from the specified offset). The slice will extend to the
end of object (or will have a length given by the size
argument).
Return true if the object argument appears callable, false if
not. If this returns true, it is still possible that a call fails,
but if it is false, calling object will never succeed. Note
that classes are callable (calling a class returns a new instance);
class instances are callable if they have a __call__()
method.
Return a string of one character whose ASCII code is the integer
i. For example, chr(97) returns the string 'a'.
This is the inverse of ord(). The argument must be in
the range [0..255], inclusive; ValueError will be raised
if i is outside that range.
Compare the two objects x and y and return an integer
according to the outcome. The return value is negative if x
< y, zero if x == y and strictly positive if
x > y.
Compile the string into a code object. Code objects can be
executed by an exec statement or evaluated by a call to
eval(). The filename argument should
give the file from which the code was read; pass some recognizable value
if it wasn't read from a file ('<string>' is commonly used).
The kind argument specifies what kind of code must be
compiled; it can be 'exec' if string consists of a
sequence of statements, 'eval' if it consists of a single
expression, or 'single' if it consists of a single
interactive statement (in the latter case, expression statements
that evaluate to something else than None will printed).
When compiling multi-line statements, two caveats apply: line
endings must be represented by a single newline character
('\n'), and the input must be terminated by at least one
newline character. If line endings are represented by
'\r\n', use the string replace() method to
change them into '\n'.
The optional arguments flags and dont_inherit
(which are new in Python 2.2) control which future statements (see
PEP 236) affect the compilation of string. If neither is
present (or both are zero) the code is compiled with those future
statements that are in effect in the code that is calling compile.
If the flags argument is given and dont_inherit is not
(or is zero) then the future statements specified by the flags
argument are used in addition to those that would be used anyway.
If dont_inherit is a non-zero integer then the flags
argument is it - the future statements in effect around the call to
compile are ignored.
Future statemants are specified by bits which can be bitwise or-ed
together to specify multiple statements. The bitfield required to
specify a given feature can be found as the compiler_flag
attribute on the _Feature instance in the
__future__ module.
Create a complex number with the value real + imag*j or
convert a string or number to a complex number. If the first
parameter is a string, it will be interpreted as a complex number
and the function must be called without a second parameter. The
second parameter can never be a string.
Each argument may be any numeric type (including complex).
If imag is omitted, it defaults to zero and the function
serves as a numeric conversion function like int(),
long() and float().
This is a relative of setattr(). The arguments are an
object and a string. The string must be the name
of one of the object's attributes. The function deletes
the named attribute, provided the object allows it. For example,
delattr(x, 'foobar') is equivalent to
del x.foobar.
Return a new dictionary initialized from the optional argument.
If an argument is not specified, return a new empty dictionary.
If the argument is a mapping object, return a dictionary mapping the
same keys to the same values as does the mapping object.
Else the argument must be a sequence, a container that supports
iteration, or an iterator object. The elements of the argument must
each also be of one of those kinds, and each must in turn contain
exactly two objects. The first is used as a key in the new dictionary,
and the second as the key's value. If a given key is seen more than
once, the last value associated with it is retained in the new
dictionary.
For example, these all return a dictionary equal to
{1: 2, 2: 3}:
Without arguments, return the list of names in the current local
symbol table. With an argument, attempts to return a list of valid
attribute for that object. This information is gleaned from the
object's __dict__ attribute, if defined, and from the class
or type object. The list is not necessarily complete. For
example, for classes, attributes defined in base classes are not
included, and for class instances, methods are not included.
The resulting list is sorted alphabetically. For example:
Take two numbers as arguments and return a pair of numbers consisting
of their quotient and remainder when using long division. With mixed
operand types, the rules for binary arithmetic operators apply. For
plain and long integers, the result is the same as
(a / b, a % b).
For floating point numbers the result is (q, a %
b), where q is usually math.floor(a /
b) but may be 1 less than that. In any case q *
b + a % b is very close to a, if
a % b is non-zero it has the same sign as
b, and 0 <= abs(a % b) < abs(b).
The arguments are a string and two optional dictionaries. The
expression argument is parsed and evaluated as a Python
expression (technically speaking, a condition list) using the
globals and locals dictionaries as global and local name
space. If the locals dictionary is omitted it defaults to
the globals dictionary. If both dictionaries are omitted, the
expression is executed in the environment where eval is
called. The return value is the result of the evaluated expression.
Syntax errors are reported as exceptions. Example:
>>> x = 1
>>> print eval('x+1')
2
This function can also be used to execute arbitrary code objects
(such as those created by compile()). In this case pass
a code object instead of a string. The code object must have been
compiled passing 'eval' as the kind argument.
Hints: dynamic execution of statements is supported by the
exec statement. Execution of statements from a file is
supported by the execfile() function. The
globals() and locals() functions returns the
current global and local dictionary, respectively, which may be
useful to pass around for use by eval() or
execfile().
This function is similar to the
exec statement, but parses a file instead of a string. It
is different from the import statement in that it does not
use the module administration -- it reads the file unconditionally
and does not create a new module.2.2
The arguments are a file name and two optional dictionaries. The
file is parsed and evaluated as a sequence of Python statements
(similarly to a module) using the globals and locals
dictionaries as global and local namespace. If the locals
dictionary is omitted it defaults to the globals dictionary.
If both dictionaries are omitted, the expression is executed in the
environment where execfile() is called. The return value is
None.
Warning:
The default locals act as described for function
locals() below: modifications to the default locals
dictionary should not be attempted. Pass an explicit locals
dictionary if you need to see effects of the code on locals after
function execfile() returns. execfile() cannot
be used reliably to modify a function's locals.
Return a new file object (described earlier under Built-in Types).
The first two arguments are the same as for stdio's
fopen(): filename is the file name to be opened,
mode indicates how the file is to be opened: 'r' for
reading, 'w' for writing (truncating an existing file), and
'a' opens it for appending (which on some Unix
systems means that all writes append to the end of the file,
regardless of the current seek position).
Modes 'r+', 'w+' and 'a+' open the file for
updating (note that 'w+' truncates the file). Append
'b' to the mode to open the file in binary mode, on systems
that differentiate between binary and text files (else it is
ignored). If the file cannot be opened, IOError is
raised.
If mode is omitted, it defaults to 'r'. When opening a
binary file, you should append 'b' to the mode value
for improved portability. (It's useful even on systems which don't
treat binary and text files differently, where it serves as
documentation.)
The optional bufsize argument specifies the
file's desired buffer size: 0 means unbuffered, 1 means line
buffered, any other positive value means use a buffer of
(approximately) that size. A negative bufsize means to use
the system default, which is usually line buffered for for tty
devices and fully buffered for other files. If omitted, the system
default is used.2.3
The file() constructor is new in Python 2.2. The previous
spelling, open(), is retained for compatibility, and is an
alias for file().
Construct a list from those elements of list for which
function returns true. list may be either a sequence, a
container which supports iteration, or an iterator, If list
is a string or a tuple, the result also has that type; otherwise it
is always a list. If function is None, the identity
function is assumed, that is, all elements of list that are false
(zero or empty) are removed.
Convert a string or a number to floating point. If the argument is a
string, it must contain a possibly signed decimal or floating point
number, possibly embedded in whitespace; this behaves identical to
string.atof(x). Otherwise, the argument may be a plain
or long integer or a floating point number, and a floating point
number with the same value (within Python's floating point
precision) is returned.
Note:
When passing in a string, values for NaN and Infinitymay be returned, depending on the
underlying C library. The specific set of strings accepted which
cause these values to be returned depends entirely on the C library
and is known to vary.
Return the value of the named attributed of object. name
must be a string. If the string is the name of one of the object's
attributes, the result is the value of that attribute. For example,
getattr(x, 'foobar') is equivalent to x.foobar. If the
named attribute does not exist, default is returned if provided,
otherwise AttributeError is raised.
Return a dictionary representing the current global symbol table.
This is always the dictionary of the current module (inside a
function or method, this is the module where it is defined, not the
module from which it is called).
The arguments are an object and a string. The result is 1 if the
string is the name of one of the object's attributes, 0 if not.
(This is implemented by calling getattr(object,
name) and seeing whether it raises an exception or not.)
Return the hash value of the object (if it has one). Hash values
are integers. They are used to quickly compare dictionary
keys during a dictionary lookup. Numeric values that compare equal
have the same hash value (even if they are of different types, as is
the case for 1 and 1.0).
Invoke the built-in help system. (This function is intended for
interactive use.) If no argument is given, the interactive help
system starts on the interpreter console. If the argument is a
string, then the string is looked up as the name of a module,
function, class, method, keyword, or documentation topic, and a
help page is printed on the console. If the argument is any other
kind of object, a help page on the object is generated.
Convert an integer number (of any size) to a hexadecimal string.
The result is a valid Python expression. Note: this always yields
an unsigned literal. For example, on a 32-bit machine,
hex(-1) yields '0xffffffff'. When evaluated on a
machine with the same word size, this literal is evaluated as -1; at
a different word size, it may turn up as a large positive number or
raise an OverflowError exception.
Return the `identity' of an object. This is an integer (or long
integer) which is guaranteed to be unique and constant for this
object during its lifetime. Two objects whose lifetimes are
disjunct may have the same id() value. (Implementation
note: this is the address of the object.)
Equivalent to eval(raw_input(prompt)).
Warning:
This function is not safe from user errors! It
expects a valid Python expression as input; if the input is not
syntactically valid, a SyntaxError will be raised.
Other exceptions may be raised if there is an error during
evaluation. (On the other hand, sometimes this is exactly what you
need when writing a quick script for expert use.)
If the readline module was loaded, then
input() will use it to provide elaborate line editing and
history features.
Consider using the raw_input() function for general input
from users.
Convert a string or number to a plain integer. If the argument is a
string, it must contain a possibly signed decimal number
representable as a Python integer, possibly embedded in whitespace;
this behaves identical to string.atoi(x[,
radix]). The radix parameter gives the base for the
conversion and may be any integer in the range [2, 36], or zero. If
radix is zero, the proper radix is guessed based on the
contents of string; the interpretation is the same as for integer
literals. If radix is specified and x is not a string,
TypeError is raised.
Otherwise, the argument may be a plain or
long integer or a floating point number. Conversion of floating
point numbers to integers truncates (towards zero).
Enter string in the table of ``interned'' strings and return
the interned string - which is string itself or a copy.
Interning strings is useful to gain a little performance on
dictionary lookup - if the keys in a dictionary are interned, and
the lookup key is interned, the key comparisons (after hashing) can
be done by a pointer compare instead of a string compare. Normally,
the names used in Python programs are automatically interned, and
the dictionaries used to hold module, class or instance attributes
have interned keys. Interned strings are immortal (never get
garbage collected).
Return true if the object argument is an instance of the
classinfo argument, or of a (direct or indirect) subclass
thereof. Also return true if classinfo is a type object and
object is an object of that type. If object is not a
class instance or a object of the given type, the function always
returns false. If classinfo is neither a class object nor a
type object, it may be a tuple of class or type objects, or may
recursively contain other such tuples (other sequence types are not
accepted). If classinfo is not a class, type, or tuple of
classes, types, and such tuples, a TypeError exception
is raised.
Changed in version 2.2:
Support for a tuple of type information was added.
Return true if class1 is a subclass (direct or indirect) of
class2. A class is considered a subclass of itself. If
either argument is not a class object, a TypeError
exception is raised.
Return an iterator object. The first argument is interpreted very
differently depending on the presence of the second argument.
Without a second argument, o must be a collection object which
supports the iteration protocol (the __iter__() method), or
it must support the sequence protocol (the __getitem__()
method with integer arguments starting at 0). If it does not
support either of those protocols, TypeError is raised.
If the second argument, sentinel, is given, then o must
be a callable object. The iterator created in this case will call
o with no arguments for each call to its next()
method; if the value returned is equal to sentinel,
StopIteration will be raised, otherwise the value will
be returned.
New in version 2.2.
Return a list whose items are the same and in the same order as
sequence's items. sequence may be either a sequence, a
container that supports iteration, or an iterator object. If
sequence is already a list, a copy is made and returned,
similar to sequence[:]. For instance,
list('abc') returns ['a', 'b', 'c'] and list(
(1, 2, 3) ) returns [1, 2, 3].
Return a dictionary representing the current local symbol table.
Warning:
The contents of this dictionary should not be modified;
changes may not affect the values of local variables used by the
interpreter.
Convert a string or number to a long integer. If the argument is a
string, it must contain a possibly signed number of
arbitrary size, possibly embedded in whitespace;
this behaves identical to string.atol(x). The
radix argument is interpreted in the same way as for
int(), and may only be given when x is a string.
Otherwise, the argument may be a plain or
long integer or a floating point number, and a long integer with
the same value is returned. Conversion of floating
point numbers to integers truncates (towards zero).
Apply function to every item of list and return a list
of the results. If additional list arguments are passed,
function must take that many arguments and is applied to the
items of all lists in parallel; if a list is shorter than another it
is assumed to be extended with None items. If function
is None, the identity function is assumed; if there are
multiple list arguments, map() returns a list consisting
of tuples containing the corresponding items from all lists (a kind
of transpose operation). The list arguments may be any kind
of sequence; the result is always a list.
With a single argument s, return the largest item of a
non-empty sequence (such as a string, tuple or list). With more
than one argument, return the largest of the arguments.
With a single argument s, return the smallest item of a
non-empty sequence (such as a string, tuple or list). With more
than one argument, return the smallest of the arguments.
Convert an integer number (of any size) to an octal string. The
result is a valid Python expression. Note: this always yields an
unsigned literal. For example, on a 32-bit machine, oct(-1)
yields '037777777777'. When evaluated on a machine with the
same word size, this literal is evaluated as -1; at a different word
size, it may turn up as a large positive number or raise an
OverflowError exception.
Return the ASCII value of a string of one character or a Unicode
character. E.g., ord('a') returns the integer 97,
ord(u'
u2020') returns 8224. This is the inverse of
chr() for strings and of unichr() for Unicode
characters.
Return x to the power y; if z is present, return
x to the power y, modulo z (computed more
efficiently than pow(x, y) % z). The
arguments must have numeric types. With mixed operand types, the
coercion rules for binary arithmetic operators apply. For int and
long int operands, the result has the same type as the operands
(after coercion) unless the second argument is negative; in that
case, all arguments are converted to float and a float result is
delivered. For example, 10**2 returns 100, but
10**-2 returns 0.01. (This last feature was added in
Python 2.2. In Python 2.1 and before, if both arguments were of integer
types and the second argument was negative, an exception was raised.)
If the second argument is negative, the third argument must be omitted.
If z is present, x and y must be of integer types,
and y must be non-negative. (This restriction was added in
Python 2.2. In Python 2.1 and before, floating 3-argument pow()
returned platform-dependent results depending on floating-point
rounding accidents.)
This is a versatile function to create lists containing arithmetic
progressions. It is most often used in for loops. The
arguments must be plain integers. If the step argument is
omitted, it defaults to 1. If the start argument is
omitted, it defaults to 0. The full form returns a list of
plain integers [start, start + step,
start + 2 * step, ...]. If step is positive,
the last element is the largest start + i *
step less than stop; if step is negative, the last
element is the largest start + i * step
greater than stop. step must not be zero (or else
ValueError is raised). Example:
If the prompt argument is present, it is written to standard output
without a trailing newline. The function then reads a line from input,
converts it to a string (stripping a trailing newline), and returns that.
When EOF is read, EOFError is raised. Example:
>>> s = raw_input('--> ')
--> Monty Python's Flying Circus
>>> s
"Monty Python's Flying Circus"
If the readline module was loaded, then
raw_input() will use it to provide elaborate
line editing and history features.
Apply function of two arguments cumulatively to the items of
sequence, from left to right, so as to reduce the sequence to
a single value. For example,
reduce(lambda x, y: x+y, [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]) calculates
((((1+2)+3)+4)+5).
If the optional initializer is present, it is placed before
the items of the sequence in the calculation, and serves as a
default when the sequence is empty.
Re-parse and re-initialize an already imported module. The
argument must be a module object, so it must have been successfully
imported before. This is useful if you have edited the module
source file using an external editor and want to try out the new
version without leaving the Python interpreter. The return value is
the module object (the same as the module argument).
There are a number of caveats:
If a module is syntactically correct but its initialization fails,
the first import statement for it does not bind its name
locally, but does store a (partially initialized) module object in
sys.modules. To reload the module you must first
import it again (this will bind the name to the partially
initialized module object) before you can reload() it.
When a module is reloaded, its dictionary (containing the module's
global variables) is retained. Redefinitions of names will override
the old definitions, so this is generally not a problem. If the new
version of a module does not define a name that was defined by the
old version, the old definition remains. This feature can be used
to the module's advantage if it maintains a global table or cache of
objects -- with a try statement it can test for the
table's presence and skip its initialization if desired.
It is legal though generally not very useful to reload built-in or
dynamically loaded modules, except for sys,
__main__ and __builtin__. In
many cases, however, extension modules are not designed to be
initialized more than once, and may fail in arbitrary ways when
reloaded.
If a module imports objects from another module using from
... import ..., calling reload() for
the other module does not redefine the objects imported from it --
one way around this is to re-execute the from statement,
another is to use import and qualified names
(module.name) instead.
If a module instantiates instances of a class, reloading the module
that defines the class does not affect the method definitions of the
instances -- they continue to use the old class definition. The
same is true for derived classes.
Return a string containing a printable representation of an object.
This is the same value yielded by conversions (reverse quotes).
It is sometimes useful to be able to access this operation as an
ordinary function. For many types, this function makes an attempt
to return a string that would yield an object with the same value
when passed to eval().
Return the floating point value x rounded to n digits
after the decimal point. If n is omitted, it defaults to zero.
The result is a floating point number. Values are rounded to the
closest multiple of 10 to the power minus n; if two multiples
are equally close, rounding is done away from 0 (so. for example,
round(0.5) is 1.0 and round(-0.5) is -1.0).
This is the counterpart of getattr(). The arguments are an
object, a string and an arbitrary value. The string may name an
existing attribute or a new attribute. The function assigns the
value to the attribute, provided the object allows it. For example,
setattr(x, 'foobar', 123) is equivalent to
x.foobar = 123.
Return a slice object representing the set of indices specified by
range(start, stop, step). The start
and step arguments default to None. Slice objects have
read-only data attributes start, stop and
step which merely return the argument values (or their
default). They have no other explicit functionality; however they
are used by Numerical Pythonand other third
party extensions. Slice objects are also generated when extended
indexing syntax is used. For example: "a[start:stop:step]" or
"a[start:stop, i]".
Return a string containing a nicely printable representation of an
object. For strings, this returns the string itself. The
difference with repr(object) is that
str(object) does not always attempt to return a string
that is acceptable to eval(); its goal is to return a
printable string.
Return a tuple whose items are the same and in the same order as
sequence's items. sequence may be a sequence, a
container that supports iteration, or an iterator object.
If sequence is already a tuple, it
is returned unchanged. For instance, tuple('abc') returns
returns ('a', 'b', 'c') and tuple([1, 2, 3]) returns
(1, 2, 3).
Return the Unicode string of one character whose Unicode code is the
integer i. For example, unichr(97) returns the string
u'a'. This is the inverse of ord() for Unicode
strings. The argument must be in the range [0..65535], inclusive.
ValueError is raised otherwise.
New in version 2.0.
Return the Unicode string version of object using one of the
following modes:
If encoding and/or errors are given, unicode()
will decode the object which can either be an 8-bit string or a
character buffer using the codec for encoding. The
encoding parameter is a string giving the name of an encoding.
Error handling is done according to errors; this specifies the
treatment of characters which are invalid in the input encoding. If
errors is 'strict' (the default), a
ValueError is raised on errors, while a value of
'ignore' causes errors to be silently ignored, and a value of
'replace' causes the official Unicode replacement character,
U+FFFD, to be used to replace input characters which cannot
be decoded. See also the codecs module.
If no optional parameters are given, unicode() will mimic the
behaviour of str() except that it returns Unicode strings
instead of 8-bit strings. More precisely, if object is an
Unicode string or subclass it will return a Unicode string without
any additional decoding applied. For objects which provide a
__unicode__ method, it will call this method without
arguments to create a Unicode string. For all other objects, the
8-bit string version or representation is requested and then
converted to a Unicode string using the codec for the default
encoding in 'strict' mode.
New in version 2.0.
Without arguments, return a dictionary corresponding to the current
local symbol table. With a module, class or class instance object
as argument (or anything else that has a __dict__
attribute), returns a dictionary corresponding to the object's
symbol table. The returned dictionary should not be modified: the
effects on the corresponding symbol table are undefined.2.4
This function is very similar to range(), but returns an
``xrange object'' instead of a list. This is an opaque sequence
type which yields the same values as the corresponding list, without
actually storing them all simultaneously. The advantage of
xrange() over range() is minimal (since
xrange() still has to create the values when asked for
them) except when a very large range is used on a memory-starved
machine or when all of the range's elements are never used (such as
when the loop is usually terminated with break).
This function returns a list of tuples, where the i-th tuple contains
the i-th element from each of the argument sequences. At
least one sequence is required, otherwise a TypeError is
raised. The returned list is truncated in length to the length of
the shortest argument sequence. When there are multiple argument
sequences which are all of the same length, zip() is
similar to map() with an initial argument of None.
With a single sequence argument, it returns a list of 1-tuples.
New in version 2.0.
Specifying a buffer size currently has no effect on systems that
don't have setvbuf(). The interface to specify the
buffer size is not done using a method that calls
setvbuf(), because that may dump core when called
after any I/O has been performed, and there's no reliable way to
determine whether this is the case.
In the current implementation, local variable bindings cannot
normally be affected this way, but variables retrieved from
other scopes (such as modules) can be. This may change.