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The Python Apprentice

You're reading from   The Python Apprentice Introduction to the Python Programming Language

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788293181
Length 352 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Austin Bingham Austin Bingham
Author Profile Icon Austin Bingham
Austin Bingham
Robert Smallshire Robert Smallshire
Author Profile Icon Robert Smallshire
Robert Smallshire
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting started FREE CHAPTER 2. Strings and Collections 3. Modularity 4. Built-in types and the object model 5. Exploring Built-in Collection types 6. Exceptions 7. Comprehensions, iterables, and generators 8. Defining new types with classes 9. Files and Resource Management 10. Unit testing with the Python standard library 11. Debugging with PDB 12. Afterword – Just the Beginning
13. Virtual Environments 14. Packaging and Distribution 15. Installing Third-Party Packages

Importing standard library modules

As mentioned earlier, Python comes with an extensive standard library, an aspect of Python that is often referred to as batteries included. The standard library is structured as modules, a topic we'll discuss in depth later. What's important at this stage is to know that you gain access to standard library modules by using the import keyword.

The basic form of importing a module is simply the import keyword followed by a space and the name of the module. For example, lets see how we can use the standard library's math module to compute square roots. At the triple-arrow prompt we type the following command:

>>> import math

Since import is a statement which doesn't return a value, Python doesn't print anything if the import succeeds, and we're immediately returned to the prompt. We can access the contents of the imported module by using the name of the module, followed by a dot, followed by the name of the attribute in the module that you need. Like many object
oriented languages the dot operator is used to drill down into object structures. Being expert Pythonistas, we have inside knowledge that the math module contains a function called sqrt(). Let's try to use the following command:

>>> math.sqrt(81)
9.0
You have been reading a chapter from
The Python Apprentice
Published in: Jun 2017
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781788293181
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