Return values
A function in Python always returns a single object. If a function has to return more than one object, these are packed and returned as a single tuple object.
For instance, the following function takes a complex number z and returns its polar coordinate representation as magnitude r and angle according to Euler’s formula:
And the Python counterpart would be this:
def complex_to_polar(z): r = sqrt(z.real ** 2 + z.imag ** 2) phi = arctan2(z.imag, z.real) return (r,phi) # here the return object is formed
Here, we used the sqrt(x)
NumPy function for the square root of a number x
and arctan2(x,y)
for the expression tan-1(x/y).
Let us try our function:
z = 3 + 5j # here we define a complex number a = complex_to_polar(z) r = a[0] phi = a[1]
The last three statements can be written more elegantly in a single line:
r,phi = complex_to_polar(z)
We can test our function by calling polar_to_comp
; refer to Exercise 1.
If a function has no return
statement...