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What are the lesser-known but useful features of the Python programming language.

  • Try to limit answers to Python core
  • One feature per answer
  • Give an example and short description of the feature, not just a link to documentation
  • Label the feature using bold title as the first line
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8  
Okay, this is an awesome topic – Teifion Sep 19 '08 at 11:56
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117 Answers

vote up 5 vote down

A slight misfeature of python. The normal fast way to join a list of strings together is,

''.join(list_of_strings)
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7  
there are very good reasons that this is a method of string instead of a method of list. this allows the same function to join any iterable, instead of duplicating join for every iterable type. – Gorgapor Jan 2 '09 at 18:37
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vote up 5 vote down

You can easily transpose an array with zip.

a = [(1,2), (3,4)]
zip(*a)
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vote up 5 vote down

First-class functions

It's not really a hidden feature, but the fact that functions are first class objects is simply great. You can pass them around like any other variable.

>>> def jim(phrase):
...   return 'Jim says, "%s".' % phrase
>>> def say_something(person, phrase):
...   print person(phrase)

>>> say_something(jim, 'hey guys')
'Jim says, "hey guys".'
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vote up 4 vote down

Ability to substitute even thinks like file deletion, file opening etc. - direct manipulation of language library. This is a huge advantage when testing. You don't have to wrap everything in complicated containers. Just substitute a function/method and go. This is also called monkey-patching.

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vote up 4 vote down

Some of the builtin favorites, map(), reduce(), and filter(). All extremely fast and powerful.

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2  
@sil: map still exists in Python 3, as does filter, and reduce exists as functools.reduce. – kaizer.se Oct 4 at 1:17
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Builtin methods or functions don't implement the descriptor protocol which makes it impossible to do stuff like this:

>>> class C(object):
...  id = id
... 
>>> C().id()
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: id() takes exactly one argument (0 given)

However you can create a small bind descriptor that makes this possible:

>>> from types import MethodType
>>> class bind(object):
...  def __init__(self, callable):
...   self.callable = callable
...  def __get__(self, obj, type=None):
...   if obj is None:
...    return self
...   return MethodType(self.callable, obj, type)
... 
>>> class C(object):
...  id = bind(id)
... 
>>> C().id()
7414064
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vote up 4 vote down

You can build up a dictionary from a set of length-2 sequences. Extremely handy when you have a list of values and a list of arrays.

>>> dict([ ('foo','bar'),('a',1),('b',2) ])
{'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'foo': 'bar'}

>>> names = ['Bob', 'Marie', 'Alice']
>>> ages = [23, 27, 36]
>>> dict(zip(names, ages))
{'Alice': 36, 'Bob': 23, 'Marie': 27}
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vote up 4 vote down

Generators

I think that a lot of beginning Python developers pass over generators without really grasping what they're for or getting any sense of their power. It wasn't until I read David M. Beazley's PyCon presentation on generators (it's available here) that I realized how useful (essential, really) they are. That presentation illuminated what was for me an entirely new way of programming, and I recommend it to anyone who doesn't have a deep understanding of generators.

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vote up 4 vote down

inspect module is also a cool feature.

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vote up 4 vote down

One word: IPython

Tab introspection, pretty-printing, %debug, history management, pylab, ... well worth the time to learn well.

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vote up 3 vote down

The reversed() builtin. It makes iterating much cleaner in many cases.

quick example:

for i in reversed([1, 2, 3]):
    print(i)

produces:

3
2
1

However, reversed() also works with arbitrary iterators, such as lines in a file, or generator expressions.

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vote up 3 vote down

Creating dictionary of two sequences that have related data

In [15]: t1 = (1, 2, 3)

In [16]: t2 = (4, 5, 6)

In [17]: dict (zip(t1,t2))
Out[17]: {1: 4, 2: 5, 3: 6}
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vote up 2 vote down

List comprehensions

list comprehensions

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1  
The question does ask for "an example and short description of the feature, not just a link to documentation". Any chance of adding one? – Dave Webb Sep 19 '08 at 12:35
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Everything is dynamic

"There is no compile-time". Everything in Python is runtime. A module is 'defined' by executing the module's source top-to-bottom, just like a script, and the resulting namespace is the module's attribute-space. Likewise, a class is 'defined' by executing the class body top-to-bottom, and the resulting namespace is the class's attribute-space. A class body can contain completely arbitrary code -- including import statements, loops and other class statements. Creating a class, function or even module 'dynamically', as is sometimes asked for, isn't hard; in fact, it's impossible to avoid, since everything is 'dynamic'.

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vote up 2 vote down

Private methods and data hiding (encapsulation)

There's a common idiom in Python of denoting methods and other class members that are not intended to be part of the class's external API by giving them names that start with underscores. This is convenient and works very well in practice, but it gives the false impression that Python does not support true encapsulation of private code and/or data. In fact, Python automatically gives you lexical closures, which make it very easy to encapsulate data in a much more bulletproof way when the situation really warrants it. Here's a contrived example of a class that makes use of this technique:

class MyClass(object):
  def __init__(self):

    privateData = {}

    self.publicData = 123

    def privateMethod(k):
      print privateData[k] + self.publicData

    def privilegedMethod():
      privateData['foo'] = "hello "
      privateMethod('foo')

    self.privilegedMethod = privilegedMethod

  def publicMethod(self):
    print self.publicData

And here's a contrived example of its use:

>>> obj = MyClass()
>>> obj.publicMethod()
123
>>> obj.publicData = 'World'
>>> obj.publicMethod()
World
>>> obj.privilegedMethod()
hello World
>>> obj.privateMethod()
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
AttributeError: 'MyClass' object has no attribute 'privateMethod'
>>> obj.privateData
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
AttributeError: 'MyClass' object has no attribute 'privateData'

The key is that privateMethod and privateData aren't really attributes of obj at all, so they can't be accessed from outside, nor do they show up in dir() or similar. They're local variables in the constructor, completely inaccessible outside of __init__. However, because of the magic of closures, they really are per-instance variables with the same lifetime as the object with which they're associated, even though there's no way to access them from outside except (in this example) by invoking privilegedMethod. Often this sort of very strict encapsulation is overkill, but sometimes it really can be very handy for keeping an API or a namespace squeaky clean.

In Python 2.x, the only way to have mutable private state is with a mutable object (such as the dict in this example). Many people have remarked on how annoying this can be. Python 3.x will remove this restriction by introducing the nonlocal keyword described in PEP 3104.

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2  
this is almost never a good idea. – Gorgapor Jan 2 '09 at 18:38
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vote up 2 vote down

You can override the mro of a class with a metaclass

>>> class A(object):
...     def a_method(self):
...         print("A")
... 
>>> class B(object):
...     def b_method(self):
...         print("B")
... 
>>> class MROMagicMeta(type):
...     def mro(cls):
...         return (cls, B, object)
... 
>>> class C(A, metaclass=MROMagicMeta):
...     def c_method(self):
...         print("C")
... 
>>> cls = C()
>>> cls.c_method()
C
>>> cls.a_method()
Traceback (most recent call last):
 File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
AttributeError: 'C' object has no attribute 'a_method'
>>> cls.b_method()
B
>>> type(cls).__bases__
(<class '__main__.A'>,)
>>> type(cls).__mro__
(<class '__main__.C'>, <class '__main__.B'>, <class 'object'>)

It's probably hidden for a good reason. :)

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vote up 2 vote down

pdb — The Python Debugger

As a programmer, one of the first things that you need for serious program development is a debugger. Python has one built-in which is available as a module called pdb (for "Python DeBugger", naturally!).

http://docs.python.org/library/pdb.html

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vote up 2 vote down

Reloading modules enables a "live-coding" style. But class instances don't update. Here's why, and how to get around it. Remember, everything, yes, everything is an object.

>>> from a_package import a_module
>>> cls = a_module.SomeClass
>>> obj = cls()
>>> obj.method()
(old method output)

Now you change the method in a_module.py and want to update your object.

>>> reload(a_module)
>>> a_module.SomeClass is cls
False # Because it just got freshly created by reload.
>>> obj.method()
(old method output)

Here's one way to update it (but consider it running with scissors):

>>> obj.__class__ is cls
True # it's the old class object
>>> obj.__class__ = a_module.SomeClass # pick up the new class
>>> obj.method()
(new method output)

This is "running with scissors" because the object's internal state may be different than what the new class expects. This works for really simple cases, but beyond that, pickle is your friend. It's still helpful to understand why this works, though.

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vote up 2 vote down

With a minute amount of work, the threading module becomes amazingly easy to use. This decorator changes a function so that it runs in its own thread, returning a placeholder class instance instead of its regular result. You can probe for the answer by checking placeolder.result or wait for it by calling placeholder.awaitResult()

def threadify(function):
    """
    exceptionally simple threading decorator. Just:
    >>> @threadify
    ... def longOperation(result):
    ...     time.sleep(3)
    ...     return result
    >>> A= longOperation("A has finished")
    >>> B= longOperation("B has finished")

    A doesn't have a result yet:
    >>> print A.result
    None

    until we wait for it:
    >>> print A.awaitResult()
    A has finished

    we could also wait manually - half a second more should be enough for B:
    >>> time.sleep(0.5); print B.result
    B has finished
    """
    class thr (threading.Thread,object):
        def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
            threading.Thread.__init__ ( self )  
            self.args, self.kwargs = args, kwargs
            self.result = None
            self.start()
        def awaitResult(self):
            self.join()
            return self.result        
        def run(self):
            self.result=function(*self.args, **self.kwargs)
    return thr
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vote up 1 vote down
>>> x=[1,1,2,'a','a',3]
>>> y = [ _x for _x in x if not _x in locals()['_[1]'] ]
>>> y
[1, 2, 'a', 3]


"locals()['_[1]']" is the "secret name" of the list being created. Very useful when state of list being built affects subsequent build decisions.

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2  
Ew. This 'name' of the result list depends on too many factors to really consider it more than abuse of a specific implementation (and specific to a particular version, to boot.) On top of that it's an O(n^2) algorithm. Yuck. – Thomas Wouters Sep 19 '08 at 13:31
vote up 1 vote down

If you use exec in a function the variable lookup rules change drastically. Closures are no longer possible but Python allows arbitrary identifiers in the function. This gives you a "modifiable locals()" and can be used to star-import identifiers. On the downside it makes every lookup slower because the variables end up in a dict rather than slots in the frame:

>>> def f():
...  exec "a = 42"
...  return a
... 
>>> def g():
...  a = 42
...  return a
... 
>>> import dis
>>> dis.dis(f)
  2           0 LOAD_CONST               1 ('a = 42')
              3 LOAD_CONST               0 (None)
              6 DUP_TOP             
              7 EXEC_STMT           

  3           8 LOAD_NAME                0 (a)
             11 RETURN_VALUE        
>>> dis.dis(g)
  2           0 LOAD_CONST               1 (42)
              3 STORE_FAST               0 (a)

  3           6 LOAD_FAST                0 (a)
              9 RETURN_VALUE
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1  
Just to nitpick: that only applies to bare exec. If you specify the namespace for it to use, eg "d={}; exec "a=42" in d" this won't happen. – Brian Sep 21 '08 at 22:48
vote up 1 vote down

If you are using descriptors on your classes Python completely bypasses __dict__ for that key which makes it a nice place to store such values:

>>> class User(object):
...  def _get_username(self):
...   return self.__dict__['username']
...  def _set_username(self, value):
...   print 'username set'
...   self.__dict__['username'] = value
...  username = property(_get_username, _set_username)
...  del _get_username, _set_username
... 
>>> u = User()
>>> u.username = "foo"
username set
>>> u.__dict__
{'username': 'foo'}

This helps to keep dir() clean.

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vote up 1 vote down

unzip un-needed in Python

Someone blogged about Python not having an unzip function to go with zip(). unzip is straight-forward to calculate because:

>>> t1 = (0,1,2,3)
>>> t2 = (7,6,5,4)
>>> [t1,t2] == zip(*zip(t1,t2))
True

On reflection though, I'd rather have an explicit unzip().

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vote up 1 vote down
class AttrDict(dict):

    def __getattr__(self, name):
        if name in self:
            return self[name]
        raise AttributeError('%s not found' % name)

    def __setattr__(self, name, value):
        self[name] = value

    def __delattr__(self, name):
        del self[name]

person = AttrDict({'name': 'John Doe', 'age': 66})
print person['name']
print person.name

person.name = 'Frodo G'
print person.name

del person.age

print person
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vote up 1 vote down

__getattr__()

getattr is a really nice way to make generic classes, which is especially useful if you're writing an API. For example, in the FogBugz Python API, getattr is used to pass method calls on to the web service seamlessly:

class FogBugz:
    ...

    def __getattr__(self, name):
        # Let's leave the private stuff to Python
        if name.startswith("__"):
            raise AttributeError("No such attribute '%s'" % name)

        if not self.__handlerCache.has_key(name):
            def handler(**kwargs):
                return self.__makerequest(name, **kwargs)
            self.__handlerCache[name] = handler
        return self.__handlerCache[name]
    ...

When someone calls FogBugz.search(q='bug'), they don't get actually call a search method. Instead, getattr handles the call by creating a new function that wraps the makerequest method, which crafts the appropriate HTTP request to the web API. Any errors will be dispatched by the web service and passed back to the user.

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vote up 1 vote down

Tuple unpacking in for loops, list comprehensions and generator expressions:

>>> l=[(1,2),(3,4)]
>>> [a+b for a,b in l ] 
[3,7]

Useful in this idiom for iterating over (key,data) pairs in dictionaries:

d = { 'x':'y', 'f':'e'}
for name, value in d.items():  # one can also use iteritems()
   print "name:%s, value:%s" % (name,value)

prints:

name:x, value:y
name:f, value:e
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vote up 1 vote down

Objects in boolean context

Empty tuples, lists, dicts, strings and many other objects are equivalent to False in boolean context (and non-empty are equivalent to True).

empty_tuple = ()
empty_list = []
empty_dict = {}
empty_string = ''
empty_set = set()
if empty_tuple or empty_list or empty_dict or empty_string or empty_set:
  print 'Never happens!'

This allows logical operations to return one of it's operands instead of True/False, which is useful in some situations:

s = t or "Default value" # s will be assigned "Default value"
                         # if t is false/empty/none
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The first-classness of everything ('everything is an object'), and the mayhem this can cause.

>>> x = 5
>>> y = 10
>>> 
>>> def sq(x):
...   return x * x
... 
>>> def plus(x):
...   return x + x
... 
>>> (sq,plus)[y>x](y)
20

The last line creates a tuple containing the two functions, then evaluates y>x (True) and uses that as an index to the tuple (by casting it to an int, 1), and then calls that function with parameter y and shows the result.

For further abuse, if you were returning an object with an index (e.g. a list) you could add further square brackets on the end; if the contents were callable, more parentheses, and so on. For extra perversion, use the result of code like this as the expression in another example (i.e. replace y>x with this code):

(sq,plus)[y>x](y)[4](x)

This showcases two facets of Python - the 'everything is an object' philosophy taken to the extreme, and the methods by which improper or poorly-conceived use of the language's syntax can lead to completely unreadable, unmaintainable spaghetti code that fits in a single expression.

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vote up 1 vote down

Nested Function Parameter Re-binding

def create_printers(n):
    for i in xrange(n):
        def printer(i=i): # Doesn't work without the i=i
            print i
        yield printer
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