15

I am newbie on Python.

I run the following code on python 2.7 and I see different result when I use print or print(). What is the difference between these two functions? I read other questions e.g., this question, but I didn't find my answer.

class Rectangle:
    def __init__(self, w, h):
        self.width = w
        self.height = h
    def __str__(self):
        return "(The width is: {0}, and the height is: {1})".format(self.width, self.height)

box = Rectangle(100, 200)
print ("box: ", box)
print "box: ", box

The result is:

('box: ', <__main__.Rectangle instance at 0x0293BDC8>)
box:  (The width is: 100, and the height is: 200)
1
  • 4
    If you are learning Python, I suggest you to use Python 3, which has fewer surprising behaviors Nov 30, 2015 at 10:59

5 Answers 5

31

In Python 2.7 (and before), print is a statement that takes a number of arguments. It prints the arguments with a space in between.

So if you do

print "box:", box

It first prints the string "box:", then a space, then whatever box prints as (the result of its __str__ function).

If you do

print ("box:", box)

You have given one argument, a tuple consisting of two elements ("box:" and the object box).

Tuples print as their representation (mostly used for debugging), so it calls the __repr__ of its elements rather than their __str__ (which should give a user-friendly message).

That's the difference you see: (The width is: 100, and the height is: 200) is the result of your box's __str__, but <__main__.Rectangle instance at 0x0293BDC8> is its __repr__.

In Python 3 and higher, print() is a normal function as any other (so print(2, 3) prints "2 3" and print 2, 3 is a syntax error). If you want to have that in Python 2.7, put

from __future__ import print_function

at the top of your source file, to make it slightly more ready for the present.

1
4

This in mainly a complement to other answers.

You can see in Python 2 scripts print (var) when the normal usage would be print var.

It uses the fact that (var) is just a parenthesed expression in Python 2 with is simply seen as var so print(var) and print var behaves exactly the same in Python 2 - but only works when printing one single variable

The interesting point is that when you considere a migration to Python 3, print(var) (here the call to function print) is already the correct syntax.

TL/DR: print(var) in Python 2 is just a trick to ease Python3 migration using the fact that (var) is just an expression - the tuple form would be (var,)

1

In the first example you're printing tuple, but not calling print function. So the following is identical:

a = ("box: ", box)
print a

In other words, in first example you've created a tuple and printed it. Different output, for different datatypes.

There's supposed to be no significant difference between function and statement for your case, but for sake of future I'm strongly advice you to always use function (print()). However, if you're still interested in differences (not related to your case), with print function you can specify separator, end and where to output it as described in documentation.

2
  • Thansk, but why those two different outputs?? Nov 30, 2015 at 10:48
  • The first one comes from repr(box), the second one from str(box). When you're printing a tuple, repr(...) version is used for all elements.
    – viraptor
    Nov 30, 2015 at 10:51
1

In Python 2.7: print is not a function, it is a keyword and acts as a special statement.

Before that, we need to learn more about tuple and expr in python2.

If we write ('hello'): it is regarded as an expression, not a tuple, it can be only be regarded as a tuple if "," is introduced.

eg:

print("hello")
>>> hello
a=("hello")
>>>'hello'
a=("hello", "world")
>>>('hello', "world")
print("hello", "world")
>>> ('hello', 'world')

so in python2.7, when we use print statement with parenthesis, it is still regarded as a statement not a python function and values with parenthesis are treated to be a tuple or an expression while in python 3, print is no longer a statement it is considered to be a function.

In order to use the print function of python 3 in python2 use the following import statement,

from __future__ import print_function
0

In python 2.7 print() is faster than print. Here a test make with Repl.it Python Console Online :

import time

start_time = time.time()
print "lol"
end_time = time.time()
print(end_time - start_time)

start_time_2 = time.time()
print ("lol")
end_time_2 = time.time()
print(end_time_2 - start_time_2)

print((end_time_2 - start_time_2) > (end_time - start_time))

Python 2.7.10
[GCC 4.8.2] on linux
lol
7.08103179932e-05
lol
1.00135803223e-05
False
2
  • Wouldn't caching affect this experiment in anyway?
    – Samarth S
    Apr 2, 2019 at 2:23
  • Good point but i don't think so ! Curious, I tried this same test with the print without parenthesis on Repl.it and the print with parenthesis on tutorialspoint.com/execute_python_online.php. As result, the last is still faster. Apr 2, 2019 at 3:30

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