442

In Python, what is the difference between expressions and statements?

1
  • 3
    Due to python's definition that expressions are a subset of statements, the question can be revised as: which statements are not expressions?
    – Youjun Hu
    Apr 28, 2022 at 7:51

17 Answers 17

316

Expressions only contain identifiers, literals and operators, where operators include arithmetic and boolean operators, the function call operator () the subscription operator [] and similar, and can be reduced to some kind of "value", which can be any Python object. Examples:

3 + 5
map(lambda x: x*x, range(10))
[a.x for a in some_iterable]
yield 7

Statements (see 1, 2), on the other hand, are everything that can make up a line (or several lines) of Python code. Note that expressions are statements as well. Examples:

# all the above expressions
print 42
if x: do_y()
return
a = 7
19
  • 32
    expressions are parts of statements
    – bismigalis
    Nov 25, 2013 at 17:45
  • 69
    @bismigalis: Every valid Python expression can be used as a statement (called an "expression statement"). In this sense, expressions are statements. Nov 25, 2013 at 18:05
  • 2
    Expressions can also include function calls (including calling classes for object instantiation). Technically these are "identifiers" exactly like names bound to values in an = statement ... even though the binding is through the 'def' or 'class' keywords. However, for this answer I would separately spell out function calls to make that clear.
    – Jim Dennis
    Feb 8, 2015 at 23:26
  • 2
    @George Fair enough. :) Expression statements are quite useful even outside of the REPL – it's quite common to use function call expressions as expression statements, e.g. print("Hello world!") or my_list.append(42). May 28, 2019 at 12:09
  • 7
    @WillTaylor Everything that yields a value is an expression, i.e. everything you could write on the write-hand side of an assignment. Since a = yield 7 is valid, yield 7 is an expression. A long time ago, yield was introduced as a statement, but it was generalized to an expression in PEP 342. Aug 22, 2019 at 19:37
138

Expression -- from the New Oxford American Dictionary:

expression: Mathematics a collection of symbols that jointly express a quantity : the expression for the circumference of a circle is 2πr.

In gross general terms: Expressions produce at least one value.

In Python, expressions are covered extensively in the Python Language Reference In general, expressions in Python are composed of a syntactically legal combination of Atoms, Primaries and Operators.

Python expressions from Wikipedia

Examples of expressions:

Literals and syntactically correct combinations with Operators and built-in functions or the call of a user-written functions:

>>> 23
23
>>> 23l
23L
>>> range(4)
[0, 1, 2, 3] 
>>> 2L*bin(2)
'0b100b10'
>>> def func(a):      # Statement, just part of the example...
...    return a*a     # Statement...
... 
>>> func(3)*4
36    
>>> func(5) is func(a=5)
True

Statement from Wikipedia:

In computer programming a statement can be thought of as the smallest standalone element of an imperative programming language. A program is formed by a sequence of one or more statements. A statement will have internal components (e.g., expressions).

Python statements from Wikipedia

In gross general terms: Statements Do Something and are often composed of expressions (or other statements)

The Python Language Reference covers Simple Statements and Compound Statements extensively.

The distinction of "Statements do something" and "expressions produce a value" distinction can become blurry however:

  • List Comprehensions are considered "Expressions" but they have looping constructs and therfore also Do Something.
  • The if is usually a statement, such as if x<0: x=0 but you can also have a conditional expression like x=0 if x<0 else 1 that are expressions. In other languages, like C, this form is called an operator like this x=x<0?0:1;
  • You can write you own Expressions by writing a function. def func(a): return a*a is an expression when used but made up of statements when defined.
  • An expression that returns None is a procedure in Python: def proc(): pass Syntactically, you can use proc() as an expression, but that is probably a bug...
  • Python is a bit more strict than say C is on the differences between an Expression and Statement. In C, any expression is a legal statement. You can have func(x=2); Is that an Expression or Statement? (Answer: Expression used as a Statement with a side-effect.) The assignment statement of x=2 inside of the function call of func(x=2) in Python sets the named argument a to 2 only in the call to func and is more limited than the C example.
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  • 3
    "From my Dictionary" meaning your personal opinion or the dictionary you own like the oxford dictionary ? Thanks Oct 5, 2019 at 5:13
  • 3
    @Talespin_Kit: ...your personal opinion or the dictionary you own like the Oxford dictionary? Good question. I used the Apple Dictionary app on a Mac which is based on New Oxford American Dictionary.
    – dawg
    Jan 14, 2020 at 17:30
  • @dawg: A couple of the examples you've mentioned, for "blurriness", seem questionable to me. Just because a list comprehension uses the keyword for, can we really say that a list comprehension contains a for statement ? I don't think so. Similarly, just because a conditional expression uses the keyword if, I don't think that we can say that a conditional expression contains an if statement and is therefore "blurring" the distinction between statement and expression. Apr 5 at 2:37
134

Though this isn't related to Python:

An expression evaluates to a value. A statement does something.

>>> x + 2         # an expression
>>> x = 1         # a statement 
>>> y = x + 1     # a statement
>>> print y       # a statement (in 2.x)
2
15
  • 4
    But note that in all language except the really really "pure" ones, expressions can "do something" (more formally: have a side effect) just as well.
    – user395760
    Jan 18, 2011 at 19:32
  • 5
    Likewise, somelist.append(123). Most function calls, really.
    – Thomas K
    Jan 18, 2011 at 19:40
  • 14
    y = x + 1 is not an expression but a statement. Try eval("y = x + 1") and you'll have an error.
    – Arglanir
    Feb 4, 2013 at 9:52
  • 5
    y = x +1 is an expression statement Oct 15, 2016 at 6:52
  • 2
    @SteveFreed Aren't statements made of expressions? If so, saying expression statement is rather redundant.
    – Nameless
    Apr 6, 2021 at 1:14
35

An expression is something that can be reduced to a value. Let's take the following examples and figure out what is what: "1+3" and "foo = 1+3".

It's easy to check:

print(foo = 1+3)

If it doesn't work, it's a statement, if it does, it's an expression. Try it out!

Another statement could be:

class Foo(Bar): pass

as it cannot be reduced to a value.

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  • 1
    As executing your first example would show, assignment is not an expression (not really, that is - a = b = expr is allowed, as a special case) in Python. In languages drawing more inspiration from C, it is.
    – user395760
    Jan 18, 2011 at 19:26
  • 1
    foo = 1+3 is NOT an expression. It is a statement (an assignment to be precise). The part 1+3 is an expression though.
    – Pithikos
    Apr 17, 2015 at 13:25
  • 5
    My formulation is very, very precise: "If it doesn't work, it's a statement, if it does, it's an expression.". Execute it, and you'll have your answer.
    – Flavius
    Jan 31, 2017 at 7:32
  • 1
    The print does not work for the above case because it considers foo=1+3 as a keyword argument, which is not expected by the print function.
    – Youjun Hu
    Apr 28, 2022 at 7:58
  • 1
    print(end="1+3") works, but end="1+3" is neither an expression nor a statement (though it looks like a statement, it's just part of the syntax of a function call.
    – chepner
    Mar 6 at 14:19
27

Statements represent an action or command e.g print statements, assignment statements.

print 'hello', x = 1

Expression is a combination of variables, operations and values that yields a result value.

5 * 5 # yields 25

Lastly, expression statements

print 5*5
1
  • This is an outdated example, as print is an ordinary function now, not a statement.
    – chepner
    Mar 6 at 14:37
11
  1. An expression is a statement that returns a value. So if it can appear on the right side of an assignment, or as a parameter to a method call, it is an expression.
  2. Some code can be both an expression or a statement, depending on the context. The language may have a means to differentiate between the two when they are ambiguous.
0
10

An expression is something, while a statement does something.
An expression is a statement as well, but it must have a return.

>>> 2 * 2          #expression
>>> print(2 * 2)     #statement

PS:The interpreter always prints out the values of all expressions.

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  • 1
    in my opinion, a statement is an expression with a null value
    – Adalcar
    Oct 18, 2017 at 9:35
  • @Adalcar No, there is a distinction between the two as you've probably come to understand from reading all the answers here. An expression tells the interpreter that something needs to be evaluated, calculated, reduced, etc. for example: >>>>5 + 5. A statement does not. Think of the statement as the block of code, that instructs the interpreter to do something (besides evaluation). So as a simple example, x = 5 + 5. This is an assignment STATEMENT, which binds a name to an object in Python. Now, before the result is bound to x, the 5 + 5 EXPRESSION is evaluated. Jun 10, 2022 at 2:28
  • @Adalcar btw, even 5 + 5 alone in Python is a type of statement, know as an "expression statement", but is is not useful outside of the REPL. You could look at a statement as a structural block or step of code in the program (storing values, defining control flow, etc.), but expressions (which are always housed within some kind of statement) as the grunt work done by the cpu. Statements manage and direct how, when, where, etc. expressions are executed. Statements are like a foreman instructing the work, the expression is the guy digging the ditch. :) Jun 10, 2022 at 2:41
  • fyi: Python "expression statements": docs.python.org/3/reference/… Jun 10, 2022 at 2:43
6

STATEMENT:

A Statement is a action or a command that does something. Ex: If-Else,Loops..etc

val a: Int = 5
If(a>5) print("Hey!") else print("Hi!")

EXPRESSION:

A Expression is a combination of values, operators and literals which yields something.

val a: Int = 5 + 5 #yields 10
3
  • 1
    This is a duplicate of this existing answer: stackoverflow.com/questions/4728073/….
    – karel
    Mar 9, 2019 at 15:58
  • 1
    Maybe it's duplicate but it shares my views for the question above. No offence Mar 17, 2019 at 7:52
  • pass is a statement. It is neither an action nor does it do anything. 5 + 5 is an expression; a = 5 + 5 is not. (val is just a syntax error in both cases.)
    – chepner
    Mar 6 at 14:38
6

Expressions always evaluate to a value, statements don't.

e.g.

variable declaration and assignment are statements because they do not return a value

const list = [1,2,3];

Here we have two operands - a variable 'sum' on the left and an expression on the right. The whole thing is a statement, but the bit on the right is an expression as that piece of code returns a value.

const sum = list.reduce((a, b)=> a+ b, 0);  

Function calls, arithmetic and boolean operations are good examples of expressions.

Expressions are often part of a statement.

The distinction between the two is often required to indicate whether we require a pice of code to return a value.

6

References

Expressions and statements

2.3 Expressions and statements - thinkpython2 by Allen B. Downey

2.10. Statements and Expressions - How to Think like a Computer Scientist by Paul Resnick and Brad Miller


An expression is a combination of values, variables, and operators. A value all by itself is considered an expression, and so is a variable, so the following are all legal expressions:

>>> 42
42
>>> n
17
>>> n + 25
42

When you type an expression at the prompt, the interpreter evaluates it, which means that it finds the value of the expression. In this example, n has the value 17 and n + 25 has the value 42.


A statement is a unit of code that has an effect, like creating a variable or displaying a value.

>>> n = 17
>>> print(n)

The first line is an assignment statement that gives a value to n. The second line is a print statement that displays the value of n. When you type a statement, the interpreter executes it, which means that it does whatever the statement says. In general, statements don’t have values.

4

An expression translates to a value.

A statement consumes a value* to produce a result**.


*That includes an empty value, like: print() or pop().

**This result can be any action that changes something; e.g. changes the memory ( x = 1) or changes something on the screen ( print("x") ).


A few notes:

  • Since a statement can return a result, it can be part of an expression.
  • An expression can be part of another expression.
5
  • pass is a statement: it does not consume a value or produce a result.
    – chepner
    Mar 6 at 14:41
  • @chepner, it surely produces a result, it increases program counter by 1.
    – Pontios
    Mar 7 at 20:24
  • That's not an observable property of your program, only an implementation detail of your Python interpreter.
    – chepner
    Mar 7 at 20:25
  • Where did I say that the result should be observable?
    – Pontios
    Apr 6 at 12:14
  • You didn't, I did. Incrementing a program counter by 1 is something that happens inside the interpreter, not your own program being executed by the interpreter.
    – chepner
    Apr 6 at 12:40
3

Statements before could change the state of our Python program: create or update variables, define function, etc.

And expressions just return some value can't change the global state or local state in a function.

But now we got :=, it's an alien!

1
  • Expressions could always change state: every function call is an expression. := just allows names to be bound in value outside of a function, which previously was the only way to wrap an assignment into an expression.
    – chepner
    Mar 6 at 14:41
2

Expressions:

  • Expressions are formed by combining objects and operators.
  • An expression has a value, which has a type.
  • Syntax for a simple expression:<object><operator><object>

2.0 + 3 is an expression which evaluates to 5.0 and has a type float associated with it.

Statements

Statements are composed of expression(s). It can span multiple lines.

1

A statement contains a keyword.

An expression does not contain a keyword.

print "hello" is statement, because print is a keyword.

"hello" is an expression, but list compression is against this.

The following is an expression statement, and it is true without list comprehension:

(x*2 for x in range(10))
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  • 4
    That strongly depends on your definition of a 'keyword'. x = 1 is a perfectly fine statement, but does not contain keywords.
    – Joost
    May 8, 2014 at 20:56
  • No, e.g. is is a keyword but x is y is not necessarily a statement (in general it is just an expression).
    – benjimin
    Feb 13, 2020 at 2:07
1

Expressions are evaluated to produce a value, whereas statements are executed to perform an action or task.

1
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    – Community Bot
    May 14 at 5:23
0

Expressions and statements are both syntactic constructs in Python's grammar.

An expression can be evaluated to produce a value.

A statement is a standalone piece of a Python program (which is simply a sequence of 0 or more statements, executed sequentially). Each kind of statement provides a different set of semantics for defining what the program will do.


Statements are often (but not always) constructed from expressions, using the values of the expressions in their own unique way. Usually, there is some keyword or symbol that can be used to recognize each particular kind of statement.

An exhaustive (as of Python 3.11) list of the various kinds of statements.

  • An expression statement evaluates an expression and discards the result. (Any expression can be used; there are no other distinguishing features of an expression statement.)
  • An assignment statement evaluates an expression and assigns its value to one or more targets. It is identified by the use of = outside of the context of a function call.
  • An assert statement evaluates an expression and raises an exception if the expression's value is false. It is identified by the assert keyword.
  • A pass statement does nothing: it's job is to provide the parser with a statement where one is expected but no other statement is appropriate. It is identified by (and consists solely of) the pass keyword.
  • A del statement removes a binding from the current scope. No expression is evaluated; the binding must be a name, an indexed name, or a dotted name. It is identified by the del keyword.
  • A return statement returns control (and the value of an optional expression, defaulting to None) to the caller of a function. It is identified by the return keyword.
  • A yield statement returns the value of an optional expression (defaulting to None) to the consumer of a generator. It is identified by the yield keyword. (yield is also used in yield expressions; context will make it clear when a statement or expression is meant.)
  • A raise statement evaluates an expression to produce an exception and circumvents the normal execution order. It is identified by the raise keyword.
  • A break statement terminates the currently active loop. It is identified (and consists solely of) the break keyword.
  • A continue statement skips the rest of the body of the currently active loop an attempts to start a new iteration. It is identified (and consists solely of) the continue keyword.
  • An import statement potentially defines a new module object and binds one or more names in the current scope to either a module or values defined in the module. (Like the class statement, there are various hooks available to override exactly what happens during the execution of an import statement.) There are several forms, all of which share the import keyword.
  • A global and nonlocal statement alters the scope in which an assignment to a particular name operates. They are identified by the global and nonlocal keywords, respectively.
  • An if statement evaluates a boolean expression to select a set of statements to execute next. It is identified by the if keyword.
  • A while statement evaluates a boolean expression to determine whether to execute its body, repeating the process until the expression become false. It is identified by the while keyword`.
  • A for loop evaluates an expression to produce an iterator, which it uses to perform some name bindings and repeatedly execute a set of statements with those bindings. It is identified by the for keyword (which is also shared by generator expressions and comprehensions, though context makes it clear which is which).
  • A try statement executes a set of statements and catches any exceptions those statements might raise. It is identified by the try keyword.
  • A with statement evaluates an expression to produce a context manager, which provides a pair of functions to call before and after a set of statements is executed. It is identified by the with keyword.
  • A function definition produces a callable object that wraps one or more statements to be execute when the object is called. It is identified by the def keyword.
  • A class statement evaluates a set of statements to produce a set of bindings to be used as attributes of a new type. (Like an import statement, there are various hooks to override exactly what happens during the execution of a class statement.) It is identified by the class keyword.
  • Coroutines are produced by various function, for, and with statements using the async keyword to distinguish them from their synchronous counterparts.
-1

Python calls expressions "expression statements", so the question is perhaps not fully formed.

A statement consists of pretty much anything you can do in Python: calculating a value, assigning a value, deleting a variable, printing a value, returning from a function, raising an exception, etc. The full list is here: http://docs.python.org/reference/simple_stmts.html#

An expression statement is limited to calling functions (e.g., math.cos(theta)"), operators ( e.g., "2+3"), etc. to produce a value.

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  • 11
    No, Python doesn't call expressions "expression statements". Python calls statements only consisting of a single expression "expression statements". Jan 18, 2011 at 19:37
  • ... and it's not alone doing so.
    – user395760
    Jan 18, 2011 at 19:51
  • @Sven Marnach No, Python doesn't call expressions "expression statements". — Hey, but as per the EBNF rule, isn't every expression an "expression statement"? I am not sure what's wrong with calling expressions "expression statements".
    – Niraj Raut
    May 1, 2021 at 7:41
  • @NirajRaut As an example, in the assignment statement a = 42 the right-hand side 42 is an expression, but it's not an expression statement. Any expression could be used as a statement, but not every expression is actually used as a statement. May 3, 2021 at 12:49
  • @Sven Marnach Off-Topic: I have a question regarding __init__ and __new__. Just want to ask if a term like "constructor" exists in the Python language. I have seen that the docs use it somewhere, but I haven't seen where the term is explicitly defined. Is "constructor" part of the Python language? Does __init__ and __new__ together somehow from the constructor? You, being the pedantic guy, I would like to know your opinion on this. Also, thanks for the clarification.
    – Niraj Raut
    May 4, 2021 at 11:28

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