38

I'd like to get a list of all of Pythons keywords as strings. It would also be rather nifty if I could do a similar thing for built in functions.

Something like this :

import syntax
print syntax.keywords
# prints ['print', 'if', 'for', etc...]
1

6 Answers 6

73

They're all listed in the keyword module:

>>> import keyword
>>> keyword.kwlist
['False', 'None', 'True', 'and', 'as', 'assert', 'async', 'await',
 'break', 'class', 'continue', 'def', 'del', 'elif', 'else',
 'except', 'finally', 'for', 'from', 'global', 'if', 'import',
 'in', 'is', 'lambda', 'nonlocal', 'not', 'or', 'pass', 'raise',
 'return', 'try', 'while', 'with', 'yield']

(output as of Python 3.11)

From the keyword.kwlist doc:

Sequence containing all the keywords defined for the interpreter. If any keywords are defined to only be active when particular __future__ statements are in effect, these will be included as well.

2
  • Why do new, init, self, cls, etc. are missing, and how to list them too?
    – defoe
    Jun 20, 2019 at 20:52
  • @defoe Those aren't keywords: self and cls are conventional, while __new__ and __init__ are magic methods, which have their own question here: Finding a list of all double-underscore variables?
    – wjandrea
    May 23 at 18:16
12

The built-in functions are in a module called __builtins__, so:

dir(__builtins__)
1
  • 3
    If this code is in an imported module, I think it would be __builtins__.keys() instead. Or in Python 3, import builtins then dir(builtins) regardless of module. docs.python.org/3/reference/executionmodel.html "By default, when in the __main__ module, __builtins__ is the built-in module builtins; when in any other module, __builtins__ is an alias for the dictionary of the builtins module itself."
    – S. Kirby
    Jun 26, 2016 at 7:19
5

The closest approach I can think of is the following:

from keyword import kwlist
print kwlist

The standard keyword module is generated automatically. For other things related to Python parsing from Python, check the language services set of modules.

Regarding listing the builtins I'm not clear if you're asking for items in the __builtin__ module or functions in that package that are implemented directly in the CPython interpreter:

import __builtin__ as B
from inspect import isbuiltin

# You're either asking for this:
print [name for name in dir(B) if isbuiltin(getattr(B, name))]

# Or this:
print dir(B)
2

You can import builtins:

>>> import builtins
>>> dir(builtins)
['ArithmeticError', 'AssertionError', 'AttributeError', 'BaseException', 'BlockingIOError', 'BrokenPipeError', 'BufferError', 'BytesWarning', 'ChildProcessError', 'ConnectionAbortedError', 'ConnectionError', 'ConnectionRefusedError', 'ConnectionResetError', 'DeprecationWarning', 'EOFError', 'Ellipsis', 'EnvironmentError', 'Exception', 'False', 'FileExistsError', 'FileNotFoundError', 'FloatingPointError', 'FutureWarning', 'GeneratorExit', 'IOError', 'ImportError', 'ImportWarning', 'IndentationError', 'IndexError', 'InterruptedError', 'IsADirectoryError', 'KeyError', 'KeyboardInterrupt', 'LookupError', 'MemoryError', 'ModuleNotFoundError', 'NameError', 'None', 'NotADirectoryError', 'NotImplemented', 'NotImplementedError', 'OSError', 'OverflowError', 'PendingDeprecationWarning', 'PermissionError', 'ProcessLookupError', 'RecursionError', 'ReferenceError', 'ResourceWarning', 'RuntimeError', 'RuntimeWarning', 'StopAsyncIteration', 'StopIteration', 'SyntaxError', 'SyntaxWarning', 'SystemError', 'SystemExit', 'TabError', 'TimeoutError', 'True', 'TypeError', 'UnboundLocalError', 'UnicodeDecodeError', 'UnicodeEncodeError', 'UnicodeError', 'UnicodeTranslateError', 'UnicodeWarning', 'UserWarning', 'ValueError', 'Warning', 'WindowsError', 'ZeroDivisionError', '_', '__build_class__', '__debug__', '__doc__', '__import__', '__loader__', '__name__', '__package__', '__spec__', 'abs', 'all', 'any', 'ascii', 'bin', 'bool', 'bytearray', 'bytes', 'callable', 'chr', 'classmethod', 'compile', 'complex', 'copyright', 'credits', 'delattr', 'dict', 'dir', 'divmod', 'enumerate', 'eval', 'exec', 'exit', 'filter', 'float', 'format', 'frozenset', 'getattr', 'globals', 'hasattr', 'hash', 'help', 'hex', 'id', 'input', 'int', 'isinstance', 'issubclass', 'iter', 'len', 'license', 'list', 'locals', 'map', 'max', 'memoryview', 'min', 'next', 'object', 'oct', 'open', 'ord', 'pow', 'print', 'property', 'quit', 'range', 'repr', 'reversed', 'round', 'set', 'setattr', 'slice', 'sorted', 'staticmethod', 'str', 'sum', 'super', 'tuple', 'type', 'vars', 'zip']

OR (this does not contain errors and stuff with __ beside them):

>>> help('keywords')

Here is a list of the Python keywords.  Enter any keyword to get more help.

False               def                 if                  raise
None                del                 import              return
True                elif                in                  try
and                 else                is                  while
as                  except              lambda              with
assert              finally             nonlocal            yield
break               for                 not                 
class               from                or                  
continue            global              pass                
1
>>> help('keywords')

Here is a list of the Python keywords.  Enter any keyword to get more help.

False               def                 if                  raise
None                del                 import              return
True                elif                in                  try
and                 else                is                  while
as                  except              lambda              with
assert              finally             nonlocal            yield
break               for                 not                 
class               from                or                  
continue            global              pass
-2

The standard keyword module is generated automatically (a Quine) Quine (computing)

>>> import keyword
>>> keyword.kwlist
['False', 'None', 'True', 'and', 'as', 'assert', 'break', 'class', 'continue', 'def', 'del', 'elif', 'else', 'except', 'finally', 'for', 'from', 'global', 'if', 'import', 'in', 'is', 'lambda', 'nonlocal', 'not', 'or', 'pass', 'raise', 'return', 'try', 'while', 'with', 'yield']
>>> len(keyword.kwlist)
33

I categorized the keywords for further reference.

keywords_33 = [
    ('file_2', ['with', 'as']),
    ('module_2', ['from', 'import']),
    ('constant_3', {'bool': ['False', 'True'], 
                    'none': ['None']}),
    ('operator_5', {'logic': ['and', 'not', 'or'],
                    'relation': ['is', 'in']}),
    ('class_1', ['class']),
    ('function_7', ['lambda', 'def', 'pass',
                    'global', 'nonlocal',
                    'return', 'yield']),
    ('loop_4', ['while', 'for', 'continue', 'break']),
    ('condition_3', ['if', 'elif', 'else']),
    ('exception_4', ['try', 'raise', 'except', 'finally']),
    ('debug_2', ['del', 'assert']),
]
2
  • 1
    A quine? Quines generate their own source code. I think you're thinking of something else.
    – wjandrea
    May 23 at 18:25
  • 1
    I don't think this categorization is really useful. as is also used for imports; with is used for more than just files (e.g. Decimal contexts); pass can be used in any block, not just functions; del isn't just used for debugging; try and for can also take else... I'm sure there's more. Lastly, why did you put the numbers in the names?
    – wjandrea
    May 23 at 18:41

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