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You're reading from  Scientific Computing with Python 3

Product typeBook
Published inDec 2016
Reading LevelBeginner
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781786463517
Edition1st Edition
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Authors (3):
Claus Führer
Claus Führer
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Claus Führer

Claus Führer is a professor of scientific computations at Lund University, Sweden. He has an extensive teaching record that includes intensive programming courses in numerical analysis and engineering mathematics across various levels in many different countries and teaching environments. Claus also develops numerical software in research collaboration with industry and received Lund University's Faculty of Engineering Best Teacher Award in 2016.
Read more about Claus Führer

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Program and program flow


A program is a sequence of statements that are executed in a top-down order. This linear execution order has some important exceptions:

  • There might be a conditional execution of alternative groups of statements (blocks), which we refer to as branching.
  • There are blocks that are executed repetitively, which is called looping (refer to the following Figure 1.2, Program flow).
  • There are function calls that are references to another piece of code, which is executed before the main program flow is resumed. A function call breaks the linear execution and pauses the execution of a program unit while it passes the control to another unit-a function. When this gets completed, its control is returned to the calling unit.

Figure 1.2: Program flow

Python uses a special syntax to mark blocks of statements: a keyword, a colon, and an indented sequence of statements, which belong to the block (refer to the following Figure 1.3 Block command).

Figure 1.3: Block command

Comments

If a line in a program contains the symbol #, everything following on the same line is considered as a comment:

# This is a comment of the following statement
a = 3  # ... which might get a further comment here  

Line joining

A backslash \ at the end of the line marks the next line as a continuation line, that is, explicit line joining. If the line ends before all the parentheses are closed, the following line will automatically be recognized as a continuation line, that is, implicit line joining.

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Authors (3)

author image
Claus Führer

Claus Führer is a professor of scientific computations at Lund University, Sweden. He has an extensive teaching record that includes intensive programming courses in numerical analysis and engineering mathematics across various levels in many different countries and teaching environments. Claus also develops numerical software in research collaboration with industry and received Lund University's Faculty of Engineering Best Teacher Award in 2016.
Read more about Claus Führer