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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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The for statement


The primary aim of the for statement is to traverse a list:

for s in ['a', 'b', 'c']:
    print(s), # a b c

In this example, the loop variable s is successively assigned to one element of the list. Notice that the loop variable is available after the loop has terminated. This may sometimes be useful; refer, for instance, the example in section Controlling the flow inside the loop.

One of the most frequent uses of a for loop is to repeat a given task a defined number of times, using the function range  (refer to section Lists of Chapter 1, Getting Started).

for iteration in range(n): # repeat the following code n times
    ...

If the purpose of a loop is to go through a list, many languages (including Python) offer the following pattern:

for k in range(...):
    ...
    element = my_list[k]

If the purpose of that code were to go through the list my_list, the preceding code would not make it very clear. For this reason, a better way to express this is as follows...

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Scientific Computing with Python 3
Published in: Dec 2016Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781786463517

Authors (3)

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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