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The Python Workshop Second Edition - Second Edition

You're reading from  The Python Workshop Second Edition - Second Edition

Product type Book
Published in Nov 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804610619
Pages 600 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Authors (5):
Corey Wade Corey Wade
Profile icon Corey Wade
Mario Corchero Jiménez Mario Corchero Jiménez
Profile icon Mario Corchero Jiménez
Andrew Bird Andrew Bird
Profile icon Andrew Bird
Dr. Lau Cher Han Dr. Lau Cher Han
Profile icon Dr. Lau Cher Han
Graham Lee Graham Lee
Profile icon Graham Lee
View More author details

Table of Contents (16) Chapters

Preface 1. Chapter 1: Python Fundamentals – Math, Strings, Conditionals, and Loops 2. Chapter 2: Python Data Structures 3. Chapter 3: Executing Python – Programs, Algorithms, and Functions 4. Chapter 4: Extending Python, Files, Errors, and Graphs 5. Chapter 5: Constructing Python – Classes and Methods 6. Chapter 6: The Standard Library 7. Chapter 7: Becoming Pythonic 8. Chapter 8: Software Development 9. Chapter 9: Practical Python – Advanced Topics 10. Chapter 10: Data Analytics with pandas and NumPy 11. Chapter 11: Machine Learning 12. Chapter 12: Deep Learning with Python 13. Chapter 13: The Evolution of Python – Discovering New Python Features 14. Index 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

Using list comprehensions

List comprehensions are a flexible, expressive way of writing Python expressions to create sequences of values. They make iterating over the input and building the resulting list implicit so that program authors and readers can focus on the important features of what the list represents. It is this concision that makes list comprehensions a Pythonic way of working with lists or sequences.

List comprehensions are built out of bits of Python syntax we have already seen. They are surrounded by square brackets ([]), which signify Python symbols for a literal list. They contain for elements in a list, which is how Python iterates over members of a collection. Optionally, they can filter elements out of a list using the familiar syntax of the if expression.

Exercise 100 – introducing list comprehensions

In this exercise, you will be writing a program that creates a list of cubes of whole numbers from 1 to 5. This example is trivial because we’...

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