Toán tử nào không thể được sử dụng trên các bộ trong python?

Set là một trong 4 kiểu dữ liệu tích hợp trong Python được sử dụng để lưu trữ các bộ sưu tập dữ liệu, 3 kiểu còn lại là List, Tuple và Dictionary, tất cả đều có chất lượng và cách sử dụng khác nhau

Một bộ là một bộ sưu tập không có thứ tự, không thể thay đổi* và không được lập chỉ mục

* Ghi chú. Các mục trong bộ không thể thay đổi, nhưng bạn có thể xóa các mục và thêm các mục mới

Các tập hợp được viết bằng dấu ngoặc nhọn

Thí dụ

Tạo một bộ

thisset = {"apple", "banana", "cherry"}
print[thisset]

Try it Yourself »

Note. Các bộ không có thứ tự, vì vậy bạn không thể chắc chắn các mục sẽ xuất hiện theo thứ tự nào

Đặt mục

Các mục của bộ không có thứ tự, không thể thay đổi và không cho phép các giá trị trùng lặp

không có thứ tự

Không có thứ tự có nghĩa là các mục trong một bộ không có thứ tự xác định

Các mục trong bộ có thể xuất hiện theo một thứ tự khác mỗi khi bạn sử dụng chúng và không thể được gọi bằng chỉ mục hoặc khóa

không thể thay đổi

Các mục trong bộ không thể thay đổi, nghĩa là chúng ta không thể thay đổi các mục sau khi tạo bộ

Sau khi một bộ được tạo, bạn không thể thay đổi các mục của nó, nhưng bạn có thể xóa các mục và thêm các mục mới

Bản sao không được phép

Bộ không thể có hai mục có cùng giá trị

Thí dụ

Các giá trị trùng lặp sẽ bị bỏ qua

thisset = {"táo", "chuối", "anh đào", "táo"}

in [bộ này]

Try it Yourself »

Get the Length of a Set

To determine how many items a set has, use the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
486 function

Thí dụ

Get the number of items in a set

thisset = {"apple", "banana", "cherry"}

print[len[thisset]]

Try it Yourself »

Set Items - Data Types

Set items can be of any data type

Thí dụ

String, int and boolean data types

set1 = {"apple", "banana", "cherry"}
set2 = {1, 5, 7, 9, 3}
set3 = {True, False, False}

Try it Yourself »

A set can contain different data types

Thí dụ

A set with strings, integers and boolean values

set1 = {"abc", 34, True, 40, "male"}

Try it Yourself »

type[]

From Python's perspective, sets are defined as objects with the data type 'set'

Thí dụ

What is the data type of a set?

myset = {"apple", "banana", "cherry"}
print[type[myset]]

Try it Yourself »

The set[] Constructor

It is also possible to use the set[] constructor to make a set

Thí dụ

Using the set[] constructor to make a set

thisset = set[["apple", "banana", "cherry"]] # note the double round-brackets
print[thisset]

Try it Yourself »

Python Collections [Arrays]

There are four collection data types in the Python programming language

  • List is a collection which is ordered and changeable. Allows duplicate members
  • Tuple is a collection which is ordered and unchangeable. Allows duplicate members
  • Set is a collection which is unordered, unchangeable*, and unindexed. No duplicate members
  • Dictionary is a collection which is ordered** and changeable. No duplicate members

*Set items are unchangeable, but you can remove items and add new items

**As of Python version 3. 7, dictionaries are ordered. In Python 3. 6 and earlier, dictionaries are unordered

When choosing a collection type, it is useful to understand the properties of that type. Choosing the right type for a particular data set could mean retention of meaning, and, it could mean an increase in efficiency or security

Some collection classes are mutable. The methods that add, subtract, or rearrange their members in place, and don’t return a specific item, never return the collection instance itself but

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
31

Some operations are supported by several object types; in particular, practically all objects can be compared for equality, tested for truth value, and converted to a string [with the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
32 function or the slightly different
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
33 function]. The latter function is implicitly used when an object is written by the
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
34 function

Truth Value Testing¶

Bất kỳ đối tượng nào cũng có thể được kiểm tra giá trị thực, để sử dụng trong điều kiện

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
35 hoặc
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
36 hoặc dưới dạng toán hạng của phép toán Boolean bên dưới

Theo mặc định, một đối tượng được coi là đúng trừ khi lớp của nó định nghĩa phương thức

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
37 trả về
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38 hoặc phương thức
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
39 trả về 0 khi được gọi với đối tượng. 1 Here are most of the built-in objects considered false

  • hằng số được xác định là sai.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    31 và
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    38

  • số không của bất kỳ loại số nào.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    42,
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    43,
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    44,
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    45,
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    46

  • trình tự và bộ sưu tập trống.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    47,
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    48,
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    49,
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    50,
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    51,
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    52

Các phép toán và hàm dựng sẵn có kết quả Boolean luôn trả về

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
42 hoặc
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38 nếu sai và
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
55 hoặc
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 nếu đúng, trừ khi có quy định khác. [Ngoại lệ quan trọng. các phép toán Boolean
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
57 và
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
58 luôn trả về một trong các toán hạng của chúng. ]

Phép toán Boolean —
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
58,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
57,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
61¶

Đây là các phép toán Boolean, được sắp xếp theo mức độ ưu tiên tăng dần

Hoạt động

Kết quả

ghi chú

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
62

nếu x sai, thì y, ngược lại x

[1]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
63

nếu x sai, thì x, ngược lại y

[2]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
64

nếu x sai, thì

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56, ngược lại thì
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38

[3]

ghi chú

  1. Đây là toán tử ngắn mạch, vì vậy nó chỉ đánh giá đối số thứ hai nếu đối số thứ nhất sai

  2. Đây là toán tử ngắn mạch, vì vậy nó chỉ đánh giá đối số thứ hai nếu đối số thứ nhất đúng

  3. def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    61 có mức ưu tiên thấp hơn so với các toán tử không phải Boolean, do đó,
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    68 được hiểu là
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    69 và
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    70 là một lỗi cú pháp

So sánh¶

Có tám thao tác so sánh trong Python. Tất cả chúng đều có cùng mức độ ưu tiên [cao hơn so với các phép toán Boolean]. So sánh có thể được xâu chuỗi tùy ý;

Bảng này tóm tắt các hoạt động so sánh

Hoạt động

Meaning

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
74

strictly less than

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
75

less than or equal

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
76

strictly greater than

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
77

greater than or equal

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
78

equal

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
79

not equal

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
80

object identity

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
81

negated object identity

Objects of different types, except different numeric types, never compare equal. The

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
78 operator is always defined but for some object types [for example, class objects] is equivalent to
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
80. The
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
74,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
75,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
76 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
77 operators are only defined where they make sense; for example, they raise a
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
88 exception when one of the arguments is a complex number

Non-identical instances of a class normally compare as non-equal unless the class defines the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
89 method

Instances of a class cannot be ordered with respect to other instances of the same class, or other types of object, unless the class defines enough of the methods

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
90,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
91,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
92, and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
93 [in general,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
90 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
89 are sufficient, if you want the conventional meanings of the comparison operators]

The behavior of the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
80 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
81 operators cannot be customized; also they can be applied to any two objects and never raise an exception

Two more operations with the same syntactic priority,

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
98 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
99, are supported by types that are iterable or implement the
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
900 method.

Numeric Types —
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
901,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
902,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
903¶

There are three distinct numeric types. integers, floating point numbers, and complex numbers. In addition, Booleans are a subtype of integers. Integers have unlimited precision. Floating point numbers are usually implemented using double in C; information about the precision and internal representation of floating point numbers for the machine on which your program is running is available in

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
904. Complex numbers have a real and imaginary part, which are each a floating point number. To extract these parts from a complex number z, use
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
905 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
906. [The standard library includes the additional numeric types
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
907, for rationals, and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
908, for floating-point numbers with user-definable precision. ]

Numbers are created by numeric literals or as the result of built-in functions and operators. Unadorned integer literals [including hex, octal and binary numbers] yield integers. Numeric literals containing a decimal point or an exponent sign yield floating point numbers. Appending

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
909 or
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
910 to a numeric literal yields an imaginary number [a complex number with a zero real part] which you can add to an integer or float to get a complex number with real and imaginary parts

Python fully supports mixed arithmetic. when a binary arithmetic operator has operands of different numeric types, the operand with the “narrower” type is widened to that of the other, where integer is narrower than floating point, which is narrower than complex. A comparison between numbers of different types behaves as though the exact values of those numbers were being compared. 2

The constructors

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
911,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
912, and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
913 can be used to produce numbers of a specific type

All numeric types [except complex] support the following operations [for priorities of the operations, see Operator precedence ].

Hoạt động

Kết quả

ghi chú

Full documentation

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
914

sum of x and y

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
915

difference of x and y

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
916

product of x and y

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
917

quotient of x and y

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
918

floored quotient of x and y

[1]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
919

remainder of

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
917

[2]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
921

x negated

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
922

x unchanged

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
923

absolute value or magnitude of x

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
924

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
925

x converted to integer

[3][6]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
911

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
927

x được chuyển đổi thành dấu phẩy động

[4][6]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
912

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
929

số phức có phần thực là phần ảo. tôi mặc định là không

[6]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
913

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
931

conjugate of the complex number c

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
932

the pair

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
933

[2]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
934

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
935

x to the power y

[5]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
936

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
937

x to the power y

[5]

ghi chú

  1. Also referred to as integer division. The resultant value is a whole integer, though the result’s type is not necessarily int. The result is always rounded towards minus infinity.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    938 is
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    42,
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    940 is
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    941,
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    942 is
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    941, and
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    944 is
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    42

  2. Not for complex numbers. Thay vào đó hãy chuyển đổi thành float bằng cách sử dụng

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    924 nếu thích hợp

  3. Conversion from floating point to integer may round or truncate as in C; see functions

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    947 and
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    948 for well-defined conversions

  4. float also accepts the strings “nan” and “inf” with an optional prefix “+” or “-” for Not a Number [NaN] and positive or negative infinity

  5. Python defines

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    949 and
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    950 to be
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    55, as is common for programming languages

  6. The numeric literals accepted include the digits

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    42 to
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    953 or any Unicode equivalent [code points with the
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    954 property]

    See https. //www. unicode. org/Public/14. 0. 0/ucd/extracted/DerivedNumericType. txt for a complete list of code points with the

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    954 property

All

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
956 types [
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
901 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
902] also include the following operations

Hoạt động

Kết quả

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
959

x truncated to

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
960

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
961

x rounded to n digits, rounding half to even. If n is omitted, it defaults to 0

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
962

the greatest

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
960 '-0b100101' s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign return len[s] # len['100101'] --> 6 964

the least

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
960 >= x

For additional numeric operations see the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
966 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
967 modules

Bitwise Operations on Integer Types¶

Bitwise operations only make sense for integers. The result of bitwise operations is calculated as though carried out in two’s complement with an infinite number of sign bits

The priorities of the binary bitwise operations are all lower than the numeric operations and higher than the comparisons; the unary operation

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
968 has the same priority as the other unary numeric operations [
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
969 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
970]

This table lists the bitwise operations sorted in ascending priority

Hoạt động

Kết quả

ghi chú

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
971

bitwise or of x and y

[4]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
972

bitwise exclusive or of x and y

[4]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
973

bitwise and of x and y

[4]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
974

x shifted left by n bits

[1][2]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
975

x shifted right by n bits

[1][3]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
976

the bits of x inverted

ghi chú

  1. Negative shift counts are illegal and cause a

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    977 to be raised

  2. A left shift by n bits is equivalent to multiplication by

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    978

  3. A right shift by n bits is equivalent to floor division by

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    978

  4. Performing these calculations with at least one extra sign extension bit in a finite two’s complement representation [a working bit-width of

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    980 or more] is sufficient to get the same result as if there were an infinite number of sign bits

Additional Methods on Integer Types¶

The int type implements the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
981 abstract base class . In addition, it provides a few more methods.

int. bit_length[]

Return the number of bits necessary to represent an integer in binary, excluding the sign and leading zeros

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
51

More precisely, if

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
982 is nonzero, then
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
983 is the unique positive integer
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
984 such that
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
985. Equivalently, when
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
923 is small enough to have a correctly rounded logarithm, then
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
987. If
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
982 is zero, then
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
983 returns
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
42

Equivalent to

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6

New in version 3. 1

int. bit_count[]

Return the number of ones in the binary representation of the absolute value of the integer. This is also known as the population count. Example

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9

Equivalent to

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
63

New in version 3. 10

int. to_bytes[length=1 , byteorder='big' , * , signed=False]

Return an array of bytes representing an integer

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
64

The integer is represented using length bytes, and defaults to 1. An

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
991 is raised if the integer is not representable with the given number of bytes

The byteorder argument determines the byte order used to represent the integer, and defaults to

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
992. If byteorder is
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
992, the most significant byte is at the beginning of the byte array. If byteorder is
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
994, the most significant byte is at the end of the byte array

The signed argument determines whether two’s complement is used to represent the integer. If signed is

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38 and a negative integer is given, an
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
991 is raised. The default value for signed is
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38

The default values can be used to conveniently turn an integer into a single byte object. However, when using the default arguments, don’t try to convert a value greater than 255 or you’ll get an

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
991

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
73

Equivalent to

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
74

New in version 3. 2

Changed in version 3. 11. Added default argument values for

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
999 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6300.

classmethod int. from_bytes[bytes , byteorder='big' , * , signed=False]

Return the integer represented by the given array of bytes

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
77

The argument bytes must either be a bytes-like object or an iterable producing bytes.

The byteorder argument determines the byte order used to represent the integer, and defaults to

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
992. If byteorder is
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
992, the most significant byte is at the beginning of the byte array. If byteorder is
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
994, the most significant byte is at the end of the byte array. To request the native byte order of the host system, use
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6304 as the byte order value

The signed argument indicates whether two’s complement is used to represent the integer

Equivalent to

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
82

New in version 3. 2

Changed in version 3. 11. Added default argument value for

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6300.

int. as_integer_ratio[]

Return a pair of integers whose ratio is exactly equal to the original integer and with a positive denominator. The integer ratio of integers [whole numbers] is always the integer as the numerator and

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
55 as the denominator

New in version 3. 8

Additional Methods on Float¶

The float type implements the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
956 abstract base class . float also has the following additional methods.

float. as_integer_ratio[]

Return a pair of integers whose ratio is exactly equal to the original float and with a positive denominator. Raises

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
991 on infinities and a
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
977 on NaNs

float. is_integer[]

Return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 if the float instance is finite with integral value, and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38 otherwise

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
90

Two methods support conversion to and from hexadecimal strings. Since Python’s floats are stored internally as binary numbers, converting a float to or from a decimal string usually involves a small rounding error. In contrast, hexadecimal strings allow exact representation and specification of floating-point numbers. This can be useful when debugging, and in numerical work

float. hex[]

Return a representation of a floating-point number as a hexadecimal string. For finite floating-point numbers, this representation will always include a leading

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6312 and a trailing
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6313 and exponent

classmethod float. fromhex[s]

Class method to return the float represented by a hexadecimal string s. The string s may have leading and trailing whitespace

Note that

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6314 is an instance method, while
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6315 is a class method

A hexadecimal string takes the form

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
0

where the optional

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6316 may by either
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
969 or
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
970,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6319 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6320 are strings of hexadecimal digits, and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6321 is a decimal integer with an optional leading sign. Case is not significant, and there must be at least one hexadecimal digit in either the integer or the fraction. This syntax is similar to the syntax specified in section 6. 4. 4. 2 of the C99 standard, and also to the syntax used in Java 1. 5 onwards. In particular, the output of
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6314 is usable as a hexadecimal floating-point literal in C or Java code, and hexadecimal strings produced by C’s
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6323 format character or Java’s
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6324 are accepted by
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6315

Note that the exponent is written in decimal rather than hexadecimal, and that it gives the power of 2 by which to multiply the coefficient. For example, the hexadecimal string

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6326 represents the floating-point number
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6327, or
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6328

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
1

Applying the reverse conversion to

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6328 gives a different hexadecimal string representing the same number

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
2

Hashing of numeric types¶

For numbers

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
982 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6331, possibly of different types, it’s a requirement that
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6332 whenever
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6333 [see the
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6334 method documentation for more details]. For ease of implementation and efficiency across a variety of numeric types [including
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
901,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
902,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
908 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
907] Python’s hash for numeric types is based on a single mathematical function that’s defined for any rational number, and hence applies to all instances of
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
901 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
907, and all finite instances of
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
902 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
908. Essentially, this function is given by reduction modulo
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6343 for a fixed prime
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6343. The value of
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6343 is made available to Python as the
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6346 attribute of
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6347

CPython implementation detail. Currently, the prime used is

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6348 on machines with 32-bit C longs and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6349 on machines with 64-bit C longs

Here are the rules in detail

  • If

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6350 is a nonnegative rational number and
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6351 is not divisible by
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6343, define
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6353 as
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6354, where
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6355 gives the inverse of
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6351 modulo
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6343

  • If

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6350 is a nonnegative rational number and
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6351 is divisible by
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6343 [but
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6361 is not] then
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6351 has no inverse modulo
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6343 and the rule above doesn’t apply; in this case define
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6353 to be the constant value
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6365

  • If

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6350 is a negative rational number define
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6353 as
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6368. If the resulting hash is
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    941, replace it with
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6370

  • The particular values

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6365 and
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6372 are used as hash values for positive infinity or negative infinity [respectively]

  • For a

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    903 number
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6374, the hash values of the real and imaginary parts are combined by computing
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6375, reduced modulo
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6376 so that it lies in
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6377. Again, if the result is
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    941, it’s replaced with
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6370

To clarify the above rules, here’s some example Python code, equivalent to the built-in hash, for computing the hash of a rational number,

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
902, or
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
903

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
3

Iterator Types¶

Python supports a concept of iteration over containers. This is implemented using two distinct methods; these are used to allow user-defined classes to support iteration. Sequences, described below in more detail, always support the iteration methods

One method needs to be defined for container objects to provide iterable support.

container. __iter__[]

Return an iterator object. The object is required to support the iterator protocol described below. If a container supports different types of iteration, additional methods can be provided to specifically request iterators for those iteration types. [An example of an object supporting multiple forms of iteration would be a tree structure which supports both breadth-first and depth-first traversal. ] This method corresponds to the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6382 slot of the type structure for Python objects in the Python/C API.

The iterator objects themselves are required to support the following two methods, which together form the iterator protocol

iterator. __iter__[]

Return the iterator object itself. This is required to allow both containers and iterators to be used with the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6383 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
98 statements. This method corresponds to the
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6382 slot of the type structure for Python objects in the Python/C API.

iterator. __next__[]

Return the next item from the iterator . If there are no further items, raise the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6386 exception. This method corresponds to the
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6387 slot of the type structure for Python objects in the Python/C API.

Python defines several iterator objects to support iteration over general and specific sequence types, dictionaries, and other more specialized forms. The specific types are not important beyond their implementation of the iterator protocol

Once an iterator’s

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6388 method raises
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6386, it must continue to do so on subsequent calls. Implementations that do not obey this property are deemed broken

Generator Types¶

Python’s generator s provide a convenient way to implement the iterator protocol. If a container object’s

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6390 method is implemented as a generator, it will automatically return an iterator object [technically, a generator object] supplying the
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6390 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6388 methods. More information about generators can be found in the documentation for the yield expression .

Sequence Types —
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6393,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6394,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6395¶

There are three basic sequence types. lists, tuples, and range objects. Additional sequence types tailored for processing of binary data and text strings are described in dedicated sections.

Common Sequence Operations¶

The operations in the following table are supported by most sequence types, both mutable and immutable. The

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6396 ABC is provided to make it easier to correctly implement these operations on custom sequence types

This table lists the sequence operations sorted in ascending priority. In the table, s and t are sequences of the same type, n, i, j and k are integers and x is an arbitrary object that meets any type and value restrictions imposed by s

Các hoạt động

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
98 và
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
99 có cùng mức độ ưu tiên như các hoạt động so sánh. Các phép toán
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
969 [nối] và
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6400 [lặp lại] có cùng mức độ ưu tiên như các phép toán số tương ứng. 3

Hoạt động

Kết quả

ghi chú

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6401

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 if an item of s is equal to x, else
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38

[1]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6404

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38 if an item of s is equal to x, else
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56

[1]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6407

the concatenation of s and t

[6][7]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6408 or
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6409

equivalent to adding s to itself n times

[2][7]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6410

ith item of s, origin 0

[3]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6411

slice of s from i to j

[3][4]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6412

slice of s from i to j with step k

[3][5]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6413

length of s

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6414

smallest item of s

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6415

largest item of s

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6416

index of the first occurrence of x in s [at or after index i and before index j]

[8]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6417

total number of occurrences of x in s

Sequences of the same type also support comparisons. In particular, tuples and lists are compared lexicographically by comparing corresponding elements. This means that to compare equal, every element must compare equal and the two sequences must be of the same type and have the same length. [For full details see Comparisons in the language reference. ]

Forward and reversed iterators over mutable sequences access values using an index. That index will continue to march forward [or backward] even if the underlying sequence is mutated. The iterator terminates only when an

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6418 or a
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6386 is encountered [or when the index drops below zero]

ghi chú

  1. While the

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    98 and
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    99 operations are used only for simple containment testing in the general case, some specialised sequences [such as
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6422,
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6423 and
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6424] also use them for subsequence testing

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    4

  2. Values of n less than

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    42 are treated as
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    42 [which yields an empty sequence of the same type as s]. Note that items in the sequence s are not copied; they are referenced multiple times. This often haunts new Python programmers; consider

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    5

    What has happened is that

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6427 is a one-element list containing an empty list, so all three elements of
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6428 are references to this single empty list. Modifying any of the elements of
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6429 modifies this single list. You can create a list of different lists this way

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6

    Further explanation is available in the FAQ entry How do I create a multidimensional list? .

  3. If i or j is negative, the index is relative to the end of sequence s.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6430 or
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6431 is substituted. But note that
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6432 is still
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    42

  4. The slice of s from i to j is defined as the sequence of items with index k such that

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6434. If i or j is greater than
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6413, use
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6413. If i is omitted or
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    31, use
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    42. If j is omitted or
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    31, use
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6413. If i is greater than or equal to j, the slice is empty

  5. The slice of s from i to j with step k is defined as the sequence of items with index

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6441 such that
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6442. In other words, the indices are
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6443,
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6444,
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6445,
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6446 and so on, stopping when j is reached [but never including j]. When k is positive, i and j are reduced to
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6413 if they are greater. When k is negative, i and j are reduced to
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6448 if they are greater. If i or j are omitted or
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    31, they become “end” values [which end depends on the sign of k]. Note, k cannot be zero. If k is
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    31, it is treated like
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    55

  6. Concatenating immutable sequences always results in a new object. This means that building up a sequence by repeated concatenation will have a quadratic runtime cost in the total sequence length. To get a linear runtime cost, you must switch to one of the alternatives below

    • if concatenating

      def bit_length[self]:
          s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
          s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
          return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
      
      6422 objects, you can build a list and use
      def bit_length[self]:
          s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
          s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
          return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
      
      6453 at the end or else write to an
      def bit_length[self]:
          s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
          s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
          return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
      
      6454 instance and retrieve its value when complete

    • if concatenating

      def bit_length[self]:
          s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
          s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
          return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
      
      6423 objects, you can similarly use
      def bit_length[self]:
          s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
          s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
          return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
      
      6456 or
      def bit_length[self]:
          s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
          s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
          return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
      
      6457, or you can do in-place concatenation with a
      def bit_length[self]:
          s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
          s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
          return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
      
      6424 object.
      def bit_length[self]:
          s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
          s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
          return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
      
      6424 objects are mutable and have an efficient overallocation mechanism

    • if concatenating

      def bit_length[self]:
          s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
          s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
          return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
      
      6394 objects, extend a
      def bit_length[self]:
          s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
          s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
          return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
      
      6393 instead

    • for other types, investigate the relevant class documentation

  7. Some sequence types [such as

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6395] only support item sequences that follow specific patterns, and hence don’t support sequence concatenation or repetition

  8. def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6463 raises
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    977 when x is not found in s. Not all implementations support passing the additional arguments i and j. These arguments allow efficient searching of subsections of the sequence. Passing the extra arguments is roughly equivalent to using
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6465, only without copying any data and with the returned index being relative to the start of the sequence rather than the start of the slice

Immutable Sequence Types¶

The only operation that immutable sequence types generally implement that is not also implemented by mutable sequence types is support for the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6466 built-in

This support allows immutable sequences, such as

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6394 instances, to be used as
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6468 keys and stored in
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6469 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6470 instances

Attempting to hash an immutable sequence that contains unhashable values will result in

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
88

Mutable Sequence Types¶

The operations in the following table are defined on mutable sequence types. The

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6472 ABC is provided to make it easier to correctly implement these operations on custom sequence types

In the table s is an instance of a mutable sequence type, t is any iterable object and x is an arbitrary object that meets any type and value restrictions imposed by s [for example,

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6424 only accepts integers that meet the value restriction
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6474]

Hoạt động

Kết quả

ghi chú

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6475

item i of s is replaced by x

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6476

slice of s from i to j is replaced by the contents of the iterable t

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6477

same as

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6478

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6479

the elements of

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6412 are replaced by those of t

[1]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6481

removes the elements of

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6412 from the list

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6483

appends x to the end of the sequence [same as

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6484]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6485

removes all items from s [same as

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6486]

[5]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6487

creates a shallow copy of s [same as

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6488]

[5]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6489 or
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6490

kéo dài s với nội dung của t [phần lớn giống như

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6491]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6492

updates s with its contents repeated n times

[6]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6493

chèn x vào s tại chỉ mục được cung cấp bởi i [giống như

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6494]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6495 or
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6496

retrieves the item at i and also removes it from s

[2]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6497

remove the first item from s where

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6410 is equal to x

[3]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6499

reverses the items of s in place

[4]

ghi chú

  1. t phải có cùng độ dài với lát cắt mà nó đang thay thế

  2. Đối số tùy chọn i mặc định là

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    941, do đó, theo mặc định, mục cuối cùng được xóa và trả về

  3. def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7301 tăng
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    977 khi không tìm thấy x trong s

  4. Phương pháp

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7303 sửa đổi trình tự tại chỗ để tiết kiệm không gian khi đảo ngược một trình tự lớn. Để nhắc nhở người dùng rằng nó hoạt động theo tác dụng phụ, nó không trả về trình tự đảo ngược

  5. def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7304 và
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7305 được bao gồm để thống nhất với giao diện của các vùng chứa có thể thay đổi không hỗ trợ thao tác cắt [chẳng hạn như
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6468 và
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6469].
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7305 không phải là một phần của
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6472 ABC, nhưng hầu hết các lớp trình tự có thể thay đổi cụ thể đều cung cấp nó

    Mới trong phiên bản 3. 3. ______17304 và phương thức

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7305.

  6. Giá trị n là một số nguyên hoặc một đối tượng triển khai

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7312. Giá trị 0 và âm của n xóa chuỗi. Các mục trong chuỗi không được sao chép; . Common Sequence Operations.

Danh sách¶

Danh sách là các chuỗi có thể thay đổi, thường được sử dụng để lưu trữ các bộ sưu tập các mục đồng nhất [trong đó mức độ tương tự chính xác sẽ thay đổi tùy theo ứng dụng]

lớp danh sách[[có thể lặp lại]]

Danh sách có thể được xây dựng theo nhiều cách

  • Sử dụng một cặp dấu ngoặc vuông để biểu thị danh sách trống.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    49

  • Sử dụng dấu ngoặc vuông, phân tách các mục bằng dấu phẩy.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7315,
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7316

  • Sử dụng hiểu danh sách.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7317

  • Sử dụng hàm tạo kiểu.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7318 hoặc
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7319

Hàm tạo xây dựng một danh sách có các mục giống nhau và theo cùng thứ tự với các mục của iterable. iterable có thể là một chuỗi, một vùng chứa hỗ trợ phép lặp hoặc một đối tượng lặp. If iterable is already a list, a copy is made and returned, similar to

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7320. Ví dụ:
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7321 trả về
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7322 và
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7323 trả về
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7324. Nếu không có đối số nào được đưa ra, hàm tạo sẽ tạo một danh sách trống mới,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
49

Nhiều thao tác khác cũng tạo danh sách, bao gồm cả danh sách tích hợp sẵn

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7326

Danh sách triển khai tất cả trình tự phổ biếncó thể thay đổi . Danh sách cũng cung cấp phương pháp bổ sung sau.

sắp xếp[* , phím=None, reverse=False]

Phương pháp này sắp xếp danh sách tại chỗ, chỉ sử dụng so sánh

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
74 giữa các mục. Các ngoại lệ không bị chặn - nếu bất kỳ thao tác so sánh nào không thành công, toàn bộ thao tác sắp xếp sẽ không thành công [và danh sách có thể sẽ ở trạng thái được sửa đổi một phần]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7328 chấp nhận hai đối số chỉ có thể được truyền theo từ khóa [ đối số chỉ có từ khóa ].

khóa chỉ định chức năng của một đối số được sử dụng để trích xuất khóa so sánh từ mỗi thành phần danh sách [ví dụ:

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7329]. Khóa tương ứng với mỗi mục trong danh sách được tính một lần và sau đó được sử dụng cho toàn bộ quá trình sắp xếp. Giá trị mặc định của
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
31 có nghĩa là các mục trong danh sách được sắp xếp trực tiếp mà không cần tính giá trị khóa riêng

Tiện ích

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7331 có sẵn để chuyển đổi 2. x style cmp thành chức năng chính

đảo ngược là một giá trị boolean. Nếu được đặt thành

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56, thì các thành phần danh sách được sắp xếp như thể mỗi phép so sánh được đảo ngược

Phương pháp này sửa đổi trình tự tại chỗ để tiết kiệm không gian khi sắp xếp một trình tự lớn. Để nhắc nhở người dùng rằng nó hoạt động theo tác dụng phụ, nó không trả về chuỗi đã sắp xếp [sử dụng

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7326 để yêu cầu rõ ràng một thể hiện danh sách được sắp xếp mới]

Phương pháp

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7328 được đảm bảo ổn định. Một sắp xếp ổn định nếu nó đảm bảo không thay đổi thứ tự tương đối của các phần tử được so sánh bằng nhau — điều này hữu ích cho việc sắp xếp theo nhiều lần [ví dụ: sắp xếp theo bộ phận, sau đó theo bậc lương]

Để biết ví dụ sắp xếp và hướng dẫn sắp xếp ngắn gọn, hãy xem Sắp xếp CÁCH .

Chi tiết triển khai CPython. Trong khi danh sách đang được sắp xếp, tác động của việc cố gắng thay đổi hoặc thậm chí kiểm tra, danh sách không được xác định. Việc triển khai C của Python làm cho danh sách xuất hiện trống trong một khoảng thời gian và tăng

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
977 nếu nó có thể phát hiện ra rằng danh sách đã bị thay đổi trong quá trình sắp xếp

Tuples¶

Bộ dữ liệu là các chuỗi bất biến, thường được sử dụng để lưu trữ các bộ sưu tập dữ liệu không đồng nhất [chẳng hạn như 2 bộ dữ liệu được tạo bởi

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7336 tích hợp]. Các bộ dữ liệu cũng được sử dụng cho các trường hợp cần một chuỗi dữ liệu đồng nhất bất biến [chẳng hạn như cho phép lưu trữ trong một thể hiện
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6469 hoặc
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6468]

lớp bộ[[có thể lặp lại]]

Tuples có thể được xây dựng trong một số cách

  • Sử dụng một cặp dấu ngoặc đơn để biểu thị bộ dữ liệu trống.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    48

  • Sử dụng dấu phẩy ở cuối cho một tuple đơn lẻ.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7340 hoặc
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7341

  • Tách các mục bằng dấu phẩy.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7342 hoặc
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7343

  • Sử dụng tích hợp sẵn

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7344.
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7344 hoặc
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7346

Hàm tạo xây dựng một bộ có các mục giống nhau và theo cùng thứ tự như các mục của iterable. iterable có thể là một chuỗi, một vùng chứa hỗ trợ phép lặp hoặc một đối tượng lặp. Nếu iterable đã là một Tuple, nó sẽ được trả về không thay đổi. Ví dụ:

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7347 trả về
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7348 và
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7349 trả về
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7350. Nếu không có đối số nào được đưa ra, hàm tạo sẽ tạo một bộ dữ liệu trống mới,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
48

Lưu ý rằng thực ra dấu phẩy tạo nên một bộ chứ không phải dấu ngoặc đơn. Các dấu ngoặc đơn là tùy chọn, ngoại trừ trong trường hợp bộ dữ liệu trống hoặc khi cần thiết để tránh sự mơ hồ về cú pháp. Ví dụ:

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7352 là một lệnh gọi hàm có ba đối số, trong khi
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7353 là một lệnh gọi hàm có 3 bộ làm đối số duy nhất

Các bộ triển khai tất cả các thao tác trình tự phổ biến .

Đối với các bộ sưu tập dữ liệu không đồng nhất trong đó truy cập theo tên rõ ràng hơn truy cập theo chỉ mục,

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7354 có thể là lựa chọn phù hợp hơn so với một đối tượng tuple đơn giản

Các dãy¶

Loại

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6395 đại diện cho một dãy số bất biến và thường được sử dụng để lặp một số lần cụ thể trong các vòng lặp
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6383

lớp phạm vi[dừng]class range[start, stop[, step]]

Các đối số cho hàm tạo phạm vi phải là số nguyên [có thể là

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
901 tích hợp sẵn hoặc bất kỳ đối tượng nào triển khai phương thức đặc biệt
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7312]. If the step argument is omitted, it defaults to
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
55. If the start argument is omitted, it defaults to
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
42. Nếu bước bằng 0,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
977 được nâng lên

Đối với một bước tích cực, nội dung của một phạm vi

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7362 được xác định theo công thức
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7363 trong đó
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7364 và
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7365

Đối với bước phủ định, nội dung của phạm vi vẫn được xác định theo công thức

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7363, nhưng các ràng buộc là
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7364 và
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7368

Một đối tượng phạm vi sẽ trống nếu

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7369 không đáp ứng ràng buộc giá trị. Phạm vi hỗ trợ các chỉ số âm, nhưng chúng được hiểu là lập chỉ mục từ cuối chuỗi được xác định bởi các chỉ số dương

Phạm vi chứa giá trị tuyệt đối lớn hơn

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7370 được cho phép nhưng một số tính năng [chẳng hạn như
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7371] có thể tăng
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
991

Ví dụ phạm vi

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7

Các phạm vi triển khai tất cả các thao tác trình tự phổ biến ngoại trừ nối và lặp lại [do thực tế là các đối tượng phạm vi chỉ có thể biểu diễn các trình tự tuân theo một .

start

The value of the start parameter [or

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
42 if the parameter was not supplied]

stop

The value of the stop parameter

step

The value of the step parameter [or

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
55 if the parameter was not supplied]

The advantage of the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6395 type over a regular
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6393 or
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6394 is that a
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6395 object will always take the same [small] amount of memory, no matter the size of the range it represents [as it only stores the
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7379,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7380 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7381 values, calculating individual items and subranges as needed]

Range objects implement the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6396 ABC, and provide features such as containment tests, element index lookup, slicing and support for negative indices [see Sequence Types — list, tuple, range ].

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8

Testing range objects for equality with

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
78 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
79 compares them as sequences. That is, two range objects are considered equal if they represent the same sequence of values. [Note that two range objects that compare equal might have different
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7379,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7380 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7381 attributes, for example
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7388 or
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7389. ]

Changed in version 3. 2. Implement the Sequence ABC. Support slicing and negative indices. Test

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
901 objects for membership in constant time instead of iterating through all items.

Changed in version 3. 3. Define ‘==’ and ‘. =’ để so sánh các đối tượng phạm vi dựa trên chuỗi giá trị mà chúng xác định [thay vì so sánh dựa trên danh tính đối tượng].

New in version 3. 3. The

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7379,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7380 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7381 attributes.

See also

  • The linspace recipe shows how to implement a lazy version of range suitable for floating point applications

Text Sequence Type —
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6422¶

Textual data in Python is handled with

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6422 objects, or strings. Strings are immutable sequences of Unicode code points. String literals are written in a variety of ways.

  • Dấu nháy đơn.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7396

  • Dấu ngoặc kép.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7397

  • Triple quoted.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7398,
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7399

Triple quoted strings may span multiple lines - all associated whitespace will be included in the string literal

String literals that are part of a single expression and have only whitespace between them will be implicitly converted to a single string literal. That is,

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7400

See String and Bytes literals for more about the various forms of string literal, including supported escape sequences, and the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7362 [“raw”] prefix that disables most escape sequence processing.

Strings may also be created from other objects using the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6422 constructor

Since there is no separate “character” type, indexing a string produces strings of length 1. That is, for a non-empty string s,

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7403

There is also no mutable string type, but

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6453 or
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6454 can be used to efficiently construct strings from multiple fragments

Đã thay đổi trong phiên bản 3. 3. For backwards compatibility with the Python 2 series, the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7406 prefix is once again permitted on string literals. It has no effect on the meaning of string literals and cannot be combined with the
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7362 prefix.

class str[object='']class str[object=b'' , encoding='utf-8' , errors='strict']

Return a string version of object. If object is not provided, returns the empty string. Otherwise, the behavior of

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
33 depends on whether encoding or errors is given, as follows.

Nếu không đưa ra mã hóa cũng như lỗi, thì

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7409 trả về
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7410, là biểu diễn chuỗi đối tượng "không chính thức" hoặc có thể in được. For string objects, this is the string itself. If object does not have a
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7411 method, then
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
33 falls back to returning
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7413

If at least one of encoding or errors is given, object should be a bytes-like object [e. g.

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6423 or
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6424]. In this case, if object is a
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6423 [or
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6424] object, then
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7418 is equivalent to
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7419. Otherwise, the bytes object underlying the buffer object is obtained before calling
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7420. See Binary Sequence Types — bytes, bytearray, memoryview and Buffer Protocol for information on buffer objects.

Passing a

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6423 object to
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
33 without the encoding or errors arguments falls under the first case of returning the informal string representation [see also the
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7423 command-line option to Python]. Ví dụ

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9

For more information on the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6422 class and its methods, see Text Sequence Type — str and the String Methods section below. To output formatted strings, see the Formatted string literals and Format String Syntax sections. In addition, see the Text Processing Services section.

String Methods¶

Strings implement all of the common sequence operations, along with the additional methods described below.

Strings also support two styles of string formatting, one providing a large degree of flexibility and customization [see

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7425, Format String Syntax and Custom String Formatting ] and the other based on C
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7426 style formatting that handles a narrower range of types and is slightly harder to use correctly, but is often faster for the cases it can handle [ printf-style String Formatting ].

The Text Processing Services section of the standard library covers a number of other modules that provide various text related utilities [including regular expression support in the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7427 module].

str. capitalize[]

Return a copy of the string with its first character capitalized and the rest lowercased

Changed in version 3. 8. The first character is now put into titlecase rather than uppercase. This means that characters like digraphs will only have their first letter capitalized, instead of the full character.

str. casefold[]

Return a casefolded copy of the string. Casefolded strings may be used for caseless matching

Casefolding tương tự như chữ thường nhưng tích cực hơn vì nó nhằm mục đích loại bỏ tất cả các phân biệt chữ hoa chữ thường trong một chuỗi. For example, the German lowercase letter

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7428 is equivalent to
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7429. Since it is already lowercase,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7430 would do nothing to
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7428;
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7432 converts it to
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7429

The casefolding algorithm is described in section 3. 13 of the Unicode Standard

New in version 3. 3

str. center[width[ , fillchar]]

Return centered in a string of length width. Padding is done using the specified fillchar [default is an ASCII space]. The original string is returned if width is less than or equal to

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6413

str. count[sub[ , start[ , end]]]

Return the number of non-overlapping occurrences of substring sub in the range [start, end]. Optional arguments start and end are interpreted as in slice notation

Nếu phụ trống, trả về số lượng chuỗi trống giữa các ký tự bằng độ dài của chuỗi cộng với một

str. encode[encoding='utf-8' , errors='strict']

Return an encoded version of the string as a bytes object. Default encoding is

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7435. errors may be given to set a different error handling scheme. The default for errors is
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7436, meaning that encoding errors raise a
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7437. Other possible values are
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7438,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7439,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7440,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7441 and any other name registered via
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7442, see section Error Handlers . For a list of possible encodings, see section Standard Encodings .

Theo mặc định, đối số lỗi không được kiểm tra để có hiệu suất tốt nhất mà chỉ được sử dụng ở lỗi mã hóa đầu tiên. Enable the Python Development Mode , or use a debug build to check errors.

Changed in version 3. 1. Support for keyword arguments added.

Changed in version 3. 9. Các lỗi hiện được kiểm tra trong chế độ phát triển và trong chế độ gỡ lỗi .

str. endswith[hậu tố[ , start[, end]]]

Trả về

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 nếu chuỗi kết thúc bằng hậu tố đã chỉ định, nếu không thì trả về
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38. hậu tố cũng có thể là một bộ hậu tố cần tìm. Với bắt đầu tùy chọn, bắt đầu kiểm tra tại vị trí đó. Với đầu cuối tùy chọn, dừng so sánh tại vị trí đó

str. tab mở rộng[kích thước tab=8]

Trả về một bản sao của chuỗi trong đó tất cả các ký tự tab được thay thế bằng một hoặc nhiều dấu cách, tùy thuộc vào cột hiện tại và kích thước tab đã cho. Vị trí tab xảy ra với mọi ký tự kích thước tab [mặc định là 8, cho vị trí tab ở các cột 0, 8, 16, v.v.]. Để mở rộng chuỗi, cột hiện tại được đặt thành 0 và chuỗi được kiểm tra từng ký tự. Nếu ký tự là một tab [

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7445], một hoặc nhiều ký tự khoảng trắng sẽ được chèn vào kết quả cho đến khi cột hiện tại bằng với vị trí tab tiếp theo. [The tab character itself is not copied. ] If the character is a newline [
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7446] or return [
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7447], it is copied and the current column is reset to zero. Any other character is copied unchanged and the current column is incremented by one regardless of how the character is represented when printed

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
90

str. tìm[phụ[ , start[, end]]]

Return the lowest index in the string where substring sub is found within the slice

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7448. Optional arguments start and end are interpreted as in slice notation. Return
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
941 if sub is not found

Note

The

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7450 method should be used only if you need to know the position of sub. To check if sub is a substring or not, use the
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
98 operator

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
91

str. format[*args , **kwargs]

Perform a string formatting operation. The string on which this method is called can contain literal text or replacement fields delimited by braces

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
50. Each replacement field contains either the numeric index of a positional argument, or the name of a keyword argument. Returns a copy of the string where each replacement field is replaced with the string value of the corresponding argument

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
92

See Format String Syntax for a description of the various formatting options that can be specified in format strings.

Note

When formatting a number [

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
901,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
902,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
903,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
908 and subclasses] with the
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6351 type [ex.
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7458], the function temporarily sets the
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7459 locale to the
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7460 locale to decode
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7461 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7462 fields of
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7463 if they are non-ASCII or longer than 1 byte, and the
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7460 locale is different than the
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7459 locale. This temporary change affects other threads

Changed in version 3. 7. When formatting a number with the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6351 type, the function sets temporarily the
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7459 locale to the
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7460 locale in some cases.

str. format_map[mapping]

Similar to

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7469, except that
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7470 is used directly and not copied to a
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6468. This is useful if for example
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7470 is a dict subclass

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
93

New in version 3. 2

str. index[sub[ , start[ , end]]]

Like

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7450, but raise
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
977 when the substring is not found

str. isalnum[]

Return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 if all characters in the string are alphanumeric and there is at least one character,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38 otherwise. A character
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7477 is alphanumeric if one of the following returns
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56.
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7479,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7480,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7481, or
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7482

str. isalpha[]

Return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 if all characters in the string are alphabetic and there is at least one character,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38 otherwise. Alphabetic characters are those characters defined in the Unicode character database as “Letter”, i. e. , those with general category property being one of “Lm”, “Lt”, “Lu”, “Ll”, or “Lo”. Note that this is different from the “Alphabetic” property defined in the Unicode Standard

str. isascii[]

Return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 if the string is empty or all characters in the string are ASCII,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38 otherwise. ASCII characters have code points in the range U+0000-U+007F

New in version 3. 7

str. isdecimal[]

Return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 if all characters in the string are decimal characters and there is at least one character,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38 otherwise. Decimal characters are those that can be used to form numbers in base 10, e. g. U+0660, ARABIC-INDIC DIGIT ZERO. Formally a decimal character is a character in the Unicode General Category “Nd”

str. isdigit[]

Return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 if all characters in the string are digits and there is at least one character,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38 otherwise. Digits include decimal characters and digits that need special handling, such as the compatibility superscript digits. This covers digits which cannot be used to form numbers in base 10, like the Kharosthi numbers. Formally, a digit is a character that has the property value Numeric_Type=Digit or Numeric_Type=Decimal

str. isidentifier[]

Return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 if the string is a valid identifier according to the language definition, section Identifiers and keywords .

Call

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7492 to test whether string
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7493 is a reserved identifier, such as
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7494 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7495

Example

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
94

str. islower[]

Return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 if all cased characters 4 in the string are lowercase and there is at least one cased character,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38 otherwise

str. isnumeric[]

Return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 if all characters in the string are numeric characters, and there is at least one character,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38 otherwise. Numeric characters include digit characters, and all characters that have the Unicode numeric value property, e. g. U+2155, VULGAR FRACTION ONE FIFTH. Formally, numeric characters are those with the property value Numeric_Type=Digit, Numeric_Type=Decimal or Numeric_Type=Numeric

str. isprintable[]

Return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 if all characters in the string are printable or the string is empty,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38 otherwise. Nonprintable characters are those characters defined in the Unicode character database as “Other” or “Separator”, excepting the ASCII space [0x20] which is considered printable. [Note that printable characters in this context are those which should not be escaped when
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
32 is invoked on a string. It has no bearing on the handling of strings written to
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7703 or
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7704. ]

str. isspace[]

Return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 if there are only whitespace characters in the string and there is at least one character,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38 otherwise

A character is whitespace if in the Unicode character database [see

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7707], either its general category is
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7708 [“Separator, space”], or its bidirectional class is one of
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7709,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7710, or
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7711

str. istitle[]

Return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 if the string is a titlecased string and there is at least one character, for example uppercase characters may only follow uncased characters and lowercase characters only cased ones. Return
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38 otherwise

str. isupper[]

Return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 if all cased characters 4 in the string are uppercase and there is at least one cased character,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38 otherwise

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
95

str. join[iterable]

Return a string which is the concatenation of the strings in iterable. A

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
88 will be raised if there are any non-string values in iterable, including
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6423 objects. The separator between elements is the string providing this method

str. ljust[width[ , fillchar]]

Return the string left justified in a string of length width. Padding is done using the specified fillchar [default is an ASCII space]. The original string is returned if width is less than or equal to

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6413

str. lower[]

Return a copy of the string with all the cased characters 4 converted to lowercase

Thuật toán viết thường được sử dụng được mô tả trong phần 3. 13 of the Unicode Standard

str. lstrip[[chars]]

Trả về một bản sao của chuỗi đã xóa các ký tự đầu. The chars argument is a string specifying the set of characters to be removed. If omitted or

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
31, the chars argument defaults to removing whitespace. The chars argument is not a prefix; rather, all combinations of its values are stripped

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
96

See

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7720 for a method that will remove a single prefix string rather than all of a set of characters. For example

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
97

static str. maketrans[x[ , y[ , z]]]

This static method returns a translation table usable for

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7721

If there is only one argument, it must be a dictionary mapping Unicode ordinals [integers] or characters [strings of length 1] to Unicode ordinals, strings [of arbitrary lengths] or

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
31. Character keys will then be converted to ordinals

If there are two arguments, they must be strings of equal length, and in the resulting dictionary, each character in x will be mapped to the character at the same position in y. If there is a third argument, it must be a string, whose characters will be mapped to

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
31 in the result

str. partition[sep]

Split the string at the first occurrence of sep, and return a 3-tuple containing the part before the separator, the separator itself, and the part after the separator. If the separator is not found, return a 3-tuple containing the string itself, followed by two empty strings

str. removeprefix[prefix , /]

If the string starts with the prefix string, return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7724. Otherwise, return a copy of the original string

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
98

New in version 3. 9

str. removesuffix[suffix , /]

If the string ends with the suffix string and that suffix is not empty, return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7725. Otherwise, return a copy of the original string

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
99

New in version 3. 9

str. replace[old , new[ , count]]

Return a copy of the string with all occurrences of substring old replaced by new. If the optional argument count is given, only the first count occurrences are replaced

str. rfind[sub[ , start[ , end]]]

Return the highest index in the string where substring sub is found, such that sub is contained within

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7448. Optional arguments start and end are interpreted as in slice notation. Return
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
941 on failure

str. rindex[sub[ , start[ , end]]]

Like

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7728 but raises
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
977 when the substring sub is not found

str. rjust[width[ , fillchar]]

Return the string right justified in a string of length width. Padding is done using the specified fillchar [default is an ASCII space]. The original string is returned if width is less than or equal to

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6413

str. rpartition[sep]

Split the string at the last occurrence of sep, and return a 3-tuple containing the part before the separator, the separator itself, and the part after the separator. If the separator is not found, return a 3-tuple containing two empty strings, followed by the string itself

str. rsplit[sep=None , maxsplit=- 1]

Return a list of the words in the string, using sep as the delimiter string. If maxsplit is given, at most maxsplit splits are done, the rightmost ones. If sep is not specified or

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
31, any whitespace string is a separator. Except for splitting from the right,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7732 behaves like
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7733 which is described in detail below

str. rstrip[[chars]]

Return a copy of the string with trailing characters removed. The chars argument is a string specifying the set of characters to be removed. If omitted or

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
31, the chars argument defaults to removing whitespace. The chars argument is not a suffix; rather, all combinations of its values are stripped

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
630

See

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7735 for a method that will remove a single suffix string rather than all of a set of characters. For example

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
631

str. split[sep=None , maxsplit=- 1]

Return a list of the words in the string, using sep as the delimiter string. If maxsplit is given, at most maxsplit splits are done [thus, the list will have at most

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7736 elements]. If maxsplit is not specified or
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
941, then there is no limit on the number of splits [all possible splits are made]

If sep is given, consecutive delimiters are not grouped together and are deemed to delimit empty strings [for example,

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7738 returns
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7739]. The sep argument may consist of multiple characters [for example,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7740 returns
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7741]. Splitting an empty string with a specified separator returns
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7742

For example

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
632

If sep is not specified or is

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
31, a different splitting algorithm is applied. runs of consecutive whitespace are regarded as a single separator, and the result will contain no empty strings at the start or end if the string has leading or trailing whitespace. Consequently, splitting an empty string or a string consisting of just whitespace with a
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
31 separator returns
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
49

For example

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
633

str. splitlines[keepends=False]

Return a list of the lines in the string, breaking at line boundaries. Line breaks are not included in the resulting list unless keepends is given and true

This method splits on the following line boundaries. In particular, the boundaries are a superset of universal newlines .

Representation

Description

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7446

Line Feed

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7447

Carriage Return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7748

Carriage Return + Line Feed

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7749 or
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7750

Line Tabulation

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7751 hoặc
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7752

Form Feed

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7753

File Separator

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7754

Tách nhóm

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7755

Record Separator

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7756

Next Line [C1 Control Code]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7757

Line Separator

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7758

Paragraph Separator

Changed in version 3. 2.

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7749 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7751 added to list of line boundaries.

For example

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
634

Unlike

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7733 when a delimiter string sep is given, this method returns an empty list for the empty string, and a terminal line break does not result in an extra line

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
635

For comparison,

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7762 gives

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
636

str. startswith[prefix[ , start[ , end]]]

Return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 if string starts with the prefix, otherwise return
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38. prefix can also be a tuple of prefixes to look for. With optional start, test string beginning at that position. Với kết thúc tùy chọn, dừng so sánh chuỗi tại vị trí đó

str. strip[[chars]]

Return a copy of the string with the leading and trailing characters removed. The chars argument is a string specifying the set of characters to be removed. If omitted or

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
31, the chars argument defaults to removing whitespace. The chars argument is not a prefix or suffix; rather, all combinations of its values are stripped

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
637

The outermost leading and trailing chars argument values are stripped from the string. Characters are removed from the leading end until reaching a string character that is not contained in the set of characters in chars. A similar action takes place on the trailing end. For example

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
638

str. swapcase[]

Return a copy of the string with uppercase characters converted to lowercase and vice versa. Note that it is not necessarily true that

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7766

str. title[]

Return a titlecased version of the string where words start with an uppercase character and the remaining characters are lowercase

For example

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
639

The algorithm uses a simple language-independent definition of a word as groups of consecutive letters. The definition works in many contexts but it means that apostrophes in contractions and possessives form word boundaries, which may not be the desired result

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
640

The

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7767 function does not have this problem, as it splits words on spaces only

Alternatively, a workaround for apostrophes can be constructed using regular expressions

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
641

str. translate[table]

Return a copy of the string in which each character has been mapped through the given translation table. The table must be an object that implements indexing via

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7768, typically a mapping or sequence . When indexed by a Unicode ordinal [an integer], the table object can do any of the following. return a Unicode ordinal or a string, to map the character to one or more other characters; return
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
31, to delete the character from the return string; or raise a
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7770 exception, to map the character to itself.

You can use

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7771 to create a translation map from character-to-character mappings in different formats

See also the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7772 module for a more flexible approach to custom character mappings

str. upper[]

Return a copy of the string with all the cased characters 4 converted to uppercase. Note that

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7773 might be
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38 if
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7493 contains uncased characters or if the Unicode category of the resulting character[s] is not “Lu” [Letter, uppercase], but e. g. “Lt” [Letter, titlecase]

The uppercasing algorithm used is described in section 3. 13 of the Unicode Standard

str. zfill[width]

Return a copy of the string left filled with ASCII

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7776 digits to make a string of length width. A leading sign prefix [
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7777/
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7778] is handled by inserting the padding after the sign character rather than before. The original string is returned if width is less than or equal to
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6413

For example

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
642

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7426-style String Formatting¶

Note

The formatting operations described here exhibit a variety of quirks that lead to a number of common errors [such as failing to display tuples and dictionaries correctly]. Using the newer formatted string literals , the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7425 interface, or template strings may help avoid these errors. Mỗi lựa chọn thay thế này cung cấp sự đánh đổi và lợi ích của riêng chúng về tính đơn giản, tính linh hoạt và/hoặc khả năng mở rộng.

String objects have one unique built-in operation. the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7782 operator [modulo]. This is also known as the string formatting or interpolation operator. Given
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7783 [where format is a string],
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7782 conversion specifications in format are replaced with zero or more elements of values. The effect is similar to using the
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7785 in the C language

If format requires a single argument, values may be a single non-tuple object. 5 Otherwise, values must be a tuple with exactly the number of items specified by the format string, or a single mapping object [for example, a dictionary]

A conversion specifier contains two or more characters and has the following components, which must occur in this order

  1. The

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7786 character, which marks the start of the specifier

  2. Mapping key [optional], consisting of a parenthesised sequence of characters [for example,

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7787]

  3. Conversion flags [optional], which affect the result of some conversion types

  4. Minimum field width [optional]. If specified as an

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7788 [asterisk], the actual width is read from the next element of the tuple in values, and the object to convert comes after the minimum field width and optional precision

  5. Precision [optional], given as a

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7789 [dot] followed by the precision. If specified as
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7788 [an asterisk], the actual precision is read from the next element of the tuple in values, and the value to convert comes after the precision

  6. Length modifier [optional]

  7. Conversion type

When the right argument is a dictionary [or other mapping type], then the formats in the string must include a parenthesised mapping key into that dictionary inserted immediately after the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7786 character. The mapping key selects the value to be formatted from the mapping. For example

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
643

In this case no

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6400 specifiers may occur in a format [since they require a sequential parameter list]

The conversion flag characters are

Flag

Meaning

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7793

The value conversion will use the “alternate form” [where defined below]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7776

The conversion will be zero padded for numeric values

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7778

Giá trị chuyển đổi được điều chỉnh trái [ghi đè chuyển đổi

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7776 nếu cả hai được cung cấp]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7797

[a space] A blank should be left before a positive number [or empty string] produced by a signed conversion

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7777

A sign character [

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7777 or
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7778] will precede the conversion [overrides a “space” flag]

A length modifier [

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8201,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8202, or
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8203] may be present, but is ignored as it is not necessary for Python – so e. g.
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8204 giống hệt với
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8205

Các loại chuyển đổi là

Conversion

Meaning

ghi chú

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8206

Signed integer decimal

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8207

Signed integer decimal

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8208

Signed octal value

[1]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8209

Obsolete type – it is identical to

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8206

[6]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8211

Signed hexadecimal [lowercase]

[2]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8212

Đã ký thập lục phân [chữ hoa]

[2]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8213

Floating point exponential format [lowercase]

[3]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8214

Floating point exponential format [uppercase]

[3]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8215

Floating point decimal format

[3]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8216

Floating point decimal format

[3]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8217

Floating point format. Uses lowercase exponential format if exponent is less than -4 or not less than precision, decimal format otherwise

[4]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8218

Floating point format. Uses uppercase exponential format if exponent is less than -4 or not less than precision, decimal format otherwise

[4]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8219

Single character [accepts integer or single character string]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8220

String [converts any Python object using

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
32]

[5]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8222

String [converts any Python object using

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
33]

[5]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8224

String [converts any Python object using

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8225]

[5]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7786

No argument is converted, results in a

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7786 character in the result

ghi chú

  1. The alternate form causes a leading octal specifier [

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    8228] to be inserted before the first digit

  2. The alternate form causes a leading

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    8229 or
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    8230 [depending on whether the
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    8211 or
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    8212 format was used] to be inserted before the first digit

  3. The alternate form causes the result to always contain a decimal point, even if no digits follow it

    The precision determines the number of digits after the decimal point and defaults to 6

  4. The alternate form causes the result to always contain a decimal point, and trailing zeroes are not removed as they would otherwise be

    The precision determines the number of significant digits before and after the decimal point and defaults to 6

  5. If precision is

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    8233, the output is truncated to
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    8233 characters

  6. See PEP 237

Since Python strings have an explicit length,

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8235 conversions do not assume that
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8236 is the end of the string

Changed in version 3. 1.

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8237 conversions for numbers whose absolute value is over 1e50 are no longer replaced by
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8238 conversions.

Binary Sequence Types —
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6423,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6424,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8241¶

The core built-in types for manipulating binary data are

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6423 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6424. They are supported by
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8241 which uses the buffer protocol to access the memory of other binary objects without needing to make a copy.

The

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8245 module supports efficient storage of basic data types like 32-bit integers and IEEE754 double-precision floating values

Bytes Objects¶

Bytes objects are immutable sequences of single bytes. Since many major binary protocols are based on the ASCII text encoding, bytes objects offer several methods that are only valid when working with ASCII compatible data and are closely related to string objects in a variety of other ways

class bytes[[source[ , encoding[ , errors]]]]

Firstly, the syntax for bytes literals is largely the same as that for string literals, except that a

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8246 prefix is added

  • Single quotes.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    8247

  • Double quotes.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    8248

  • Triple quoted.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    8249,
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    8250

Only ASCII characters are permitted in bytes literals [regardless of the declared source code encoding]. Any binary values over 127 must be entered into bytes literals using the appropriate escape sequence

As with string literals, bytes literals may also use a

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7362 prefix to disable processing of escape sequences. See String and Bytes literals for more about the various forms of bytes literal, including supported escape sequences.

While bytes literals and representations are based on ASCII text, bytes objects actually behave like immutable sequences of integers, with each value in the sequence restricted such that

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8252 [attempts to violate this restriction will trigger
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
977]. This is done deliberately to emphasise that while many binary formats include ASCII based elements and can be usefully manipulated with some text-oriented algorithms, this is not generally the case for arbitrary binary data [blindly applying text processing algorithms to binary data formats that are not ASCII compatible will usually lead to data corruption]

Ngoài các dạng chữ, các đối tượng byte có thể được tạo theo một số cách khác

  • A zero-filled bytes object of a specified length.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    8254

  • From an iterable of integers.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    8255

  • Copying existing binary data via the buffer protocol.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    8256

Also see the bytes built-in.

Since 2 hexadecimal digits correspond precisely to a single byte, hexadecimal numbers are a commonly used format for describing binary data. Accordingly, the bytes type has an additional class method to read data in that format

classmethod fromhex[string]

This

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6423 class method returns a bytes object, decoding the given string object. The string must contain two hexadecimal digits per byte, with ASCII whitespace being ignored

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
644

Changed in version 3. 7.

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8258 now skips all ASCII whitespace in the string, not just spaces.

A reverse conversion function exists to transform a bytes object into its hexadecimal representation

hex[[sep[ , bytes_per_sep]]]

Return a string object containing two hexadecimal digits for each byte in the instance

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
645

If you want to make the hex string easier to read, you can specify a single character separator sep parameter to include in the output. By default, this separator will be included between each byte. A second optional bytes_per_sep parameter controls the spacing. Positive values calculate the separator position from the right, negative values from the left

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
646

New in version 3. 5

Changed in version 3. 8.

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8259 now supports optional sep and bytes_per_sep parameters to insert separators between bytes in the hex output.

Since bytes objects are sequences of integers [akin to a tuple], for a bytes object b,

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8260 will be an integer, while
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8261 will be a bytes object of length 1. [This contrasts with text strings, where both indexing and slicing will produce a string of length 1]

Việc biểu diễn các đối tượng byte sử dụng định dạng chữ [

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8262] vì nó thường hữu ích hơn e. g.
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8263. You can always convert a bytes object into a list of integers using
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8264

Bytearray Objects¶

Các đối tượng

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6424 là một đối tượng có thể thay đổi đối với các đối tượng
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6423

class bytearray[[source[ , encoding[ , errors]]]]

There is no dedicated literal syntax for bytearray objects, instead they are always created by calling the constructor

  • Creating an empty instance.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    8267

  • Creating a zero-filled instance with a given length.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    8268

  • From an iterable of integers.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    8269

  • Copying existing binary data via the buffer protocol.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    8270

As bytearray objects are mutable, they support the mutable sequence operations in addition to the common bytes and bytearray operations described in Bytes and Bytearray Operations .

Also see the bytearray built-in.

Since 2 hexadecimal digits correspond precisely to a single byte, hexadecimal numbers are a commonly used format for describing binary data. Accordingly, the bytearray type has an additional class method to read data in that format

classmethod fromhex[string]

This

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6424 class method returns bytearray object, decoding the given string object. The string must contain two hexadecimal digits per byte, with ASCII whitespace being ignored

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
647

Đã thay đổi trong phiên bản 3. 7.

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8272 now skips all ASCII whitespace in the string, not just spaces.

A reverse conversion function exists to transform a bytearray object into its hexadecimal representation

hex[[sep[ , bytes_per_sep]]]

Return a string object containing two hexadecimal digits for each byte in the instance

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
648

New in version 3. 5

Changed in version 3. 8. Similar to

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8259,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8274 now supports optional sep and bytes_per_sep parameters to insert separators between bytes in the hex output.

Since bytearray objects are sequences of integers [akin to a list], for a bytearray object b,

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8260 will be an integer, while
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8261 will be a bytearray object of length 1. [This contrasts with text strings, where both indexing and slicing will produce a string of length 1]

The representation of bytearray objects uses the bytes literal format [

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8277] since it is often more useful than e. g.
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8278. You can always convert a bytearray object into a list of integers using
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8264

Bytes and Bytearray Operations¶

Both bytes and bytearray objects support the common sequence operations. They interoperate not just with operands of the same type, but with any bytes-like object . Due to this flexibility, they can be freely mixed in operations without causing errors. However, the return type of the result may depend on the order of operands.

Note

The methods on bytes and bytearray objects don’t accept strings as their arguments, just as the methods on strings don’t accept bytes as their arguments. For example, you have to write

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
649

and

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
730

Some bytes and bytearray operations assume the use of ASCII compatible binary formats, and hence should be avoided when working with arbitrary binary data. These restrictions are covered below

Note

Using these ASCII based operations to manipulate binary data that is not stored in an ASCII based format may lead to data corruption

The following methods on bytes and bytearray objects can be used with arbitrary binary data

bytes. count[sub[ , start[ , end]]]bytearray. count[sub[ , start[ , end]]]

Return the number of non-overlapping occurrences of subsequence sub in the range [start, end]. Optional arguments start and end are interpreted as in slice notation

The subsequence to search for may be any bytes-like object or an integer in the range 0 to 255.

If sub is empty, returns the number of empty slices between characters which is the length of the bytes object plus one

Changed in version 3. 3. Also accept an integer in the range 0 to 255 as the subsequence.

bytes. removeprefix[prefix , /]bytearray. removeprefix[prefix , /]

If the binary data starts with the prefix string, return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8280. Otherwise, return a copy of the original binary data

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
731

The prefix may be any bytes-like object .

Note

The bytearray version of this method does not operate in place - it always produces a new object, even if no changes were made

New in version 3. 9

bytes. removesuffix[suffix , /]bytearray. removesuffix[suffix , /]

If the binary data ends with the suffix string and that suffix is not empty, return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8281. Otherwise, return a copy of the original binary data

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
732

The suffix may be any bytes-like object .

Note

The bytearray version of this method does not operate in place - it always produces a new object, even if no changes were made

New in version 3. 9

bytes. decode[encoding='utf-8' , errors='strict']bytearray. decode[encoding='utf-8' , errors='strict']

Trả về một chuỗi được giải mã từ các byte đã cho. Default encoding is

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7435. errors may be given to set a different error handling scheme. The default for errors is
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7436, meaning that encoding errors raise a
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7437. Other possible values are
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7438,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7439 and any other name registered via
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7442, see section Error Handlers . For a list of possible encodings, see section Standard Encodings .

By default, the errors argument is not checked for best performances, but only used at the first decoding error. Enable the Python Development Mode , or use a debug build to check errors.

Note

Passing the encoding argument to

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6422 allows decoding any bytes-like object directly, without needing to make a temporary bytes or bytearray object.

Changed in version 3. 1. Added support for keyword arguments.

Changed in version 3. 9. Các lỗi hiện được kiểm tra trong chế độ phát triển và trong chế độ gỡ lỗi .

bytes. endswith[suffix[ , start[ , end]]]bytearray. endswith[suffix[ , start[ , end]]]

Return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 if the binary data ends with the specified suffix, otherwise return
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38. suffix can also be a tuple of suffixes to look for. With optional start, test beginning at that position. With optional end, stop comparing at that position

The suffix[es] to search for may be any bytes-like object .

bytes. find[sub[ , start[ , end]]]bytearray. find[sub[ , start[ , end]]]

Return the lowest index in the data where the subsequence sub is found, such that sub is contained in the slice

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7448. Optional arguments start and end are interpreted as in slice notation. Return
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
941 if sub is not found

The subsequence to search for may be any bytes-like object or an integer in the range 0 to 255.

Note

The

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7450 method should be used only if you need to know the position of sub. To check if sub is a substring or not, use the
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
98 operator

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
733

Changed in version 3. 3. Also accept an integer in the range 0 to 255 as the subsequence.

bytes. index[sub[ , start[ , end]]]bytearray. index[sub[ , start[ , end]]]

Like

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7450, but raise
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
977 when the subsequence is not found

The subsequence to search for may be any bytes-like object or an integer in the range 0 to 255.

Changed in version 3. 3. Also accept an integer in the range 0 to 255 as the subsequence.

bytes. join[iterable]bytearray. tham gia[có thể lặp lại]

Return a bytes or bytearray object which is the concatenation of the binary data sequences in iterable. A

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
88 will be raised if there are any values in iterable that are not bytes-like objects , including
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6422 objects. The separator between elements is the contents of the bytes or bytearray object providing this method.

static bytes. maketrans[from , to]static bytearray. maketrans[from , to]

This static method returns a translation table usable for

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8299 that will map each character in from into the character at the same position in to; from and to must both be bytes-like objects and have the same length.

New in version 3. 1

bytes. partition[sep]bytearray. partition[sep]

Split the sequence at the first occurrence of sep, and return a 3-tuple containing the part before the separator, the separator itself or its bytearray copy, and the part after the separator. If the separator is not found, return a 3-tuple containing a copy of the original sequence, followed by two empty bytes or bytearray objects

The separator to search for may be any bytes-like object .

bytes. replace[old , new[ , count]]bytearray. replace[old , new[ , count]]

Trả về một bản sao của chuỗi với tất cả các lần xuất hiện của chuỗi cũ được thay thế bằng mới. If the optional argument count is given, only the first count occurrences are replaced

The subsequence to search for and its replacement may be any bytes-like object .

Note

The bytearray version of this method does not operate in place - it always produces a new object, even if no changes were made

bytes. rfind[sub[ , start[ , end]]]bytearray. rfind[sub[ , start[ , end]]]

Return the highest index in the sequence where the subsequence sub is found, such that sub is contained within

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7448. Optional arguments start and end are interpreted as in slice notation. Return
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
941 on failure

The subsequence to search for may be any bytes-like object or an integer in the range 0 to 255.

Changed in version 3. 3. Also accept an integer in the range 0 to 255 as the subsequence.

bytes. rindex[sub[ , start[ , end]]]bytearray. rindex[sub[ , start[ , end]]]

Like

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7728 but raises
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
977 when the subsequence sub is not found

The subsequence to search for may be any bytes-like object or an integer in the range 0 to 255.

Changed in version 3. 3. Also accept an integer in the range 0 to 255 as the subsequence.

bytes. rpartition[sep]bytearray. rpartition[sep]

Split the sequence at the last occurrence of sep, and return a 3-tuple containing the part before the separator, the separator itself or its bytearray copy, and the part after the separator. If the separator is not found, return a 3-tuple containing two empty bytes or bytearray objects, followed by a copy of the original sequence

The separator to search for may be any bytes-like object .

bytes. startswith[prefix[ , start[ , end]]]bytearray. startswith[prefix[ , start[ , end]]]

Return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 if the binary data starts with the specified prefix, otherwise return
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38. prefix can also be a tuple of prefixes to look for. With optional start, test beginning at that position. With optional end, stop comparing at that position

The prefix[es] to search for may be any bytes-like object .

bytes. translate[table , / , delete=b'']bytearray. translate[table , / , delete=b'']

Return a copy of the bytes or bytearray object where all bytes occurring in the optional argument delete are removed, and the remaining bytes have been mapped through the given translation table, which must be a bytes object of length 256

You can use the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9006 method to create a translation table

Set the table argument to

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
31 for translations that only delete characters

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
734

Changed in version 3. 6. delete is now supported as a keyword argument.

The following methods on bytes and bytearray objects have default behaviours that assume the use of ASCII compatible binary formats, but can still be used with arbitrary binary data by passing appropriate arguments. Note that all of the bytearray methods in this section do not operate in place, and instead produce new objects

bytes. center[width[ , fillbyte]]bytearray. center[width[ , fillbyte]]

Return a copy of the object centered in a sequence of length width. Padding is done using the specified fillbyte [default is an ASCII space]. For

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6423 objects, the original sequence is returned if width is less than or equal to
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6413

Note

The bytearray version of this method does not operate in place - it always produces a new object, even if no changes were made

bytes. ljust[width[ , fillbyte]]bytearray. ljust[width[ , fillbyte]]

Return a copy of the object left justified in a sequence of length width. Padding is done using the specified fillbyte [default is an ASCII space]. For

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6423 objects, the original sequence is returned if width is less than or equal to
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6413

Note

The bytearray version of this method does not operate in place - it always produces a new object, even if no changes were made

bytes. lstrip[[chars]]bytearray. lstrip[[chars]]

Trả về một bản sao của chuỗi đã xóa các byte đầu được chỉ định. The chars argument is a binary sequence specifying the set of byte values to be removed - the name refers to the fact this method is usually used with ASCII characters. If omitted or

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
31, the chars argument defaults to removing ASCII whitespace. The chars argument is not a prefix; rather, all combinations of its values are stripped

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
735

The binary sequence of byte values to remove may be any bytes-like object . See

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9013 for a method that will remove a single prefix string rather than all of a set of characters. For example.

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
736

Note

The bytearray version of this method does not operate in place - it always produces a new object, even if no changes were made

bytes. rjust[width[ , fillbyte]]bytearray. rjust[width[ , fillbyte]]

Return a copy of the object right justified in a sequence of length width. Padding is done using the specified fillbyte [default is an ASCII space]. For

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6423 objects, the original sequence is returned if width is less than or equal to
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6413

Note

The bytearray version of this method does not operate in place - it always produces a new object, even if no changes were made

bytes. rsplit[sep=None , maxsplit=- 1]bytearray. rsplit[sep=None , maxsplit=- 1]

Split the binary sequence into subsequences of the same type, using sep as the delimiter string. If maxsplit is given, at most maxsplit splits are done, the rightmost ones. If sep is not specified or

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
31, any subsequence consisting solely of ASCII whitespace is a separator. Except for splitting from the right,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7732 behaves like
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7733 which is described in detail below

bytes. rstrip[[chars]]bytearray. rstrip[[chars]]

Return a copy of the sequence with specified trailing bytes removed. The chars argument is a binary sequence specifying the set of byte values to be removed - the name refers to the fact this method is usually used with ASCII characters. If omitted or

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
31, the chars argument defaults to removing ASCII whitespace. The chars argument is not a suffix; rather, all combinations of its values are stripped

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
737

The binary sequence of byte values to remove may be any bytes-like object . See

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9020 for a method that will remove a single suffix string rather than all of a set of characters. For example.

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
738

Note

The bytearray version of this method does not operate in place - it always produces a new object, even if no changes were made

bytes. split[sep=None , maxsplit=- 1]bytearray. tách[sep=Không có, maxsplit=- 1]

Tách chuỗi nhị phân thành các chuỗi con cùng loại, sử dụng sep làm chuỗi phân cách. Nếu maxsplit được đưa ra và không âm, thì tối đa việc tách maxsplit được thực hiện [do đó, danh sách sẽ có nhiều nhất

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7736 phần tử]. Nếu maxsplit không được chỉ định hoặc là
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
941, thì không có giới hạn về số lần phân tách [tất cả các lần phân tách có thể được thực hiện]

Nếu sep được cung cấp, các dấu phân cách liên tiếp không được nhóm lại với nhau và được coi là phân cách các chuỗi con trống [ví dụ:

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9023 trả về
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9024]. Đối số sep có thể bao gồm một chuỗi nhiều byte [ví dụ:
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9025 trả về
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9026]. Việc tách một chuỗi trống với một dấu tách được chỉ định trả về
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9027 hoặc
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9028 tùy thuộc vào loại đối tượng được tách. Đối số sep có thể là bất kỳ đối tượng giống như byte .

For example

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
739

Nếu sep không được chỉ định hoặc là

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
31, một thuật toán tách khác sẽ được áp dụng. các khoảng trắng ASCII liên tiếp được coi là một dấu phân cách duy nhất và kết quả sẽ không chứa chuỗi trống ở đầu hoặc cuối nếu chuỗi có khoảng trắng ở đầu hoặc cuối. Do đó, việc tách một chuỗi trống hoặc một chuỗi chỉ bao gồm khoảng trắng ASCII mà không có dấu tách được chỉ định sẽ trả về
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
49

For example

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
740

byte. dải[[ký tự] . ]bytearray.dải[[ký tự]]

Trả về một bản sao của chuỗi đã xóa các byte đầu và cuối được chỉ định. Đối số ký tự là một chuỗi nhị phân chỉ định tập hợp các giá trị byte sẽ bị xóa - tên đề cập đến thực tế là phương thức này thường được sử dụng với các ký tự ASCII. Nếu bỏ qua hoặc

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
31, đối số ký tự mặc định xóa khoảng trắng ASCII. Đối số ký tự không phải là tiền tố hoặc hậu tố;

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
741

Chuỗi nhị phân của các giá trị byte cần xóa có thể là bất kỳ đối tượng giống byte .

Note

The bytearray version of this method does not operate in place - it always produces a new object, even if no changes were made

Các phương thức sau trên các đối tượng byte và bytearray giả sử sử dụng các định dạng nhị phân tương thích ASCII và không được áp dụng cho dữ liệu nhị phân tùy ý. Lưu ý rằng tất cả các phương thức bytearray trong phần này không hoạt động tại chỗ mà thay vào đó tạo ra các đối tượng mới

bytes. capitalize[]bytearray. capitalize[]

Return a copy of the sequence with each byte interpreted as an ASCII character, and the first byte capitalized and the rest lowercased. Non-ASCII byte values are passed through unchanged

Note

The bytearray version of this method does not operate in place - it always produces a new object, even if no changes were made

bytes. expandtabs[tabsize=8]bytearray. expandtabs[tabsize=8]

Return a copy of the sequence where all ASCII tab characters are replaced by one or more ASCII spaces, depending on the current column and the given tab size. Tab positions occur every tabsize bytes [default is 8, giving tab positions at columns 0, 8, 16 and so on]. To expand the sequence, the current column is set to zero and the sequence is examined byte by byte. If the byte is an ASCII tab character [

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9032], one or more space characters are inserted in the result until the current column is equal to the next tab position. [The tab character itself is not copied. ] If the current byte is an ASCII newline [
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9033] or carriage return [
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9034], it is copied and the current column is reset to zero. Any other byte value is copied unchanged and the current column is incremented by one regardless of how the byte value is represented when printed

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
742

Note

The bytearray version of this method does not operate in place - it always produces a new object, even if no changes were made

bytes. isalnum[]bytearray. isalnum[]

Return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 if all bytes in the sequence are alphabetical ASCII characters or ASCII decimal digits and the sequence is not empty,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38 otherwise. Alphabetic ASCII characters are those byte values in the sequence
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9037. ASCII decimal digits are those byte values in the sequence
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9038

For example

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
743

bytes. isalpha[]bytearray. isalpha[]

Return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 if all bytes in the sequence are alphabetic ASCII characters and the sequence is not empty,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38 otherwise. Alphabetic ASCII characters are those byte values in the sequence
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9037

For example

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
744

bytes. isascii[]bytearray. isascii[]

Return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 if the sequence is empty or all bytes in the sequence are ASCII,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38 otherwise. ASCII bytes are in the range 0-0x7F

New in version 3. 7

bytes. isdigit[]bytearray. isdigit[]

Return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 if all bytes in the sequence are ASCII decimal digits and the sequence is not empty,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38 otherwise. ASCII decimal digits are those byte values in the sequence
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9038

For example

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
745

bytes. islower[]bytearray. islower[]

Return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 if there is at least one lowercase ASCII character in the sequence and no uppercase ASCII characters,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38 otherwise

For example

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
746

Lowercase ASCII characters are those byte values in the sequence

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9049. Uppercase ASCII characters are those byte values in the sequence
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9050

bytes. isspace[]bytearray. isspace[]

Return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 if all bytes in the sequence are ASCII whitespace and the sequence is not empty,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38 otherwise. ASCII whitespace characters are those byte values in the sequence
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9053 [space, tab, newline, carriage return, vertical tab, form feed]

bytes. istitle[]bytearray. istitle[]

Return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 if the sequence is ASCII titlecase and the sequence is not empty,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38 otherwise. See
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9056 for more details on the definition of “titlecase”

For example

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
747

bytes. isupper[]bytearray. isupper[]

Return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 if there is at least one uppercase alphabetic ASCII character in the sequence and no lowercase ASCII characters,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38 otherwise

For example

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
748

Lowercase ASCII characters are those byte values in the sequence

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9049. Uppercase ASCII characters are those byte values in the sequence
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9050

bytes. lower[]bytearray. lower[]

Return a copy of the sequence with all the uppercase ASCII characters converted to their corresponding lowercase counterpart

For example

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
749

Lowercase ASCII characters are those byte values in the sequence

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9049. Uppercase ASCII characters are those byte values in the sequence
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9050

Note

The bytearray version of this method does not operate in place - it always produces a new object, even if no changes were made

bytes. splitlines[keepends=False]bytearray. splitlines[keepends=False]

Return a list of the lines in the binary sequence, breaking at ASCII line boundaries. This method uses the universal newlines approach to splitting lines. Line breaks are not included in the resulting list unless keepends is given and true.

For example

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
770

Unlike

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7733 when a delimiter string sep is given, this method returns an empty list for the empty string, and a terminal line break does not result in an extra line

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
771

bytes. swapcase[]bytearray. swapcase[]

Return a copy of the sequence with all the lowercase ASCII characters converted to their corresponding uppercase counterpart and vice-versa

For example

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
772

Lowercase ASCII characters are those byte values in the sequence

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9049. Uppercase ASCII characters are those byte values in the sequence
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9050

Unlike

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9066, it is always the case that
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9067 for the binary versions. Case conversions are symmetrical in ASCII, even though that is not generally true for arbitrary Unicode code points

Note

The bytearray version of this method does not operate in place - it always produces a new object, even if no changes were made

bytes. title[]bytearray. title[]

Trả về phiên bản có tiêu đề của chuỗi nhị phân trong đó các từ bắt đầu bằng ký tự ASCII viết hoa và các ký tự còn lại là chữ thường. Uncased byte values are left unmodified

For example

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
773

Các ký tự ASCII chữ thường là các giá trị byte đó trong chuỗi

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9049. Uppercase ASCII characters are those byte values in the sequence
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9050. All other byte values are uncased

The algorithm uses a simple language-independent definition of a word as groups of consecutive letters. The definition works in many contexts but it means that apostrophes in contractions and possessives form word boundaries, which may not be the desired result

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
774

Có thể xây dựng giải pháp thay thế cho dấu nháy đơn bằng cách sử dụng biểu thức chính quy

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
775

Note

The bytearray version of this method does not operate in place - it always produces a new object, even if no changes were made

bytes. upper[]bytearray. upper[]

Return a copy of the sequence with all the lowercase ASCII characters converted to their corresponding uppercase counterpart

For example

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
776

Lowercase ASCII characters are those byte values in the sequence

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9049. Uppercase ASCII characters are those byte values in the sequence
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9050

Note

The bytearray version of this method does not operate in place - it always produces a new object, even if no changes were made

bytes. zfill[width]bytearray. zfill[width]

Return a copy of the sequence left filled with ASCII

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9072 digits to make a sequence of length width. A leading sign prefix [
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9073/
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9074] is handled by inserting the padding after the sign character rather than before. For
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6423 objects, the original sequence is returned if width is less than or equal to
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
9076

For example

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
777

Note

The bytearray version of this method does not operate in place - it always produces a new object, even if no changes were made

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7426-style Bytes Formatting¶

Note

The formatting operations described here exhibit a variety of quirks that lead to a number of common errors [such as failing to display tuples and dictionaries correctly]. If the value being printed may be a tuple or dictionary, wrap it in a tuple

Bytes objects [

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6423/
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6424] have one unique built-in operation. the
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7782 operator [modulo]. This is also known as the bytes formatting or interpolation operator. Given
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7783 [where format is a bytes object],
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7782 conversion specifications in format are replaced with zero or more elements of values. Hiệu quả tương tự như sử dụng
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7785 trong ngôn ngữ C

If format requires a single argument, values may be a single non-tuple object. 5 Otherwise, values must be a tuple with exactly the number of items specified by the format bytes object, or a single mapping object [for example, a dictionary]

A conversion specifier contains two or more characters and has the following components, which must occur in this order

  1. The

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7786 character, which marks the start of the specifier

  2. Mapping key [optional], consisting of a parenthesised sequence of characters [for example,

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7787]

  3. Conversion flags [optional], which affect the result of some conversion types

  4. Minimum field width [optional]. If specified as an

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7788 [asterisk], the actual width is read from the next element of the tuple in values, and the object to convert comes after the minimum field width and optional precision

  5. Precision [optional], given as a

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7789 [dot] followed by the precision. If specified as
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    7788 [an asterisk], the actual precision is read from the next element of the tuple in values, and the value to convert comes after the precision

  6. Length modifier [optional]

  7. Conversion type

When the right argument is a dictionary [or other mapping type], then the formats in the bytes object must include a parenthesised mapping key into that dictionary inserted immediately after the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7786 character. The mapping key selects the value to be formatted from the mapping. For example

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
778

In this case no

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6400 specifiers may occur in a format [since they require a sequential parameter list]

The conversion flag characters are

Flag

Meaning

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7793

The value conversion will use the “alternate form” [where defined below]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7776

The conversion will be zero padded for numeric values

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7778

Giá trị chuyển đổi được điều chỉnh trái [ghi đè chuyển đổi

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7776 nếu cả hai được cung cấp]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7797

[a space] A blank should be left before a positive number [or empty string] produced by a signed conversion

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7777

A sign character [

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7777 or
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7778] will precede the conversion [overrides a “space” flag]

A length modifier [

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8201,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8202, or
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8203] may be present, but is ignored as it is not necessary for Python – so e. g.
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8204 giống hệt với
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8205

Các loại chuyển đổi là

Conversion

Meaning

ghi chú

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8206

Signed integer decimal

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8207

Signed integer decimal

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8208

Signed octal value

[1]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8209

Obsolete type – it is identical to

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8206

[8]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8211

Signed hexadecimal [lowercase]

[2]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8212

Đã ký thập lục phân [chữ hoa]

[2]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8213

Floating point exponential format [lowercase]

[3]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8214

Floating point exponential format [uppercase]

[3]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8215

Floating point decimal format

[3]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8216

Floating point decimal format

[3]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8217

Floating point format. Uses lowercase exponential format if exponent is less than -4 or not less than precision, decimal format otherwise

[4]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8218

Floating point format. Uses uppercase exponential format if exponent is less than -4 or not less than precision, decimal format otherwise

[4]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8219

Single byte [accepts integer or single byte objects]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
018

Bytes [any object that follows the buffer protocol or has

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
019].

[5]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8222

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8222 is an alias for
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
018 and should only be used for Python2/3 code bases

[6]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8224

Bytes [converts any Python object using

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
024]

[5]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8220

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8220 is an alias for
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8224 and should only be used for Python2/3 code bases

[7]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7786

No argument is converted, results in a

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7786 character in the result

ghi chú

  1. The alternate form causes a leading octal specifier [

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    8228] to be inserted before the first digit

  2. The alternate form causes a leading

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    8229 or
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    8230 [depending on whether the
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    8211 or
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    8212 format was used] to be inserted before the first digit

  3. The alternate form causes the result to always contain a decimal point, even if no digits follow it

    The precision determines the number of digits after the decimal point and defaults to 6

  4. The alternate form causes the result to always contain a decimal point, and trailing zeroes are not removed as they would otherwise be

    The precision determines the number of significant digits before and after the decimal point and defaults to 6

  5. If precision is

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    8233, the output is truncated to
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    8233 characters

  6. def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    037 is deprecated, but will not be removed during the 3. x series

  7. def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    038 không được dùng nữa, nhưng sẽ không bị xóa trong 3. x series

  8. See PEP 237

Note

The bytearray version of this method does not operate in place - it always produces a new object, even if no changes were made

See also

PEP 461 - Adding % formatting to bytes and bytearray

New in version 3. 5

Lượt xem bộ nhớ¶

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8241 cho phép mã Python truy cập dữ liệu bên trong của một đối tượng hỗ trợ giao thức bộ đệm mà không cần sao chép.

class memoryview[object]

Create a

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8241 that references object. object must support the buffer protocol. Built-in objects that support the buffer protocol include
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6423 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6424

A

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8241 has the notion of an element, which is the atomic memory unit handled by the originating object. For many simple types such as
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6423 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6424, an element is a single byte, but other types such as
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
046 may have bigger elements

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
047 is equal to the length of
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
048. If
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
049, the length is 1. If
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
050, the length is equal to the number of elements in the view. For higher dimensions, the length is equal to the length of the nested list representation of the view. The
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
051 attribute will give you the number of bytes in a single element

A

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8241 supports slicing and indexing to expose its data. Cắt một chiều sẽ dẫn đến một chế độ xem phụ

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
779

If

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
053 is one of the native format specifiers from the
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
054 module, indexing with an integer or a tuple of integers is also supported and returns a single element with the correct type. One-dimensional memoryviews can be indexed with an integer or a one-integer tuple. Multi-dimensional memoryviews can be indexed with tuples of exactly ndim integers where ndim is the number of dimensions. Zero-dimensional memoryviews can be indexed with the empty tuple

Here is an example with a non-byte format

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
820

If the underlying object is writable, the memoryview supports one-dimensional slice assignment. Resizing is not allowed

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
821

One-dimensional memoryviews of hashable [read-only] types with formats ‘B’, ‘b’ or ‘c’ are also hashable. The hash is defined as

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
055

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
822

Changed in version 3. 3. One-dimensional memoryviews can now be sliced. One-dimensional memoryviews with formats ‘B’, ‘b’ or ‘c’ are now hashable.

Changed in version 3. 4. memoryview is now registered automatically with

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6396

Changed in version 3. 5. memoryviews can now be indexed with tuple of integers.

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8241 has several methods

__eq__[exporter]

Chế độ xem bộ nhớ và trình xuất PEP 3118 bằng nhau nếu hình dạng của chúng tương đương nhau và nếu tất cả các giá trị tương ứng đều bằng nhau khi mã định dạng tương ứng của toán hạng được diễn giải bằng cú pháp

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
054

For the subset of

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
054 format strings currently supported by
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
060,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
061 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
062 are equal if
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
063

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
823

If either format string is not supported by the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
054 module, then the objects will always compare as unequal [even if the format strings and buffer contents are identical]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
824

Lưu ý rằng, như với các số dấu phẩy động,

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
065 không ngụ ý
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
066 đối với các đối tượng memoryview

Changed in version 3. 3. Previous versions compared the raw memory disregarding the item format and the logical array structure.

tobytes[order='C']

Return the data in the buffer as a bytestring. This is equivalent to calling the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6423 constructor on the memoryview

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
825

For non-contiguous arrays the result is equal to the flattened list representation with all elements converted to bytes.

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
068 supports all format strings, including those that are not in
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
054 module syntax

New in version 3. 8. order can be {‘C’, ‘F’, ‘A’}. When order is ‘C’ or ‘F’, the data of the original array is converted to C or Fortran order. For contiguous views, ‘A’ returns an exact copy of the physical memory. In particular, in-memory Fortran order is preserved. Đối với các chế độ xem không liền kề, dữ liệu được chuyển đổi thành C trước. order=None is the same as order=’C’.

hex[[sep[ , bytes_per_sep]]]

Trả về một đối tượng chuỗi chứa hai chữ số thập lục phân cho mỗi byte trong bộ đệm

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
826

New in version 3. 5

Changed in version 3. 8. Similar to

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
8259,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
071 now supports optional sep and bytes_per_sep parameters to insert separators between bytes in the hex output.

tolist[]

Return the data in the buffer as a list of elements

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
827

Đã thay đổi trong phiên bản 3. 3. ______0060 hiện hỗ trợ tất cả các định dạng gốc ký tự đơn trong cú pháp mô-đun

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
054 cũng như các biểu diễn đa chiều.

toreadonly[]

Return a readonly version of the memoryview object. The original memoryview object is unchanged

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
828

New in version 3. 8

release[]

Release the underlying buffer exposed by the memoryview object. Many objects take special actions when a view is held on them [for example, a

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6424 would temporarily forbid resizing]; therefore, calling release[] is handy to remove these restrictions [and free any dangling resources] as soon as possible

After this method has been called, any further operation on the view raises a

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
977 [except
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
076 itself which can be called multiple times]

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
829

The context management protocol can be used for a similar effect, using the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
077 statement

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
900

New in version 3. 2

cast[format[ , shape]]

Cast a memoryview to a new format or shape. shape defaults to

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
078, which means that the result view will be one-dimensional. The return value is a new memoryview, but the buffer itself is not copied. Supported casts are 1D -> C- contiguous and C-contiguous -> 1D.

The destination format is restricted to a single element native format in

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
054 syntax. One of the formats must be a byte format [‘B’, ‘b’ or ‘c’]. The byte length of the result must be the same as the original length

Cast 1D/long to 1D/unsigned bytes

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
901

Cast 1D/unsigned bytes to 1D/char

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
902

Cast 1D/bytes to 3D/ints to 1D/signed char

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
903

Cast 1D/unsigned long to 2D/unsigned long

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
904

New in version 3. 3

Changed in version 3. 5. The source format is no longer restricted when casting to a byte view.

There are also several readonly attributes available

obj

The underlying object of the memoryview

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
905

New in version 3. 3

nbytes

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
080. This is the amount of space in bytes that the array would use in a contiguous representation. It is not necessarily equal to
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
081

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
906

Multi-dimensional arrays

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
907

New in version 3. 3

readonly

A bool indicating whether the memory is read only

format

A string containing the format [in

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
054 module style] for each element in the view. A memoryview can be created from exporters with arbitrary format strings, but some methods [e. g.
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
060] are restricted to native single element formats

Changed in version 3. 3. format

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
084 is now handled according to the struct module syntax. This means that
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
085.

itemsize

The size in bytes of each element of the memoryview

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
908

ndim

An integer indicating how many dimensions of a multi-dimensional array the memory represents

shape

Một bộ số nguyên có độ dài bằng

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
086 tạo ra hình dạng của bộ nhớ dưới dạng một mảng N chiều

Changed in version 3. 3. An empty tuple instead of

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
31 when ndim = 0.

strides

A tuple of integers the length of

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
086 giving the size in bytes to access each element for each dimension of the array

Changed in version 3. 3. An empty tuple instead of

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
31 when ndim = 0.

suboffsets

Used internally for PIL-style arrays. The value is informational only

c_contiguous

A bool indicating whether the memory is C- contiguous .

New in version 3. 3

f_contiguous

A bool indicating whether the memory is Fortran contiguous .

New in version 3. 3

contiguous

A bool indicating whether the memory is contiguous .

New in version 3. 3

Set Types —
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6469,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6470¶

A set object is an unordered collection of distinct hashable objects. Common uses include membership testing, removing duplicates from a sequence, and computing mathematical operations such as intersection, union, difference, and symmetric difference. [For other containers see the built-in

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6468,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6393, and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6394 classes, and the
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
095 module. ]

Like other collections, sets support

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
096,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
097, and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
098. Being an unordered collection, sets do not record element position or order of insertion. Accordingly, sets do not support indexing, slicing, or other sequence-like behavior

There are currently two built-in set types,

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6469 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6470. The
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6469 type is mutable — the contents can be changed using methods like
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
102 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7301. Since it is mutable, it has no hash value and cannot be used as either a dictionary key or as an element of another set. The
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6470 type is immutable and hashable — its contents cannot be altered after it is created; it can therefore be used as a dictionary key or as an element of another set.

Non-empty sets [not frozensets] can be created by placing a comma-separated list of elements within braces, for example.

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
105, in addition to the
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6469 constructor

The constructors for both classes work the same

class set[[iterable]]class frozenset[[iterable]]

Return a new set or frozenset object whose elements are taken from iterable. The elements of a set must be hashable . To represent sets of sets, the inner sets must be

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6470 objects. If iterable is not specified, a new empty set is returned.

Sets can be created by several means

  • Use a comma-separated list of elements within braces.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    105

  • Use a set comprehension.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    109

  • Sử dụng hàm tạo kiểu.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    51,
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    111,
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    112

Instances of

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6469 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6470 provide the following operations

len[s]

Trả về số phần tử trong tập hợp s [số lượng của s]

x in s

Test x for membership in s

x không vào s

Test x for non-membership in s

isdisjoint[other]

Return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 if the set has no elements in common with other. Sets are disjoint if and only if their intersection is the empty set

issubset[other]set 6 116

issuperset[other]set >= other

Test whether every element in other is in the set

set > other

Test whether the set is a proper superset of other, that is,

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
117

union[*others]set . other . .

Return a new set with elements from the set and all others

intersection[*others]set & other & .

Return a new set with elements common to the set and all others

difference[*others]set - other - .

Return a new set with elements in the set that are not in the others

symmetric_difference[other]set ^ other

Return a new set with elements in either the set or other but not both

copy[]

Return a shallow copy of the set

Note, the non-operator versions of

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
118,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
119,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
120,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
121,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
122, and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
123 methods will accept any iterable as an argument. In contrast, their operator based counterparts require their arguments to be sets. This precludes error-prone constructions like
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
124 in favor of the more readable
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
125

Both

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6469 and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6470 support set to set comparisons. Two sets are equal if and only if every element of each set is contained in the other [each is a subset of the other]. A set is less than another set if and only if the first set is a proper subset of the second set [is a subset, but is not equal]. A set is greater than another set if and only if the first set is a proper superset of the second set [is a superset, but is not equal]

Instances of

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6469 are compared to instances of
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6470 based on their members. For example,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
130 returns
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 and so does
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
132

The subset and equality comparisons do not generalize to a total ordering function. For example, any two nonempty disjoint sets are not equal and are not subsets of each other, so all of the following return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38.
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
134,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
135, or
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
136

Since sets only define partial ordering [subset relationships], the output of the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
137 method is undefined for lists of sets

Set elements, like dictionary keys, must be hashable .

Binary operations that mix

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6469 instances with
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6470 return the type of the first operand. For example.
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
140 returns an instance of
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6470

The following table lists operations available for

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6469 that do not apply to immutable instances of
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6470

update[*others]set . = other . .

Update the set, adding elements from all others

intersection_update[*others]set &= other & .

Update the set, keeping only elements found in it and all others

difference_update[*others]set -= other . .

Update the set, removing elements found in others

symmetric_difference_update[khác]set ^= other

Update the set, keeping only elements found in either set, but not in both

add[elem]

Add element elem to the set

remove[elem]

Remove element elem from the set. Raises

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
144 if elem is not contained in the set

discard[elem]

Remove element elem from the set if it is present

pop[]

Remove and return an arbitrary element from the set. Raises

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
144 if the set is empty

clear[]

Remove all elements from the set

Note, the non-operator versions of the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
146,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
147,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
148, and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
149 methods will accept any iterable as an argument

Note, the elem argument to the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
900,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7301, and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
152 methods may be a set. To support searching for an equivalent frozenset, a temporary one is created from elem

Mapping Types —
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6468¶

A mapping object maps hashable values to arbitrary objects. Mappings are mutable objects. There is currently only one standard mapping type, the dictionary. [For other containers see the built-in

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6393,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6469, and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6394 classes, and the
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
095 module. ]

A dictionary’s keys are almost arbitrary values. Values that are not hashable , that is, values containing lists, dictionaries or other mutable types [that are compared by value rather than by object identity] may not be used as keys. Values that compare equal [such as

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
55,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
159, and
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56] can be used interchangeably to index the same dictionary entry.

class dict[**kwargs]class dict[mapping , **kwargs]class dict[iterable , **kwargs]

Return a new dictionary initialized from an optional positional argument and a possibly empty set of keyword arguments

Dictionaries can be created by several means

  • Use a comma-separated list of

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    161 pairs within braces.
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    162 or
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    163

  • Sử dụng hiểu chính tả.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    50,
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    165

  • Use the type constructor.

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    166,
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    167,
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    168

If no positional argument is given, an empty dictionary is created. If a positional argument is given and it is a mapping object, a dictionary is created with the same key-value pairs as the mapping object. Otherwise, the positional argument must be an iterable object. Each item in the iterable must itself be an iterable with exactly two objects. The first object of each item becomes a key in the new dictionary, and the second object the corresponding value. Nếu một khóa xuất hiện nhiều lần, giá trị cuối cùng của khóa đó sẽ trở thành giá trị tương ứng trong từ điển mới.

If keyword arguments are given, the keyword arguments and their values are added to the dictionary created from the positional argument. If a key being added is already present, the value from the keyword argument replaces the value from the positional argument

Để minh họa, tất cả các ví dụ sau đều trả về một từ điển bằng

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
169

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
909

Providing keyword arguments as in the first example only works for keys that are valid Python identifiers. Otherwise, any valid keys can be used

These are the operations that dictionaries support [and therefore, custom mapping types should support too]

list[d]

Return a list of all the keys used in the dictionary d

len[d]

Return the number of items in the dictionary d

d[key]

Return the item of d with key key. Tăng

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
144 nếu khóa không có trong bản đồ

If a subclass of dict defines a method

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
171 and key is not present, the
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
172 operation calls that method with the key key as argument. The
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
172 operation then returns or raises whatever is returned or raised by the
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
174 call. No other operations or methods invoke
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
171. If
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
171 is not defined,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
144 is raised.
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
171 must be a method; it cannot be an instance variable

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
00

The example above shows part of the implementation of

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
179. Một phương thức
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
180 khác được sử dụng bởi
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
181

d[key] = value

Set

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
172 to value

del d[key]

Remove

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
172 from d. Raises a
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
144 if key is not in the map

key in d

Return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 if d has a key key, else
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38

key not in d

Equivalent to

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
187

iter[d]

Return an iterator over the keys of the dictionary. This is a shortcut for

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
188

clear[]

Remove all items from the dictionary

copy[]

Return a shallow copy of the dictionary

classmethod fromkeys[iterable[ , value]]

Create a new dictionary with keys from iterable and values set to value

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
189 is a class method that returns a new dictionary. value defaults to
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
31. All of the values refer to just a single instance, so it generally doesn’t make sense for value to be a mutable object such as an empty list. To get distinct values, use a dict comprehension instead.

get[key[ , default]]

Return the value for key if key is in the dictionary, else default. If default is not given, it defaults to

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
31, so that this method never raises a
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
144

items[]

Return a new view of the dictionary’s items [

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
193 pairs]. See the documentation of view objects .

keys[]

Trả lại chế độ xem mới cho các khóa của từ điển. See the documentation of view objects .

pop[key[ , default]]

If key is in the dictionary, remove it and return its value, else return default. If default is not given and key is not in the dictionary, a

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
144 is raised

popitem[]

Remove and return a

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
193 pair from the dictionary. Pairs are returned in LIFO order

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
196 is useful to destructively iterate over a dictionary, as often used in set algorithms. If the dictionary is empty, calling
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
196 raises a
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
144

Changed in version 3. 7. LIFO order is now guaranteed. In prior versions,

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
196 would return an arbitrary key/value pair.

reversed[d]

Return a reverse iterator over the keys of the dictionary. This is a shortcut for

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
200

New in version 3. 8

setdefault[key[ , default]]

If key is in the dictionary, return its value. Nếu không, hãy chèn khóa có giá trị mặc định và trả về giá trị mặc định. default defaults to

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
31

update[[other]]

Update the dictionary with the key/value pairs from other, overwriting existing keys. Return

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
31

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
146 accepts either another dictionary object or an iterable of key/value pairs [as tuples or other iterables of length two]. If keyword arguments are specified, the dictionary is then updated with those key/value pairs.
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
204

values[]

Return a new view of the dictionary’s values. See the documentation of view objects .

An equality comparison between one

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
205 view and another will always return
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38. This also applies when comparing
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
205 to itself

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
01

d . other

Create a new dictionary with the merged keys and values of d and other, which must both be dictionaries. The values of other take priority when d and other share keys

New in version 3. 9

d . = other

Update the dictionary d with keys and values from other, which may be either a mapping or an iterable of key/value pairs. The values of other take priority when d and other share keys.

New in version 3. 9

Dictionaries compare equal if and only if they have the same

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
193 pairs [regardless of ordering]. Order comparisons [‘’] raise
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
88.

Dictionaries preserve insertion order. Note that updating a key does not affect the order. Keys added after deletion are inserted at the end

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
02

Changed in version 3. 7. Dictionary order is guaranteed to be insertion order. This behavior was an implementation detail of CPython from 3. 6.

Dictionaries and dictionary views are reversible

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
03

Đã thay đổi trong phiên bản 3. 8. Từ điển hiện có thể đảo ngược.

See also

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
210 có thể được sử dụng để tạo chế độ xem chỉ đọc của
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6468

Đối tượng xem từ điển¶

Các đối tượng được trả về bởi

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
212,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
205 và
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
214 là các đối tượng xem. Chúng cung cấp chế độ xem động cho các mục nhập của từ điển, có nghĩa là khi từ điển thay đổi, chế độ xem sẽ phản ánh những thay đổi này

Chế độ xem từ điển có thể được lặp đi lặp lại để mang lại dữ liệu tương ứng và hỗ trợ kiểm tra tư cách thành viên

len[dictview]

Trả về số mục trong từ điển

lặp đi lặp lại [dictview]

Trả về một trình vòng lặp trên các khóa, giá trị hoặc mục [được biểu thị dưới dạng bộ dữ liệu của

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
193] trong từ điển

Các khóa và giá trị được lặp lại theo thứ tự chèn. Điều này cho phép tạo các cặp

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
216 bằng cách sử dụng
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
217.
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
218. Một cách khác để tạo danh sách tương tự là
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
219

Lặp lại các chế độ xem trong khi thêm hoặc xóa các mục nhập trong từ điển có thể làm tăng

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
220 hoặc không thể lặp lại tất cả các mục nhập

Đã thay đổi trong phiên bản 3. 7. Thứ tự từ điển được đảm bảo là thứ tự chèn.

x in dictview

Trả về

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56 nếu x nằm trong các khóa, giá trị hoặc mục của từ điển cơ bản [trong trường hợp sau, x phải là bộ dữ liệu
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
193]

đảo ngược [dictview]

Trả về một trình lặp đảo ngược trên các khóa, giá trị hoặc mục của từ điển. Chế độ xem sẽ được lặp lại theo thứ tự ngược lại của phần chèn

Changed in version 3. 8. Chế độ xem từ điển hiện có thể đảo ngược.

chế độ xem chính tả. lập bản đồ

Trả lại một

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
210 bao bọc từ điển gốc mà chế độ xem đề cập đến

New in version 3. 10

Chế độ xem khóa giống như được đặt vì các mục nhập của chúng là duy nhất và có thể băm. Nếu tất cả các giá trị đều có thể băm, để các cặp

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
193 là duy nhất và có thể băm, thì chế độ xem các mục cũng giống như được đặt. [Chế độ xem giá trị không được coi là giống như tập hợp vì các mục thường không phải là duy nhất. ] Đối với các khung nhìn dạng tập hợp, tất cả các thao tác được xác định cho lớp cơ sở trừu tượng
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
225 đều khả dụng [ví dụ:
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
78,
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
74 hoặc
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
228]

Một ví dụ về việc sử dụng chế độ xem từ điển

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
04

Các loại trình quản lý ngữ cảnh¶

Câu lệnh

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
077 của Python hỗ trợ khái niệm bối cảnh thời gian chạy được xác định bởi trình quản lý bối cảnh. Điều này được thực hiện bằng cách sử dụng một cặp phương thức cho phép các lớp do người dùng định nghĩa xác định bối cảnh thời gian chạy được nhập vào trước khi phần thân câu lệnh được thực thi và thoát khi câu lệnh kết thúc

trình quản lý ngữ cảnh. __enter__[]

Enter the runtime context and return either this object or another object related to the runtime context. Giá trị được phương thức này trả về được liên kết với mã định danh trong mệnh đề

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
230 của câu lệnh
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
077 bằng trình quản lý ngữ cảnh này

Ví dụ về trình quản lý bối cảnh tự trả về là một đối tượng tệp . Các đối tượng tệp tự trả về từ __enter__[] để cho phép sử dụng

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
232 làm biểu thức ngữ cảnh trong câu lệnh
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
077.

Một ví dụ về trình quản lý bối cảnh trả về một đối tượng liên quan là đối tượng được trả về bởi

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
234. Những người quản lý này đặt ngữ cảnh thập phân đang hoạt động thành một bản sao của ngữ cảnh thập phân ban đầu rồi trả lại bản sao. Điều này cho phép thực hiện các thay đổi đối với ngữ cảnh thập phân hiện tại trong phần thân của câu lệnh
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
077 mà không ảnh hưởng đến mã bên ngoài câu lệnh
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
077

trình quản lý ngữ cảnh. __exit__[exc_type , exc_val , exc_tb]

Exit the runtime context and return a Boolean flag indicating if any exception that occurred should be suppressed. If an exception occurred while executing the body of the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
077 statement, the arguments contain the exception type, value and traceback information. Mặt khác, cả ba đối số đều là
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
31

Returning a true value from this method will cause the

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
077 statement to suppress the exception and continue execution with the statement immediately following the
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
077 statement. Otherwise the exception continues propagating after this method has finished executing. Exceptions that occur during execution of this method will replace any exception that occurred in the body of the
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
077 statement

The exception passed in should never be reraised explicitly - instead, this method should return a false value to indicate that the method completed successfully and does not want to suppress the raised exception. This allows context management code to easily detect whether or not an

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
242 method has actually failed

Python định nghĩa một số trình quản lý ngữ cảnh để hỗ trợ đồng bộ hóa luồng dễ dàng, đóng nhanh tệp hoặc các đối tượng khác và thao tác đơn giản hơn đối với ngữ cảnh số học thập phân đang hoạt động. Các loại cụ thể không được xử lý đặc biệt ngoài việc thực hiện giao thức quản lý ngữ cảnh. Xem mô-đun

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
243 để biết một số ví dụ

Trình tạo của Python và trình trang trí

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
244 cung cấp một cách thuận tiện để triển khai các giao thức này. Nếu một hàm tạo được trang trí bằng trình tạo trang trí
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
244, thì nó sẽ trả về trình quản lý ngữ cảnh thực hiện các phương thức
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
246 và
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
242 cần thiết, thay vì trình vòng lặp được tạo bởi hàm tạo không được trang trí.

Lưu ý rằng không có vị trí cụ thể nào cho bất kỳ phương thức nào trong số này trong cấu trúc kiểu cho các đối tượng Python trong API Python/C. Các loại tiện ích mở rộng muốn xác định các phương thức này phải cung cấp chúng như một phương thức truy cập Python thông thường. So với chi phí thiết lập bối cảnh thời gian chạy, chi phí hoạt động của một tra cứu từ điển một lớp là không đáng kể

Type Annotation Types — Generic Alias , Union

The core built-in types for type annotations are Generic Alias and Union .

Loại bí danh chung¶

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
248 đối tượng thường được tạo bởi đăng ký một lớp. Chúng thường được sử dụng nhất với các lớp vùng chứa , chẳng hạn như
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6393 hoặc
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6468. Ví dụ:
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
251 là đối tượng
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
248 được tạo bằng cách đăng ký lớp
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6393 với đối số
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
901. Các đối tượng
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
248 được thiết kế chủ yếu để sử dụng với chú thích loại .

Note

Nói chung, chỉ có thể đăng ký một lớp nếu lớp đó triển khai phương thức đặc biệt

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
256

Đối tượng

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
248 hoạt động như một proxy cho loại chung , triển khai các loại chung được tham số hóa.

Đối với lớp vùng chứa, [các] đối số được cung cấp cho đăng ký của lớp có thể cho biết [các] loại phần tử . Ví dụ,

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
258 có thể được sử dụng trong chú thích loại để biểu thị một
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6469 trong đó tất cả các phần tử thuộc loại
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6423.

Đối với một lớp định nghĩa

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
256 nhưng không phải là một vùng chứa, [các] đối số được cung cấp cho đăng ký của lớp thường sẽ chỉ ra [các] kiểu trả về của một hoặc nhiều phương thức được xác định trên một đối tượng. Ví dụ:
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
262 có thể được sử dụng trên cả loại dữ liệu
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6422 và loại dữ liệu
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6423

  • Nếu

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    265, thì
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    982 sẽ là lại. Khớp đối tượng trong đó các giá trị trả về của
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    267 và
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    268 đều thuộc loại
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6422. Chúng ta có thể biểu diễn loại đối tượng này trong các chú thích kiểu với
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    248
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    271.

  • Nếu

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    272, [lưu ý
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    8246 cho
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6423], thì
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6331 cũng sẽ là một thể hiện của
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    276, nhưng các giá trị trả về của
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    277 và
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    278 đều sẽ thuộc loại
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6423. Trong các chú thích loại, chúng tôi sẽ trình bày nhiều loại re. Khớp các đối tượng với
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    280.

Các đối tượng

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
248 là các thể hiện của lớp
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
282, cũng có thể được sử dụng để tạo trực tiếp các đối tượng
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
248

T[X, Y, . ]

Tạo một

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
248 đại diện cho một loại
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
285 được tham số hóa bởi các loại X, Y, v.v. tùy thuộc vào
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
285 được sử dụng. Ví dụ: một hàm mong đợi một
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6393 chứa các phần tử
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
902

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
05

Một ví dụ khác cho các đối tượng ánh xạ , sử dụng

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6468, là loại chung cần có hai tham số loại đại diện cho loại khóa và loại giá trị. Trong ví dụ này, hàm mong đợi một
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6468 với các khóa thuộc loại
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6422 và các giá trị thuộc loại
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
901.

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
06

Các hàm dựng sẵn

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
293 và
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
294 không chấp nhận các loại
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
248 cho đối số thứ hai của chúng

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
07

Thời gian chạy Python không thực thi chú thích loại . Điều này mở rộng đến các loại chung và các tham số loại của chúng. When creating a container object from a

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
248, the elements in the container are not checked against their type. Ví dụ: đoạn mã sau không được khuyến khích nhưng sẽ chạy không có lỗi.

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
08

Hơn nữa, các tham số loại được tham số hóa xóa các tham số loại trong quá trình tạo đối tượng

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
09

Gọi

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
32 hoặc
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
33 trên một chung hiển thị loại được tham số hóa

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
10

Phương pháp

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
7768 của các thùng chứa chung sẽ đưa ra một ngoại lệ để không cho phép các lỗi như
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
300

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
11

Tuy nhiên, các biểu thức như vậy hợp lệ khi sử dụng biến loại . Chỉ mục phải có nhiều phần tử bằng với số mục biến loại trong đối tượng

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
248 của đối tượng
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
302.

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
12

Các lớp học chung tiêu chuẩn¶

Các lớp thư viện tiêu chuẩn sau đây hỗ trợ các generic được tham số hóa. danh sách này là không đầy đủ

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6394

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6393

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6468

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6469

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6470

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    308

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    309

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    181

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    311

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    179

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    313

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    314

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    315

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    316

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    317

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    318

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    319

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    320

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    321

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    322

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    323

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    324

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    325

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    225

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    327

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    328

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    329

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6396

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6472

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    332

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    333

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    334

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    335

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    336

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    337

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    338

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    339

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    340

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    341

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    342

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    343

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    344

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    345

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    346

  • lại. Họa tiết

  • lại. Cuộc thi đấu

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    347

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    348

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    349

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    210

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    351

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    352

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    353

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    354

Thuộc tính đặc biệt của đối tượng
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
248¶

Tất cả các generic được tham số hóa đều triển khai các thuộc tính chỉ đọc đặc biệt

tên chung. __origin__

Thuộc tính này trỏ đến lớp chung không tham số hóa

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
13

tên chung. __args__

Thuộc tính này là một

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6394 [có thể có độ dài 1] của các loại chung được truyền cho
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
256 ban đầu của lớp chung

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
14

tên chung. __tham số__

Thuộc tính này là một bộ được tính toán chậm [có thể trống] gồm các biến loại duy nhất được tìm thấy trong

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
302

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
15

Note

Một đối tượng

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
248 với các tham số
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
360 có thể không có
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
361 chính xác sau khi thay thế vì
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
360 chủ yếu dành cho kiểm tra kiểu tĩnh

tên chung. __unpacked__

Một giá trị boolean đúng nếu bí danh đã được giải nén bằng cách sử dụng toán tử

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6400 [xem
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
364]

Mới trong phiên bản 3. 11

See also

PEP 484 - Gợi ý loại

Giới thiệu khung của Python cho các chú thích loại

PEP 585 - Nhập gợi ý Generics trong bộ sưu tập tiêu chuẩn

Giới thiệu khả năng tham số hóa các lớp thư viện tiêu chuẩn, miễn là chúng triển khai phương thức lớp đặc biệt

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
256

Thuốc chung , thuốc chung do người dùng xác định
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
366

Tài liệu về cách triển khai các lớp chung có thể được tham số hóa trong thời gian chạy và được hiểu bởi trình kiểm tra kiểu tĩnh

New in version 3. 9

Loại liên minh¶

Đối tượng hợp lưu giữ giá trị của phép toán

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
367 [theo bit hoặc] trên nhiều đối tượng loại . Các loại này chủ yếu dành cho chú thích loại . Biểu thức kiểu kết hợp cho phép cú pháp gợi ý kiểu sạch hơn so với
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
368.

X . Y . .

Xác định một đối tượng kết hợp chứa các loại X, Y, v.v.

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
369 có nghĩa là X hoặc Y. Nó tương đương với
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
370. Ví dụ: hàm sau mong đợi một đối số kiểu
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
901 hoặc
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
902

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
16

union_object == khác

Các đối tượng kết hợp có thể được kiểm tra sự bình đẳng với các đối tượng kết hợp khác. Thông tin chi tiết

  • Liên minh công đoàn bị san bằng

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    17

  • Các loại dư thừa được loại bỏ

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    18

  • Khi so sánh các công đoàn, thứ tự bị bỏ qua

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    19

  • Nó tương thích với

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    368

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    20

  • Các loại tùy chọn có thể được viết dưới dạng hợp nhất với

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    31

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    21

isinstance[obj, union_object]issubclass[obj, union_object]

Các cuộc gọi đến

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
293 và
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
294 cũng được hỗ trợ với một đối tượng hợp nhất

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
22

Tuy nhiên, không thể sử dụng các đối tượng hợp có chứa các tổng quát được tham số hóa .

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
23

Loại tiếp xúc với người dùng cho đối tượng hợp nhất có thể được truy cập từ

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
377 và được sử dụng để kiểm tra
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
293. Một đối tượng không thể được khởi tạo từ loại

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
24

Note

Phương thức

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
379 cho các đối tượng kiểu đã được thêm vào để hỗ trợ cú pháp
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
369. Nếu một siêu dữ liệu triển khai
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
379, Liên minh có thể ghi đè lên nó

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
25

See also

PEP 604 – PEP đề xuất cú pháp

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
369 và kiểu Union

New in version 3. 10

Các loại tích hợp khác¶

Trình thông dịch hỗ trợ một số loại đối tượng khác. Hầu hết trong số này chỉ hỗ trợ một hoặc hai thao tác

Mô-đun¶

Hoạt động đặc biệt duy nhất trên một mô-đun là truy cập thuộc tính.

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
383, where m is a module and name accesses a name defined in m’s symbol table. Thuộc tính mô-đun có thể được gán cho. [Lưu ý rằng câu lệnh
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
384 nói đúng ra không phải là một thao tác trên đối tượng mô-đun;
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
385 không yêu cầu đối tượng mô-đun có tên foo tồn tại, thay vào đó, nó yêu cầu định nghĩa [bên ngoài] cho mô-đun có tên foo ở đâu đó. ]

Một thuộc tính đặc biệt của mọi mô-đun là

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
386. Đây là từ điển chứa bảng ký hiệu của module. Sửa đổi từ điển này sẽ thực sự thay đổi bảng ký hiệu của mô-đun, nhưng không thể gán trực tiếp cho thuộc tính
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
386 [bạn có thể viết
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
388, định nghĩa
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
389 là
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
55, nhưng bạn không thể viết
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
391]. Sửa đổi trực tiếp
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
386 không được khuyến nghị

Các mô-đun được tích hợp trong trình thông dịch được viết như thế này.

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
393. Nếu được tải từ một tệp, chúng được viết là
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
394

Lớp và thực thể lớp¶

Xem Đối tượng, giá trị và loạiĐịnh nghĩa lớp .

Chức năng¶

Các đối tượng hàm được tạo bởi các định nghĩa hàm. Thao tác duy nhất trên một đối tượng hàm là gọi nó.

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
395

Thực sự có hai hương vị của các đối tượng chức năng. built-in functions and user-defined functions. Cả hai đều hỗ trợ cùng một thao tác [để gọi hàm], nhưng cách thực hiện khác nhau, do đó các loại đối tượng khác nhau

Xem Định nghĩa hàm để biết thêm thông tin.

Phương pháp¶

Phương thức là các hàm được gọi bằng cách sử dụng ký hiệu thuộc tính. Có hai hương vị. các phương thức tích hợp sẵn [chẳng hạn như

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
396 trong danh sách] và các phương thức thể hiện của lớp. Các phương thức tích hợp được mô tả với các loại hỗ trợ chúng

Nếu bạn truy cập một phương thức [một hàm được xác định trong không gian tên lớp] thông qua một thể hiện, bạn sẽ nhận được một đối tượng đặc biệt. một đối tượng phương thức ràng buộc [còn gọi là phương thức thể hiện]. Khi được gọi, nó sẽ thêm đối số

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
397 vào danh sách đối số. Các phương thức ràng buộc có hai thuộc tính chỉ đọc đặc biệt.
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
398 là đối tượng mà phương thức hoạt động và
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
399 là hàm thực thi phương thức. Gọi
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
400 hoàn toàn tương đương với gọi
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
401

Giống như các đối tượng hàm, các đối tượng phương thức ràng buộc hỗ trợ nhận các thuộc tính tùy ý. Tuy nhiên, vì các thuộc tính của phương thức thực sự được lưu trữ trên đối tượng chức năng bên dưới [

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
402], nên việc đặt các thuộc tính của phương thức trên các phương thức bị ràng buộc là không được phép. Cố gắng đặt một thuộc tính trên một phương thức sẽ dẫn đến việc tăng
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
403. Để đặt một thuộc tính phương thức, bạn cần đặt nó một cách rõ ràng trên đối tượng hàm bên dưới

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
26

See The standard type hierarchy for more information.

Đối tượng mã¶

Các đối tượng mã được triển khai sử dụng để biểu thị mã Python thực thi được "biên dịch giả" chẳng hạn như thân hàm. Chúng khác với các đối tượng chức năng vì chúng không chứa tham chiếu đến môi trường thực thi toàn cầu của chúng. Các đối tượng mã được trả về bởi hàm

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
404 tích hợp và có thể được trích xuất từ ​​các đối tượng hàm thông qua thuộc tính
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
405 của chúng. Xem thêm mô-đun
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
406

Việc truy cập vào

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
405 sẽ tạo ra một sự kiện kiểm tra
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
408 với các đối số
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
409 và
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
410.

Một đối tượng mã có thể được thực thi hoặc đánh giá bằng cách chuyển đối tượng đó [thay vì chuỗi nguồn] tới các hàm dựng sẵn

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
411 hoặc
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
412

See The standard type hierarchy for more information.

Nhập đối tượng¶

Loại đối tượng đại diện cho các loại đối tượng khác nhau. Loại đối tượng được truy cập bằng chức năng tích hợp sẵn

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
413. Không có thao tác đặc biệt nào trên các loại. Mô-đun tiêu chuẩn
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
414 xác định tên cho tất cả các loại tích hợp tiêu chuẩn

Các loại được viết như thế này.

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
415

Đối tượng Null¶

Đối tượng này được trả về bởi các hàm không trả về giá trị một cách rõ ràng. It supports no special operations. Có chính xác một đối tượng null, tên là

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
31 [tên dựng sẵn].
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
417 tạo ra cùng một singleton

Nó được viết là

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
31

Đối tượng Dấu chấm lửng¶

Đối tượng này thường được sử dụng bằng cách cắt lát [xem Cắt lát ]. Nó không hỗ trợ các hoạt động đặc biệt. Có chính xác một đối tượng dấu chấm lửng, tên là

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
419 [tên dựng sẵn].
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
420 tạo ra đĩa đơn
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
419.

Nó được viết là

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
419 hoặc
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
423

Đối tượng không được triển khai¶

Đối tượng này được trả về từ phép so sánh và phép toán nhị phân khi chúng được yêu cầu thao tác trên các loại mà chúng không hỗ trợ. Xem So sánh để biết thêm thông tin. Có chính xác một đối tượng

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
424.
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
425 tạo ra cá thể đơn lẻ.

Nó được viết là

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
424

Boolean Values¶

Giá trị Boolean là hai đối tượng hằng số

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38 và
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56. Chúng được sử dụng để biểu thị giá trị thật [mặc dù các giá trị khác cũng có thể được coi là sai hoặc đúng]. Trong ngữ cảnh số [ví dụ: khi được sử dụng làm đối số cho toán tử số học], chúng hoạt động giống như các số nguyên 0 và 1 tương ứng. Có thể sử dụng hàm tích hợp sẵn
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
429 để chuyển đổi bất kỳ giá trị nào thành Boolean, nếu giá trị đó có thể được hiểu là giá trị thực [xem phần Kiểm tra giá trị thực above].

Chúng được viết lần lượt là

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
38 và
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
56

Đối tượng bên trong¶

Xem Hệ thống phân cấp loại tiêu chuẩn để biết thông tin này. Nó mô tả các đối tượng khung ngăn xếp, đối tượng truy nguyên và đối tượng lát.

Thuộc tính đặc biệt¶

Việc triển khai thêm một vài thuộc tính chỉ đọc đặc biệt cho một số loại đối tượng, nơi chúng có liên quan. Một số trong số này không được báo cáo bởi hàm tích hợp

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
432

đối tượng. __dict__

Từ điển hoặc đối tượng ánh xạ khác được sử dụng để lưu trữ các thuộc tính [có thể ghi] của đối tượng

instance. __class__

Lớp mà một thể hiện của lớp thuộc về

lớp. __base__

Bộ các lớp cơ sở của một đối tượng lớp

định nghĩa. __name__

Tên của lớp, hàm, phương thức, bộ mô tả hoặc thể hiện của trình tạo

định nghĩa. __qualname__

The tên đủ điều kiện của lớp, hàm, phương thức, bộ mô tả hoặc thể hiện trình tạo.

New in version 3. 3

lớp. __mro__

Thuộc tính này là một bộ các lớp được xem xét khi tìm kiếm các lớp cơ sở trong quá trình phân giải phương thức

lớp. mro[]

Phương thức này có thể được ghi đè bởi một siêu dữ liệu để tùy chỉnh thứ tự phân giải phương thức cho các phiên bản của nó. It is called at class instantiation, and its result is stored in

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
433

lớp. __phân lớp__[]

Mỗi lớp giữ một danh sách các tham chiếu yếu đến các lớp con trực tiếp của nó. Phương thức này trả về một danh sách tất cả các tham chiếu vẫn còn tồn tại. Danh sách theo thứ tự định nghĩa. Thí dụ

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
27

Giới hạn độ dài chuyển đổi chuỗi số nguyên¶

CPython có giới hạn toàn cầu cho việc chuyển đổi giữa

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
901 và
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6422 để giảm thiểu các cuộc tấn công từ chối dịch vụ. Giới hạn này chỉ áp dụng cho cơ số thập phân hoặc cơ số không phải lũy thừa hai. Chuyển đổi thập lục phân, bát phân và nhị phân là không giới hạn. Giới hạn có thể được cấu hình

Loại ________ 6901 trong Python là một số có độ dài tùy ý được lưu trữ ở dạng nhị phân [thường được gọi là “bignum”]. Không tồn tại thuật toán nào có thể chuyển đổi một chuỗi thành một số nguyên nhị phân hoặc một số nguyên nhị phân thành một chuỗi trong thời gian tuyến tính, trừ khi cơ số là lũy thừa của 2. Ngay cả các thuật toán được biết đến nhiều nhất cho cơ số 10 cũng có độ phức tạp bậc hai. Chuyển đổi một giá trị lớn chẳng hạn như

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
437 có thể mất hơn một giây trên CPU nhanh

Giới hạn kích thước chuyển đổi cung cấp một cách thiết thực để tránh CVE-2020-10735

The limit is applied to the number of digit characters in the input or output string when a non-linear conversion algorithm would be involved. Dấu gạch dưới và dấu không được tính vào giới hạn

Khi một hoạt động sẽ vượt quá giới hạn, một

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
977 được nâng lên

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
28

Giới hạn mặc định là 4300 chữ số như được cung cấp trong

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
439. Giới hạn thấp nhất có thể được định cấu hình là 640 chữ số như được cung cấp trong
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
440

xác minh

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
29

Mới trong phiên bản 3. 11

API bị ảnh hưởng¶

Giới hạn chỉ áp dụng cho các chuyển đổi có khả năng chậm giữa

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
901 và
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6422 hoặc
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6423

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    444 với cơ sở mặc định 10

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    445 cho tất cả các cơ số không phải là lũy thừa của 2

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    446

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    447

  • bất kỳ chuyển đổi chuỗi nào khác sang cơ số 10, ví dụ:

    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    448,
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    449 hoặc
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    450

Các giới hạn không áp dụng cho các hàm có thuật toán tuyến tính

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    445 với cơ số 2, 4, 8, 16 hoặc 32

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    452 và
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    453

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    454,
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    455,
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    456

  • Ngôn ngữ nhỏ đặc tả định dạng cho các số hex, bát phân và nhị phân.

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6422 đến
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    902

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    6422 đến
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    908

Định cấu hình giới hạn¶

Trước khi Python khởi động, bạn có thể sử dụng biến môi trường hoặc cờ dòng lệnh của trình thông dịch để định cấu hình giới hạn

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    461, e. g.
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    462 để đặt giới hạn thành 640 hoặc
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    463 để tắt giới hạn

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    464, e. g.
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    465

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    466 chứa giá trị của
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    461 hoặc
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    464. Nếu cả tùy chọn env var và tùy chọn
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    469 được đặt, tùy chọn
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    469 sẽ được ưu tiên. Giá trị -1 cho biết rằng cả hai đều không được đặt, giá trị này là ________ 0439 đã được sử dụng trong quá trình khởi tạo

Từ mã, bạn có thể kiểm tra giới hạn hiện tại và đặt giới hạn mới bằng cách sử dụng các API

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
472 này

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    473 và
    def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    474 là một getter và setter cho giới hạn toàn phiên dịch. Phiên dịch viên phụ có giới hạn riêng của họ

Information about the default and minimum can be found in

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
475

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    439 là giới hạn mặc định được biên dịch sẵn

  • def bit_length[self]:
        s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
        s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
        return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
    
    440 là giá trị thấp nhất được chấp nhận cho giới hạn [khác 0 sẽ vô hiệu hóa nó]

Mới trong phiên bản 3. 11

thận trọng

Đặt giới hạn thấp có thể dẫn đến sự cố. Mặc dù hiếm gặp, mã tồn tại chứa các hằng số nguyên ở dạng thập phân trong nguồn của chúng vượt quá ngưỡng tối thiểu. Hậu quả của việc đặt giới hạn là mã nguồn Python chứa các số nguyên thập phân dài hơn giới hạn sẽ gặp lỗi trong quá trình phân tích cú pháp, thường là tại thời điểm khởi động hoặc thời điểm nhập hoặc thậm chí tại thời điểm cài đặt - bất kỳ lúc nào bản cập nhật

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
478 chưa tồn tại cho . Một giải pháp thay thế cho nguồn chứa các hằng số lớn như vậy là chuyển đổi chúng sang dạng thập lục phân
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
6312 vì nó không có giới hạn

Kiểm tra ứng dụng của bạn kỹ lưỡng nếu bạn sử dụng giới hạn thấp. Đảm bảo các thử nghiệm của bạn chạy với giới hạn được đặt sớm thông qua môi trường hoặc cờ để nó áp dụng trong quá trình khởi động và thậm chí trong bất kỳ bước cài đặt nào có thể gọi Python để biên dịch trước nguồn

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
480 thành tệp
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
478

Cấu hình đề xuất¶

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
439 mặc định dự kiến ​​sẽ hợp lý cho hầu hết các ứng dụng. Nếu ứng dụng của bạn yêu cầu một giới hạn khác, hãy đặt giới hạn đó từ điểm vào chính của bạn bằng cách sử dụng mã bất khả tri của phiên bản Python vì các API này đã được thêm vào trong các bản phát hành bản vá bảo mật trong các phiên bản trước 3. 11

Example

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
30

Nếu bạn cần tắt hoàn toàn, hãy đặt thành

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
42

chú thích

1

Thông tin bổ sung về các phương pháp đặc biệt này có thể được tìm thấy trong Hướng dẫn tham khảo Python [ Tùy chỉnh cơ bản ].

2

Kết quả là, danh sách

def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
484 được coi là bằng với
def bit_length[self]:
    s = bin[self]       # binary representation:  bin[-37] --> '-0b100101'
    s = s.lstrip['-0b'] # remove leading zeros and minus sign
    return len[s]       # len['100101'] --> 6
485 và tương tự đối với các bộ dữ liệu

3

Chúng phải có vì trình phân tích cú pháp không thể cho biết loại toán hạng

4[1,2,3,4]

Cased characters are those with general category property being one of “Lu” [Letter, uppercase], “Ll” [Letter, lowercase], or “Lt” [Letter, titlecase]

5[1,2]

Do đó, để chỉ định dạng một bộ dữ liệu, bạn nên cung cấp một bộ dữ liệu đơn có phần tử duy nhất là bộ dữ liệu được định dạng

Toán tử nào không thể được áp dụng trên bộ trong Python?

Vì vậy, câu trả lời là các đối tượng tập hợp không sử dụng + và * bởi vì các toán tử đó thường được sử dụng cho các hoạt động không có ý nghĩa đối với .

Toán tử nào có thể được sử dụng trên các tập hợp trong Python?

Hầu hết, mặc dù không hoàn toàn là tất cả, các thao tác thiết lập trong Python có thể được thực hiện theo hai cách khác nhau. theo toán tử hoặc theo phương thức. Chúng ta hãy xem cách thức hoạt động của các toán tử và phương thức này, sử dụng liên kết tập hợp làm ví dụ.

Thao tác nào sau đây không phải là thao tác tập hợp hợp lệ trong Python?

Giải thích. toán tử phép nhân không hợp lệ cho loại dữ liệu đã đặt.

* Có thể vận hành trên các tập hợp trong Python không?

Sửa đổi một tập hợp trong Python . Đặt loại dữ liệu không hỗ trợ nó. We can add a single element using the add[] method, and multiple elements using the update[] method. We cannot access or change an element of a set using indexing or slicing. Set data type does not support it. We can add a single element using the add[] method, and multiple elements using the update[] method.

Chủ Đề