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Python en:Operators and Expressions

In This Guide:

Introduction

Most statements (logical lines) that you write will contain expressions. A simple example of an expression is 2 + 3. An expression can be broken down into operators and operands.

Operators are functionality that do something and can be represented by symbols such as + or by special keywords. Operators require some data to operate on and such data is called operands. In this case, 2 and 3 are the operands.

Operators

We will briefly take a look at the operators and their usage:

Note that you can evaluate the expressions given in the examples using the interpreter interactively. For example, to test the expression 2 + 3, use the interactive Python interpreter prompt:

<source lang="python"> >>> 2 + 3 5 >>> 3 * 5 15 >>> </source>

Operators And Their Usage

Operator

Name

Explanation

Examples

+

Plus

Adds the two objects

3 + 5 gives 8. 'a' + 'b' gives 'ab'.

-

Minus

Either gives a negative number or gives the subtraction of one number from the other

-5.2 gives a negative number. 50 - 24 gives 26.

*

Multiply

Gives the multiplication of the two numbers or returns the string repeated that many times.

2 * 3 gives 6. 'la' * 3 gives 'lalala'.

**

Power

Returns x to the power of y

3 ** 4 gives 81 (i.e. 3 * 3 * 3 * 3)

/

Divide

Divide x by y

4 / 3 gives 1.3333333333333333.

//

Floor Division

Returns the floor of the quotient

4 // 3 gives 1.

%

Modulo

Returns the remainder of the division

8 % 3 gives 2. -25.5 % 2.25 gives 1.5.

<<

Left Shift

Shifts the bits of the number to the left by the number of bits specified. (Each number is represented in memory by bits or binary digits i.e. 0 and 1)

2 << 2 gives 8. 2 is represented by 10 in bits. Left shifting by 2 bits gives 1000 which represents the decimal 8.

>>

Right Shift

Shifts the bits of the number to the right by the number of bits specified.

11 >> 1 gives 5. 11 is represented in bits by 1011 which when right shifted by 1 bit gives 101 which is the decimal 5.

&

Bitwise AND

Bitwise AND of the numbers

5 & 3 gives 1.

|

Bit-wise OR

Bitwise OR of the numbers

5 | 3 gives 7

^

Bit-wise XOR

Bitwise XOR of the numbers

5 ^ 3 gives 6

~

Bit-wise invert

The bit-wise inversion of x is -(x+1)

~5 gives -6.

<

Less Than

Returns whether x is less than y. All comparison operators return True or False. Note the capitalization of these names.

5 < 3 gives False and 3 < 5 gives True.

Comparisons can be chained arbitrarily: 3 < 5 < 7 gives True.

>

Greater Than

Returns whether x is greater than y

5 > 3 returns True. If both operands are numbers, they are first converted to a common type. Otherwise, it always returns False.

<=

Less Than or Equal To

Returns whether x is less than or equal to y

x = 3; y = 6; x <= y returns True.

>=

Greater Than or Equal To

Returns whether x is greater than or equal to y

x = 4; y = 3; x >= 3 returns True.

==

Equal To

Compares if the objects are equal

x = 2; y = 2; x == y returns True.

x = 'str'; y = 'stR'; x == y returns False.

x = 'str'; y = 'str'; x == y returns True.

!=

Not Equal To

Compares if the objects are not equal

x = 2; y = 3; x != y returns True.

not

Boolean NOT

If x is True, it returns False. If x is False, it returns True.

x = True; not x returns False.

and

Boolean AND

x and y returns False if x is False, else it returns evaluation of y

x = False; y = True; x and y returns False since x is False. In this case, Python will not evaluate y since it knows that the left hand side of the 'and' expression is False which implies that the whole expression will be False irrespective of the other values. This is called short-circuit evaluation.

or

Boolean OR

If x is True, it returns True, else it returns evaluation of y

x = True; y = False; x or y returns True. Short-circuit evaluation applies here as well.

Shortcut for math operation and assignment

It is common to run a math operation on a variable and then assign the result of the operation back to the variable, hence there is a shortcut for such expressions:

You can write:

<source lang="python"> a = 2; a = a * 3 </source>

as:

<source lang="python"> a = 2; a *= 3 </source>

Notice that var = var operation expression becomes var operation= expression.

Evaluation Order

If you had an expression such as 2 + 3 * 4, is the addition done first or the multiplication? Our high school maths tells us that the multiplication should be done first. This means that the multiplication operator has higher precedence than the addition operator.

The following table gives the precedence table for Python, from the lowest precedence (least binding) to the highest precedence (most binding). This means that in a given expression, Python will first evaluate the operators and expressions lower in the table before the ones listed higher in the table.

The following table, taken from the Python reference manual, is provided for the sake of completeness. It is far better to use parentheses to group operators and operands appropriately in order to explicitly specify the precedence. This makes the program more readable. See Changing the Order of Evaluation below for details.

Operator Precedence

Operator

Description

lambda

Lambda Expression

or

Boolean OR

and

Boolean AND

not x

Boolean NOT

in, not in

Membership tests

is, is not

Identity tests

<, <=, >, >=, !=, ==

Comparisons

|

Bitwise OR

^

Bitwise XOR

&

Bitwise AND

<<, >>

Shifts

+, -

Addition and subtraction

*, /, //, %

Multiplication, Division, Floor Division and Remainder

+x, -x

Positive, Negative

~x

Bitwise NOT

**

Exponentiation

x.attribute

Attribute reference

x[index]

Subscription

x[index1:index2]

Slicing

f(arguments ...)

Function call

(expressions, ...)

Binding or tuple display

[expressions, ...]

List display

{key:datum, ...}

Dictionary display

The operators which we have not already come across will be explained in later chapters.

Operators with the same precedence are listed in the same row in the above table. For example, + and - have the same precedence.

Changing the Order Of Evaluation

To make the expressions more readable, we can use parentheses. For example, 2 + (3 * 4) is definitely easier to understand than 2 + 3 * 4 which requires knowledge of the operator precedences. As with everything else, the parentheses should be used reasonably (do not overdo it) and should not be redundant (as in 2 + (3 + 4)).

There is an additional advantage to using parentheses - it helps us to change the order of evaluation. For example, if you want addition to be evaluated before multiplication in an expression, then you can write something like (2 + 3) * 4.

Associativity

Operators are usually associated from left to right i.e. operators with same precedence are evaluated in a left to right manner. For example, 2 + 3 + 4 is evaluated as (2 + 3) + 4. Some operators like assignment operators have right to left associativity i.e. a = b = c is treated as a = (b = c).

Expressions

Example:

<source lang="python">

  1. !/usr/bin/python
  2. Filename: expression.py

length = 5 breadth = 2

area = length * breadth print('Area is', area) print('Perimeter is', 2 * (length + breadth)) </source>

Output:

   $ python expression.py
   Area is 10
   Perimeter is 14

How It Works:

The length and breadth of the rectangle are stored in variables by the same name. We use these to calculate the area and perimeter of the rectangle with the help of expressions. We store the result of the expression length * breadth in the variable area and then print it using the print function. In the second case, we directly use the value of the expression 2 * (length + breadth) in the print function.

Also, notice how Python 'pretty-prints' the output. Even though we have not specified a space between 'Area is' and the variable area, Python puts it for us so that we get a clean nice output and the program is much more readable this way (since we don't need to worry about spacing in the strings we use for output). This is an example of how Python makes life easy for the programmer.

Summary

We have seen how to use operators, operands and expressions - these are the basic building blocks of any program. Next, we will see how to make use of these in our programs using statements.