How to decide whether to use return or plain variable manipulation inside functions? - python-3.x

I know that return is like throwing out a value at the end of an operation and that it actually stops the iteration or the function in which it's residing. I am having this very simple piece of code where classmethods & class variables are used.
class Person:
number_of_people = 0
def __init__(self, name):
#Person.number_of_people +=1
Person.add_person()
#classmethod
def get_person_count(cls):
return cls.number_of_people
#classmethod
def add_person(cls):
# return cls.number_of_people+1 <-- this does not work. Output is 0 and 0. Why?
cls.number_of_people += 1 #<-- this works
P1 = Person("Rups")
print(P1.get_person_count())
P2 = Person("RG")
print(P2.get_person_count())
As I have commented on the lines, why is my method giving output 0 both times and not the expected output(1 & 2), which is achieved using plan variable modification? Either way, I thought I should be able to use the value given out by add_person method in the init method, since there is no looping involved.

Returning a value does not mean it is modifying a variable. It just means that something can use what is returned. The difference is that cls.number_of_people += 1 changes number_of_people to it's value + 1 (due to the = sign), while return cls.number_of_people+1 takes number_of_people + 1 and "throws" it for something else to use.
What this means is that if add_person returns a value, anytime you call add_person(), there is a value that can be used.
# {...}
def add_person(cls):
return cls.number_of_people + 1
P1 = Person("Rups")
print(P1.add_person()) # prints 1 (number_of_people which is 0, then add 1)
print(P1.add_person()) # still prints 1

Related

Why along with output it is showing NONE each time? [duplicate]

What does the return statement do? How should it be used in Python?
How does return differ from print?
See also
Often, people try to use print in a loop inside a function in order to see multiple values, and want to be able to use the results from outside. They need to be returned, but return exits the function the first time. See How can I use `return` to get back multiple values from a loop? Can I put them in a list?.
Often, beginners will write a function that ultimately prints something rather than returning it, and then also try to print the result, resulting in an unexpected None. See Why is "None" printed after my function's output?.
Occasionally in 3.x, people try to assign the result of print to a name, or use it in another expression, like input(print('prompt:')). In 3.x, print is a function, so this is not a syntax error, but it returns None rather than what was displayed. See Why does the print function return None?.
Occasionally, people write code that tries to print the result from a recursive call, rather than returning it properly. Just as if the function were merely called, this does not work to propagate the value back through the recursion. See Why does my recursive function return None?.
Consider How do I get a result (output) from a function? How can I use the result later? for questions that are simply about how to use return, without considering print.
The print() function writes, i.e., "prints", a string in the console. The return statement causes your function to exit and hand back a value to its caller. The point of functions in general is to take in inputs and return something. The return statement is used when a function is ready to return a value to its caller.
For example, here's a function utilizing both print() and return:
def foo():
print("hello from inside of foo")
return 1
Now you can run code that calls foo, like so:
if __name__ == '__main__':
print("going to call foo")
x = foo()
print("called foo")
print("foo returned " + str(x))
If you run this as a script (e.g. a .py file) as opposed to in the Python interpreter, you will get the following output:
going to call foo
hello from inside foo
called foo
foo returned 1
I hope this makes it clearer. The interpreter writes return values to the console so I can see why somebody could be confused.
Here's another example from the interpreter that demonstrates that:
>>> def foo():
... print("hello within foo")
... return 1
...
>>> foo()
hello within foo
1
>>> def bar():
... return 10 * foo()
...
>>> bar()
hello within foo
10
You can see that when foo() is called from bar(), 1 isn't written to the console. Instead it is used to calculate the value returned from bar().
print() is a function that causes a side effect (it writes a string in the console), but execution resumes with the next statement. return causes the function to stop executing and hand a value back to whatever called it.
Think of the print statement as causing a side-effect, it makes your function write some text out to the user, but it can't be used by another function.
I'll attempt to explain this better with some examples, and a couple definitions from Wikipedia.
Here is the definition of a function from Wikipedia
A function, in mathematics, associates one quantity, the argument of the function, also known as the input, with another quantity, the value of the function, also known as the output..
Think about that for a second. What does it mean when you say the function has a value?
What it means is that you can actually substitute the value of a function with a normal value! (Assuming the two values are the same type of value)
Why would you want that you ask?
What about other functions that may accept the same type of value as an input?
def square(n):
return n * n
def add_one(n):
return n + 1
print square(12)
# square(12) is the same as writing 144
print add_one(square(12))
print add_one(144)
#These both have the same output
There is a fancy mathematical term for functions that only depend on their inputs to produce their outputs: Referential Transparency. Again, a definition from Wikipedia.
Referential transparency and referential opaqueness are properties of parts of computer programs. An expression is said to be referentially transparent if it can be replaced with its value without changing the behavior of a program
It might be a bit hard to grasp what this means if you're just new to programming, but I think you will get it after some experimentation.
In general though, you can do things like print in a function, and you can also have a return statement at the end.
Just remember that when you use return you are basically saying "A call to this function is the same as writing the value that gets returned"
Python will actually insert a return value for you if you decline to put in your own, it's called "None", and it's a special type that simply means nothing, or null.
I think the dictionary is your best reference here
Return and Print
In short:
return gives something back or replies to the caller of the function while print produces text
In python, we start defining a function with def, and generally - but not necessarily - end the function with return.
Suppose we want a function that adds 2 to the input value x. In mathematics, we might write something like f(x) = x + 2, describing that relationship: the value of the function, evaluated at x, is equal to x + 2.
In Python, it looks like this instead:
def f(x):
return x + 2
That is: we define a function named f, which will be given an x value. When the code runs we figure out x + 2, and return that value. Instead of describing a relationship, we lay out steps that must be taken to calculate the result.
After defining the function, it can be called with whatever argument you like. It doesn't have to be named x in the calling code, and it doesn't even have to be a variable:
print f(2)
>>> 4
We could write the code for the function in some other ways. For example:
def f(x):
y = x + 2
return y
or even
def f(x):
x = x + 2
return x
Again, we are following steps in order - x = x + 2 changes what x refers to (now it means the result from the sum), and that is what gets returned by return x (because that's the value *at the time that the return happens).
return means "output this value from this function".
print means "send this value to (generally) stdout"
In the Python REPL, a function's return value will be output to the screen by default (this isn't the same as printing it). This output only happens at the REPL, not when running code from a .py file. It is the same as the output from any other expression at the REPL.
This is an example of print:
>>> n = "foo\nbar" #just assigning a variable. No output
>>> n #the value is output, but it is in a "raw form"
'foo\nbar'
>>> print(n) #the \n is now a newline
foo
bar
>>>
This is an example of return:
>>> def getN():
... return "foo\nbar"
...
>>> getN() #When this isn't assigned to something, it is just output
'foo\nbar'
>>> n = getN() # assigning a variable to the return value. No output
>>> n #the value is output, but it is in a "raw form"
'foo\nbar'
>>> print(n) #the \n is now a newline
foo
bar
>>>
This answer goes over some of the cases that have not been discussed above.
The return statement allows you to terminate the execution of a function before you reach the end. This causes the flow of execution to immediately return to the caller.
In line number 4:
def ret(n):
if n > 9:
temp = "two digits"
return temp #Line 4
else:
temp = "one digit"
return temp #Line 8
print("return statement")
ret(10)
After the conditional statement gets executed the ret() function gets terminated due to return temp (line 4).
Thus the print("return statement") does not get executed.
Output:
two digits
This code that appears after the conditional statements, or the place the flow of control cannot reach, is the dead code.
Returning Values
In lines number 4 and 8, the return statement is being used to return the value of a temporary variable after the condition has been executed.
To bring out the difference between print and return:
def ret(n):
if n > 9:
print("two digits")
return "two digits"
else :
print("one digit")
return "one digit"
ret(25)
Output:
two digits
'two digits'
Note that return can also be used for control flow. By putting one or more return statements in the middle of a function, we can say: "stop executing this function. We've either got what we wanted or something's gone wrong!"
For example, imagine trying to implement str.find(sub) if we only had str.index(sub) available (index raises a ValueError if the substring isn't found, whereas find returns -1).
We could use a try/except block:
def find(s: str, sub: str) -> int:
try:
return s.index(sub)
except ValueError:
return -1
This is fine, and it works, but it's not very expressive. It's not immediately clear what would cause str.index to raise a ValueError: a reader of this code must understand the workings of str.index in order to understand the logic of find.
Rather than add a doc-string, saying "...unless sub isn't found, in which case return -1", we could make the code document itself, like this:
def find(s: str, sub: str) -> int:
if sub not in s:
return -1
return s.index(sub)
This makes the logic very clear.
The other nice thing about this is that once we get to return s.index(sub) we don't need to wrap it in a try/except because we already know that the substring is present!
See the Code Style section of the Python Guide for more advice on this way of using return.
To put it as simply as possible:
return makes the value (a variable, often) available for use by the caller (for example, to be stored by a function that the function using return is within). Without return, your value or variable wouldn't be available for the caller to store/re-use.
print, by contrast, prints to the screen - but does not make the value or variable available for use by the caller.
Difference between "return" and "print" can also be found in the following example:
RETURN:
def bigger(a, b):
if a > b:
return a
elif a <b:
return b
else:
return a
The above code will give correct results for all inputs.
PRINT:
def bigger(a, b):
if a > b:
print a
elif a <b:
print b
else:
print a
NOTE: This will fail for many test cases.
ERROR:
----
FAILURE: Test case input: 3, 8.
Expected result: 8
FAILURE: Test case input: 4, 3.
Expected result: 4
FAILURE: Test case input: 3, 3.
Expected result: 3
You passed 0 out of 3 test cases
Here is my understanding. (hope it will help someone and it's correct).
def count_number_of(x):
count = 0
for item in x:
if item == "what_you_look_for":
count = count + 1
return count
So this simple piece of code counts number of occurrences of something. The placement of return is significant. It tells your program where do you need the value. So when you print, you send output to the screen. When you return you tell the value to go somewhere. In this case you can see that count = 0 is indented with return - we want the value (count + 1) to replace 0.
If you try to follow logic of the code when you indent the return command further the output will always be 1, because we would never tell the initial count to change.
I hope I got it right.
Oh, and return is always inside a function.
return should be used for recursive functions/methods or you want to use the returned value for later applications in your algorithm.
print should be used when you want to display a meaningful and desired output to the user and you don't want to clutter the screen with intermediate results that the user is not interested in, although they are helpful for debugging your code.
The following code shows how to use return and print properly:
def fact(x):
if x < 2:
return 1
return x * fact(x - 1)
print(fact(5))
This explanation is true for all of the programming languages not just python.
return is part of a function definition, while print outputs text to the standard output (usually the console).
A function is a procedure accepting parameters and returning a value. return is for the latter, while the former is done with def.
Example:
def timestwo(x):
return x*2
Best thing about return function is you can return a value from function but you can do same with print so whats the difference ?
Basically return not about just returning it gives output in object form so that we can save that return value from function to any variable but we can't do with print because its same like stdout/cout in C Programming.
Follow below code for better understanding
CODE
def add(a, b):
print "ADDING %d + %d" % (a, b)
return a + b
def subtract(a, b):
print "SUBTRACTING %d - %d" % (a, b)
return a - b
def multiply(a, b):
print "MULTIPLYING %d * %d" % (a, b)
return a * b
def divide(a, b):
print "DIVIDING %d / %d" % (a, b)
return a / b
print "Let's do some math with just functions!"
age = add(30, 5)
height = subtract(78, 4)
weight = multiply(90, 2)
iq = divide(100, 2)
print "Age: %d, Height: %d, Weight: %d, IQ: %d" % (age, height, weight, iq)
# A puzzle for the extra credit, type it in anyway.
print "Here is a puzzle."
what = add(age, subtract(height, multiply(weight, divide(iq, 2))))
print "That becomes: ", what, "Can you do it by hand?"
We are now doing our own math functions for add, subtract, multiply, and divide. The important thing to notice is the last line where we say return a + b (in add). What this does is the following:
Our function is called with two arguments: a and b.
We print out what our function is doing, in this case "ADDING."
Then we tell Python to do something kind of backward: we return the addition of a + b. You might say this as, "I add a and b then return them."
Python adds the two numbers. Then when the function ends, any line that runs it will be able to assign this a + b result to a variable.
The simple truth is that print and return have nothing to do with each other. print is used to display things in the terminal (for command-line programs).1 return is used to get a result back when you call a function, so that you can use it in the next step of the program's logic.
Many beginners are confused when they try out code at Python's interpreter prompt2, like
>>> def example():
... return 1
...
>>> example()
1
The value was displayed; doesn't this mean that return displays things? No. If you try the same code in a .py file, you can see for yourself that running the script doesn't cause the 1 to display.
This shouldn't actually be confusing, because it works the same way as any other expression:
>>> 1 + 1
2
This displays at the interactive prompt, but not if we make a script that just says 1 + 1 and try running it.
Again: if you need something to display as part of your script, print it. If you need to use it in the next step of the calculation, return it.
The secret is that the interactive prompt is causing the result to be displayed, not the code. It's a separate step that the prompt does for you, so that you can see how the code works a step at a time, for testing purposes.
Now, let's see what happens with print:
>>> def example():
... return 'test'
...
>>> print(example())
test
The result will display, whether we have this in an interactive prompt or in a script. print is explicitly used to display the value - and as we can see, it displays differently. The interactive prompt uses what is called the repr of the value that was returned from example, while print uses the str of the value.
In practical terms: print shows us what the value looks like, in text form (for a string, that just means the contents of the string as-is). The interactive prompt shows us what the value is - typically, by writing something that looks like the source code we would use to create it.3
But wait - print is a function, right? (In 3.x, anyway). So it returned a value, right? Isn't the interpreter prompt supposed to display that in its separate step? What happened?
There is one more trick: print returns the special value None, which the interpreter prompt will ignore. We can test this by using some expressions that evaluate to None:
>>> None
>>> [None][0]
>>> def example():
... pass # see footnote 4
...
>>> example()
>>>
In each case, there is no separate line at all for output, not even a blank line - the interpreter prompt just goes back to the prompt.
1 It can also be used to write into files, although this is a less common idea and normally it will be clearer to use the .write method.
2 This is sometimes called the REPL, which stands for "read-eval-print loop".
3 This isn't always practical, or even possible - especially once we start defining our own classes. The firm rule is that repr will lean on the .__repr__ method of the object to do the dirty work; similarly, str leans on .__str__.
4 Functions in Python implicitly return None if they don't explicitly return a value.
Return statement -- will return some values according your function.
def example(n):
if n == 5:
return true
else:
return false
if you call above function and you pass number 5 then it will return true else it will return false.
Printing function -- it will print content that you have given to the print function or with in print function bracket.
def example(n):
if n == 5:
print("number is equal")
else:
print("number is not equal")

Output should be 4 and 1 but it's returning 4 and 5?

In the following code i am try to find kth factor of given number it's works fine until i created function and pass value to it can anyone tell me why it's returning wrong output.
when you call function only ones no matter what number you pass it shows correct output but when call function two time it returning wrong output.
#Code
fact = []
def factor(N,k):
for i in range(1,N+1):
if N % i == 0:
fact.append(i)
if len(fact)<k:
print(1)
else:
print(fact[k])
factor(12,3)
factor(30,9)
You have defined the fact variable of type list outside your function. So it is being referenced and used by both functions calls when you call it twice.
If you declare fact inside the function the scope of the variable will not persist and the number of times it is called will not be an issue.
def factor(N,k):
fact = []
for i in range(1,N+1):
if N % i == 0:
fact.append(i)
if len(fact)<k:
print(1)
else:
print(fact[k])

Variable declaration as a member of a function?

What type of declaration is the one indicated in this code
def call_counter(func):
def helper(x):
helper.calls1 += 1 # <== This
return func(x)
helper.calls1 = 0
return helper
#call_counter
def succ(x):
return x + 1
print(succ.calls1)
for i in range(10):
print(succ(i))
print(succ.calls1())
What's the name of this is the first time i see something like this
Functions are just objects in Python, so the same way you can add new attributes to instances of your own classes (and to the classes themselves) you can add them to your functions:
def foo():
pass
class Bar:
pass
bar = Bar()
foo.spam = 1
bar.spam = 2
print(foo.spam) # 1
print(bar.spam) # 2
Generally one wouldn't add new attributes to a function object though, since it can quickly get messy and hard to keep track of.

increase the size of array deque

I'm trying to be as efficient as possible with space while creating an array based deque. So, the array starts with size one, and I'll call a function called "grow" if the array is not large enough when I push new values to the deque (at either end). I then mod to preserve the front and back of the deque. Here is a sample of what I've done so far:
def __init__(self):
# capacity starts at 1; we will grow on demand.
self.__capacity = 1
self.__contents = [None] * self.__capacity
self.__front = 1
self.__back = 1
self.__size = 1
def __grow(self):
old_list = self.__contents
walk = self.__front
for k in range(self.__capacity):
self.__contents[k] = old_list[walk]
walk = (1 + walk) % len(old_list)
self.__front = 0
self.__capacity = self.__capacity * 2
def push_front(self, val):
if self.__size == len(self.__contents):
self.__grow(self.__capacity)
self.__front = (self.__front - 1) % len(self.__contents)
self.__contents[self.__front] = val
self.__size += 1
My question comes when I call the grow method. I keep getting the error that I am giving 'grow' two positional arguments, but I don't see where or how that's happening. If anyone has any ideas on how to improve this so that it only has one positional argument? Also, does my reasoning for a walk through to re-index in the grow method make sense as well as my reasoning for the push front method?
You need to add an argument to __grow if you are going to pass arguments to it, i.e.:
def __grow(self, size):
Currently, it only has a self argument, but you are also passing in self.__capacity when you call it. However, I think you really meant to call grow without arguments:
if self.__size == len(self.__contents):
self.__grow()
All instance methods in a class treat the calling instance as their first argument, unless you use the class to call the method in which case you must provide an instance as the first argument.
class A:
def __init__(self):
pass
def f(self, x):
print(self, x)
a = A()
a.f(1) # <A object at 0x7fa9a067da90> 1
A.f(a, 2) # <A object at 0x7fa9a067da90> 2
So when you call self.__grow(self.__capacity), that gets turned into Deque.__grow(self, self.__capacity). But your __grow method only takes self.

Function Help Python 3.4

def areaOfRectangle (length,width):
area = length*width
sqArea = length**2
return area,sqArea
def areaOfSquare (length,):
areaOfRectangle (length,width)
return sqArea
#def radiusOfCircle (radius):
area = 3.14*(radius**2)
return area
#def volumeOfCylinder (radius,height):
volume = 3.14*(radius**2)*height
return volume
length = int(input("Input length: "))
width = int(input("Input width: "))
print()
print(areaOfRectangle (10,20))
print()
print(areaOfRectangle (24.3,6))
print()
print(areaOfRectangle (34.9,17.4))
print()
print(areaOfRectangle (length,width))
print()
print(areaOfSquare (10.3))
I need to make two functions, the first function to calculate the area of a rectangle given the length and width. The second function needs to calculate the area of a square given the length of one of its sides. The second function should call the previous function to perform the calculation. I know how to call a function within another function however I don't know how to bring a variable from the first function to the second.
I don't know how to bring a variable from the first function to the second
Typically, this is done through the use of parameters. Let's say you have a value x:
x = 0
You can pass the value to a function by inserting it into the call itself:
f(x)
Lastly, the function needs to be able to handle the parameter you give it:
def f(y): pass
A working example of what you describe:
def f2(y):
return y + 1
def f1():
x = 2
print(f2(x))
f1()
3 is printed.

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