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author | Guido van Rossum <guido@python.org> | 1992-03-20 14:59:04 (GMT) |
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committer | Guido van Rossum <guido@python.org> | 1992-03-20 14:59:04 (GMT) |
commit | cb9d66da5992a6c5b01ad4be8d17948107723118 (patch) | |
tree | 182d525ad911744fe64492dbd011ed05ed8c9d75 /Doc/ref/ref.tex | |
parent | cbc1d90cdaa07514838ebf3b89ab0fea02d7df04 (diff) | |
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Diffstat (limited to 'Doc/ref/ref.tex')
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/ref/ref.tex | 102 |
1 files changed, 93 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/ref/ref.tex b/Doc/ref/ref.tex index 7a9fd5c..8cfda04 100644 --- a/Doc/ref/ref.tex +++ b/Doc/ref/ref.tex @@ -416,11 +416,10 @@ for long integers, it is strongly recommended to always use `L', since the letter `l' looks too much like the digit `1'. Plain integer decimal literals must be at most $2^{31} - 1$ (i.e., the -largest positive integer, assuming 32-bit arithmetic); plain octal and +largest positive integer, assuming 32-bit arithmetic). Plain octal and hexadecimal literals may be as large as $2^{32} - 1$, but values -larger than $2^{31} - 1$ are converted to a signed value in the range -$-2^{31} \dots 2^{31} - 1$ by subtracting $2^{32}$. There is no limit -for long integer literals. +larger than $2^{31} - 1$ are converted to a negative value by +subtracting $2^{32}$. There is no limit for long integer literals. Some examples of plain and long integer literals: @@ -571,7 +570,7 @@ lists. Below is a list of the types that are built into Python. Extension modules written in C can define additional types. Future versions of Python may add types to the type hierarchy (e.g., rational or complex -numbers, efficientlt stored arrays of integers, etc.). +numbers, efficiently stored arrays of integers, etc.). \index{type} \index{type hierarchy} \index{extension module} @@ -1619,8 +1618,9 @@ Mappings (dictionaries) are compared through lexicographic comparison of their sorted (key, value) lists.% \footnote{This is expensive since it requires sorting the keys first, but about the only sensible definition. It was tried to compare -dictionaries using the rule below for most other types, but this gave -surprises in cases like \verb|if d == {}: ...|.} +dictionaries by identity only, but this caused surprises because +people expected to be able to test a dictionary for emptiness by +comparing it to {\tt \{\}}.} \item Most other types compare unequal unless they are the same object; @@ -2313,10 +2313,94 @@ original local name space. \section{P.M.} -XXX Syntax for scripts, modules -XXX Syntax for interactive input, eval, exec, execfile, input XXX New definition of expressions (as conditions) +\chapter{Top-level components} + +The Python interpreter can get its input from a number of sources: +from a script passed to it as standard input or as program argument, +typed in interactively, from a module source file, etc. This chapter +gives the syntax used in these cases. + +\section{Complete Python programs} + +While a language specification need not prescribe how the language +interpreter is invoked, it is useful to have a notion of a complete +Python program. A complete Python program is executed in a minimally +initialized environment: all built-in and standard modules are +available, but none have been initialized, except for \verb\sys\ +(various system services), \verb\builtin\ (built-in functions, +exceptions and \verb\None\) and \verb\__main__\. The latter is used +to provide the local and global name space for execution of the +complete program. + +The syntax for a complete Python program is that for file input, +described in the next section. + +The interpreter may also be invoked in interactive mode; in this case, +it does not read and execute a complete program but reads and executes +one statement (possibly compound) at a time. The initial environment +is identical to that of a complete program; each statement is executed +in the name space of \verb\__main__\. + +Under {\UNIX}, a complete program can be passed to the interpreter in +three forms: with the {\bf -c} {\it string} command line option, as a +file passed as the first command line argument, or as standard input. +If the file or standard input is a tty device, the interpreter enters +interactive mode; otherwise, it executes the file as a complete +program. + +\section{File input} + +All input read from non-interactive files has the same form: + +\begin{verbatim} +file_input: (NEWLINE | statement)* +\end{verbatim} + +This syntax is used in the following situations: + +\begin{itemize} + +\item when parsing a complete Python program (from a file or from a string); + +\item when parsing a module; + +\item when parsing a string passed to \verb\exec()\; + +\item when parsing a file passed to \verb\execfile()\; + +\end{itemize} + +\section{Interactive input} + +Input in interactive mode is parsed using the following grammar: + +\begin{verbatim} +interactive_input: [stmt_list] NEWLINE | compound_stmt NEWLINE +\end{verbatim} + +Note that a (top-level) compound statement must be followed by a blank +line in interactive mode; this is needed to help the parser detect the +end of the input. + +\section{Expression input} + +There are two forms of expression input. Both ignore leading +whitespace. + +The string argument to \verb\eval()\ must have the following form: + +\begin{verbatim} +eval_input: condition_list NEWLINE* +\end{verbatim} + +The input line read by \verb\input()\ must have the following form: + +\begin{verbatim} +input_input: condition_list NEWLINE +\end{verbatim} + \input{ref.ind} % The index \end{document} |