$show=home

Python - Functions

Python - Functions @Shout4Education
A function is a block of organized, reusable code that is used to perform a single, related action. Functions provide better modularity for your application and a high degree of code reusing.
As you already know, Python gives you many built-in functions like print(), etc. but you can also create your own functions. These functions are called user-defined functions.

Defining a Function

You can define functions to provide the required functionality. Here are simple rules to define a function in Python.
  • Function blocks begin with the keyword def followed by the function name and parentheses ( ( ) ).
  • Any input parameters or arguments should be placed within these parentheses. You can also define parameters inside these parentheses.
  • The first statement of a function can be an optional statement - the documentation string of the function or docstring.
  • The code block within every function starts with a colon (:) and is indented.
  • The statement return [expression] exits a function, optionally passing back an expression to the caller. A return statement with no arguments is the same as return None.

Syntax

def functionname( parameters ):
   "function_docstring"
   function_suite
   return [expression]
By default, parameters have a positional behavior and you need to inform them in the same order that they were defined.

Example

The following function takes a string as input parameter and prints it on standard screen.
def printme( str ):
   "This prints a passed string into this function"
   print str
   return

Calling a Function

Defining a function only gives it a name, specifies the parameters that are to be included in the function and structures the blocks of code.
Once the basic structure of a function is finalized, you can execute it by calling it from another function or directly from the Python prompt. Following is the example to call printme() function −

#!/usr/bin/python

# Function definition is here
def printme( str ):
   "This prints a passed string into this function"
   print str
   return;

# Now you can call printme function
printme("I'm first call to user defined function!")
printme("Again second call to the same function")
When the above code is executed, it produces the following result −
I'm first call to user defined function!
Again second call to the same function

Pass by reference vs value

All parameters (arguments) in the Python language are passed by reference. It means if you change what a parameter refers to within a function, the change also reflects back in the calling function. For example −

#!/usr/bin/python

# Function definition is here
def changeme( mylist ):
   "This changes a passed list into this function"
   mylist.append([1,2,3,4]);
   print "Values inside the function: ", mylist
   return

# Now you can call changeme function
mylist = [10,20,30];
changeme( mylist );
print "Values outside the function: ", mylist
Here, we are maintaining reference of the passed object and appending values in the same object. So, this would produce the following result −
Values inside the function:  [10, 20, 30, [1, 2, 3, 4]]
Values outside the function:  [10, 20, 30, [1, 2, 3, 4]]
There is one more example where argument is being passed by reference and the reference is being overwritten inside the called function.

#!/usr/bin/python

# Function definition is here
def changeme( mylist ):
   "This changes a passed list into this function"
   mylist = [1,2,3,4]; # This would assig new reference in mylist
   print "Values inside the function: ", mylist
   return

# Now you can call changeme function
mylist = [10,20,30];
changeme( mylist );
print "Values outside the function: ", mylist
The parameter mylist is local to the function changeme. Changing mylist within the function does not affect mylist. The function accomplishes nothing and finally this would produce the following result −
Values inside the function:  [1, 2, 3, 4]
Values outside the function:  [10, 20, 30]

Function Arguments

You can call a function by using the following types of formal arguments −
  • Required arguments
  • Keyword arguments
  • Default arguments
  • Variable-length arguments

Required arguments

Required arguments are the arguments passed to a function in correct positional order. Here, the number of arguments in the function call should match exactly with the function definition.
To call the function printme(), you definitely need to pass one argument, otherwise it gives a syntax error as follows −

#!/usr/bin/python

# Function definition is here
def printme( str ):
   "This prints a passed string into this function"
   print str
   return;

# Now you can call printme function
printme()
When the above code is executed, it produces the following result −
Traceback (most recent call last):
   File "test.py", line 11, in <module>
      printme();
TypeError: printme() takes exactly 1 argument (0 given)

Keyword arguments

Keyword arguments are related to the function calls. When you use keyword arguments in a function call, the caller identifies the arguments by the parameter name.
This allows you to skip arguments or place them out of order because the Python interpreter is able to use the keywords provided to match the values with parameters. You can also make keyword calls to the printme() function in the following ways −

#!/usr/bin/python

# Function definition is here
def printme( str ):
   "This prints a passed string into this function"
   print str
   return;

# Now you can call printme function
printme( str = "My string")
When the above code is executed, it produces the following result −
My string
The following example gives more clear picture. Note that the order of parameters does not matter.

#!/usr/bin/python

# Function definition is here
def printinfo( name, age ):
   "This prints a passed info into this function"
   print "Name: ", name
   print "Age ", age
   return;

# Now you can call printinfo function
printinfo( age=50, name="miki" )
When the above code is executed, it produces the following result −
Name:  miki
Age  50

Default arguments

A default argument is an argument that assumes a default value if a value is not provided in the function call for that argument. The following example gives an idea on default arguments, it prints default age if it is not passed −

#!/usr/bin/python

# Function definition is here
def printinfo( name, age = 35 ):
   "This prints a passed info into this function"
   print "Name: ", name
   print "Age ", age
   return;

# Now you can call printinfo function
printinfo( age=50, name="miki" )
printinfo( name="miki" )
When the above code is executed, it produces the following result −
Name:  miki
Age  50
Name:  miki
Age  35

Variable-length arguments

You may need to process a function for more arguments than you specified while defining the function. These arguments are called variable-length arguments and are not named in the function definition, unlike required and default arguments.
Syntax for a function with non-keyword variable arguments is this −
def functionname([formal_args,] *var_args_tuple ):
   "function_docstring"
   function_suite
   return [expression]
An asterisk (*) is placed before the variable name that holds the values of all nonkeyword variable arguments. This tuple remains empty if no additional arguments are specified during the function call. Following is a simple example −

#!/usr/bin/python

# Function definition is here
def printinfo( arg1, *vartuple ):
   "This prints a variable passed arguments"
   print "Output is: "
   print arg1
   for var in vartuple:
      print var
   return;

# Now you can call printinfo function
printinfo( 10 )
printinfo( 70, 60, 50 )
When the above code is executed, it produces the following result −
Output is:
10
Output is:
70
60
50

The Anonymous Functions

These functions are called anonymous because they are not declared in the standard manner by using the def keyword. You can use the lambda keyword to create small anonymous functions.
  • Lambda forms can take any number of arguments but return just one value in the form of an expression. They cannot contain commands or multiple expressions.
  • An anonymous function cannot be a direct call to print because lambda requires an expression
  • Lambda functions have their own local namespace and cannot access variables other than those in their parameter list and those in the global namespace.
  • Although it appears that lambda's are a one-line version of a function, they are not equivalent to inline statements in C or C++, whose purpose is by passing function stack allocation during invocation for performance reasons.

Syntax

The syntax of lambda functions contains only a single statement, which is as follows −
lambda [arg1 [,arg2,.....argn]]:expression
Following is the example to show how lambda form of function works −

#!/usr/bin/python

# Function definition is here
sum = lambda arg1, arg2: arg1 + arg2;

# Now you can call sum as a function
print "Value of total : ", sum( 10, 20 )
print "Value of total : ", sum( 20, 20 )
When the above code is executed, it produces the following result −
Value of total :  30
Value of total :  40

The return Statement

The statement return [expression] exits a function, optionally passing back an expression to the caller. A return statement with no arguments is the same as return None.
All the above examples are not returning any value. You can return a value from a function as follows −

#!/usr/bin/python

# Function definition is here
def sum( arg1, arg2 ):
   # Add both the parameters and return them."
   total = arg1 + arg2
   print "Inside the function : ", total
   return total;

# Now you can call sum function
total = sum( 10, 20 );
print "Outside the function : ", total 
When the above code is executed, it produces the following result −
Inside the function :  30
Outside the function :  30

Scope of Variables

All variables in a program may not be accessible at all locations in that program. This depends on where you have declared a variable.
The scope of a variable determines the portion of the program where you can access a particular identifier. There are two basic scopes of variables in Python −
  • Global variables
  • Local variables

Global vs. Local variables

Variables that are defined inside a function body have a local scope, and those defined outside have a global scope.
This means that local variables can be accessed only inside the function in which they are declared, whereas global variables can be accessed throughout the program body by all functions. When you call a function, the variables declared inside it are brought into scope. Following is a simple example −

#!/usr/bin/python

total = 0; # This is global variable.
# Function definition is here
def sum( arg1, arg2 ):
   # Add both the parameters and return them."
   total = arg1 + arg2; # Here total is local variable.
   print "Inside the function local total : ", total
   return total;

# Now you can call sum function
sum( 10, 20 );
print "Outside the function global total : ", total 
When the above code is executed, it produces the following result −
Inside the function local total :  30
Outside the function global total :  0

Comments

Blogger
Name

.NET_Interview,1,Accenture,1,Accenture News,1,Accenture_GFT,1,Accenture_Prep,1,Advance_Excel,22,Advance_Python,10,Advanced_Linux,6,Advanced_SQL,18,Advanced_Unix,6,AI,2,AI-900,1,Alexa,1,Alias,1,Amazon,1,Amazon Lightsail,1,Amazon News,7,AMCAT,1,AMCAT_Prep,1,AMCAT_Solved_Papers,1,Ancient India,5,Android,1,Android Security,1,Ansible,2,Apache,1,Apache_Sqoop,10,Aptitude,1,artofthepot,1,artofthepot RO,1,Asterisk,1,AWS,40,AWS CLI,7,AWS DeepRacer,1,AWS Developer,2,AWS Developer Associate,2,AWS EC2,2,AWS Lambda,1,AWS Lifecycle Management,1,AWS S3,4,AWS Services,5,AWS Snapshots,1,AWS Solution Architect Associate,1,AWS SysOps Admin,1,AWS Tutorials,14,AWS_Dumps,1,AWS_Interview,1,AZ-104,1,AZ-900,4,Azure,7,Azure Administrator Associate,1,Azure AI Fundamentals,1,B Tech,4,B_Tech,19,B.Tech,5,B.Tech Jobs,1,Backup,3,Banking Exam,1,Banking_Exam,1,Basic_Linux,29,Basic_Python,19,Basic_SQL,24,Basic_Unix,30,BAT,1,Best_Websites,1,bgcsavannah,1,bgcsavannah DE,1,Big_Data_Analytics,70,Blog,731,Blogger,3,Blogging,2,Blogspot,1,Books,2,Boto3,1,BTech,20,C++_Interview,1,CBSE,158,Certification,14,ChatGPT,1,Cheat Sheet,18,Civil_1st_Semester,1,Class 11,54,Class 11 Biology,7,Class 11 Chemistry,12,Class 11 Economics,2,Class 11 English,11,Class 11 Mathematics,14,Class 11 Physics,8,Class 12,74,Class 12 Accountancy,1,Class 12 Biology,16,Class 12 Chemistry,16,Class 12 Economics,5,Class 12 English,14,Class 12 Mathematics,7,Class 12 Physics,15,Class_12,28,Class_12_Chemistry,4,Class_12_Computer_Science,7,Class_12_Mathematics,1,Class_12_NCERT,15,Class_12_NCERT_Solutions,15,Class_12_Physics,18,Class_12_Physics_NCERT_Solutions,15,Class_12_Science,29,Cloud,2,Cloud Storage,2,Cloud_Service,1,CloudFormation,4,Coding,1,Cognizant News,1,Communication,2,Computer,18,Computer_Memory,2,Computer_Programming,2,Computer_Science,4,Control Panel,1,Control_System,9,Converter,1,Crack_Interview,3,CSE_5th_Semester,1,CSS,1,Darmowe Spiny Bez Depozytu W Kasynie Vulkan Vegas 235,1,Data Analyst Jobs,1,Data Science,2,Data Science Interview,1,Data_Analytics,16,Data_Science,18,Data_Science_Interview,1,Database,47,Database Interview,2,Database_Interview,4,Databases,9,Delta Lake,1,Desktop Environment,1,Deutsche Online Casinos Jetzt Sicher um Echtgeld Spielen 509,1,Development Tools,3,DP-203,1,DP-900,1,Dumps,2,ECE,4,ECE 2nd Semester,4,ECE_1st_Semester,1,ECE_1st_Year,1,ECE_4th_Semester,9,Electrical,2,Electrical Engineering,2,Electrical_1st_Semester,1,Electronic Devices,4,Electronics,2,Electronics & Communication,7,Electronics_&_Communication,14,English,2,Error,1,ESE,4,ESE EC,1,Ethical Hacking,2,Ethical_Hacking,1,ETL_Tools,17,Exam Dumps,6,Exam Preparation,22,Exam_Cracker,3,Exams,5,Exams_Banking,1,Exams_Prep,1,Excel,22,Excel_Macros,22,Excel_Terms,1,Excel_VBA,22,EXE,1,File Permission,1,File System,1,Free_OS,1,Free_Softwares,1,FTP,1,Games,3,GATE,24,GATE EC,3,GATE EE,2,GATE Electronics & Communication,1,GATE Machine,1,GATE Mathematics,1,GATE Measurements,1,GATE_2019,16,GATE_2020,16,GATE_2021,7,GATE_EC,10,GATE_ECE,9,GATE_ECE_Best_Book,1,GATE_Electrical,1,GATE_Electronics,12,GATE_Made_Easy,1,GATE_ME,6,GATE_Mechanical,6,GGSIPU,1,Git,3,Google,2,Google Cloud,2,Google Jobs,1,Google News,3,Google Play,1,Google Search,1,Government Jobs,2,Graphic,1,GRUB,1,Handwritten Notes,6,Handwritten_Notes,10,Hardware,6,HCL_Prep,1,HDFS,1,Hive,1,Hive Tutorials,1,Hosting,2,How To,72,How_To,8,HR Interview,2,HR Interview Questions,1,HR_Interview,3,Hyderabad_News,1,IBPS,2,IBPS_English,1,IBPS_PO,2,Indian History,5,Informatica,1,Informatica_Interview,1,Information,20,Internet,5,Interview,20,Interview Preparation,5,Interview_Prep,20,IPU,1,ISRO Jobs,1,IT Jobs,4,IT News,1,Java,3,Java Interview,1,Java_Interview,2,Java_Questions_&_answers,1,JavaScript,1,JEE,6,JEE_Mains,6,Job Alert,6,Jobs,1,Jocuri Pacanele Gratis Jocuri ca la Aparate 77777 942,1,Jupyter Notebook,1,Kali Linux,1,Kali Linux Tools,1,Katoolin,1,Keyboard,1,Keyboard_Shortcuts,1,Layoffs,3,Learn_VBA,22,Linux,82,Linux Command,20,Linux Interview,1,Linux Mint,1,Linux Tools,11,Linux Tutorials,1,Linux_Distributions,1,Linux_Interview,1,Linux_Redirections,1,Linux_Scripting,30,Linux_Shell_Arrays,1,Linux_Shell_Functions,1,Linux_Shell_Quote,1,Linux_Signals_And_Traps,1,Logical_Reasoning,1,M.Tech Jobs,1,Machine Learning,1,Machine Learning Interview,1,Machine_Learning,1,Machine_Learning_Interview,1,Macros,22,Malware,1,Manufacturing_Processes,1,MariaDB,2,Matplotlib,1,ME_1st_Semester,1,ME_Fluid_Mechanics,1,ME_Industrial_Engineering,1,ME_Machine_Design,1,Mechanical,6,Memory,1,Microcontroller,1,Microsoft,6,Microsoft Azure Associate,1,Microsoft Azure Data Engineering,1,Microsoft Azure Fundamentals,5,Microsoft Edge,1,Microsoft Jobs,1,Microsoft News,1,Microsoft_Azure,1,Microsoft_Azure_Interview,1,Mobile,1,Mobile News,1,MongoDB,1,mostbet,2,mostbet AZ,1,mostbet UZ,1,MS_Access,40,MySQL,58,NCERT Solutions,128,Network,2,News,3,Nginx,2,Notes,31,NumPy,1,OOPs,1,Open_Source_OS,1,OpenTelemetry,1,Operating_Systems,2,Operating_Systems_Interview,1,Oracle,42,Oracle Interview,1,Oracle_Interview,1,OS,1,Pandas,16,Paytm Jobs,1,PEM,2,PHP,2,Physics,2,PIP,1,PL_SQL,42,PL_SQL_Interview,1,Placement,21,Placement Preparation,19,Placement_Prep,24,Poetry,1,PowerShell,1,PPK,2,Programming,29,Programming_Languages,1,PuTTY,3,PySpark,60,PySpark Tutorial,55,Python,67,Python Tutorials,25,Python_Built_In_Strings_Methods,2,Python_built_In_Tuple_Functions,1,Python_CAlling_a_Function,1,Python_CGI,1,Python_Class,1,Python_Data_Types,1,Python_DAte,1,Python_Decision_Making,1,Python_Dictionary,1,Python_DOM_APIs,1,Python_Features,1,Python_Files_Functions,1,Python_For_Loop,1,Python_Functions,6,Python_GUI,1,Python_History,1,Python_If_Else,1,Python_import_Statements,1,Python_Installation,1,Python_Interview,1,Python_JPython,1,Python_Lists,2,Python_Loops,1,Python_Methods,1,Python_Modules,1,Python_MySQL,1,Python_Nested_If_Else,1,Python_Nested_Loops,1,Python_Number_Type_Conversion,1,Python_Numbers,2,Python_Object_Oriented,1,Python_OOP,1,Python_Pass_By_Reference_vs_Value,1,Python_Programming,28,Python_Scripting,28,Python_Special_Operators,1,Python_Strings,2,Python_Strings_Functions,1,Python_Threading_Module,1,Python_Time,1,Python_Tkinter,1,Python_Tuples,2,Python_Tutorial,28,Python_Types_of_Loops,1,Python_Variables,1,Python_Web_Server,1,Python_While_Loop,1,Python_wxPython,1,Python_XML_Processing,1,PythonPath_Setup,1,Quantitative,1,Quantitative_Aptitude,2,RDBMS,1,Recorder,1,Regular Expressions,1,Restore,1,Run,1,S3,1,Sabrent,1,Samsung,1,SAP Jobs,1,SAP News,1,SBI Jobs,1,Scripting,52,Scripting Interview,1,Security,1,Server,2,service now,1,Shell_Command_Manual,1,Shell_Logging_Commands,1,Shell_Scripting,31,Shell_Scripting_Interview,1,Software Engineering Interview,1,Software_Engineering_Interview,1,Solutions,1,Spark,1,Spinnaker,1,SQL,53,SQL Interview,4,SQL Server,3,SQL Tutorials,1,SQL_Alias_Syntax,1,SQL_Alter_Table_Query,1,SQL_Alter_Table_Statement,1,SQL_AND_OR_Query,1,SQL_AND_OR_Statement,1,SQL_Architecture,1,SQL_Clone_Table,1,SQL_Commands,1,SQL_Conjunctive_Operators,1,SQL_Constraints,1,SQL_Create_Database,1,SQL_Create_Table,1,SQL_DataTypes,1,SQL_Date_Functions,1,SQL_Date_Statement,1,SQL_DCL,1,SQL_Server,39,SQL_Temporary_Table_Statement,1,SQLite,43,Sqoop,9,Sqoop_Tutorial,10,SSC,4,SSC CGL,1,SSC CHSL,1,SSC_CGL,3,SSC_CGL_English,1,SSC_CHSL,1,SSC_CPO,1,SSC_GS,1,SSC_Quantative,1,SSD,1,ssl,1,Storage,1,Talend,17,Talend Interview,1,Talend_ETL,15,Talend_Tutorials,16,Task Scheduler,1,TCS Interview,1,TCS Jobs,1,TCS News,1,TCS_Interview,1,TCS_Prep,1,Tech News,22,Tech Tips,72,Teradata_Interview,1,Terraform,4,Təyyarə Oyunu Mostbet Mostbet Aviator game 651,1,Tips & Tricks,12,Tips_&_Tricks,18,Top 10,4,Top 20,1,Top 50,11,Top_10,1,Top_50,18,Top25,1,Tutorials,243,Tutorials_Python,28,Tutorials_VBA,11,Ubuntu,13,Uncategorized,2,Unix,32,Unix Interview,1,Unix Tutorials,1,Unix_Interview,1,Unix_Scripting,31,UPSC,5,VBA,22,VBA_Basics,22,VBA_Excel,22,VBA_Scripting,22,VBA_Tutorials,22,Vim,1,VirtualBox,1,Visual Studio Code,3,Visual_Basic_Application,22,VPN,1,vulkan vegas,1,vulkan vegas DE,1,Web Development,7,Web Server,1,Websites,7,Windows,33,Windows Command,2,WinSCP,1,WordPress,3,Yarn,1,Авиатор Mostbet 155,1,бонусы,1,Казино МостБет УЗ регистрация,1,
ltr
item
Shout4Education - Get Jobs, Tutorials and Notes: Python - Functions
Python - Functions
Python - Functions @Shout4Education ... Python - Functions @Shout4Education A function is a block of organized, reusable code that is used to perform a single, related action. Functions provide better modularity for your application and a high degree of code reusing. As you already know, Python gives you many built-in functions like print(), etc. but you can also create your own functions. These functions are called user-defined functions. Defining a Function You can define functions to provide the required functionality. Here are simple rules to define a function in Python. Function blocks begin with the keyword def followed by the function name and parentheses ( ( ) ). Any input parameters or arguments should be placed within these parentheses. You can also define parameters inside these parentheses. The first statement of a function can be an optional statement - the documentation string of the function or docstring. The code block within every function starts with a colon (:) and is indented. The statement return [expression] exits a function, optionally passing back an expression to the caller. A return statement with no arguments is the same as return None. Syntax def functionname( parameters ): "function_docstring" function_suite return [expression] By default, parameters have a positional behavior and you need to inform them in the same order that they were defined. Example The following function takes a string as input parameter and prints it on standard screen. def printme( str ): "This prints a passed string into this function" print str return Calling a Function Defining a function only gives it a name, specifies the parameters that are to be included in the function and structures the blocks of code. Once the basic structure of a function is finalized, you can execute it by calling it from another function or directly from the Python prompt. Following is the example to call printme() function − #!/usr/bin/python # Function definition is here def printme( str ): "This prints a passed string into this function" print str return; # Now you can call printme function printme("I'm first call to user defined function!") printme("Again second call to the same function") When the above code is executed, it produces the following result − I'm first call to user defined function! Again second call to the same function Pass by reference vs value All parameters (arguments) in the Python language are passed by reference. It means if you change what a parameter refers to within a function, the change also reflects back in the calling function. For example − #!/usr/bin/python # Function definition is here def changeme( mylist ): "This changes a passed list into this function" mylist.append([1,2,3,4]); print "Values inside the function: ", mylist return # Now you can call changeme function mylist = [10,20,30]; changeme( mylist ); print "Values outside the function: ", mylist Here, we are maintaining reference of the passed object and appending values in the same object. So, this would produce the following result − Values inside the function: [10, 20, 30, [1, 2, 3, 4]] Values outside the function: [10, 20, 30, [1, 2, 3, 4]] There is one more example where argument is being passed by reference and the reference is being overwritten inside the called function. #!/usr/bin/python # Function definition is here def changeme( mylist ): "This changes a passed list into this function" mylist = [1,2,3,4]; # This would assig new reference in mylist print "Values inside the function: ", mylist return # Now you can call changeme function mylist = [10,20,30]; changeme( mylist ); print "Values outside the function: ", mylist The parameter mylist is local to the function changeme. Changing mylist within the function does not affect mylist. The function accomplishes nothing and finally this would produce the following result − Values inside the function: [1, 2, 3, 4] Values outside the function: [10, 20, 30] Function Arguments You can call a function by using the following types of formal arguments − Required arguments Keyword arguments Default arguments Variable-length arguments Required arguments Required arguments are the arguments passed to a function in correct positional order. Here, the number of arguments in the function call should match exactly with the function definition. To call the function printme(), you definitely need to pass one argument, otherwise it gives a syntax error as follows − #!/usr/bin/python # Function definition is here def printme( str ): "This prints a passed string into this function" print str return; # Now you can call printme function printme() When the above code is executed, it produces the following result − Traceback (most recent call last): File "test.py", line 11, in printme(); TypeError: printme() takes exactly 1 argument (0 given) Keyword arguments Keyword arguments are related to the function calls. When you use keyword arguments in a function call, the caller identifies the arguments by the parameter name. This allows you to skip arguments or place them out of order because the Python interpreter is able to use the keywords provided to match the values with parameters. You can also make keyword calls to the printme() function in the following ways − #!/usr/bin/python # Function definition is here def printme( str ): "This prints a passed string into this function" print str return; # Now you can call printme function printme( str = "My string") When the above code is executed, it produces the following result − My string The following example gives more clear picture. Note that the order of parameters does not matter. #!/usr/bin/python # Function definition is here def printinfo( name, age ): "This prints a passed info into this function" print "Name: ", name print "Age ", age return; # Now you can call printinfo function printinfo( age=50, name="miki" ) When the above code is executed, it produces the following result − Name: miki Age 50 Default arguments A default argument is an argument that assumes a default value if a value is not provided in the function call for that argument. The following example gives an idea on default arguments, it prints default age if it is not passed − #!/usr/bin/python # Function definition is here def printinfo( name, age = 35 ): "This prints a passed info into this function" print "Name: ", name print "Age ", age return; # Now you can call printinfo function printinfo( age=50, name="miki" ) printinfo( name="miki" ) When the above code is executed, it produces the following result − Name: miki Age 50 Name: miki Age 35 Variable-length arguments You may need to process a function for more arguments than you specified while defining the function. These arguments are called variable-length arguments and are not named in the function definition, unlike required and default arguments. Syntax for a function with non-keyword variable arguments is this − def functionname([formal_args,] *var_args_tuple ): "function_docstring" function_suite return [expression] An asterisk (*) is placed before the variable name that holds the values of all nonkeyword variable arguments. This tuple remains empty if no additional arguments are specified during the function call. Following is a simple example − #!/usr/bin/python # Function definition is here def printinfo( arg1, *vartuple ): "This prints a variable passed arguments" print "Output is: " print arg1 for var in vartuple: print var return; # Now you can call printinfo function printinfo( 10 ) printinfo( 70, 60, 50 ) When the above code is executed, it produces the following result − Output is: 10 Output is: 70 60 50 The Anonymous Functions These functions are called anonymous because they are not declared in the standard manner by using the def keyword. You can use the lambda keyword to create small anonymous functions. Lambda forms can take any number of arguments but return just one value in the form of an expression. They cannot contain commands or multiple expressions. An anonymous function cannot be a direct call to print because lambda requires an expression Lambda functions have their own local namespace and cannot access variables other than those in their parameter list and those in the global namespace. Although it appears that lambda's are a one-line version of a function, they are not equivalent to inline statements in C or C++, whose purpose is by passing function stack allocation during invocation for performance reasons. Syntax The syntax of lambda functions contains only a single statement, which is as follows − lambda [arg1 [,arg2,.....argn]]:expression Following is the example to show how lambda form of function works − #!/usr/bin/python # Function definition is here sum = lambda arg1, arg2: arg1 + arg2; # Now you can call sum as a function print "Value of total : ", sum( 10, 20 ) print "Value of total : ", sum( 20, 20 ) When the above code is executed, it produces the following result − Value of total : 30 Value of total : 40 The return Statement The statement return [expression] exits a function, optionally passing back an expression to the caller. A return statement with no arguments is the same as return None. All the above examples are not returning any value. You can return a value from a function as follows − #!/usr/bin/python # Function definition is here def sum( arg1, arg2 ): # Add both the parameters and return them." total = arg1 + arg2 print "Inside the function : ", total return total; # Now you can call sum function total = sum( 10, 20 ); print "Outside the function : ", total When the above code is executed, it produces the following result − Inside the function : 30 Outside the function : 30 Scope of Variables All variables in a program may not be accessible at all locations in that program. This depends on where you have declared a variable. The scope of a variable determines the portion of the program where you can access a particular identifier. There are two basic scopes of variables in Python − Global variables Local variables Global vs. Local variables Variables that are defined inside a function body have a local scope, and those defined outside have a global scope. This means that local variables can be accessed only inside the function in which they are declared, whereas global variables can be accessed throughout the program body by all functions. When you call a function, the variables declared inside it are brought into scope. Following is a simple example − #!/usr/bin/python total = 0; # This is global variable. # Function definition is here def sum( arg1, arg2 ): # Add both the parameters and return them." total = arg1 + arg2; # Here total is local variable. print "Inside the function local total : ", total return total; # Now you can call sum function sum( 10, 20 ); print "Outside the function global total : ", total When the above code is executed, it produces the following result − Inside the function local total : 30 Outside the function global total : 0 ....
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj_MiZ9NDcQLo63yOOjoc7wAr2NP-2zkf238fYxgmmsRne5AIyQ3NQOyyko83Flf7StSJq1eWzLnTlfmtNdgQNckff_oO4OG-z4R9grN4EsLpyhPDs84sfL4VM5mcCViMmvrEDZxJw9d4E/s640/Arcade-vs-PyGame_Watermarked_1.jpg
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj_MiZ9NDcQLo63yOOjoc7wAr2NP-2zkf238fYxgmmsRne5AIyQ3NQOyyko83Flf7StSJq1eWzLnTlfmtNdgQNckff_oO4OG-z4R9grN4EsLpyhPDs84sfL4VM5mcCViMmvrEDZxJw9d4E/s72-c/Arcade-vs-PyGame_Watermarked_1.jpg
Shout4Education - Get Jobs, Tutorials and Notes
https://shout4education.blogspot.com/2020/02/python-functions.html
https://shout4education.blogspot.com/
https://shout4education.blogspot.com/
https://shout4education.blogspot.com/2020/02/python-functions.html
true
7947974353386595563
UTF-8
Loaded All Posts Not Found Any Posts :( View All Read More Reply Cancel Reply Delete By Home Pages Posts View All Similar Posts Label Archive Search All Posts Not Found Any Post Match with Your Request Sorry !! Search Something Blazing :) Back Home Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat January February March April May June July August September October November December Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Just Now 1 Minute Ago $$1$$ minutes ago 1 Hour Ago $$1$$ hours ago Yesterday $$1$$ days ago $$1$$ weeks ago More than 5 Weeks Ago Followers Follow :) This Premium Content is LOCKED !!! STEP 1: Share. STEP 2: Click the Link You Shared to Unlock Copy All Code Select All Code All Codes were Copied to Your Clipboard :) Can NOT Copy the Codes / Texts, Please Press [CTRL]+[C] (or CMD+C with Mac) to Copy