12 Input and Output ¶
There will be situations where your program has to interact with the user. For example, you would want to take input from the user and then print some results back. We can achieve this using the
input()
function and
print
function respectively.
For output, we can also use the various methods of the
str
(string) class. For example, you can use the
rjust
method to get a string which is right justified to a specified width. See
help(str)
for more details.
Another common type of input/output is dealing with files. The ability to create, read and write files is essential to many programs and we will explore this aspect in this chapter.
Input from user ¶
Save this program as
io_input.py
:
{% include "./programs/io_input.py" %}
Output:
{% include "./programs/io_input.txt" %}
How It Works
We use the slicing feature to reverse the text. We've already seen how we can make
slices from sequences
using the
seq[a:b]
code starting from position
a
to position
b
. We can also provide a third argument that determines the
step
by which the slicing is done. The default step is
1
because of which it returns a continuous part of the text. Giving a negative step, i.e.,
-1
will return the text in reverse.
The
input()
function takes a string as argument and displays it to the user. Then it waits for the user to type something and press the return key. Once the user has entered and pressed the return key, the
input()
function will then return that text the user has entered.
We take that text and reverse it. If the original text and reversed text are equal, then the text is a palindrome .
Homework exercise ¶
Checking whether a text is a palindrome should also ignore punctuation, spaces and case. For example, "Rise to vote, sir." is also a palindrome but our current program doesn't say it is. Can you improve the above program to recognize this palindrome?
If you need a hint, the idea is that...[^1]
Files ¶
You can open and use files for reading or writing by creating an object of the
file
class and using its
read
,
readline
or
write
methods appropriately to read from or write to the file. The ability to read or write to the file depends on the mode you have specified for the file opening. Then finally, when you are finished with the file, you call the
close
method to tell Python that we are done using the file.
Example (save as
io_using_file.py
):
{% include "./programs/io_using_file.py" %}
Output:
{% include "./programs/io_using_file.txt" %}
How It Works
Note that we can create a new file object simply by using the
open
method. We open (or create it if it doesn't already exist) this file by using the built-in
open
function and specifying the name of the file and the mode in which we want to open the file. The mode can be a read mode (
'r'
), write mode (
'w'
) or append mode (
'a'
). We can also specify whether we are reading, writing, or appending in text mode (
't'
) or binary mode (
'b'
). There are actually many more modes available and
help(open)
will give you more details about them. By default,
open()
considers the file to be a 't'ext file and opens it in 'r'ead mode.
In our example, we first open/create the file in write text mode and use the
write
method of the file object to write our string variable
poem
to the file and then we finally
close
the file.
Next, we open the same file again for reading. We don't need to specify a mode because 'read text file' is the default mode. We read in each line of the file using the
readline
method in a loop. This method returns a complete line including the newline character at the end of the line. When an
empty
string is returned, it means that we have reached the end of the file and we 'break' out of the loop.
In the end, we finally
close
the file.
We can see from our
readline
output that this program has indeed written to and read from our new
poem.txt
file.
Pickle ¶
Python provides a standard module called
pickle
which you can use to store
any
plain Python object in a file and then get it back later. This is called storing the object
persistently
.
Example (save as
io_pickle.py
):
{% include "./programs/io_pickle.py" %}
Output:
{% include "./programs/io_pickle.txt" %}
How It Works
To store an object in a file, we have to first
open
the file in __w__rite __b__inary mode and then call the
dump
function of the
pickle
module. This process is called
pickling
.
Next, we retrieve the object using the
load
function of the
pickle
module which returns the object. This process is called
unpickling
.
Unicode ¶
So far, when we have been writing and using strings, or reading and writing to a file, we have used simple English characters only. Both English and non-English characters can be represented in Unicode (please see the articles at the end of this section for more info), and Python 3 by default stores string variables (think of all that text we wrote using single or double or triple quotes) in Unicode.
NOTE: If you are using Python 2, and we want to be able to read and write other non-English languages, we need to use the
unicode
type, and it all starts with the characteru
, e.g.u"hello world"
>>> "hello world"
'hello world'
>>> type("hello world")
<class 'str'>
>>> u"hello world"
'hello world'
>>> type(u"hello world")
<class 'str'>
When data is sent over the Internet, we need to send it in bytes... something your computer easily understands. The rules for translating Unicode (which is what Python uses when it stores a string) to bytes is called encoding. A popular encoding to use is UTF-8. We can read and write in UTF-8 by using a simple keyword argument in our
open
function.
{% include "./programs/io_unicode.py" %}
How It Works
We use
io.open
and then use the
encoding
argument in the first open statement to encode the message, and then again in the second open statement when decoding the message. Note that we should only use encoding in the open statement when in text mode.
Whenever we write a program that uses Unicode literals (by putting a
u
before the string) like we have used above, we have to make sure that Python itself is told that our program uses UTF-8, and we have to put
# encoding=utf-8
comment at the top of our program.
You should learn more about this topic by reading:
- "The Absolute Minimum Every Software Developer Absolutely, Positively Must Know About Unicode and Character Sets"
- Python Unicode Howto
- Pragmatic Unicode talk by Nat Batchelder
Summary ¶
We have discussed various types of input/output, about file handling, about the pickle module and about Unicode.
Next, we will explore the concept of exceptions.
[^1]: Use a tuple (you can find a list of
all
punctuation marks here
) to hold all the forbidden characters, then use the membership test to determine whether a character should be removed or not, i.e. forbidden = (
!
,
?
,
.
, ...).