getting-started-strings/script.rst
author Puneeth Chaganti <punchagan@fossee.in>
Wed, 13 Oct 2010 11:13:01 +0530
changeset 313 b9b7bfce773e
child 436 e62bc810999c
permissions -rw-r--r--
Getting started with strings LO - script and questions.

.. Objectives
.. ----------

.. At the end of this tutorial, you should know --

..   1. How to define strings
..   #. Different ways of defining a string
..   #. How to concatenate strings 
..   #. How to print a string repeatedly 
..   #. Accessing individual elements of the string
..   #. Immutability of strings

.. Prerequisites
.. -------------

.. 1. getting started with ipython
     
.. Author              : Madhu
   Internal Reviewer   : 
   External Reviewer   :
   Checklist OK?       : <put date stamp here, if OK> [2010-10-05]

Script
------

{{{ Show the slide containing the title }}}

Hello friends. Welcome to this spoken tutorial on Getting started with
strings.

{{{ Show the slide containing the outline }}}

In this tutorial, we will learn what do we actually mean by strings in
python, how python supports the use of strings. We will also learn
some of the operations that can be performed on strings.

{{{ Shift to terminal and start ipython }}}

To begin with let us start ipython, by typing::

  ipython

on the terminal

So what are strings? In Python anything within either single quotes
or double quotes or triple single quotes or triple double quotes are
strings. This is true whatsoever, even if there is only one character
within the quotes

{{{ Type in ipython the following and read them as you type }}}::

  'This is a string'
  "This is a string too'
  '''This is a string as well'''
  """This is also a string"""
  'p'

Having more than one control character to define strings come as very
handy when one of the control characters itself is part of the
string. For example::

  "Python's string manipulation functions are very useful"

In this case we use single quote for apostrophe. If we had only single
quote to define strings we should have a clumsy way of escaping the
single quote character to make it part of the string. Hence this is a
very handy feature.

The triple quoted strings let us define multi-lines strings without
using any escaping. Everything within the triple quotes is a single
string no matter how many lines it extends::

   """Having more than one control character to define
   strings come as very handy when one of the control
   characters itself is part of the string."""

We can assign this string to any variable::

  a = 'Hello, World!'

Now 'a' is a string variable. String is a collection of characters. In
addition string is an immutable collection. So all the operations that
are applicable to any other immutable collection in Python works on
string as well. So we can add two strings::

  a = 'Hello'
  b = 'World'
  c = a + ', ' + b + '!'

We can add string variables as well as the strings themselves all in
the same statement. The addition operation performs the concatenation
of two strings.

Similarly we can multiply a string with an integer::

  a = 'Hello'
  a * 5

gives another string in which the original string 'Hello' is repeated
5 times.

Since strings are collections we can access individual items in the
string using the subscripts::

  a[0]

gives us the first character in the string. The indexing starts from 0
for the first character up to n-1 for the last character. We can
access the strings from the end using negative indices::

  a[-2]

gives us second element from the end of the string

Let us attempt to change one of the characters in a string::

  a = 'hello'
  a[0] = 'H'

As said earlier, strings are immutable. We cannot manipulate the
string. Although there are some methods which let us to manipulate the
strings. We will look at them in the advanced session on strings. In
addition to the methods that let us manipulate the strings we have
methods like split which lets us break the string on the specified
separator, the join method which lets us combine the list of strings
into a single string based on the specified separator.

{{{ Show summary slide }}}

This brings us to the end of another session. In this tutorial session
we learnt

  * How to define strings
  * Different ways of defining a string
  * String concatenation and repeatition
  * Accessing individual elements of the string
  * Immutability of strings

{{{ Show the "sponsored by FOSSEE" slide }}}

This tutorial was created as a part of FOSSEE project, NME ICT, MHRD India

Hope you have enjoyed and found it useful.
Thank you!