Semester 6 - chae research log: Difference between revisions

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==python study==
==python study==
  '''enumerate()'''<br>In Python, a for loop is usually written as a loop over an iterable object. This means you don’t need a counting variable to access items in the iterable. '''Sometimes, though, you do want to have a variable that changes on each loop iteration.''' Rather than creating and incrementing a variable yourself, you can use Python’s enumerate() to get a counter and the value from the iterable at the same time! https://realpython.com/python-enumerate/
  '''enumerate()'''<br>In Python, a for loop is usually written as a loop over an iterable object. This means you don’t need a counting variable to access items in the iterable. '''Sometimes, though, you do want to have a variable that changes on each loop iteration.''' Rather than creating and incrementing a variable yourself, you can use Python’s enumerate() to get a counter and the value from the iterable at the same time! https://realpython.com/python-enumerate/
 
'''range()'''
'''len()'''
  '''join()'''
  '''join()'''

Revision as of 16:37, 26 April 2023

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python study

enumerate()
In Python, a for loop is usually written as a loop over an iterable object. This means you don’t need a counting variable to access items in the iterable. Sometimes, though, you do want to have a variable that changes on each loop iteration. Rather than creating and incrementing a variable yourself, you can use Python’s enumerate() to get a counter and the value from the iterable at the same time! https://realpython.com/python-enumerate/ range() len() join()