This reference manual describes the syntax and “core semantics” of the language. It is terse, but attempts to be exact and complete. The semantics of non-essential built-in object types and of the built-in functions and modules are described in The Python Standard Library. For an informal introduction to the language, see The Python Tutorial. For C or C++ programmers, two additional manuals exist:Extending and Embedding the Python Interpreter describes the high-level picture of how to write a Python extension module, and thePython/C API Reference Manual describes the interfaces available to C/C++ programmers in detail.
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Lexical analysis
- 3. Data model
- 4. Execution model
- 5. Expressions
- 5.1. Arithmetic conversions
- 5.2. Atoms
- 5.3. Primaries
- 5.4. The power operator
- 5.5. Unary arithmetic and bitwise operations
- 5.6. Binary arithmetic operations
- 5.7. Shifting operations
- 5.8. Binary bitwise operations
- 5.9. Comparisons
- 5.10. Boolean operations
- 5.11. Conditional Expressions
- 5.12. Lambdas
- 5.13. Expression lists
- 5.14. Evaluation order
- 5.15. Operator precedence
- 6. Simple statements
- 6.1. Expression statements
- 6.2. Assignment statements
- 6.3. The
assert
statement - 6.4. The
pass
statement - 6.5. The
del
statement - 6.6. The
print
statement - 6.7. The
return
statement - 6.8. The
yield
statement - 6.9. The
raise
statement - 6.10. The
break
statement - 6.11. The
continue
statement - 6.12. The
import
statement - 6.13. The
global
statement - 6.14. The
exec
statement
- 7. Compound statements
- 8. Top-level components
- 9. Full Grammar specification
from: https://docs.python.org/2/reference/index.html#reference-index