Python print() Function
print(object(s), sep=separator, end=end, file=file, flush=flush)
It takes one or more arguments separated by comma(,) and adds a 'newline' at the end by default.
Parameters:
- object(s) - As many as you want data to display, will first converted into string and printed to the console.
- sep - Separates the objects by a separator passed, default value = " ".
- end - Ends a line with a newline character
- file - a file object with write method, default value = sys.stdout
# Displaying a string
print("Hello, World!")
# Displaying multiple values
name = "Aman"
age = 21
print("Name:", name, "Age:", age)
# Printing variables and literals
x = 5
y = 7
print("x =", x, "y =", y, "Sum =", x + y)
# Printing with formatting
percentage = 85.75
print("Score: {:.2f}%".format(percentage))
Hello, World!
Name: Aman Age: 21
X = 5 y = 7 Sum = 12
Score: 85.75%
Python Conditional Statements
Python provides if and else keywords to set up logical conditions. The elif keyword is also used as a conditional statement.
x = 10
y = 5
if x > y:
print("x is greater than y")
else:
print("y is greater than or equal to x")
x is greater than y
Python Loops
fruits = ["apple", "banana", "cherry"]
for x in fruits:
print(x, end=" ")
apple banana cherry
i = 1
while i<5:
print(i, end=" ")
i += 1
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