Libraries
Overview
Teaching: 10 min
Exercises: 10 minQuestions
How can I extend the capabilities of Python?
How can I use software that other people have written?
How can I find out what that software does?
Objectives
Explain what software libraries are and why programmers create and use them.
Write programs that import and use libraries from Python’s standard library.
Find and read documentation for standard libraries interactively (in the interpreter) and online.
Most of the power of a programming language is in its (software) libraries.
- A (software) library is a collection of files (called modules) that contains
functions for use by other programs.
- May also contain data values (e.g., numerical constants) and other things.
- Library’s contents are supposed to be related, but there’s no way to enforce that.
- The Python standard library is an extensive suite of modules that comes with Python itself.
- Many additional libraries are available from PyPI (the Python Package Index).
- We will see later how to write new libraries.
Libraries and modules
A library is a collection of modules, but the terms are often used interchangeably, especially since many libraries only consist of a single module, so don’t worry if you mix them.
A program must import a library module before using it.
- Use
importto load a library module into a program’s memory. - Then refer to things from the module as
module_name.thing_name.- Python uses
.to mean “part of”.
- Python uses
- Using
string, one of the modules in the standard library:
import string
print('The lower ascii letters are', string.ascii_lowercase)
print(string.capwords('capitalise this sentence please.'))
The lower ascii letters are abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
Capitalise This Sentence Please.
- You have to refer to each item with the module’s name.
string.capwords(ascii_lowercase)won’t work: the reference toascii_lowercasedoesn’t somehow “inherit” the function’s reference tostring.
Use help to learn about the contents of a library module.
- Works just like help for a function.
help(string)
Help on module string:
NAME
string - A collection of string constants.
MODULE REFERENCE
https://docs.python.org/3.6/library/string
The following documentation is automatically generated from the Python
source files. It may be incomplete, incorrect or include features that
are considered implementation detail and may vary between Python
implementations. When in doubt, consult the module reference at the
location listed above.
DESCRIPTION
Public module variables:
whitespace -- a string containing all ASCII whitespace
ascii_lowercase -- a string containing all ASCII lowercase letters
ascii_uppercase -- a string containing all ASCII uppercase letters
ascii_letters -- a string containing all ASCII letters
digits -- a string containing all ASCII decimal digits
hexdigits -- a string containing all ASCII hexadecimal digits
octdigits -- a string containing all ASCII octal digits
punctuation -- a string containing all ASCII punctuation characters
printable -- a string containing all ASCII characters considered printable
CLASSES
builtins.object
Formatter
Template
⋮ ⋮ ⋮
Import specific items from a library module to shorten programs.
- Use
from ... import ...to load only specific items from a library module. - Then refer to them directly without library name as prefix.
from string import ascii_letters
print('The ASCII letters are', ascii_letters)
The ASCII letters are abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ
Create an alias for a library module when importing it to shorten programs.
- Use
import ... as ...to give a library a short alias while importing it. - Then refer to items in the library using that shortened name.
import string as s
print(s.capwords('capitalise this sentence again.'))
Capitalise This Sentence Again.
- Commonly used for libraries that are frequently used or have long names.
- E.g., The
pandaslibrary is often aliased aspd.
- E.g., The
- But can make programs harder to understand, since readers must learn your program’s aliases.
Exploring the os Library
The os library provides a way of accessing operating system functionality.
- What function from the
oslibrary can you use to determine the current working directory?- What function from the
oslibrary will list the files in a directory?Solution
- Using
help(os)we see that we’ve gotos.getcwd()which returns a string representing the current working directory.- Using
help(os)we also can see thatos.listdir(path=None))returns a list containing the names of the files in the directory. The function takes a parameter that is the directory to look into. If it’s not provided, it looks at the current directory (.) .
EXERCISE: Go to slides.
Locating the Right Module
Given the variables
year,monthandday, how would you generate a date in the standard iso format:year = 2016 month = 10 day = 22
- Which standard library module could help you?
- Which function would you select from that module?
- Try to write a program that uses the function.
Solution
The datetime module seems like it could help you.
You could use
date(year, month, date).isoformat()to convert your date:import datetime iso_date = datetime.date(year, month, day).isoformat() print(iso_date)or more compactly:
import datetime print(datetime.date(year, month, day).isoformat())
Key Points
Most of the power of a programming language is in its libraries.
A program must import a library module in order to use it.
Use
helpto learn about the contents of a library module.Import specific items from a library to shorten programs.
Create an alias for a library when importing it to shorten programs.