10. Brief Tour of the Standard Library¶
10.1. Operating System Interface¶
The os module provides dozens of functions for interacting with the
operating system:
>>> import os
>>> os.getcwd() # Return the current working directory
'C:\\Python35'
>>> os.chdir('/server/accesslogs') # Change current working directory
>>> os.system('mkdir today') # Run the command mkdir in the system shell
0
Be sure to use the import os style instead of from os import *. This
will keep os.open() from shadowing the built-in open() function which
operates much differently.
The built-in dir() and help() functions are useful as interactive
aids for working with large modules like os:
>>> import os
>>> dir(os)
<returns a list of all module functions>
>>> help(os)
<returns an extensive manual page created from the module's docstrings>
For daily file and directory management tasks, the shutil module provides
a higher level interface that is easier to use:
>>> import shutil
>>> shutil.copyfile('data.db', 'archive.db')
'archive.db'
>>> shutil.move('/build/executables', 'installdir')
'installdir'
10.2. File Wildcards¶
The glob module provides a function for making file lists from directory
wildcard searches:
>>> import glob
>>> glob.glob('*.py')
['primes.py', 'random.py', 'quote.py']
10.3. Command Line Arguments¶
Common utility scripts often need to process command line arguments. These
arguments are stored in the sys module’s argv attribute as a list. For
instance the following output results from running python demo.py one two
three at the command line:
>>> import sys
>>> print(sys.argv)
['demo.py', 'one', 'two', 'three']
The getopt module processes sys.argv using the conventions of the Unix
getopt() function. More powerful and flexible command line processing is
provided by the argparse module.
10.4. Error Output Redirection and Program Termination¶
The sys module also has attributes for stdin, stdout, and stderr.
The latter is useful for emitting warnings and error messages to make them
visible even when stdout has been redirected:
>>> sys.stderr.write('Warning, log file not found starting a new one\n')
Warning, log file not found starting a new one
The most direct way to terminate a script is to use sys.exit().
10.5. String Pattern Matching¶
The re module provides regular expression tools for advanced string
processing. For complex matching and manipulation, regular expressions offer
succinct, optimized solutions:
>>> import re
>>> re.findall(r'\bf[a-z]*', 'which foot or hand fell fastest')
['foot', 'fell', 'fastest']
>>> re.sub(r'(\b[a-z]+) \1', r'\1', 'cat in the the hat')
'cat in the hat'
When only simple capabilities are needed, string methods are preferred because they are easier to read and debug:
>>> 'tea for too'.replace('too', 'two')
'tea for two'
10.6. Mathematics¶
The math module gives access to the underlying C library functions for
floating point math:
>>> import math
>>> math.cos(math.pi / 4)
0.70710678118654757
>>> math.log(1024, 2)
10.0
The random module provides tools for making random selections:
>>> import random
>>> random.choice(['apple', 'pear', 'banana'])
'apple'
>>> random.sample(range(100), 10) # sampling without replacement
[30, 83, 16, 4, 8, 81, 41, 50, 18, 33]
>>> random.random() # random float
0.17970987693706186
>>> random.randrange(6) # random integer chosen from range(6)
4
The statistics module calculates basic statistical properties
(the mean, median, variance, etc.) of numeric data:
>>> import statistics
>>> data = [2.75, 1.75, 1.25, 0.25, 0.5, 1.25, 3.5]
>>> statistics.mean(data)
1.6071428571428572
>>> statistics.median(data)
1.25
>>> statistics.variance(data)
1.3720238095238095
The SciPy project <https://scipy.org> has many other modules for numerical computations.
10.7. Internet Access¶
There are a number of modules for accessing the internet and processing internet
protocols. Two of the simplest are urllib.request for retrieving data
from URLs and smtplib for sending mail:
>>> from urllib.request import urlopen
>>> with urlopen('http://tycho.usno.navy.mil/cgi-bin/timer.pl') as response:
... for line in response:
... line = line.decode('utf-8') # Decoding the binary data to text.
... if 'EST' in line or 'EDT' in line: # look for Eastern Time
... print(line)
<BR>Nov. 25, 09:43:32 PM EST
>>> import smtplib
>>> server = smtplib.SMTP('localhost')
>>> server.sendmail('soothsayer@example.org', 'jcaesar@example.org',
... """To: jcaesar@example.org
... From: soothsayer@example.org
...
... Beware the Ides of March.
... """)
>>> server.quit()
(Note that the second example needs a mailserver running on localhost.)
10.8. Dates and Times¶
The datetime module supplies classes for manipulating dates and times in
both simple and complex ways. While date and time arithmetic is supported, the
focus of the implementation is on efficient member extraction for output
formatting and manipulation. The module also supports objects that are timezone
aware.
>>> # dates are easily constructed and formatted
>>> from datetime import date
>>> now = date.today()
>>> now
datetime.date(2003, 12, 2)
>>> now.strftime("%m-%d-%y. %d %b %Y is a %A on the %d day of %B.")
'12-02-03. 02 Dec 2003 is a Tuesday on the 02 day of December.'
>>> # dates support calendar arithmetic
>>> birthday = date(1964, 7, 31)
>>> age = now - birthday
>>> age.days
14368
10.9. Data Compression¶
Common data archiving and compression formats are directly supported by modules
including: zlib, gzip, bz2, lzma, zipfile and
tarfile.
>>> import zlib
>>> s = b'witch which has which witches wrist watch'
>>> len(s)
41
>>> t = zlib.compress(s)
>>> len(t)
37
>>> zlib.decompress(t)
b'witch which has which witches wrist watch'
>>> zlib.crc32(s)
226805979
