Sum() function gives 0 as the sum. Please tell a solution to this. Thanks in Advance [duplicate]
In my previous question, Andrew Jaffe writes:
In addition to all of the other hints and tips, I think you're missing something crucial: your functions actually need to return something. When you create
autoparts()
orsplittext()
, the idea is that this will be a function that you can call, and it can (and should) give something back. Once you figure out the output that you want your function to have, you need to put it in areturn
statement.
def autoparts():
parts_dict = {}
list_of_parts = open('list_of_parts.txt', 'r')
for line in list_of_parts:
k, v = line.split()
parts_dict[k] = v
print(parts_dict)
>>> autoparts()
{'part A': 1, 'part B': 2, ...}
This function creates a dictionary, but it does not return something. However, since I added the print
, the output of the function is shown when I run the function. What is the difference between return
ing something and print
ing it?
print
simply prints out the structure to your output device (normally the console). Nothing more. To return it from your function, you would do:
def autoparts():
parts_dict = {}
list_of_parts = open('list_of_parts.txt', 'r')
for line in list_of_parts:
k, v = line.split()
parts_dict[k] = v
return parts_dict
Why return? Well if you don't, that dictionary dies (gets garbage collected) and is no longer accessible as soon as this function call ends. If you return the value, you can do other stuff with it. Such as:
my_auto_parts = autoparts()
print(my_auto_parts['engine'])
See what happened? autoparts()
was called and it returned the parts_dict
and we stored it into the my_auto_parts
variable. Now we can use this variable to access the dictionary object and it continues to live even though the function call is over. We then printed out the object in the dictionary with the key 'engine'
.
For a good tutorial, check out dive into python. It's free and very easy to follow.
The print statement will output an object to the user. A return statement will allow assigning the dictionary to a variable once the function is finished.
>>> def foo():
... print "Hello, world!"
...
>>> a = foo()
Hello, world!
>>> a
>>> def foo():
... return "Hello, world!"
...
>>> a = foo()
>>> a
'Hello, world!'
Or in the context of returning a dictionary:
>>> def foo():
... print {'a' : 1, 'b' : 2}
...
>>> a = foo()
{'a': 1, 'b': 2}
>>> a
>>> def foo():
... return {'a' : 1, 'b' : 2}
...
>>> a = foo()
>>> a
{'a': 1, 'b': 2}
(The statements where nothing is printed out after a line is executed means the last statement returned None)
I think you're confused because you're running from the REPL, which automatically prints out the value returned when you call a function. In that case, you do get identical output whether you have a function that creates a value, prints it, and throws it away, or you have a function that creates a value and returns it, letting the REPL print it.
However, these are very much not the same thing, as you will realize when you call autoparts with another function that wants to do something with the value that autoparts creates.
you just add a return statement...
def autoparts():
parts_dict={}
list_of_parts = open('list_of_parts.txt', 'r')
for line in list_of_parts:
k, v = line.split()
parts_dict[k] = v
return parts_dict
printing out only prints out to the standard output (screen) of the application. You can also return multiple things by separating them with commas:
return parts_dict, list_of_parts
to use it:
test_dict = {}
test_dict = autoparts()
Major difference:
Calling print will immediately make your program write out text for you to see. Use print when you want to show a value to a human.
return is a keyword. When a return statement is reached, Python will stop the execution of the current function, sending a value out to where the function was called. Use return when you want to send a value from one point in your code to another.
Using return changes the flow of the program. Using print does not.