>>> 3 + 4
7
You can issue commands in the Python interactive console. But it has a disadvantage: The program that you type is lost when the session ends. It is good for trying simple commands. Very often however, you need a way to save more complex programs somewhere.
Open your editor (You should have an editor installed. If not, follow the instructions in Editor installation.)
Create a new file in your editor and type the following code:
print("Hello world!")
Then save the file as hello.py
.
02
in the pyladies
(or whatever folder name you've created last lecture) directory.hello.py
in it.If you can choose the encoding in your editor, you should use UTF-8
.
If you can choose the file type, use .py
or All Formats
.
Some operating systems or editors hide extensions or add their own extensions.
You can check the real name using the command line.
Open your command line and change your current directory to the subdirectory you created -
for example by using the cd
command to ~/pyladies/02
.
List what is in the directory using the command ls
(Mac or Linux) or dir
(Windows)
and check that the filename is really hello.py
and not, for example, hello.py.txt
.
Open the command line.
Change to the ~/pyladies/02
directory and issue the following command:
python3 hello.py
You have learned about the command line in
a previous lesson which shows how to change the current directory
using the cd
command.
After you run python3 hello.py
you should see the program responding with writing Hello world!
into the terminal.
If it does not work, make sure that:
~/pyladies/02
(you need to replace ~/pyladies
with the directory that you have created previously).hello.py
file contains the correct command, including quotes and parentheses.$
or >
character in the command line – it is there to indicate that this is a command line.
It is printed by the operating system after any program has finished.
You should type only: python3 hello.py
.If it still does not work, ask your coach for help!
Note about code style
It does not usually matter where you use space in Python inside a command.
The command print("Hello world!")
has the same effect as:
print ( "Hello world!" )
It is however a good practice to follow some typical guidelines.
In English, we do not write a space after an opening parenthesis.
In Python, we do not write a space even between print
and (
.
The recommended style is:
print("Hello world!")
The spaces between the quotes have a meaning: If you type
" Hello world!"
, then the extra spaces are printed.