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why print() in python3 instead of just print
what is the benefit of print function? why python 3 uses print() function instead of just print statement. can anyone explain me why it was modified in python3?
2 Answers
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The print statement has long appeared on lists of dubious language features that are to be removed in Python 3000, such as Guido's "Python Regrets" presentation [1].
As such, the objective of this PEP is not new, though it might become much disputed among Python developers.
The following arguments for a print() function are distilled from a python-3000 message by Guido himself [2]:
1- print is the only application-level functionality that has a statement dedicated to it. Within Python's world, syntax is generally used as a last resort, when something can't be done without help from the compiler. Print doesn't qualify for such an exception.
2- At some point in application development one quite often feels the need to replace print output by something more sophisticated, like logging calls or calls into some other I/O library. With a print() function, this is a straightforward string replacement, today it is a mess adding all those parentheses and possibly converting >>stream style syntax.
3- Having special syntax for print puts up a much larger barrier for evolution, e.g. a hypothetical new printf() function is not too far fetched when it will coexist with a print() function.
4- There's no easy way to convert print statements into another call if one needs a different separator, not spaces, or none at all. Also, there's no easy way at all to conveniently print objects with some other separator than a space.
5- If print() is a function, it would be much easier to replace it within one module (just def print(*args):...) or even throughout a program (e.g. by putting a different function in __builtin__.print). As it is, one can do this by writing a class with a write() method and assigning that to sys.stdout -- that's not bad, but definitely a much larger conceptual leap, and it works at a different level than print.
You can use print() it in places where you can't use print, such as:
[print(x) for x in range(10)]
Source :
https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-3105/
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Simply, it is syntax of python
Maybe, used for better understanding