This question already has an answer here:
- python print end=' ' 13 answers
This is the function for printing all values in a nested list (taken from Head first with Python).
def printall(the_list, level):
for x in the_list:
if isinstance(x, list):
printall(x, level=level + 1)
else:
for tab_stop in range(level):
print("\t", end='')
print(x)
The function is working properly.
The function basically prints the values in a list and if there is a nested list then it print it by a tab space.
Just for a better understanding, what does end=' ' do?
I am using Python 3.3.5
For 2.7
f = fi.input( files = 'test2.py', inplace = True, backup = '.bak')
for line in f:
if fi.lineno() == 4:
print line + '\n'
print 'extra line'
else:
print line + '\n'
as of 2.6 fileinput does not support with. This code appends 3 more lines and prints the appended text on the 3rd new line. and then appends a further 16 empty lines.
The default value of end is \n meaning that after the print statement it will print a new line. So simply stated end is what you want to be printed after the print statement has been executed
Eg: - print ("hello",end=" +") will print hello +
See the documentation for the print function: print()
The content of end is printed after the thing you want to print. By default it contains a newline ("\n") but it can be changed to something else, like an empty string.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/27312273/python-meaning-of-end-in-the-statement-print-t-end