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When to use _ with for ?

When should we use _ with for ? Eg. for _ in range(N) What this line will do ? I know normal for loop syntax and range function.

1st May 2020, 1:43 PM
Peter Parker
Peter Parker - avatar
4 Answers
+ 1
_ can be used in the case where you don't need to use the loop variable inside the loop
1st May 2020, 1:48 PM
R Vijay Anand
R Vijay Anand - avatar
+ 1
_ is a valid variable name identifier: you could use it for what you want ^^ Anyway, it's kind of convention widely shared (beyond just only Python community) to use it for variables needed syntaxically but not technically used... ;)
1st May 2020, 7:50 PM
visph
visph - avatar
+ 1
This is what I learned from YouTube. Underscore can be used in these many ways. Case 1: For storing the result of the last executed expression in an interactive shell. The Python interpreter stores the last expression value to the special variable called '_'. Eg.: >>> 1+2+3 Output: 6 >>> _ Output: 6 >>>_ + 6 Output: 12 >>>_ Output: 12 --------------------------------------------- Case 2: The underscore is also used for ignoring specific values. If you don't need the specific values, just assign the values to underscore. Eg 1.: for x in range(10): print("Hi") Here variable 'x' is of no use, so u can replace it with underscore. for _ in range(10): print("Hi") Eg 2.: x,_,z = [1,2,3] Here 1 and 3 will be assigned to x and z respectively. ---------------------------------------------- Case 3: Single leading underscore gives variables and functions special meaning. This convention is used for declaring private variables, functions & classes in a module. Anything with this convention are ignored when you try to import your module in some other module by from module import * However, if you still need to import a private variable or function, import it directly. ---------------------------------------------- Case 4: It is used for separating digits of numbers for readability. In general, we use ','. In Python we can use '_'. Eg.: x = 1_234_567 print(x) Output: 1234567 --------------------------------------------- Case 5: Double leading underscore will change the way a method/attribute can be called using an object of a class. This convention is useful in case of inheritence when you want to use methods of same name in child & parent class separately. Eg.: class A: def __double_method(self): print("A") a = A() a.__double_method() #this will not work a._A__double_method() #this will work Lets make another class B class B(A): def __double_method(self): print("B") b = B() b._B__double_method() b._A__double_method() Output: B A
2nd May 2020, 10:00 AM
Peter Parker
Peter Parker - avatar