2.5. Variable Names and KeywordsΒΆ
Variable names can be arbitrarily long. They can contain both letters and
digits, but they have to begin with a letter or an underscore. Although it is
legal to use uppercase letters, by convention we don’t. If you do, remember
that case matters. Bruce
and bruce
are different variables.
Caution
Variable names can never contain spaces.
The underscore character ( _
) can also appear in a name. It is often used in
names with multiple words, such as my_name
or price_of_tea_in_china
.
There are some situations in which names beginning with an underscore have
special meaning, so a safe rule for beginners is to start all names with a
letter.
If you give a variable an illegal name, you get a syntax error. In the example below, each of the variable names is illegal.
76trombones = "big parade"
more$ = 1000000
class = "Computer Science 101"
76trombones
is illegal because it does not begin with a letter. more$
is illegal because it contains an illegal character, the dollar sign. But
what’s wrong with class
?
It turns out that class
is one of the Python keywords. Keywords define
the language’s syntax rules and structure, and they cannot be used as variable
names.
Python has thirty-something keywords (and every now and again improvements to
Python introduce or eliminate one or two):
and | as | assert | break | class | continue |
def | del | elif | else | except | exec |
finally | for | from | global | if | import |
in | is | lambda | nonlocal | not | or |
pass | raise | return | try | while | with |
yield | True | False | None |
You might want to keep this list handy. If the interpreter complains about one of your variable names and you don’t know why, see if it is on this list.
Programmers generally choose names for their variables that are meaningful to the human readers of the program — they help the programmer document, or remember, what the variable is used for.
Caution
Beginners sometimes confuse “meaningful to the human readers” with
“meaningful to the computer”. So they’ll wrongly think that because
they’ve called some variable average
or pi
, it will somehow
automagically calculate an average, or automagically associate the variable
pi
with the value 3.14159. No! The computer doesn’t attach semantic
meaning to your variable names.
So you’ll find some instructors who deliberately don’t choose meaningful names when they teach beginners — not because they don’t think it is a good habit, but because they’re trying to reinforce the message that you, the programmer, have to write some program code to calculate the average, or you must write an assignment statement to give a variable the value you want it to have.
Check your understanding
-
data-5-1: True or False: the following is a legal variable name in Python: A_good_grade_is_A+
- (A) True
- - The + character is not allowed in variable names.
- (B) False
- - The + character is not allowed in variable names (everything else in this name is fine).