Range Function in Python
To iterate over indices instead of elements, use the range()
function. It generates a sequence of numbers and returns a range
object. The function accepts one, two, or three numeric arguments. With a single argument n
, range(n)
produces integers from 0
to n - 1
. For example, range(5)
generates 0
to 4
.
123# Range with one argument for i in range(5): print(i, end = ' ')
With two arguments, range(n, m)
generates integers from n
to m - 1
. For example, range(5, 10)
produces 5
to 9
.
123# Range with two arguments for i in range(5, 10): print(i, end = ' ')
With three arguments, range(n, m, s)
generates numbers from n
to m - 1
, incrementing by s
. For example, range(10, 30, 5)
produces 10, 15, 20, 25.
123# Range with three arguments for i in range(10, 30, 5): print(i, end = ' ')
Tak for dine kommentarer!
Spørg AI
Spørg AI
Spørg om hvad som helst eller prøv et af de foreslåede spørgsmål for at starte vores chat
Spørg mig spørgsmål om dette emne
Opsummér dette kapitel
Vis virkelige eksempler
Awesome!
Completion rate improved to 1.67
Range Function in Python
Stryg for at vise menuen
To iterate over indices instead of elements, use the range()
function. It generates a sequence of numbers and returns a range
object. The function accepts one, two, or three numeric arguments. With a single argument n
, range(n)
produces integers from 0
to n - 1
. For example, range(5)
generates 0
to 4
.
123# Range with one argument for i in range(5): print(i, end = ' ')
With two arguments, range(n, m)
generates integers from n
to m - 1
. For example, range(5, 10)
produces 5
to 9
.
123# Range with two arguments for i in range(5, 10): print(i, end = ' ')
With three arguments, range(n, m, s)
generates numbers from n
to m - 1
, incrementing by s
. For example, range(10, 30, 5)
produces 10, 15, 20, 25.
123# Range with three arguments for i in range(10, 30, 5): print(i, end = ' ')
Tak for dine kommentarer!