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 = ' ')
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Range Function in Python
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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 = ' ')
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