The %f formatter is used to format floats (numbers with decimals). Here we format it as %4.2f where 4
b9510430212has quoted4 years ago
brand = ‘Apple’ exchangeRate = 1.235235245 message = ‘The price of this %s laptop is %d USD and the exchange rate is %4.2f USD to 1 EUR’ %(brand, 1299, exchangeRate)
b9510430212has quoted4 years ago
Peter’.upper() will give us the string “PETER
b9510430212has quoted4 years ago
Peter” + “Lee” is equivalent to the string “PeterLee”
b9510430212has quoted4 years ago
To declare a string, you can either use variableName = ‘initial value’ (single quotes) or variableName = “initial value” (double quotes)
b9510430212has quoted4 years ago
Instead of writing x = x + 2, we can also write x += 2
b9510430212has quoted4 years ago
Modulus: x%y = 1 (gives the remainder when 5 is divided by 2)
b9510430212has quoted4 years ago
variable names are case sensitive. username is not the same as userName
b9510430212has quoted4 years ago
We can also define multiple variables at one go. To do that simply write userAge, userName = 30, ‘Peter’ This is equivalent to userAge = 30 userName = ‘Peter