Overview
Teaching: 30 min
Exercises: 0 minQuestions
How can my programs do different things based on data values?
Objectives
Write conditional statements including
if
,elif
, andelse
branches.Correctly evaluate expressions containing
and
andor
.
In our last lesson, we discovered something suspicious was going on in our inflammation data by drawing some plots. How can we use Python to automatically recognize the different features we saw, and take a different action for each? In this lesson, we’ll learn how to write code that runs only when certain conditions are true.
We can ask Python to take different actions, depending on a condition, with an if
statement:
num = 37
if num > 100:
print('greater')
else:
print('not greater')
print('done')
not greater
done
The second line of this code uses the keyword if
to tell Python that we want to make a choice.
If the test that follows the if
statement is true,
the body of the if
(i.e., the lines indented underneath it) are executed.
If the test is false,
the body of the else
is executed instead.
Only one or the other is ever executed:
Conditional statements don’t have to include an else
.
If there isn’t one,
Python simply does nothing if the test is false:
num = 53
print('before conditional...')
if num > 100:
print('53 is greater than 100')
print('...after conditional')
before conditional...
...after conditional
We can also chain several tests together using elif
,
which is short for “else if”.
The following Python code uses elif
to print the sign of a number.
num = -3
if num > 0:
print(num, "is positive")
elif num == 0:
print(num, "is zero")
else:
print(num, "is negative")
"-3 is negative"
One important thing to notice in the code above is that we use a double equals sign ==
to test for equality
rather than a single equals sign
because the latter is used to mean assignment.
We can also combine tests using and
and or
.
and
is only true if both parts are true:
if (1 > 0) and (-1 > 0):
print('both parts are true')
else:
print('at least one part is false')
at least one part is false
while or
is true if at least one part is true:
if (1 < 0) or (-1 < 0):
print('at least one test is true')
at least one test is true
Now that we’ve seen how conditionals work,
we can use them to check for the suspicious features we saw in our inflammation data.
In the first couple of plots, the maximum inflammation per day
seemed to rise like a straight line, one unit per day.
We can check for this inside the for
loop we wrote with the following conditional:
if numpy.max(data, axis=0)[0] == 0 and numpy.max(data, axis=0)[20] == 20:
print('Suspicious looking maxima!')
We also saw a different problem in the third dataset;
the minima per day were all zero (looks like a healthy person snuck into our study).
We can also check for this with an elif
condition:
elif numpy.sum(numpy.min(data, axis=0)) == 0:
print('Minima add up to zero!')
And if neither of these conditions are true, we can use else
to give the all-clear:
else:
print('Seems OK!')
Let’s test that out:
data = numpy.loadtxt(fname='inflammation-01.csv', delimiter=',')
if numpy.max(data, axis=0)[0] == 0 and numpy.max(data, axis=0)[20] == 20:
print('Suspicious looking maxima!')
elif numpy.sum(numpy.min(data, axis=0)) == 0:
print('Minima add up to zero!')
else:
print('Seems OK!')
Suspicious looking maxima!
data = numpy.loadtxt(fname='inflammation-03.csv', delimiter=',')
if numpy.max(data, axis=0)[0] == 0 and numpy.max(data, axis=0)[20] == 20:
print('Suspicious looking maxima!')
elif numpy.sum(numpy.min(data, axis=0)) == 0:
print('Minima add up to zero!')
else:
print('Seems OK!')
Minima add up to zero!
In this way,
we have asked Python to do something different depending on the condition of our data.
Here we printed messages in all cases,
but we could also imagine not using the else
catch-all
so that messages are only printed when something is wrong,
freeing us from having to manually examine every plot for features we’ve seen before.
How Many Paths?
What Is Truth?
That’s Not Not What I Meant
Close Enough
In-Place Operators
Sorting a List Into Buckets
Counting Vowels
Key Points
Use
if condition
to start a conditional statement,elif condition
to provide additional tests, andelse
to provide a default.The bodies of the branches of conditional statements must be indented.
Use
==
to test for equality.
X and Y
is only true if both X and Y are true.
X or Y
is true if either X or Y, or both, are true.Zero, the empty string, and the empty list are considered false; all other numbers, strings, and lists are considered true.
Nest loops to operate on multi-dimensional data.
Put code whose parameters change frequently in a function, then call it with different parameter values to customize its behavior.