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  • pythoon_interview_redit

    easy/intermediate

    What are Python decorators and how would you use them?
    How would you setup many projects where each one uses different versions of Python and third party libraries?
    What is PEP8 and do you follow its guidelines when you're coding?
    How are arguments passed – by reference of by value? (easy, but not that easy, I'm not sure if I can answer this clearly)
    Do you know what list and dict comprehensions are? Can you give an example?
    Show me three different ways of fetching every third item in the list
    Do you know what is the difference between lists and tuples? Can you give me an example for their usage?
    Do you know the difference between range and xrange?
    Tell me a few differences between Python 2.x and 3.x?
    The with statement and its usage.
    How to avoid cyclical imports without having to resort to imports in functions?
    what's wrong with import all?
    Why is the GIL important? (This actually puzzles me, don't know the answer)
    What are "special" methods (<foo>), how they work, etc
    can you manipulate functions as first-class objects?
    the difference between "class Foo" and "class Foo(object)"

    tricky, smart ones

    how to read a 8GB file in python?
    what don't you like about Python?
    can you convert ascii characters to an integer without using built in methods like string.atoi or int()? curious one

    subjective ones

    do you use tabs or spaces, which ones are better?
    Ok, so should I add something else or is the list comprehensive?

    [–]d4rch0nPythonistamancer 50 指標 3 年前
    I'll try my hand at a few:

    1 What are Python decorators and how would you use them?
    They extend past python, and are functions that take a function as an argument and return functions. A simple example might be a decorator that takes a function, prints its args to stdout, prints the return value to stdout, then returns that return value. The syntax in Python is usually done with the @decorator_name above a function definition.

    2 How would you setup many projects where each one uses different versions of Python and third party libraries?
    virtualenv

    3 What is PEP8 and do you follow its guidelines when you're coding?
    A coding standard, and I try to. pylint is a great help.

    4 How are arguments passed – by reference of by value?
    Probably all through reference, but I'm not sure about primitives under the hood. Anyone know this? If you pass f(12, 81), are those by value?

    5 Do you know what list and dict comprehensions are? Can you give an example?
    ways to construct a list or dict through an expression and an iterable.

    >>> x = [(a, a+1) for a in range(5)]
    >>> y = dict((a,b) for a,b in x)
    >>> x
    [(0, 1), (1, 2), (2, 3), (3, 4), (4, 5)]
    >>> y
    {0: 1, 1: 2, 2: 3, 3: 4, 4: 5}

    6 Show me three different ways of fetching every third item in the list
    [x for i, x in enumerate(thelist) if i%3 == 0]

    for i, x in enumerate(thelist):
    if i % 3: continue
    yield x

    a = 0
    for x in thelist:
    if a%3: continue
    yield x
    a += 1


    7 Do you know what is the difference between lists and tuples? Can you give me an example for their usage?
    Tuples are immutable. A tuple might be a good type for a coordinate inst var in some class. Lists are ordered collections, but with a tuple, each index generally has a certain meaning, so coord[0] is the x coordinate and coord[1] is y.

    8 Do you know the difference between range and xrange?
    Range returns a list of the full sequence while xrange generates each element iteratively like you would with the "yield" keyword. This changes in python3, and the default behavior is to yield like xrange. I think xrange is out.

    9 Tell me a few differences between Python 2.x and 3.x?
    The previous answer. print is no longer a statement and is just a function ("print 5" won't work anymore and you need parens), they added the Ellipse object (...). That's all I know off hand.

    10 The with statement and its usage.
    It's for context management, and you can define your own that implement enter init and exit if it might help. This is very useful for opening and closing files automatically (with open(foo) as bar:)

    11 How to avoid cyclical imports without having to resort to imports in functions?
    Refactoring your code? Not sure. When I've ran into this I generally have restructured functions into different modules which ended up cleaning everything anyway.

    12 what's wrong with import all?
    You can overwrite functions and this can be dangerous especially if you don't maintain that module.

    rewrite.py def open(foo): print('aint happening!')

    test.py from rewrite import * z = open('test.txt')

    prints aint happening!

    13 Why is the GIL important?
    It has to do with preventing true multithreaded bytecode, and has been an issue forever. I think python bytecode execution is protected with the Global Interpreter Lock so every bc execution is atomic. Explained best here: http://wiki.python.org/moin/GlobalInterpreterLock

    You might want to consider writing a multithreaded module or program in C and wrapping it with Python if this is an issue for you.

    14 What are "special" methods (<foo>), how they work, etc
    These are methods like str and gt, which override behavior of other global functions like str() and operators like >. enter and exit will be used with the with keyword, and there are many more like getattr. Overriding getattr can result in some very unpredictable behavior with a dynamic language like Python, and you should be very careful when you use magic like that.

    15 can you manipulate functions as first-class objects?
    Yes. eg. they can be passed as args to functions.

    16 the difference between "class Foo" and "class Foo(object)"
    class Foo(object) inherits from the new-style object. I don't know the specifics, but here's stack overflow: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/4015417/python-class-inherits-object

    17 how to read a 8GB file in python?
    Operate on chunks, and not one byte at a time. Be wary about the RAM of the host machine. What is the nature of the data such that it is so large? How are you operating on it? What are you returning? Are you accessing it sequentially or randomly? There's a lot more to ask than to answer here.

    18 what don't you like about Python?
    It's slow, and it can be too dynamic for certain tasks in my opinion. It is not compiled. It can be very unpredictable. People abuse the flexibility of it sometimes.

    19 can you convert ascii characters to an integer without using built in methods like string.atoi or int()? curious one
    struct.unpack("<I", foo)[0]

    ord, chr

    20 do you use tabs or spaces, which ones are better?
    Spaces. Stick to PEP8 when possible.

    Ok, so should I add something else or is the list comprehensive?
    generators/yield keyword
    what is multiple inheritance / does python have multiple inheritance
    is Python compiled, interpreted and/or emulated
    What differentiates Python from Ruby
    How do you debug your Python? What's pdb and how do you use it?
    How do you modify global variables in a function? Why should you avoid this?
    Use of the re module... what is it, give an example, etc.

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  • 原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/IDRI/p/7197780.html
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