From the course specifications, you are expected to be understand the following skills in Python by the end of your HSC. They have been broken down further for clarity, so make sure you have a read of the following and use your time wisely at the beginning of the course to get your head around some of this!
Conditional Statements: Understand how to use if
, elif
, and else
statements to control the flow of a program.
Loops: Master the use of for
loops and while
loops for repeating tasks.
Loop Control Statements: Learn about break
, continue
, and pass
to manage the behavior of loops.
Comprehensions: Use list comprehensions and dictionary comprehensions for creating new sequences.
Error Handling: Implement try
and except
to manage exceptions.
Global Variables: Variables defined outside of a function and accessible from anywhere in the code. Understand their scope and usage.
Local Variables: Variables defined within a function or block, accessible only within that function. Comprehend their scope and limitations.
The global
Keyword: Learn how to declare a variable as global within a function to modify it outside of the function's local scope.
Integers (int
) – Whole numbers (e.g., 10
, -5
, 42
)
Floating-point numbers (float
) – Decimal numbers (e.g., 3.14
, -0.5
, 2.0
)
Booleans (bool
) – True
or False
Strings (str
) – Text data enclosed in quotes (e.g., "Hello"
, 'Python'
)
Lists (list
) – Ordered, mutable collection (e.g., [1, 2, 3]
, ["apple", "banana"]
)
Tuples (tuple
) – Ordered, immutable collection (e.g., (1, 2, 3)
, ("red", "blue")
)
Dictionaries (dict
) – Key-value pairs (e.g., {"name": "Alice", "age": 25}
)
Sets (set
) – Unordered, unique elements (e.g., {1, 2, 3}
)
Defining a function – Use def
keyword (def function_name():
).
Calling a function – Use the function name followed by ()
.
Parameters – Pass values into a function (def greet(name):
).
Return statement – Send a value back using return
.
Default parameters – Provide a default value (def greet(name="Guest")
).
Modules – Files containing Python code (.py
) that can be imported.
Importing Modules – Use import module_name
.
Using from
Import – Import specific functions or classes (from module import function
).
Built-in Modules – Pre-installed modules like math
, random
, datetime
.
Third-Party Libraries – Installed using pip
(e.g., numpy
, pandas
).
Creating a Module – Write functions in a .py
file and import them.
Packages – Collections of modules organised in directories with __init__.py
.
Opening a File – Use open("filename", "mode")
.
Modes – 'r'
(read), 'w'
(write), 'a'
(append), 'x'
(create).
Reading a File – Use .read()
, .readline()
, or .readlines()
.
Writing to a File – Use .write("text")
.
Appending to a File – Use mode 'a'
to add content without deleting existing data.
Closing a File – Always use .close()
or with open() as f:
for automatic closing.
Handling Exceptions – Use try-except
to catch file errors.
Classes – Blueprints for creating objects (class ClassName:
).
Objects – Instances of a class (obj = ClassName()
).
Attributes – Variables stored in an object (self.attribute = value
).
Methods – Functions inside a class (def method(self):
).
__init__
Method – Constructor for initialising attributes.
self
Keyword – Refers to the instance of the class.
Creating & Using Objects – Instantiate and access attributes/methods.
Inheritance – A class can inherit attributes and methods from another class (class Child(Parent):
).
Polymorphism – Different classes can have methods with the same name but different behavior.
Encapsulation – Restrict direct access to data using private/protected attributes (_protected
, __private
).