Python: Difference between revisions

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* [http://www.greenteapress.com/thinkpython/ Think Python (Free Ebook)]
* [http://www.greenteapress.com/thinkpython/ Think Python (Free Ebook)]
* [https://www.liaoxuefeng.com/wiki/0014316089557264a6b348958f449949df42a6d3a2e542c000 Python教程]
* [https://www.liaoxuefeng.com/wiki/0014316089557264a6b348958f449949df42a6d3a2e542c000 Python教程]
* [https://richardson.byu.edu/624/lpython/PythonforRusers.pdf Python for R users]
* [https://github.com/rwepa/DataDemo/blob/master/Python_Programming_Lee.pdf Python 程式設計-李明昌 免費電子書]
* [https://github.com/jakevdp/PythonDataScienceHandbook Python Data Science Handbook] by Jake VanderPlas
* [https://github.com/jakevdp/PythonDataScienceHandbook Python Data Science Handbook] by Jake VanderPlas
* [https://docs.python-guide.org/ The Hitchhiker’s Guide to Python!]
* [https://docs.python-guide.org/ The Hitchhiker’s Guide to Python!]
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* [https://www.makeuseof.com/learn-to-code-python/ Learn to Code Python Free With These Courses and Apps]
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/learn-to-code-python/ Learn to Code Python Free With These Courses and Apps]
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/python-built-in-functions-methods-you-should-know/ 20 Python Functions You Should Know]
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/python-built-in-functions-methods-you-should-know/ 20 Python Functions You Should Know]
=== Python for R users ===
* [https://blog.stephenturner.us/p/python-for-r-users Stephen Turner]
* [https://richardson.byu.edu/624/lpython/PythonforRusers.pdf Chandan Routray]


=== Python end of life ===
=== Python end of life ===
Line 27: Line 31:


== Install, setup ==
== Install, setup ==
=== Multiple python versions ===
 
[https://opensource.com/article/20/4/pyenv How to use pyenv to run multiple versions of Python on a Mac]
=== Alias ===
[https://www.freecodecamp.org/news/how-to-fix-python-installation-errors-on-mac/ How to Fix Common Python Installation Errors on macOS]
<pre>
nano ~/.bash_profile
# or
nano ~/.zshrc
</pre>
Add the following line
<pre>
alias python=python3
</pre>
 
=== Ubuntu ===
[https://www.howtogeek.com/install-latest-python-version-on-ubuntu/ How to Install the Latest Python Version on Ubuntu Linux]


=== Mac ===
=== Mac ===
Line 45: Line 62:
python -m pip install -U pip
python -m pip install -U pip
</pre>
</pre>
* On my 2018 mac, the default python3 is at "/usr/local/bin/pyhton3". In "~/Library/Python" directory, it has "2.7", "3.8" and "3.9".
* On my 2021 mac Ventura, the default python3 is at "/usr/bin". But when we try to run 'python3', it asked to install the command line developer tools. After the installation we can use python3. Still, there is no "~/Library/Python" directory.


== IDE ==
== Multiple python versions ==
* [https://www.jetbrains.com/pycharm/ PyCharm]
[https://www.freecodecamp.org/news/manage-multiple-python-versions-and-virtual-environments-venv-pyenv-pyvenv-a29fb00c296f/ How to manage multiple Python versions and virtual environments] 2018.  
** Pycharm was used by [https://youtu.be/rfscVS0vtbw Learn Python - Full Course for Beginners ] (freeCodeCamp.org)
 
** [https://stackoverflow.com/questions/7681431/run-python-source-code-line-by-line Run a code line by line] by changing the keyboard shortcuts from Settings -> Keymap -> Other.
=== conda/mamba ===
** To run the current file, right click the tab and select Run XXX. (Frustrated)
<pre>
* [http://thonny.org/ Thonny]
conda create --name myenv python=3.6.12
* [https://www.spyder-ide.org/ Spyder]
conda activate myenv
* RStudio
** Create a file (xxx.py)
** Click the terminal tab. Type 'python' (or ipython3).  
** Use Ctrl/CMD + Alt + Enter to run your python code line by line or a chunk.


=== Visual Studio Code ===
mamba create --name myenv python=3.6.12
The ipynb file can contain figures.
mamba activate myenv
</pre>


[https://github.com/immunogenomics/harmony2019/tree/master/notebooks This (Harmony Manuscript)] has several notebook files where the code in ipynb files were written in R, not Python.
=== pyenv ===
* https://github.com/pyenv/pyenv
* [https://github.com/posit-dev/positron/wiki Positron wiki]
* [https://opensource.com/article/20/4/pyenv How to use pyenv to run multiple versions of Python on a Mac]
* [https://ubuntushell.com/install-multiple-python-versions-on-ubuntu/ How to Install Multiple Python Versions on Ubuntu Using Pyenv]


I can use [https://stackoverflow.com/a/61707097 vsc] to open a ipynb file.
<pre>
pyenv install 3.6.12
pyenv virtualenv 3.6.12 myenv
pyenv activate myenv
</pre>


Conversion
=== virtualenv ===
* Rmd to ipynb
<pre>
** [https://github.com/mkearney/rmd2jupyter rmd2jupyter] package
pip install virtualenv
** [https://codes.correlaid.org/first%20steps/r/jupyter/2021/03/02/Convert-Rmd-files-to-Jupyter-Notebook.html How to convert Rmd to ipynb notebook]: '''Jupytext''' and '''notedown'''.
virtualenv -p python3.6 myenv
** [https://vatlab.github.io/sos-docs/index.html Script of Scripts (SoS) ]
source myenv/bin/activate
* ipynb to Rmd
</pre>
** [https://rmarkdown.rstudio.com/docs/reference/convert_ipynb.html  Convert ipynb to Rmd]
 
=== venv (python 3.3+) ===
<ul>
<li>For Python 3, '''venv''' is generally more commonly used because it is included in the Python standard library starting from Python 3.3, making it more convenient and straightforward to use. However, '''virtualenv''' is still popular, especially among developers who need more advanced features or compatibility with older Python versions. It offers more flexibility and can be used with both Python 2 and Python 3.
<ul>
<li>The primary purpose of '''venv''' is to create isolated environments for managing Python packages and dependencies, but not python itself. For instance, <syntaxhighlight lang='sh' inline>python3.10 -m venv myenv</syntaxhighlight>.
<li>On the other hand, '''virtualenv''' can indeed be used to control the Python version for your virtual environments. For instance, <syntaxhighlight lang='sh' inline>virtualenv -p /usr/bin/python3.10 myenv</syntaxhighlight>.
</ul>


=== nbdev ===
<li>[https://www.howtogeek.com/start-project-python-virtual-environments/ Don’t Make This Mistake When You Start Your Python Project]
* [https://github.com/fastai/nbdev nbdev]
* [https://towardsdatascience.com/jupyter-is-now-a-full-fledged-ide-c99218d33095 Jupyter is now a full-fledged IDE] Literate programming is now a reality through nbdev and the new visual debugger for Jupyter.


=== Emacs ===
<li>[https://python-code.dev/articles/236456323 Understanding Python's Virtual Environment Landscape: venv vs. virtualenv, Wrapper Mania, and Dependency Control]
[https://stackoverflow.com/a/7053298 Emacs Shell mode: how to send region to shell?]


== JupyterLab ==
<li>Here is another example
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
~/github/PUREE$ python3 -m venv myenv
The virtual environment was not created successfully because ensurepip is not
available.  On Debian/Ubuntu systems, you need to install the python3-venv
package using the following command.


=== JupyterLab install methods ===
    apt install python3.10-venv
* https://pypi.org/project/jupyterlab/
...
* https://github.com/dylkot/cNMF/#analyze_simulated_example_data.ipynb
~/github/PUREE$ sudo apt install python3.10-venv
<pre>
~/github/PUREE$ python3 -m venv myenv
conda install --yes jupyterlab && conda clean --yes --all
</pre>


=== IPython shell ===
~/github/PUREE$ source myenv/bin/activate
<ul>
(myenv) ~/github/PUREE$ which python
<li>[https://opensource.com/article/21/3/ipython-shell-jupyter-notebooks Why I love using the IPython shell and Jupyter notebooks]
/home/brb/github/PUREE/myenv/bin/python
<pre>
(myenv) ~/github/PUREE$ pip freeze > requirements.txt
ipython  # Shell
(myenv) ~/github/PUREE$ deactivate
~/github/PUREE$


jupyter notebook # auto open the browser
~/github/PUREE$ ls myenv/bin
</pre>
activate      activate.fish  f2py  f2py3.10    pip  pip3.10  python3    wheel
</li>
activate.csh  Activate.ps1  f2py3  normalizer  pip3  python  python3.10
<li>[https://medium.com/analytics-vidhya/why-switch-to-jupyterlab-from-jupyter-notebook-c6d98362945b Why switch to JupyterLab from jupyter-notebook?]
</syntaxhighlight>
</li>
<li>[https://stackoverflow.com/a/52392304 What is the difference between Jupyter Notebook and JupyterLab?]
</li>
</li>
</ul>
</ul>


=== Cloud Jupyter ===
== Online compiler ==
<ul>
* [https://www.python.org/shell/ Python.org]. It seems this has most modules.
<li>https://jupyter.org/, [https://stackoverflow.com/a/52392304 What is the difference between Jupyter Notebook and JupyterLab?] (Install R kernel for Jupyter Notebook)
* [https://www.tutorialspoint.com/online_python_compiler.php Tutorialspoint]
<pre>
* [https://onecompiler.com/python OneCompiler]
pip3 install jupyterlab
jupyter-lab
# http://localhost:8888/lab
# The current directory will be available on the file browser panel in JupyterLab.
</pre>
</li>
</ul>
* [https://www.dataschool.io/cloud-services-for-jupyter-notebook/ Six easy ways to run your Jupyter Notebook in the cloud]
* [https://dzone.com/articles/using-r-on-jupyternbspnotebook Using R on Jupyter Notebook]
* [http://www.win-vector.com/blog/2020/03/cross-methods-are-a-leak-variance-trade-off/ Cross-Methods are a Leak/Variance Trade-Off]
* [https://opensource.com/article/20/11/daily-journal-jupyter Journal five minutes a day with Jupyter]
* [https://www.dataquest.io/blog/jupyter-notebook-tutorial/ How to Use Jupyter Notebook in 2020: A Beginner’s Tutorial]
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/get-started-with-jupyter-notebook/ Get Started With Jupyter Notebook: A Tutorial]
* [https://datalya.com/blog/python-data-science/jupyter-notebook-command-mode-keyboard-shortcuts Jupyter Notebook Command Mode Keyboard Shortcuts]
** Enter: edit mode
** Esc: command mode
** Ctrl-Enter: run cell
** Shift-­Enter: run current cell, and select cell below
** Alt-Enter: run cell, insert a cell below
** Y: to code
** M: to markdown
** 1: to insert heading 1
** 2,3,4,5,6: to insert heading 2,3,4,5,6


=== conda + Jupyter ===
== IDE ==
[https://stackoverflow.com/a/58068850 How to use Jupyter notebooks in a conda environment?] Option 1 works for me.
* [https://www.jetbrains.com/pycharm/ PyCharm]
** Pycharm was used by [https://youtu.be/rfscVS0vtbw Learn Python - Full Course for Beginners ] (freeCodeCamp.org)
** [https://stackoverflow.com/questions/7681431/run-python-source-code-line-by-line Run a code line by line] by changing the keyboard shortcuts from Settings -> Keymap -> Other.
** To run the current file, right click the tab and select Run XXX. (Frustrated)
* [http://thonny.org/ Thonny]
* [https://www.spyder-ide.org/ Spyder]
* RStudio
** Create a file (xxx.py)
** Click the terminal tab. Type 'python' (or ipython3).
** Use Ctrl/CMD + Alt + Enter to run your python code line by line or a chunk.


== Cheat sheet ==
=== Visual Studio Code ===
* http://datasciencefree.com/python.pdf
* [https://youtu.be/h1sAzPojKMg Get started with Jupyter Notebooks in less than 4 minutes] (video)
* https://s3.amazonaws.com/assets.datacamp.com/blog_assets/PythonForDataScience.pdf
* [https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/datascience/jupyter-notebooks Jupyter Notebooks in VS Code], [https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/languages/python Python in Visual Studio Code]
* [https://ithome.com.tw/news/156795 VS Code Python擴充套件開始不預裝Jupyter擴充套件]


== The Most Frequently Asked Questions About Python Programming ==
The ipynb file can contain figures.  
https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/python-programming-faq/


== Running ==
[https://github.com/immunogenomics/harmony2019/tree/master/notebooks This (Harmony Manuscript)] has several notebook files where the code in ipynb files were written in R, not Python.
=== Interactively ===
Use Ctrl+d to quit.


=== How to run a python script file ===
I can use [https://stackoverflow.com/a/61707097 vsc] to open a ipynb file.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
python mypython.py
</syntaxhighlight>


=== Run python statements from a command line ===
Conversion
Use '''-c''' (command) option.
* Rmd to ipynb
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
** [https://github.com/mkearney/rmd2jupyter rmd2jupyter] package
python -c "import psutil"
** [https://codes.correlaid.org/first%20steps/r/jupyter/2021/03/02/Convert-Rmd-files-to-Jupyter-Notebook.html How to convert Rmd to ipynb notebook]: '''Jupytext''' and '''notedown'''.
</syntaxhighlight>
** [https://vatlab.github.io/sos-docs/index.html Script of Scripts (SoS) ]
* ipynb to Rmd
** [https://rmarkdown.rstudio.com/docs/reference/convert_ipynb.html  Convert ipynb to Rmd]


=== run python source code line by line ===
=== nbdev ===
[https://stackoverflow.com/a/7681464 run python source code line by line]
* [https://github.com/fastai/nbdev nbdev]
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* [https://towardsdatascience.com/jupyter-is-now-a-full-fledged-ide-c99218d33095 Jupyter is now a full-fledged IDE] Literate programming is now a reality through nbdev and the new visual debugger for Jupyter.
python -m pdb <script.py>
</syntaxhighlight>


== Install a new module ==
=== Emacs ===
See an example of installing [[Anders2013#HTSeq|HTSeq]].
[https://stackoverflow.com/a/7053298 Emacs Shell mode: how to send region to shell?]
=== PyPI/Python Package Index ===
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Python_Package_Index
* [https://pypi.python.org/pypi The Python Package Index (PyPI)] is the definitive list of packages (or modules)
* [https://opensource.com/article/20/3/pip-linux-mac-windows How to install pip to manage PyPI packages easily]
* [https://opensource.com/article/19/9/pypi-guide Introducing the guide to 7 essential PyPI libraries and how to use them]


=== pip ===
== JupyterLab ==
'''pip''', use PyPI as the default source for packages and their dependencies.
* [https://stackoverflow.com/a/52392304 What is the difference between Jupyter Notebook and JupyterLab?]
* Jupyter Notebook (classic) and JupyterLab are both web-based interactive computing environments for working with data and code, but they have some key differences in terms of their user interface, features, and capabilities.
* JupyterLab is a more modern and powerful tool than Jupyter Notebook, and is recommended for users who want a more flexible and feature-rich interface for working with data and code. However, Jupyter Notebook remains a popular and widely used tool, particularly for working with Jupyter notebooks.
* [https://towardsdatascience.com/7-reasons-why-you-should-use-jupyterlab-for-data-science-7c2a3db8755a 7 Reasons Why You Should Use Jupyterlab for Data Science]


As an example, [https://pypi.org/project/motioneye/ motionEye] can be installed by pip install or pip2 install; see its [https://github.com/ccrisan/motioneye/wiki/Installation wiki] and source code on Github.
=== Some resources ===
* [https://www.dataschool.io/cloud-services-for-jupyter-notebook/ Six easy ways to run your Jupyter Notebook in the cloud]
* [http://www.win-vector.com/blog/2020/03/cross-methods-are-a-leak-variance-trade-off/ Cross-Methods are a Leak/Variance Trade-Off]
* [https://opensource.com/article/20/11/daily-journal-jupyter Journal five minutes a day with Jupyter]
* [https://www.dataquest.io/blog/jupyter-notebook-tutorial/ How to Use Jupyter Notebook in 2020: A Beginner’s Tutorial]
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/get-started-with-jupyter-notebook/ Get Started With Jupyter Notebook: A Tutorial]
* [https://datalya.com/blog/python-data-science/jupyter-notebook-command-mode-keyboard-shortcuts Jupyter Notebook Command Mode Keyboard Shortcuts]
** Enter: edit mode
** Esc: command mode
** Ctrl-Enter: run cell
** '''Shift-­Enter''': run current cell, and select cell below
** '''Alt-Enter''': run cell, insert a cell below
** Y: to code
** M: to markdown
** 1: to insert heading 1
** 2,3,4,5,6: to insert heading 2,3,4,5,6
 
=== Online tools rendering ipynb ===
* Github
* NBViewer (nbviewer.jupyter.org)
* Google Colaboratory (colab.research.google.com)
* Binder (mybinder.org)
* Kaggle Notebooks (kaggle.com)
* Azure Notebooks (notebooks.azure.com)
* Datalore (datalore.jetbrains.com)
* Deepnote (deepnote.com)
* CoCalc (cocalc.com)
 
=== Different installation methods ===
<ul>
<li>https://pypi.org/project/jupyterlab/
<li>https://jupyterlab.readthedocs.io/en/stable/getting_started/installation.html
<li>[https://www.howtoforge.com/guide-to-install-jupyterlab-on-debian-12/ Guide to Install JupyterLab on Debian 12]. Hint: require node.js. '''Node.js''', is used for building and managing JupyterLab’s '''JavaScript''' dependencies. Many Jupyter extensions require having working '''npm''' (which comes with Node.js) and '''jlpm''' commands, which are required for downloading useful Jupyter extensions or other JavaScript dependencies. Node.js itself is built with '''GYP''', a cross-platform build tool written in Python, which is another reason why Python is needed.
<li>[https://www.howtoforge.com/how-to-install-jupyterlab-on-rocky-linux-9/ How to Install JupyterLab on Rocky Linux 9]
<syntaxhighlight lang='sh'>
mkdir -p ~/project; cd ~/project
python3 -m venv myenv    # '-m venv' means to run venv module as a script
source myenv/bin/activate
pip3 install jupyter
which jupyter
jupyter --version
 
jupyter server --generate-config
jupyter server password


<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
jupyter lab --generate-config
sudo apt-get install python-pip
jupyter lab --show-config
pip --version
pip install SomePackage
pip show --files SomePackage
pip install --upgrade SomePackage
pip install --upgrade https://github.com/Lasagne/Lasagne/archive/master.zip
pip install ‐‐upgrade pip  # Upgrade itself
pip uninstall SomePackage


sudo apt install python3-pip
sudo firewall-cmd --add-port=8888/tcp
pip3 --version
jupyter lab --ip 192.168.5.120
# http://192.168.5.120:8888/
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
<Li>[https://www.linuxcapable.com/how-to-install-jupyter-notebook-on-ubuntu-linux/ How to Install Jupyter Notebook on Ubuntu 24.04, 22.04 or 20.04]
</ul>


==== List installed packages and their versions, location ====
=== JupyterLab Desktop ===
* https://github.com/jupyterlab/jupyterlab-desktop
* [https://blog.jupyter.org/introducing-the-new-jupyterlab-desktop-bca1982bdb23 Introducing the new JupyterLab Desktop!] 2/9/2023
 
=== pip/pip3 Jupyter ===
<ul>
<li>https://jupyter.org/
<pre>
<pre>
pip3 list -v
which python3
# /usr/bin/python3
 
pip3 install jupyterlab
jupyter-lab
# http://localhost:8888/lab
# The current directory will be available on the file browser panel in JupyterLab.
</pre>
</pre>
On my Ubuntu 20.04, the packages installed by '''pip3''' is located in ''~/.local/lib/python3.8/site-packages/''. It does not matter where I issued the ''pip3 install'' command.
On Mac, it shows the following when I run 'pip3 install jupyterlab'
{{Pre}}
Installing collected packages: pip
  WARNING: The scripts pip, pip3 and pip3.9 are installed in '/Users/XXX/Library/Python/3.9/bin' which is not on PATH.
  Consider adding this directory to PATH or, if you prefer to suppress this warning, use --no-warn-script-location.
Successfully installed pip-23.0
WARNING: You are using pip version 21.2.4; however, version 23.0 is available.
You should consider upgrading via the '/Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/usr/bin/python3 -m pip install --upgrade pip' command.
</pre>
That is, I need to use '''/Users/XXX/Library/Python/3.9/bin/jupyter-lab''' to launch '''jupyter-lab''' OR add the path to ".zshrc"; see [https://jupyterlab.readthedocs.io/en/stable/getting_started/installation.html jupyterlab doc].
</li>
</ul>


==== The danger of upgrading pip ====
=== conda + Jupyter ===
* [https://stackoverflow.com/questions/49836676/error-after-upgrading-pip-cannot-import-name-main Error after upgrading pip]: cannot import name 'main'
* [https://stackoverflow.com/a/58068850 How to use Jupyter notebooks in a conda environment?] Option 1 works for me.
* [https://askubuntu.com/a/783442 You should consider upgrading via the 'pip install --upgrade pip' command]
* https://github.com/dylkot/cNMF/#analyze_simulated_example_data.ipynb
<pre>
conda install --yes jupyterlab && conda clean --yes --all
</pre>


==== Don't use sudo + pip ====
=== IPython shell ===
https://askubuntu.com/questions/802544/is-sudo-pip-install-still-a-broken-practice
<ul>
<li>[https://opensource.com/article/21/3/ipython-shell-jupyter-notebooks Why I love using the IPython shell and Jupyter notebooks]
<pre>
ipython  # Shell


==== "--user" option in pip ====
jupyter notebook # auto open the browser
https://github.com/pypa/pip/issues/4186
<pre style="white-space: pre-wrap; /* CSS 3 */ white-space: -moz-pre-wrap; /* Mozilla, since 1999 */ white-space: -pre-wrap; /* Opera 4-6 */ white-space: -o-pre-wrap; /* Opera 7 */ word-wrap: break-word; /* IE 5.5+ */ " >
$ pip install Pygments
...
OSError: [Errno 13] Permission denied: '/usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/Pygments-2.2.0.dist-info'
/usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/pip-9.0.1-py2.7.egg/pip/_vendor/requests/packages/urllib3/util/ssl_.py:122: InsecurePlatformWarning: A true SSLContext object is not available. This prevents urllib3 from configuring SSL appropriately and may cause certain SSL connections to fail. You can upgrade to a newer version of Python to solve this. For more information, see https://urllib3.readthedocs.io/en/latest/security.html#insecureplatformwarning.
  InsecurePlatformWarning
$ pip install --user Pygments
Collecting Pygments
  Using cached Pygments-2.2.0-py2.py3-none-any.whl
Installing collected packages: Pygments
Successfully installed Pygments-2.2.0
</pre>
</pre>
</li>
<li>[https://medium.com/analytics-vidhya/why-switch-to-jupyterlab-from-jupyter-notebook-c6d98362945b Why switch to JupyterLab from jupyter-notebook?]
</li>
</ul>


==== virtualenv ====
=== Extract python code from Jupyter notebook ===
Python “Virtual Environments” allows us to install a Python package in an isolated location, rather than installing it globally.
* [https://stackoverflow.com/a/56832942 Get only the code out of Jupyter Notebook]. '''nbconvert''' or '''jq'''. Or File -> Download as -> Python (.py) — this should export all code cells as single .py file.
<ul>
* [https://win-vector.com/2022/04/30/separating-code-from-presentation-in-jupyter-notebooks/ Separating Code from Presentation in Jupyter Notebooks]
<li>[https://www.ostechnix.com/manage-python-packages-using-pip/ How To Manage Python Packages Using Pip]
 
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
=== Execute Javascript in a Jupyter Notebook ===
# Python 2
[https://linuxtldr.com/run-javascript-jupyter-notebook/ How to Execute Javascript in a Jupyter Notebook on Linux]
$ sudo pip install virtualenv
 
$ virtualenv <DIR_NAME>
=== Google colab ===
$ source <DIR_NAME>/bin/activate
* https://colab.research.google.com/
(<DIR_NAME>) ~$ which python
* An example [https://github.com/MariaNattestad/pca-on-genotypes Mini bioinformatics project: PCA on genotypes]
....
$ deactivate


# Python 3, https://docs.python.org/3/tutorial/venv.html
=== R programming ===
$ python3 -m venv <DIR_NAME>
[https://developers.refinitiv.com/en/article-catalog/article/setup-jupyter-notebook-r Setup Jupyter Notebook for R] or [https://dzone.com/articles/using-r-on-jupyternbspnotebook Using R on Jupyter Notebook]
$ source <DIR_NAME>/bin/activate
 
(<DIR_NAME>) ~$ which python
To use R in JupyterLab, you will first need to install the IRkernel package in your R environment using the following command: 
....
<pre>
$ deactivate
install.packages('IRkernel')
</syntaxhighlight>
</pre>
</li>
 
<li>
Once you have installed the IRkernel package, you can register it with JupyterLab using the following command in your R console:  
[https://youtu.be/N5vscPTWKOk Python Tutorial: virtualenv and why you should use virtual environments]. '''pip freeze'''.
<pre>
<pre>
pip list
IRkernel::installspec()
pip freeze --local > requirements.txt
...
pip install -r requirements.txt
pip list
</pre>
</pre>
</li>
After you have registered the kernel, you can start a new Jupyter notebook or JupyterLab session and select the "R" kernel from the kernel dropdown menu. This will allow you to run R code in JupyterLab, including data analysis, visualization, and other tasks.
</ul>
 
* [https://opensource.com/article/20/10/learn-python-ebook Learn Python by creating a video game]
=== Xeus-R: a future-proof Jupyter kernel for R ===
* [https://www.pythonforbeginners.com/basics/how-to-use-python-virtualenv How to use Python virtualenv]
[https://blog.jupyter.org/meet-xeus-r-a-future-proof-jupyter-kernel-for-r-1adc5fdd09ab Meet Xeus-R: a future-proof Jupyter kernel for R]
* [https://www.dabapps.com/blog/introduction-to-pip-and-virtualenv-python/ A non-magical introduction to Pip and Virtualenv for Python beginners]
* Alternative to ''virtualenv'' we need to add "--user" to the '''pip''' command. See the installation guide of  [https://lasagne.readthedocs.io/en/latest/user/installation.html#python-pip lasagne] or [https://stackoverflow.com/a/15912917 easy_install or pip as a limited user?]


==== pipx ====
== Run Jupyter Notebooks on an Apple M1 Mac ==
* [https://www.ostechnix.com/pipx-install-and-run-python-applications-in-isolated-environments/ Pipx – Install And Run Python Applications In Isolated Environments]
* [https://blog.roboflow.com/how-to-run-jupyter-notebooks-on-a-mac-m1/ How to Run Jupyter Notebooks on an Apple M1 Mac]
* [https://opensource.com/article/21/7/python-pipx Run Python applications in virtual environments]
* [https://towardsdatascience.com/how-to-easily-set-up-python-on-any-m1-mac-5ea885b73fab How to Easily Set Up Python on Any M1 Mac]
* [https://alexmanrique.com/blog/development/2021/03/05/installing-jupyter-in-macbook-air-m1.html Installing Jupyter in Macbook Air M1]


=== python setup.py ===
== Cheat sheet ==
If a package has been bundled by its creator using the standard approach to
* http://datasciencefree.com/python.pdf
bundling modules (with Python’s distutils tool), all you need to do is download
* https://s3.amazonaws.com/assets.datacamp.com/blog_assets/PythonForDataScience.pdf
the package, uncompress it and type:
 
== The Most Frequently Asked Questions About Python Programming ==
https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/python-programming-faq/
 
== Running ==
=== Interactively ===
Use Ctrl+d to quit.
 
=== How to run a python script file ===
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
python setup.py build
python mypython.py
sudo python setup.py install
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
For Python 2, the packages are installed under '''/usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/'''.
 
=== Run python statements from a command line ===
Use '''-c''' (command) option.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
$ ls -l /usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/
python -c "import psutil"
total 12
-rw-r--r-- 1 root staff  273 Jan 12 13:45 easy-install.pth
drwxr-sr-x 4 root staff 4096 Jan 12 13:45 HTSeq-0.6.1p1-py2.7-linux-x86_64.egg
drwxr-sr-x 4 root staff 4096 Jan 12 13:42 pysam-0.9.1.4-py2.7-linux-x86_64.egg
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


=== Get a list of installed modules ===
=== run python source code line by line ===
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/739993/how-can-i-get-a-list-of-locally-installed-python-modules
[https://stackoverflow.com/a/7681464 run python source code line by line]
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pydoc modules
python -m pdb <script.py>
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
Not helpful. See the '''pip list''' command.


=== Check installed packages' versions ===
== Install a new module ==
If you install packages through '''pip''', use
* See an example of installing [[Anders2013#HTSeq|HTSeq]].
 
=== Module != Package ===
* A Python '''module''' is a single file containing Python code, while a '''package''' is a collection of modules organized in a specific way.
* A module has a filename with the suffix '''.py''' added.
 
=== PyPI/Python Package Index ===
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Python_Package_Index
* [https://pypi.python.org/pypi The Python Package Index (PyPI)] is the definitive list of packages (or modules)
* [https://opensource.com/article/20/3/pip-linux-mac-windows How to install pip to manage PyPI packages easily]
* [https://opensource.com/article/19/9/pypi-guide Introducing the guide to 7 essential PyPI libraries and how to use them]
 
=== pip ===
'''pip''', use PyPI as the default source for packages and their dependencies.
 
As an example, [https://pypi.org/project/motioneye/ motionEye] can be installed by pip install or pip2 install; see its [https://github.com/ccrisan/motioneye/wiki/Installation wiki] and source code on Github.
 
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
$ pip list
sudo apt-get install python-pip
...
pip --version
pyOpenSSL (0.13.1)
pip install SomePackage
pyparsing (2.0.1)
pip show --files SomePackage
pysam (0.10.0)
pip install --upgrade SomePackage
python-dateutil (1.5)
pip install --upgrade https://github.com/Lasagne/Lasagne/archive/master.zip
pytz (2013.7)
pip install ‐‐upgrade pip  # Upgrade itself
rudix (2016.12.13)
pip uninstall SomePackage
scipy (0.13.0b1)
 
setuptools (1.1.6)
sudo apt install python3-pip
singledispatch (3.4.0.3)
pip3 --version
six (1.4.1)
tornado (4.4.2)
vboxapi (1.0)
xattr (0.6.4)
zope.interface (4.1.1)
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


And more information about a package by using '''pip show PACKAGE'''.
==== Upgrade packages ====
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
[https://itsfoss.com/upgrade-pip-packages/ How to Upgrade Python Packages with Pip]
$ pip show pysam
Name: pysam
Version: 0.10.0
Summary: pysam
Home-page: https://github.com/pysam-developers/pysam
Author: Andreas Heger
Author-email: [email protected]
License: MIT
Location: /Users/XXX/Library/Python/2.7/lib/python/site-packages
Requires:
</syntaxhighlight>


The following method works whether the package is installed by source or binary package
==== requirements.txt ====
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<ul>
>>> import pysam
<li>[https://learnpython.com/blog/python-requirements-file/ The Python Requirements File and How to Create it]
>>> print(pysam.__version__)
<pre>
0.10.0
pip freeze > requirements.txt
>>> print pysam.__version__
</pre>
0.10.0
<li>An example
</syntaxhighlight>
<pre>
tensorflow==2.3.1
uvicorn==0.12.2
fastapi==0.63.0
</pre>
We can use '''pip freeze''' or '''pip list''' to verify available packages in an environment.
</ul>
 
==== List installed packages and their versions, location/directory ====
<pre>
pip3 list -v
</pre>
On my Ubuntu 20.04, the packages installed by '''pip3''' is located in ''~/.local/lib/python3.8/site-packages/''. It does not matter where I issued the ''pip3 install'' command.


See http://hammelllab.labsites.cshl.edu/tetoolkit-faq/
==== The danger of upgrading pip ====
* [https://stackoverflow.com/questions/49836676/error-after-upgrading-pip-cannot-import-name-main Error after upgrading pip]: cannot import name 'main'
* [https://askubuntu.com/a/783442 You should consider upgrading via the 'pip install --upgrade pip' command]


=== Install a specific version of package through pip ===
==== Don't use sudo + pip ====
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/5226311/installing-specific-package-versions-with-pip
https://askubuntu.com/questions/802544/is-sudo-pip-install-still-a-broken-practice


For example, pysam package was actively released. But the new release (0.11.2.2) may introduce some bugs. So I have to install an older version (0.10.0 works for me on Mac El Capitan and Sierra).  
==== "--user" option in pip ====
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* It is not recommended to use sudo before calling pip on Linux (actually can we?). This is because using sudo can cause permissions issues and can potentially damage your system12. Instead, you can install packages locally using the '''--user''' flag.  
$ sudo -H pip uninstall pysam
* [https://askubuntu.com/a/641194 Upgrade python packages with pip: use "sudo" or "--user"? ]
Uninstalling pysam-0.11.2.2:
* If you need to install packages system-wide, you can use virtual environments instead of sudo. Virtual environments allow you to create isolated Python environments that do not interfere with the system Python installation
......
* [https://github.com/pypa/pip/issues/4186 Permission denied: '/usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/pip']
$ sudo -H pip install pysam==0.10.0
<pre style="white-space: pre-wrap; /* CSS 3 */ white-space: -moz-pre-wrap; /* Mozilla, since 1999 */ white-space: -pre-wrap; /* Opera 4-6 */ white-space: -o-pre-wrap; /* Opera 7 */ word-wrap: break-word; /* IE 5.5+ */ " >
Collecting pysam==0.10.0
$ pip install Pygments
   Downloading pysam-0.10.0.tar.gz (2.3MB)
...
    100% |████████████████████████████████| 2.3MB 418kB/s
OSError: [Errno 13] Permission denied: '/usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/Pygments-2.2.0.dist-info'
Installing collected packages: pysam
/usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/pip-9.0.1-py2.7.egg/pip/_vendor/requests/packages/urllib3/util/ssl_.py:122: InsecurePlatformWarning: A true SSLContext object is not available. This prevents urllib3 from configuring SSL appropriately and may cause certain SSL connections to fail. You can upgrade to a newer version of Python to solve this. For more information, see https://urllib3.readthedocs.io/en/latest/security.html#insecureplatformwarning.
  Running setup.py install for pysam ... done
  InsecurePlatformWarning
Successfully installed pysam-0.10.0
$ pip install --user Pygments
</syntaxhighlight>
Collecting Pygments
   Using cached Pygments-2.2.0-py2.py3-none-any.whl
Installing collected packages: Pygments
Successfully installed Pygments-2.2.0
</pre>


=== warning: Please check the permissions and owner of that directory ===
==== pip -t option ====
I got this message when I use root to run the 'sudo pip install PACKAGE' command.  
We can force to install a package in user's directory (i.e. a package is already installed in the global directory /usr/lib/python3/dist-packages but some applications cannot find it). [https://stackoverflow.com/questions/17216689/pip-install-python-package-into-a-specific-directory-other-than-the-default-inst Pip install python package into a specific directory other than the default install location]
<pre>
pip3 install -t ~/.local/bin/python3.10/site-packages pytz
</pre>


See
==== virtualenv ====
* http://stackoverflow.com/questions/27870003/pip-install-please-check-the-permissions-and-owner-of-that-directory
Python “Virtual Environments” allows us to install a Python package in an isolated location, rather than installing it globally.
* http://askubuntu.com/questions/578869/python-pip-permissions
<ul>
<li>[https://www.ostechnix.com/manage-python-packages-using-pip/ How To Manage Python Packages Using Pip].  


=== python3-pip installed but pip3 command not found? ===
First Create a new project folder and cd to the project folder in your terminal.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
sudo apt-get remove python3-pip; sudo apt-get install python3-pip
# Python 2
$ sudo pip install virtualenv
$ virtualenv <DIR_NAME>
$ source <DIR_NAME>/bin/activate
(<DIR_NAME>) ~$ which python
....
$ deactivate
 
# For Python 3, https://docs.python.org/3/tutorial/venv.html it is more common to use venv instead
$ python3 -m venv <DIR_NAME>  # DIR_NAME is also called an environment
$ source <DIR_NAME>/bin/activate
(<DIR_NAME>) ~$ which python
....
$ deactivate
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
<li>
[https://youtu.be/N5vscPTWKOk Python Tutorial: virtualenv and why you should use virtual environments]. '''pip freeze'''.
<pre>
pip list
pip freeze --local > requirements.txt
...
pip install -r requirements.txt
pip list
</pre>
</li>
</ul>
* [https://opensource.com/article/20/10/learn-python-ebook Learn Python by creating a video game]
* [https://www.pythonforbeginners.com/basics/how-to-use-python-virtualenv How to use Python virtualenv]
* [https://www.dabapps.com/blog/introduction-to-pip-and-virtualenv-python/ A non-magical introduction to Pip and Virtualenv for Python beginners]
* Alternative to ''virtualenv'' we need to add "--user" to the '''pip''' command. See the installation guide of  [https://lasagne.readthedocs.io/en/latest/user/installation.html#python-pip lasagne] or [https://stackoverflow.com/a/15912917 easy_install or pip as a limited user?]


=== DeepSurv example ===
==== pipenv ====
https://github.com/jaredleekatzman/DeepSurv
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/pipenv-python-environment/ Why Use Pipenv to Create a Python Environment?]
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* Pipenv is a Python virtualenv management tool that supports a multitude of systems and nicely bridges the gaps between pip, pyenv and virtualenv. It automatically creates and manages a virtualenv for your projects, as well as adds/removes packages from your Pipfile as you install/uninstall packages. It also generates the ever-important '''Pipfile.lock''', which is used to produce deterministic builds.
git clone https://github.com/jaredleekatzman/DeepSurv.git
* https://pipenv.pypa.io/en/latest/pipfile/
sudo cp /usr/bin/pip /usr/bin/pip.bak
sudo nano /usr/bin/pip # See https://stackoverflow.com/a/50187211 more detail
 
# Method 1 for Theano
sudo pip install theano
# Method 2 for Theano
pip install --user --upgrade https://github.com/Theano/Theano/archive/master.zip
 
pip install --user --upgrade https://github.com/Lasagne/Lasagne/archive/master.zip
cd DeepSurv/
pip install . --user
sudo apt install python-pytest
pip install h5py --user
sudo pip uninstall protobuf # https://stackoverflow.com/a/33623372
pip install protobuf --user
sudo apt install python-tk
py.test
============ test session starts ===========
platform linux2 -- Python 2.7.12, pytest-2.8.7, py-1.4.31, pluggy-0.3.1
rootdir: /home/brb/github/DeepSurv, inifile:
collected 7 items


tests/test_deepsurv.py .......
==== Poetry ====
* https://python-poetry.org/
* Poetry is a tool for dependency management and packaging in Python. It allows you to declare the libraries your project depends on and it will manage (install/update) them for you. Poetry offers a '''poetry.lock''' lockfile to ensure repeatable installs, and can build your project for distribution.
 
==== pipx (alternative to pip3) ====
<ul>
<li>Pipx is a tool that helps you install and run end-user applications written in Python. It is similar to macOS’s brew, JavaScript’s npx, and Linux’s apt.  
* Pipx is focused on installing and managing Python packages that can be '''run from the command line directly''' as applications.  
* pipx is made specifically for application installation, as it adds isolation yet still makes the apps available in your shell: pipx creates an '''isolated environment''' for each application and its associated packages.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
python3 -m pip install --user pipx
python3 -m pipx ensurepath
# OR sudo apt install pipx 
# Or pip3 install pipx


========== 7 passed in 5.77 seconds ========
pipx install <package_name> # no sudo needed
pipx list
pipx uninstall <package_name>
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
<li>I need to find an alternative to '''pip''' utility because of a problem when I used pip command. '''Error: externally-managed-environment'''
* [https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2023/04/pip-install-error-externally-managed-environment-fix 3 Ways to Solve Pip Install Error on Ubuntu 23.04]
* See the example of installing [[Linux#Asciinema_.26_agg|Asciinema & agg]]
* I can see "asciinema" was installed under ~/.local/bin directory that's because "pipx ensurepath" adds ~/.local/bin to ~/.bashrc file.
<li>Official website [https://pypa.github.io/pipx/pipx] - Install and Run Python Applications in Isolated Environments, [https://github.com/pypa/pipx github]
<li>pipx vs pip
* pipx is made specifically for application installation and adds isolation yet still makes the apps available in your shell. '''pipx creates an isolated environment for each application''' and its associated packages. On the other hand, '''pip is a general-purpose package installer for both libraries and apps with no environment isolation'''.
* If you want to install an application that has dependencies that conflict with other applications or libraries on your system, you can use pipx to create an isolated environment for that application and its dependencies. This way, '''you can avoid conflicts between different versions of the same package'''.
* On my Ubuntu, pip installs packages to /usr/local/lib/python3.8/dist-packages/.
<li>[https://www.ostechnix.com/pipx-install-and-run-python-applications-in-isolated-environments/ Pipx – Install And Run Python Applications In Isolated Environments]
<li>[https://opensource.com/article/21/7/python-pipx Run Python applications in virtual environments]
</ul>


== How to list all installed modules ==
=== python setup.py ===
If a package has been bundled by its creator using the standard approach to
bundling modules (with Python’s distutils tool), all you need to do is download
the package, uncompress it and type:
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
python setup.py build
sudo python setup.py install
</syntaxhighlight>
For Python 2, the packages are installed under '''/usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/'''.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
$ ls -l /usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/
total 12
-rw-r--r-- 1 root staff  273 Jan 12 13:45 easy-install.pth
drwxr-sr-x 4 root staff 4096 Jan 12 13:45 HTSeq-0.6.1p1-py2.7-linux-x86_64.egg
drwxr-sr-x 4 root staff 4096 Jan 12 13:42 pysam-0.9.1.4-py2.7-linux-x86_64.egg
</syntaxhighlight>


<pre>
=== python setup.py bdist_wheel ===
help('modules')  # the output is not pretty
* [https://stackoverflow.com/a/65480764 Why does python setup.py bdist_wheel creates a build folder?]
</pre>
* [https://realpython.com/python-wheels/ What Are Python Wheels and Why Should You Care?] The purpose of creating a wheel file in Python is to package and distribute your code in a way that makes it easier for others to install and use your code.
* [https://docs.python.org/3/distutils/builtdist.html Creating Built Distributions]
* [https://packaging.python.org/en/latest/guides/distributing-packages-using-setuptools/#id67 Wheels]
* In Python programming, “wheel” refers to a built-package format for Python. It is designed to contain all the files for a PEP 376 compatible install in a way that is very close to the on-disk format.
* [https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/what-is-a-python-wheel/# What is a Python wheel?]
* To create a wheel file in Python.
** First, make sure you have the wheel package installed: pip install wheel
** Navigate to the directory containing your package and run the following command: python setup.py bdist_wheel
** This will create a .whl file in the dist directory of your package. (people can use [https://stackoverflow.com/a/28300854 '''pip''' to install the project])


== Comment ==
=== Get a list of installed modules ===
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/739993/how-can-i-get-a-list-of-locally-installed-python-modules
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pydoc modules
</syntaxhighlight>
Not helpful. See the '''pip list''' command.


# Use the comment symbol # for a single line
=== Check installed packages' versions ===
# Use a delimiter “”” on each end of the comment. '''Attention''': [https://stackoverflow.com/questions/675442/how-to-comment-out-a-block-of-code-in-python Don't use triple-quotes]
If you install packages through '''pip''', use
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
$ pip list
...
pyOpenSSL (0.13.1)
pyparsing (2.0.1)
pysam (0.10.0)
python-dateutil (1.5)
pytz (2013.7)
rudix (2016.12.13)
scipy (0.13.0b1)
setuptools (1.1.6)
singledispatch (3.4.0.3)
six (1.4.1)
tornado (4.4.2)
vboxapi (1.0)
xattr (0.6.4)
zope.interface (4.1.1)
</syntaxhighlight>


[http://www.zentut.com/python-tutorial/python-comments/ Python Comments] from zentut.com.
And more information about a package by using '''pip show PACKAGE'''.
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
$ pip show pysam
Name: pysam
Version: 0.10.0
Summary: pysam
Home-page: https://github.com/pysam-developers/pysam
Author: Andreas Heger
Author-email: [email protected]
License: MIT
Location: /Users/XXX/Library/Python/2.7/lib/python/site-packages
Requires:
</syntaxhighlight>


=== Docstring ===
The following method works whether the package is installed by source or binary package
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Docstring
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
* Python Developer's Guide [https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0257/ Docstring Conventions]
>>> import pysam
>>> print(pysam.__version__)
0.10.0
>>> print pysam.__version__
0.10.0
</syntaxhighlight>
 
See http://hammelllab.labsites.cshl.edu/tetoolkit-faq/


== Try / Except ==
=== Install a specific version of package through pip ===
[https://pythonbasics.org/try-except/ Try and Except in Python]
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/5226311/installing-specific-package-versions-with-pip
<pre>
try:
    number = int(input("Enter a number: "))
    print(number)
except:
    print("Invalid Input")
</pre>


== if __name__ == "__main__": ==
For example, pysam package was actively released. But the new release (0.11.2.2) may introduce some bugs. So I have to install an older version (0.10.0 works for me on Mac El Capitan and Sierra).
* [https://stackoverflow.com/a/419185 What does if __name__ == “__main__”: do?]
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
** [https://stackoverflow.com/a/419986 Simplest example]
$ sudo -H pip uninstall pysam
** [https://stackoverflow.com/a/419189 A more complicated example]
Uninstalling pysam-0.11.2.2:
* [https://www.freecodecamp.org/news/whats-in-a-python-s-name-506262fe61e8/ What’s in a (Python’s) __name__?]
......
$ sudo -H pip install pysam==0.10.0
Collecting pysam==0.10.0
  Downloading pysam-0.10.0.tar.gz (2.3MB)
    100% |████████████████████████████████| 2.3MB 418kB/s
Installing collected packages: pysam
  Running setup.py install for pysam ... done
Successfully installed pysam-0.10.0
</syntaxhighlight>


== How to Get the Current Directory in Python ==
=== warning: Please check the permissions and owner of that directory ===
[https://www.makeuseof.com/how-to-get-the-current-directory-in-python/ How to Get the Current Directory in Python]
I got this message when I use root to run the 'sudo pip install PACKAGE' command.


== Import a compiled C module ==
See
* An [http://www.swig.org/tutorial.html example] based on SWIG compiler.
* http://stackoverflow.com/questions/27870003/pip-install-please-check-the-permissions-and-owner-of-that-directory
* http://askubuntu.com/questions/578869/python-pip-permissions
 
=== python3-pip installed but pip3 command not found? ===
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
sudo apt-get remove python3-pip; sudo apt-get install python3-pip
</syntaxhighlight>


== string and string operators ==
=== DeepSurv example ===
Reference:  
https://github.com/jaredleekatzman/DeepSurv
# Python for Genomic Data Science from coursera.  
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
# [https://www.codementor.io/mgalarny/python-hello-world-and-string-manipulation-gdgwd8ymp Python Hello World and String Manipulation]
git clone https://github.com/jaredleekatzman/DeepSurv.git
sudo cp /usr/bin/pip /usr/bin/pip.bak
sudo nano /usr/bin/pip # See https://stackoverflow.com/a/50187211 more detail


* Use double quote instead of single quote to define a string
# Method 1 for Theano
* Use triple double quotes """ to write a [https://docs.python.org/3/tutorial/introduction.html long string spanning multiple lines] or [http://stackoverflow.com/questions/7696924/multiline-comments-in-python comments in a python script]
sudo pip install theano
* if dna="gatagc", then
# Method 2 for Theano
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
pip install --user --upgrade https://github.com/Theano/Theano/archive/master.zip
dna[0]='g'
dna[-1]='c' (start counting from the right)
dna[-2]='g'
dna[0:3]='gat' (the end always excluded)
dna[:3]='gat'
dna[2:]='tgc'
len(dna)=6
type(dna)
print(dna)
dna.count('c')
dna.upper()
dna.find('ag')=3  (only the first occurrence of 'ag' is reported)
dna.find('17', 2) (start looking from pos 17)
dna.rfind('ag')  ( search backwards in string)
dna.islower()    (True)
dna.isupper()    (False)
dna.replace('a', 'A')
print(dna.upper().isupper())
</syntaxhighlight>


=== Format ===
pip install --user --upgrade https://github.com/Lasagne/Lasagne/archive/master.zip
[https://docs.python.org/3.8/library/string.html#format-specification-mini-language Format Specification Mini-Language]
cd DeepSurv/
 
pip install . --user
== Regular expression ==
sudo apt install python-pytest
[https://www.makeuseof.com/regular-expressions-python/ The Beginner’s Guide to Regular Expressions With Python]
pip install h5py --user
 
sudo pip uninstall protobuf # https://stackoverflow.com/a/33623372
== User's input ==
pip install protobuf --user
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
sudo apt install python-tk
dna=raw_input("Enter a DNA sequence: ")  # python 2
py.test
dna=input("Enter a DNA sequence: ")      # python 3
============ test session starts ===========
</syntaxhighlight>
platform linux2 -- Python 2.7.12, pytest-2.8.7, py-1.4.31, pluggy-0.3.1
To convert a user's input (a string) to others
rootdir: /home/brb/github/DeepSurv, inifile:
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
collected 7 items
int(x, [, base])
 
flaot(x)
tests/test_deepsurv.py .......
str(x) #converts x to a string
str(65) # '65'


chr(x)  # converts an integer to a character
========== 7 passed in 5.77 seconds ========
chr(65) # 'A'
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


== Print ==
== How to list all installed modules ==
[https://stackoverflow.com/a/6183002 Why is parenthesis in print voluntary in Python 2.7?]


== Fancy Output ==
<pre>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
help('modules') # the output is not pretty
print("THE DNA's GC content is ", gc, "%") # gives too many digits following the dot
</pre>
print("THE DNA's GC content is %5.3f %%" % " % gc)
 
# the percent operator separating the formatting string and the value to
== Comment ==
# replace the format placeholder
print("%d" % 10.6)  # 10
print("%e" % 10.6)  # 10.060000e+01
print("%s" % dna)  # gatagc
</syntaxhighlight>


== List ==
# Use the comment symbol # for a single line
A list is an ordered set of values
# Use a delimiter “”” on each end of the comment. '''Attention''': [https://stackoverflow.com/questions/675442/how-to-comment-out-a-block-of-code-in-python Don't use triple-quotes]
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
gene_expr=['gene', 5.16e-08, 0.001385, 7.33e-08]
print(gene_expr[2]
gene_expr[0]='Lif'
</syntaxhighlight>


Slice a list (it will create a new list)
[http://www.zentut.com/python-tutorial/python-comments/ Python Comments] from zentut.com.
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
gene_expr[-3:]  # [5.16e-08, 0.001385, 7.33e-08]
gene_expr[1:3] = [6.09e-07]
</syntaxhighlight>


Clear the list
=== Docstring ===
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Docstring
gene_expr[]=[]
* Python Developer's Guide [https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0257/ Docstring Conventions]
</syntaxhighlight>


=== List functions ===
== Try / Except ==
Size of the list
[https://pythonbasics.org/try-except/ Try and Except in Python]
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<pre>
len(gene_expr)  
try:
</syntaxhighlight>
    number = int(input("Enter a number: "))
    print(number)
except:
    print("Invalid Input")
</pre>


Delete an element
== if __name__ == "__main__": ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
* [https://stackoverflow.com/a/419185 What does if __name__ == “__main__”: do?]
del gene_expr[1]
** [https://stackoverflow.com/a/419986 Simplest example]
</syntaxhighlight>
** [https://stackoverflow.com/a/419189 A more complicated example]
* [https://www.freecodecamp.org/news/whats-in-a-python-s-name-506262fe61e8/ What’s in a (Python’s) __name__?]


Extend/append to a list
== How to Get the Current Directory in Python ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
[https://www.makeuseof.com/how-to-get-the-current-directory-in-python/ How to Get the Current Directory in Python]
gene_expr).extend([5.16e-08, 0.00123])
</syntaxhighlight>


Count the number of times an element appears in a list
== Import a compiled C module ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
* An [http://www.swig.org/tutorial.html example] based on SWIG compiler.
print(gene_expr.count('Lif'), gene_expr.count('gene'))
</syntaxhighlight>


Reverse all elements in a list
== string and string operators ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
Reference:
gene_expr.reverse()
# Python for Genomic Data Science from coursera.  
print(gene_expr)
# [https://www.codementor.io/mgalarny/python-hello-world-and-string-manipulation-gdgwd8ymp Python Hello World and String Manipulation]
help(list)
</syntaxhighlight>


Lists as Stacks
* Use double quote instead of single quote to define a string
* Use triple double quotes """ to write a [https://docs.python.org/3/tutorial/introduction.html long string spanning multiple lines] or [http://stackoverflow.com/questions/7696924/multiline-comments-in-python comments in a python script]
* if dna="gatagc", then
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
stack=['a', 'b', 'c', 'd']
dna[0]='g'
stack.append('e')
dna[-1]='c' (start counting from the right)
dna[-2]='g'
dna[0:3]='gat' (the end always excluded)
dna[:3]='gat'
dna[2:]='tgc'
len(dna)=6
type(dna)
print(dna)
dna.count('c')
dna.upper()
dna.find('ag')=3  (only the first occurrence of 'ag' is reported)
dna.find('17', 2) (start looking from pos 17)
dna.rfind('ag')  ( search backwards in string)
dna.islower()    (True)
dna.isupper()    (False)
dna.replace('a', 'A')
print(dna.upper().isupper())
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


Sorting lists
=== Format ===
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
[https://docs.python.org/3.8/library/string.html#format-specification-mini-language Format Specification Mini-Language]
mylist=[3, 31, 123, 1, 5]
sorted(mylist)
mylist  # not changed
mylist.sort()


mylist=['c', 'g', 'T', 'a', 'A']
== Regular expression ==
mylist.sort()
[https://www.makeuseof.com/regular-expressions-python/ The Beginner’s Guide to Regular Expressions With Python]
</syntaxhighlight>


Don't change an element in a string!
== User's input ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
dna=raw_input("Enter a DNA sequence: ")  # python 2
dna=input("Enter a DNA sequence: ")      # python 3
</syntaxhighlight>
To convert a user's input (a string) to others
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
int(x, [, base])
flaot(x)
str(x) #converts x to a string
str(65) # '65'


motif = 'nacggggtc'
chr(x)  # converts an integer to a character
motif[0] = 'a'   # ERROR
chr(65) # 'A'
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


== Tuples ==
== Print ==
A tuple consists of a number of values separated by commas, and is another standard sequence data type, like strings and lists.
[https://stackoverflow.com/a/6183002 Why is parenthesis in print voluntary in Python 2.7?]
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
t=1,2,3
t
t=(1,2,3)  # we may input tuples with or without surrounding parentheses
</syntaxhighlight>


== Sets ==
== Fancy Output ==
A set is an unordered collection with no duplicate elements.
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
brca1={'DNA repair', 'zine ion binding'}
print("THE DNA's GC content is ", gc, "%") # gives too many digits following the dot
brca2={protein binding', 'H4 histone'}
print("THE DNA's GC content is %5.3f %%" % " % gc)
brca1 | brca2
# the percent operator separating the formatting string and the value to
brca1 & brca2
# replace the format placeholder
brca1 - brca2
print("%d" % 10.6)  # 10
print("%e" % 10.6)  # 10.060000e+01
print("%s" % dna)  # gatagc
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


== Dictionaries ==
== Type ==
A '''dictionary''' is an unordered set of ''key'' and ''value'' pairs, with the requirement that the keys are unique (within on dictionary).
[https://docs.python.org/3/library/functions.html Built-in Functions], [https://www.golinuxcloud.com/python-type-of-variable/#Conclusion How to check type of variable (object) in Python]
<pre>
type(object)
</pre>
 
== List ==
A list is an ordered set of values
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
gene_expr=['gene', 5.16e-08, 0.001385, 7.33e-08]
print(gene_expr[2]
gene_expr[0]='Lif'
</syntaxhighlight>


Slice a list (it will create a new list)
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
TF_motif = {'SP1' : 'gggcgg',  
gene_expr[-3:]  # [5.16e-08, 0.001385, 7.33e-08]
            'C/EBP' : 'attgcgcaat',
gene_expr[1:3] = [6.09e-07]
            'ATF' : 'tgacgtca',
            'c-Myc' : 'cacgtg',
            'Oct-1' : 'atgcaaat'}
# Access
print("The recognition sequence for the ATF transcription is %s." % TF_motif['ATF'])
# Update
TF_motif['AP-1'] = 'tgagtca'
# Delete
del TF_motif['SP1']
# Size of a list
len(TF_motif)
# Get a list of all the 'keys' in a dictionary
list(TF_motif.keys())
# Get a list of all the 'values'
list(TF_motif.values())
# sort
sorted(TF_motif.keys())
sorted(TF_motif.values())
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


We can retrieve data from dictionaries using the '''items()''' method.
Clear the list
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
for name,seq in seqs.item():
gene_expr[]=[]
    print(name, seq)
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


In summary, '''strings''', '''lists''' and '''dictionaries''' are most useful data types for bioinformatics.
=== List functions ===
Size of the list
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
len(gene_expr)
</syntaxhighlight>


== '''if''' statement ==
Delete an element
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
dna=input('Enter DNA sequence: ')
del gene_expr[1]
if 'n' in dna :
</syntaxhighlight>
  nbases=dna.count('n')
  print("dna sequence has %d undefined bases " % nbases)


if condtion 1:
Extend/append to a list
  do action 1
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
elif condition 2:
gene_expr).extend([5.16e-08, 0.00123])
  do action 2
else:
  do action 3
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


== Logical operators ==
Count the number of times an element appears in a list
Use and, or, not.
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
dna=input('Enter DNA sequence: ')
print(gene_expr.count('Lif'), gene_expr.count('gene'))
if 'n' in dna or 'N' in dna:
    nbases=dna.count('n')+dna.count('N')
    print("dna sequence has %d undefined bases " % nbases)
else:
    print("dna sequence has no undefined bases)
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


== Loops ==
Reverse all elements in a list
while
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
dna=input('Enter DNA sequence:')
gene_expr.reverse()
pos=dna.find('gt', 0)
print(gene_expr)
 
help(list)
while pos>-1 :
    print("Donar splice site candidate at position %d" %pos)
    pos=dna.find('gt', pos+1)
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


for
Lists as Stacks
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
motifs=["attccgt", "aggggggttttttcg", "gtagc"]
stack=['a', 'b', 'c', 'd']
for m in motifs:
stack.append('e')
    print(m, len(m))
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


range
Sorting lists
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
for i in range(4):
mylist=[3, 31, 123, 1, 5]
    print(i)
sorted(mylist)
for i in range(1,10,2):
mylist  # not changed
    print(i)
mylist.sort()
 
mylist=['c', 'g', 'T', 'a', 'A']
mylist.sort()
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


Problem: find all characters in a given protein sequence are valid amino acids.
Don't change an element in a string!
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
protein='SDVIHRYKUUPAKSHGWYVCJRSRFTWMVWWRFRSCRA'
 
for i in range(len(protein)):
motif = 'nacggggtc'
    if protein[i] not in 'ABCDEFGHIKLMNPQRSTVWXYZ':
motif[0] = 'a'   # ERROR
        print("this is not a valid protein sequence!")
        break
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


continue
== Tuples ==
A tuple consists of a number of values separated by commas, and is another standard sequence data type, like strings and lists.
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
protein='SDVIHRYKUUPAKSHGWYVCJRSRFTWMVWWRFRSCRA'
t=1,2,3
corrected_protein=''
t
for i in range(len(protein)):
t=(1,2,3) # we may input tuples with or without surrounding parentheses
    if protein[i] not in 'ABCDEFGHIKLMNPQRSTVWXYZ':
        continue
    corrected_protein=corrected_protein+protein[i]
print("COrrected protein seq is %s" % corrected_protein)
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


else Statement used with loops
== Sets ==
* If used with a for loop, the else statement is executed when the loop has exhausted iterating the list
A set is an unordered collection with no duplicate elements.
* If used with a while loop, the else statement is executed when the condition becomes false
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
# Find all prime numbers smaller than a given integer
brca1={'DNA repair', 'zine ion binding'}
N=10
brca2={protein binding', 'H4 histone'}
for y in range(2, N):
brca1 | brca2
    for x in range(2, y):
brca1 & brca2
        if y %x == 0:
brca1 - brca2
            print(y, 'equals', x, '*', y//x)
            break
        else:
            // loop fell through without finding a factor
            print(y, 'is a prime number')
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


The '''pass''' statement is a placeholder
== Dictionaries ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
A '''dictionary''' is an unordered set of ''key'' and ''value'' pairs, with the requirement that the keys are unique (within on dictionary).
if motif not in dna:
    pass
else:
    some_function_here()
</syntaxhighlight>
 
== Functions ==
[https://opensource.com/article/19/7/get-modular-python-functions Get modular with Python function]


<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
def function_name(arguments) :
TF_motif = {'SP1' : 'gggcgg',
    function_code_block
            'C/EBP' : 'attgcgcaat',
    return output
            'ATF' : 'tgacgtca',
            'c-Myc' : 'cacgtg',
            'Oct-1' : 'atgcaaat'}
# Access
print("The recognition sequence for the ATF transcription is %s." % TF_motif['ATF'])  
# Update
TF_motif['AP-1'] = 'tgagtca'
# Delete
del TF_motif['SP1']
# Size of a list
len(TF_motif)
# Get a list of all the 'keys' in a dictionary
list(TF_motif.keys())
# Get a list of all the 'values'
list(TF_motif.values())
# sort
sorted(TF_motif.keys())
sorted(TF_motif.values())
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


For example,
We can retrieve data from dictionaries using the '''items()''' method.
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
def gc(dna) :
for name,seq in seqs.item():
     "this function computes the gc perc of a dna seq"
     print(name, seq)
    nbases=dna.count('n')+dna.count('n')
</syntaxhighlight>
    gcpercent=float(dna.count('c')+dna.count('C')+dna.count('g)
 
+dna.count('G'))*100.0/(len(dna)-nbases)
In summary, '''strings''', '''lists''' and '''dictionaries''' are most useful data types for bioinformatics.
    return gcpercent
 
gc('AAAAGTNNAGTCC')
== '''if''' statement ==
help(gc)
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
dna=input('Enter DNA sequence: ')
if 'n' in dna :
  nbases=dna.count('n')
  print("dna sequence has %d undefined bases " % nbases)
 
if condtion 1:
  do action 1
elif condition 2:
  do action 2
else:
  do action 3
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


=== SyntaxError: invalid syntax ===
== Logical operators ==
https://stackoverflow.com/a/11890194
Use and, or, not.
 
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
On the Python shell add an empty line at the end of function definition. Eg
dna=input('Enter DNA sequence: ')
<pre>
if 'n' in dna or 'N' in dna:
>>> def fun(a):
    nbases=dna.count('n')+dna.count('N')
...    return a+1
    print("dna sequence has %d undefined bases " % nbases)
...  
else:
>>> fun(9)
    print("dna sequence has no undefined bases)
10
</syntaxhighlight>
>>> exit()
</pre>


On a python script
== Loops ==
<pre>
while
def fun(a):
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
    return a+1
dna=input('Enter DNA sequence:')
print fun(9)
pos=dna.find('gt', 0)
</pre>


=== Debug functions ===
while pos>-1 :
https://stackoverflow.com/a/4929267
    print("Donar splice site candidate at position %d" %pos)
    pos=dna.find('gt', pos+1)
</syntaxhighlight>


You can launch a Python program through [https://docs.python.org/3/library/pdb.html pdb] by using '''pdb myscript.py''' or '''python -m pdb myscript.py'''
for
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
motifs=["attccgt", "aggggggttttttcg", "gtagc"]
for m in motifs:
    print(m, len(m))
</syntaxhighlight>


<pre>
range
$ cat debug.py
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
def fun(a):
for i in range(4):
     a= a*2
     print(i)
     a= a*3
for i in range(1,10,2):
    return a+1
     print(i)
print fun(5)
</syntaxhighlight>


$ python -m pdb debug.py
Problem: find all characters in a given protein sequence are valid amino acids.
> /home/pi/Downloads/debug.py(1)<module>()
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
-> def fun(a):
protein='SDVIHRYKUUPAKSHGWYVCJRSRFTWMVWWRFRSCRA'
(Pdb) b fun
for i in range(len(protein)):
Breakpoint 1 at /home/pi/Downloads/debug.py:1
    if protein[i] not in 'ABCDEFGHIKLMNPQRSTVWXYZ':
(Pdb) c
        print("this is not a valid protein sequence!")
> /home/pi/Downloads/debug.py(2)fun()
        break
-> a= a*2
</syntaxhighlight>
(Pdb) n
> /home/pi/Downloads/debug.py(3)fun()
-> a= a*3
(Pdb)
> /home/pi/Downloads/debug.py(4)fun()
-> return a+1
(Pdb) p a
30
(Pdb) n
--Return--
> /home/pi/Downloads/debug.py(4)fun()->31
-> return a+1
(Pdb) exit
</pre>


=== Boolean functions ===
continue
Problem: checks if a given dna seq contains an in-frame stop condon
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
dna=input("Enter a dna seq: ")
protein='SDVIHRYKUUPAKSHGWYVCJRSRFTWMVWWRFRSCRA'
if (has_stop_codon(dna)) :
corrected_protein=''
    print("input seq has an in frame stop codon.")
for i in range(len(protein)):
else :
    if protein[i] not in 'ABCDEFGHIKLMNPQRSTVWXYZ':  
    print("input seq has no in frame stop codon.")
         continue
 
    corrected_protein=corrected_protein+protein[i]
def has_stop_codon(dna) :
print("COrrected protein seq is %s" % corrected_protein)
    "This function checks if given dna seq has in frame stop codons."
    stop_codon_found=False
    stop_codons=['tga', 'tag', 'taa']
    for i in range(0, len(dna), 3) :
        codon=dna[i:i+3].lower()
         if codon in stop_codons :
            stop_codon_found=True
            break
    return stop_codon_found
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


=== Function default parameter values ===
else Statement used with loops
Suppose the has_stop_codon function also accepts a frame argument (equal to 0, 1, or 2) which specifies in what frame we want to look for stop codons.
* If used with a for loop, the else statement is executed when the loop has exhausted iterating the list
* If used with a while loop, the else statement is executed when the condition becomes false
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
def has_stop_codon(dna, frame=0) :
# Find all prime numbers smaller than a given integer
    "This function checks if given dna seq has in frame stop codons."
N=10
    stop_codon_found=False
for y in range(2, N):
    stop_codons=['tga', 'tag', 'taa']
     for x in range(2, y):
     for i in range(frame, len(dna), 3) :
         if y %x == 0:
         codon=dna[i:i+3].lower()
            print(y, 'equals', x, '*', y//x)
        if codon in stop_codons :
            stop_codon_found=True
             break
             break
    return stop_codon_found
        else:
 
            // loop fell through without finding a factor
dna="atgagcggccggct"
            print(y, 'is a prime number')
has_stop_codon(dna)    # False
has_stop_codon(dna, 0) # False
has_stop_codon(dna, 1) # True
has_stop_codon(frame=0, dna=dna)
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


=== More examples ===
The '''pass''' statement is a placeholder
Reverse complement of a dna sequence
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
def reversecomplement(seq):
if motif not in dna:
     """Return the reverse complement of the dna string."""
     pass
    seq = reverse_string(seq)
else:
     seq = complement(seq)
     some_function_here()
    return seq
</syntaxhighlight>


reversecomplement('CCGGAAGAGCTTACTTAG')
== Functions ==
</syntaxhighlight>
[https://opensource.com/article/19/7/get-modular-python-functions Get modular with Python function]


To reverse a string
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
def reverse_string(seq):
def function_name(arguments) :
     return seq[::-1]
    function_code_block
 
     return output
reverse_string(dna)
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


Complement a DNA Sequence
For example,
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
def complement(dna):
def gc(dna) :
     """Return the complementary sequence string."""
     "this function computes the gc perc of a dna seq"
     basecomplement = {'A':'T', 'C':'G', 'G':'C', 'T':'A',
     nbases=dna.count('n')+dna.count('n')
                      'N':'N', 'a':t', 'c':'g', 'g':'c', 't':'a', 'n':'n'} # dictionary
    gcpercent=float(dna.count('c')+dna.count('C')+dna.count('g)
    letters = list(dna) # list comprehensions
+dna.count('G'))*100.0/(len(dna)-nbases)
     letters = [basecomplement[base] for base in letters]
     return gcpercent
    return ''.join(letters)
gc('AAAAGTNNAGTCC')
help(gc)
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


=== Split and Join functions ===
=== SyntaxError: invalid syntax ===
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
https://stackoverflow.com/a/11890194
sentence="enzymes and other proteins come in many shapes"
sentence.split()  # split on all whitespaces
sentence.split('and') # use 'and' as the separator


'-'.join(['enzymes', 'and', 'other', 'proteins', 'come', 'in', 'many', 'shapes'])
On the Python shell add an empty line at the end of function definition. Eg
</syntaxhighlight>
<pre>
>>> def fun(a):
...    return a+1
...
>>> fun(9)
10
>>> exit()
</pre>


=== Variable number of function arguments ===
On a python script
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<pre>
def newfunction(fi, se, th, *rest):
def fun(a):
  print("First: %s" % fi)
    return a+1
  print("Second: %s" % se)
print fun(9)
  print("Third: %s" % th)
</pre>
  print("Rest... %s" % rest)
  return
</syntaxhighlight>


== Modules and packages ==
=== Debug functions ===
* [https://www.programiz.com/python-programming/modules Python Modules]
https://stackoverflow.com/a/4929267
* [https://www.w3schools.com/python/python_modules.asp Python Modules] from w3schools
* [https://realpython.com/python-import/ Python import: Advanced Techniques and Tips]
* [https://docs.python.org/3/py-modindex.html Python Module Index]


'''Packages''' group multiple '''modules''' under on name, by using "dotted module names". For example, the module name A.B designates a submodule named B in a package named A. See [https://stackoverflow.com/questions/7948494/whats-the-difference-between-a-python-module-and-a-python-package What's the difference between a Python module and a Python package?]
You can launch a Python program through [https://docs.python.org/3/library/pdb.html pdb] by using '''pdb myscript.py''' or '''python -m pdb myscript.py'''


<dnautil.py>
<pre>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
$ cat debug.py
#!/usr/bin/python
def fun(a):
"""
     a= a*2
dnautil module contains a few useful functions for dna seq
     a= a*3
"""
     return a+1
def gc(dna) :
print fun(5)
     blah
     blah
     return gcpercent
</syntaxhighlight>


When a module is imported, Python first searches for a built-in module with that name.
$ python -m pdb debug.py
> /home/pi/Downloads/debug.py(1)<module>()
-> def fun(a):
(Pdb) b fun
Breakpoint 1 at /home/pi/Downloads/debug.py:1
(Pdb) c
> /home/pi/Downloads/debug.py(2)fun()
-> a= a*2
(Pdb) n
> /home/pi/Downloads/debug.py(3)fun()
-> a= a*3
(Pdb)
> /home/pi/Downloads/debug.py(4)fun()
-> return a+1
(Pdb) p a
30
(Pdb) n
--Return--
> /home/pi/Downloads/debug.py(4)fun()->31
-> return a+1
(Pdb) exit
</pre>


If built-in module is not found, Python then searches for a file obtained by
=== Boolean functions ===
adding the extension .py to the name of the module that it's imported:
Problem: checks if a given dna seq contains an in-frame stop condon
* in your current directory,
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
* the directory where Python has been installed
dna=input("Enter a dna seq: ")
* in a path, i.e., a colon(':') separated list of file paths, stored in the environment variable PYTHONPATH.
if (has_stop_codon(dna)) :
    print("input seq has an in frame stop codon.")
else :
    print("input seq has no in frame stop codon.")


You can use the '''sys.path''' variable from the '''sys''' built-in module to check the list of all directories where Python look for files
def has_stop_codon(dna) :
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
    "This function checks if given dna seq has in frame stop codons."
import sys
    stop_codon_found=False
sys.path
    stop_codons=['tga', 'tag', 'taa']
    for i in range(0, len(dna), 3) :
        codon=dna[i:i+3].lower()
        if codon in stop_codons :
            stop_codon_found=True
            break
    return stop_codon_found
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


If the sys.path variable does not contains the directory where you put your module you can extend it:
=== Function default parameter values ===
Suppose the has_stop_codon function also accepts a frame argument (equal to 0, 1, or 2) which specifies in what frame we want to look for stop codons.
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
sys.path.append("/home/$USER/python")
def has_stop_codon(dna, frame=0) :
sys.path
    "This function checks if given dna seq has in frame stop codons."
    stop_codon_found=False
    stop_codons=['tga', 'tag', 'taa']
    for i in range(frame, len(dna), 3) :
        codon=dna[i:i+3].lower()
        if codon in stop_codons :
            stop_codon_found=True
            break
    return stop_codon_found
 
dna="atgagcggccggct"
has_stop_codon(dna)   # False
has_stop_codon(dna, 0) # False
has_stop_codon(dna, 1) # True
has_stop_codon(frame=0, dna=dna)
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


=== Using modules (from PACKAGE/DIRNAME/FILENAME import CLASS) ===
=== More examples ===
Reverse complement of a dna sequence
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
from math import *
def reversecomplement(seq):
print(floor(3.7))
    """Return the reverse complement of the dna string."""
    seq = reverse_string(seq)
    seq = complement(seq)
    return seq


import dnautil
reversecomplement('CCGGAAGAGCTTACTTAG')
dna="atgagggctaggt"
gc(dna)         # gc is not defined
dnautil.gc(dna)  # Good
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


Import Names from a Module
To reverse a string
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
from dnautil import *
def reverse_string(seq):
gc(dna)         # OK
    return seq[::-1]


from dnautil import gc, has_stop_codon
reverse_string(dna)
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


[https://opensource.com/article/19/7/get-modular-python-functions Get modular with Python functions] & [https://opensource.com/article/19/7/get-modular-python-classes Learn object-oriented programming with Python] from opensource.com.
Complement a DNA Sequence
 
=== from...import vs import vs import...as ===
<ul>
<li>[https://vinesmsuic.github.io/2020/06/05/python-import-vs-fromimport/ Difference between 'import' and 'from...import' in Python] </li>
<li>[https://core-electronics.com.au/tutorials/import-from-as-python.html Import, From and As Keywords in Python] </li>
<li>[https://stackoverflow.com/a/21547572 `from … import` vs `import .`]  </li>
<li>[http://www.wellho.net/mouth/418_Difference-between-import-and-from-in-Python.html Difference between import and from in Python].
Python's '''import''' loads a Python module into its own namespace, so that you have to add the module name followed by a dot in front of references to any names from the imported module that you refer to:
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
import feathers
def complement(dna):
duster = feathers.ostrich("South Africa")
    """Return the complementary sequence string."""
    basecomplement = {'A':'T', 'C':'G', 'G':'C', 'T':'A',
                      'N':'N', 'a':t', 'c':'g', 'g':'c', 't':'a', 'n':'n'} # dictionary
    letters = list(dna) # list comprehensions
    letters = [basecomplement[base] for base in letters]
    return ''.join(letters)
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
'''from''' loads a Python module into the current namespace, so that you can refer to it without the need to mention the module name again:
 
=== Split and Join functions ===
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
from feathers import *
sentence="enzymes and other proteins come in many shapes"
duster = ostrich("South Africa")
sentence.split()  # split on all whitespaces
sentence.split('and') # use 'and' as the separator
 
'-'.join(['enzymes', 'and', 'other', 'proteins', 'come', 'in', 'many', 'shapes'])
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
<ul>
<li>Question: Why are both import and from provided? Can't I always use from?


Answer: If you were to load a lot of modules using from, you would find sooner or later that there was a conflict of names; from is fine for a small program but if it was used throughout a big program, you would hit problems from time to time
=== Variable number of function arguments ===
</li>
<li>
Question: Should I always use import then?
 
Answer: No ... '''use import most of the time, but use from is you want to refer to the members of a module many, many times in the calling code'''; that way, you save yourself having to write "feather." (in our example) time after time, but yet you don't end up with a cluttered namespace. You could describe this approach as being the best of both worlds.
</li>
</ul>
<li>[https://stackoverflow.com/a/22245722 from … import OR import … as for modules] </li>
<li>Some examples:
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
from numpy import array  # Run file; load specific 'attribute'
def newfunction(fi, se, th, *rest):
arr = array([1,2,3])   # Use name directly: no need to qualify
  print("First: %s" % fi)
print(arr) # print [1 2 3]
  print("Second: %s" % se)
 
  print("Third: %s" % th)
from math import pi
  print("Rest... %s" % rest)
pi # 3.141592653589793
  return
math.pi  # NameError: name 'math' is not defined
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


VS
== Modules and packages ==
* [https://www.programiz.com/python-programming/modules Python Modules]
* [https://www.w3schools.com/python/python_modules.asp Python Modules] from w3schools
* [https://realpython.com/python-import/ Python import: Advanced Techniques and Tips]
* [https://docs.python.org/3/py-modindex.html Python Module Index]


<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
'''Packages''' group multiple '''modules''' under on name, by using "dotted module names". For example, the module name A.B designates a submodule named B in a package named A. See [https://stackoverflow.com/questions/7948494/whats-the-difference-between-a-python-module-and-a-python-package What's the difference between a Python module and a Python package?]
import numpy  # Run file; load module as a whole
arr = numpy.array([1,2,3])  # Use its attribute names: '.' to qualify
print(arr) # print [1 2 3]
 
import math
math.pi # 3.141592653589793
dir(math)
</syntaxhighlight>
 
VS


<dnautil.py>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
import numpy as np
#!/usr/bin/python
dir(np)
"""
 
dnautil module contains a few useful functions for dna seq
import math as m
"""
m.pi # 3.141592653589793
def gc(dna) :
    blah
    blah
    return gcpercent
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
</li>
<li>[https://github.com/qianhuiSenn/scRNA_cell_deconv_benchmark/blob/master/Scripts/Result_preprocessing/metrics_calculation_example.ipynb scRNA_cell_deconv_benchmark] example.
</li>
</ul>


=== help ===
When a module is imported, Python first searches for a built-in module with that name.
<pre>
from AAA import BBB
help(BBB)
help(BBB.FunctionName)


import BBB as CCC
If built-in module is not found, Python then searches for a file obtained by
help(CCC)
adding the extension .py to the name of the module that it's imported:
</pre>
* in your current directory,
* the directory where Python has been installed
* in a path, i.e., a colon(':') separated list of file paths, stored in the environment variable PYTHONPATH.


=== Packages & __init__.py ===
You can use the '''sys.path''' variable from the '''sys''' built-in module to check the list of all directories where Python look for files
Each package in Python is a directory which MUST contain a special file __init__.py. This file can be empty and it indicates that the directory it contains is a Python package, so it can be imported the same way a module can be imported. https://docs.python.org/2/tutorial/modules.html
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
import sys
sys.path
</syntaxhighlight>


Example: suppose you have several modules dnautil.py, rnautil.py , and proteinutil.py. You want to group them in a package called "bioseq" which processes all types of biological sequences. The structure of the package:
If the sys.path variable does not contains the directory where you put your module you can extend it:
<pre>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
bioseq/
sys.path.append("/home/$USER/python")
  __init__.py
sys.path
  dnautil.py
</syntaxhighlight>
  rnautil.py
  proteinutil.py
  fasta/
    __init__.py
    fastautil.py
  fastq/
    __init__.py
    fastqutil.py
</pre>


Loading from packages:
=== Using modules (from PACKAGE/DIRNAME/FILENAME import CLASS) ===
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
import bioseq.dnautil
from math import *
bioseq.dnautil.gc(dna)
print(floor(3.7))


from bioseq import dnautil
import dnautil
dnautil.gc(dna)
dna="atgagggctaggt"
 
gc(dna)          # gc is not defined
from bioseq.fasta.fastautil import fastqseqread
dnautil.gc(dna) # Good
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


=== Example ===
Import Names from a Module
[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rfscVS0vtbw&t=14257s Building a Multiple Choice Quiz] by freeCodeCamp.org
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
from dnautil import *
gc(dna)          # OK


'''QuestionFile.py'''
from dnautil import gc, has_stop_codon
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
class Question:
    def __init__(self, prompt, answer):
        self.prompt = prompt
        self.answer = answer
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


'''app.py'''
[https://opensource.com/article/19/7/get-modular-python-functions Get modular with Python functions] & [https://opensource.com/article/19/7/get-modular-python-classes Learn object-oriented programming with Python] from opensource.com.
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
from QuestionFile import Question


question_prompts = [
=== from...import vs import vs import...as ===
    "What color are apples?\n(a) Red/Green\n(b) Purple\n(c) Orange\n\n",
<ul>
    "What color are Bananas?\n(a) Teal\n(b) Magenta\n(c) Yellow\n\n",
<li>[https://vinesmsuic.github.io/2020/06/05/python-import-vs-fromimport/ Difference between 'import' and 'from...import' in Python] </li>
    "What color are strawberries?\n(a) Yellow\n(b) Red\n(c) Blue\n\n"
<li>[https://core-electronics.com.au/tutorials/import-from-as-python.html Import, From and As Keywords in Python] </li>
]
<li>[https://stackoverflow.com/a/21547572 `from … import` vs `import .`]  </li>
<li>[http://www.wellho.net/mouth/418_Difference-between-import-and-from-in-Python.html Difference between import and from in Python].
Python's '''import''' loads a Python module into its own namespace, so that you have to add the module name followed by a dot in front of references to any names from the imported module that you refer to:
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
import feathers
duster = feathers.ostrich("South Africa")
</syntaxhighlight>
'''from''' loads a Python module into the current namespace, so that you can refer to it without the need to mention the module name again:
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
from feathers import *
duster = ostrich("South Africa")
</syntaxhighlight>
<ul>
<li>Question: Why are both import and from provided? Can't I always use from?


questions = [
Answer: If you were to load a lot of modules using from, you would find sooner or later that there was a conflict of names; from is fine for a small program but if it was used throughout a big program, you would hit problems from time to time
    Question(question_prompts[0], "a"),
</li>
    Question(question_prompts[1], "c"),
<li>
    Question(question_prompts[2], "b")
Question: Should I always use import then?
]


def run_test(question):
Answer: No ... '''use import most of the time, but use from is you want to refer to the members of a module many, many times in the calling code'''; that way, you save yourself having to write "feather." (in our example) time after time, but yet you don't end up with a cluttered namespace. You could describe this approach as being the best of both worlds.
    score = 0
</li>
    for question in questions:
</ul>
        answer = input(question.prompt)
<li>[https://stackoverflow.com/a/22245722 from … import OR import … as for modules] </li>
        if answer == question.answer:
<li>Some examples:
            score += 1
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
    print("You got " + str(score) + " /" + str(len(questions))+ " correct")
from numpy import array  # Run file; load specific 'attribute'
arr = array([1,2,3])    # Use name directly: no need to qualify
print(arr) # print [1 2 3]


run_test(questions)
from math import pi
pi # 3.141592653589793
math.pi  # NameError: name 'math' is not defined
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
Run the program by '''python3 app.py'''


== Files - Communicate with the outside  ==
VS
* [https://www.pythonforbeginners.com/files/reading-and-writing-files-in-python Reading and Writing Files in Python]
* [https://realpython.com/read-write-files-python/#iterating-over-each-line-in-the-file Reading and Writing Files in Python (Guide)]


<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
f=open('myfile', 'r') # read
import numpy  # Run file; load module as a whole
f=open('myfile')
arr = numpy.array([1,2,3]) # Use its attribute names: '.' to qualify
f=open('myfile', 'w') # write
print(arr) # print [1 2 3]
f=open('myfile', 'a') # append
</syntaxhighlight>


=== Take care if a file does not exists ===
import math
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
math.pi # 3.141592653589793
try:
dir(math)
    f = open('myfile')
except IOError:
    print("the file myfile does not exist!!")
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


=== Reading ===
VS
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
for line in f:
    print(line)
</syntaxhighlight>


Change positions within a file object
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
f.seek(0)  # go to the beginning of the file
import numpy as np
f.read()
dir(np)
</syntaxhighlight>


Read a single line
import math as m
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
m.pi # 3.141592653589793
f.seek(0)
f.readline()
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
</li>
<li>[https://github.com/qianhuiSenn/scRNA_cell_deconv_benchmark/blob/master/Scripts/Result_preprocessing/metrics_calculation_example.ipynb scRNA_cell_deconv_benchmark] example.
</li>
</ul>


Write into a file
=== help ===
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<pre>
f=open("/home/$USER/myfile, 'a)
from AAA import BBB
f.write("this is a new line")
help(BBB)
f.close()
help(BBB.FunctionName)
</syntaxhighlight>


[https://stackoverflow.com/a/16999000 Importing large tab-delimited .txt file into Python]
import BBB as CCC
<pre>
help(CCC)
# R
</pre>
write.table(iris[1:10,], file="iris.txt", sep="\t", quote=F, row.names=F)


# Python
=== Packages & __init__.py ===
import csv
Each package in Python is a directory which MUST contain a special file __init__.py. This file can be empty and it indicates that the directory it contains is a Python package, so it can be imported the same way a module can be imported. https://docs.python.org/2/tutorial/modules.html
with open('iris.txt') as f:
    reader = csv.reader(f, delimiter="\t")
    d = list(reader)
print(d[0][2])
print(d[1][2])


# Shell
Example: suppose you have several modules dnautil.py, rnautil.py , and proteinutil.py. You want to group them in a package called "bioseq" which processes all types of biological sequences. The structure of the package:
$ python test_csv.py
Petal.Length
1.4
</pre>
If the data are all numerical, we can use the numpy package.
<pre>
<pre>
# R
bioseq/
write.table(iris[1:10, 1:4],
  __init__.py
            file="~/Downloads/iris2.txt",
  dnautil.py
            sep="\t", quote=F, row.names=F, col.names=F)
  rnautil.py
 
  proteinutil.py
# Python
  fasta/
import numpy as np
    __init__.py
d = np.loadtxt('iris2.txt', delimiter="\t")
    fastautil.py
print(d[0][2])
  fastq/
print(d[1][2])
    __init__.py
 
    fastqutil.py
# Shell
$ python test_csv2.py
1.4
1.4
</pre>
</pre>


=== Read text file from a URL ===
Loading from packages:
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
import urllib.request
import bioseq.dnautil
bioseq.dnautil.gc(dna)


url = "http://textfiles.com/adventure/aencounter.txt"
from bioseq import dnautil
file = urllib.request.urlopen(url)
dnautil.gc(dna)


for line in file:
from bioseq.fasta.fastautil import fastqseqread
  print(line.decode('utf-8'))
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
* [https://docs.python.org/3.0/library/urllib.request.html urllib.request — extensible library for opening URLs]
* [https://www.guru99.com/accessing-internet-data-with-python.html Python Internet Access using Urllib.Request and urlopen()]


=== Command line arguments ===
=== Example ===
Suppose we run 'python processfasta.py myfile.fa' in the command line, then
[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rfscVS0vtbw&t=14257s Building a Multiple Choice Quiz] by freeCodeCamp.org
 
'''QuestionFile.py'''
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
import sys
class Question:
print(sys.argv) #  ['processfasta.py', 'myfile.fa']
    def __init__(self, prompt, answer):
        self.prompt = prompt
        self.answer = answer
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


More completely
'''app.py'''
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
#!/usr/bin/python
from QuestionFile import Question
"""
processfasta.py builds a dictionary with all sequences from a FASTA file.
"""


import sys
question_prompts = [
filename=sys.argv[1]
    "What color are apples?\n(a) Red/Green\n(b) Purple\n(c) Orange\n\n",
    "What color are Bananas?\n(a) Teal\n(b) Magenta\n(c) Yellow\n\n",
    "What color are strawberries?\n(a) Yellow\n(b) Red\n(c) Blue\n\n"
]


try:
questions = [
  f = open(filename)
    Question(question_prompts[0], "a"),
except IOError:
    Question(question_prompts[1], "c"),
     print("File %s does not exist!" % filename)
    Question(question_prompts[2], "b")
]
 
def run_test(question):
    score = 0
    for question in questions:
        answer = input(question.prompt)
        if answer == question.answer:
            score += 1
     print("You got " + str(score) + " /" + str(len(questions))+ " correct")
 
run_test(questions)
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
Run the program by '''python3 app.py'''
== Files - Communicate with the outside  ==
* [https://www.pythonforbeginners.com/files/reading-and-writing-files-in-python Reading and Writing Files in Python]
* [https://realpython.com/read-write-files-python/#iterating-over-each-line-in-the-file Reading and Writing Files in Python (Guide)]


Parsing command line arguments with '''getopt'''. Suppose we want to store in the dictionary the sequences bigger than a given length provided in the command line: 'processfasta.py -l 250 myfile.fa'
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
#!/usr/bin/python
f=open('myfile', 'r') # read
import sys
f=open('myfile')
import getopt
f=open('myfile', 'w') # write
f=open('myfile', 'a') # append
</syntaxhighlight>


def usage():
=== Take care if a file does not exists ===
     print """
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
processfasta.py: reads a FASTA file and builds a
try:
dictionary with all sequence bigger than a given length
    f = open('myfile')
except IOError:
     print("the file myfile does not exist!!")
</syntaxhighlight>


processfasta.py [-h] [-l <length>] <filename>
=== Reading ===
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
for line in f:
    print(line)
</syntaxhighlight>


-h          print this message
Change positions within a file object
-l <length>  filter all sequences with a length
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
              smaller than <length>
f.seek(0)  # go to the beginning of the file
              (default <length>=0)
f.read()
<filename>   the file has to be in FASTA format
</syntaxhighlight>


o, a = getopt.getopt(sys.argv[1:], '1:h')
Read a single line
opts = {} # empty dictionary
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
seqlen=0;
f.seek(0)
 
f.readline()
for k,v in o:
    opts[k] = v
if 'h' in opts.keys():  # he means the user wants help
    usage(); sys.exit()
if len(a) < 1:
    usage(); sys.exit("input fasta file is missing")
if 'l' in opts.keys():
    if opts['l'] <0 :
        print("length of seq should be positive!"); sys.exit(0);
    seqlen=opts['l']
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


=== stdin and stdout ===
Write into a file
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
sys.stdin.read()
f=open("/home/$USER/myfile, 'a)
f.write("this is a new line")
f.close()


sys.stdout.write("Some useful ouput.\n")
>>> with open("file.txt", "w") as f:
 
...  f.write(str(object))
sys.stderr.write("Warning: input file was not found\n")
...
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


=== Call external programs ===
[https://stackoverflow.com/a/16999000 Importing large tab-delimited .txt file into Python]
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<pre>
import subprocess
# R
subprocess.call('["ls", "-l"]) # return code indicates the success or failure of the execution
write.table(iris[1:10,], file="iris.txt", sep="\t", quote=F, row.names=F)


subprocess.call('["tophat", "genome_mouse_idx", "PE_reads_1.fq.gz", "PE_reads_2.fq.gz"])
# Python
</syntaxhighlight>
import csv
with open('iris.txt') as f:
    reader = csv.reader(f, delimiter="\t")
    d = list(reader)
print(d[0][2])
print(d[1][2])


== Exceptions ==
# Shell
[https://www.thegeekstuff.com/2019/05/python-try-except-examples/ 5 Python Examples to Handle Exceptions using try, except and finally]
$ python test_csv.py
Petal.Length
1.4
</pre>
If the data are all numerical, we can use the numpy package.
<pre>
# R
write.table(iris[1:10, 1:4],
            file="~/Downloads/iris2.txt",
            sep="\t", quote=F, row.names=F, col.names=F)


== Debugging ==
# Python
[https://www.makeuseof.com/debug-python-code/ How to Debug Your Python Code]
import numpy as np
d = np.loadtxt('iris2.txt', delimiter="\t")
print(d[0][2])
print(d[1][2])


== [http://biopython.org/wiki/Main_Page Biopython] & Pubmed ==
# Shell
* Parsers for various bioinformatics file formats (FASTA, Genbank)
$ python test_csv2.py
* Access to online services like NCBI Entrez or Pubmed databases
1.4
* Interfaces to common bioinformatics programs such as BLAST, Clustalw and others.
1.4
</pre>


=== Read text file from a URL ===
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
import Bio
import urllib.request
print(Bio.__version__)
 
url = "http://textfiles.com/adventure/aencounter.txt"
file = urllib.request.urlopen(url)
 
for line in file:
  print(line.decode('utf-8'))
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>
* [https://docs.python.org/3.0/library/urllib.request.html urllib.request — extensible library for opening URLs]
* [https://www.guru99.com/accessing-internet-data-with-python.html Python Internet Access using Urllib.Request and urlopen()]


Running BLAST over the internet
=== Command line arguments ===
Suppose we run 'python processfasta.py myfile.fa' in the command line, then
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
from Bio.Blast import NCBIWWW
import sys
fasta_string = open("myseq.fa").read()
print(sys.argv) #  ['processfasta.py', 'myfile.fa']
result_handle = NCBIWWW.qblast("blastn":, "nt", fasta_string)
# blastn is the program to use
# nt is the database to search against
# default output is xml
help(NCBIWWW.qblast)
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


The BLAST record
More completely
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
from Bio.Blast import NCBIXML
#!/usr/bin/python
blast_record = NCBIXML.read(result_handle)
"""
processfasta.py builds a dictionary with all sequences from a FASTA file.
"""
 
import sys
filename=sys.argv[1]
 
try:
  f = open(filename)
except IOError:
    print("File %s does not exist!" % filename)
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


Parse BLAST output
Parsing command line arguments with '''getopt'''. Suppose we want to store in the dictionary the sequences bigger than a given length provided in the command line: 'processfasta.py -l 250 myfile.fa'
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
len(blast_record.alignments)
#!/usr/bin/python
import sys
import getopt


E_VALUE_THRESH = 0.01
def usage():
for alignment in blas_record.alignments:
    print """
  for hsp in alignment.hsps:
processfasta.py: reads a FASTA file and builds a
    if hsp.expect < E_VALUE_THRESH:
dictionary with all sequence bigger than a given length
      print('***Alignment***')
      print('sequence:', alignment.title)
      print('length:', alignment.length)
      print('e value:', hsp.expect)
      print(hsp.query)
      print(hsp.match)
      print(hsp.sbjct)
</syntaxhighlight>


More help with Biopython
processfasta.py [-h] [-l <length>] <filename>
* Biopython tutorial and cookbook: http://biopython.org/DIST/docs/tutorial/Tutorial.html
* Biopython FAQ: http://biopython.org/DIST/docs/tutorial/Tutorial.html#htoc5


== pubmed_parser ==
-h          print this message
[https://github.com/titipata/pubmed_parser Parser for Pubmed Open-Access XML Subset and MEDLINE XML Dataset]
-l <length>  filter all sequences with a length
              smaller than <length>
              (default <length>=0)
<filename>  the file has to be in FASTA format


== pyTest ==
o, a = getopt.getopt(sys.argv[1:], '1:h')
* https://wiki.python.org/moin/PyTest
opts = {} # empty dictionary
* https://docs.python-guide.org/writing/tests/
seqlen=0;


== pyc file ==
for k,v in o:
[https://stackoverflow.com/a/3918716 What is the difference between .py and .pyc files? [duplicate]]. I observe it can cause a problem when I want to modify a python file but it keeps using the old pyc file so my change is not used (Raspbery Pi e-ink example).
    opts[k] = v
if 'h' in opts.keys(): # he means the user wants help
    usage(); sys.exit()
if len(a) < 1:
    usage(); sys.exit("input fasta file is missing")
if 'l' in opts.keys():
    if opts['l'] <0 :
        print("length of seq should be positive!"); sys.exit(0);
    seqlen=opts['l']
</syntaxhighlight>


== Shutdown or restart OS ==
=== stdin and stdout ===
Below is tested on Raspbian
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
import os
sys.stdin.read()
os.system('sudo shutdown -h now')
 
sys.stdout.write("Some useful ouput.\n")
 
sys.stderr.write("Warning: input file was not found\n")
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


= Popular python libraries =
=== Call external programs ===
[https://pythontips.com/2013/07/30/20-python-libraries-you-cant-live-without/ 20 Python libraries you can’t live without]
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
== psutil ==
import subprocess
* [https://programtalk.com/python-examples/psutil.cpu_percent/ psutil.cpu_percent() examples]. Inspired by the e-ink example from Raspberry Pi.
subprocess.call('["ls", "-l"]) # return code indicates the success or failure of the execution
* https://github.com/arvydas/blinkstick-python/wiki/Example%3A-Display-CPU-usage
 
* https://www.liaoxuefeng.com/wiki/1016959663602400/1183565811281984
subprocess.call('["tophat", "genome_mouse_idx", "PE_reads_1.fq.gz", "PE_reads_2.fq.gz"])
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
# pip install psutil --user
for x in range(10):
    psutil.cpu_percent(interval=1)
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


== [http://www.numpy.org/ numpy] ==
== Exceptions ==
* [https://engineering.ucsb.edu/~shell/che210d/numpy.pdf An introduction to Numpy and Scipy]
[https://www.thegeekstuff.com/2019/05/python-try-except-examples/ 5 Python Examples to Handle Exceptions using try, except and finally]
* https://docs.scipy.org/doc/numpy-dev/user/quickstart.html
* [https://s3.amazonaws.com/assets.datacamp.com/blog_assets/Numpy_Python_Cheat_Sheet.pdf Cheat sheets]
* [https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/program-to-find-the-sum-of-each-row-and-each-column-of-a-matrix/ Program to find the Sum of each Row and each Column of a Matrix]


== [https://www.scipy.org/ scipy] ==
== Debugging ==
* [http://blog.nextgenetics.net/?e=94 Hypergeometric test]
[https://www.makeuseof.com/debug-python-code/ How to Debug Your Python Code]
* [http://www2.stat.duke.edu/~ar182/rr/examples-gallery/PermutationTest.html Permutation Test]


== seaborn ==
== [http://biopython.org/wiki/Main_Page Biopython] & Pubmed ==
* https://seaborn.pydata.org/
* Parsers for various bioinformatics file formats (FASTA, Genbank)
* [https://github.com/georgezakinih/exploratory-data-analysis Examples of performaing Explorator Data Analysis for few public clinical data sets]
* Access to online services like NCBI Entrez or Pubmed databases
* Interfaces to common bioinformatics programs such as BLAST, Clustalw and others.


== matplotlib ==
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
* https://matplotlib.org/users/installing.html
import Bio
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/draw-graphs-jupyter-notebook/ How to Draw Graphs in Jupyter Notebook]
print(Bio.__version__)
</syntaxhighlight>


Installation. <syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
Running BLAST over the internet
python -m pip install -U pip
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
python -m pip install -U matplotlib
from Bio.Blast import NCBIWWW
fasta_string = open("myseq.fa").read()
result_handle = NCBIWWW.qblast("blastn":, "nt", fasta_string)
# blastn is the program to use
# nt is the database to search against
# default output is xml
help(NCBIWWW.qblast)
</syntaxhighlight>


# https://stackoverflow.com/a/50328517
The BLAST record
sudo apt-get install python3.5-tk
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
from Bio.Blast import NCBIXML
blast_record = NCBIXML.read(result_handle)
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


Example. <syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
Parse BLAST output
from sklearn import datasets
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
iris = datasets.load_iris()
len(blast_record.alignments)
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
iris = iris.data


# Scatterplot
E_VALUE_THRESH = 0.01
plt.scatter(iris[:,1], iris[:,2])
for alignment in blas_record.alignments:
plt.show()
  for hsp in alignment.hsps:
    if hsp.expect < E_VALUE_THRESH:
      print('***Alignment***')
      print('sequence:', alignment.title)
      print('length:', alignment.length)
      print('e value:', hsp.expect)
      print(hsp.query)
      print(hsp.match)
      print(hsp.sbjct)
</syntaxhighlight>


# Boxplot
More help with Biopython
plot.boxplot(iris[:,1])
* Biopython tutorial and cookbook: http://biopython.org/DIST/docs/tutorial/Tutorial.html
plt.show()
* Biopython FAQ: http://biopython.org/DIST/docs/tutorial/Tutorial.html#htoc5


# Histogram
== pubmed_parser ==
plt.hist(iris[:,1])
[https://github.com/titipata/pubmed_parser Parser for Pubmed Open-Access XML Subset and MEDLINE XML Dataset]
plt.show()
</syntaxhighlight>


== scikit-learn ==
== pyTest ==
[https://scikit-learn.org/stable/index.html scikit-learn]: Machine Learning in Python
* https://wiki.python.org/moin/PyTest
* https://docs.python-guide.org/writing/tests/


Installation. <syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
== pyc file ==
pip install -U scikit-learn
[https://stackoverflow.com/a/3918716 What is the difference between .py and .pyc files? [duplicate]]. I observe it can cause a problem when I want to modify a python file but it keeps using the old pyc file so my change is not used (Raspbery Pi e-ink example).
</syntaxhighlight>


Example.
== Shutdown or restart OS ==
Below is tested on Raspbian
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
$ python
import os
>>> from sklearn import datasets
os.system('sudo shutdown -h now')
>>> iris = datasets.load_iris()
>>> digits = datasets.load_digits()
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


== feedparser ==
= Popular python libraries =
[https://fedoramagazine.org/never-miss-magazines-article-build-rss-notification-system/ Never miss a Magazine article — build your own RSS notification system]
[https://pythontips.com/2013/07/30/20-python-libraries-you-cant-live-without/ 20 Python libraries you can’t live without]
== psutil ==
* [https://programtalk.com/python-examples/psutil.cpu_percent/ psutil.cpu_percent() examples]. Inspired by the e-ink example from Raspberry Pi.
* https://github.com/arvydas/blinkstick-python/wiki/Example%3A-Display-CPU-usage
* https://www.liaoxuefeng.com/wiki/1016959663602400/1183565811281984
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
# pip install psutil --user
for x in range(10):
    psutil.cpu_percent(interval=1)
</syntaxhighlight>


== Boto ==
== [http://www.numpy.org/ numpy] ==
A Python interface to Amazon Web Services
* [https://engineering.ucsb.edu/~shell/che210d/numpy.pdf An introduction to Numpy and Scipy]
* https://docs.scipy.org/doc/numpy-dev/user/quickstart.html
* [https://s3.amazonaws.com/assets.datacamp.com/blog_assets/Numpy_Python_Cheat_Sheet.pdf Cheat sheets]
* [https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/program-to-find-the-sum-of-each-row-and-each-column-of-a-matrix/ Program to find the Sum of each Row and each Column of a Matrix]


* http://docs.pythonboto.org/en/latest/
== pandas ==
* https://hpc.nih.gov/training/handouts/object_storage_class_2018_oct.pdf
[https://www.makeuseof.com/pandas-manipulate-dataframes/ 30 pandas Commands for Manipulating DataFrames]


== PIL, Pillow ==
Write a pandas dataframe to a text file using [https://pandas.pydata.org/pandas-docs/stable/reference/api/pandas.DataFrame.to_csv.html to.csv()]. https://stackoverflow.com/a/41514539
* Installation <syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>sudo apt install python-imaging </syntaxhighlight>
<pre>
* [https://stackoverflow.com/a/24103766 How I can load a font file with PIL.ImageFont.truetype without specifying the absolute path?]
a.to_csv('xgboost.txt', header=True, index=True, sep='\t')
</pre>


== plotnine ==
== [https://www.scipy.org/ scipy] ==
[https://www.r-bloggers.com/2020/11/python-and-r-part-2-visualizing-data-with-plotnine/ Python and R – Part 2: Visualizing Data with Plotnine]
* [http://blog.nextgenetics.net/?e=94 Hypergeometric test]
* [http://www2.stat.duke.edu/~ar182/rr/examples-gallery/PermutationTest.html Permutation Test]


== nltk: Natural Language Toolkit ==
== seaborn ==
https://www.nltk.org/
* https://seaborn.pydata.org/
* [https://github.com/georgezakinih/exploratory-data-analysis Examples of performaing Explorator Data Analysis for few public clinical data sets]
* ChatGPT [https://twitter.com/arjunrajlab/status/1650134944641871878 GPT-4]


== pygame ==
== matplotlib ==
[https://opensource.com/article/20/10/learn-python-ebook Learn Python by creating a video game]
* https://matplotlib.org/users/installing.html
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/draw-graphs-jupyter-notebook/ How to Draw Graphs in Jupyter Notebook]


== scanpy ==
Installation. <syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* [https://github.com/theislab/scanpy scanpy] and the [https://scanpy.readthedocs.io/en/stable/installation.html installation instruction]
python -m pip install -U pip
* [https://github.com/chriscainx/mnnpy mnnpy]
python -m pip install -U matplotlib


= Trouble shooting =
# https://stackoverflow.com/a/50328517
== ImportError: cannot import name main when running pip ==
sudo apt-get install python3.5-tk
https://stackoverflow.com/a/50187211
</syntaxhighlight>


== TypeError: ‘module’ object is not callable ==
Example. <syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
I was trying to run "bbknn.py" from [https://github.com/oxwang/fda_scRNA-seq/tree/master/4_Batch_correction/Code here].
from sklearn import datasets
iris = datasets.load_iris()
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
iris = iris.data


[https://www.thecrazyprogrammer.com/2020/11/typeerror-module-object-is-not-callable.html Solve “TypeError: ‘module’ object is not callable” in Python], [https://stackoverflow.com/a/4534443 TypeError: 'module' object is not callable]
# Scatterplot
plt.scatter(iris[:,1], iris[:,2])
plt.show()


The problem is I have a file called "bbknn.py" and I have "import bbknn" in the code. It will confuse python. The solution is to rename my script file "bbknn.py" ('''avoid MODULE.py''') to other name like "bbknnDemo.py".
# Boxplot
plot.boxplot(iris[:,1])
plt.show()


[https://www.quora.com/When-I-import-my-module-in-python-it-automatically-runs-all-of-the-defined-functions-inside-of-it-How-do-I-prevent-it-from-auto-executing-my-functions-but-still-allow-me-to-call-them-in-my-main-script When I import my module in python, it automatically runs all of the defined functions inside of it. How do I prevent it from auto executing my functions, but still allow me to call them in my main script?]
# Histogram
plt.hist(iris[:,1])
plt.show()
</syntaxhighlight>


== Illegal instruction ==
== scikit-learn ==
I got this error after I called python3 -c 'import scanpy'. [https://hpc.nih.gov/apps/python.html Python on Biowulf].
[https://scikit-learn.org/stable/index.html scikit-learn]: Machine Learning in Python


<pre>
Installation. <syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
wget https://repo.continuum.io/miniconda/Miniconda3-latest-Linux-x86_64.sh
pip install -U scikit-learn
TMPDIR=/tmp bash Miniconda3-latest-Linux-x86_64.sh -p ~/conda -b
</syntaxhighlight>


source ~/conda/etc/profile.d/conda.sh # ~/conda/condabin is added to PATH
Example.
 
<syntaxhighlight lang='python'>
conda activate base
$ python
python -V # Python 3.9.4
>>> from sklearn import datasets
>>> iris = datasets.load_iris()
>>> digits = datasets.load_digits()
</syntaxhighlight>


conda create -n project1 pandas numpy scipy -y
== PyTorch ==
conda activate project1
* https://pytorch.org/
pip3 install scanpy bbknn
* [https://github.com/PyTorchLightning/pytorch-lightning PyTorch Lightning] - The lightweight PyTorch wrapper for high-performance AI research. Scale your models, not the boilerplate.
ls ~/conda/envs/project1/lib/python3.9/site-packages
# bbknn and scanpy are there 
python3 -c 'import scanpy'
# Illegal instruction


conda info --env
== feedparser ==
conda deactivate
[https://fedoramagazine.org/never-miss-magazines-article-build-rss-notification-system/ Never miss a Magazine article — build your own RSS notification system]
conda remove --all -n project1 -y
conda deactivate
</pre>


== No matching distribution found for XXX ==
== Boto ==
Got an error ''No matching distribution found for lasagne==0.2.dev1'' when I ran '' 'pip install .' '' on [https://github.com/jaredleekatzman/DeepSurv DeepSurv].
A Python interface to Amazon Web Services


https://github.com/imatge-upc/saliency-salgan-2017/issues/29
* http://docs.pythonboto.org/en/latest/
* https://hpc.nih.gov/training/handouts/object_storage_class_2018_oct.pdf


== Python AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute 'SSL_ST_INIT' ==
== PIL, Pillow ==
See https://stackoverflow.com/a/52398193. I got this message after I ran ''sudo pip install --upgrade cryptography'' and ''pip show cryptography''. The reason I try to upgrade cryptography is the following message
* Installation <syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>sudo apt install python-imaging </syntaxhighlight>
<pre>
* [https://stackoverflow.com/a/24103766 How I can load a font file with PIL.ImageFont.truetype without specifying the absolute path?]
$ pip show protobuf
/home/brb/.local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/pip/_vendor/requests/__init__.py:83:
  RequestsDependencyWarning: Old version of cryptography ([1, 2, 3]) may cause slowdown.
  warnings.warn(warning, RequestsDependencyWarning)
Name: protobuf
...
</pre>


And OpenSSL & pyOpenSSL-0.15.1.egg-inf are under /usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages directory on my Ubuntu 16.04.
== plotnine ==
[https://www.r-bloggers.com/2020/11/python-and-r-part-2-visualizing-data-with-plotnine/ Python and R – Part 2: Visualizing Data with Plotnine]


Note the following solutions do not work
== nltk: Natural Language Toolkit ==
<pre>
https://www.nltk.org/
$ sudo pip uninstall pyopenssl
$ sudo pip install pyOpenSSL==16.2.0
</pre>


I always get an error message
== pygame ==
<pre>
[https://opensource.com/article/20/10/learn-python-ebook Learn Python by creating a video game]
...
  File "/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/OpenSSL/SSL.py", line 118, in <module>
    SSL_ST_INIT = _lib.SSL_ST_INIT
AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute 'SSL_ST_INIT'
</pre>


And a quick solution is to do '''sudo rm -r /usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/OpenSSL'''. I also did '''sudo pip install pyopenssl''' but I did not follow [https://stackoverflow.com/a/53195423 this answer] ('''sudo apt install --reinstall python-openssl''').
== scanpy ==
* [https://github.com/theislab/scanpy scanpy] and the [https://scanpy.readthedocs.io/en/stable/installation.html installation instruction]
* [https://github.com/chriscainx/mnnpy mnnpy]


== /usr/bin/env: ‘python’: No such file or directory ==
= Trouble shooting =
On [https://askubuntu.com/a/1234598 Ubuntu 20.04],
== ImportError: cannot import name main when running pip ==
<pre>
https://stackoverflow.com/a/50187211
sudo apt-get install python-is-python3
</pre>
This solved an error when I used [https://yt-dl.org/ youtube-dl].


= Projects based on python =
== Error: externally-managed-environment ==
See [[Python#pipx_.28alternative_to_pip3.29|pipx]]


* [http://kevinmehall.net/p/pithos/ pithos] Pandora on linux
== TypeError: ‘module’ object is not callable ==
* Many Raspberry Pi GPIO projects
I was trying to run "bbknn.py" from [https://github.com/oxwang/fda_scRNA-seq/tree/master/4_Batch_correction/Code here].
* [http://csbio.unc.edu/genescissors/instruction.html GeneScissors] It also requires pip and scikit-learn packages.
* [http://keepnote.org KeepNote] It depends on Python 2.X, [http://www.sqlite.org sqlite] and [http://www.pygtk.org PyGTK].
* [http://www.zim-wiki.org Zim] It depends on Python, Gtk and the python-gtk bindings.
* [http://www.giuspen.com/cherrytree Cherrytree] It depends on Python2, Python-gtk2, Python-gtksourceview2, p7zip-full, python-enchant and python-dbus.


= Send emails =
[https://www.thecrazyprogrammer.com/2020/11/typeerror-module-object-is-not-callable.html Solve “TypeError: ‘module’ object is not callable” in Python], [https://stackoverflow.com/a/4534443 TypeError: 'module' object is not callable]
[https://www.makeuseof.com/python-send-email/ How to Send Automated Email Messages in Python 3]


= GUI programming =
The problem is I have a file called "bbknn.py" and I have "import bbknn" in the code. It will confuse python. The solution is to rename my script file "bbknn.py" ('''avoid MODULE.py''') to other name like "bbknnDemo.py".
[https://www.raspberrypi.org/blog/create-graphical-user-interfaces-with-python/ New book: Create Graphical User Interfaces with Python]


== Qt for GUI development ==
[https://www.quora.com/When-I-import-my-module-in-python-it-automatically-runs-all-of-the-defined-functions-inside-of-it-How-do-I-prevent-it-from-auto-executing-my-functions-but-still-allow-me-to-call-them-in-my-main-script When I import my module in python, it automatically runs all of the defined functions inside of it. How do I prevent it from auto executing my functions, but still allow me to call them in my main script?]
* http://zetcode.com/gui/pyqt4/
* http://wiki.wildsong.biz/index.php/PyQt Create GUI in Qt Designer and convert/use it in PyQt.


= Python 3 =
== Illegal instruction ==
* Python 2.7 will not be maintained past 2020. See https://pythonclock.org/.
I got this error after I called python3 -c 'import scanpy'. [https://hpc.nih.gov/apps/python.html Python on Biowulf].
* [https://github.com/arogozhnikov/python3_with_pleasure Migrating to Python 3 with pleasure]
* [https://github.com/wesm/pydata-book Python for Data Analysis: Data Wrangling with Pandas, NumPy, and IPython] by Wes McKinney.


== pip3 ==
<pre>
Use '''pip3''' instead of '''pip''' for Python 3. For example,
wget https://repo.continuum.io/miniconda/Miniconda3-latest-Linux-x86_64.sh
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
TMPDIR=/tmp bash Miniconda3-latest-Linux-x86_64.sh -p ~/conda -b
pip3 install --upgrade pip


pip3 install -U scikit-learn
source ~/conda/etc/profile.d/conda.sh # ~/conda/condabin is added to PATH


pip3 install -U matplotlib
conda activate base
</syntaxhighlight>
python -V # Python 3.9.4


== http.server ==
conda create -n project1 pandas numpy scipy -y
[https://developers.google.com/web/tools/chrome-devtools/workspaces/ Edit Files With Workspaces]. The 'http.server' module is contained in python3.
conda activate project1
<pre>
pip3 install scanpy bbknn
cd ~/website
ls ~/conda/envs/project1/lib/python3.9/site-packages
python3 -m http.server
# bbknn and scanpy are there 
python3 -c 'import scanpy'
# Illegal instruction
 
conda info --env
conda deactivate
conda remove --all -n project1 -y
conda deactivate
</pre>
</pre>


= R and Python: reticulate package =
== No matching distribution found for XXX ==
* [https://blog.rstudio.com/2018/03/26/reticulate-r-interface-to-python/ reticulate: R interface to Python] (2018). [https://rstudio.github.io/reticulate Latest version].
Got an error ''No matching distribution found for lasagne==0.2.dev1'' when I ran '' 'pip install .' '' on [https://github.com/jaredleekatzman/DeepSurv DeepSurv].
* https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/reticulate/index.html, [https://github.com/rstudio/reticulate Github]
 
** Using Python in R markdown
https://github.com/imatge-upc/saliency-salgan-2017/issues/29
** Importing Python modules and call its functions directly from R — '''import()''' function
 
** Sourcing Python scripts — '''source_python()''' function
== Python AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute 'SSL_ST_INIT' ==
** Python REPL — The '''repl_python()''' function creates an interactive Python console within R.
See https://stackoverflow.com/a/52398193. I got this message after I ran ''sudo pip install --upgrade cryptography'' and ''pip show cryptography''. The reason I try to upgrade cryptography is the following message
<ul>
<li>[https://rstudio.github.io/reticulate/articles/versions.html Python Version Configuration]. Suppose I have installed miniconda and create a new environment called 'project1'. Then after calling '''source ~/conda/etc/profile.d/conda.sh''' I can start in R
<pre>
<pre>
library(reticulate)
$ pip show protobuf
use_condaenv("project1")
/home/brb/.local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/pip/_vendor/requests/__init__.py:83:
</pre>
  RequestsDependencyWarning: Old version of cryptography ([1, 2, 3]) may cause slowdown.
</li>
  warnings.warn(warning, RequestsDependencyWarning)
</ul>
Name: protobuf
* On my macOS, even I have python3 installed, it still asks to install miniconda (/Users/$USER/Library/r-miniconda). So I get another version of Python3 in '''/Users/$USER/Library/r-miniconda/envs/r-reticulate/bin/python'''.
...
* I found RStudio IDE is better than PyCharm and Thonny editors.
</pre>
* Install Python packages https://rstudio.github.io/reticulate/articles/python_packages.html
 
** Better to have [https://www.anaconda.com/distribution/ anaconda3] installed. 2.26G space is required on macOS.
And OpenSSL & pyOpenSSL-0.15.1.egg-inf are under /usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages directory on my Ubuntu 16.04.
** Direct running py_install("pandas") would ask me to upgrade virtualenv
 
** Running virtualenv_create("r-reticulate") and then py_install("pandas") works
Note the following solutions do not work
* [https://www.rstudio.com/resources/cheatsheets/ Cheat sheet]
<pre>
* [https://www.brodrigues.co/blog/2018-12-30-reticulate/ R or Python? Why not both? Using Anaconda Python within R with {reticulate}]
$ sudo pip uninstall pyopenssl
* [https://www.listendata.com/2018/03/run-python-from-r.html?m=1 Run Python from R]
$ sudo pip install pyOpenSSL==16.2.0
* [https://www.statworx.com/de/blog/r-and-python-using-reticulate-to-get-the-best-of-both-worlds/ R and Python: Using reticulate to get the best of both worlds]. Note
</pre>
** [https://rstudio.github.io/reticulate/articles/r_markdown.html RStudio v1.2 preview release includes support for using reticulate to execute Python chunks within R Notebooks]
 
** Error from my execution: ''ValueError: 'RBF' is not in list''
I always get an error message
* [https://rviews.rstudio.com/2019/03/18/the-reticulate-package-solves-the-hardest-problem-in-data-science-people/ The reticulate package solves the hardest problem in data science: people]
<pre>
* [https://rviews.rstudio.com/2019/06/10/reticulate-virtualenv-and-python-in-linux/ reticulate, virtualenv, and Python in Linux]
...
* Bugs
  File "/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/OpenSSL/SSL.py", line 118, in <module>
** [https://stackoverflow.com/a/49556037 Pass Python objects to R]: Works. Or use py_run_string()
     SSL_ST_INIT = _lib.SSL_ST_INIT
** [https://stackoverflow.com/a/52542230 Cannot pass R variables to Python]: use source_python()
AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute 'SSL_ST_INIT'
* [https://github.com/matloff/R-vs.-Python-for-Data-Science R vs Python for data science] by Norm Matloff.
* [https://bensstats.wordpress.com/2020/11/05/rvspython-5-1-making-the-game-even-with-pythons-best-practices/ RvsPython #5.1: Making the Game even with Python’s Best Practices]
* [https://bensstats.wordpress.com/2020/11/04/rvspython-5-using-monte-carlo-to-simulate-%CF%80/ RvsPython #5: Using Monte Carlo To Simulate π]
* [https://www.business-science.io/learn-r/2020/04/20/setup-python-in-r-with-rmarkdown.html How to Run Python's Scikit-Learn in R in 5 minutes]
<ul>
<li>Test python and markdown files
{{Pre}}
def add_three(x):
     z = x + 3
    return z
</pre>
</pre>


And a quick solution is to do '''sudo rm -r /usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/OpenSSL'''. I also did '''sudo pip install pyopenssl''' but I did not follow [https://stackoverflow.com/a/53195423 this answer] ('''sudo apt install --reinstall python-openssl''').
== /usr/bin/env: ‘python’: No such file or directory ==
On [https://askubuntu.com/a/1234598 Ubuntu 20.04],
<pre>
<pre>
---
sudo apt-get install python-is-python3
title: "R Notebook"
</pre>
output: html_notebook
This solved an error when I used [https://yt-dl.org/ youtube-dl].
---


```{r}
= Projects based on python =
library(reticulate)
 
py_discover_config()
* [http://kevinmehall.net/p/pithos/ pithos] Pandora on linux
x <- 5
* Many Raspberry Pi GPIO projects
source_python("test.py")
* [http://csbio.unc.edu/genescissors/instruction.html GeneScissors] It also requires pip and scikit-learn packages.
y <- add_three(x)
* [http://keepnote.org KeepNote] It depends on Python 2.X, [http://www.sqlite.org sqlite] and [http://www.pygtk.org PyGTK].
print(y)
* [http://www.zim-wiki.org Zim] It depends on Python, Gtk and the python-gtk bindings.
```
* [http://www.giuspen.com/cherrytree Cherrytree] It depends on Python2, Python-gtk2, Python-gtksourceview2, p7zip-full, python-enchant and python-dbus.


Pass R variables to Python. Works
= Python scripts =
```{python}
[https://www.tecmint.com/python-automation-scripts/ 21 Simple Python Scripts That Will Automate Your Daily Tasks]
a = 7
* Renaming Files in Bulk
print(r.x)
* Backing Up Files Automatically
```
* Downloading Files from the Internet
* '''Automating Email Reports'''
* Task Scheduler (Task Automation)
* Web Scraping for Data Collection
* Automating Social Media Posts
* Automating Invoice Generation
* Monitoring Website Uptime
* Auto-Reply to Emails
* File Cleanup
* Generate Passwords Automatically
* Task Tracker/Reminder
* Auto-Generate Daily Reports
* '''Monitor System Resources'''
* Batch Image Resizing
* Automating Data Backup to Cloud
* Creating Daily Reminders
* Automating Data Entry to Excel
* Automating Data Cleaning
* Text Extract from Images


Pass python variables to R. Works.
== Send emails ==
```{r}
* [https://support.google.com/accounts/answer/6010255?hl=en&utm_source=google-account&utm_medium=profile-less-secure-apps-card Less secure apps & your Google Account]. To help keep your account secure, from May 30, 2022, ​​Google no longer supports the use of third-party apps or devices which ask you to sign in to your Google Account using only your username and password.
py$a
** [https://pythonassets.com/posts/send-email-via-gmail-and-smtp/ Send Email via Gmail and SMTP] Use an '''App Password''' 2022/9. Click on Security -> 2-Step Verification (You may need to enter your PW first). Scroll to the bottom of the page, and you'll see the "App passwords" section. You can delete/create app passwords but you can't view any existing passwords.
py_run_string("y = 10"); py$y
* [https://www.makeuseof.com/python-send-email/ How to Send Automated Email Messages in Python 3] 2021/3
```
</pre>
</li>
</ul>
* [https://hutsons-hacks.info/reticulate-webinar-r-and-python-a-happy-union Reticulate webinar – R and Python – a happy union]


== How to quit python ==
= GUI programming =
Type '''exit''' and hit Enter. See https://rstudio.github.io/reticulate/.
[https://www.raspberrypi.org/blog/create-graphical-user-interfaces-with-python/ New book: Create Graphical User Interfaces with Python]
 
== Qt for GUI development ==
* http://zetcode.com/gui/pyqt4/
* http://wiki.wildsong.biz/index.php/PyQt Create GUI in Qt Designer and convert/use it in PyQt.
 
= Python 3 =
* Python 2.7 will not be maintained past 2020. See https://pythonclock.org/.
* [https://github.com/arogozhnikov/python3_with_pleasure Migrating to Python 3 with pleasure]
* [https://github.com/wesm/pydata-book Python for Data Analysis: Data Wrangling with Pandas, NumPy, and IPython] by Wes McKinney.


== R vs Python ==
== pip3 ==
[https://www.business-science.io/business/2021/07/12/R-is-for-research-Python-is-for-production.html R is for Research, Python is for Production]
Use '''pip3''' instead of '''pip''' for Python 3. For example,
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
pip3 install --upgrade pip


= Conda, Anaconda, miniconda =
pip3 install -U scikit-learn
* [[Docker#Conda|Docker]]
 
* [https://hpc.nih.gov/apps/python.html Python on Biowulf]. Users who need stable, reproducible environments are encouraged to install miniconda in their data directory and create their own private environments.  
pip3 install -U matplotlib
* [https://towardsdatascience.com/a-guide-to-conda-environments-bc6180fc533 The Definitive Guide to Conda Environments]
</syntaxhighlight>
* [https://research.computing.yale.edu/sites/default/files/files/anaconda.pdf Introduction to Anaconda]. Simplifies installation of Python packages
 
** Platform-independent package manager
== http.server ==
** Doesn’t require administrative privileges
[https://developers.google.com/web/tools/chrome-devtools/workspaces/ Edit Files With Workspaces]. The 'http.server' module is contained in python3.
** Installs non-Python library dependencies (MKL, HDF5, Boost)
<pre>
** Provides ”virtual environment” capabilities
cd ~/website
** Many channels exist that support additional packages
python3 -m http.server
* [https://docs.anaconda.com/anaconda/install/mac-os/ Install Anaconda on macOS]. Better to use the command line method in order to install it to the user's directory. The new python can be manually loaded into the shell by using '''source ~/.bash_profile'''. Like Ubuntu, ananconda3 is installed under ~/ directory. In addition, '''Anaconda-Navigator''' is available under Finder -> Applications.
</pre>
 
= C vs Python =
[https://www.makeuseof.com/c-python-core-differences/ C vs. Python: The Key Differences]
 
= R and Python: reticulate package =
* [https://blog.rstudio.com/2018/03/26/reticulate-r-interface-to-python/ reticulate: R interface to Python] (2018). [https://rstudio.github.io/reticulate Latest version].
<ul>
<ul>
<li>[https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-install-the-anaconda-python-distribution-on-ubuntu-16-04 How To Install the Anaconda Python Distribution on Ubuntu 16.04]. As we can see Anaconda3 will be installed under '''/home/$USER/anaconda3'''.
<li>[https://support.rstudio.com/hc/en-us/articles/360023654474-Installing-and-Configuring-Python-with-RStudio Installing and Configuring Python with RStudio]
<ul>
<ul>
<li>Download '''Anaconda3-2018.12-Linux-x86_64.sh''' from https://www.anaconda.com/distribution/#download-section </li>
<li>The instruction is based on ''virtualenv''. But I'm following Biowulf's Python [https://hpc.nih.gov/apps/python.html#envs miniconda instruction] to create a new project/environment. One caveat is I need to run ''source ~/$USER/conda/etc/profile.d/conda.sh'' each time before I start R in order to make conda available OR I need to set the [https://rstudio.github.io/reticulate/reference/miniconda_path.html RETICULATE_MINICONDA_PATH] variable (see below). </li>
<li>bash Anaconda3-2018.12-Linux-x86_64.sh </li>
<li>The conda-related reticulate functions include conda_create(), [https://www.rdocumentation.org/packages/reticulate/versions/1.20/topics/use_python use_condaenv()], conda_install(), conda_list(), conda_remove() </li>
<li>There is a question: <span style="color: red">Do you wish the installer to initialize Anaconda3</span>. If you answer Yes, it will modify ~/.bashrc file. # <span style="color: red"> This will overwrite system's Python</span>. So the default python/python3 will now be in /home/$USER/anaconda3/bin/.
<li>Use '''py_config()''' to check the current python path and other python versions found. </li>
<li>My example
<pre>
<pre>
Do you wish the installer to initialize Anaconda3
library(reticulate)
by running conda init? [yes|no]
# Assume I followed Biowulf's instruction to create 'project1'
[no] >>> yes
Sys.setenv(RETICULATE_MINICONDA_PATH = "~/conda")
no change    /home/brb/anaconda3/condabin/conda
conda_list()
no change    /home/brb/anaconda3/bin/conda
use_condaenv("project1", required=T)
no change    /home/brb/anaconda3/bin/conda-env
py_config()
no change    /home/brb/anaconda3/bin/activate
</pre>
no change    /home/brb/anaconda3/bin/deactivate
</li>
no change    /home/brb/anaconda3/etc/profile.d/conda.sh
</ul>
no change    /home/brb/anaconda3/etc/fish/conf.d/conda.fish
</li>
no change    /home/brb/anaconda3/shell/condabin/Conda.psm1
</ul>
no change    /home/brb/anaconda3/shell/condabin/conda-hook.ps1
* [[Rstudio#Python|RStudio -> Python]]
no change    /home/brb/anaconda3/lib/python3.8/site-packages/xontrib/conda.xsh
* https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/reticulate/index.html, [https://github.com/rstudio/reticulate Github]
no change    /home/brb/anaconda3/etc/profile.d/conda.csh
** Using Python in R markdown
modified      /home/brb/.bashrc
** Importing Python modules and call its functions directly from R — '''import()''' function
 
** Sourcing Python scripts — '''source_python()''' function
==> For changes to take effect, close and re-open your current shell. <==
** Python REPL — The '''repl_python()''' function creates an interactive Python console within R.  
 
<ul>
If you'd prefer that conda's base environment not be activated on startup,
<li>[https://rstudio.github.io/reticulate/articles/versions.html Python Version Configuration]. Suppose I have installed miniconda and create a new environment called 'project1'. Then after calling '''source ~/conda/etc/profile.d/conda.sh''' I can start in R
  set the auto_activate_base parameter to false:
<pre>
 
library(reticulate)
conda config --set auto_activate_base false
use_condaenv("project1", required = TRUE)
</pre>
</pre>
If I choose not to modify .bashrc file,
</li>
<pre>
Do you wish the installer to initialize Anaconda3
by running conda init? [yes|no]
[no] >>> no
 
You have chosen to not have conda modify your shell scripts at all.
To activate conda's base environment in your current shell session:
 
eval "$(/home/brb/anaconda3/bin/conda shell.YOUR_SHELL_NAME hook)"
 
To install conda's shell functions for easier access, first activate, then:
 
conda init
 
If you'd prefer that conda's base environment not be activated on startup,
  set the auto_activate_base parameter to false:
 
conda config --set auto_activate_base false
 
Thank you for installing Anaconda3!
 
</pre></li>
<li>'''Anaconda-Navigator''' (including jupyter notebook, Spyder IDE, ...) can be launched by typing '''anaconda-navigator''' in a terminal </li>
</ul>
</ul>
</li>
* On my macOS, even I have python3 installed, it still asks to install miniconda (/Users/$USER/Library/r-miniconda). So I get another version of Python3 in '''/Users/$USER/Library/r-miniconda/envs/r-reticulate/bin/python'''.
</ul>
* I found RStudio IDE is better than PyCharm and Thonny editors.
* [https://opensource.com/article/18/4/getting-started-anaconda-python Getting started with Anaconda Python for data science]  
* Install Python packages https://rstudio.github.io/reticulate/articles/python_packages.html
* Differences:
** Better to have [https://www.anaconda.com/distribution/ anaconda3] installed. 2.26G space is required on macOS.
** [https://stackoverflow.com/questions/30034840/what-are-the-differences-between-conda-and-anaconda What are the differences between Conda and Anaconda]
** Direct running py_install("pandas") would ask me to upgrade virtualenv
** [https://www.quora.com/What-is-the-comparison-among-conda-vs-pip-vs-anaconda What is the comparison among conda vs pip vs anaconda?]
** Running virtualenv_create("r-reticulate") and then py_install("pandas") works
** [https://bioconda.github.io/faqs.html#conda-anaconda-minconda What’s the difference between Anaconda, conda, and Miniconda?]
* Cheat sheet https://ugoproto.github.io/ugo_r_doc/pdf/reticulate.pdf
* Comparions:
* [https://www.brodrigues.co/blog/2018-12-30-reticulate/ R or Python? Why not both? Using Anaconda Python within R with {reticulate}]
** [https://conda.io/docs/ Conda]: an open source package management system and environment management system
* [https://www.listendata.com/2018/03/run-python-from-r.html?m=1 Run Python from R]
** [https://conda.io/miniconda.html Miniconda], which is a smaller alternative to Anaconda that is just conda and its dependencies. Once you have Miniconda, you can easily install Anaconda into it with '''conda install anaconda'''.
* [https://www.statworx.com/de/blog/r-and-python-using-reticulate-to-get-the-best-of-both-worlds/ R and Python: Using reticulate to get the best of both worlds]. Note
** [https://anaconda.org/ Anaconda]: Anaconda is a set of about a hundred packages including conda, numpy, scipy, ipython notebook, and so on.
** [https://rstudio.github.io/reticulate/articles/r_markdown.html RStudio v1.2 preview release includes support for using reticulate to execute Python chunks within R Notebooks]
*** [https://anaconda.org/r/rstudio RStudio]
** Error from my execution: ''ValueError: 'RBF' is not in list''
*** [https://bioconda.github.io/ Bioconda] is a '''channel''' for the conda package manager specializing in bioinformatics software.
* [https://rviews.rstudio.com/2019/03/18/the-reticulate-package-solves-the-hardest-problem-in-data-science-people/ The reticulate package solves the hardest problem in data science: people]
* [https://conda.io/projects/conda/en/latest/user-guide/getting-started.html#managing-conda Getting started with conda]. More details are in [https://conda.io/projects/conda/en/latest/user-guide/tasks/index.html Tasks].
* [https://rviews.rstudio.com/2019/06/10/reticulate-virtualenv-and-python-in-linux/ reticulate, virtualenv, and Python in Linux]
: <syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
* Bugs
conda --version
** [https://stackoverflow.com/a/49556037 Pass Python objects to R]: Works. Or use py_run_string()
 
** [https://stackoverflow.com/a/52542230 Cannot pass R variables to Python]: use source_python()
# Manage environment
* [https://github.com/matloff/R-vs.-Python-for-Data-Science R vs Python for data science] by Norm Matloff.
conda info --envs  # see a list of environments.
* [https://bensstats.wordpress.com/2020/11/05/rvspython-5-1-making-the-game-even-with-pythons-best-practices/ RvsPython #5.1: Making the Game even with Python’s Best Practices]
                  # The active environment is the one with an asterisk (*)
* [https://bensstats.wordpress.com/2020/11/04/rvspython-5-using-monte-carlo-to-simulate-%CF%80/ RvsPython #5: Using Monte Carlo To Simulate π]
# create a new environment
* [https://www.business-science.io/learn-r/2020/04/20/setup-python-in-r-with-rmarkdown.html How to Run Python's Scikit-Learn in R in 5 minutes]
conda create --name myenv
<ul>
# remove an environment
<li>Test python and markdown files
conda remove --name myenv --all
{{Pre}}
def add_three(x):
    z = x + 3
    return z
</pre>


# Manage Python
<pre>
conda create --name snakes python=3.5
---
conda activate snowflakes # activate
title: "R Notebook"
conda info --envs
output: html_notebook
python --version
---
conda activate  # Change your current environment back to the default (base)
conda deactivate # exit any python virtualenv


# Managing packages
```{r}
conda search beautifulsoup4
library(reticulate)
conda install beautifulsoup4
py_discover_config()
conda list
x <- 5
source_python("test.py")
y <- add_three(x)
print(y)
```


# Updating Anaconda or Miniconda
Pass R variables to Python. Works
conda update conda
```{python}
</syntaxhighlight>
a = 7
* Used in [https://github.com/MaxSalm/pdxBlacklist pdxBlacklist]
print(r.x)
* [https://stringfestanalytics.com/what-is-open-source-distribution/ What is an open source software distribution?]
```


== Miniconda ==
Pass python variables to R. Works.
https://docs.conda.io/en/latest/miniconda.html As you can see miniconda installers were separated by the Python version.
```{r}
py$a
py_run_string("y = 10"); py$y
```
</pre>
</li>
</ul>
* [https://hutsons-hacks.info/reticulate-webinar-r-and-python-a-happy-union Reticulate webinar – R and Python – a happy union]
* [https://datascienceplus.com/linking-r-and-python-to-retrieve-financial-data-and-plot-a-candlestick/ Linking R and Python to retrieve financial data and plot a candlestick]
* [https://www.r-bloggers.com/2022/04/getting-started-with-python-using-r-and-reticulate/ Getting started with Python using R and reticulate]


[https://ostechnix.com/how-to-install-miniconda-in-linux/ How To Install Miniconda In Linux] 2021. It includes Install Miniconda interactively, '''unattended installation''', '''Update Miniconda''', and '''Uninstall Miniconda'''. If you've chosen the default location, the installer will display “PREFIX=/var/home/<user>/miniconda3”. To manually activate conda's base environment, do '''/home/<user>/miniconda3/etc/profile.d/conda.sh''' where we assume miniconda is installed under /home/<user>/miniconda3 directory.
== How to quit python ==
Type '''exit''' and hit Enter. See https://rstudio.github.io/reticulate/.
 
== R vs Python ==
* [https://www.business-science.io/business/2021/07/12/R-is-for-research-Python-is-for-production.html R is for Research, Python is for Production]
* [https://datasciencetut.com/difference-between-r-and-python/ Difference between R and Python]
 
== Call R from Python ==
* [https://github.com/kpj/rwrap rwrap] Seamlessly integrate R packages into Python.
* [https://pypi.org/project/rpy2/ rpy2]


[https://youtu.be/bbIG5d3bOmk Miniconda Installation for macOS users] 2019. At the end of installation, we see if we don't want conda's base environment to be activated on start up, we can do
= Conda, Anaconda, miniconda =
'''conda config --set auto_activate_base false'''
* [[Docker#Conda|Docker]]
* [https://hpc.nih.gov/apps/python.html Python on Biowulf]. Users who need stable, reproducible environments are encouraged to install miniconda in their data directory and create their own private environments.
* [https://towardsdatascience.com/a-guide-to-conda-environments-bc6180fc533 The Definitive Guide to Conda Environments]


See also [https://hpc.nih.gov/apps/python.html Python on Biowulf] about how to specify '''prefix'''.
== Private environment ==
[https://hpc.nih.gov/docs/diy_installation/conda.html Conda on Biowulf] & [https://github.com/conda-forge/miniforge#mambaforge mambaforge]


We can add a module to an existing environment. See [https://afni.nimh.nih.gov/pub/dist/doc/htmldoc/background_install/miniconda.html#sidenote Miniconda: Python(s) in a convenient setup].
== Transfer a conda environment to another computer: YAML files ==
[https://conda.io/projects/conda/en/latest/user-guide/tasks/manage-environments.html Managing environments]
<pre>
<pre>
conda install -n <env_name> <package>
# computer 1
conda env export > environment.yml
 
# computer 2
conda env create -f environment.yml
</pre>
</pre>


=== Uninstall miniconda ===
== Conda environment create, activate, deactivate, info (see a list) ==
# rm -rf ~/miniconda3
[https://conda.io/projects/conda/en/latest/user-guide/getting-started.html#managing-conda Getting started with conda]. More details are in [https://conda.io/projects/conda/en/latest/user-guide/tasks/index.html Tasks].
# nano ~/.bash_profile and delete conda initialize block
<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
conda --version


=== What's the purpose of the “base” (for best practices) in Anaconda? ===
# Manage environment
https://stackoverflow.com/a/56504279
conda info --envs  # see a list of environments.
                  # The active environment is the one with an asterisk (*)
# create a new environment
conda create --name myenv
# remove an environment
conda remove --name myenv --all


=== Does Conda replace the need for virtualenv? ===
# Manage Python
[https://stackoverflow.com/a/34398794 Yes]. Conda is not limited to Python but can be used for other languages too.
conda create --name snakes python=3.5
conda activate snowflakes # activate
conda info --envs
python --version
conda activate  # Change your current environment back to the default (base)
conda deactivate # exit any python virtualenv


== Using R language with Anaconda ==
# Managing packages
conda search beautifulsoup4
conda install beautifulsoup4
conda list
 
# Updating Anaconda or Miniconda
conda update conda
</syntaxhighlight>
 
== Anaconda ==
* [https://research.computing.yale.edu/sites/default/files/files/anaconda.pdf Introduction to Anaconda]. Simplifies installation of Python packages
** Platform-independent package manager
** Doesn’t require administrative privileges
** Installs non-Python library dependencies (MKL, HDF5, Boost)
** Provides ”virtual environment” capabilities
** Many channels exist that support additional packages
* [https://docs.anaconda.com/anaconda/install/mac-os/ Install Anaconda on macOS]. Better to use the command line method in order to install it to the user's directory. The new python can be manually loaded into the shell by using '''source ~/.bash_profile'''. Like Ubuntu, ananconda3 is installed under ~/ directory. In addition, '''Anaconda-Navigator''' is available under Finder -> Applications.
<ul>
<li>[https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-install-the-anaconda-python-distribution-on-ubuntu-16-04 How To Install the Anaconda Python Distribution on Ubuntu 16.04]. As we can see Anaconda3 will be installed under '''/home/$USER/anaconda3'''.
<ul>
<ul>
<li>
<li>Download '''Anaconda3-2018.12-Linux-x86_64.sh''' from https://www.anaconda.com/distribution/#download-section </li>
[https://towardsdatascience.com/a-guide-to-conda-environments-bc6180fc533 The Definitive Guide to Conda Environments], [https://docs.anaconda.com/anaconda/user-guide/tasks/using-r-language/ Using R language with Anaconda]. '''Environments''' created with ''conda create'' live by default in the '''envs/''' folder of your Conda directory, whose path will look something like ''/Users/user-name/miniconda3/envs'' or ''/Users/user-name/anaconda3/envs''.
<li>bash Anaconda3-2018.12-Linux-x86_64.sh </li>
<li>There is a question: <span style="color: red">Do you wish the installer to initialize Anaconda3</span>. If you answer Yes, it will run '''conda init''' & modify ~/.bashrc file. # <span style="color: red"> This will overwrite system's Python</span>. So the default python/python3 will now be in /home/$USER/anaconda3/bin/.
<pre>
<pre>
Activate conda base                  Create a new env    Activate a new env          Deactivate an env
Do you wish the installer to initialize Anaconda3
----------------------------> (base) -----------------> -------------------> (r-env) -----------------> (base)
by running conda init? [yes|no]
eval $(conda shell.bash hook)"      conda create r-env  conda activate r-env        conda deactivate
[no] >>> yes
no change    /home/brb/anaconda3/condabin/conda
no change    /home/brb/anaconda3/bin/conda
no change    /home/brb/anaconda3/bin/conda-env
no change    /home/brb/anaconda3/bin/activate
no change    /home/brb/anaconda3/bin/deactivate
no change    /home/brb/anaconda3/etc/profile.d/conda.sh
no change    /home/brb/anaconda3/etc/fish/conf.d/conda.fish
no change    /home/brb/anaconda3/shell/condabin/Conda.psm1
no change    /home/brb/anaconda3/shell/condabin/conda-hook.ps1
no change    /home/brb/anaconda3/lib/python3.8/site-packages/xontrib/conda.xsh
no change    /home/brb/anaconda3/etc/profile.d/conda.csh
modified      /home/brb/.bashrc
 
==> For changes to take effect, close and re-open your current shell. <==
 
If you'd prefer that conda's base environment not be activated on startup,
  set the auto_activate_base parameter to false:
 
conda config --set auto_activate_base false
</pre>
</pre>
If I choose not to modify .bashrc file,
<pre>
<pre>
$ eval "$(/home/brb/anaconda3/bin/conda shell.bash hook)"
Do you wish the installer to initialize Anaconda3
(base) $ mkdir mypythonproj; cd mypythonproj  # This step seems not necessary
by running conda init? [yes|no]
(base) $ conda create -n r-env r-base
[no] >>> no
...
 
#
You have chosen to not have conda modify your shell scripts at all.
# To activate this environment, use
To activate conda's base environment in your current shell session:
#
 
#    $ conda activate r-env
eval "$(/home/brb/anaconda3/bin/conda shell.YOUR_SHELL_NAME hook)"  
#
 
# To deactivate an active environment, use
To install conda's shell functions for easier access, first activate, then:
#
 
#    $ conda deactivate
conda init
(base) $ conda activate r-env
 
(r-env) $ ls anaconda3/envs
If you'd prefer that conda's base environment not be activated on startup,  
r-env
  set the auto_activate_base parameter to false:
(r-env) $ conda install r-essentials
 
(r-env) $ which R
conda config --set auto_activate_base false
/home/brb/anaconda3/envs/r-env/bin/R
 
(r-env) $ ls -la  # Still Empty
Thank you for installing Anaconda3!
(r-env) $ R --version
 
R version 3.4.3 (2017-11-30) -- "Kite-Eating Tree"
</pre></li>
# Note that the current R version should be 4.0.3
<li>'''Anaconda-Navigator''' (including jupyter notebook, Spyder IDE, ...) can be launched by typing '''anaconda-navigator''' in a terminal </li>
(r-env) $ conda env list
</ul>
base                    /home/brb/anaconda3
r-env                *  /home/brb/anaconda3/envs/r-env
(r-env) $ conda deactivate
(base)  $
</pre>
It seems to be better to save the environment inside a project directory. So using '''python -m venv /path/to/new/environment''' method is preferred. You can also use '''conda create --prefix /path/to/new/environment'''. Placing environments outside of the default env/ folder comes with some drawbacks. Read the document of 'The Definitive Guide to Conda Environments'.
</li>
</li>
<li> [https://conda-forge.org/ conda-forge channel], [https://conda-forge.org/docs/user/introduction.html A brief introduction], https://anaconda.org/conda-forge/r-base. Following the instruction seems to mess things up though the conda-forge says the latest version is 4.0.3 (3 years late).
</ul>
{{Pre}}
* [https://opensource.com/article/18/4/getting-started-anaconda-python Getting started with Anaconda Python for data science]
$ eval "$(/home/brb/anaconda3/bin/conda shell.bash hook)"
* Differences:
(base) $ conda install -c conda-forge r-base
** [https://stackoverflow.com/questions/30034840/what-are-the-differences-between-conda-and-anaconda What are the differences between Conda and Anaconda]
...
** [https://www.quora.com/What-is-the-comparison-among-conda-vs-pip-vs-anaconda What is the comparison among conda vs pip vs anaconda?]
** [https://bioconda.github.io/faqs.html#conda-anaconda-minconda What’s the difference between Anaconda, conda, and Miniconda?]
* Comparions:
** [https://conda.io/docs/ Conda]: an open source package management system and environment management system
** [https://conda.io/miniconda.html Miniconda], which is a smaller alternative to Anaconda that is just conda and its dependencies. Once you have Miniconda, you can easily install Anaconda into it with '''conda install anaconda'''.
** [https://anaconda.org/ Anaconda]: Anaconda is a set of about a hundred packages including conda, numpy, scipy, ipython notebook, and so on.
*** [https://anaconda.org/r/rstudio RStudio]
*** [https://bioconda.github.io/ Bioconda] is a '''channel''' for the conda package manager specializing in bioinformatics software.
* [https://docs.anaconda.com/anaconda/install/uninstall/ Uninstall]
* Used in [https://github.com/MaxSalm/pdxBlacklist pdxBlacklist]
* [https://stringfestanalytics.com/what-is-open-source-distribution/ What is an open source software distribution?]
 
== Miniconda ==
* https://docs.conda.io/en/latest/miniconda.html As you can see miniconda installers were separated by the Python version.
* [https://ostechnix.com/how-to-install-miniconda-in-linux/ How To Install Miniconda In Linux] 2021. It includes Install Miniconda interactively, '''unattended installation''', '''Update Miniconda''', and '''Uninstall Miniconda'''. If you've chosen the default location, the installer will display “PREFIX=/var/home/<user>/miniconda3”. To manually activate conda's base environment, do '''/home/<user>/miniconda3/etc/profile.d/conda.sh''' where we assume miniconda is installed under /home/<user>/miniconda3 directory.
* [https://youtu.be/bbIG5d3bOmk Miniconda Installation for macOS users] 2019. At the end of installation, we see if we don't want conda's base environment to be activated on start up, we can do '''conda config --set auto_activate_base false'''
* See also [https://hpc.nih.gov/apps/python.html Python on Biowulf] about how to specify '''prefix'''.
* We can add/install a module to an existing environment. See [https://afni.nimh.nih.gov/pub/dist/doc/htmldoc/background_install/miniconda.html#sidenote Miniconda: Python(s) in a convenient setup].
:<syntaxhighlight lang='bash'>
conda install -n <env_name> <package>
conda create -n myenv python=3 # create a new environment named “myenv” with Python 3 installed
  # after that, use "conda activate myenv" and use "conda install numpy" to install the numpy
</syntaxhighlight>
 
=== Install and "conda init" ===
* Windows: screenshots are included [https://katiekodes.com/setup-python-windows-miniconda/ Setting up Python on Windows with Miniconda by Anaconda] & [https://docs.anaconda.com/free/anaconda/install/windows/ Anaconda documentation]. The default is not to add Anaconda to my PATH environment variable.
* Ubuntu: [https://varhowto.com/install-miniconda-ubuntu-20-04/ How to Install Miniconda on Ubuntu 20.04]. After installation, PATH variable will prepend '''~/miniconda3/condabin''' which contains only 1 file: '''conda'''.
* '''conda init'''
** Running conda init initializes conda for shell interaction by writing some shell code in the relevant startup scripts of your shell (e.g~/.bashrc) 1. This allows the conda command to interact more closely with the shell context and provides a cleaner PATH manipulation and snappier responses in some conda commands. The main advantage of running conda init is that it enables the use of the [https://docs.conda.io/projects/conda/en/latest/dev-guide/deep-dives/activation.html conda activate and conda deactivate] commands, which are used to activate and deactivate conda environments.
** We only need to call "conda init" once no matter after we install conda how many conda environments we will work.
** One disadvantage of running conda init is that it can sometimes cause issues if the initialization is not done correctly or if there are conflicts with other configurations in your [https://stackoverflow.com/questions/58388190/conda-init-doesnt-work-in-bash-on-windows shell startup scripts]. However, these issues can usually be resolved by troubleshooting and making the necessary changes to your configurat
 
=== conda environment ===
A conda environment is a directory that contains a specific collection of conda packages that you have installed.
 
You need to create an environment first before you can activate it. The conda activate command does not create an environment for you, it only activates an existing one.
 
<pre>
conda create --name myenv
 
conda activate myenv
</pre>
 
Q: Where are the environments located? A: Conda environments are typically stored in the envs subdirectory of your Anaconda installation directory. For example, if you have an environment named myenv, it would be located in a directory like ~/anaconda3/envs/myenv. The exact path can be found by using '''conda env list''' command.
 
Q: How do I list all existing environments? A: To list all existing conda environments, you can use the conda env list or conda info --envs command. Here’s how you do it:
<pre>
conda env list
#
base      * /opt/conda
DrivR-Base  /opt/conda/envs/DrivR-Base
</pre>
 
Q: How to quit a conda environment?
<pre>
conda deactivate  # Return to base
conda deactivate  # Exit base
</pre>
 
Q: Check the disk space used by a specific conda environment.
<pre>
du -sh /path/to/conda/envs/your_enviornment_name
</pre>
 
Q: How to delete a conda environemnt,
<pre>
conda deactivate
conda env remove --name your_environment_name
# OR
conda remove --name your_environment_name --all
</pre>
 
=== Install all anaconda packages ===
* https://stackoverflow.com/a/52316549 '''conda install anaconda'''
* https://docs.conda.io/en/latest/miniconda.html '''conda create -n py3k anaconda python=3'''
* how much space is needed for installing anaconda? The minimum disk space required for installing Anaconda is 3 GB, but it is recommended to have at least 6 GB of free disk space available.
 
=== Uninstall miniconda ===
# rm -rf ~/miniconda3
# nano ~/.bash_profile and delete conda initialize block
 
=== What's the purpose of the “base” (for best practices) in Anaconda? ===
https://stackoverflow.com/a/56504279
 
=== Does Conda replace the need for virtualenv? ===
[https://stackoverflow.com/a/34398794 Yes]. Conda is not limited to Python but can be used for other languages too.
 
== GCC/gFortran ==
* '''conda install gcc'''
* Using [https://anaconda.org/conda-forge/gfortran/  conda-forge] channel - '''conda install -c conda-forge gfortran'''
 
== Using R language with Anaconda ==
<ul>
<li>[https://docs.anaconda.com/free/anaconda/packages/using-r-language/ Using R language with Anaconda]
<pre>
conda create -n r_env r-essentials r-base
conda activate r_env
</pre>
<li>Difference of install a package using '''install.packages()''' function in R and using the '''conda install''' command?
* The install.packages() function in R and the conda install command are two different ways to install R packages. The install.packages() function is used to install packages from the Comprehensive R Archive Network (CRAN), while the conda install command is used to install packages from the Anaconda repository.
* One key difference between the two methods is that conda can manage dependencies across multiple programming languages, while install.packages() only manages dependencies within R.
* Another difference is that conda allows you to create and manage multiple isolated environments, each with its own set of packages. This can be useful if you want to have different versions of packages available for different projects. With install.packages(), all packages are installed in the same global library, which can make it more difficult to manage dependencies and avoid conflicts.
<li>
[https://towardsdatascience.com/a-guide-to-conda-environments-bc6180fc533 The Definitive Guide to Conda Environments], [https://docs.anaconda.com/anaconda/user-guide/tasks/using-r-language/ Using R language with Anaconda]. '''Environments''' created with ''conda create'' live by default in the '''envs/''' folder of your Conda directory, whose path will look something like ''/Users/user-name/miniconda3/envs'' or ''/Users/user-name/anaconda3/envs''.
<pre>
Activate conda base                  Create a new env    Activate a new env          Deactivate an env
----------------------------> (base) ----------------->  -------------------> (r-env) -----------------> (base)
eval $(conda shell.bash hook)"      conda create r-env  conda activate r-env        conda deactivate
</pre>
<pre>
$ eval "$(/home/brb/anaconda3/bin/conda shell.bash hook)"
(base) $ mkdir mypythonproj; cd mypythonproj  # This step seems not necessary
(base) $ conda create -n r-env r-base
...
#
# To activate this environment, use
#
#    $ conda activate r-env
#
# To deactivate an active environment, use
#
#    $ conda deactivate
(base) $ conda activate r-env
(r-env) $ ls anaconda3/envs
r-env
(r-env) $ conda install r-essentials
(r-env) $ which R
/home/brb/anaconda3/envs/r-env/bin/R
(r-env) $ ls -la  # Still Empty
(r-env) $ R --version
R version 3.4.3 (2017-11-30) -- "Kite-Eating Tree"
# Note that the current R version should be 4.0.3
(r-env) $ conda env list
base                    /home/brb/anaconda3
r-env                *  /home/brb/anaconda3/envs/r-env
(r-env) $ conda deactivate
(base)  $
</pre>
It seems to be better to save the environment inside a project directory. So using '''python -m venv /path/to/new/environment''' method is preferred. You can also use '''conda create --prefix /path/to/new/environment'''. Placing environments outside of the default env/ folder comes with some drawbacks. Read the document of 'The Definitive Guide to Conda Environments'.
</li>
<li> [https://conda-forge.org/ conda-forge channel], [https://conda-forge.org/docs/user/introduction.html A brief introduction], https://anaconda.org/conda-forge/r-base. Following the instruction seems to mess things up though the conda-forge says the latest version is 4.0.3 (3 years late).
{{Pre}}
$ eval "$(/home/brb/anaconda3/bin/conda shell.bash hook)"
(base) $ conda install -c conda-forge r-base
...
## Package Plan ##
## Package Plan ##
 
 
   environment location: /home/brb/anaconda3
   environment location: /home/brb/anaconda3
 
 
   added / updated specs:
   added / updated specs:
     - r-base
     - r-base
...
...
Downloading and Extracting Packages
Downloading and Extracting Packages
r-base-3.2.2    ...
r-base-3.2.2    ...
(base) $ R --version
(base) $ R --version
/home/brb/anaconda3/lib/R/bin/exec/R: error while loading shared libraries: libreadline.so.6: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
/home/brb/anaconda3/lib/R/bin/exec/R: error while loading shared libraries: libreadline.so.6: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
(base) $ which R
(base) $ which R
/home/brb/anaconda3/bin/R
/home/brb/anaconda3/bin/R
</pre>
</pre>
</li>
</li>
</ul>
 
== Run R with Jupyter notebook ==
<ul>
<li>[https://marketsplash.com/tutorials/r/how-to-use-r-in-jupyter-notebooks/ How To Use R In Jupyter Notebooks: A Step-By-Step Approach]
<pre>
mkdir project; cd project
python3 -m venv myenv
source myenv/bin/activate
pip3 install jupyter
# Same terminal
R  # this is from the global environment
    # so the local environment for R does not work
</pre>
<pre>
install.packages('IRkernel')  # Install IRkernel from within R
        # Make sure build-essential has been installed before
        # running install.packages().
IRkernel::installspec()      # Make IRkernel available to JupyterLab
q()
</pre>
After running these commands in R, you should be able to select R as a kernel when creating a new notebook in JupyterLab.
<pre>
jupyter lab # automatically launch jupyter in a browser
 
Ctrl+c      # stop
deactivate
</pre>
 
<li>[https://docs.anaconda.com/anaconda/navigator/tutorials/r-lang/ Using the R programming language in Jupyter Notebook] (Anaconda)
 
<li>[https://developers.refinitiv.com/en/article-catalog/article/setup-jupyter-notebook-r Setup Jupyter Notebook for R] (Windows OS, no conda)
<li>[https://datatofish.com/r-jupyter-notebook/ How to Add R to Jupyter Notebook (full steps)] using Anaconda
<li>[https://www.storybench.org/install-r-jupyter-notebook/ How to install R on a Jupyter notebook] using homebrew
<li>[http://www.rebeccabarter.com/blog/2017-11-17-ggplot2_tutorial/ ggplot2: Mastering the basics] & [https://github.com/rlbarter/ggplot2-thw Jupyter Notebook]. To set up the Jupyter environment, see the [[Docker#Python_Jupyter_including_R|Docker method]].
<pre>
docker run --rm -p 8888:8888 \
      -e JUPYTER_ENABLE_LAB=yes \
      -v "$PWD":/home/jovyan \
      jupyter/datascience-notebook:r-4.0.3
</pre>
We first have to use "git clone https://github.com/rlbarter/ggplot2-thw.git" to download the repo and "cd ggplot2-thw".  Then after opening http://IP:8888/?token=XXXXXXX we will see "ggplot2.ipynb" on the left panel. Double click the file will open it on the Notebook.
</li>
</ul>
 
== Example 1: GEO2RNAseq ==
[[Genome#GEO2RNAseq|GEO2RNAseq]]
 
== Example 2: p-NET ==
[https://github.com/marakeby/pnet_prostate_paper Biologically informed deep neural network for prostate cancer classification and discovery] and the [https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-021-03922-4 paper] 2021.
 
= Mamba =
<ul>
<li>'''Mamba''' is a high-performance package manager that is fully compatible with '''Conda''', the package management system widely used in the Python ecosystem. It was developed to provide a faster and more efficient alternative to Conda, addressing some of the performance issues, especially in terms of dependency resolution and package installation speed.
<li> https://github.com/mamba-org/mamba The Fast Cross-Platform Package Manager
<li> [https://hpc.nih.gov/apps/python.html#envs Biowulf]. Mambaforge: a derivative of miniconda that includes mamba and uses the conda-forge channel in place of the defaults channel
<li> [https://youtu.be/yeXDyF6_VwQ How to install Mamba on Ubuntu 21.10], [https://youtu.be/q0qn8EOOP6c How to install R using Mamba], [https://youtu.be/rlTXjOXjJGE How to install RStudio on Ubuntu 21.10 with R installed using Mamba]
<li> Debian 12
<ul>
<li>(This step is unnecessary, miniforge includes Conda already) Install [https://docs.anaconda.com/anaconda/install/linux/ anaconda] on debian. I choose 'no' at the final question.
<syntaxhighlight lang='sh'>
sudo apt-get install libgl1-mesa-glx libegl1-mesa libxrandr2 libxrandr2 \
          libxss1 libxcursor1 libxcomposite1 libasound2 libxi6 libxtst6
 
curl -O https://repo.anaconda.com/archive/Anaconda3-2024.06-1-Linux-x86_64.sh
 
bash Anaconda3-2024.06-1-Linux-x86_64.sh
 
# Anaconda3 will now be installed into this location: /home/$USER/anaconda3
# Do you wish to update your shell profile to automatically initialize conda? no
# Log out and log in again
 
# verify conda
conda list
 
conda activate base
 
conda deactivate
</syntaxhighlight>
<li>Install [https://mamba.readthedocs.io/en/latest/installation/mamba-installation.html mamba]. Note that I choose 'yes' at the final question.
<syntaxhighlight lang='sh'>
curl -O https://github.com/conda-forge/miniforge/releases/latest/download/Miniforge3-Linux-x86_64.sh
bash Miniforge3-$(uname)-$(uname -m).sh
# press q to exit the agreement
# Miniforge3 will now be installed into this location:
# /home/brb/miniforge3
 
# To activate this environment, use:
#
#    micromamba activate /home/brb/miniforge3
#
# Or to execute a single command in this environment, use:
#
#    micromamba run -p /home/brb/miniforge3 mycommand
#
# ...
# You can undo this by running `conda init --reverse $SHELL`? [yes|no]
# [no] >>> yes    <----- IMPORTANT; o.w. mamba will not be available
# You have chosen to not have conda modify your shell scripts at all.
# To activate conda's base environment in your current shell session:
#
# eval "$(/home/brb/miniforge3/bin/conda shell.YOUR_SHELL_NAME hook)"
#
# To install conda's shell functions for easier access, first activate, then:
#
# conda init
#
# Thank you for installing Miniforge3!
</syntaxhighlight>
<li>Using mamba. Mamba commands are the same as Conda commands, so you can seamlessly switch between using the two.
<syntaxhighlight lang='sh'>
mamba create -n myenv python=3.6.12
 
mamba activate myenv
 
mamba install numpy=1.19.2  pandas=1.1.3
pip list
 
mamba deactivate
# deactivating an environment does not delete it; it simply changes your working context.
 
mamba env list
 
mamba env remove -n myenv
 
$ which mamba
/home/brb/miniforge3/condabin/mamba
$ which conda
/home/brb/miniforge3/condabin/conda
</syntaxhighlight>
</ul>
</ul>
== Run R with Jupyter notebook ==
* [https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-set-up-jupyter-notebook-with-python-3-on-ubuntu-18-04 How To Set Up Jupyter Notebook with Python 3 on Ubuntu 18.04]
* [https://docs.anaconda.com/anaconda/navigator/tutorials/r-lang/ Using the R programming language in Jupyter Notebook]
* [https://developers.refinitiv.com/en/article-catalog/article/setup-jupyter-notebook-r Setup Jupyter Notebook for R] (Windows OS, no conda)
* [https://datatofish.com/r-jupyter-notebook/ How to Add R to Jupyter Notebook (full steps)] using Anaconda
* [https://www.storybench.org/install-r-jupyter-notebook/ How to install R on a Jupyter notebook] using homebrew
<ul>
<li>[http://www.rebeccabarter.com/blog/2017-11-17-ggplot2_tutorial/ ggplot2: Mastering the basics] & [https://github.com/rlbarter/ggplot2-thw Jupyter Notebook]. To set up the Jupyter environment, see the [[Docker#Python_Jupyter_including_R|Docker method]].
<pre>
docker run --rm -p 8888:8888 \
      -e JUPYTER_ENABLE_LAB=yes \
      -v "$PWD":/home/jovyan \
      jupyter/datascience-notebook:r-4.0.3
</pre>
We first have to use "git clone https://github.com/rlbarter/ggplot2-thw.git" to download the repo and "cd ggplot2-thw".  Then after opening http://IP:8888/?token=XXXXXXX we will see "ggplot2.ipynb" on the left panel. Double click the file will open it on the Notebook.
</li>
</ul>
</ul>
== Example 1: GEO2RNAseq ==
[[Genome#GEO2RNAseq|GEO2RNAseq]]


= Web framework =
= Web framework =

Latest revision as of 13:38, 18 November 2024

Basic

Resources

Python for R users

Python end of life

https://endoflife.date/python or https://devguide.python.org/. By default, the end-of-life is scheduled 5 years after the first release, but can be adjusted by the release manager of each branch.

Install, setup

Alias

How to Fix Common Python Installation Errors on macOS

nano ~/.bash_profile
# or
nano ~/.zshrc

Add the following line

alias python=python3

Ubuntu

How to Install the Latest Python Version on Ubuntu Linux

Mac

# check pip version
python -m pip --version

# install
curl https://bootstrap.pypa.io/get-pip.py -o get-pip.py
python get-pip.py

# Upgrading pip
python -m pip install -U pip
  • On my 2018 mac, the default python3 is at "/usr/local/bin/pyhton3". In "~/Library/Python" directory, it has "2.7", "3.8" and "3.9".
  • On my 2021 mac Ventura, the default python3 is at "/usr/bin". But when we try to run 'python3', it asked to install the command line developer tools. After the installation we can use python3. Still, there is no "~/Library/Python" directory.

Multiple python versions

How to manage multiple Python versions and virtual environments 2018.

conda/mamba

conda create --name myenv python=3.6.12
conda activate myenv

mamba create --name myenv python=3.6.12
mamba activate myenv

pyenv

pyenv install 3.6.12
pyenv virtualenv 3.6.12 myenv
pyenv activate myenv

virtualenv

pip install virtualenv
virtualenv -p python3.6 myenv
source myenv/bin/activate

venv (python 3.3+)

  • For Python 3, venv is generally more commonly used because it is included in the Python standard library starting from Python 3.3, making it more convenient and straightforward to use. However, virtualenv is still popular, especially among developers who need more advanced features or compatibility with older Python versions. It offers more flexibility and can be used with both Python 2 and Python 3.
    • The primary purpose of venv is to create isolated environments for managing Python packages and dependencies, but not python itself. For instance, python3.10 -m venv myenv.
    • On the other hand, virtualenv can indeed be used to control the Python version for your virtual environments. For instance, virtualenv -p /usr/bin/python3.10 myenv.
  • Don’t Make This Mistake When You Start Your Python Project
  • Understanding Python's Virtual Environment Landscape: venv vs. virtualenv, Wrapper Mania, and Dependency Control
  • Here is another example
    ~/github/PUREE$ python3 -m venv myenv
    The virtual environment was not created successfully because ensurepip is not
    available.  On Debian/Ubuntu systems, you need to install the python3-venv
    package using the following command.
    
        apt install python3.10-venv
    ...
    ~/github/PUREE$ sudo apt install python3.10-venv
    ~/github/PUREE$ python3 -m venv myenv
    
    ~/github/PUREE$ source myenv/bin/activate
    (myenv) ~/github/PUREE$ which python
    /home/brb/github/PUREE/myenv/bin/python
    (myenv) ~/github/PUREE$ pip freeze > requirements.txt
    (myenv) ~/github/PUREE$ deactivate
    ~/github/PUREE$
    
    ~/github/PUREE$ ls myenv/bin
    activate      activate.fish  f2py   f2py3.10    pip   pip3.10  python3     wheel
    activate.csh  Activate.ps1   f2py3  normalizer  pip3  python   python3.10

Online compiler

IDE

  • PyCharm
  • Thonny
  • Spyder
  • RStudio
    • Create a file (xxx.py)
    • Click the terminal tab. Type 'python' (or ipython3).
    • Use Ctrl/CMD + Alt + Enter to run your python code line by line or a chunk.

Visual Studio Code

The ipynb file can contain figures.

This (Harmony Manuscript) has several notebook files where the code in ipynb files were written in R, not Python.

I can use vsc to open a ipynb file.

Conversion

nbdev

Emacs

Emacs Shell mode: how to send region to shell?

JupyterLab

  • What is the difference between Jupyter Notebook and JupyterLab?
  • Jupyter Notebook (classic) and JupyterLab are both web-based interactive computing environments for working with data and code, but they have some key differences in terms of their user interface, features, and capabilities.
  • JupyterLab is a more modern and powerful tool than Jupyter Notebook, and is recommended for users who want a more flexible and feature-rich interface for working with data and code. However, Jupyter Notebook remains a popular and widely used tool, particularly for working with Jupyter notebooks.
  • 7 Reasons Why You Should Use Jupyterlab for Data Science

Some resources

Online tools rendering ipynb

  • Github
  • NBViewer (nbviewer.jupyter.org)
  • Google Colaboratory (colab.research.google.com)
  • Binder (mybinder.org)
  • Kaggle Notebooks (kaggle.com)
  • Azure Notebooks (notebooks.azure.com)
  • Datalore (datalore.jetbrains.com)
  • Deepnote (deepnote.com)
  • CoCalc (cocalc.com)

Different installation methods

JupyterLab Desktop

pip/pip3 Jupyter

  • https://jupyter.org/
    which python3
    # /usr/bin/python3
    
    pip3 install jupyterlab
    jupyter-lab
    # http://localhost:8888/lab
    # The current directory will be available on the file browser panel in JupyterLab.
    

    On Mac, it shows the following when I run 'pip3 install jupyterlab'

    Installing collected packages: pip
      WARNING: The scripts pip, pip3 and pip3.9 are installed in '/Users/XXX/Library/Python/3.9/bin' which is not on PATH.
      Consider adding this directory to PATH or, if you prefer to suppress this warning, use --no-warn-script-location.
    Successfully installed pip-23.0
    WARNING: You are using pip version 21.2.4; however, version 23.0 is available.
    You should consider upgrading via the '/Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/usr/bin/python3 -m pip install --upgrade pip' command.
    

    That is, I need to use /Users/XXX/Library/Python/3.9/bin/jupyter-lab to launch jupyter-lab OR add the path to ".zshrc"; see jupyterlab doc.

conda + Jupyter

conda install --yes jupyterlab && conda clean --yes --all

IPython shell

Extract python code from Jupyter notebook

Execute Javascript in a Jupyter Notebook

How to Execute Javascript in a Jupyter Notebook on Linux

Google colab

R programming

Setup Jupyter Notebook for R or Using R on Jupyter Notebook

To use R in JupyterLab, you will first need to install the IRkernel package in your R environment using the following command:

install.packages('IRkernel')

Once you have installed the IRkernel package, you can register it with JupyterLab using the following command in your R console:

IRkernel::installspec()

After you have registered the kernel, you can start a new Jupyter notebook or JupyterLab session and select the "R" kernel from the kernel dropdown menu. This will allow you to run R code in JupyterLab, including data analysis, visualization, and other tasks.

Xeus-R: a future-proof Jupyter kernel for R

Meet Xeus-R: a future-proof Jupyter kernel for R

Run Jupyter Notebooks on an Apple M1 Mac

Cheat sheet

The Most Frequently Asked Questions About Python Programming

https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/python-programming-faq/

Running

Interactively

Use Ctrl+d to quit.

How to run a python script file

python mypython.py

Run python statements from a command line

Use -c (command) option.

python -c "import psutil"

run python source code line by line

run python source code line by line

python -m pdb <script.py>

Install a new module

  • See an example of installing HTSeq.

Module != Package

  • A Python module is a single file containing Python code, while a package is a collection of modules organized in a specific way.
  • A module has a filename with the suffix .py added.

PyPI/Python Package Index

pip

pip, use PyPI as the default source for packages and their dependencies.

As an example, motionEye can be installed by pip install or pip2 install; see its wiki and source code on Github.

sudo apt-get install python-pip
pip --version
pip install SomePackage
pip show --files SomePackage
pip install --upgrade SomePackage
pip install --upgrade https://github.com/Lasagne/Lasagne/archive/master.zip 
pip install ‐‐upgrade pip  # Upgrade itself
pip uninstall SomePackage

sudo apt install python3-pip
pip3 --version

Upgrade packages

How to Upgrade Python Packages with Pip

requirements.txt

List installed packages and their versions, location/directory

pip3 list -v

On my Ubuntu 20.04, the packages installed by pip3 is located in ~/.local/lib/python3.8/site-packages/. It does not matter where I issued the pip3 install command.

The danger of upgrading pip

Don't use sudo + pip

https://askubuntu.com/questions/802544/is-sudo-pip-install-still-a-broken-practice

"--user" option in pip

$ pip install Pygments
...
OSError: [Errno 13] Permission denied: '/usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/Pygments-2.2.0.dist-info'
/usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/pip-9.0.1-py2.7.egg/pip/_vendor/requests/packages/urllib3/util/ssl_.py:122: InsecurePlatformWarning: A true SSLContext object is not available. This prevents urllib3 from configuring SSL appropriately and may cause certain SSL connections to fail. You can upgrade to a newer version of Python to solve this. For more information, see https://urllib3.readthedocs.io/en/latest/security.html#insecureplatformwarning.
  InsecurePlatformWarning
$ pip install --user Pygments
Collecting Pygments
  Using cached Pygments-2.2.0-py2.py3-none-any.whl
Installing collected packages: Pygments
Successfully installed Pygments-2.2.0

pip -t option

We can force to install a package in user's directory (i.e. a package is already installed in the global directory /usr/lib/python3/dist-packages but some applications cannot find it). Pip install python package into a specific directory other than the default install location

pip3 install -t ~/.local/bin/python3.10/site-packages pytz

virtualenv

Python “Virtual Environments” allows us to install a Python package in an isolated location, rather than installing it globally.

  • How To Manage Python Packages Using Pip. First Create a new project folder and cd to the project folder in your terminal.
    # Python 2
    $ sudo pip install virtualenv
    $ virtualenv <DIR_NAME>
    $ source <DIR_NAME>/bin/activate
    (<DIR_NAME>) ~$ which python
    ....
    $ deactivate
    
    # For Python 3, https://docs.python.org/3/tutorial/venv.html it is more common to use venv instead
    $ python3 -m venv <DIR_NAME>  # DIR_NAME is also called an environment
    $ source <DIR_NAME>/bin/activate
    (<DIR_NAME>) ~$ which python
    ....
    $ deactivate
  • Python Tutorial: virtualenv and why you should use virtual environments. pip freeze.
    pip list
    pip freeze --local > requirements.txt
    ...
    pip install -r requirements.txt
    pip list
    

pipenv

  • Why Use Pipenv to Create a Python Environment?
  • Pipenv is a Python virtualenv management tool that supports a multitude of systems and nicely bridges the gaps between pip, pyenv and virtualenv. It automatically creates and manages a virtualenv for your projects, as well as adds/removes packages from your Pipfile as you install/uninstall packages. It also generates the ever-important Pipfile.lock, which is used to produce deterministic builds.
  • https://pipenv.pypa.io/en/latest/pipfile/

Poetry

  • https://python-poetry.org/
  • Poetry is a tool for dependency management and packaging in Python. It allows you to declare the libraries your project depends on and it will manage (install/update) them for you. Poetry offers a poetry.lock lockfile to ensure repeatable installs, and can build your project for distribution.

pipx (alternative to pip3)

  • Pipx is a tool that helps you install and run end-user applications written in Python. It is similar to macOS’s brew, JavaScript’s npx, and Linux’s apt.
    • Pipx is focused on installing and managing Python packages that can be run from the command line directly as applications.
    • pipx is made specifically for application installation, as it adds isolation yet still makes the apps available in your shell: pipx creates an isolated environment for each application and its associated packages.
    python3 -m pip install --user pipx
    python3 -m pipx ensurepath
    # OR sudo apt install pipx   
    # Or pip3 install pipx
    
    pipx install <package_name> # no sudo needed
    pipx list
    pipx uninstall <package_name>
  • I need to find an alternative to pip utility because of a problem when I used pip command. Error: externally-managed-environment
  • Official website [1] - Install and Run Python Applications in Isolated Environments, github
  • pipx vs pip
    • pipx is made specifically for application installation and adds isolation yet still makes the apps available in your shell. pipx creates an isolated environment for each application and its associated packages. On the other hand, pip is a general-purpose package installer for both libraries and apps with no environment isolation.
    • If you want to install an application that has dependencies that conflict with other applications or libraries on your system, you can use pipx to create an isolated environment for that application and its dependencies. This way, you can avoid conflicts between different versions of the same package.
    • On my Ubuntu, pip installs packages to /usr/local/lib/python3.8/dist-packages/.
  • Pipx – Install And Run Python Applications In Isolated Environments
  • Run Python applications in virtual environments

python setup.py

If a package has been bundled by its creator using the standard approach to bundling modules (with Python’s distutils tool), all you need to do is download the package, uncompress it and type:

python setup.py build
sudo python setup.py install

For Python 2, the packages are installed under /usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/.

$ ls -l /usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/
total 12
-rw-r--r-- 1 root staff  273 Jan 12 13:45 easy-install.pth
drwxr-sr-x 4 root staff 4096 Jan 12 13:45 HTSeq-0.6.1p1-py2.7-linux-x86_64.egg
drwxr-sr-x 4 root staff 4096 Jan 12 13:42 pysam-0.9.1.4-py2.7-linux-x86_64.egg

python setup.py bdist_wheel

Get a list of installed modules

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/739993/how-can-i-get-a-list-of-locally-installed-python-modules

pydoc modules

Not helpful. See the pip list command.

Check installed packages' versions

If you install packages through pip, use

$ pip list
...
pyOpenSSL (0.13.1)
pyparsing (2.0.1)
pysam (0.10.0)
python-dateutil (1.5)
pytz (2013.7)
rudix (2016.12.13)
scipy (0.13.0b1)
setuptools (1.1.6)
singledispatch (3.4.0.3)
six (1.4.1)
tornado (4.4.2)
vboxapi (1.0)
xattr (0.6.4)
zope.interface (4.1.1)

And more information about a package by using pip show PACKAGE.

$ pip show pysam
Name: pysam
Version: 0.10.0
Summary: pysam
Home-page: https://github.com/pysam-developers/pysam
Author: Andreas Heger
Author-email: [email protected]
License: MIT
Location: /Users/XXX/Library/Python/2.7/lib/python/site-packages
Requires:

The following method works whether the package is installed by source or binary package

>>> import pysam
>>> print(pysam.__version__)
0.10.0
>>> print pysam.__version__
0.10.0

See http://hammelllab.labsites.cshl.edu/tetoolkit-faq/

Install a specific version of package through pip

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/5226311/installing-specific-package-versions-with-pip

For example, pysam package was actively released. But the new release (0.11.2.2) may introduce some bugs. So I have to install an older version (0.10.0 works for me on Mac El Capitan and Sierra).

$ sudo -H pip uninstall pysam
Uninstalling pysam-0.11.2.2:
......
$ sudo -H pip install pysam==0.10.0
Collecting pysam==0.10.0
  Downloading pysam-0.10.0.tar.gz (2.3MB)
    100% |████████████████████████████████| 2.3MB 418kB/s 
Installing collected packages: pysam
  Running setup.py install for pysam ... done
Successfully installed pysam-0.10.0

warning: Please check the permissions and owner of that directory

I got this message when I use root to run the 'sudo pip install PACKAGE' command.

See

python3-pip installed but pip3 command not found?

sudo apt-get remove python3-pip; sudo apt-get install python3-pip

DeepSurv example

https://github.com/jaredleekatzman/DeepSurv

git clone https://github.com/jaredleekatzman/DeepSurv.git
sudo cp /usr/bin/pip /usr/bin/pip.bak
sudo nano /usr/bin/pip # See https://stackoverflow.com/a/50187211 more detail

# Method 1 for Theano
sudo pip install theano
# Method 2 for Theano
pip install --user --upgrade https://github.com/Theano/Theano/archive/master.zip 

pip install --user --upgrade https://github.com/Lasagne/Lasagne/archive/master.zip
cd DeepSurv/
pip install . --user
sudo apt install python-pytest
pip install h5py --user
sudo pip uninstall protobuf # https://stackoverflow.com/a/33623372
pip install protobuf --user
sudo apt install python-tk
py.test
============ test session starts ===========
platform linux2 -- Python 2.7.12, pytest-2.8.7, py-1.4.31, pluggy-0.3.1
rootdir: /home/brb/github/DeepSurv, inifile:
collected 7 items

tests/test_deepsurv.py .......

========== 7 passed in 5.77 seconds ========

How to list all installed modules

help('modules')  # the output is not pretty

Comment

  1. Use the comment symbol # for a single line
  2. Use a delimiter “”” on each end of the comment. Attention: Don't use triple-quotes

Python Comments from zentut.com.

Docstring

Try / Except

Try and Except in Python

try:
    number = int(input("Enter a number: "))
    print(number)
except:
    print("Invalid Input")

if __name__ == "__main__":

How to Get the Current Directory in Python

How to Get the Current Directory in Python

Import a compiled C module

string and string operators

Reference:

  1. Python for Genomic Data Science from coursera.
  2. Python Hello World and String Manipulation
dna[0]='g' 
dna[-1]='c' (start counting from the right)
dna[-2]='g'
dna[0:3]='gat' (the end always excluded)
dna[:3]='gat'
dna[2:]='tgc'
len(dna)=6
type(dna)
print(dna)
dna.count('c')
dna.upper()
dna.find('ag')=3  (only the first occurrence of 'ag' is reported)
dna.find('17', 2) (start looking from pos 17)
dna.rfind('ag')   ( search backwards in string)
dna.islower()    (True)
dna.isupper()    (False)
dna.replace('a', 'A')
print(dna.upper().isupper())

Format

Format Specification Mini-Language

Regular expression

The Beginner’s Guide to Regular Expressions With Python

User's input

dna=raw_input("Enter a DNA sequence: ")  # python 2
dna=input("Enter a DNA sequence: ")      # python 3

To convert a user's input (a string) to others

int(x, [, base])
flaot(x)
str(x) #converts x to a string
str(65) # '65'

chr(x)  # converts an integer to a character
chr(65) # 'A'

Print

Why is parenthesis in print voluntary in Python 2.7?

Fancy Output

print("THE DNA's GC content is ", gc, "%") # gives too many digits following the dot
print("THE DNA's GC content is %5.3f %%" % " % gc) 
# the percent operator separating the formatting string and the value to
# replace the format placeholder
print("%d" % 10.6)  # 10
print("%e" % 10.6)  # 10.060000e+01
print("%s" % dna)   # gatagc

Type

Built-in Functions, How to check type of variable (object) in Python

type(object)

List

A list is an ordered set of values

gene_expr=['gene', 5.16e-08, 0.001385, 7.33e-08]
print(gene_expr[2]
gene_expr[0]='Lif'

Slice a list (it will create a new list)

gene_expr[-3:]  # [5.16e-08, 0.001385, 7.33e-08]
gene_expr[1:3] = [6.09e-07]

Clear the list

gene_expr[]=[]

List functions

Size of the list

len(gene_expr)

Delete an element

del gene_expr[1]

Extend/append to a list

gene_expr).extend([5.16e-08, 0.00123])

Count the number of times an element appears in a list

print(gene_expr.count('Lif'), gene_expr.count('gene'))

Reverse all elements in a list

gene_expr.reverse()
print(gene_expr)
help(list)

Lists as Stacks

stack=['a', 'b', 'c', 'd']
stack.append('e')

Sorting lists

mylist=[3, 31, 123, 1, 5]
sorted(mylist)
mylist  # not changed
mylist.sort()

mylist=['c', 'g', 'T', 'a', 'A']
mylist.sort()

Don't change an element in a string!


motif = 'nacggggtc'
motif[0] = 'a'    # ERROR

Tuples

A tuple consists of a number of values separated by commas, and is another standard sequence data type, like strings and lists.

t=1,2,3
t
t=(1,2,3)  # we may input tuples with or without surrounding parentheses

Sets

A set is an unordered collection with no duplicate elements.

brca1={'DNA repair', 'zine ion binding'}
brca2={protein binding', 'H4 histone'}
brca1 | brca2
brca1 & brca2
brca1 - brca2

Dictionaries

A dictionary is an unordered set of key and value pairs, with the requirement that the keys are unique (within on dictionary).

TF_motif = {'SP1' : 'gggcgg', 
            'C/EBP' : 'attgcgcaat',
            'ATF' : 'tgacgtca',
            'c-Myc' : 'cacgtg',
            'Oct-1' : 'atgcaaat'}
# Access
print("The recognition sequence for the ATF transcription is %s." % TF_motif['ATF']) 
# Update
TF_motif['AP-1'] = 'tgagtca'
# Delete
del TF_motif['SP1']
# Size of a list
len(TF_motif)
# Get a list of all the 'keys' in a dictionary
list(TF_motif.keys())
# Get a list of all the 'values'
list(TF_motif.values())
# sort
sorted(TF_motif.keys())
sorted(TF_motif.values())

We can retrieve data from dictionaries using the items() method.

for name,seq in seqs.item():
    print(name, seq)

In summary, strings, lists and dictionaries are most useful data types for bioinformatics.

if statement

dna=input('Enter DNA sequence: ')
if 'n' in dna :
  nbases=dna.count('n')
  print("dna sequence has %d undefined bases " % nbases)

if condtion 1:
  do action 1
elif condition 2:
  do action 2
else:
  do action 3

Logical operators

Use and, or, not.

dna=input('Enter DNA sequence: ')
if 'n' in dna or 'N' in dna:
    nbases=dna.count('n')+dna.count('N')
    print("dna sequence has %d undefined bases " % nbases)
else:
    print("dna sequence has no undefined bases)

Loops

while

dna=input('Enter DNA sequence:')
pos=dna.find('gt', 0)

while pos>-1 :
    print("Donar splice site candidate at position %d" %pos)
    pos=dna.find('gt', pos+1)

for

motifs=["attccgt", "aggggggttttttcg", "gtagc"]
for m in motifs:
    print(m, len(m))

range

for i in range(4):
    print(i)
for i in range(1,10,2):
    print(i)

Problem: find all characters in a given protein sequence are valid amino acids.

protein='SDVIHRYKUUPAKSHGWYVCJRSRFTWMVWWRFRSCRA'
for i in range(len(protein)):
    if protein[i] not in 'ABCDEFGHIKLMNPQRSTVWXYZ': 
        print("this is not a valid protein sequence!")
        break

continue

protein='SDVIHRYKUUPAKSHGWYVCJRSRFTWMVWWRFRSCRA'
corrected_protein=''
for i in range(len(protein)):
    if protein[i] not in 'ABCDEFGHIKLMNPQRSTVWXYZ': 
        continue
    corrected_protein=corrected_protein+protein[i]
print("COrrected protein seq is %s" % corrected_protein)

else Statement used with loops

  • If used with a for loop, the else statement is executed when the loop has exhausted iterating the list
  • If used with a while loop, the else statement is executed when the condition becomes false
# Find all prime numbers smaller than a given integer
N=10
for y in range(2, N):
    for x in range(2, y):
        if y %x == 0:
            print(y, 'equals', x, '*', y//x)
            break
        else:
            // loop fell through without finding a factor
            print(y, 'is a prime number')

The pass statement is a placeholder

if motif not in dna:
    pass
else:
    some_function_here()

Functions

Get modular with Python function

def function_name(arguments) :
    function_code_block
    return output

For example,

def gc(dna) :
    "this function computes the gc perc of a dna seq"
    nbases=dna.count('n')+dna.count('n')
    gcpercent=float(dna.count('c')+dna.count('C')+dna.count('g)
+dna.count('G'))*100.0/(len(dna)-nbases)
    return gcpercent
gc('AAAAGTNNAGTCC')
help(gc)

SyntaxError: invalid syntax

https://stackoverflow.com/a/11890194

On the Python shell add an empty line at the end of function definition. Eg

>>> def fun(a):
...     return a+1
... 
>>> fun(9)
10
>>> exit()

On a python script

def fun(a):
    return a+1
print fun(9)

Debug functions

https://stackoverflow.com/a/4929267

You can launch a Python program through pdb by using pdb myscript.py or python -m pdb myscript.py

$ cat debug.py
def fun(a):
    a= a*2
    a= a*3
    return a+1
print fun(5)

$ python -m pdb debug.py
> /home/pi/Downloads/debug.py(1)<module>()
-> def fun(a):
(Pdb) b fun
Breakpoint 1 at /home/pi/Downloads/debug.py:1
(Pdb) c
> /home/pi/Downloads/debug.py(2)fun()
-> a= a*2
(Pdb) n
> /home/pi/Downloads/debug.py(3)fun()
-> a= a*3
(Pdb) 
> /home/pi/Downloads/debug.py(4)fun()
-> return a+1
(Pdb) p a
30
(Pdb) n
--Return--
> /home/pi/Downloads/debug.py(4)fun()->31
-> return a+1
(Pdb) exit

Boolean functions

Problem: checks if a given dna seq contains an in-frame stop condon

dna=input("Enter a dna seq: ")
if (has_stop_codon(dna)) :
    print("input seq has an in frame stop codon.")
else :
    print("input seq has no in frame stop codon.")

def has_stop_codon(dna) :
    "This function checks if given dna seq has in frame stop codons."
    stop_codon_found=False
    stop_codons=['tga', 'tag', 'taa']
    for i in range(0, len(dna), 3) :
        codon=dna[i:i+3].lower()
        if codon in stop_codons : 
            stop_codon_found=True
            break
    return stop_codon_found

Function default parameter values

Suppose the has_stop_codon function also accepts a frame argument (equal to 0, 1, or 2) which specifies in what frame we want to look for stop codons.

def has_stop_codon(dna, frame=0) :
    "This function checks if given dna seq has in frame stop codons."
    stop_codon_found=False
    stop_codons=['tga', 'tag', 'taa']
    for i in range(frame, len(dna), 3) :
        codon=dna[i:i+3].lower()
        if codon in stop_codons : 
            stop_codon_found=True
            break
    return stop_codon_found

dna="atgagcggccggct"
has_stop_codon(dna)    # False
has_stop_codon(dna, 0) # False
has_stop_codon(dna, 1) # True
has_stop_codon(frame=0, dna=dna)

More examples

Reverse complement of a dna sequence

def reversecomplement(seq):
    """Return the reverse complement of the dna string."""
    seq = reverse_string(seq)
    seq = complement(seq)
    return seq

reversecomplement('CCGGAAGAGCTTACTTAG')

To reverse a string

def reverse_string(seq):
    return seq[::-1]

reverse_string(dna)

Complement a DNA Sequence

def complement(dna):
    """Return the complementary sequence string."""
    basecomplement = {'A':'T', 'C':'G', 'G':'C', 'T':'A', 
                      'N':'N', 'a':t', 'c':'g', 'g':'c', 't':'a', 'n':'n'} # dictionary
    letters = list(dna) # list comprehensions
    letters = [basecomplement[base] for base in letters]
    return ''.join(letters)

Split and Join functions

sentence="enzymes and other proteins come in many shapes"
sentence.split()  # split on all whitespaces
sentence.split('and') # use 'and' as the separator

'-'.join(['enzymes', 'and', 'other', 'proteins', 'come', 'in', 'many', 'shapes'])

Variable number of function arguments

def newfunction(fi, se, th, *rest):
  print("First: %s" % fi)
  print("Second: %s" % se)
  print("Third: %s" % th)
  print("Rest... %s" % rest)
  return

Modules and packages

Packages group multiple modules under on name, by using "dotted module names". For example, the module name A.B designates a submodule named B in a package named A. See What's the difference between a Python module and a Python package?

<dnautil.py>

#!/usr/bin/python
"""
dnautil module contains a few useful functions for dna seq
"""
def gc(dna) :
    blah
    blah
    return gcpercent

When a module is imported, Python first searches for a built-in module with that name.

If built-in module is not found, Python then searches for a file obtained by adding the extension .py to the name of the module that it's imported:

  • in your current directory,
  • the directory where Python has been installed
  • in a path, i.e., a colon(':') separated list of file paths, stored in the environment variable PYTHONPATH.

You can use the sys.path variable from the sys built-in module to check the list of all directories where Python look for files

import sys
sys.path

If the sys.path variable does not contains the directory where you put your module you can extend it:

sys.path.append("/home/$USER/python")
sys.path

Using modules (from PACKAGE/DIRNAME/FILENAME import CLASS)

from math import *
print(floor(3.7))

import dnautil
dna="atgagggctaggt"
gc(dna)          # gc is not defined
dnautil.gc(dna)  # Good

Import Names from a Module

from dnautil import *
gc(dna)          # OK

from dnautil import gc, has_stop_codon

Get modular with Python functions & Learn object-oriented programming with Python from opensource.com.

from...import vs import vs import...as

  • Difference between 'import' and 'from...import' in Python
  • Import, From and As Keywords in Python
  • `from … import` vs `import .`
  • Difference between import and from in Python. Python's import loads a Python module into its own namespace, so that you have to add the module name followed by a dot in front of references to any names from the imported module that you refer to:
    import feathers
    duster = feathers.ostrich("South Africa")

    from loads a Python module into the current namespace, so that you can refer to it without the need to mention the module name again:

    from feathers import *
    duster = ostrich("South Africa")
    • Question: Why are both import and from provided? Can't I always use from? Answer: If you were to load a lot of modules using from, you would find sooner or later that there was a conflict of names; from is fine for a small program but if it was used throughout a big program, you would hit problems from time to time
    • Question: Should I always use import then? Answer: No ... use import most of the time, but use from is you want to refer to the members of a module many, many times in the calling code; that way, you save yourself having to write "feather." (in our example) time after time, but yet you don't end up with a cluttered namespace. You could describe this approach as being the best of both worlds.
  • from … import OR import … as for modules
  • Some examples:
    from numpy import array   # Run file; load specific 'attribute'
    arr = array([1,2,3])    # Use name directly: no need to qualify
    print(arr) # print [1 2 3]
    
    from math import pi
    pi # 3.141592653589793
    math.pi  # NameError: name 'math' is not defined

    VS

    import numpy   # Run file; load module as a whole
    arr = numpy.array([1,2,3])  # Use its attribute names: '.' to qualify
    print(arr) # print [1 2 3]
    
    import math
    math.pi # 3.141592653589793
    dir(math)

    VS

    import numpy as np
    dir(np)
    
    import math as m
    m.pi # 3.141592653589793
  • scRNA_cell_deconv_benchmark example.

help

from AAA import BBB
help(BBB)
help(BBB.FunctionName)

import BBB as CCC
help(CCC)

Packages & __init__.py

Each package in Python is a directory which MUST contain a special file __init__.py. This file can be empty and it indicates that the directory it contains is a Python package, so it can be imported the same way a module can be imported. https://docs.python.org/2/tutorial/modules.html

Example: suppose you have several modules dnautil.py, rnautil.py , and proteinutil.py. You want to group them in a package called "bioseq" which processes all types of biological sequences. The structure of the package:

bioseq/
  __init__.py
  dnautil.py
  rnautil.py
  proteinutil.py
  fasta/
    __init__.py
    fastautil.py
  fastq/
    __init__.py
    fastqutil.py

Loading from packages:

import bioseq.dnautil
bioseq.dnautil.gc(dna)

from bioseq import dnautil
dnautil.gc(dna)

from bioseq.fasta.fastautil import fastqseqread

Example

Building a Multiple Choice Quiz by freeCodeCamp.org

QuestionFile.py

class Question:
    def __init__(self, prompt, answer):
        self.prompt = prompt
        self.answer = answer

app.py

from QuestionFile import Question

question_prompts = [
    "What color are apples?\n(a) Red/Green\n(b) Purple\n(c) Orange\n\n",
    "What color are Bananas?\n(a) Teal\n(b) Magenta\n(c) Yellow\n\n",
    "What color are strawberries?\n(a) Yellow\n(b) Red\n(c) Blue\n\n"
]

questions = [
    Question(question_prompts[0], "a"),
    Question(question_prompts[1], "c"),
    Question(question_prompts[2], "b")
]

def run_test(question):
    score = 0
    for question in questions:
        answer = input(question.prompt)
        if answer == question.answer:
            score += 1
    print("You got " + str(score) + " /" + str(len(questions))+ " correct")

run_test(questions)

Run the program by python3 app.py

Files - Communicate with the outside

f=open('myfile', 'r') # read
f=open('myfile')
f=open('myfile', 'w') # write
f=open('myfile', 'a') # append

Take care if a file does not exists

try:
    f = open('myfile')
except IOError:
    print("the file myfile does not exist!!")

Reading

for line in f:
    print(line)

Change positions within a file object

f.seek(0)  # go to the beginning of the file
f.read()

Read a single line

f.seek(0)
f.readline()

Write into a file

f=open("/home/$USER/myfile, 'a)
f.write("this is a new line")
f.close()

>>> with open("file.txt", "w") as f:
...   f.write(str(object))
...

Importing large tab-delimited .txt file into Python

# R
write.table(iris[1:10,], file="iris.txt", sep="\t", quote=F, row.names=F)

# Python
import csv
with open('iris.txt') as f:
    reader = csv.reader(f, delimiter="\t")
    d = list(reader)
print(d[0][2])
print(d[1][2])

# Shell
$ python test_csv.py
Petal.Length
1.4

If the data are all numerical, we can use the numpy package.

# R
write.table(iris[1:10, 1:4], 
            file="~/Downloads/iris2.txt", 
            sep="\t", quote=F, row.names=F, col.names=F)

# Python
import numpy as np
d = np.loadtxt('iris2.txt', delimiter="\t")
print(d[0][2])
print(d[1][2])

# Shell
$ python test_csv2.py
1.4
1.4

Read text file from a URL

import urllib.request

url = "http://textfiles.com/adventure/aencounter.txt"
file = urllib.request.urlopen(url)

for line in file:
   print(line.decode('utf-8'))

Command line arguments

Suppose we run 'python processfasta.py myfile.fa' in the command line, then

import sys
print(sys.argv)  #  ['processfasta.py', 'myfile.fa']

More completely

#!/usr/bin/python
"""
processfasta.py builds a dictionary with all sequences from a FASTA file.
"""

import sys
filename=sys.argv[1]

try:
  f = open(filename)
except IOError:
    print("File %s does not exist!" % filename)

Parsing command line arguments with getopt. Suppose we want to store in the dictionary the sequences bigger than a given length provided in the command line: 'processfasta.py -l 250 myfile.fa'

#!/usr/bin/python
import sys
import getopt

def usage():
    print """
processfasta.py: reads a FASTA file and builds a 
dictionary with all sequence bigger than a given length

processfasta.py [-h] [-l <length>] <filename>

 -h           print this message
 -l <length>  filter all sequences with a length
              smaller than <length>
              (default <length>=0)
 <filename>   the file has to be in FASTA format

o, a = getopt.getopt(sys.argv[1:], '1:h')
opts = {} # empty dictionary
seqlen=0;

for k,v in o:
    opts[k] = v
if 'h' in opts.keys():  # he means the user wants help
    usage(); sys.exit()
if len(a) < 1:
    usage(); sys.exit("input fasta file is missing")
if 'l' in opts.keys():
    if opts['l'] <0 :
        print("length of seq should be positive!"); sys.exit(0);
    seqlen=opts['l']

stdin and stdout

sys.stdin.read()

sys.stdout.write("Some useful ouput.\n")

sys.stderr.write("Warning: input file was not found\n")

Call external programs

import subprocess
subprocess.call('["ls", "-l"]) # return code indicates the success or failure of the execution

subprocess.call('["tophat", "genome_mouse_idx", "PE_reads_1.fq.gz", "PE_reads_2.fq.gz"])

Exceptions

5 Python Examples to Handle Exceptions using try, except and finally

Debugging

How to Debug Your Python Code

Biopython & Pubmed

  • Parsers for various bioinformatics file formats (FASTA, Genbank)
  • Access to online services like NCBI Entrez or Pubmed databases
  • Interfaces to common bioinformatics programs such as BLAST, Clustalw and others.
import Bio
print(Bio.__version__)

Running BLAST over the internet

from Bio.Blast import NCBIWWW
fasta_string = open("myseq.fa").read()
result_handle = NCBIWWW.qblast("blastn":, "nt", fasta_string)
# blastn is the program to use
# nt is the database to search against
# default output is xml
help(NCBIWWW.qblast)

The BLAST record

from Bio.Blast import NCBIXML
blast_record = NCBIXML.read(result_handle)

Parse BLAST output

len(blast_record.alignments)

E_VALUE_THRESH = 0.01
for alignment in blas_record.alignments:
  for hsp in alignment.hsps:
    if hsp.expect < E_VALUE_THRESH:
      print('***Alignment***')
      print('sequence:', alignment.title)
      print('length:', alignment.length)
      print('e value:', hsp.expect)
      print(hsp.query)
      print(hsp.match)
      print(hsp.sbjct)

More help with Biopython

pubmed_parser

Parser for Pubmed Open-Access XML Subset and MEDLINE XML Dataset

pyTest

pyc file

What is the difference between .py and .pyc files? [duplicate]. I observe it can cause a problem when I want to modify a python file but it keeps using the old pyc file so my change is not used (Raspbery Pi e-ink example).

Shutdown or restart OS

Below is tested on Raspbian

import os
os.system('sudo shutdown -h now')

Popular python libraries

20 Python libraries you can’t live without

psutil

# pip install psutil --user
for x in range(10):
    psutil.cpu_percent(interval=1)

numpy

pandas

30 pandas Commands for Manipulating DataFrames

Write a pandas dataframe to a text file using to.csv(). https://stackoverflow.com/a/41514539

a.to_csv('xgboost.txt', header=True, index=True, sep='\t')

scipy

seaborn

matplotlib

Installation.

python -m pip install -U pip
python -m pip install -U matplotlib

# https://stackoverflow.com/a/50328517
sudo apt-get install python3.5-tk

Example.

from sklearn import datasets
iris = datasets.load_iris()
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
iris = iris.data

# Scatterplot
plt.scatter(iris[:,1], iris[:,2])
plt.show()

# Boxplot
plot.boxplot(iris[:,1])
plt.show()

# Histogram
plt.hist(iris[:,1])
plt.show()

scikit-learn

scikit-learn: Machine Learning in Python

Installation.

pip install -U scikit-learn

Example.

$ python
>>> from sklearn import datasets
>>> iris = datasets.load_iris()
>>> digits = datasets.load_digits()

PyTorch

feedparser

Never miss a Magazine article — build your own RSS notification system

Boto

A Python interface to Amazon Web Services

PIL, Pillow

plotnine

Python and R – Part 2: Visualizing Data with Plotnine

nltk: Natural Language Toolkit

https://www.nltk.org/

pygame

Learn Python by creating a video game

scanpy

Trouble shooting

ImportError: cannot import name main when running pip

https://stackoverflow.com/a/50187211

Error: externally-managed-environment

See pipx

TypeError: ‘module’ object is not callable

I was trying to run "bbknn.py" from here.

Solve “TypeError: ‘module’ object is not callable” in Python, TypeError: 'module' object is not callable

The problem is I have a file called "bbknn.py" and I have "import bbknn" in the code. It will confuse python. The solution is to rename my script file "bbknn.py" (avoid MODULE.py) to other name like "bbknnDemo.py".

When I import my module in python, it automatically runs all of the defined functions inside of it. How do I prevent it from auto executing my functions, but still allow me to call them in my main script?

Illegal instruction

I got this error after I called python3 -c 'import scanpy'. Python on Biowulf.

wget https://repo.continuum.io/miniconda/Miniconda3-latest-Linux-x86_64.sh
TMPDIR=/tmp bash Miniconda3-latest-Linux-x86_64.sh -p ~/conda -b

source ~/conda/etc/profile.d/conda.sh # ~/conda/condabin is added to PATH

conda activate base
python -V # Python 3.9.4

conda create -n project1 pandas numpy scipy -y
conda activate project1
pip3 install scanpy bbknn
ls ~/conda/envs/project1/lib/python3.9/site-packages
# bbknn and scanpy are there  
python3 -c 'import scanpy'
# Illegal instruction

conda info --env
conda deactivate
conda remove --all -n project1 -y
conda deactivate

No matching distribution found for XXX

Got an error No matching distribution found for lasagne==0.2.dev1 when I ran 'pip install .' on DeepSurv.

https://github.com/imatge-upc/saliency-salgan-2017/issues/29

Python AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute 'SSL_ST_INIT'

See https://stackoverflow.com/a/52398193. I got this message after I ran sudo pip install --upgrade cryptography and pip show cryptography. The reason I try to upgrade cryptography is the following message

$ pip show protobuf
/home/brb/.local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/pip/_vendor/requests/__init__.py:83: 
  RequestsDependencyWarning: Old version of cryptography ([1, 2, 3]) may cause slowdown.
  warnings.warn(warning, RequestsDependencyWarning)
Name: protobuf
...

And OpenSSL & pyOpenSSL-0.15.1.egg-inf are under /usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages directory on my Ubuntu 16.04.

Note the following solutions do not work

$ sudo pip uninstall pyopenssl
$ sudo pip install pyOpenSSL==16.2.0

I always get an error message

...
  File "/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/OpenSSL/SSL.py", line 118, in <module>
    SSL_ST_INIT = _lib.SSL_ST_INIT
AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute 'SSL_ST_INIT'

And a quick solution is to do sudo rm -r /usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/OpenSSL. I also did sudo pip install pyopenssl but I did not follow this answer (sudo apt install --reinstall python-openssl).

/usr/bin/env: ‘python’: No such file or directory

On Ubuntu 20.04,

sudo apt-get install python-is-python3

This solved an error when I used youtube-dl.

Projects based on python

  • pithos Pandora on linux
  • Many Raspberry Pi GPIO projects
  • GeneScissors It also requires pip and scikit-learn packages.
  • KeepNote It depends on Python 2.X, sqlite and PyGTK.
  • Zim It depends on Python, Gtk and the python-gtk bindings.
  • Cherrytree It depends on Python2, Python-gtk2, Python-gtksourceview2, p7zip-full, python-enchant and python-dbus.

Python scripts

21 Simple Python Scripts That Will Automate Your Daily Tasks

  • Renaming Files in Bulk
  • Backing Up Files Automatically
  • Downloading Files from the Internet
  • Automating Email Reports
  • Task Scheduler (Task Automation)
  • Web Scraping for Data Collection
  • Automating Social Media Posts
  • Automating Invoice Generation
  • Monitoring Website Uptime
  • Auto-Reply to Emails
  • File Cleanup
  • Generate Passwords Automatically
  • Task Tracker/Reminder
  • Auto-Generate Daily Reports
  • Monitor System Resources
  • Batch Image Resizing
  • Automating Data Backup to Cloud
  • Creating Daily Reminders
  • Automating Data Entry to Excel
  • Automating Data Cleaning
  • Text Extract from Images

Send emails

  • Less secure apps & your Google Account. To help keep your account secure, from May 30, 2022, ​​Google no longer supports the use of third-party apps or devices which ask you to sign in to your Google Account using only your username and password.
    • Send Email via Gmail and SMTP Use an App Password 2022/9. Click on Security -> 2-Step Verification (You may need to enter your PW first). Scroll to the bottom of the page, and you'll see the "App passwords" section. You can delete/create app passwords but you can't view any existing passwords.
  • How to Send Automated Email Messages in Python 3 2021/3

GUI programming

New book: Create Graphical User Interfaces with Python

Qt for GUI development

Python 3

pip3

Use pip3 instead of pip for Python 3. For example,

pip3 install --upgrade pip

pip3 install -U scikit-learn

pip3 install -U matplotlib

http.server

Edit Files With Workspaces. The 'http.server' module is contained in python3.

cd ~/website
python3 -m http.server

C vs Python

C vs. Python: The Key Differences

R and Python: reticulate package

  • Installing and Configuring Python with RStudio
    • The instruction is based on virtualenv. But I'm following Biowulf's Python miniconda instruction to create a new project/environment. One caveat is I need to run source ~/$USER/conda/etc/profile.d/conda.sh each time before I start R in order to make conda available OR I need to set the RETICULATE_MINICONDA_PATH variable (see below).
    • The conda-related reticulate functions include conda_create(), use_condaenv(), conda_install(), conda_list(), conda_remove()
    • Use py_config() to check the current python path and other python versions found.
    • My example
      library(reticulate)
      # Assume I followed Biowulf's instruction to create 'project1'
      Sys.setenv(RETICULATE_MINICONDA_PATH = "~/conda") 
      conda_list()
      use_condaenv("project1", required=T)
      py_config()
      
  • Python Version Configuration. Suppose I have installed miniconda and create a new environment called 'project1'. Then after calling source ~/conda/etc/profile.d/conda.sh I can start in R
    library(reticulate)
    use_condaenv("project1", required = TRUE)
    
  • Test python and markdown files
    def add_three(x):
        z = x + 3
        return z
    
    ---
    title: "R Notebook"
    output: html_notebook
    ---
    
    ```{r}
    library(reticulate)
    py_discover_config()
    x <- 5
    source_python("test.py")
    y <- add_three(x)
    print(y)
    ```
    
    Pass R variables to Python. Works
    ```{python}
    a = 7
    print(r.x)
    ```
    
    Pass python variables to R. Works.
    ```{r}
    py$a
    py_run_string("y = 10"); py$y
    ```
    

How to quit python

Type exit and hit Enter. See https://rstudio.github.io/reticulate/.

R vs Python

Call R from Python

  • rwrap Seamlessly integrate R packages into Python.
  • rpy2

Conda, Anaconda, miniconda

Private environment

Conda on Biowulf & mambaforge

Transfer a conda environment to another computer: YAML files

Managing environments

# computer 1
conda env export > environment.yml

# computer 2
conda env create -f environment.yml

Conda environment create, activate, deactivate, info (see a list)

Getting started with conda. More details are in Tasks.

conda --version

# Manage environment
conda info --envs  # see a list of environments. 
                   # The active environment is the one with an asterisk (*)
# create a new environment
conda create --name myenv
# remove an environment
conda remove --name myenv --all

# Manage Python
conda create --name snakes python=3.5
conda activate snowflakes # activate
conda info --envs
python --version
conda activate  # Change your current environment back to the default (base)
conda deactivate # exit any python virtualenv

# Managing packages
conda search beautifulsoup4
conda install beautifulsoup4
conda list

# Updating Anaconda or Miniconda
conda update conda

Anaconda

  • Introduction to Anaconda. Simplifies installation of Python packages
    • Platform-independent package manager
    • Doesn’t require administrative privileges
    • Installs non-Python library dependencies (MKL, HDF5, Boost)
    • Provides ”virtual environment” capabilities
    • Many channels exist that support additional packages
  • Install Anaconda on macOS. Better to use the command line method in order to install it to the user's directory. The new python can be manually loaded into the shell by using source ~/.bash_profile. Like Ubuntu, ananconda3 is installed under ~/ directory. In addition, Anaconda-Navigator is available under Finder -> Applications.
  • How To Install the Anaconda Python Distribution on Ubuntu 16.04. As we can see Anaconda3 will be installed under /home/$USER/anaconda3.
    • Download Anaconda3-2018.12-Linux-x86_64.sh from https://www.anaconda.com/distribution/#download-section
    • bash Anaconda3-2018.12-Linux-x86_64.sh
    • There is a question: Do you wish the installer to initialize Anaconda3. If you answer Yes, it will run conda init & modify ~/.bashrc file. # This will overwrite system's Python. So the default python/python3 will now be in /home/$USER/anaconda3/bin/.
      Do you wish the installer to initialize Anaconda3
      by running conda init? [yes|no]
      [no] >>> yes
      no change     /home/brb/anaconda3/condabin/conda
      no change     /home/brb/anaconda3/bin/conda
      no change     /home/brb/anaconda3/bin/conda-env
      no change     /home/brb/anaconda3/bin/activate
      no change     /home/brb/anaconda3/bin/deactivate
      no change     /home/brb/anaconda3/etc/profile.d/conda.sh
      no change     /home/brb/anaconda3/etc/fish/conf.d/conda.fish
      no change     /home/brb/anaconda3/shell/condabin/Conda.psm1
      no change     /home/brb/anaconda3/shell/condabin/conda-hook.ps1
      no change     /home/brb/anaconda3/lib/python3.8/site-packages/xontrib/conda.xsh
      no change     /home/brb/anaconda3/etc/profile.d/conda.csh
      modified      /home/brb/.bashrc
      
      ==> For changes to take effect, close and re-open your current shell. <==
      
      If you'd prefer that conda's base environment not be activated on startup, 
         set the auto_activate_base parameter to false: 
      
      conda config --set auto_activate_base false
      

      If I choose not to modify .bashrc file,

      Do you wish the installer to initialize Anaconda3
      by running conda init? [yes|no]
      [no] >>> no
      
      You have chosen to not have conda modify your shell scripts at all.
      To activate conda's base environment in your current shell session:
      
      eval "$(/home/brb/anaconda3/bin/conda shell.YOUR_SHELL_NAME hook)" 
      
      To install conda's shell functions for easier access, first activate, then:
      
      conda init
      
      If you'd prefer that conda's base environment not be activated on startup, 
         set the auto_activate_base parameter to false: 
      
      conda config --set auto_activate_base false
      
      Thank you for installing Anaconda3!
      
      
    • Anaconda-Navigator (including jupyter notebook, Spyder IDE, ...) can be launched by typing anaconda-navigator in a terminal

Miniconda

  • https://docs.conda.io/en/latest/miniconda.html As you can see miniconda installers were separated by the Python version.
  • How To Install Miniconda In Linux 2021. It includes Install Miniconda interactively, unattended installation, Update Miniconda, and Uninstall Miniconda. If you've chosen the default location, the installer will display “PREFIX=/var/home/<user>/miniconda3”. To manually activate conda's base environment, do /home/<user>/miniconda3/etc/profile.d/conda.sh where we assume miniconda is installed under /home/<user>/miniconda3 directory.
  • Miniconda Installation for macOS users 2019. At the end of installation, we see if we don't want conda's base environment to be activated on start up, we can do conda config --set auto_activate_base false
  • See also Python on Biowulf about how to specify prefix.
  • We can add/install a module to an existing environment. See Miniconda: Python(s) in a convenient setup.
conda install -n <env_name> <package>
conda create -n myenv python=3 # create a new environment named “myenv” with Python 3 installed
   # after that, use "conda activate myenv" and use "conda install numpy" to install the numpy

Install and "conda init"

  • Windows: screenshots are included Setting up Python on Windows with Miniconda by Anaconda & Anaconda documentation. The default is not to add Anaconda to my PATH environment variable.
  • Ubuntu: How to Install Miniconda on Ubuntu 20.04. After installation, PATH variable will prepend ~/miniconda3/condabin which contains only 1 file: conda.
  • conda init
    • Running conda init initializes conda for shell interaction by writing some shell code in the relevant startup scripts of your shell (e.g~/.bashrc) 1. This allows the conda command to interact more closely with the shell context and provides a cleaner PATH manipulation and snappier responses in some conda commands. The main advantage of running conda init is that it enables the use of the conda activate and conda deactivate commands, which are used to activate and deactivate conda environments.
    • We only need to call "conda init" once no matter after we install conda how many conda environments we will work.
    • One disadvantage of running conda init is that it can sometimes cause issues if the initialization is not done correctly or if there are conflicts with other configurations in your shell startup scripts. However, these issues can usually be resolved by troubleshooting and making the necessary changes to your configurat

conda environment

A conda environment is a directory that contains a specific collection of conda packages that you have installed.

You need to create an environment first before you can activate it. The conda activate command does not create an environment for you, it only activates an existing one.

conda create --name myenv

conda activate myenv

Q: Where are the environments located? A: Conda environments are typically stored in the envs subdirectory of your Anaconda installation directory. For example, if you have an environment named myenv, it would be located in a directory like ~/anaconda3/envs/myenv. The exact path can be found by using conda env list command.

Q: How do I list all existing environments? A: To list all existing conda environments, you can use the conda env list or conda info --envs command. Here’s how you do it:

conda env list
#
base       * /opt/conda
DrivR-Base   /opt/conda/envs/DrivR-Base

Q: How to quit a conda environment?

conda deactivate  # Return to base
conda deactivate  # Exit base 

Q: Check the disk space used by a specific conda environment.

du -sh /path/to/conda/envs/your_enviornment_name

Q: How to delete a conda environemnt,

conda deactivate
conda env remove --name your_environment_name
# OR
conda remove --name your_environment_name --all

Install all anaconda packages

Uninstall miniconda

  1. rm -rf ~/miniconda3
  2. nano ~/.bash_profile and delete conda initialize block

What's the purpose of the “base” (for best practices) in Anaconda?

https://stackoverflow.com/a/56504279

Does Conda replace the need for virtualenv?

Yes. Conda is not limited to Python but can be used for other languages too.

GCC/gFortran

  • conda install gcc
  • Using conda-forge channel - conda install -c conda-forge gfortran

Using R language with Anaconda

  • Using R language with Anaconda
    conda create -n r_env r-essentials r-base
    conda activate r_env
    
  • Difference of install a package using install.packages() function in R and using the conda install command?
    • The install.packages() function in R and the conda install command are two different ways to install R packages. The install.packages() function is used to install packages from the Comprehensive R Archive Network (CRAN), while the conda install command is used to install packages from the Anaconda repository.
    • One key difference between the two methods is that conda can manage dependencies across multiple programming languages, while install.packages() only manages dependencies within R.
    • Another difference is that conda allows you to create and manage multiple isolated environments, each with its own set of packages. This can be useful if you want to have different versions of packages available for different projects. With install.packages(), all packages are installed in the same global library, which can make it more difficult to manage dependencies and avoid conflicts.
  • The Definitive Guide to Conda Environments, Using R language with Anaconda. Environments created with conda create live by default in the envs/ folder of your Conda directory, whose path will look something like /Users/user-name/miniconda3/envs or /Users/user-name/anaconda3/envs.
    Activate conda base                  Create a new env    Activate a new env           Deactivate an env
    ----------------------------> (base) ----------------->  -------------------> (r-env) -----------------> (base)
    eval $(conda shell.bash hook)"       conda create r-env  conda activate r-env         conda deactivate
    
    $ eval "$(/home/brb/anaconda3/bin/conda shell.bash hook)"
    (base) $ mkdir mypythonproj; cd mypythonproj  # This step seems not necessary
    (base) $ conda create -n r-env r-base
    ...
    #
    # To activate this environment, use
    #
    #     $ conda activate r-env
    #
    # To deactivate an active environment, use
    #
    #     $ conda deactivate
    (base) $ conda activate r-env
    (r-env) $ ls anaconda3/envs
    r-env
    (r-env) $ conda install r-essentials
    (r-env) $ which R
    /home/brb/anaconda3/envs/r-env/bin/R
    (r-env) $ ls -la   # Still Empty
    (r-env) $ R --version
    R version 3.4.3 (2017-11-30) -- "Kite-Eating Tree"
    # Note that the current R version should be 4.0.3
    (r-env) $ conda env list
    base                     /home/brb/anaconda3
    r-env                 *  /home/brb/anaconda3/envs/r-env
    (r-env) $ conda deactivate
    (base)  $ 
    

    It seems to be better to save the environment inside a project directory. So using python -m venv /path/to/new/environment method is preferred. You can also use conda create --prefix /path/to/new/environment. Placing environments outside of the default env/ folder comes with some drawbacks. Read the document of 'The Definitive Guide to Conda Environments'.

  • conda-forge channel, A brief introduction, https://anaconda.org/conda-forge/r-base. Following the instruction seems to mess things up though the conda-forge says the latest version is 4.0.3 (3 years late).
    $ eval "$(/home/brb/anaconda3/bin/conda shell.bash hook)"
    (base) $ conda install -c conda-forge r-base
    ...
    ## Package Plan ##
    
      environment location: /home/brb/anaconda3
    
      added / updated specs:
        - r-base
    ...
    Downloading and Extracting Packages
    r-base-3.2.2    ...
    (base) $ R --version
    /home/brb/anaconda3/lib/R/bin/exec/R: error while loading shared libraries: libreadline.so.6: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory
    (base) $ which R
    /home/brb/anaconda3/bin/R
    

Run R with Jupyter notebook

Example 1: GEO2RNAseq

GEO2RNAseq

Example 2: p-NET

Biologically informed deep neural network for prostate cancer classification and discovery and the paper 2021.

Mamba

  • Mamba is a high-performance package manager that is fully compatible with Conda, the package management system widely used in the Python ecosystem. It was developed to provide a faster and more efficient alternative to Conda, addressing some of the performance issues, especially in terms of dependency resolution and package installation speed.
  • https://github.com/mamba-org/mamba The Fast Cross-Platform Package Manager
  • Biowulf. Mambaforge: a derivative of miniconda that includes mamba and uses the conda-forge channel in place of the defaults channel
  • How to install Mamba on Ubuntu 21.10, How to install R using Mamba, How to install RStudio on Ubuntu 21.10 with R installed using Mamba
  • Debian 12
    • (This step is unnecessary, miniforge includes Conda already) Install anaconda on debian. I choose 'no' at the final question.
      sudo apt-get install libgl1-mesa-glx libegl1-mesa libxrandr2 libxrandr2 \
                libxss1 libxcursor1 libxcomposite1 libasound2 libxi6 libxtst6
      
      curl -O https://repo.anaconda.com/archive/Anaconda3-2024.06-1-Linux-x86_64.sh
      
      bash Anaconda3-2024.06-1-Linux-x86_64.sh
      
      # Anaconda3 will now be installed into this location: /home/$USER/anaconda3
      # Do you wish to update your shell profile to automatically initialize conda? no
      # Log out and log in again
      
      # verify conda
      conda list
      
      conda activate base
      
      conda deactivate
    • Install mamba. Note that I choose 'yes' at the final question.
      curl -O https://github.com/conda-forge/miniforge/releases/latest/download/Miniforge3-Linux-x86_64.sh
      bash Miniforge3-$(uname)-$(uname -m).sh
      # press q to exit the agreement
      # Miniforge3 will now be installed into this location:
      # /home/brb/miniforge3
      
      # To activate this environment, use:
      #
      #    micromamba activate /home/brb/miniforge3
      #
      # Or to execute a single command in this environment, use:
      #
      #    micromamba run -p /home/brb/miniforge3 mycommand
      # 
      # ...
      # You can undo this by running `conda init --reverse $SHELL`? [yes|no]
      # [no] >>> yes    <----- IMPORTANT; o.w. mamba will not be available
      # You have chosen to not have conda modify your shell scripts at all.
      # To activate conda's base environment in your current shell session:
      # 
      # eval "$(/home/brb/miniforge3/bin/conda shell.YOUR_SHELL_NAME hook)"
      #
      # To install conda's shell functions for easier access, first activate, then:
      #
      # conda init
      # 
      # Thank you for installing Miniforge3!
    • Using mamba. Mamba commands are the same as Conda commands, so you can seamlessly switch between using the two.
      mamba create -n myenv python=3.6.12
      
      mamba activate myenv
      
      mamba install numpy=1.19.2  pandas=1.1.3
      pip list
      
      mamba deactivate
      # deactivating an environment does not delete it; it simply changes your working context. 
      
      mamba env list
      
      mamba env remove -n myenv
      
      $ which mamba
      /home/brb/miniforge3/condabin/mamba
      $ which conda
      /home/brb/miniforge3/condabin/conda

Web framework

Flask

Django

Games

Simulate gravity in your Python game