Prerequisite: Loops
Note: Output of all these programs is tested on Python3
1. What is the output of the following?
mylist = [ 'Lazyroar' , 'forLazyroar' ] for i in mylist: i.upper() print (mylist) |
- [‘GEEKS’, ‘FORGEEKS’].
- [‘Lazyroar’, ‘forLazyroar’].
- [None, None].
- Unexpected
Output:
2. [‘Lazyroar’, ‘forLazyroar’]
Explanation: The function upper() does not modify a string in place, it returns a new string which isn’t being stored anywhere.
2. What is the output of the following?
mylist = [ 'Lazyroar' , 'forLazyroar' ] for i in mylist: mylist.append(i.upper()) print (mylist) |
- [‘GEEKS’, ‘FORGEEKS’].
- [‘Lazyroar’, ‘forLazyroar’, ‘GEEKS’, ‘FORGEEKS’].
- [None, None].
- None of these
Output:
4. None of these
Explanation:The loop does not terminate as new elements are being added to the list in each iteration.
3. What is the output of the following?
i = 1 while True : if i % 0O7 = = 0 : break print (i) i + = 1 |
- 1 2 3 4 5 6.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7.
- error.
- None of these
Output:
1. 1 2 3 4 5 6
Explanation: The loop will terminate when i will be equal to 7.
4. What is the output of the following?
True = False while True : print ( True ) break |
- False.
- True.
- Error.
- None of these
Output:
3. Error
Explanation: SyntaxError, True is a keyword and it’s value cannot be changed.
5. What is the output of the following?
i = 1 while True : if i % 3 = = 0 : break print (i) i + = 1 |
- 1 2 3.
- 1 2.
- Syntax Error.
- None of these
Output:
3. Syntax Error
Explanation: SyntaxError, there shouldn’t be a space between + and = in +=.