LUA:For Python Programmers
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Latest revision as of 15:31, 10 February 2011
Lua: Lua for Python Programmers |
Description: | A crash course in Lua for people who already know Python |
Original Author: | Darkspork |
Contributors: | The community |
Created: | Dec 7, 2009 |
About
This is a WIP
The Basics
I'd recommend first reading this page, as it explains how to make and run Hello World in Lua. Got that done? Good.
Lua code will look very familiar to a Python programmer. As in Python, Lua variables don't have an explicit data type. Lua also has a very familiar data structure and looping construct. I'm getting ahead of myself, though.
Boolean Values
One key difference between Python and Lua is the treatment of boolean variables. In Python, just about anything that resembles "zero" or "empty" evaluates to false. This is not true in Lua. Lua treats everything as true except for the values nil and false.
Also key are the various boolean operators. The Garry's Mod implementation of Lua uses &&, ||, and ! for and, or, and not respectively. The &&/|| operators behave exactly like Python's and/or operators - they return one of the two values, rather than simply true or false. Note that the regular lua syntax is completely supported as well.
Control Structure
Shown are various constructs in Python and their equivalent lua code
Python
def fn(param1,param2,param3...): ...
Lua
function fn(param1,param2,param3...) ... end
Python
if condition:
...
Lua
if condition then ... end
Python
"Beginning %s End"%(MiddleString,)
Lua
"Beginning "..MiddleString.." End" //or Format("Beginning %s End", MiddleString)
Python
"Beginning %d End"%(MiddleNumber,)
Lua
"Beginning "..MiddleNumber.." End" //or Format("Beginning %d End", MiddleNumber)
Python
for (i in range(low,high)): ...
Lua
for i=low,high do ... end
Tables
An avid Python programmer will be no doubt familiar with the power of lists and dictionaries. Lua brings both of these together in the Table. Essentially, a table is a dictionary. The syntax to define, set values, and retrieve values is identical.
myTable={} myTable[240]=25 myTable[231]="potato" myTable[92]=48 myTable[119]=52 myTable["george"]=1 myTable["alex"]=3 myTable["orange"]=17 myTable["cake"]="lie" myTable[240] // Returns 25 myTable["george"] // Returns 1 myTable[231] // Returns "potato"
There's also a beautifully familiar loop:
The For-In Loop
Python
for (key, value) in dict: ...
Lua
for key, value in pairs(table) do ... end