Compound statements contain (groups of) other statements; they affect
or control the execution of those other statements in some way. In
general, compound statements span multiple lines, although in simple
incarnations a whole compound statement may be contained in one line.
The if, while and for statements implement
traditional control flow constructs. try specifies exception
handlers and/or cleanup code for a group of statements. Function and
class definitions are also syntactically compound statements.
Compound statements consist of one or more `clauses.' A clause
consists of a header and a `suite.' The clause headers of a
particular compound statement are all at the same indentation level.
Each clause header begins with a uniquely identifying keyword and ends
with a colon. A suite is a group of statements controlled by a
clause. A suite can be one or more semicolon-separated simple
statements on the same line as the header, following the header's
colon, or it can be one or more indented statements on subsequent
lines. Only the latter form of suite can contain nested compound
statements; the following is illegal, mostly because it wouldn't be
clear to which if clause a following else clause would
belong:
if test1: if test2: print x
Also note that the semicolon binds tighter than the colon in this
context, so that in the following example, either all or none of the
print statements are executed:
Note that statements always end in a
NEWLINEpossibly followed by a
DEDENT.Also note that optional
continuation clauses always begin with a keyword that cannot start a
statement, thus there are no ambiguities (the `dangling
else' problem is solved in Python by requiring nested
if statements to be indented).
The formatting of the grammar rules in the following sections places
each clause on a separate line for clarity.