I want to create a loop who has this sense:
for i in xrange(0,10):
for k in xrange(0,10):
     z=k+i
     print z
where the output should be
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
I want to create a loop who has this sense:
for i in xrange(0,10):
for k in xrange(0,10):
     z=k+i
     print z
where the output should be
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
You can use zip to turn multiple lists (or iterables) into pairwise* tuples:
>>> for a,b in zip(xrange(10), xrange(10)):
...     print a+b
... 
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
But zip will not scale as well as izip (that sth mentioned) on larger sets.  zip's advantage is that it is a built-in and you don't have to import itertools -- and whether that is actually an advantage is subjective.
*Not just pairwise, but n-wise.  The tuples' length will be the same as the number of iterables you pass in to zip.
The itertools module contains an izip function that combines iterators in the desired way:
from itertools import izip
for (i, k) in izip(xrange(0,10), xrange(0,10)):
   print i+k
You can do this in python - just have to make the tabs right and use the xrange argument for step.
for i in xrange(0, 20, 2);
  print i
What about this?
i = range(0,10)
k = range(0,10)
for x in range(0,10):
     z=k[x]+i[x]
     print z
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18
What you want is two arrays and one loop, iterate over each array once, adding the results.