DS4UX (Spring 2016)/Day 3 lecture: Difference between revisions
From CommunityData
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===Strings=== | |||
;Strings are a lot like lists | |||
>>> my_string = "Hello World" | >>> my_string = "Hello World" | ||
>>> my_string[0] | >>> my_string[0] | ||
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'Hello Jessica' | 'Hello Jessica' | ||
* | *In: 'a' in my_string | ||
;String formatting | |||
x = 1 | |||
y = 1.234 | |||
z = True | |||
w = "elevator" | |||
all_together_now = "You can put ints like %d, floating point numbers like %f, boolean values like %s, and other strings like %s into a string without changing them to strings first!" % (x,y,z,w) | |||
== New concepts == | == New concepts == |
Revision as of 17:37, 11 April 2016
Review
Lists
- Use lists to store data where order matters.
- Lists are indexed starting with 0.
List initialization
>>> my_list = [] >>> my_list [] >>> your_list = ["a", "b", "c", 1, 2, 3] >>> your_list ['a', 'b', 'c', 1, 2, 3]
Access and adding elements to a list
>>> len(my_list) 0 >>> my_list[0] Traceback (most recent call last): File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> IndexError: list index out of range >>> my_list.append("Alice") >>> my_list ['Alice'] >>> len(my_list) 1 >>> my_list[0] 'Alice' >>> my_list.insert(0, "Amy") >>> my_list ['Amy', 'Alice']
>>> my_list = ['Amy', 'Alice'] >>> 'Amy' in my_list True >>> 'Bob' in my_list False
Changing elements in a list
>>> your_list = [] >>> your_list.append("apples") >>> your_list[0] 'apples' >>> your_list[0] = "bananas" >>> your_list ['bananas']
Slicing lists
>>> her_list = ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e', 'f', 'g', 'h'] >>> her_list[0] 'a' >>> her_list[0:3] ['a', 'b', 'c'] >>> her_list[:3] ['a', 'b', 'c'] >>> her_list[-1] 'h' >>> her_list[5:] ['f', 'g', 'h'] >>> her_list[:] ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e', 'f', 'g', 'h']
sorting lists
Use .sort()
to sort a list:
>>> names = ["Eliza", "Joe", "Henry", "Harriet", "Wanda", "Pat"] >>> names.sort() >>> names ['Eliza', 'Harriet', 'Henry', 'Joe', 'Pat', 'Wanda']
Getting the maximum and minimum values from a list
>>> numbers = [0, 3, 10, -1] >>> max(numbers) 10 >>> min(numbers) -1
Strings
- Strings are a lot like lists
>>> my_string = "Hello World" >>> my_string[0] 'H' >>> my_string[:5] 'Hello' >>> my_string[6:] 'World' >>> my_string = my_string[:6] + "Jessica" >>> my_string 'Hello Jessica'
- In: 'a' in my_string
- String formatting
x = 1 y = 1.234 z = True w = "elevator" all_together_now = "You can put ints like %d, floating point numbers like %f, boolean values like %s, and other strings like %s into a string without changing them to strings first!" % (x,y,z,w)
New concepts
Generating a list of numbers easily with range()
>>> range(5) [0, 1, 2, 3, 4] >>> for i in range(5): ... print "Hi" * i ... Hi HiHi HiHiHi HiHiHiHi
The range()
function returns a list of numbers. This is handy for when you want to generate a list of numbers on the fly instead of creating the list yourself.
>>> range(5) [0, 1, 2, 3, 4]
Use range
when you want to loop over a bunch of numbers in a list:
>>> numbers = range(5) >>> for number in numbers: ... print(number * number) ... 0 1 4 9 16
We could rewrite the above example like this:
>>> for number in range(5): ... print(number * number) ... 0 1 4 9 16
Get user input with input()
>>> for i in range(100): ... my_input = input("Please type something> ") ... if input == "Quit": ... print("Goodbye!") ... break ... else: ... print("You said: " + my_input) ... Please type something> Hello You said: Hello Please type something> How are you? You said: How are you? Please type something> Quit Goodbye! >>>
Dictionaries
- Use dictionaries to store key/value pairs.
- Dictionaries do not guarantee ordering.
- A given key can only have one value, but multiple keys can have the same value.
Initialization
>>> my_dict = {} >>> my_dict {} >>> your_dict = {"Alice" : "chocolate", "Bob" : "strawberry", "Cara" : "mint chip"} >>> your_dict {'Bob': 'strawberry', 'Cara': 'mint chip', 'Alice': 'chocolate'}
Adding elements to a dictionary
>>> your_dict["Dora"] = "vanilla" >>> your_dict {'Bob': 'strawberry', 'Cara': 'mint chip', 'Dora': 'vanilla', 'Alice': 'chocolate'}
Accessing elements of a dictionary
>>> your_dict["Alice"] 'chocolate' >>> your_dict.get("Alice") 'chocolate'
>>> your_dict["Eve"] Traceback (most recent call last): File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> KeyError: 'Eve' >>> "Eve" in your_dict False >>> "Alice" in your_dict True >>> your_dict.get("Eve") >>> person = your_dict.get("Eve") >>> print(person) None >>> print(type(person)) <type 'NoneType'> >>> your_dict.get("Alice") 'chocolate'
Changing elements of a dictionary
>>> your_dict["Alice"] = "coconut" >>> your_dict {'Bob': 'strawberry', 'Cara': 'mint chip', 'Dora': 'vanilla', 'Alice': 'coconut'}
Types
>>> type(my_dict) <type 'dict'>
Exercise
Click here to download the scripts for this week's in-class exercise