Editing Community Data Science Course (Spring 2015)/Day 2 Followup

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The only thing might seem new here is the line with <code>counter</code> in it twice. All we're doing in that line is just adding 1 to the variable <code>counter</code> and then replacing the old value with the new, slightly bigger, version.
The only thing might seem new here is the line with <code>counter</code> in it twice. All we're doing in that line is just adding 1 to the variable <code>counter</code> and then replacing the old value with the new, slightly bigger, version.


Of course, instead of that counter and <code>for</code> loop, we could have just used <code>len(names)</code> and it would have done the same thing! This is powerful because loops are much more flexible and combined with other things we've learned. For example, lets say I wanted to count the number of names that start with the letter "m". I could combine that counter above with an <code>if</code> statement that checks if the "0th" item in each name (i.e., the first letter) to see if it's "m" like this:
Of course, instead of that counter and for loop, we could have just used <code>len(names)</code> and it would have done the same thing! The way this gets powerful is that we begin to combine this.
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For example, lets say I wanted to just count the number of names that start with the letter "m". I could combine that counter above with an if statement that checks if the "0th" item in each name (i.e., item in the list) is "m" like this:


<syntaxhighlight lang="python">
<syntaxhighlight lang="python">
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Now, this program will print out "2" (the number of names that start with "m") instead of "4".
Now, this program will print out "2" (the number of names that start with "m") instead of "4".


Python can do anything from within a loop! For example, lets say I wanted to create a new list (I'll call the variable <code>m_names</code>) that contains only those names that start with "m". In this case, the code I'll write is going to similar to what we've already seen except I will replace the counter with an empty list (<code>[]</code>) and I'll append things to that list every time there's a match from within a loop. Here's an example:
I can also use append to create a new list from within a for loop. So lets say I wanted to create a new list that contains only those "m" names. In this case, the code I'll write is very similar except I will replace the counter with an empty list (<code>[]</code>) and I'll append things to it every time there's a match. Here's an example:


<syntaxhighlight lang="python">
<syntaxhighlight lang="python">
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