Editing DS4UX (Spring 2016)/Day 3 follow up

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Here are some important concepts that we didn't have a chance to go into in great detail last week. You can use the sections below to review the concepts individually. You can also review how they work together in <code>math_game.py</code>, which is included in [http://jtmorgan.net/ds4ux/week4/lecture.zip the week 4 lecture files.]
Here are some important concepts that we didn't have a chance to go into in great detail last week. You can use the sections below to review the concepts individually. You can also review how they work together in <code>math_game.py</code>, which is included in [http://jtmorgan.net/ds4ux/week4/lecture.zip the week 4 lecture files.]


===Return random values with the <code>random</code> module===
===Select random items from a set with <code>random.choice()</code>===


Use <code>random.choice()</code> to select items at random from a list.
<pre>
>>> import random
>>> my_list = ["terry j.","john","parrot","michael","terry g.", "graham", "llama"]
>>> random.choice(my_list)
'graham'
>>> random.choice(my_list)
'terry j.'
>>>
</pre>
Use <code>random.sample()</code> to gather a given number of random items from a list. The first argument you pass to the <code>random.sample()</code> function is the set of items you are sampling from. The second argument is the number of items you want to gather from that set.
<pre>
>>> random.sample(my_list,3)
['terry j.', 'llama', 'michael']
</pre>
Use <code>random.randint()</code> to gather a random number from a list of numbers. You specify the list of sequential numbers by passing the starting number as the first argument, and the final number as the last argument. Unlike with <code>range()</code> function discussed below, when you use <code>randint()</code> both the first and last numbers you specify are ''included'' in the set you are sampling from.
<pre>
>>> random.randint(1,10)
8
>>> random.randint(1,10)
3
>>> random.randint(1,10)
10
>>>
</pre>


===Generating a list of numbers easily with <code>range()</code>===
===Generating a list of numbers easily with <code>range()</code>===
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