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Coding 101 (part 8)

Coding 101 (part 8)

03/05/2016 By debkr

A quick recap:
We’re cracking on well here, going through the Python course on Coursera as taught by Dr. Chuck (see footnotes for more info and links). We’ve looked a strings and how we can slice, dice and extract data from them using find and split functions. We’ve gone on to learn about files, and proceeded to open and read data from files, both as strings and as lists. We’ve been able to index lists using integer values from zero upwards. Then we’ve gone on to look at dictionaries, which are mini two-field databases of key/value pairs referenced using their keys. And all throughout we’ve been learning about and using various kinds of loops or iterations, conditional statements, and functions (both built-in and defined in-program).

Monty_Python,_And_Now_for_Something_Completely_Different_(1971)And now for something completely different:
All these things were familiar to me from programming in school and as a maths undergrad (albeit a little rusty!). But now we come on to something completely different, something I hadn’t heard of before: tuples. I’ll call tuples the big brother of lists as they’re very similar to lists: they’re basically another type of collection of things. [Read more…] about Coding 101 (part 8)

Filed Under: Blog, Personalised Training Plan, Programming Tagged With: append(), argument, coding101, count, dictionary, function, items(), key/value pair, list, loop, order, python, sort, tuple

Building a Tagging Engine in Python using Dictionaries

Building a Tagging Engine in Python using Dictionaries

01/05/2016 By debkr

tagging-engineI started playing around building a Tagging Engine in Python using Lists but now I’ve studied a bit more – particularly Dictionaries – I want to see how I can perfect what I was working on. Here are a couple of key things I added/changed in this program over the version I was working on earlier.

1. Using a dictionary instead of lists for faster counting and simpler recall. This is straight forward, using the get method as taught by Dr. Chuck (see Coding 101 part 7 for more details).

words = dict()
for word in wordlist :
____if word in excluded : continue
____words[word] = words.get(word,0) + 1

[Read more…] about Building a Tagging Engine in Python using Dictionaries

Filed Under: Blog, Personalised Training Plan, Programming, Programming Projects Tagged With: ==, count, descending, dictionary, iteration, len(), length, list, loop, order, print, program, range, raw_input, user, variable, working directory

Coding 101  (fun with lists)

Coding 101 (fun with lists)

18/04/2016 By debkr

coding-101-fun-with-listsThis is me just mucking about with lists, testing out what I’ve learnt so far and applying it to little problems I might want to solve. I find it the best way to learn, and it’s more fun than reading books!

Project 1: Building a tagging engine (Mon 18Apr16)

1. This snippet splits each line into a list, creates an iteration variable to loop through all words in the line list and print them out. I add various print statements at suitable points (both variable print statements and descriptive text statements) to help me test the program structure, to make sure it’s doing what I want and expect it to at each point through the loop. [Read more…] about Coding 101 (fun with lists)

Filed Under: Blog, Personalised Training Plan, Programming, Programming Projects Tagged With: add, append(), coding101, continue, count, file, find, frequency, iteration, len(), line, list, loop, phrase, print, program, range, split(), test, text, variable

Coding 101 (part 6)

Coding 101 (part 6)

16/04/2016 By debkr

spaghettiWhen strings become spaghetti:
Working with strings and files, particular when using the for {line} in {filehandle}: construct, allows us to do some cool manipulation of data, by finding, splitting and stripping the data into different chunks based on some repeating factor (such as a comma spearating each value in order), then sorting, counting and totalling those values through iterative loops. [Read more…] about Coding 101 (part 6)

Filed Under: Blog, Personalised Training Plan, Programming Tagged With: append(), category, code, coding101, data, element, find, function, handle, index, iteration, key/value pair, len(), length, list, loop, numeric, position, python, range, repeating, return, sorting, split(), startswith(), string, text, value, variable

Coding 101 (part 5)

Coding 101 (part 5)

11/04/2016 By debkr

coding-101-data-structuresThis post follows on from earlier Coding 101 posts and records my responses and learnings from the highly-recommended Python programming book and Coursera specialisation by Charles Severance (see References below).

Opening data files:
In all our previous examples we used data as a constant (i.e. hard-coded into the program some way) or we prompted the user to enter some data which was then manipulated by the program in some way. We want to be able to read data from a variety of sources though – either from files, or from the web – and we know these are going to be much larger data sources, so we’ll need to be able to access and save files on our hard drive somewhere. [Read more…] about Coding 101 (part 5)

Filed Under: Blog, Personalised Training Plan, Programming Tagged With: coding101, count, data, email, file, filename, function, input, line, loop, manipulate, mode, open, print, program, prompt, python, read, reading, rstrip(), searching, startswith(), string, strip, text, type, user

Coding 101 (part 4)

Coding 101 (part 4)

10/04/2016 By debkr

This post follows on from earlier posts (Coding 101 (part 1) ~ (part 2) ~ (part 3)) and records my responses and learnings from the highly-recommended Python programming book and Coursera specialisation by Charles Severance (see References below).

A quick recap on strings:
Strings are computer-speak for characters, specifically where some object or value has the ‘type’ string. Type is an attribute Python applies to any given object or value so it knows how to handle that object or value, i.e. what kinds of operations can and cannot be applied to it. String, and two numeric types – integer and float – are the most common types within Python.

A string may contain one or more characters, so ‘a’ and ‘0’ are strings, just as ‘abcdefghij’ and ‘Hello world. I am Python.’ are. [Read more…] about Coding 101 (part 4)

Filed Under: Blog, Personalised Training Plan, Programming Tagged With: coding101, data, email, find, function, index, integer, length, loop, name, numeric, position, python, read, return, startswith(), string, strip, type, value, variable

Coding 101 (part 3)

Coding 101 (part 3)

04/04/2016 By debkr

This post follows on from my earlier posts Coding 101 (part 1) and (part 2), and is my responses and learnings from the highly-recommended Python programming book and course by Charles Severance (see References below).

Functions:
Functions are sections of code (a sequence of executable steps) which we want to be able to use and re-use at many points in our program. It may be that we want to read and process a whole range of data over and over (but the process done to all the data is the same) or maybe there are a number of inputs required from the user which all need to be processed the same way. Rather than rewriting the same lines of code again and again in our program, we can give that section of code a name (known as ‘defining the function’). We can then ‘call’ that named function, that is, ask Python to execute the defined sequence of steps, at any future point within our program, and as many times as we want. (In other programming languages this same functionality may be referred to as sub-programs or sub-routines.) [Read more…] about Coding 101 (part 3)

Filed Under: Blog, Personalised Training Plan, Programming Tagged With: ==, argument, break, code, coding101, condition, construct, continue, data, define, function, input, items(), iteration, largest, list, loop, parameter, program, python, raw_input, reserved words, return, sequence, smallest, string, type, value, variable

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