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5 changes: 4 additions & 1 deletion src/00_hello.py
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
@@ -1 +1,4 @@
# Print "Hello, world!" to your terminal
# Print "Hello, world!" to your terminal

hello = "Hello, world"
print(hello)
3 changes: 2 additions & 1 deletion src/01_bignum.py
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
@@ -1,4 +1,5 @@
# Print out 2 to the 65536 power
# (try doing the same thing in the JS console and see what it outputs)

# YOUR CODE HERE
# YOUR CODE HERE
print(2**65536)
5 changes: 3 additions & 2 deletions src/02_datatypes.py
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -14,8 +14,9 @@
# Write a print statement that combines x + y into the integer value 12

# YOUR CODE HERE

print(int(y) + x)

# Write a print statement that combines x + y into the string value 57

# YOUR CODE HERE
# YOUR CODE HERE
print(f'{x}{y}')
31 changes: 30 additions & 1 deletion src/03_modules.py
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -5,27 +5,56 @@
level operating system functionality.
"""

import getpass
import sys
import argparse
import platform
import os

# See docs for the sys module: https://docs.python.org/3.7/library/sys.html

# Print out the command line arguments in sys.argv, one per line:
# YOUR CODE HERE

# Total arguments
n = len(sys.argv)
print("Total arguments passed: " + str(n))

# Arguments passed:
print("\nName of python script:", sys.argv[0])

print("\nArguments passed:", end = " ")
for i in range(1, n):
print(sys.argv[i], end = " ")

# Print out the OS platform you're using:
# YOUR CODE HERE
print("My OS is", os.name)


# Print out the version of Python you're using:
# YOUR CODE HERE

print("My python Version is:", sys.version)
print("MY python version infi is:", sys.version_info)

import os
# See the docs for the OS module: https://docs.python.org/3.7/library/os.html

# Print the current process ID
# YOUR CODE HERE

print("This is my current process ID:", os.getpid())

# Print the current working directory (cwd):
# YOUR CODE HERE

print("My current working directory is", os.getcwd())

# Print out your machine's login name
# YOUR CODE HERE

username = os.getlogin()
username2 = getpass.getuser

print("My computers username is:", username)
print("MY computers username2 is", username2)
9 changes: 8 additions & 1 deletion src/04_printing.py
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -12,6 +12,13 @@
# y, and z:
# x is 10, y is 2.25, z is "I like turtles!"

print("x: %2d, y: %2.2f, z: \"%s\"" % (x, y, z))

print("=================================")


# Use the 'format' string method to print the same thing

# Finally, print the same thing using an f-string
# Finally, print the same thing using an f-

print(f"x = {x}, \ny = {y:.2f}, \nz = \"{z}\"")
10 changes: 9 additions & 1 deletion src/05_lists.py
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -8,22 +8,30 @@

# Change x so that it is [1, 2, 3, 4]
# YOUR CODE HERE
x.append(4)
print(x)

# Using y, change x so that it is [1, 2, 3, 4, 8, 9, 10]
# YOUR CODE HERE
x += y
print(x)

# Change x so that it is [1, 2, 3, 4, 9, 10]
# YOUR CODE HERE
x.remove(8)
print(x)

# Change x so that it is [1, 2, 3, 4, 9, 99, 10]
# YOUR CODE HERE
x.insert(5, 99)
print(x)

# Print the length of list x
# YOUR CODE HERE
print(len(x))
print(x.count)

# Print all the values in x multiplied by 1000
# YOUR CODE HERE
# YOUR CODE HERE

print(list(map(lambda a: a * 1000, x)))
6 changes: 4 additions & 2 deletions src/06_tuples.py
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -34,11 +34,13 @@ def dist(a, b):

# Write a function `print_tuple` that prints all the values in a tuple

# YOUR CODE HERE
def print_tuple(tuple):
for element in tuple:
print(element)

t = (1, 2, 5, 7, 99)
print_tuple(t) # Prints 1 2 5 7 99, one per line

# Declare a tuple of 1 element then print it
u = (1) # What needs to be added to make this work?
u = (1,) # What needs to be added to make this work?
print_tuple(u)
15 changes: 8 additions & 7 deletions src/07_slices.py
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -12,26 +12,27 @@
a = [2, 4, 1, 7, 9, 6]

# Output the second element: 4:
print()
print(a[1])

# Output the second-to-last element: 9
print()
print(a[-2])

# Output the last three elements in the array: [7, 9, 6]
print()
print(a[-3:])

# Output the two middle elements in the array: [1, 7]
print()
print(a[2:4])

# Output every element except the first one: [4, 1, 7, 9, 6]
print()
print(a[1:])

# Output every element except the last one: [2, 4, 1, 7, 9]
print()
# When using minus one and the colon to the left the compiler then goes all the way from the last number to the left (-1 to -6)
print(a[:-1])

# For string s...

s = "Hello, world!"

# Output just the 8th-12th characters: "world"
print()
print(s[7:12])
16 changes: 9 additions & 7 deletions src/08_comprehensions.py
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -10,32 +10,34 @@

# Write a list comprehension to produce the array [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]

y = []
y = [num for num in range(1, 6)]
print(y)

print (y)
y1 = []
for num in range(1, 6):
y1.append(num)
print(y1)

# Write a list comprehension to produce the cubes of the numbers 0-9:
# [0, 1, 8, 27, 64, 125, 216, 343, 512, 729]

y = []

y = [num**3 for num in range(10)]
print(y)

# Write a list comprehension to produce the uppercase version of all the
# elements in array a. Hint: "foo".upper() is "FOO".

a = ["foo", "bar", "baz"]

y = []
y = [word.upper() for word in a]

print(y)

# Use a list comprehension to create a list containing only the _even_ elements
# the user entered into list x.

x = input("Enter comma-separated numbers: ").split(',')

# What do you need between the square brackets to make it work?
y = []
y = [num for num in x if int(num) % 2 == 0]

print(y)
39 changes: 38 additions & 1 deletion src/09_dictionaries.py
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -14,6 +14,7 @@
- lon: a signed integer representing a longitude value
- name: a name string for this location
"""
import json

waypoints = [
{
Expand All @@ -36,12 +37,48 @@
# Add a new waypoint to the list
# YOUR CODE HERE

waypoints.append( {
"lat": 120,
"lon": -11,
"name": "Some random place"
})

# Another way
# anotherPlace = { "lat": 42, "lon": -120, "name": "a fourth place"}
# waypoints.append(anotherPlace)
# print(waypoints)

# *************How to print json data **************
# json_data = '[{"ID":10,"Name":"Pankaj","Role":"CEO"},' \
# '{"ID":20,"Name":"David Lee","Role":"Editor"}]'

# json_object = json.loads(json_data)
# json_formatted_str = json.dumps(json_object, indent=2)
# print(json_formatted_str)
# dont forget to import json

# with open('EmployeeData.json', 'r') as json_file:
# json_object = json.load(json_file)

# print(json_object)
# print(json.dumps(json_object))
# print(json.dumps(json_object, indent=1))
# **********************************************************


# Modify the dictionary with name "a place" such that its longitude
# value is -130 and change its name to "not a real place"
# Note: It's okay to access the dictionary using bracket notation on the
# waypoints list.

# YOUR CODE HERE
waypoints[0]["lon"] = -130
waypoints[0]["name"] = "not a real place"

# Write a loop that prints out all the field values for all the waypoints
# YOUR CODE HERE

# YOUR CODE HERE
for i, waypoint in enumerate(waypoints):
print(f"Waypoint #{i + 1}")
for key, value in waypoint.items():
print(f" { key }: {value}")
7 changes: 6 additions & 1 deletion src/10_functions.py
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
@@ -1,6 +1,8 @@
# Write a function is_even that will return true if the passed-in number is even.

# YOUR CODE HERE
def is_even(num):
return num % 2 == 0

# Read a number from the keyboard
num = input("Enter a number: ")
Expand All @@ -9,4 +11,7 @@
# Print out "Even!" if the number is even. Otherwise print "Odd"

# YOUR CODE HERE

if is_even(num):
print("Even")
else:
print("Odd")
19 changes: 17 additions & 2 deletions src/11_args.py
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -5,6 +5,8 @@
# the sum. This is what you'd consider to be a regular, normal function.

# YOUR CODE HERE
def f1(num1, num2):
return num1 + num2

print(f1(1, 2))

Expand All @@ -14,6 +16,12 @@

# YOUR CODE HERE

def f2(*nums):
sum = 0
for num in nums:
sum += num
return sum

print(f2(1)) # Should print 1
print(f2(1, 3)) # Should print 4
print(f2(1, 4, -12)) # Should print -7
Expand All @@ -22,7 +30,7 @@
a = [7, 6, 5, 4]

# How do you have to modify the f2 call below to make this work?
print(f2(a)) # Should print 22
print(f2(*a)) # Should print 22

# Write a function f3 that accepts either one or two arguments. If one argument,
# it returns that value plus 1. If two arguments, it returns the sum of the
Expand All @@ -31,6 +39,9 @@

# YOUR CODE HERE

def f3(num1, num2 = 1):
return num1 + num2

print(f3(1, 2)) # Should print 3
print(f3(8)) # Should print 9

Expand All @@ -45,6 +56,10 @@

# YOUR CODE HERE

def f4(**keyValues):
for key, value in keyValues.items():
print("Key: %s, Value: %s" % (key, value))

# Should print
# key: a, value: 12
# key: b, value: 30
Expand All @@ -62,4 +77,4 @@
}

# How do you have to modify the f4 call below to make this work?
f4(d)
f4(**d)
5 changes: 4 additions & 1 deletion src/12_scopes.py
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -5,9 +5,11 @@
x = 12

def change_x():
global x
x = 99

change_x()
change_x()


# This prints 12. What do we have to modify in change_x() to get it to print 99?
print(x)
Expand All @@ -19,6 +21,7 @@ def outer():
y = 120

def inner():
nonlocal y
y = 999

inner()
Expand Down
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