Lists¶
🎨 Arithmetic Operators¶
In [1]:
7 + 2
Out[1]:
9
In [2]:
7 - 2
Out[2]:
5
In [3]:
7 * 2
Out[3]:
14
In [4]:
7 ** 2
Out[4]:
49
7 ** 2
is $ 7 ^ 2 $
In [5]:
7 / 2
Out[5]:
3.5
In [6]:
7 // 2
Out[6]:
3
In [7]:
7 % 2
Out[7]:
1
$\frac{7}{2} = 3r1$
7 // 2
gives us the $3$
7 % 2
gives us the $1$ (the remainder)
🎨 Comparisons¶
In [8]:
2 > 1
Out[8]:
True
In [9]:
2 > 2
Out[9]:
False
In [10]:
2 <= 2
Out[10]:
True
In [11]:
2 >= 2
Out[11]:
True
In [14]:
4 == 4
Out[14]:
False
In [13]:
4 != 6
Out[13]:
True
🎨 None
¶
What is the value of a variable that doesn't have a value?
What does a function return when it doesn't return
anything?
In [15]:
def no_return():
print('This function doesn\'t return anything.')
value = no_return()
print('the value is:', value)
This function doesn't return anything. the value is: None
In [16]:
type(value)
Out[16]:
NoneType
None
is what Python uses to communicate nothing.
It's what you use to indicate that you don't have any information.
In [17]:
thing = 8
thing is None
Out[17]:
False
In [18]:
thing = None
thing is None
Out[18]:
True
To determine whether a variable is None
, use the is None
expression.
In [19]:
thing = 9
thing is not None
Out[19]:
True
To determine whether a variable is not None
, use the is not None
expression.
In [20]:
names = []
while True:
name = input("Give me a name: ")
if name == '':
break
names.append(name)
print(names)
print(names)
Give me a name: Charles ['Charles'] Give me a name: George ['Charles', 'George'] Give me a name: Sandy ['Charles', 'George', 'Sandy'] Give me a name: Walter ['Charles', 'George', 'Sandy', 'Walter'] Give me a name: Ezekiel ['Charles', 'George', 'Sandy', 'Walter', 'Ezekiel'] Give me a name: ['Charles', 'George', 'Sandy', 'Walter', 'Ezekiel']
In [21]:
names = ['Julia', 'Juan', 'George', 'Gina']
print(names)
['Julia', 'Juan', 'George', 'Gina']
In [22]:
names = ['Julia', 'Juan', 'George', 'Gina']
while True:
name = input("Give me a name: ")
if name == '':
break
names.append(name)
print(names)
Give me a name: Fred Give me a name: Phred Give me a name: Gordon Give me a name: Ivan Give me a name: ['Julia', 'Juan', 'George', 'Gina', 'Fred', 'Phred', 'Gordon', 'Ivan']
🎨 len
¶
In [23]:
fruit = ['apple', 'peach', 'pear', 'açaí']
how_many = len(fruit)
print(how_many)
print(len(fruit))
4 4
🖌 for
¶
In [26]:
students = ['Julia', 'Juan', 'George', 'Gina', 'Gina']
for student in students:
print(f"Hello {student}. Welcome to CS 110.")
print(f"I hope you ({student}) have a great day.")
Hello Julia. Welcome to CS 110. I hope you (Julia) have a great day. Hello Juan. Welcome to CS 110. I hope you (Juan) have a great day. Hello George. Welcome to CS 110. I hope you (George) have a great day. Hello Gina. Welcome to CS 110. I hope you (Gina) have a great day. Hello Gina. Welcome to CS 110. I hope you (Gina) have a great day.
In [ ]:
%%file for_class/fruit_salad.py
# 🍓 🍎 🥭
👩🏽🎨 Big and Small¶
Write a program that queries the user for a list of numbers (one number at a time).
Then ask the user what number to use as the boundary between "big" and "small" numbers.
Print "You have {how_many} numbers:"
Then print out all the numbers with one of the following comments:
- for "big" numbers say "(big)"
- for "small" numbers say "(small)"
Number: 8 Number: 10 Number: 30 Number: 2 Number: 65 Number: 42 Number: 13 Number: 77 Number: Boundary: 20 You have 8 numbers: - 8 (small) - 10 (small) - 30 (big) - 2 (small) - 65 (big) - 42 (big) - 13 (small) - 77 (big)
Key Ideas¶
- Arithmetic operators
- Lists!
[]
.append(...)
len
for