Difference between revisions of "CSC111 Lab 6 2011"
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: Write the code that will take this string, process it, and output the information in a different format, shown below: | : Write the code that will take this string, process it, and output the information in a different format, shown below: | ||
− | Kathryn Stockett | + | Kathryn Stockett: 1. The Help |
− | James Patterson and Michael Ledwidge | + | James Patterson and Michael Ledwidge: 2. Worst Case |
− | Dan Brown | + | Dan Brown: 3. The Lost Symbol |
− | Jackie Collins | + | Jackie Collins: 4. Poor Little Bitch Girl |
− | Kristin Hannah | + | Kristin Hannah: 5. Winter Garden |
Revision as of 21:18, 12 October 2011
This lab deals with Strings, string variables as object instantiated from the class String, which sports many different and useful methods.
Contents
More String Methods
The methods are all documented at this page: http://docs.python.org/py3k/library/string.html. Open this page and refer to it while you are working on this lab.
Use emacs or the python interactive prompt to test out different methods.
center()
One of the string methods is the center function. A few people discovered it and used it in the last homework assignment...
Use it to center the title "computer SCIENCE 111" between two lines of 45 dashes. Use a variable called myTitle to store the string.
myTitle = "computer SCIENCE 111" print 45*"-" print myTitle.center( 45 ) print 45*"-"
capitalize()
Instead of printing the variable myTitle, print myTitle.capitalize( ) and see what happens.
upper()
Use upper() instead of capitalize(). Observe the new output.
title()
Same exercise, but with the title() method.
Challenge 1 |
- Write some Python code that will ask for your name, then your last name, and will print both of them centered between two lines of 60 dashes. Make your program capitalize the first letter of each word.
- Example
your first name? alexAndra your last name? SMITH ------------------------------------------------------------ Alexandra Smith ------------------------------------------------------------
Replacing substrings in a string
To replace a substring of a string (or a word in a sentence), all you need to do is to use the replace() method.
sentence = """Strength is the capacity to break a chocolate bar into four pieces with your bare hands - and then eat just one of the pieces""" print sentence sentence = sentence.replace( "chocolate", "carrot" ) print sentence
Try it and replace the word "piece" by the word "chunk" in the same sentence, so that now you're breaking carrots into chunks.
Multiple Replacements
We are still dealing with the sentence above, but we want to replace four separate words by four new words. The words we want to replace are in this list:
toBeReplaced = ["chocolate", "piece", "hand", "break"]
and the replacement words are in this list:
newWords = ["carrot", "chunk", "elbow", "melt"]
Challenge 2 |
Write python statements that will take the string sentence and replace chocolate by carrot, then it will look for piece and replace it by chunk, hand by elbow, and break by melt.
Use a for-loop, something inspired by this code...
oldStr = [ "chocolate", "piece", "hand", "break" ] for i in range( len( oldStr ) ): print( oldStr[ i ] )
Count()
Read the documentation on the method count() and write some statements that output the number of times the word "piece" appears in sentence using the count() method.
Strip()
Read the documentation about the method strip() and use it to allow you to print the lines below left aligned.
listOfStrings = [ " But then, shall I never get any older than I am now? ", " That'll be a comfort, one way -- never to be an old woman -- ", " but then -- always to have lessons to learn! ", " Alice " ]
Splitting strings
First, read the documentation on the split() method.
Let's use the same string as before.
sentence = """Strength is the capacity to break a chocolate bar into four pieces with your bare hands - and then eat just one of the pieces"""
And process it that way
list1 = sentence.split( "\n" ) print "list1 = ", list1 list2 = sentence.split( ) print "list2 = ", list2 list3 = sentence.split( 's' ) print "list3 = ", list3
Challenge 3 |
- Make your program print the number of words in sentence (there are several ways to do that: one long, one very short).
Challenge 4 |
- Make your program display the first and last words of the sentence. (Remember that you can use negative indexes to pick elements of a list starting from its end.)
Challenge 5 |
- Assume that you have a string of this type:
NYTBestSellers = """1. THE HELP, by Kathryn Stockett 2. WORST CASE, by James Patterson and Michael Ledwidge 3. THE LOST SYMBOL, by Dan Brown 4. POOR LITTLE BITCH GIRL, by Jackie Collins 5. WINTER GARDEN, by Kristin Hannah """
- Write the code that will take this string, process it, and output the information in a different format, shown below:
Kathryn Stockett: 1. The Help James Patterson and Michael Ledwidge: 2. Worst Case Dan Brown: 3. The Lost Symbol Jackie Collins: 4. Poor Little Bitch Girl Kristin Hannah: 5. Winter Garden