CSC111 Homework 8 2014

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Revision as of 17:28, 26 March 2014 by Thiebaut (talk | contribs) (Problem #2)
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--D. Thiebaut (talk) 12:35, 26 March 2014 (EDT)


This assignment is about Artificial Intelligence, and will require you to use tests and lists in a program that will simulate a therapist.

The program is due on 4/5/14 at midnight. You are encouraged to pair-program this assignment.



Page under construction!
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Eliza


You will call your program hw8a.py.

Please, meet Eliza


Please read this introduction to Eliza in Wikipedia. The goal of this assignment is to write our own version of Eliza.


Setup

  • Copy the following program in a file called eliza1.py
  • Play with the program
  • Every so often, try answering "no" or "never" and see how the program reacts.
  • Also, from time to time, use "I", "you", "me", or "your" in your answer, as in "I like you" for example. See how the program responds. We call this a reflection.
  • At some point type bye at the prompt and verify that the program stops.

Reflection

  • Start your Eliza program and tell it: I like you
  • Observe that it responds: you like me?
This is a reflection!
  • Unfortunately, your current version of Eliza is not very clever.
  • Try: you do remind me of my mother
  • Observe its output.
  • See the problem?

Part 1: Improved Reflections

Improve the way your program performs reflections.

When doing a reflection, your program should transform the string "you" at the beginnning of a sentence in "I". However, if the word "you" is not at the beginning of a sentence, your program will translate it into "me".

The effect of this is that if you type:


you do not understand


Your Eliza program should have responded with


I do not understand?

but it doesn't...


However if you type:


I told you so


your Eliza program will respond correctly with


you told me so?


Modify your program so that it will perform reflections correctly (at least for I, you, and me).

Part 2: Picking up on keywords

Modify your program so that if you type the words mother or father anywhere in your input, the program will respond with a random sentence whose topic should include the word family.

For example, if you type My mother always calls me at the wrong time, your Eliza program could respond with something like Is that typical in your family? or Is that a family trait?

Make sure your program recognizes different versions of the keywords, such as (but not limited to) mother, Mother, or MOTHER.

Make your program also pick up on father, brother, and sister (and more if you feel like it).

Part 3: Let's be polite

Make your program scold the user if he/she does not start the first sentence with the word hello or Hello. Feel free to find an appropriate sentence for this faux pas.

Part 4: Ending the conversation

Your program should stop not only if the user enters bye, but it should also recognize goodbye, ciao.

Part 5: Aggressive user

If the user enters a sentence of the form I xxxx you, we can imagine that the word xxxx is a verb, and that the user is being aggressive. In this case Eliza should respond with a sentence of the form Why do you xxxx me?


Part 6: Dealing with exclamation marks and question marks

If the user enters a sentence of the form I lost you!, then the last word, "you" will not be reflected in "me" because the string.split() function will have kept the exclamation mark attached to the word "you." The last word is thus "you!" and will not be reflected by the current program. Figure out a way for your program to be able to reflect the last words of a sentence, even when they are terminated by a "!", "?", or "."

Be efficient in your coding. The fewer changes you need to make to your program to make it behave that way, the better.

Part 7: Memory

Whenever the user enters a sentence of the form I xxxx you, make your program remember it so that whenever it has to output a canned response, it will sometimes output Is that why you xxxx me?.

As an example, imagine that the user has already typed in her conversation with Eliza I dislike you and I trust you, whenever the user enters a sentence that is not reflected and not negative, the program will sometimes, but not always, respond with Is that why you dislike me?, or Is that why you trust me?.

This should really enhance the illusion that the program is intelligent and remembers the conversation.

Recommendations

  • Use functions! What we have built so far is a very linear program, but it should use functions. For example, returning a canned sentence from a list of canned sentences can easily be done by a function.


  • Only PG13 programs will be accepted! Be imaginative in creating your dialogs and responses, and make your programs enjoyable and fun to read and play with!


Submission


Submit your Eliza program to this URL.



Problem #2


Create a new file called temp.py and paste into it the string temperatures found on this page.

Create a second program called hw8b.py, and add the following statement at the top, below the header:


from temp.py import temperatures


You should now be able to read all the lines contained in the variable temperatures (there should be 1,170 lines in it).

Write a well documented program that uses functions, including a main function, that will answer the following questions. Each question should be answered by calling a function to which you will pass temperatures as a parameter. The function will print the answer and return to your main function.

Here is an example of what your main function should look like:

def main():
    # answer to question 1
    findColdestTemp( temperatures )

    # answer to question 2
    findHottestTemp( temperatures )

    # answer to question 3
    findColdestCity( temperatures, "2011" )

    # answer to question 4
    findLargestSwing( temperatures )


Question 1
Which month and year and in which city was the coldest temperature recorded?
Question 2
Which month and year and in which city was the hottest temperature recorded?
Question 3
Which city was the coldest in December 2011? The function should be able to answer for any year. The year will be passed to the function as a string parameter (see above).
Question 4
Which city saw the largest difference of temperature between min and max, a given month, and what year did this happen?


Submission


Submit your hw8b.py program to this URL.