CSC111 Homework 5 2015b
--D. Thiebaut (talk) 09:37, 4 October 2015 (EDT)
This assignment should be done in pairs, and is due on 10/8/15, at 11:55 p.m.
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Contents
Problem 1
This problem is super easy, but will get you to see the structure of the type of programs you will have to write for this homework. All the programs will have the same structure, and will be tested in a similar way.
- Write a program called hw5_1.py that has contains a function called happyBirthday1Line(...), that receives one parameter, which will contain the name of a person (say, "Elena"), and that will print the following message:
Happy birthday to you, dear Elena
- Note that the function only prints one line. No extra blank lines.
- Add a main function to your program that will call your happyBirthday1Line() function. For example:
def main(): happyBirthday1Line( "Elena" ) happyBirthday1Line( "Maria" ) happyBirthday1Line( "Rui" ) main()
- When you run your program, the output should be:
Happy birthday to you, dear Elena Happy birthday to you, dear Maria Happy birthday to you, dear Rui
- Submit your program to the HW 5 PB 1 section on Moodle.
Note 1: that Moodle will remove the main function from your program and replace it with another main() function, that will call your function with different names. This will ensure that you write your function correctly, independently of your main function. So, do not be surprised if you see the output of your program on Moodle not corresponding to your output. It's normal!
Note 2: Another reminder about the way Moodle shows you differences between your program and the solution program. Below is an example of the type of output you might get.
+ Happy birthday to you, dear Alfred - Happy birthday to you, dear ALFred ? -- + Happy birthday to you, dear Fred - Happy birthday to you, dear FRED - Happy birthday to you, dear naomi ? ^ + Happy birthday to you, dear Naomi ? ^
The lines starting with a + represent the solution output. The lines starting with - represent the output of your program. You see, above, that the solution program is capitalizing the first names correctly, while the submitted program does not.
Problem 2
- Write a program called hw5_2.py that contains 2 functions, the first one is the one from Problem 1, happyBirthday1Line(), and the second one is a function called happyBirthday2(...).
- Here is an example of a main() program that calls happyBirthday2(...), and its output:
def main(): happyBirthday2( "Alexandra" ) happyBirthday2( "Mickey MOUSE" ) happyBirthday2( "OLGA" ) main()
- and the output:
---------------------------------------- Happy birthday to you, dear Alexandra ---------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------- Happy birthday to you, dear Mickey Mouse ---------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------- Happy birthday to you, dear Olga ----------------------------------------
- Make your function happyBirthday2() call happyBirthday1Line(), since this second function is already written and works well.
- Submit your program in the Moodle section called HW 5 PB 2.
- Note: Moodle will test that your output matches exactly the output of the solution program. This includes the horizontal bars. Make sure they have the same lengths!
Problem #3
- Here is a main program that calls 2 different functions, one called reformatDate() and the other one called convertTemperature().
def main(): # display 3 dates in digit format, and in easier to read format for date in [ "01012000", "12311900", "01011000" ]: print( date, "-->", reformatDate( date ) ) print() # display 3 temperatures in Fahrenheit and in Celsius for temp in [32, 64, 100]: print( "{0:1} Fahrenheit = {1:1.2f} Celsius" .format( temp, convertTemperature( temp ) ) ) main()
- Here is the output of the program:
01012000 --> Jan 1 2000 12311900 --> Dec 31 1900 01011000 --> Jan 1 1000 32 Fahrenheit = 0.00 Celsius 64 Fahrenheit = 17.78 Celsius 100 Fahrenheit = 37.78 Celsius
- Write a program called hw5_3.py that contains the code for the two functions reformatDate() and convertTemperature().
- Note: Your functions will be tested on Moodle with a main program that is different from yours
- Submit your program in the HW 5 PB 3 section.
Problem #4: Gremlins in your Computer!
- Write a program called hw5_5.py which contains a function, called addGremlins( ... ), that, when passed a string of characters, returns a new string where all the g or G letters are replaced by "gremlin" or "GREMLIN".
- Here is an example of how your function could be called from a main program, and its corresponding output:
def main(): for line in [ "good great", "Not so bad!", "Good and Great" ]: print( line, addGremlins( line ), sep="\n" ) print( ) main()
- and the output:
good great gremlinood gremlinreat Not so bad! Not so bad! Good and Great GREMLINood and GREMLINreat
- Submit your program in the HW 5 PB 5 section on Moodle.
Problem 6: Mail-Merge
- Write a program called hw5_6.py that contains 1 function called mailMerge(...), the behavior of which is illustrated in the example below. First the code:
def main(): msg1 = """Dear %%NAME%%, Your order for %%QUANTITY%% %%ITEM%% has been received. We will ship you the %%ITEM%% in the next 24 hours.""" msg2 = """The order for %%QUANTITY%% %%ITEM%% ordered by %%NAME%% has just been shipped.""" msg3 = """The quick red fox jumped over the dog""" mailMerge( msg1, "Alma", "a ton of", "chocolate" ) mailMerge( msg2, "Paul", "2000", "paper airplanes" ) mailMerge( msg3, "wolf", "10", "rabbits" ) main()
- and the output:
Dear Alma, Your order for a ton of chocolate has been received. We will ship you the chocolate in the next 24 hours. The order for 2000 paper airplanes ordered by Paul has just been shipped. The quick red fox jumped over the dog
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- If you study the strings that are passed to the function mailMerge(), and the output it generates, you will find that it will have substituted the name of the people for the string "%%NAME%%" in the message passed. It does the same for the strings "%%QUANTITY%%" and "%%ITEM%%", that get substituted for some amount of stuff, and the name of the stuff.
- Submit your program to the HW 5 PB 6 section on Moodle.
Problem 7
- Write a program called hw5_7.py that contains 1 function called finalGrade(...) and that receives as parameter a list of 7 numbers representing grades. The first 5 grades are homework assignments, and count for 40% of the final grade. The last 2 numbers represent exams, and each exam counts for 30% of the final grade. The function returns the integer value of the final grade, computed as 40% of the average of the first 5 grades, + 30% of the 6th grade, + 30% of the last number.
- Example:
def main(): grades = [100, 100, 100, 90, 80, 51, 95 ] print( "Grades: " , grades ) print( "Total: " , finalGrade( grades ) ) print() grades = [100, 100, 100, 100, 100, 100, 100 ] print( "Grades: " , grades ) print( "Total: " , finalGrade( grades ) ) print() grades = [100, 100, 100, 100, 100, 0, 0 ] print( "Grades: " , grades ) print( "Total: " , finalGrade( grades ) ) print()
- and the output:
Grades: [100, 100, 100, 90, 80, 51, 95] Total: 81 Grades: [100, 100, 100, 100, 100, 100, 100] Total: 100 Grades: [100, 100, 100, 100, 100, 0, 0] Total: 40
- Submit your program in the HW 5 PB 7 section of Moodle.
Problem #8: DNA
- Write a program called hw5_8.py that processes DNA strings, containing symbols A, C, G, and T, and sometimes - and N, and that extracts a substring that appears between specific markers. An example will illustrate what is going on.
DNA string = ACGTAAGGAGAAAATTTTAAAAGGATTTTT Marker = AGGA DNA substring between AGGA markers = AGGAGAAAATTTTAAAA