Applied the suggestion of Nishanth on getting started with lists and basicdatatypes(Partially)
authoramit
Thu, 23 Sep 2010 12:29:30 +0530
changeset 201 6b1efb74d914
parent 200 db9617c1d01f
child 202 069d4e86207e
Applied the suggestion of Nishanth on getting started with lists and basicdatatypes(Partially)
basicdatatype.rst
getting_started_with_lists.rst
--- a/basicdatatype.rst	Thu Sep 23 11:26:34 2010 +0530
+++ b/basicdatatype.rst	Thu Sep 23 12:29:30 2010 +0530
@@ -10,15 +10,10 @@
  * Operators with a little hands-on on how they can be applied to 
    the different data types.
 
-Since this a hands on session, you will require python installed in your 
-computer. 
-.. #[Nishanth]: this line is not required
+
 
 First we will explore python data structures in the domain of numbers.
-There are three built-in data structures in python to represent numbers.
-
-.. #[Nishanth]: Did you mean data types when you said data structures??
-                Data structures is used for lists and others.
+There are three built-in data types in python to represent numbers.
 
 {{{ A slide to make a memory note of this }}}
 
@@ -31,12 +26,12 @@
 Lets first talk about integers. ::
 
    a = 13
+   a
 
-.. #[Nishanth]: give a space before and after the = sign
 
 Thats it, there we have our first integer variable a.
 
-.. #[Nishanth]: Show the value of a
+
 
 If we now see ::
      
@@ -49,7 +44,7 @@
 
   a.<Tab>
 
-.. #[Nishanth]: a.<Tab> is not a good idea for int or float
+
 
 Lets see the limits of this int.
 
@@ -81,21 +76,16 @@
 format. There is always an aproximationation. This is why we should
 never rely on equality of floating point numbers in a program.
 
-The last data structure in the list is complex number ::
+The last data type in the list is complex number ::
 
   c = 3.2+4.6j
 
 as simple as that so essentialy its just a combination of two floats the 
-imaginary part being define by j notation usually used in electrical 
-engineering. Complex numbers have a lot of functions specific to them.
+imaginary part being define by j notation instead of i. Complex numbers have a lot of functions specific to them.
 Lets check these ::
 
   c.<Tab>
 
-.. #[Nishanth]: rephrase the "j used in electrical engineering"
-                Its ok if you skip it also. Just say that here
-                j is used and not i
-
 Lets try some of them ::
 
   c.real
@@ -118,14 +108,13 @@
 You can apply different Boolean operations on t now for example ::
 
   f = not t 
-  In[]: f
-  In[]: f or t
-  In[]: f and t 
+  f
+  f or t
+  f and t 
 
-.. #[Nishanth]: remove In[]: and include spaces before and after = symbol
-                I don't want to edit it everywhere in the script
+
   
-The results explanotary in themselves.
+The results are explanotary in themselves.
 
 The usage of boolean brings us to an interesting question of precendence.
 What if you want to apply one operator before another. 
@@ -143,13 +132,13 @@
 
 one ::
  
-  In[]: (a and b) or c
+  (a and b) or c
  
 This expression gives the value True
 
 where as the expression :: 
   
-  In[]: a and (b or c) 
+  a and (b or c) 
 
 gives the value False.
 
@@ -170,9 +159,10 @@
 
 We create our first list by typing :: 
   
-  In[]: num = [1, 2, 3, 4]
+  num_list = [1, 2, 3, 4]
+  num_list
 
-.. #[Nishanth]: Show the value of the variable 
+
 Items enclosed in square brackets separated by comma 
 constitutes a list.
 
@@ -180,19 +170,19 @@
 
 We can have a list something like ::
 
- In[]: var = [1, 1.2, [1,2]]	
+ var_list = [1, 1.2, [1,2]]	
+ var_list
 
-.. #[Nishanth]: Show the value of the variable 
-print var
+
 
 Now we will have a look at strings 
 
 type :: 
 
- In[]: w="hello"
+ In[]: greeting_string="hello"
 
-.. #[Nishanth]: Show the value of the variable 
-w is now a string variable with the value "hello"
+
+greeting_string is now a string variable with the value "hello"
 
 {{{ Memory Aid Slide }}}
 
@@ -212,7 +202,7 @@
 To create a tuple  we use normal brackets '('
 unlike '[' for lists.::
 
-  In[]: t = (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8)
+  In[]: num_tuple = (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8)
   
 Because of their sequential property there are certain functions and 
 operations we can apply to all of them. 
@@ -223,53 +213,54 @@
 
 They can be accessed using index numbers ::
 
-  In[]: num[2]
-  In[]: num[-1]
-  In[]: w[1]
-  In[]: w[3]
-  In[]: w[-2]
-  In[]: t[2]
-  In[]: t[-3]
+  In[]: num_list[2]
+  In[]: num_list[-1]
+  In[]: greeting_string[1]
+  In[]: greeting_string[3]
+  In[]: greeting_string[-2]
+  In[]: num_tuple[2]
+  In[]: num_tuple[-3]
 
-Negative indices can be used to access in reverse
 
-.. #[Nishanth]: Elaborate on indexing.
-                Indexing starts from 0 when moving from left to right
-                Indexing starts from -1 when moving from right to left
+Indexing starts from 0 from left to right and from -1 when accessing
+lists in reverse. Thus num_list[2] refers to the third element 3. 
+and greetings [-2] is the second element from the end , that is 'l'. 
+
+
 
 Addition gives a new sequence containing both sequences ::
 
-     In[]: num+var
-     In[]: p="another string"
-     In[]: w+p
+     In[]: num_list+var_list
+     In[]: a_string="another string"
+     In[]: greeting_string+a_string
      In[]: t2=(3,4,6,7)
-     In[]: t+t2
+     In[]: num_tuple+t2
 
 len function gives the length  ::
 
-  In[]: len(num)
-  In[]: len(w)
-  In[]: len(t)
+  In[]: len(num_list)
+  In[]: len(greeting_string)
+  In[]: len(num_tuple)
 
 Prints the length the variable.
 
 We can check the containership of an element using the 'in' keyword ::
 
-  In[]: 3 in num
-  In[]: 'H' in w
-  In[]: 2 in t
+  In[]: 3 in num_list
+  In[]: 'H' in greeting_string
+  In[]: 2 in num_tuple
 
 We see that it gives True and False accordingly.
 
 Find maximum using max function and minimum using min:: 
 
-  In[]: max(t)
-  In[]: min(w)
+  In[]: max(num_tuple)
+  In[]: min(greeting_string)
 
 Get a sorted list and reversed list using sorted and reversed function ::
 
-  In[]: sorted(num)
-  In[]: reversed(w)
+  In[]: sorted(num_list)
+  In[]: reversed(greeting_string)
 
 As a consequence of the order one we access a group of elements together.
 This is called slicing and striding.
@@ -287,8 +278,8 @@
   In[]: j[1:4]
 
 The syntax for slicing is sequence variable name square bracket
-first element index, colon, second element index.::
-.. #[nishanth]: specify that the last element is not included
+first element index, colon, second element index.The last element however is notincluded in the resultant list::
+
 
   In[]: j[:4]
 
@@ -305,9 +296,9 @@
 
 Lets see by example ::
 
-  In[]: z=[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10]
-  In[]: z[1:8:2]
-  Out[]:[2, 4, 6, 8]
+  new_num_list=[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10]
+  new_num_list[1:8:2]
+  [2, 4, 6, 8]
 
 The colon two added in the end signifies all the alternate elements. This is why we call this concept
 striding because we move through the list with a particular stride or step. The step in this example
@@ -316,62 +307,54 @@
 We have talked about many similar features of lists, strings and tuples. But there are many important
 features in lists that differ from strings and tuples. Lets see this by example.::
 
-  In[]: z[1]=9
-  In[]: w[1]='k'
+  In[]: new_num_list[1]=9
+  In[]: greeting_string[1]='k'
 
 {{{ slide to show the error }}}
 
-.. #[Nishanth]: Use sensible variable names. At this point no one will remember
-                that z is a list and w is tuple.
-                for example you can use names like some_list, a_tuple etc.
-                or you can also use l for list, t for tuple and s for string
+
 
 As you can see while the first command executes with out a problem there is an error on the second one.
   
 Now lets try ::
 
-  In[]: t[1]=5
+  In[]: new_tuple[1]=5
 
 Its the same error. This is because strings and tuples share the property of being immutable.
 We cannot change the value at a particular index just by assigning a new value at that position.
 
-In case of strings we have special functions to appy relacement and other things while tuples cannot
-be changed at all. 
-
-.. #[Nishanth]: Even in strings also the special functions do not modify the
-                original string. A new string is created instead. These have 
-                been provided for string manipulation.
-                hence I don't think you have to mention this.
 
 We have looked at different types but we need to convert one data type into another. Well lets one
 by one go through methods by which we can convert one data type to other:
 
 We can convert all the number data types to one another ::
 
-  In[]: i=34
-  In[]: d=float(i)
+  i=34
+  d=float(i)
+  d  
 
 Python has built in functions int, float and complex to convert one number type
 data structure to another.
 
-  In[]: dec=2.34
-  In[]: dec_con=int(dec)
-  
-.. #[Nishanth]: Show the value of the variables
+  dec=2.34
+  dec_con=int(dec)
+  dec_con
+
 
 As you can see the decimal part of the number is simply stripped to get the integer.::
 
-  In[]: com=2.3+4.2j
-  In[]: float(com)
+  com=2.3+4.2j
+  float(com)
+  com
 
 In case of complex number to floating point only the real value of complex number is taken.
 
 Similarly we can convert list to tuple and tuple to list ::
   
-  In[]: lst=[3,4,5,6]
-  In[]: tup=tuple(lst)
-  In[]: tupl=(3,23,4,56)
-  In[]: lst=list(tuple)
+  lst=[3,4,5,6]
+  tup=tuple(lst)
+  tupl=(3,23,4,56)
+  lst=list(tuple)
 
 However string to list and list to string is an interesting problem.
 Lets say we have a string ::
@@ -379,7 +362,6 @@
   In: somestring="Is there a way to split on these spaces."
   In: somestring.split()
 
-.. #[Nishanth]: Did you try list(somestring). What does it give??
 
 This produces a list with the string split at whitespace.
 similarly we can split on some other character.
--- a/getting_started_with_lists.rst	Thu Sep 23 11:26:34 2010 +0530
+++ b/getting_started_with_lists.rst	Thu Sep 23 12:29:30 2010 +0530
@@ -1,9 +1,3 @@
-.. #[Nishanth]: liststart is not a good name. there is no consistency.
-                Use underscores or hyphens instead of spaces and 
-                make the filename from LO name
-                Ex: getting_started_with_lists (or)
-                getting_started_lists
-
 Hello friends and welcome to the tutorial on getting started with
 lists.
 
@@ -19,13 +13,6 @@
  * Append elements to lists
  * Deleting elements from lists
 
-.. #[Nishanth]: Did you compile this??
-                There must an empty before the bulleted list
-
-I hope you have ipython running on your system.
-
-.. #[Nishanth]: need not specify. Implicit that IPython is running
-
 List is a compound data type, it can contain data of other data
 types. List is also a sequence data type, all the elements are in
 order and there order has a meaning.
@@ -49,7 +36,7 @@
 of comma-separated values (items) between square brackets. 
 All the list items need not have the same data type.
 
-.. #[Nishanth]: do not use "You" or anything else. Stick to "We"
+
 
 As we can see lists can contain different kinds of data. In the
 previous example 'spam' and 'eggs' are strings and 100 and 1.234
@@ -74,43 +61,36 @@
    nonempty[-2] 
    nonempty[-4]
 
--1 being the last element , -2 second to last and -4 being the first
-element.
+-1 gives the last element which is the 4th element , -2 second to last and -4 gives the fourth
+from last element which is first element.
 
-.. #[Nishanth]: -1 being last element sounds like -1 is the last element
-                Instead say -1 gives the last element which is 4
+
 
-.. #[Nishanth]: Instead of saying -4 being the first, say -4 gives 4th 
-                from the last which is the first element.
 
-* =append= elements 
 We can append elements to the end of a list using append command. ::
 
    nonempty.append('onemore') 
+   nonempty
    nonempty.append(6) 
    nonempty
    
 As we can see non empty appends 'onemore' and 6 at the end.
 
-.. #[Nishanth]: First show an example with only one append.
-                may be show the value of a after first append
-                then show what happens after second append 
+
 
 Using len function we can check the number of elements in the list
-nonempty. Because we just appended two elements at the end this
-returns us 6.::
+nonempty. In this case it being 6:
 	 
 	 len(nonempty)
 
-.. #[Nishanth]: the "because ..." can be removed. You can simply
-                say len gives the no.of elements which is 6 here
+
 
 Just like we can append elements to a list we can also remove them.
-There are two ways of doing. One is by using index. ::
+There are two ways of doing it. One is by using index. ::
 
       del(nonempty[1])
 
-.. #[Nishanth]: do not use "You" or anything else. Stick to We
+
 
 deletes the element at index 1, i.e the second element of the
 list, 'eggs'. The other way is removing element by content. Lets say
@@ -142,9 +122,7 @@
  * Delete Element from list.  
  * And Checking list length.
 
-.. #[Nishanth]: See the diff. I have corrected punctuation in many places.
-                The first thing you do before committing is compile the script.
-                I have corrected syntax errors also in many places.
+
 
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