# HG changeset patch # User Shantanu # Date 1258657458 -19800 # Node ID 8bf99f7478171f5fb08baf58bd92ddd2babbdb04 # Parent 0eca6c542fce55cd2f4307d2924fe43526f99edf Modified cheat sheet of session 1 day 2. diff -r 0eca6c542fce -r 8bf99f747817 day1/cheatsheet6.tex --- a/day1/cheatsheet6.tex Thu Nov 19 22:26:00 2009 +0530 +++ b/day1/cheatsheet6.tex Fri Nov 20 00:34:18 2009 +0530 @@ -115,4 +115,9 @@ In []: plot(t, y) \end{lstlisting} +\section{Links and References} +\begin{itemize} +\item Documentation for Numpy and Scipy is available at: \url{http://docs.scipy.org/doc/} + \item For "recipes" or worked examples of commonly-done tasks in SciPy explore: \url{http://www.scipy.org/Cookbook/} +\end{itemize} \end{document} diff -r 0eca6c542fce -r 8bf99f747817 day2/cheatsheet1.tex --- a/day2/cheatsheet1.tex Thu Nov 19 22:26:00 2009 +0530 +++ b/day2/cheatsheet1.tex Fri Nov 20 00:34:18 2009 +0530 @@ -26,95 +26,151 @@ \large{FOSSEE} \end{center} \section{Data types} -Complex Numbers +\subsection{int and float} +A whole number is a \typ{int} variable. \begin{lstlisting} -In []: c = 3+4j -In []: abs(c) +In []: a = 13 +In []: type(a) +Out[]: +In []: b = -2 +In []: type(b) +Out[]: +In []: c = 500000000 +In []: type(c) +Out[]: +\end{lstlisting} +A number with decimal is a \typ{float}. +\begin{lstlisting} +In []: p = 3.141592 +In []: type(p) +Out[]: +\end{lstlisting} +\subsection{Complex Numbers} +\begin{lstlisting} +In []: c = 3+4j #coeff of j specifies imaginary part +In []: abs(c) #absolute value of complex number Out[]: 5.0 -In []: c.imag +In []: c.imag #accessing imaginary part of c Out[]: 4.0 -In []: c.real +In []: c.real #accessing real part of c Out[]: 3.0 \end{lstlisting} -Boolean +\newpage +\subsection{Boolean} \begin{lstlisting} In []: a = False In []: b = True In []: c = True -In []: (a and b) or c +In []: (a and b) or c #Boolean operations Out[]: True \end{lstlisting} -Strings +\textbf{Note:} Python is case sensitive language, \typ{True} is \typ{bool} type, but \typ{true} would be a variable. and hence following assignment fails:\\ +\typ{In []: a = true}\\ +\subsection{Strings} \begin{lstlisting} -In []: w = "hello" -In []: print w[0] + w[2] + w[-1] -Out[]: hlo -In []: len(w) +In []: w = "hello" #w is string variable +In []: print w[1] +Out[]: e +In []: print w[-1] #last character of string +Out[]: o + \end{lstlisting} +\textbf{Note:} For a string variable, individual elements can be accessed using indices. + \begin{lstlisting} +In []: len(w) #function to calculate length of string Out[]: 5 In []: w[0] = 'H' # ERROR: Strings are immutable \end{lstlisting} -String methods +\subsection{String methods} \begin{lstlisting} In []: a = 'Hello World' In []: a.startswith('Hell') # 'a' starts with 'Hell' +Out[]: True In []: a.endswith('ld') # 'a' ends with 'ld' +Out[]: True In []: a.upper() # all characters to upper case +Out[]: 'HELLO WORLD' In []: a.lower() # all characters to lower case +Out[]: 'hello world' In []: ''.join(['a', 'b', 'c']) Out[]: 'abc' \end{lstlisting} -String formatting +\typ{join} function joins all the list member passed as argument with the string it is called upon. In above case it is \typ{empty string}. +\begin{lstlisting} +In []: ' '.join(['a','b','c']) +Out[]: 'a b c' +In []: ','.join(['a','b','c']) +Out[]: 'a,b,c' +\end{lstlisting} +\subsection{String formatting} \begin{lstlisting} -In []: x, y = 1, 1.234 +In []: x, y = 1, 1.234 #initializing two variables In []: 'x is %s, y is %s' %(x, y) Out[]: 'x is 1, y is 1.234' \end{lstlisting} -Arithmetic Operators +\textbf{Note:} \typ{\%s} used in above fomatting specifies \typ{'str'} representation of variables. One can also try:\\ +\typ{\%d} for \typ{int} representation\\ +\typ{\%f} for \typ{float} representation +\begin{lstlisting} +In []: 'x is %f, y is %f' %(x, y) +Out[]: 'x is 1.000000, y is 1.234000' + +In []: 'x is %d, y is %d' %(x, y) +Out[]: 'x is 1, y is 1' +\end{lstlisting} +\subsection{Arithmetic Operators} \begin{lstlisting} In []: 45 % 2 # Modulo operator Out[]: 1 -In []: 1234567891234567890 ** 3 # Power +In []: 5 ** 3 # Power +Out[]: 125 In []: a = 5 -In []: a += 1 +In []: a += 1 #increment by 1, translates to a = a + 1 In []: a *= 2 \end{lstlisting} -String Operations +\subsection{String Operations} \begin{lstlisting} In []: s = 'Hello' In []: p = 'World' -In []: s + p +In []: s + p #concatenating two strings Out[]: 'HelloWorld' -In []: s * 4 +In []: s * 4 #repeating string for given num of times Out[]: 'HelloHelloHelloHello' \end{lstlisting} -Relational and Logical Operators +\subsection{Relational and Logical Operators} \begin{lstlisting} -In []: p, z, n = 1, 0, -1 -In []: p == n +In []: p, z, n = 1, 0, -1 #initializing three variables +In []: p == n #equivalency check Out[]: False -In []: p >= n +In []: p >= n Out[]: True -In []: n < z < p +In []: n < z < p #finding largest number among three Out[]: True In []: p + n != z Out[]: False \end{lstlisting} -Built-ins +\subsection{Built-ins} \begin{lstlisting} -In []: int(17 / 2.0) +In []: int(17 / 2.0) #converts arguments to integer Out[]: 8 -In []: float(17 / 2) +In []: float(17 / 2) #argument is already integer(17 / 2 = 8) Out[]: 8.0 -In []: str(17 / 2.0) +In []: str(17 / 2.0) #converts to string Out[]: '8.5' -In []: round( 7.5 ) +In []: round( 7.5 ) Out[]: 8.0 \end{lstlisting} -Console Input +\subsection{Console Input} \begin{lstlisting} In []: a = raw_input('Enter a value: ') Enter a value: 5 \end{lstlisting} +\textbf{Note:} \typ{raw_input} always returns string representation of user input and hence: +\begin{lstlisting} +In []: type(a) +Out[]: +\end{lstlisting} +To get integer or floating point of this input, one has to perform type conversion:\\ +\typ{In []: b = int(a)} \section{Conditionals} \typ{if} \begin{lstlisting} @@ -133,4 +189,10 @@ In []: a = raw_input('Enter number(Q to quit):') In []: num = int(a) if a != 'Q' else 0 \end{lstlisting} +Above statement can be read as ``num is int of a, if a is not equal to 'Q', otherwise 0 `` +\section{Links and References} +\begin{itemize} + \item Reference manual to describe the standard libraries that are distributed with Python is available at \url{http://docs.python.org/library/} + \item To read more on strings refer to: \\ \url{http://docs.python.org/library/stdtypes.html#string-methods} +\end{itemize} \end{document}