Python Mini-Tutorial: Invoking The Interpreter

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Python mini-tutorial

Files to Edit and Submit: You will fill in portions of addition.py, buyLotsOfFruit.py, and shopSmart.py
in Lab01→tutorial during the assignment.

Required Files
You have to use the files associated with the Python mini-tutorial, found in the folder
Lab01→python_basics.

Table of Contents
Invoking the Interpreter
Operators
Strings
Exercise: Dir and Help
Built-in Data Structures
Lists
Tuples
Sets
Dictionaries
Writing Scripts
Beware of Indendation!
Tabs vs Spaces
Writing Functions
Object Basics
Defining Classes
Using Objects
Static vs Instance Variables
More Python Tips and Tricks
Troubleshooting
More References

The programming assignments in this course will be written in Python, an interpreted, object-
oriented language that shares some features with both Java and Scheme. This tutorial will walk
through the primary syntactic constructions in Python, using short examples.
We encourage you to type all python shown in the tutorial onto your own machine. Make sure it
responds the same way.

Invoking the Interpreter


Python can be run in one of two modes. It can either be used interactively, via an interpeter, or it
can be called from the command line to execute a script. We will first use the Python interpreter
interactively.

You invoke the interpreter by entering python at the Windows command prompt.
Note: you may have to type python2.4, python2.5, python2.6 or python2.7, rather than python,
depending on your machine.
[…]$ python
Python 2.6.5 (r265:79063, Jan 14 2011, 14:20:15)
[GCC 4.4.1] on sunos5
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>>

Operators
The Python interpreter can be used to evaluate expressions, for example simple arithmetic
expressions. If you enter such expressions at the prompt (>>>) they will be evaluated and the result
will be returned on the next line.
>>> 1 + 1
2
>>> 2 * 3
6

Boolean operators also exist in Python to manipulate the primitive True and False values.

>>> 1==0
False
>>> not (1==0)
True
>>> (2==2) and (2==3)
False
>>> (2==2) or (2==3)
True

Strings
Like Java, Python has a built in string type. The + operator is overloaded to do string concatenation
on string values.

>>> 'artificial' + "intelligence"


'artificialintelligence'
There are many built-in methods which allow you to manipulate strings.
>>> 'artificial'.upper()
'ARTIFICIAL'
>>> 'HELP'.lower()
'help'
>>> len('Help')
4

Notice that we can use either single quotes ' ' or double quotes " " to surround string. This allows
for easy nesting of strings.

We can also store expressions into variables.


>>> s = 'hello world'
>>> print s
hello world
>>> s.upper()
'HELLO WORLD'
>>> len(s.upper())
11
>>> num = 8.0
>>> num += 2.5
>>> print num
10.5

In Python, you do not have declare variables before you assign to them.

Exercise: Dir and Help


Learn about the methods Python provides for strings. To see what methods Python provides for a
datatype, use the dir and help commands:

>>> s = 'abc'

>>> dir(s)
['__add__', '__class__', '__contains__', '__delattr__', '__doc__', '__eq__',
'__ge__', '__getattribute__', '__getitem__', '__getnewargs__',
'__getslice__', '__gt__', '__hash__', '__init__','__le__', '__len__',
'__lt__', '__mod__', '__mul__', '__ne__', '__new__', '__reduce__',
'__reduce_ex__','__repr__', '__rmod__', '__rmul__', '__setattr__', '__str__',
'capitalize', 'center', 'count', 'decode', 'encode', 'endswith',
'expandtabs', 'find', 'index', 'isalnum', 'isalpha', 'isdigit', 'islower',
'isspace', 'istitle', 'isupper', 'join', 'ljust', 'lower', 'lstrip',
'replace', 'rfind','rindex', 'rjust', 'rsplit', 'rstrip', 'split',
'splitlines', 'startswith', 'strip', 'swapcase', 'title', 'translate',
'upper', 'zfill']

>>> help(s.find)
Help on built-in function find:

find(...)
S.find(sub [,start [,end]]) -> int

Return the lowest index in S where substring sub is found,


such that sub is contained within s[start,end]. Optional
arguments start and end are interpreted as in slice notation.

Return -1 on failure.

>> s.find('b')
1

Try out some of the string functions listed in dir (ignore those with underscores '_' around the
method name).
Built-in Data Structures
Python comes equipped with some useful built-in data structures, broadly similar to Java's
collections package.

Lists
Lists store a sequence of mutable items:
>>> fruits = ['apple','orange','pear','banana']
>>> fruits[0]
'apple'
We can use the + operator to do list concatenation:
>>> otherFruits = ['kiwi','strawberry']
>>> fruits + otherFruits
>>> ['apple', 'orange', 'pear', 'banana', 'kiwi', 'strawberry']

Python also allows negative-indexing from the back of the list. For instance, fruits[-1] will access
the last element 'banana':

>>> fruits[-2]
'pear'
>>> fruits.pop()
'banana'
>>> fruits
['apple', 'orange', 'pear']
>>> fruits.append('grapefruit')
>>> fruits
['apple', 'orange', 'pear', 'grapefruit']
>>> fruits[-1] = 'pineapple'
>>> fruits
['apple', 'orange', 'pear', 'pineapple']

We can also index multiple adjacent elements using the slice operator. For instance, fruits[1:3],
returns a list containing the elements at position 1 and 2. In general fruits[start:stop] will get
the elements in start, start+1, ..., stop-1. We can also do fruits[start:]which returns all
elements starting from the start index. Also fruits[:end] will return all elements before the
element at position end:

>>> fruits[0:2]
['apple', 'orange']
>>> fruits[:3]
['apple', 'orange', 'pear']
>>> fruits[2:]
['pear', 'pineapple']
>>> len(fruits)
4

The items stored in lists can be any Python data type. So for instance we can have lists of lists:
>>> lstOfLsts = [['a','b','c'],[1,2,3],['one','two','three']]
>>> lstOfLsts[1][2]
3
>>> lstOfLsts[0].pop()
'c'
>>> lstOfLsts
[['a', 'b'],[1, 2, 3],['one', 'two', 'three']]

Exercise: Lists
Play with some of the list functions. You can find the methods you can call on an object via
the dir and get information about them via thehelp command:

>>> dir(list)
['__add__', '__class__', '__contains__', '__delattr__', '__delitem__',
'__delslice__', '__doc__', '__eq__', '__ge__', '__getattribute__',
'__getitem__', '__getslice__', '__gt__', '__hash__', '__iadd__', '__imul__',
'__init__', '__iter__', '__le__', '__len__', '__lt__', '__mul__', '__ne__',
'__new__', '__reduce__', '__reduce_ex__', '__repr__', '__reversed__',
'__rmul__', '__setattr__', '__setitem__', '__setslice__', '__str__',
'append', 'count', 'extend', 'index', 'insert', 'pop', 'remove', 'reverse',
'sort']
>>> help(list.reverse)
Help on built-in function reverse:

reverse(...)
L.reverse() -- reverse *IN PLACE*
>>> lst = ['a','b','c']
>>> lst.reverse()
>>> ['c','b','a']

Note: Ignore functions with underscores "_" around the names; these are private helper methods.
Press 'q' to back out of a help screen.

Tuples
A data structure similar to the list is the tuple, which is like a list except that it is immutable once it
is created (i.e. you cannot change its content once created). Note that tuples are surrounded with
parentheses while lists have square brackets.

>>> pair = (3,5)


>>> pair[0]
3
>>> x,y = pair
>>> x
3
>>> y
5
>>> pair[1] = 6
TypeError: object does not support item assignment

The attempt to modify an immutable structure raised an exception. Exceptions indicate errors: index
out of bounds errors, type errors, and so on will all report exceptions in this way.
Sets
A set is another data structure that serves as an unordered list with no duplicate items. Below, we
show how to create a set, add things to the set, test if an item is in the set, and perform common
set operations (difference, intersection, union):

>>> shapes = ['circle','square','triangle','circle']


>>> setOfShapes = set(shapes)
>>> setOfShapes
set(['circle','square','triangle'])
>>> setOfShapes.add('polygon')
>>> setOfShapes
set(['circle','square','triangle','polygon'])
>>> 'circle' in setOfShapes
True
>>> 'rhombus' in setOfShapes
False
>>> favoriteShapes = ['circle','triangle','hexagon']
>>> setOfFavoriteShapes = set(favoriteShapes)
>>> setOfShapes - setOfFavoriteShapes
set(['square','polyon'])
>>> setOfShapes & setOfFavoriteShapes
set(['circle','triangle'])
>>> setOfShapes | setOfFavoriteShapes
set(['circle','square','triangle','polygon','hexagon'])

Note that the objects in the set are unordered; you cannot assume that their traversal or
print order will be the same across machines!

Dictionaries
The last built-in data structure is the dictionary which stores a map from one type of object (the
key) to another (the value). The key must be an immutable type (string, number, or tuple). The
value can be any Python data type.
Note: In the example below, the printed order of the keys returned by Python could be different
than shown below. The reason is that unlike lists which have a fixed ordering, a dictionary is simply
a hash table for which there is no fixed ordering of the keys (like HashMaps in Java). The order of
the keys depends on how exactly the hashing algorithm maps keys to buckets, and will usually seem
arbitrary. Your code should not rely on key ordering, and you should not be surprised if even a small
modification to how your code uses a dictionary results in a new key ordering.
>>> studentIds = {'knuth': 42.0, 'turing': 56.0, 'nash': 92.0 }
>>> studentIds['turing']
56.0
>>> studentIds['nash'] = 'ninety-two'
>>> studentIds
{'knuth': 42.0, 'turing': 56.0, 'nash': 'ninety-two'}
>>> del studentIds['knuth']
>>> studentIds
{'turing': 56.0, 'nash': 'ninety-two'}
>>> studentIds['knuth'] = [42.0,'forty-two']
>>> studentIds
{'knuth': [42.0, 'forty-two'], 'turing': 56.0, 'nash': 'ninety-two'}
>>> studentIds.keys()
['knuth', 'turing', 'nash']
>>> studentIds.values()
[[42.0, 'forty-two'], 56.0, 'ninety-two']
>>> studentIds.items()
[('knuth',[42.0, 'forty-two']), ('turing',56.0), ('nash','ninety-two')]
>>> len(studentIds)
3

As with nested lists, you can also create dictionaries of dictionaries.

Exercise: Dictionaries
Use dir and help to learn about the functions you can call on dictionaries.

Writing Scripts
Now that you've got a handle on using Python interactively, let's write a simple Python script that
demonstrates Python's for loop. Open the file called foreach.py and update it with the following
code:

# This is what a comment looks like


fruits = ['apples','oranges','pears','bananas']
for fruit in fruits:
print fruit + ' for sale'

fruitPrices = {'apples': 2.00, 'oranges': 1.50, 'pears': 1.75}


for fruit, price in fruitPrices.items():
if price < 2.00:
print '%s cost %f a pound' % (fruit, price)
else:
print fruit + ' are too expensive!'

At the command line, use the following command in the directory containing foreach.py:

[…]$ python foreach.py


apples for sale
oranges for sale
pears for sale
bananas for sale
oranges cost 1.500000 a pound
pears cost 1.750000 a pound
apples are too expensive!

Remember that the print statements listing the costs may be in a different order on your screen than
in this tutorial; that's due to the fact that we're looping over dictionary keys, which are unordered.
To learn more about control structures (e.g., if and else) in Python, check out the official Python
tutorial section on this topic.

If you like functional programming you might also like map and filter:
>>> map(lambda x: x * x, [1,2,3])
[1, 4, 9]
>>> filter(lambda x: x > 3, [1,2,3,4,5,4,3,2,1])
[4, 5, 4]

You can learn more about lambda if you're interested.

The next snippet of code demonstrates Python's list comprehension construction:

nums = [1,2,3,4,5,6]
plusOneNums = [x+1 for x in nums]
oddNums = [x for x in nums if x % 2 == 1]
print oddNums
oddNumsPlusOne = [x+1 for x in nums if x % 2 ==1]
print oddNumsPlusOne

This code is in a file called listcomp.py, which you can run:

[…]$ python listcomp.py


[1,3,5]
[2,4,6]

Exercise: List Comprehensions


Write a list comprehension which, from a list, generates a lowercased version of each string that has
length greater than five. You can find the solution in listcomp2.py.

Beware of Indendation!
Unlike many other languages, Python uses the indentation in the source code for interpretation. So
for instance, for the following script:

if 0 == 1:
print 'We are in a world of arithmetic pain'
print 'Thank you for playing'

will output

Thank you for playing

But if we had written the script as


if 0 == 1:
print 'We are in a world of arithmetic pain'
print 'Thank you for playing'

there would be no output. The moral of the story: be careful how you indent! It's best to use four
spaces for indentation -- that's what the course code uses.

Tabs vs Spaces
Because Python uses indentation for code evaluation, it needs to keep track of the level of
indentation across code blocks. This means that if your Python file switches from using tabs as
indentation to spaces as indentation, the Python interpreter will not be able to resolve the ambiguity
of the indentation level and throw an exception. Even though the code can be lined up visually in
your text editor, Python "sees" a change in indentation and most likely will throw an exception (or
rarely, produce unexpected behavior).
This most commonly happens when opening up a Python file that uses an indentation scheme that is
opposite from what your text editor uses (aka, your text editor uses spaces and the file uses tabs).
When you write new lines in a code block, there will be a mix of tabs and spaces, even though the
whitespace is aligned. For a longer discussion on tabs vs spaces, see this discussion on
StackOverflow.

Writing Functions
As in Java, in Python you can define your own functions:

fruitPrices = {'apples':2.00, 'oranges': 1.50, 'pears': 1.75}

def buyFruit(fruit, numPounds):


if fruit not in fruitPrices:
print "Sorry we don't have %s" % (fruit)
else:
cost = fruitPrices[fruit] * numPounds
print "That'll be %f please" % (cost)

# Main Function
if __name__ == '__main__':
buyFruit('apples',2.4)
buyFruit('coconuts',2)

Rather than having a main function as in Java, the __name__ == '__main__' check is used to
delimit expressions which are executed when the file is called as a script from the command line.
The code after the main check is thus the same sort of code you would put in a mainfunction in Java.

Save this script as fruit.py and run it:

[…]$ python fruit.py


That'll be 4.800000 please
Sorry we don't have coconuts

Advanced Exercise
Write a quickSort function in Python using list comprehensions. Use the first element as the pivot.
You can find the solution inquickSort.py.

Object Basics
Although this isn't a class in object-oriented programming, you'll have to use some objects in the
programming projects, and so it's worth covering the basics of objects in Python. An object
encapsulates data and provides functions for interacting with that data.
Defining Classes
Here's an example of defining a class named FruitShop:

class FruitShop:

def __init__(self, name, fruitPrices):


"""
name: Name of the fruit shop

fruitPrices: Dictionary with keys as fruit


strings and prices for values e.g.
{'apples':2.00, 'oranges': 1.50, 'pears': 1.75}
"""
self.fruitPrices = fruitPrices
self.name = name
print 'Welcome to the %s fruit shop' % (name)

def getCostPerPound(self, fruit):


"""
fruit: Fruit string
Returns cost of 'fruit', assuming 'fruit'
is in our inventory or None otherwise
"""
if fruit not in self.fruitPrices:
print "Sorry we don't have %s" % (fruit)
return None
return self.fruitPrices[fruit]

def getPriceOfOrder(self, orderList):


"""
orderList: List of (fruit, numPounds) tuples

Returns cost of orderList. If any of the fruit are


"""
totalCost = 0.0
for fruit, numPounds in orderList:
costPerPound = self.getCostPerPound(fruit)
if costPerPound != None:
totalCost += numPounds * costPerPound
return totalCost

def getName(self):
return self.name

The FruitShop class has some data, the name of the shop and the prices per pound of some fruit,
and it provides functions, or methods, on this data. What advantage is there to wrapping this data in
a class?
1. Encapsulating the data prevents it from being altered or used inappropriately
2. The abstraction that objects provide make it easier to write general-purpose code.
Using Objects
So how do we make an object and use it? Make sure you have the FruitShop implementation
in shop.py. We then import the code from this file (making it accessible to other scripts)
using import shop, since shop.py is the name of the file. Then, we can create FruitShop objects as
follows:
import shop

shopName = 'the Berkeley Bowl'


fruitPrices = {'apples': 1.00, 'oranges': 1.50, 'pears': 1.75}
berkeleyShop = shop.FruitShop(shopName, fruitPrices)
applePrice = berkeleyShop.getCostPerPound('apples')
print applePrice
print('Apples cost $%.2f at %s.' % (applePrice, shopName))

otherName = 'the Stanford Mall'


otherFruitPrices = {'kiwis':6.00, 'apples': 4.50, 'peaches': 8.75}
otherFruitShop = shop.FruitShop(otherName, otherFruitPrices)
otherPrice = otherFruitShop.getCostPerPound('apples')
print otherPrice
print('Apples cost $%.2f at %s.' % (otherPrice, otherName))
print("My, that's expensive!")
This code is in shopTest.py; you can run it like this:
[cs188-ta@nova ~]$ python shopTest.py
Welcome to the Berkeley Bowl fruit shop
1.0
Apples cost $1.00 at the Berkeley Bowl.
Welcome to the Stanford Mall fruit shop
4.5
Apples cost $4.50 at the Stanford Mall.
My, that's expensive!

So what just happended? The import shop statement told Python to load all of the functions and
classes in shop.py. The line berkeleyShop = shop.FruitShop(shopName,
fruitPrices) constructs an instance of the FruitShop class defined in shop.py, by calling
the __init__ function in that class. Note that we only passed two arguments in,
while __init__ seems to take three arguments: (self, name, fruitPrices). The reason for this is
that all methods in a class have self as the first argument. The self variable's value is
automatically set to the object itself; when calling a method, you only supply the remaining
arguments. The self variable contains all the data (name and fruitPrices) for the current specific
instance (similar to this in Java). The print statements use the substitution operator (described in
the Python docs if you're curious).

Static vs Instance Variables


The following example illustrates how to use static and instance variables in Python.

Create the person_class.py containing the following code:

class Person:
population = 0
def __init__(self, myAge):
self.age = myAge
Person.population += 1
def get_population(self):
return Person.population
def get_age(self):
return self.age

We first compile the script:

[…]$ python person_class.py

Now use the class as follows:


>>> import person_class
>>> p1 = person_class.Person(12)
>>> p1.get_population()
1
>>> p2 = person_class.Person(63)
>>> p1.get_population()
2
>>> p2.get_population()
2
>>> p1.get_age()
12
>>> p2.get_age()
63

In the code above, age is an instance variable and population is a static variable. population is
shared by all instances of the Person class whereas each instance has its own age variable.

More Python Tips and Tricks


This tutorial has briefly touched on some major aspects of Python that will be relevant to the course.
Here are some more useful tidbits:

Use range to generate a sequence of integers, useful for generating traditional indexed for loops:

for index in range(3):


print lst[index]

After importing a file, if you edit a source file, the changes will not be immediately propagated in the
interpreter. For this, use the reload command:

>>> reload(shop)

Troubleshooting
These are some problems (and their solutions) that new Python learners commonly encounter.
Problem:
ImportError: No module named py
Solution:
When using import, do not include the ".py" from the filename.

For example, you should say: import shop

NOT: import shop.py

Problem:
NameError: name 'MY VARIABLE' is not defined
Even after importing you may see this.
Solution:
To access a member of a module, you have to type MODULE NAME.MEMBER NAME, where MODULE
NAME is the name of the .py file, and MEMBER NAME is the name of the variable (or function) you are
trying to access.
Problem:
TypeError: 'dict' object is not callable
Solution:
Dictionary looks up are done using square brackets: [ and ]. NOT parenthesis: ( and ).
Problem:
ValueError: too many values to unpack
Solution:
Make sure the number of variables you are assigning in a for loop matches the number of elements
in each item of the list. Similarly for working with tuples.

For example, if pair is a tuple of two elements (e.g. pair =('apple', 2.0)) then the following
code would cause the "too many values to unpack error":
(a,b,c) = pair

Here is a problematic scenario involving a for loop:


pairList = [('apples', 2.00), ('oranges', 1.50), ('pears', 1.75)]
for fruit, price, color in pairList:
print '%s fruit costs %f and is the color %s' % (fruit, price, color)

Problem:
AttributeError: 'list' object has no attribute 'length' (or something similar)
Solution:
Finding length of lists is done using len(NAME OF LIST).

Problem:
Changes to a file are not taking effect.
Solution:
Make sure you are saving all your files after any changes.
If you are editing a file in a window different from the one you are using to execute python, make
sure you reload(YOUR_MODULE) to guarantee your changes are being reflected. reload works
similarly to import.

More References
The place to go for more Python information: www.python.org
A good reference book: Learning Python (From the UCB campus, you can read the whole book
online)

Autograding
To get you familiarized with the autograder, we will ask you to code, test, and submit solutions for
three questions.
You can find all of the files associated the autograder tutorial in folder Lab01→tutorial (note this
is different from the files used in the Python mini-tutorials, python_basics).

This contains a number of files you'll edit or run:

 addition.py: source file for question 1


 buyLotsOfFruit.py: source file for question 2
 shop.py: source file for question 3
 shopSmart.py: source file for question 3
 autograder.py: autograding script (see below)

and others you can ignore:

 test_cases: directory contains the test cases for each question


 grading.py: autograder code
 testClasses.py: autograder code
 tutorialTestClasses.py: test classes for this particular project
 projectParams.py: project parameters

The command python autograder.py grades your solution to all three problems. If we run it before
editing any files we get a page or two of output:
[...]$ python autograder.py
Starting on 1-21 at 23:39:51

Question q1
===========
*** FAIL: test_cases/q1/addition1.test
*** add(a,b) must return the sum of a and b
*** student result: "0"
*** correct result: "2"
*** FAIL: test_cases/q1/addition2.test
*** add(a,b) must return the sum of a and b
*** student result: "0"
*** correct result: "5"
*** FAIL: test_cases/q1/addition3.test
*** add(a,b) must return the sum of a and b
*** student result: "0"
*** correct result: "7.9"
*** Tests failed.

### Question q1: 0/1 ###

Question q2
===========
*** FAIL: test_cases/q2/food_price1.test
*** buyLotsOfFruit must compute the correct cost of the order
*** student result: "0.0"
*** correct result: "12.25"
*** FAIL: test_cases/q2/food_price2.test
*** buyLotsOfFruit must compute the correct cost of the order
*** student result: "0.0"
*** correct result: "14.75"
*** FAIL: test_cases/q2/food_price3.test
*** buyLotsOfFruit must compute the correct cost of the order
*** student result: "0.0"
*** correct result: "6.4375"
*** Tests failed.

### Question q2: 0/1 ###

Question q3
===========
Welcome to shop1 fruit shop
Welcome to shop2 fruit shop
*** FAIL: test_cases/q3/select_shop1.test
*** shopSmart(order, shops) must select the cheapest shop
*** student result: "None"
*** correct result: "<FruitShop: shop1>"
Welcome to shop1 fruit shop
Welcome to shop2 fruit shop
*** FAIL: test_cases/q3/select_shop2.test
*** shopSmart(order, shops) must select the cheapest shop
*** student result: "None"
*** correct result: "<FruitShop: shop2>"
Welcome to shop1 fruit shop
Welcome to shop2 fruit shop
Welcome to shop3 fruit shop
*** FAIL: test_cases/q3/select_shop3.test
*** shopSmart(order, shops) must select the cheapest shop
*** student result: "None"
*** correct result: "<FruitShop: shop3>"
*** Tests failed.

### Question q3: 0/1 ###

Finished at 23:39:51

Provisional grades
==================
Question q1: 0/1
Question q2: 0/1
Question q3: 0/1
------------------
Total: 0/3

Your grades are NOT yet registered. To register your grades, make sure
to follow your instructor's guidelines to receive credit on your project.

For each of the three questions, this shows the results of that question's tests, the questions grade,
and a final summary at the end. Because you haven't yet solved the questions, all the tests fail. As
you solve each question you may find some tests pass while other fail. When all tests pass for a
question, you get full marks.

Looking at the results for question 1, you can see that it has failed three tests with the error
message "add(a,b) must return the sum of a and b". The answer your code gives is always 0, but
the correct answer is different. We'll fix that in the next tab.

Question 1: Addition
Open addition.py and look at the definition of add:

def add(a, b):


"Return the sum of a and b"
"*** YOUR CODE HERE ***"
return 0

The tests called this with a and b set to different values, but the code always returned zero. Modify
this definition to read:
def add(a, b):
"Return the sum of a and b"
print "Passed a=%s and b=%s, returning a+b=%s" % (a,b,a+b)
return a+b

Now rerun the autograder (omitting the results for questions 2 and 3):
[…]$ python autograder.py -q q1
Starting on 1-21 at 23:52:05

Question q1
===========
Passed a=1 and b=1, returning a+b=2
*** PASS: test_cases/q1/addition1.test
*** add(a,b) returns the sum of a and b
Passed a=2 and b=3, returning a+b=5
*** PASS: test_cases/q1/addition2.test
*** add(a,b) returns the sum of a and b
Passed a=10 and b=-2.1, returning a+b=7.9
*** PASS: test_cases/q1/addition3.test
*** add(a,b) returns the sum of a and b

### Question q1: 1/1 ###

Finished at 23:41:01

Provisional grades
==================
Question q1: 1/1
Question q2: 0/1
Question q3: 0/1
------------------
Total: 1/3

You now pass all tests, getting full marks for question 1. Notice the new lines "Passed a=..." which
appear before "*** PASS: ...". These are produced by the print statement in add. You can use print
statements like that to output information useful for debugging. You can also run the autograder
with the option --mute to temporarily hide such lines, as follows:

[…]$ python autograder.py -q q1 --mute


Starting on 1-22 at 14:15:33
Question q1
===========
*** PASS: test_cases/q1/addition1.test
*** add(a,b) returns the sum of a and b
*** PASS: test_cases/q1/addition2.test
*** add(a,b) returns the sum of a and b
*** PASS: test_cases/q1/addition3.test
*** add(a,b) returns the sum of a and b

### Question q1: 1/1 ###

Question 2: buyLotsOfFruit function


Add a buyLotsOfFruit(orderList) function to buyLotsOfFruit.py which takes a list
of (fruit,pound) tuples and returns the cost of your list. If there is some fruit in the list which
doesn't appear in fruitPrices it should print an error message and return None. Please do not
change the fruitPrices variable.

Run python autograder.py until question 2 passes all tests and you get full marks. Each test will
confirm that buyLotsOfFruit(orderList)returns the correct answer given various possible inputs.
For example, test_cases/q2/food_price1.test tests whether:

Cost of [('apples', 2.0), ('pears', 3.0), ('limes', 4.0)] is 12.25

Question 3: shopSmart function


Fill in the function shopSmart(orders,shops) in shopSmart.py, which takes an orderList (like the
kind passed in toFruitShop.getPriceOfOrder) and a list of FruitShop and returns
the FruitShop where your order costs the least amount in total. Don't change the file name or
variable names, please. Note that we will provide the shop.py implementation as a "support" file, so
you don't need to submit yours.

Run python autograder.py until question 3 passes all tests and you get full marks. Each test will
confirm that shopSmart(orders,shops)returns the correct answer given various possible inputs. For
example, with the following variable definitions:
orders1 = [('apples',1.0), ('oranges',3.0)]
orders2 = [('apples',3.0)]
dir1 = {'apples': 2.0, 'oranges':1.0}
shop1 = shop.FruitShop('shop1',dir1)
dir2 = {'apples': 1.0, 'oranges': 5.0}
shop2 = shop.FruitShop('shop2',dir2)
shops = [shop1, shop2]
test_cases/q3/select_shop1.test tests whether:
shopSmart.shopSmart(orders1, shops) == shop1
and test_cases/q3/select_shop2.test tests whether:

shopSmart.shopSmart(orders2, shops) == shop2

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