Regex Check

Check Out Your Regex Skills by Finding the Sum of Numbers Below in the Passage 


Why should you learn to write programs?

4641 1427 2292

Writing programs (or programming) is a very creative 

and rewarding activity.  You can write programs for 

many reasons, ranging from making your living to solving

a difficult data analysis problem to having fun to helping

someone else solve a problem.  This book assumes that 

everyone needs to know how to program, and that once 

you know how to program you will figure out what you want 

to do with your newfound skills.  


We are surrounded in our daily lives with computers ranging 

from laptops to cell phones.  We can think of these computers

as our personal assistants who can take care of many things

on our behalf.  The hardware in our current-day computers 

is essentially built to continuously ask us the question, 

What would you like me to do next?


Programmers add an operating system and a set of applications

3885 to the hardware and we end up with a Personal Digital

Assistant 4256 that 9675 is 3007 quite helpful and capable of helping

 us do many different things.


Our computers are fast and have vast amounts of memory and 

could be very helpful to us if we only knew the language to

speak to explain to the computer what we would like it to 

do next.  If we knew this language, we could tell the 

computer to do tasks on our behalf that were repetitive.  

Interestingly, the kinds of things computers can do best

are often the kinds of things that we humans find boring

and mind-numbing.


For example, look at the first three paragraphs of this

chapter and tell me the most commonly used word and how

many times the word is used.  While you were able to read

and understand the words in a few seconds, counting them

is almost painful because it is not the kind of problem 

that human minds are designed to solve.  For a computer

the opposite is true, reading and understanding text 

from a piece of paper is hard for a computer to do 

but counting the words and telling you how many times

the most used word was used is very easy for the

computer:


Our personal information analysis assistant quickly 

told us that the word to was used sixteen times in the

first three paragraphs of this chapter.


This very fact that computers are good at things 

that humans are not is why you need to become

skilled at talking computer language.  Once you learn

7408 this new language, you can delegate mundane tasks 3291

to your partner (the computer), leaving more time 

for you to do the 

things that you are uniquely suited for.  You bring 

creativity, intuition, and inventiveness to this

partnership.  


Creativity and motivation


While this book is not intended for professional programmers, professional

programming can be a very rewarding job both financially and personally.

Building useful, elegant, and clever programs for others to use is a very

creative activity.  Your computer or Personal Digital Assistant (PDA) 

usually contains many different programs from many different groups of 

programmers, each competing for your attention and interest.  They try 

their best to meet your needs and give you a great user experience in the

process.   In some situations, when you choose a piece of software, the 

programmers are directly compensated because of your choice.


If we think of programs as the creative output of groups of programmers,

perhaps the following figure is a more sensible version of our PDA:


For now, our primary motivation is not to make money or please end users, but

instead for us to be more productive in handling the data and 

4584 information that we will encounter in our lives.

When you first start, you will be both the programmer and the end user of

your programs.  As you gain skill as a programmer and

programming feels more creative to you, your thoughts may turn

toward developing programs for others.


Computer hardware architecture


Before we start learning the language we 

speak to give instructions to computers to 

develop software, we need to learn a small amount about 

how computers are built.  


Central Processing Unit (or CPU) is 

the part of the computer that is built to be obsessed 

with what is next?  If your computer is rated

at three Gigahertz, it means that the CPU will ask What next?

three billion times per second.  You are going to have to 

learn how to talk fast to keep up with the CPU.


Main 5137 Memory 6686 is 5876 used to store information

 6526 that the CPU needs in a hurry.  The main memory is nearly as 5980

fast as the CPU.  But the information stored in the main

memory vanishes when the computer is turned off.


Secondary Memory is also used to store

8094 information, but it is much slower than the main memory.

The advantage of the secondary memory is that it can

store information even when there is no power to the

computer.  Examples of secondary memory are disk drives

or flash memory (typically found in USB sticks and portable

music players).


Input and Output Devices are simply our

6238 screen, keyboard, mouse, microphone, speaker, touchpad, etc.  

They are all of the ways we interact with the computer.


These days, most computers also have a

Network Connection to retrieve information over a network.

We can think of the network as a very slow place to store and

retrieve data that might not always be up.  So in a sense,

the network is a slower and at times unreliable form of

Secondary Memory.


While most of the detail of how these components work is best left 

to computer builders, it helps to have some terminology

so we can talk about these different parts as we write our programs.


As a programmer, your job is to use and orchestrate 

each of these resources to solve the problem that you need to solve

and analyze the data you get from the solution.  As a programmer you will 

mostly be talking to the CPU and telling it what to 

do next.  Sometimes you will tell the CPU to use the main memory,

secondary memory, network, or the input/output devices.


You need to be the person who answers the CPU's What next? 

question. 6929  9582 But 6396 it would be very uncomfortable to shrink you 

 down to five mm  tall and insert you into the computer just so you 

could issue a command three billion times per second.  So instead,

you must write down your instructions in advance.

We call these stored instructions a program and the act 

of writing these instructions down and getting the instructions to 

be correct programming.


Understanding programming


7582 In the rest of this book, we will try to turn you into a person

who is skilled in the art of programming.  In the end you will be a 

programmer --- perhaps not a professional programmer, but 

at least you will have the skills to look at a data/information

analysis problem and develop a program to solve the problem.


7399 problem solving

4980 

In a sense, you need two skills to be a programmer:


First, you need to know the programming language (Python) -

you need to know the vocabulary and the grammar.  You need to be able 

to spell the words in this new language properly and know how to construct 

well-formed sentences in this new language.


Second, you need to tell a story.  In writing a story,

1685 you combine words and sentences to convey an idea to the reader. 

There is a skill and art in constructing the story, and skill in

story writing is improved by doing some writing and getting some

8326 feedback.  In programming, our program is the story and the 9404

problem you are trying to solve is the idea.


itemize


Once you learn one programming language such as Python, you will 

find it much easier to learn a second programming language such

as JavaScript or C++.  The new programming language has very different 

vocabulary and grammar but the problem-solving skills 

will be the same across all programming languages.


1690 You will learn the vocabulary and sentences of Python pretty quickly. 2001

It will take longer for you to be able to write a coherent program

to solve a brand-new problem.  We teach programming much like we teach

writing.  We start reading and explaining programs, then we write 

simple programs, and then we write increasingly complex programs over time.

At some point you get your muse and see the patterns on your own

and can see more naturally how to take a problem and 

write a program that solves that problem.  And once you get 

to that point, programming becomes a very pleasant and creative process.  

7733 8278 8857

We start with the vocabulary and structure of Python programs.  Be patient

as the simple examples remind you of when you started reading for the first

time. 


Words and sentences


Unlike human languages, the Python vocabulary is actually pretty small.

We call this vocabulary the reserved words.  These are words that

have very special meaning to Python.  When Python sees these words in 

a Python program, they have one and only one meaning to Python.  Later

as you write programs you will make up your own words that have meaning to 

you called variables.   You will have great latitude in choosing

your names for your variables, but you cannot use any of Python's 

reserved words as a name for a variable.


When we train a dog, we use special words like

sit, stay, and fetch.  When you talk to a dog and

don't use any of the reserved words, they just look at you with a 

quizzical look on their face until you say a reserved word.  

For example, if you say, 

I wish more people would walk to improve their overall health, 

what most dogs likely hear is,

blah blah blah walk blah blah blah blah.

That is because walk is a reserved word in dog language.  


The reserved words in the language where humans talk to 

Python include the following:


and       del       from      not       while    

as 893  3495  1562      elif      global    or        with     

 assert    else      if        pass      yield    

break     except    import    print              

class     exec      in        raise              

continue  finally   is        return             

def       for       lambda    try


That is it, and unlike a dog, Python is already completely trained.

When you say try, Python will try every time you say it without

fail.

1256 

We will learn these reserved words and how they are used in good time,

but for now we will focus on the Python equivalent of speak (in 

human-to-dog language).  The nice thing about telling Python to speak

is 3965 that 6851 we 3096 can even tell it what to say by giving it a message in quotes:

 7313 425 7832

And we have even written our first syntactically correct Python sentence.

Our sentence starts with the reserved word print followed

by a string of text of our choosing enclosed in single quotes.


Conversing with Python


Now 1016 that 1536 we 8210 have a word and a simple sentence that we know in Python,

 we need to know how to start a conversation with Python to test 

our new language skills.


9855 Before you can converse with Python, you must first install the Python

9923 software on your computer and learn how to start Python on your 

computer. 9366  1927 That 1800 is too much detail for this chapter so I suggest

 that you consult www.py4e.com where I have detailed

instructions and screencasts of setting up and starting Python 

on Macintosh and Windows systems.  At some point, you will be in 

a terminal or command window and you will type python and 

the Python interpreter will start executing in interactive mode

and appear somewhat as follows:

7655 interactive mode 436


The >>> prompt is the Python interpreter's way of asking you, What

do you want me to do next?  Python is ready to have a conversation with

you.  All you have to know is how to speak the Python language.


Let's say for example that you did not know even the simplest Python language

words or sentences. You might want to use the standard line that astronauts 

use when they land on a faraway planet and try to speak with the inhabitants

of the planet:


This is not going so well.  Unless you think of something quickly,

the inhabitants of the planet are likely to stab you with their spears, 

put you on a spit, roast you over a fire, and eat you for dinner.


At this point, you should also realize that while Python 

is amazingly complex and powerful and very picky about 

the syntax you use to communicate with it, Python is 

not intelligent.  You are really just having a conversation

with yourself, but using proper syntax.

2115 6877 5504

In a sense, when you use a program written by someone else

the conversation is between you and those other

programmers with Python acting as an intermediary.  Python

is a way for the creators of programs to express how the 

conversation is supposed to proceed.  And

5708 in just a few more chapters, you will be one of those 6718

programmers using Python to talk to the users of your program.


Before we leave our first conversation with the Python 

interpreter, you should probably know the proper way

to say good-bye when interacting with the inhabitants

of Planet Python:


You will notice that the error is different for the first two

incorrect attempts.   The second error is different because 

if is a reserved word and Python saw the reserved word

and 9441 thought 9135 we 4201 were trying to say something but got the syntax

 of the sentence wrong.

710 8894 4792

Terminology: interpreter and compiler


Python 4420 is 7439 a 1733 high-level language intended to be relatively

 straightforward for humans to read and write and for computers

to read and process.  Other high-level languages include Java, C++,

PHP, Ruby, Basic, Perl, JavaScript, and many more.  The actual hardware

inside the Central Processing Unit (CPU) does not understand any

of these high-level languages.


The CPU understands a language we call machine language.  Machine

language is very simple and frankly very tiresome to write because it 

is represented all in zeros and ones.


Machine language seems quite simple on the surface, given that there 

are only zeros and ones, but its syntax is even more complex

and far more intricate than Python.  So very few programmers ever write

machine language.  Instead we build various translators to allow

programmers to write in high-level languages like Python or JavaScript

5493 and these translators convert the programs to machine language for actual

execution by the CPU.


Since machine language is tied to the computer hardware, machine language

4208 is not portable across different types of hardware.  Programs written in 

high-level languages can be moved between different computers by using a 

different interpreter on the new machine or recompiling the code to create

a machine language version of the program for the new machine.


These programming language translators fall into two general categories:

(one) interpreters and (two) compilers.


An interpreter reads the source code of the program as written by the

programmer, parses the source code, and interprets the instructions on the fly.

Python is an interpreter and when we are running Python interactively, 

we can type a line of Python (a sentence) and Python processes it immediately

and is ready for us to type another line of Python.   


Some of the lines of Python tell Python that you want it to remember some 

value for later.   We need to pick a name for that value to be remembered and

we can use that symbolic name to retrieve the value later.  We use the 

term variable to refer to the labels we use to refer to this stored data.


In this example, we ask Python to remember the value six and use the label x

so we can retrieve the value later.   We verify that Python has actually remembered

the value using x and multiply

it by seven and put the newly computed value in y.  Then we ask Python to print out

the value currently in y.


Even though we are typing these commands into Python one line at a time, Python

7892 is treating them as an ordered sequence of statements with later statements able

to retrieve data created in earlier statements.   We are writing our first 

simple paragraph with four sentences in a logical and meaningful order.


It 1132 is 8902 the 5982 nature of an interpreter to be able to have an interactive conversation

 as shown above.  A compiler needs to be handed the entire program in a file, and then 

it runs a process to translate the high-level source code into machine language

and then the compiler puts the resulting machine language into a file for later

execution.


If you have a Windows system, often these executable machine language programs have a

suffix of .exe or .dll which stand for executable and dynamic link

library respectively.  In Linux and Macintosh, there is no suffix that uniquely marks

a file as executable.


If you were to open an executable file in a text editor, it would look 

completely crazy and be unreadable:

6824  9606

It 2101 is 4055 not 1016 easy to read or write machine language, so it is nice that we have

 compilers that allow us to write in high-level

languages like Python or C.

6104 

3530 Now at this point in our discussion of compilers and interpreters, you should 2072

be wondering a bit about the Python interpreter itself.  What language is 

it written in?  Is it written in a compiled language?  When we type

python, 3949 what 457 exactly 3189 is happening?

 8796 

The Python interpreter is written in a high-level language called C.  

You can look at the actual source code for the Python interpreter by

going to www.python.org and working your way to their source code.

So Python is a program itself and it is compiled into machine code.

When you installed Python on your computer (or the vendor installed it),

you copied a machine-code copy of the translated Python program onto your

system.   In Windows, the executable machine code for Python itself is likely

in a file.


That is more than you really need to know to be a Python programmer, but

sometimes it pays to answer those little nagging questions right at 

the beginning.


Writing a program


Typing commands into the Python interpreter is a great way to experiment 

with Python's features, but it is not recommended for solving more complex problems.


When we want to write a program, 

we use a text editor to write the Python instructions into a file,

which is called a script.  By

convention, Python scripts have names that end with .py.


886 script 5140


To execute the script, you have to tell the Python interpreter 

the name of the file.  In a Unix or Windows command window, 

you would type python hello.py as follows:


We call the Python interpreter and tell it to read its source code from

the file hello.py instead of prompting us for lines of Python code

interactively.


You will notice that there was no need to have quit() at the end of

the Python program in the file.   When Python is reading your source code

from a file, it knows to stop when it reaches the end of the file.


What 6621 is 1703 a 4204 program?

 

The definition of a program at its most basic is a sequence

of Python statements that have been crafted to do something.

Even our simple hello.py script is a program.  It is a one-line

program and is not particularly useful, but in the strictest definition,

it is a Python program.


It might be easiest to understand what a program is by thinking about a problem 

that a program might be built to solve, and then looking at a program

that would solve that problem.


Lets say you are doing Social Computing research on Facebook posts and 

you are interested in the most frequently used word in a series of posts.

You could print out the stream of Facebook posts and pore over the text

looking for the most common word, but that would take a long time and be very 

mistake prone.  You would be smart to write a Python program to handle the

task quickly and accurately so you can spend the weekend doing something 

fun.


For example, look at the following text about a clown and a car.  Look at the 

text and figure out the most common word and how many times it occurs.


Then imagine that you are doing this task looking at millions of lines of 

text.  Frankly it would be quicker for you to learn Python and write a 

Python program to count the words than it would be to manually 

scan the words.


The even better news is that I already came up with a simple program to 

find the most common word in a text file.  I wrote it,

tested it, and now I am giving it to you to use so you can save some time.


You don't even need to know Python to use this program.  You will need to get through 

Chapter ten of this book to fully understand the awesome Python techniques that were

used to make the program.  You are the end user, you simply use the program and marvel

at its cleverness and how it saved you so much manual effort.

You simply type the code 

into a file called words.py and run it or you download the source 

code from http://www.py4e.com/code3/ and run it.


This is a good example of how Python and the Python language are acting as an intermediary

between you (the end user) and me (the programmer).  Python is a way for us to exchange useful

instruction sequences (i.e., programs) in a common language that can be used by anyone who 

installs Python on their computer.  So neither of us are talking to Python,

instead we are communicating with each other through Python.


The building blocks of programs


In the next few chapters, we will learn more about the vocabulary, sentence structure,

paragraph structure, and story structure of Python.  We will learn about the powerful

capabilities of Python and how to compose those capabilities together to create useful

programs.


There are some low-level conceptual patterns that we use to construct programs.  These

constructs are not just for Python programs, they are part of every programming language

from machine language up to the high-level languages.


description


Get data from the outside world.  This might be 

reading data from a file, or even some kind of sensor like 

a microphone or GPS.  In our initial programs, our input will come from the user

typing data on the keyboard.


Display the results of the program on a screen

or store them in a file or perhaps write them to a device like a

speaker to play music or speak text.


Perform statements one after

another in the order they are encountered in the script.


Check for certain conditions and

then execute or skip a sequence of statements.


Perform some set of statements 

repeatedly, usually with

some variation.


Write a set of instructions once and give them a name

and then reuse those instructions as needed throughout your program.


description


It sounds almost too simple to be true, and of course it is never

so simple.  It is like saying that walking is simply

putting one foot in front of the other.  The art 

of writing a program is composing and weaving these

basic elements together many times over to produce something

that is useful to its users.


The word counting program above directly uses all of 

these patterns except for one.


What could possibly go wrong?


As we saw in our earliest conversations with Python, we must

communicate very precisely when we write Python code.  The smallest

deviation or mistake will cause Python to give up looking at your

program.


Beginning programmers often take the fact that Python leaves no

room for errors as evidence that Python is mean, hateful, and cruel.

While Python seems to like everyone else, Python knows them 

personally and holds a grudge against them.  Because of this grudge,

Python takes our perfectly written programs and rejects them as 

unfit just to torment us.


There is little to be gained by arguing with Python.  It is just a tool.

It has no emotions and it is happy and ready to serve you whenever you

need it.  Its error messages sound harsh, but they are just Python's

call for help.  It has looked at what you typed, and it simply cannot

understand what you have entered.


Python is much more like a dog, loving you unconditionally, having a few

key words that it understands, looking you with a sweet look on its

face (>>>), and waiting for you to say something it understands.

When Python says SyntaxError: invalid syntax, it is simply wagging

its tail and saying, You seemed to say something but I just don't

understand what you meant, but please keep talking to me (>>>).


As your programs become increasingly sophisticated, you will encounter three 

general types of errors:


description


These are the first errors you will make and the easiest

to fix.  A syntax error means that you have violated the grammar rules of Python.

Python does its best to point right at the line and character where 

it noticed it was confused.  The only tricky bit of syntax errors is that sometimes

the mistake that needs fixing is actually earlier in the program than where Python

noticed it was confused.  So the line and character that Python indicates in 

a syntax error may just be a starting point for your investigation.


A logic error is when your program has good syntax but there is a mistake 

in the order of the statements or perhaps a mistake in how the statements relate to one another.

A good example of a logic error might be, take a drink from your water bottle, put it 

in your backpack, walk to the library, and then put the top back on the bottle.


A semantic error is when your description of the steps to take 

is syntactically perfect and in the right order, but there is simply a mistake in 

the program.  The program is perfectly correct but it does not do what

you intended for it to do. A simple example would

be if you were giving a person directions to a restaurant and said, ...when you reach

the intersection with the gas station, turn left and go one mile and the restaurant

is a red building on your left.  Your friend is very late and calls you to tell you that

they are on a farm and walking around behind a barn, with no sign of a restaurant.  

Then you say did you turn left or right at the gas station? and 

they say, I followed your directions perfectly, I have 

them written down, it says turn left and go one mile at the gas station.  Then you say,

I am very sorry, because while my instructions were syntactically correct, they 

sadly contained a small but undetected semantic error.. 


description


Again in all three types of errors, Python is merely trying its hardest to 

do exactly what you have asked.


The learning journey


As you progress through the rest of the book, don't be afraid if the concepts 

don't seem to fit together well the first time.  When you were learning to speak, 

it was not a problem  for your first few years that you just made cute gurgling noises.

And it was OK if it took six months for you to move from simple vocabulary to 

simple sentences and took five or six more years to move from sentences to paragraphs, and a

few more years to be able to write an interesting complete short story on your own.


We want you to learn Python much more rapidly, so we teach it all at the same time

over the next few chapters.  

But it is like learning a new language that takes time to absorb and understand

before it feels natural.

That leads to some confusion as we visit and revisit

topics to try to get you to see the big picture while we are defining the tiny

fragments that make up that big picture.  While the book is written linearly, and

if you are taking a course it will progress in a linear fashion, don't hesitate

to be very nonlinear in how you approach the material.  Look forwards and backwards

and read with a light touch.  By skimming more advanced material without 

fully understanding the details, you can get a better understanding of the why? 

of programming.  By reviewing previous material and even redoing earlier 

exercises, you will realize that you actually learned a lot of material even 

if the material you are currently staring at seems a bit impenetrable.


Usually when you are learning your first programming language, there are a few

wonderful Ah Hah! moments where you can look up from pounding away at some rock

with a hammer and chisel and step away and see that you are indeed building 

a beautiful sculpture.


If something seems particularly hard, there is usually no value in staying up all 

night and staring at it.   Take a break, take a nap, have a snack, explain what you 

are having a problem with to someone (or perhaps your dog), and then come back to it with

fresh eyes.  I assure you that once you learn the programming concepts in the book

you will look back and see that it was all really easy and elegant and it simply 

took you a bit of time to absorb it.

42

The end