In Class: Week 1, Wednesday and Friday
In your cs21 subdirectory create a directory named 'class' and cd into that
directory, and then make a directory named 'week01' and cd into that directory:
$ cd # cd into your cs21 subdirectory:
$ cd cs21
$ pwd
/home/your_user_name/cs21
$ mkdir class # make a new directory named class
$ cd class # cd into it
$ pwd
/home/your_user_name/cs21/class
$ mkdir week01 # make a subdirectory named week01
$ cd week01 # cd into it
$ pwd
/home/your_user_name/cs21/class/week01
Now copy over all the files from my public/cs21/week01 directory into your
week01 directory (remember to add the dot as the destination of the cp command).
From your week01 directory:
$ cp ~newhall/public/cs21/week01/* .
$ ls
- We are going to start by looking at the firstProg.py program together,
so go ahead and open it in vim:
$ vim firstProg.py
This is the command to run the program in the python interpreter:
$ python firstProg.py
- Try modifying the firstProg.py in vim to print out a different string,
and run it.
- Next we will look at add.py. This program follows the general pattern
that all (most) programs follow:
- input phase: get data values for program variables
- compute phase: do something with the program's data (some operations on
variables and values)
- output phase: display the results to the user
- Finally, we will look at loop.py. This is an example of a program that
uses a for loop. A loop construct tells the python interpreter to repeat
a set of instructions some number of times.
Running Python Programs
You can run your python program in the python interpreter two different ways
(we will use the first way most of the time):
- Have the interpreter run your program to completion:
$ python firstProg.py
Hello There
$
- Run the interpreter in interactive mode on your program (the python
interpreter will continue to run after running your program, and you can
enter new python commands at the prompt >>>:
$ python -i firstProg.py
Hello there
>>> print ("I love computer science!")
I love computer science!
>>> print (13 + 7 + 11)
31
>>>
To exit the python interpreter hold down the control and the D keys
together (CNTL-D)
You can also just start the python interpreter in interactive mode without
giving it a python code file to run:
$ python
>>>