adds import

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waldek 2021-10-29 15:34:58 +02:00
parent 531f790c2f
commit 81625688a6
1 changed files with 54 additions and 3 deletions

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@ -716,9 +716,59 @@ pretty_print("Alice", "-")
# Using the standard library # Using the standard library
TODO import random exercise (digital dice) There is no need to reinvent the wheel each time you build a bike.
TODO import datetime exercise (will it be Sunday) The same goes for programming.
TODO simple ROT13 cryptography with multiple libs Most, if not all, programming languages come with a **standard library** which is a collection of additional objects and functions to facilitate common problems.
We'll look at some essential ones together but I urge you to [read](https://docs.python.org/3/library/index.html) up a bit when you have some free time.
Over the course of you programming journey you'll discover that efficient programming is often finding the right libraries and chaining them together to suit your use case.
Imagine we want to include a dice in our text based adventure game.
How on earth do we program that?
We need some for of *randomness* in our code.
A [quick google](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/28705965/python-random-function-without-using-random-module) demonstrates this is quite difficult without the use of libraries.
As randomness is both [extensively](https://www.random.org/randomness/) used in programming **and** it's quite [difficult](https://medium.com/swlh/random-functions-a4f36b1dfd8f) to do properly, you'll find a `random` library in most languages.
The new **keyword** you'll learn here is `import`.
It allows you to add extra functionality to your program.
Once *imported* we can **call** functions that exist from the library in question.
So, our dice becomes as follows.
```python3
import random
throw = random.randint(1, 6)
print(throw)
```
⛑ **Autocomplete is your friend. You can use it to browse around a library and discover interesting functions or classes you can make use of.**
A second widely used library is `datetime`.
It facilitates handling dates, hours, calendars, time differences, etc.
A simple program we can write to illustrate it's purpose is a *will-it-be-Sunday* program.
You give date and the program tells you if it's a Sunday or not.
```python3
import datetime
sunday = 6
date = input("which date should I look up? (example: 2022 3 23) ")
year, month, day = date.split()
date = datetime.date(int(year), int(month), int(day))
if date.weekday() == sunday:
print("yes! you can sleep in...")
else:
print("better set your alarm")
```
The program above incorporates a lot of different concepts.
Read it very slowly and think about what each step is doing.
Also think about how you can *break* this program!
⛑ **Why on earth is Sunday six? Read the [doc](https://docs.python.org/3/library/datetime.html#datetime.date.weekday)!**
# Coding challenge - Memento Mori calculator # Coding challenge - Memento Mori calculator
@ -751,6 +801,7 @@ TODO guess the number exercise
# For loop # For loop
TODO say hello to my friends exercise TODO say hello to my friends exercise
TODO simple ROT13 cryptography with multiple libs
# Coding challenge - Cheerleader chant # Coding challenge - Cheerleader chant