Big Idea 1 'Identifying and Correcting Errors'
Practice with identifying and correcting code blocks
alphabet = "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz"
alphabetList = []
for i in alphabet:
alphabetList.append(i)
print(alphabetList)
The intended outcome is to determine where the letter is in the alphabet using a while loop
- What is a good test case to check the current outcome? Why?
- Make changes to get the intended outcome.
letter = input("What letter would you like to check?")
i = 0
while i < 26:
if alphabetList[i] == letter:
print("The letter " + letter + " is the " + str(i+1) + " letter in the alphabet")
i += 1
The intended outcome is to determine where the letter is in the alphabet using a for loop
- What is a good test case to check the current outcome? Why?
- Make changes to get the intended outcome.
letter = input("What letter would you like to check?")
for i in alphabetList:
count = 1
if i == letter:
count += alphabetList.index(letter)
print("The letter " + i + " is the " + str(count) + " letter in the alphabet")
This code outputs the even numbers from 0 - 10 using a while loop.
- Analyze this code to determine what can be changed to get the outcome to be odd numbers. (Code block below)
evens = []
i = 0
while i <= 10:
evens.append(i)
i += 2
print(evens)
This code should output the odd numbers from 0 - 10 using a while loop.
odds = []
i = 1
while i <= 10:
odds.append(i)
i += 2
print(odds)
This code outputs the even numbers from 0 - 10 using a for loop.
- Analyze this code to determine what can be changed to get the outcome to be odd numbers. (Code block below)
numbers = [0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10]
evens = []
for i in numbers:
if (numbers[i] % 2 == 0):
evens.append(numbers[i])
print(evens)
This code should output the odd numbers from 0 - 10 using a for loop.
numbers = [0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10]
odds = []
for i in numbers:
if (numbers[i] % 2 == 1):
odds.append(numbers[i])
print(odds)
The intended outcome is printing a number between 1 and 100 once, if it is a multiple of 2 or 5
- What values are outputted incorrectly. Why?
- Make changes to get the intended outcome.
numbers = []
newNumbers = []
i = 0
while i < 100:
numbers.append(i)
i += 1
for i in numbers:
if numbers[i] % 5 == 0:
newNumbers.append(numbers[i])
elif numbers[i] % 2 == 0:
newNumbers.append(numbers[i])
print(newNumbers)
Challenge
This code segment is at a very early stage of implementation.
- What are some ways to (user) error proof this code?
- The code should be able to calculate the cost of the meal of the user
Hint:
- write a “single” test describing an expectation of the program of the program
- test - input burger, expect output of burger price
- run the test, which should fail because the program lacks that feature
- write “just enough” code, the simplest possible, to make the test pass
Then repeat this process until you get program working like you want it to work.
from operator import truediv
from pickle import TRUE
menu = {"burger": 3.99,
"fries": 1.99,
"drink": 0.99}
total = 0
#shows the user the menu and prompts them to select an item
print("Menu")
for k,v in menu.items():
print(k + " $" + str(v)) #why does v have "str" in front of it?
#ideally the code should prompt the user multiple times
item = input("Please select an item from the menu")
match = False
for k, v in menu.items():
if item == str(k):
# print(str(v))
match = TRUE
total += v
otheritem = input("Anything else? y/n ")
if otheritem.lower() == "y" or otheritem.lower() == "yes":
item = input("Please select an item from the menu")
for k, v in menu.items():
if item == str(k):
# print(str(v))
match = TRUE
total += v
else:
break
if match == False :
print(item + " not found")
# total= menu[item]
print("Your total is $" , round(total,2))
Hacks
Now is a good time to think about Testing of your teams final project...
- What errors may arise in your project?
- What are some test cases that can be used?
- Make sure to document any bugs you encounter and how you solved the problem.
- What are “single” tests that you will perform on your project? Or, your part of the project?
- As Hack Design and Test plan action … Divide these “single” tests into Issues for Scrum Board prior to coding. FYI, related tests could be in same Issue by using markdown checkboxes to separate tests.