Difference between revisions of "EGR 103/Spring 2022/Lab 12"

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Not much to go here!  The test cases in the starter code will help identify any issues you may have before uploading to Gradescope.  You will definitely want to get the __repr__ method working first so you can actually see what your vectors look like by typing their name in the console or using print(a) or print('{}'.format(a)) in the console or your program.
 
Not much to go here!  The test cases in the starter code will help identify any issues you may have before uploading to Gradescope.  You will definitely want to get the __repr__ method working first so you can actually see what your vectors look like by typing their name in the console or using print(a) or print('{}'.format(a)) in the console or your program.
 +
 +
==Notes==
 +
* When you call a method by appending it to a variable of that method type, the information the method needs from the variable will be stored in "self."  For example, with the following code:
 +
 +
<syntaxhighlight lang=python>
 +
class customer:
 +
    def __init__(self, myname="", bal=0, acct=0):
 +
        self.name = myname
 +
        self.balance = bal
 +
        self.acctnumber = acct
 +
       
 +
    def __repr__(self):
 +
        return "{} ({}): ${:0.2f}".format(self.name,
 +
                                    self.acctnumber,
 +
                                    self.balance)
 +
       
 +
    def give_loan(self, other_person, amount):
 +
        if amount > self.balance:
 +
            print("Insufficient funds!")
 +
        else:
 +
            other_person.balance += amount
 +
            self.balance -= amount
 +
 +
 +
if __name__=="__main__":
 +
    me = customer("Person 1", 1000)
 +
    you = customer("Person 2", 1000)
 +
    print(me, "\n", you, "\n")
 +
    me.give_loan(you, 100)
 +
    print(me, "\n", you, "\n")
 +
 +
</syntaxhighlight>
 +
The <code>give_loan</code> method is called by the <code>me</code> variable, which means that the information in <code>me</code> will be stored in the local variable <code>self</code> and the information in <code>you</code> will be stored in the local variable <code>other</code>.
 +
  
 
== References ==
 
== References ==
 
* [https://towardsdatascience.com/introduction-to-python-classes-da526ff745df Introduction to Python Classes] by Soner Yıldırım on TowardsDataScience.com.  This is a brief introduction to classes.  We did not discuss the idea of "inheritance" and you will not need it for this assignment, but it is an interesting option with classes.
 
* [https://towardsdatascience.com/introduction-to-python-classes-da526ff745df Introduction to Python Classes] by Soner Yıldırım on TowardsDataScience.com.  This is a brief introduction to classes.  We did not discuss the idea of "inheritance" and you will not need it for this assignment, but it is an interesting option with classes.
 
* [https://python-course.eu/oop/magic-methods.php Magic Methods] by Bernd Klein on python-course.eu.  This is a brief introduction to classes and dunder methods
 
* [https://python-course.eu/oop/magic-methods.php Magic Methods] by Bernd Klein on python-course.eu.  This is a brief introduction to classes and dunder methods

Latest revision as of 17:37, 13 April 2022

Not much to go here! The test cases in the starter code will help identify any issues you may have before uploading to Gradescope. You will definitely want to get the __repr__ method working first so you can actually see what your vectors look like by typing their name in the console or using print(a) or print('{}'.format(a)) in the console or your program.

Notes

  • When you call a method by appending it to a variable of that method type, the information the method needs from the variable will be stored in "self." For example, with the following code:
class customer:
    def __init__(self, myname="", bal=0, acct=0):
        self.name = myname
        self.balance = bal
        self.acctnumber = acct
        
    def __repr__(self):
        return "{} ({}): ${:0.2f}".format(self.name, 
                                     self.acctnumber,
                                     self.balance)
        
    def give_loan(self, other_person, amount):
        if amount > self.balance:
            print("Insufficient funds!")
        else:
            other_person.balance += amount
            self.balance -= amount


if __name__=="__main__":
    me = customer("Person 1", 1000)
    you = customer("Person 2", 1000)
    print(me, "\n", you, "\n")
    me.give_loan(you, 100)
    print(me, "\n", you, "\n")

The give_loan method is called by the me variable, which means that the information in me will be stored in the local variable self and the information in you will be stored in the local variable other.


References

  • Introduction to Python Classes by Soner Yıldırım on TowardsDataScience.com. This is a brief introduction to classes. We did not discuss the idea of "inheritance" and you will not need it for this assignment, but it is an interesting option with classes.
  • Magic Methods by Bernd Klein on python-course.eu. This is a brief introduction to classes and dunder methods