3 Commits
0.0.9 ... 0.1.2

Author SHA1 Message Date
ducoterra
7358db6429 fix major variable issue 2020-11-29 16:36:27 -05:00
ducoterra
ec8a37af1c fix menu 2020-11-29 14:55:57 -05:00
ducoterra
4e6a69c038 day 4 done 2020-11-29 14:46:34 -05:00
4 changed files with 455 additions and 2 deletions

View File

@@ -1,8 +1,15 @@
# Docs # Docs
Converting mov to gif:
```bash ```bash
ffmpeg -i in.mov -filter:v "setpts=0.5*PTS" out.gif ffmpeg -i in.mov -filter:v "setpts=0.5*PTS" out.gif
ffmpeg -i in.mkv out.mov ```
Converting mkv to mp4 with 20Mbit bitrate
```bash
ffmpeg -i in.mkv -b:v 20M out.mov
``` ```
```bash ```bash

439
docs/day4.md Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,439 @@
# Day 4
## "While"
The last section covered the for loop - a useful loop when you have a finite number of things you need to do something with. A grocery list, api data, and application arguments could be massive but will always have a definite size. Let's talk about times when you don't know how many times to loop.
### Example 1: A Game
Let's imagine you're coding a checkers app. You might approach it like this:
1. Game Start
2. Player 1 moves
3. Check if player 2 has no remaining pieces
4. Player 2 moves
5. Check if player 1 has no remaining pieces
6. Player 1 moves
7. Check if player 2 has no remaining pieces
8. Player 2 moves
9. Check if player 1 has no remaining pieces
10. ""
11. ""
12. ""
13. ...
You'll need to do a lot of the same stuff over and over - that's great for a loop. Since you'll have no idea how long the game will go on you can't use a for loop because there aren't a finite number of things to loop through (although you could simple use [the longest checkers game](http://www.wylliedraughts.com/LongGame.htm#:~:text=The%20longest%20game%20that%20Wyllie,of%203%2Dmove%20restriction%20checkers.) as your starting point I suppose).
What we need is a loop that run indefinitey until a condition is met - namely that one player wins the game.
### Example 2: User Input
Let's build a menu system for a text-based app.
1. Open your python interpretor by typing `python` and pressing ++enter++
2. In your python interpretor paste the following:
```python
program_choices = ["print", "count", "add", "exit"]
while True:
choice = input(f"Please choose one of the following options: [{', '.join(program_choices)}]: ")
if choice == "print":
print("hello")
elif choice == "count":
print(", ".join(["1","2","3","4","5"]))
elif choice == "add":
num1 = input("first number: ")
num2 = input("second number: ")
try:
print(f"Answer: {int(num1) + int(num2)}")
except ValueError:
print("You did not provide 2 valid numbers")
elif choice == "exit":
break
else:
print("invalid choice!")
```
3. Exit the menu by typing 'exit'
4. Type exit() to exit the python interpretor
This lets a user select from a variety of options and returns them to the start of the menu upon a selection. If their selection is invalid we tell them it's invalid and return them to the start anyway.
Since we don't know how many things a user will want to do with our menu we should use a while loop to loop indefinitely.
Note the line that says `break`. This is how you break out of a loop in python. as soon as you call `break` it will stop the loop.
### Easy looping
Now that we've seen a few examples let's run through the core of a while loop:
1. Type `python` and press ++enter++ to open the python interpretor.
2. We can use a while loop to do something indefinitely. Type the following and press ++enter++ twice:
```python
while True:
print("hello")
```
3. Press ++ctrl+c++ to stop the loop
4. We can use a while loop like a for loop (though this isn't recommended - it's too easy to get stuck in an infinite loop). Type the following and press ++enter++ twice:
```python
count_to = 10
start_at = 1
while start_at <= count_to:
print(start_at)
start_at += 1
```
5. We can use a while loop to check multiple conditions. Type the following and press ++enter++:
```python
import random
day = 1
raining = True
temperature = "cold"
while temperature == "cold" or raining == True:
print(f"Day {day}: Stay inside")
day += 1
temperature = random.choice(["cold", "warm"])
raining = random.choice([True, False])
print(f"Day {day}: It's safe")
```
6. We can put while loops inside while loops (notice how we break out of each loop - this requires 2 break statements). Type the following and press ++enter++:
```python
while True:
print("loop 1")
while True:
print("loop 2")
break
break
```
## Let's build a menu
We're going to build a piece of software that lets us interact with our people API. We should be able to:
1. List the people from our API
2. Update the list by calling the API
3. Clear the list
4. Exit
Let's get started:
1. Create a new file in your root directory called "menu.py"
2. Add the following to the top:
```python
import requests
```
3. Create the list_people function by adding the following:
```python hl_lines="3-5"
import requests
def list_people(people):
print(people)
return people
```
4. Now create the update_people function by adding the following:
```python hl_lines="5-12"
def list_people(people):
print(people)
return people
def update_people(people):
try:
response = requests.get("http://localhost:8000/people")
people = response.json()["data"]
print("successfully updated people.")
except requests.exceptions.ConnectionError:
print("Server is not running. Failed to update.")
return people
```
5. Now create the clear_people function by adding the following:
```python hl_lines="10-12"
def update_people(people):
try:
response = requests.get("http://localhost:8000/people")
people = response.json()["data"]
print("successfully updated people.")
except requests.exceptions.ConnectionError:
print("Server is not running. Failed to update.")
return people
def clear_people(people):
people = None
return people
```
6. Finally add the main loop:
```python hl_lines="5-19"
def clear_people(people):
people = None
return people
if __name__ == "__main__":
people = None
choices = ["list", "update", "clear", "exit"]
while True:
choice = input(f"Please choose an option [{', '.join(choices)}]: ")
if choice == "list":
people = list_people(people)
elif choice == "update":
people = update_people(people)
elif choice == "clear":
people = clear_people(people)
elif choice == "exit":
break
else:
print("Invalid choice. Please try again.")
```
7. Check your work. Your whole program should be 35 lines long and look like this:
```python
import requests
import json
def list_people(people):
print(people)
return people
def update_people(people):
try:
response = requests.get("http://localhost:8000/people")
people = response.json()["data"]
print("successfully updated people.")
except requests.exceptions.ConnectionError:
print("Server is not running. Failed to update.")
return people
def clear_people(people):
people = None
return people
if __name__ == "__main__":
people = None
choices = ["list", "update", "clear", "exit"]
while True:
choice = input(f"Please choose an option [{', '.join(choices)}]: ")
if choice == "list":
people = list_people(people)
elif choice == "update":
people = update_people(people)
elif choice == "clear":
people = clear_people(people)
elif choice == "exit":
break
else:
print("Invalid choice. Please try again.")
```
8. Run the program by typing `python menu.py` and pressing ++enter++.
9. Type "list" and press ++enter++. You should see "None" printed to the screen. We haven't updated our people yet!
10. Type "update" and press ++enter++. You should see "Server is not running. Failed to update.". We didn't run our server!
11. Open a new terminal by clicking the plus icon.
12. Type `python manage.py runserver` and press ++enter++.
13. Flip back over to your other terminal by using the dropdown menu.
14. Type "update" and press ++enter++. You should see "successfully updated people."
15. Type "list" again and press ++enter++. You should see your people print out.
16. Type "clear" and press ++enter++.
17. Type "list" again and press ++enter++. Your people should be cleared.
18. Type "exit" to exit.
19. Flip back over to your django terminal with the dropdown menu
20. Press ++ctrl+c++ to stop the server
## Threading
One of the more difficult concepts in programming is threading and multiprocessing. It's rarely taught at an intro level but it's fairly easy to use.
A program runs in a "thread". When you run `python menu.py` it creates one thread that executes all code in order. Code at the end of your file can't run before code at the beginning of your file.
...unless it could. What if you have a super slow internet connection and you need to make an api call? You don't want it to slow down your whole menu.
Here's the idea: we tell our computer to make the slow call to our API in the background and continue letting the user mess with the menu.
Let's make that a reality by simulating a slow internet connection.
1. Open views.py
2. For this part we're going to need the time library. "time" lets us pause code execution for a bit, simulating a slow internet. At the top of views.py add the following:
```python hl_lines="2 2"
import random
import time
from django.shortcuts import render
from django.http import JsonResponse
```
3. Jump to the very bottom and add the highlighted code:
```python hl_lines="10-23"
def api(request):
people = [
{"first name" : "Jim", "last name": "Fowler", "age": 24},
{"first name" : "Bob", "last name": "Jones", "age": 36},
{"first name" : "Alice", "last name": "Appleseed", "age": 52}
]
return JsonResponse({"data": people})
def slow_api(request):
people = []
first_names = ["Liam", "Noah", "Oliver", "William", "Olivia", "Emma", "Ava", "Sophia", "Isabella"]
last_names = ["Smith", "Johnson", "Anderson", "Brown", "Garcia", "Miller", "Martinez", "Chavez"]
num_people = random.randint(1,100)
for person in range(num_people):
time.sleep(.1)
first_name = random.choice(first_names)
last_name = random.choice(last_names)
age = random.randint(1,100)
people.append({"first_name": first_name, "last_name": last_name, "age": age})
return JsonResponse({"data": people})
```
4. Save with ++ctrl+s++
5. We need to add a URL, open urls.py
6. Add the highlighted code:
```python hl_lines="8 8"
from django.urls import path
from . import views
urlpatterns = [
path('', views.index),
path('weather/', views.weather),
path('people/', views.api),
path('slow/', views.slow_api),
]
```
7. Save with ++ctrl+s++
8. Open a new terminal by clicking the plus icon.
9. Type `python manage.py runserver` and press ++enter++.
10. Flip back over to your other terminal by using the dropdown menu.
11. Navigate to <http://localhost:8000/slow/> to see your api results. Notice how long the page takes to load.
12. Let's try our menu.py with the new API. Open menu.py and update line 10:
```python hl_lines="3 3"
def update_people(people):
try:
response = requests.get("http://localhost:8000/slow")
people = response.json()["data"]
print("successfully updated people.")
```
13. Save with ++ctrl+s++
14. Open a new terminal by clicking the plus icon
15. Type `python menu.py` and press ++enter++
16. Type "list" and press ++enter++. You should see `None`
17. Type "update" and press ++enter++. Notice the delay. While we're waiting for our api to respond our menu won't respond to any thing we type.
18. Type "exit" to exit.
19. Let's add the magic that will unblock our menu during an API call. At the top of menu.py add the following:
```python hl_lines="3 3"
import requests
import json
from concurrent.futures import ThreadPoolExecutor
```
20. We need to modify our main program to call the update_people function in a different thread. To do this we need to keep track of a "future" object.
A future is something that hasn't finished executing yet. We don't know when it will finish but we assume that it will.
```python hl_lines="3 8 10"
if __name__ == "__main__":
people = None
future = None
choices = ["list", "update", "clear", "exit"]
while True:
choice = input(f"Please choose an option [{', '.join(choices)}]: ")
if choice == "list":
future, people = list_people(future, people)
elif choice == "update":
future = ThreadPoolExecutor().submit(update_people, people)
elif choice == "clear":
people = clear_people(people)
elif choice == "exit":
break
else:
print("Invalid choice. Please try again.")
```
21. We need to modify the `list_people` function to handle a future. This ensures that new people will print after an update. Change the following:
```python hl_lines="1-4"
def list_people(future, people):
if future is not None and future.done():
people = future.result()
future = None
print(people)
return (future, people)
```
22. Save with ++ctrl+s++
23. Your menu.py should look like this:
```python
import requests
import json
from concurrent.futures import ThreadPoolExecutor
def list_people(future, people):
if future is not None and future.done():
people = future.result()
future = None
print(people)
return (future, people)
def update_people(people):
try:
response = requests.get("http://localhost:8000/slow")
people = response.json()["data"]
print("successfully updated people.")
except requests.exceptions.ConnectionError:
print("Server is not running. Failed to update.")
return people
def clear_people(people):
people = None
return people
if __name__ == "__main__":
people = None
future = None
choices = ["list", "update", "clear", "exit"]
while True:
choice = input(f"Please choose an option [{', '.join(choices)}]: ")
if choice == "list":
future, people = list_people(future, people)
elif choice == "update":
future = ThreadPoolExecutor().submit(update_people, people)
elif choice == "clear":
people = clear_people(people)
elif choice == "exit":
break
else:
print("Invalid choice. Please try again.")
```
24. Now run `python menu.py`
25. Type `list` and press ++enter++. Notice how there's nothing in the list.
26. Type `update` and press ++enter++. Notice the menu returns instantly.
27. In a moment you'll see "successfully updated people" print. Type `list` and press ++enter++.
28. Type `clear` and press ++enter++
29. Now type `update` and press ++enter++ and quickly type `list` and press ++enter++ before it updates. Notice you can interact with the menu before the result returns!
30. You've successfully written a multithreaded program. Type `exit` to exit.
31. Flip back to your django server terminal with the dropdown
32. Press ++ctrl+c++ to stop the server.

View File

@@ -28,3 +28,9 @@
- "For" - "For"
- Creating an API - Creating an API
- Reading an API with Python - Reading an API with Python
### [Day 4](day4.md): while
- "While"
- Let's build a menu
- Threading

View File

@@ -5,6 +5,7 @@ nav:
- Day 1: day1.md - Day 1: day1.md
- Day 2: day2.md - Day 2: day2.md
- Day 3: day3.md - Day 3: day3.md
- Day 4: day4.md
theme: theme:
name: material name: material
markdown_extensions: markdown_extensions: