- CB 3.12,3.13 Developing Procedures
What is a procedure?
A procedure is a named group of code that has paramaters and return values. Procedures are known as methods or functions depending on the language.
A procedure executes the statements within it on the parameters to provide a return value.
What are parameters?
Paramaters are input values of a procedure that are specified by arguments.Arguments specify the values of the parameters when a procedure is called.
By creating theses algorithms the readibility of code increases and the complexity decreases. This is becasue a function’s name can tell the reader what action it will perform, and by calling it, the code becomes more clean and easy to understand.
What is a return value?
A return value is the value that is returned when a function or a method is called.
That return value can be assigned or printed
Procedures are used to create algorthims that can perform certain actions or return values. When a procedure returns a value, theis information must be stored in a variable for later use. However some procedures like the MOVE_FORWARD() perform an action, and don’t return a value. The image above provides an example of where procedures that don’t output a value would be used.
A 60$ item recieves a 20% discount and taxed at 8%.
PROCEDURE applyDiscount(cost, percentDiscounted)
{
temp ← 100 - percentDiscounted
temp← temp/ 100
cost ← cost *temp
RETURN(cost)
}
price ← applyDiscount(60, 20)
This is how we get the final price with the discount by calling the procedure and assigning it to the price variable.
PROCEDURE applyTax(cost, percentTaxed)
{
temp ← 100 + percentTaxed
temp← temp/ 100
cost ← cost *temp
RETURN(cost)
}
price ← applyTax(price, 8)
This applys the 8% tax to the price determined after the discount.
Popcorn Hack 1
Given the applyTax procedure above: How would you call the procedure to get it to find the price using cost = 50, and percentTaxed = 10, and what value will it return?
#code here
cost = 50
def applyTax(cost, percentTaxed):
temp = 100 + percentTaxed
temp = temp/100
cost = cost * temp
return cost
price = applyTax(cost, 10)
print(price)
55.00000000000001
What Are Functions?
- Collections of code
- Divides large program into smaller chunks
- Better readability
- Less repetitive code
- More efficient code
- Good organization
What Are The Components of a Function?
- The function declaration
- The parameters (input). This is also referred to as an argument when a value is being passed to the actual function.
- The functionality
- The return value (output)
- Calling the function
# Defining Functions
#
# def function_name(parameter1, parameter2, etc..):
# code here...
#
# return return_value;
# return the value of parameter1 plus parameter2;
def add(parameter1, parameter2): # creates a function that takes in two parameters
solution = parameter1 + parameter2; # sets solution to the sum of parameter1 and parameter2
return solution; # return solution
print(add(5, 5)); # prints the return value of add(5,5)
Popcorn Hack 2:
1. Make a function that returns the difference of two numbers
# Code here
def subtract(num1, num2):
answer = num1 - num2
return answer
subtract(8, -2)
10
What is a Class?
- A class is an outline for a set of nested functions and variables.
- There are instance variables
- Functions
- Constructor method (Required)
- To String method
- Getter method
- Setter method
How Does a Class Work?
# Defining Classes
class person:
def __init__(self, name, age, ): # constructor
self.name = name;
self.age = age;
def getName(self): # method to create get name
return self.name;
def getAge(self): # method to create get age
return self.age;
def setName(self, name): # method to create set name
self.name = name;
def setAge(self, age): # method to create set age
self.age = age;
def yearOlder(self): # method to increment age by 1
self.age += 1;
def __str__(self): # method that returns a string when the object is printed
return (f"My name is {self.name} and I am {self.age} years old.")
Person1 = person("John Doe", 15);
print(Person1)
print(Person1);
Popcorn Hack 3:
1. Create a Car class which has the attributes model, vehicle name, and price
2. Create instances of the following cars
- Name: Honda Civic , Model Year: 2018 , Price: $13,000
- Name: Toyota Prius, Model Year: 2023 , Price: $28,000
- Name: Chevrolet Impala, Model Year: 2020 , Price: $22,000
class car:
def __init__(self, name, year, price, ):
self.name = name
self.year = year
self.price = price
def getName(self):
return self.name
def getYear(self):
return self.year
def getPrice(self):
return self.price
def __str__(self):
return (f"Name: {self.name}, Year: {self.year}, Price: {self.price}")
car1 = car("Honda Civic", 2018, 13000)
print(car1)
car2 = car("Toyota Prius", 2023, 28000)
print(car2)
car3 = car("Chevrolet Impala", 2020, 22000)
print(car3)
Name: Honda Civic, Year: 2018, Price: 13000
Name: Toyota Prius, Year: 2023, Price: 28000
Name: Chevrolet Impala, Year: 2020, Price: 22000
UPDATED HW assignment 1: Create a function that takes in an array as the parameter and returns the array of distinct values. DON’T USE SETS. TEST ARRAY: arr1 = [2,1,3,2,0,2,0,0,4,2,0,0,0,2,0,0,1,2,3,0,7,4,5,2,1,2,3,4,6]. (edited)
def distinct_values(arr):
distinct_arr = []
for element in arr:
if element not in distinct_arr:
distinct_arr.append(element)
return distinct_arr
# Test the function with the provided array
arr1 = [2, 1, 3, 2, 0, 2, 0, 0, 4, 2, 0, 0, 0, 2, 0, 0, 1, 2, 3, 0, 7, 4, 5, 2, 1, 2, 3, 4, 6]
print("Original array:", arr1)
result = distinct_values(arr1)
print("New array of distinct values:", result)
Original array: [2, 1, 3, 2, 0, 2, 0, 0, 4, 2, 0, 0, 0, 2, 0, 0, 1, 2, 3, 0, 7, 4, 5, 2, 1, 2, 3, 4, 6]
New array of distinct values: [2, 1, 3, 0, 4, 7, 5, 6]
Assignment 2:
Create a student class that...
- Has a constructor that takes three parameters as attributes
-
- name
- grade
- Three getter methods to access the name, email, and grade
- Three setter methods to modify the name, email, and grade
- A to string method that returns the three instance variables in this format - "My name is {name}. My email is {email}. My grade is {grade}
- Create an instance of the class that corresponds with you
class student:
def __init__(self, name, email, grade, ):
self.name = name
self.email = email
self.grade = grade
def getName(self):
return self.name
def getEmail(self):
return self.email
def getGrade(self):
return self.grade
def __str__(self):
return (f"My name is {self.name}. My email is {self.email}. My grade is {self.grade}.")
me = student("Brandon So", "brandons10308@stu.powayusd.com", 95)
print(me)
My name is Brandon So. My email is brandons10308@stu.powayusd.com. My grade is 95.