Module-7-INTEGRATIVE PROGRAMMING 2
Module-7-INTEGRATIVE PROGRAMMING 2
Tuguegarao City
Course Code :
Course Title : INTEGRATIVE PROGRAMMING 2
MODULE No. 07
TITLE: ITERATION
INTRODUCTION
LEARNING 1.
OUTCOMES
LEARNING 1.
OBJECTIVES
A common pattern in assignment statements is an assignment statement that updates a variable, where
the new value of the variable depends on the old.
x=x+1
This means "get the current value of x, add 1, and then update x with the new value."
If you try to update a variable that doesn't exist, you get an error, because Python evaluates the right
side before it assigns a value to x:
>>> x = x + 1
NameError: name 'x' is not defined
Before you can update a variable, you have to initialize it, usually with a simple assignment:
>>> x = 0
>>> x = x + 1
Computers are often used to automate repetitive tasks. Repeating identical or similar tasks without
making errors is something that computers do well and people do poorly. Because iteration is so
common, Python provides several language features to make it easier.
One form of iteration in Python is the while statement. Here is a simple program that counts down from
five and then says "Blastoff!".
n=5
while n > 0:
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print(n)
n=n-1
print('Blastoff!')
You can almost read the while statement as if it were English. It means, "While n is greater than 0,
display the value of n and then reduce the value of n by 1. When you get to 0, exit the while statement
and display the word Blastoff!"
2. If the condition is false, exit the while statement and continue execution at the next statement.
3. If the condition is true, execute the body and then go back to step 1.
This type of flow is called a loop because the third step loops back around to the top. We call each
time we execute the body of the loop an iteration. For the above loop, we would say, "It had five
iterations", which means that the body of the loop was executed five times.
The body of the loop should change the value of one or more variables so that eventually the condition
becomes false and the loop terminates. We call the variable that changes each time the loop executes
and controls when the loop finishes the iteration variable. If there is no iteration variable, the loop will
repeat forever, resulting in an infinite loop.
Infinite loops
An endless source of amusement for programmers is the observation that the directions on shampoo,
"Lather, rinse, repeat," are an infinite loop because there is no iteration variable telling you how many
times to execute the loop.
In the case of countdown, we can prove that the loop terminates because we know that the value of n is
finite, and we can see that the value of n gets smaller each time through the loop, so eventually we
have to get to 0. Other times a loop is obviously infinite because it has no iteration variable at all.
Sometimes you don't know it's time to end a loop until you get half way through the body. In that case
you can write an infinite loop on purpose and then use the break statement to jump out of the loop.
This loop is obviously an infinite loop because the logical expression on the while statement is simply
the logical constant True:
n = 10
while True:
print(n, end=' ')
n=n-1
print('Done!')
If you make the mistake and run this code, you will learn quickly how to stop a runaway Python
process on your system or find where the power-off button is on your computer. This program will run
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forever or until your battery runs out because the logical expression at the top of the loop is always
true by virtue of the fact that the expression is the constant value True.
While this is a dysfunctional infinite loop, we can still use this pattern to build useful loops as long as
we carefully add code to the body of the loop to explicitly exit the loop using break when we have
reached the exit condition.
For example, suppose you want to take input from the user until they type done. You could write:
The loop condition is True, which is always true, so the loop runs repeatedly until it hits the break
statement.
Each time through, it prompts the user with an angle bracket. If the user types done, the break statement
exits the loop. Otherwise the program echoes whatever the user types and goes back to the top of the
loop. Here's a sample run:
This way of writing while loops is common because you can check the condition anywhere in the loop
(not just at the top) and you can express the stop condition affirmatively ("stop when this happens")
rather than negatively ("keep going until that happens.").
Sometimes you are in an iteration of a loop and want to finish the current iteration and immediately
jump to the next iteration. In that case you can use the continue statement to skip to the next iteration
without finishing the body of the loop for the current iteration.
Here is an example of a loop that copies its input until the user types "done", but treats lines that start
with the hash character as lines not to be printed (kind of like Python comments).
All the lines are printed except the one that starts with the hash sign because when the continue is
executed, it ends the current iteration and jumps back to the while statement to start the next iteration,
thus skipping the print statement.
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Sometimes we want to loop through a set of things such as a list of words, the lines in a file, or a list of
numbers. When we have a list of things to loop through, we can construct a definite loop using
a for statement. We call the while statement an indefinite loop because it simply loops until some
condition becomes False, whereas the for loop is looping through a known set of items so it runs
through as many iterations as there are items in the set.
The syntax of a for loop is similar to the while loop in that there is a for statement and a loop body:
In Python terms, the variable friends is a list1 of three strings and the for loop goes through the list and
executes the body once for each of the three strings in the list resulting in this output:
Translating this for loop to English is not as direct as the while, but if you think of friends as a set, it
goes like this: "Run the statements in the body of the for loop once for each friend in the set named
friends."
In particular, friend is the iteration variable for the for loop. The variable friend changes for each
iteration of the loop and controls when the for loop completes. The iteration variable steps
successively through the three strings stored in the friends variable.
Loop patterns
Often we use a for or while loop to go through a list of items or the contents of a file and we are looking
for something such as the largest or smallest value of the data we scan through.
Performing some computation on each item in the loop body, possibly changing the variables
in the body of the loop
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We will use a list of numbers to demonstrate the concepts and construction of these loop patterns.
For example, to count the number of items in a list, we would write the following for loop:
count = 0
for itervar in [3, 41, 12, 9, 74, 15]:
count = count + 1
print('Count: ', count)
We set the variable count to zero before the loop starts, then we write a for loop to run through the list
of numbers. Our iteration variable is named itervar and while we do not use itervar in the loop, it does
control the loop and cause the loop body to be executed once for each of the values in the list.
In the body of the loop, we add 1 to the current value of count for each of the values in the list. While
the loop is executing, the value of count is the number of values we have seen "so far".
Once the loop completes, the value of count is the total number of items. The total number "falls in our
lap" at the end of the loop. We construct the loop so that we have what we want when the loop
finishes.
Another similar loop that computes the total of a set of numbers is as follows:
total = 0
for itervar in [3, 41, 12, 9, 74, 15]:
total = total + itervar
print('Total: ', total)
In this loop we do use the iteration variable. Instead of simply adding one to the count as in the
previous loop, we add the actual number (3, 41, 12, etc.) to the running total during each loop
iteration. If you think about the variable total, it contains the "running total of the values so far". So
before the loop starts total is zero because we have not yet seen any values, during the loop total is the
running total, and at the end of the loop total is the overall total of all the values in the list.
As the loop executes, total accumulates the sum of the elements; a variable used this way is sometimes
called an accumulator.
Neither the counting loop nor the summing loop are particularly useful in practice because there are
built-in functions len() and sum() that compute the number of items in a list and the total of the items in
the list respectively.
To find the largest value in a list or sequence, we construct the following loop:
largest = None
print('Before:', largest)
for itervar in [3, 41, 12, 9, 74, 15]:
if largest is None or itervar > largest :
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largest = itervar
print('Loop:', itervar, largest)
print('Largest:', largest)
Before: None
Loop: 3 3
Loop: 41 41
Loop: 12 41
Loop: 9 41
Loop: 74 74
Loop: 15 74
Largest: 74
The variable largest is best thought of as the "largest value we have seen so far". Before the loop, we
set largest to the constant None. None is a special constant value which we can store in a variable to mark
the variable as "empty".
Before the loop starts, the largest value we have seen so far is None since we have not yet seen any
values. While the loop is executing, if largest is None then we take the first value we see as the largest
so far. You can see in the first iteration when the value of itervar is 3, since largest is None, we
immediately set largest to be 3.
After the first iteration, largest is no longer None, so the second part of the compound logical expression
that checks itervar > largest triggers only when we see a value that is larger than the "largest so far".
When we see a new "even larger" value we take that new value for largest. You can see in the program
output that largest progresses from 3 to 41 to 74.
At the end of the loop, we have scanned all of the values and the variable largest now does contain the
largest value in the list.
To compute the smallest number, the code is very similar with one small change:
smallest = None
print('Before:', smallest)
for itervar in [3, 41, 12, 9, 74, 15]:
if smallest is None or itervar < smallest:
smallest = itervar
print('Loop:', itervar, smallest)
print('Smallest:', smallest)
Again, smallest is the "smallest so far" before, during, and after the loop executes. When the loop has
completed, smallest contains the minimum value in the list.
Again as in counting and summing, the built-in functions max() and min() make writing these exact
loops unnecessary.
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def min(values):
smallest = None
for value in values:
if smallest is None or value < smallest:
smallest = value
return smallest
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