Boston Python Workshop 6/Friday/CodingBat Using Codingbat

Using CodingBat
CodingBat is a little different from using python at the command line or in a text editor like we've been doing. When you use CodingBat you type your code into a web page and click 'Go' when you want that code to run. You'll still need to make sure you indent all your code to the same level.

The way CodingBat works is that your write a function (the first line of the function is written for you), and CodingBat will run your function a few times, each time with a different input. CodingBat will look at the output of your function and compare it to the correct answer. If all the outputs are correct for all the inputs, you're done!

Let's walk through an example; in this case I'll use the sumTwoNumbers exercise.

Here's the first screen we see:



This screen describes the problem (write a function to add any two numbers together) and gives you the inputs that CodingBat will give to the function you've written, and the outputs that CodingBat expects to see returned from your function for each input.

The inputs are the values in the parentheses, and the expected output is the value pointed to by the arrows:



For this example CodingBat is going to run your function three times (one for each set of inputs). Some of the CodingBat problems will run your function more than three times, some less.

If you simply click "Go" without typing anything in the box, CodingbBat gives you an error on the right hand side of the screen:



Let's add some code. Remember that you just need to write the body of the function, but you still need to indent. Here's a first try at the problem:



Hmm. I've got one correct and two wrong. Maybe instead of  I should use  ?



That's not it. CodingBat problems always want you to use  in your functions. Oh! I see - I typed in  twice, when instead I should have used  :



Great!

I can check this by typing the same function into the command prompt:

What CodingBat is doing is the same as when you write a function in your editor or at the command prompt and run it a few times, like this:

awf$ python Python 2.6.1 (r261:67515, Aug 2 2010, 20:10:18) [GCC 4.2.1 (Apple Inc. build 5646)] on darwin Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information. >>> def sumTwoNumbers(first, second): ...   return first + second ... >>> sumTwoNumbers(2,3) 5 >>> sumTwoNumbers(5,5) 10 >>> sumTwoNumbers(10,-10) 0

Perfect!

Now we can move on to completing tonight's practice problems