Shakespeare



How many times does the word 'love' appear in Shakespeare's plays? Is it possible to find negative passages using a list of keywords? We'll use Python to practice our skills and answer questions like these.

Setup
We'll need additional setup here.

Goals

 * Have fun using Python to learn basic data science.
 * Practice searching for information in text documents
 * Practice manipulating strings
 * Practice using loops
 * Practice using lists
 * Practice using dictionaries.

Strings
>>> s = "mama" >>> s == "mama" True >>> s == "papa" False >>> s = "mama" >>> s in "I love mama" True >>> "day" in "Saturday" True >>> "Day" in "Saturday" False >>> Sat = "Saturday" >>> "day" in Sat True
 * Checking if two strings are equal
 * Checking if a string contains another as a substring

File Operations
>>> M_S=open("A Midsummer-Night's Dream.txt", "r") >>> M_S  >>> M_S = open("A Midsummer-Night's Dream.txt", "r") >>> line = M_S.readline >>> print line < Shakespeare -- A MIDSUMMER-NIGHT'S DREAM > >>> for eachline in M_S: >>> # Do something here with each line read ...
 * Open a file
 * Read a line
 * Read a file line by line until the end of file (also known as )

Using the word "love"
1. Make a python program, call it  save it under the same directory as where you've saved the Shakespearean texts.
 * We will use the play  Romeo and Juliet 

2. In your program, open the file "Romeo and Juliet.txt" (The text file need to be saved in the same directory as your python program to be able to use local file name)

3. Check to see that the file was opened properly

4. Now create a variable that represents the string "love", for example: >>> lv = "love" 5. Also create a variable that is a counter for the number of time that "love" appears, for example: >>> lv_counter = 0; 6.Use a for loop (or while loop, if you like) to read through the lines of the file. While you are reading each line, count the number of lines that contains the word "love"

7. Does Shakespeare use a lot of love in his plays? How about other synonyms of "love"?

Lists
>>> lst=["William","Shakespeare"] >>> lst ['William', 'Shakespeare'] >>> lst.append("Bard of Avon") >>> lst ['William', 'Shakespeare', 'Bard of Avon'] >>> lst = open("importList.txt").readlines
 * Recall that lists in Python can contain arbitrary objects and dynamically expand as new things "arrive"
 * We may declare our list as such
 * We may append something to our list as such
 * More on list operations can be fount at the following URL: https://docs.python.org/2/tutorial/datastructures.html
 * One common way to process a file is to open it, and save each line as a string into a list


 * 1) readlines. reads each line in the file and puts each line as a string and saves them all to the list called lst.

>>> lst ['apple\n', 'pear\n', 'oranges\n', 'kiwi\n', 'banana\n', 'monkey']


 * 1) notice that there are these weird '\n' characters following each item, they are the newline symbols (when you hit enter to start a new line)
 * 2) we can remove them as such:

>>> lstFinal = [eachthing.strip("\n") for eachthing in lst] >>> lstFinal ['apple', 'pear', 'oranges', 'kiwi', 'banana', 'monkey']

Dictionaries

 * Dictionaries are another data structure commonly used in programming. Dictionaries (think of dictionary in real life) stores what we call  key-value pairs. One common thing to do with dictionary is determine an entry's value given its key.
 * Entries in the dictionary are stored  orderless  (i.e. no way to arrange storage position according to value)
 * keys for each entry in the dictionary must be unique,  values  do not have to be unique.
 * For our simplicity, we will use a string as keys.

>>> myDict = {"Python":9, "Workshop": 27, "Interesting":1} >>> myDict {'Python': 9, 'Interesting': 1, 'Workshop': 27}
 * Creating a dictionary:


 * 1) notice that printing them does not necessarily give the entries in the order you entered them.

>>> del myDict["Interesting"] >>> myDict {'Python': 9, 'Workshop': 27} >>> myDict["Interesting"]=1 >>> myDict {'Python': 9, 'Interesting': 1, 'Workshop': 27} >>> "Interesting" in myDict True >>> myDict["Interesting"] 1 For more information on dictionary: https://docs.python.org/2/tutorial/datastructures.html#dictionaries
 * The following basic operations works with entries in a dictionary (remove an entry, add an entry, check if a key is in the dictionary, print the value corresponding to a given key):

Lists and Dictionaries Exercises
List & Iteration Exercise 1: >>> myFile = open("name_of_file", "r") ... >>> myFile.close
 * Create a new python program.
 * Import the list of characters from  A Midsummer Night's Dream  saved in the file
 * Save it to a list, where each item in the list should be the name of the character enclosed in angled brackets, e.g. ['', ...]
 * Print the list to see that you got it right
 * For good practice, you should close the file by using

List & Iteration Exercise 2:
 * In the same program that you created from exercise 1
 * Now open the play  A Midsummer Night's Dream 
 * Read through the play line by line, count how many times has    spoke.
 * Print to screen the name  and the number of times he spoke.
 * Close the file.

List & Iteration Exercise 3*:
 * Use the same program as above
 * Open the same play again
 * Now iterate through the list of character you saved from exercise 1, see how many times each of them speak.
 * Print to screen each character's name and the number of times they spoke.
 * Close the file.


 * Note: You can only readline through a file once, so for each line read, you must check that if any of the characters have started a new speech that line.

List & Iteration Exercise 4**:
 * Do the same as exercise 3, except now instead of printing them directly, save the names of character and number of times they spoke as a key:value pair in to a dictionary.
 * Print the dictionary to screen and check that you have the same result as part 3.

'''Who speaks the most in Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream? Can you guess (or if you know) the pairings of the couples in the story?'''

Extended Exercises
Exercise 1:
 * In modern English, we owe many words to William Shakespeare, who alone invented over 2000 words in the English literature.
 * The file "popularWords.txt" lists some popular words that we still use today that were invented by Shakespeare (bet you didn't know that!). Each word originates from at least one of his plays. Can you find the play(s) where each word originated?
 * You can save the popular word and  the play it comes from  as a key:value pair in a dictionary. (remember that value does not have to be a number, it could be arbitrary data structure, i.e. it could be a string or a list of strings)

Exercise 2: 	<0%> If music be the food of love, play on; Give me excess of it, that, surfeiting, The appetite may sicken, and so die. That strain again! it had a dying fall: O! it came o'er my ear like the sweet sound That breathes upon a bank of violets, Stealing and giving odour. Enough! no more: 'Tis not so sweet now as it was before. O spirit of love! how quick and fresh art thou, That, notwithstanding thy capacity Receiveth as the sea, nought enters there, Of what validity and pitch soe'er, But falls into abatement and low price, Even in a minute: so full of shapes is fancy, That it alone is high fantastical. 
 * Give yourself a word that you see in a play. Try to output the entire dialogue spoken by the person that first contained the word.
 * i.e. if your word is "fantastical" and you are looking at the play "Twelfth Night", you should output:
 * Note that each person's speech is opened with their name in angular brackets and ends with , as similar to HTML tags.

Exercise 3:
 * Animals are often used as condescending terms to address someone in Shakespeare's plays.
 * Using the list of animals given in the file "listAnimal.txt" can you find (in a play or in many plays) which play and who spoke of something as what animal?

Finally...
 * Feel free to devise your own exercises that you would enjoy and find out things about Shakespeare's plays!