Introduction to Programming

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
11 January 2013Birkbeck College, U. London1 Introduction to Programming Lecturer: Steve Maybank Department of Computer Science and Information Systems.
Advertisements

EC-111 Algorithms & Computing Lecture #1 Instructor: Jahan Zeb Department of Computer Engineering (DCE) College of E&ME NUST.
Chapter 1 These slides for CSE 110 Sections are based in part on the textbook-authors’ slides, which are copyright by the authors. The authors state that.
16/13/2015 3:30 AM6/13/2015 3:30 AM6/13/2015 3:30 AMIntroduction to Software Development What is a computer? A computer system contains: Central Processing.
1 Lecture 1  Getting ready to program  Hardware Model  Software Model  Programming Languages  The C Language  Software Engineering  Programming.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley Starting Out with C++ Early Objects Sixth Edition by Tony Gaddis, Judy Walters,
C++ Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design, Third Edition Chapter 1: An Overview of Computers and Programming Languages C++ Programming:
Starting Out with C++: Early Objects 5/e © 2006 Pearson Education. All Rights Reserved Starting Out with C++: Early Objects 5 th Edition Chapter 1 Introduction.
Copyright 2003 Scott/Jones Publishing Brief Version of Starting Out with C++, 4th Edition Chapter 1 Introduction to Computers and Programming.
CS190/295 Programming in Python for Life Sciences: Lecture 1 Instructor: Xiaohui Xie University of California, Irvine.
CS102 Introduction to Computer Programming
Computer Programming-1 CSC 111 Chapter 1 : Introduction.
Alternate Version of STARTING OUT WITH C++ 4 th Edition Chapter 1 Introduction to Computers and Programming.
Chapter Introduction to Computers and Programming 1.
CSC 125 Introduction to C++ Programming Chapter 1 Introduction to Computers and Programming.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 1: Introduction to Computers and Programming.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley Chapter 1: Introduction to Computers and Programming.
Python Programming, 2/e1 Python Programming: An Introduction to Computer Science Chapter 1 Computers and Programs.
Introduction to Computational Linguistics Programming I.
Big Java by Cay Horstmann Copyright © 2008 by John Wiley & Sons. All rights reserved. Chapter One: Introduction.
Week 1 Introduction to Computer Science and Object-Oriented Programming COMP 111 George Basham.
C++ Programming Language Lecture 1 Introduction By Ghada Al-Mashaqbeh The Hashemite University Computer Engineering Department.
August 29, 2005ICP: Chapter 1: Introduction to Python Programming 1 Introduction to Computer Programming Chapter 1: Introduction to Python Programming.
King Fahd University of Petroleum & Minerals College of Computer Science & Engineering Information & Computer Science Department Lecture 1 : Introduction.
1 CISC181 Introduction to Computer Science Dr. McCoy Lecture 1 February 8, 2005.
CS 127 Introduction to Computer Science. What is a computer?  “A machine that stores and manipulates information under the control of a changeable program”
Copyright 2003 Scott/Jones Publishing Standard Version of Starting Out with C++, 4th Edition Chapter 1 Introduction to Computers and Programming.
Chapter 1 Introduction. Chapter Goals To understand the activity of programming To learn about the architecture of computers To learn about machine code.
Chapter 1 09/04/13. Change Your Password  The command is: passwd In the lab first do : ssh -Y onyx  You will have to see me to change it, if you forget.
8 January 2016Birkbeck College, U. London1 Introduction to Programming Lecturer: Steve Maybank Department of Computer Science and Information Systems
Introduction to Programming Python Lab 1: My First Program 8 January PythonLab1 lecture slides.ppt Ping Brennan
A Python Tour: Just a Brief Introduction "The only way to learn a new programming language is by writing programs in it." -- B. Kernighan and D. Ritchie.
1. COMPUTERS AND PROGRAMS Rocky K. C. Chang September 6, 2015 (Adapted from John Zelle’s slides)
Chapter 11  Getting ready to program  Hardware Model  Software Model  Programming Languages  Facts about C++  Program Development Process  The Hello-world.
Introduction to Computer Programming using Fortran 77.
Chapter 1: Introduction to Computers and Programming
Introduction to Programming
Fundamentals of Programming I Overview of Programming
Department of Computer Science,
A Python Tour: Just a Brief Introduction
Introduction to Programming
Introduction to Programming
Introduction to Programming
Lecture 1: Introduction to JAVA
basic Python programs, defining functions
Java programming lecture one
Introduction to Programming
Introduction to Programming
C++ Programming: From Problem Analysis to Program Design
Introduction to Programming
Chapter 1: Introduction to Computers and Programming
CS190/295 Programming in Python for Life Sciences: Lecture 1
Introduction to Python
basic Python programs, defining functions
Introduction to Programming
Introduction to Programming
Introduction to Programming
Introduction CSC 111.
Programming Fundamentals Lecture #3 Overview of Computer Programming
Introduction to Programming
Introduction to Programming
Introduction to Programming
Introduction to Programming
12th Computer Science – Unit 5
Chapter 1: Programming Basics, Python History and Program Components
Introduction to Programming
Computer Programming-1 CSC 111
Hardware is… Software is…
Chapter 1: Introduction to Computers and Programming
Presentation transcript:

Introduction to Programming Department of Computer Science and Information Systems Tingting Han (afternoon), Steve Maybank (evening) tingting@dcs.bbk.ac.uk sjmaybank@dcs.bbk.ac.uk Autumn 2017 Week 1: First Program 3 October 2017 Birkbeck College, U. London

Birkbeck College, U. London Module Information Full time students: 14.00-17.00 on Tuesdays in the autumn term. First half: lecture, second half: lab class Part time students: 18.00-21.00 on Tuesdays in the autumn term. First half: lab class, second half: lecture 3 October 2017 Birkbeck College, U. London

Tests and Examinations Week 10: mock examination Week 10: mock in laboratory test Week 11: in laboratory test The mock examination and the mock in lab test are for practice only. They will not be marked. 3 October 2017 Birkbeck College, U. London

Birkbeck College, U. London Assessment Lab attendance (9 classes): 10% In Lab test: 20% Two hour examination in summer 2018: 70% Pass: an overall mark of at least 40% Example: 6 lab classes, 45% in lab test, 38% examination. Overall mark: ((6/9)*100)*(1/10)+45*(2/10)+38*(7/10) = 42.27 3 October 2017 Birkbeck College, U. London

Birkbeck College, U. London Teaching Materials Slides, lab worksheets, example programs, etc. will be posted on the ITP web page http://www.dcs.bbk.ac.uk/~sjmaybank/ITP%20autumn%202017/introduction%20to%20Programming.html The timetable and syllabus will be posted on Moodle and on the ITP web page Moodle will be used for messages to the class 3 October 2017 Birkbeck College, U. London

Birkbeck College, U. London Textbook Essential: Cay Horstmann and Rance Necaise (2014) Python for Everyone, Wiley Teaching is based on the first six chapters of PFE The lab classes are based on exercises in PFE 3 October 2017 Birkbeck College, U. London

Birkbeck College, U. London Syllabus First program: print("Hello World") Safe operation of equipment: avoid RSI Variables: q = 2 Pseudo code and algorithm design Arithmetic and Input: (1+4)/5; input("Type a number") Strings and Output: print("Hello World"); print(q) Relational operators and Boolean variables: 2 < 5 if statement: if (2 < 5) : Loops: while (q < 3) : Functions: q = max(2, 3) Lists: [4, -5, 2] 3 October 2017 Birkbeck College, U. London

Birkbeck College, U. London This Lecture Based on Ch. 1 of PFE Aim 1: provide background information on computing Aim 2: provide enough information to write a first Python program. 5 October 2017 Birkbeck College, U. London

Structure of a Computer primary storage CPU Central Processing Unit: executes sequences of small fragments of code known as instructions. Primary storage (= main memory): stores programs and data required by the CPU Bus: connects the CPU and the primary storage 3 October 2017 Birkbeck College, U. London

Birkbeck College, U. London Peripheral Devices Input devices: mouse, keyboard, microphone Output devices: printer, monitor, speakers Input and Output device: hard drive (large capacity storage of programs and data) 3 October 2017 Birkbeck College, U. London

Birkbeck College, U. London Problem The CPU of a computer can only carry out a few simple instructions written in machine code It is time consuming and error prone to write programs using machine code 3 October 2017 Birkbeck College, U. London

Birkbeck College, U. London Solution Write programs in a high level language which is easier to understand than machine code. Use another program to convert high level programs into lists of machine code instructions for the CPU. 3 October 2017 Birkbeck College, U. London

Birkbeck College, U. London Python Developed in the late 80s and early 90s by Guido van Rossum (National Research Institute for Mathematics and Computer Science, The Netherlands) Aim: to produce a language in which small programs can be written quickly The name: from Monty Python’s Flying Circus Python 0.9.0: year 1991 Python 2.0: year 2000 Python 3.0: year 2008 3 October 2017 Birkbeck College, U. London

Birkbeck College, U. London Advantages of Python Simple syntax (= grammar) Portable without change to Windows, UNIX, Linux and Macintosh operating systems Easy to write programs for complex data Very large standard library (text processing, data compression, file formats, mathematical functions, …) 3 October 2017 Birkbeck College, U. London

Birkbeck College, U. London Python Interpreter The interpreter consists of a compiler and a virtual machine The compiler converts Python instructions to simpler instructions known as byte code The virtual machine is a software version of a CPU. It runs the byte code 3 October 2017 Birkbeck College, U. London

Birkbeck College, U. London Portability The virtual machine is not portable Once the virtual machine is installed, it can run the byte code from any Python program 3 October 2017 Birkbeck College, U. London

Integrated Development Environment Our IDE for Python is IDLE IDLE facilities: Create file for program Edit program file Run program See laboratory session 3 October 2017 Birkbeck College, U. London

Birkbeck College, U. London IDLE Editor and Shell Left hand: editor, contains program Right hand: shell, receives output when the program is run 3 October 2017 Birkbeck College, U. London

Birkbeck College, U. London My First Program # My first program print("Hello World!") When the above program is run in IDLE the string "Hello World!" appears in the shell screen 3 October 2017 Birkbeck College, U. London

Birkbeck College, U. London Commentary # My first program is a comment. It is ignored by the interpreter print("Hello World!") is a statement print is the name of a function print("Hello World!") is a function call The string "Hello World!" is an argument for the function print() 3 October 2017 Birkbeck College, U. London

Birkbeck College, U. London Colour Coding in IDLE Red for comments: # My first program Purple for functions: print(…) Green for data: "Hello World!" Blue for output: "Hello World!" 3 October 2017 Birkbeck College, U. London

Birkbeck College, U. London More About Functions A function is a collection of programming instructions that carry out a particular task Example: print as in print("Hello World!") We know the name of the function, the data supplied to the function and the data obtained from the function (in this example as printed output) The programming instructions within the function print are hidden 3 October 2017 Birkbeck College, U. London

Birkbeck College, U. London Calls to print print("The answer is", 6+7, "!") # three arguments # The printed output is The answer is 13 ! print("Hello") # one argument print() # no arguments. A blank line is printed print("World") # one argument Hello World 3 October 2017 Birkbeck College, U. London

Birkbeck College, U. London Errors Python is case sensitive: Print("Hello World!") # error if print is intended PRINT("Hello World!") # error if print is intended Syntax errors: print(Hello World!) print("Hello World!) 3 October 2017 Birkbeck College, U. London

Birkbeck College, U. London Indentation # Statements must begin in the same column # The following statements are in error print("Hello") print("World") 3 October 2017 Birkbeck College, U. London

Birkbeck College, U. London Compile Time Error An error in the syntax (grammar of Python) is detected by the compiler, e.g. print(Hello World!) An error message is produced, in this case SyntaxError: invalid syntax The error must be corrected `by hand` 3 October 2017 Birkbeck College, U. London

Birkbeck College, U. London Run Time Errors Run time exception: the program is compiled but the run time process stops when the error is encountered, e.g. print(1/0) A run time exception produces an error message, in this case ZeroDivisionError: int division or modulo by zero Run time error (but not an exception): the program runs but does not produce the desired result, e.g. print("Helo World!") 3 October 2017 Birkbeck College, U. London

Birkbeck College, U. London Questions What does this program print? print("39+3") print(39+3) print("Hello", "World", "!") What is the compile time error in this program? print("Hello", "World!) 3 October 2017 Birkbeck College, U. London