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In chapter 2, I have a couple of notes:
- The argparse module is a bit heavy handed for most purposes. In most cases, it is faster and easier to use
sys.argv. Surprisingly, it was a little hard to find good, simple examples ofsys.argvon a site that isn't riddled with popups, but I think this site should do.sys.argvis simply a list of arguments given to a python program, with the name of the program at index 0. - This comprehensive python cheatsheet should be included in the resources. Between this cheatsheet, google, and practice practice practice, you have the recipe for a good time learning python. For a less terse, more example-driven reference, I like learnXinYminutes
Notes for chapter 3:
The awk tutorial in the references is not very learner friendly for several reasons. It would be good to establish the usual awk 'condition {action}; another condition {another action}' file structure and then talk about possible conditions and actions in increasing complexity using examples. There are some ok tutorials out there, like this one, although this one makes a huge oversight in not mentioning regular expressions and piping into other commands like sort or uniq. Basically, I think it's worth fleshing out awk a bit.
- First with regex, like printing out field 3 of lines matching a regex:
awk '/^A[bc]+/ {print "The third field of this matching line is ",$3}' file.txt
- Then get into examples of the built in variables
NR,FNR,NF,FS,OFSto do things like averages. - Then maybe get into
BEGIN{} END{}, variables and associative arrays (usingBEGINrather than-v). - Then some basic flow control.
- Then show the possibilities of piping into
sort -rn,uniq -c, etc. - All of this, of course, driven by examples. I think that would give a strong enough foundation to tackle to parsing exercises.
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