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I am teaching a course "Introduction to Computer Programming" to the first year math students. One has to assume that this is the first exposure of students to computer programming. Here are the main goals of my teaching:

  • Students should learn and understand the basics of Python.
  • Eventually they need to master sufficiently many Python tools so that they are able to select the right tool for a given problem.
  • At the same time they have to learn basic skills of problem solving by computer programming.

My method of teaching is to give for each newly introduced concept a series of problems and teasers that motivate students. For instance, when introducing strings and lists a natural question is the task of string or list reversal. If I ask students to write a code that will check whether a string is a palindrome then I better tell them how to reverse it.

For lists, a natural solution myString.reverse() has at least two drawbacks:

  1. It does not carry over to strings.
  2. Students will see it a magic unless told about methods first.

The real question is: How should one introduce the problem of reversing a string in Python?

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    What is so hard about telling them to use myString[::-1]?
    – poke
    Mar 13, 2010 at 17:21
  • 5
    Please provide the material you're thinking of using. This is a trivial function in Python and doesn't require any "teaching". It's already in the library. What are you trying to teach? Algorithms? Data structures? How to search in the Library? How to Avoid using Google? Please provide more background in your question.
    – S.Lott
    Mar 13, 2010 at 17:21
  • I can do that, but will they understand or just learn another trick? Mar 13, 2010 at 17:24
  • I think stride notation is the easiest way to teach python beginners string reversing. Mar 13, 2010 at 17:25
  • @Tomaž Pisanski: What's your goal? What are you trying to teach them? Please provide a summary of the course material so we know where this fits. What is the point of teaching "reversing a string"?
    – S.Lott
    Mar 13, 2010 at 18:06

6 Answers 6

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You could teach them about stride notation (::) first and then slicing and apply both.

s = 'string'
s = s[::-1]
print s  # gnirts

References and more information:

In response to your comment, you can supply either arguments.

>>> s[len(s):None:-1]  
'gnirts'
>>> s[5:None:-1]  
'gnirts'
>>> s[::-1]  # and of course
'gnirts'
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  • I was plugging various values for a and b into the statement s = s[a:b:-1] but I am unable to obtain the same effect as s = s[::-1]. Mar 13, 2010 at 22:40
  • What values you using for a and b? Mar 13, 2010 at 22:57
  • I edited my answer to incorporate a and b values that will reproduce the same results, hope that helps. Mar 13, 2010 at 23:04
  • Thanks! I would never have guessed. I did notice that 5 and 6 produce the same results, but None was beyond my abilities, while 0 miserably failed. Mar 13, 2010 at 23:27
  • Yeah 0 does miserably fail, and interesting fact to note that: None<0 evaluates to True Mar 13, 2010 at 23:32
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The two obvious ways are:

''.join(reversed(s))

and

s[::-1]

I think both are non-trivial for a programming newbie, but the concepts involved are not really that difficult.

The second way is easier to understand if you start by showing them what the results of s[::3], s[::2] and s[::1] are. Then s[::-1] will come naturally :)

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  • Very nice! Is the first solution more difficult to explain? Mar 14, 2010 at 4:45
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Just ask them a riddle like this:

why

>>> 'dammitimmad'[::-1] == 'dammitimmad'
True

but

>>> 'dammit im mad'[::-1] == 'dammit im mad'
False

?

2

Absolute beginners guide to string reversal in python. ;)

# Tell them that,
# to reverse a string
# we read it backwards

s = 'string'  # input string
l = len(s)
rs = ''       # reversed string

for i in range(l-1,-1,-1): # range(start,end,step)
    rs += s[i]

print rs

But this is not considered pythonic and I am in favor of better methods everyone else have already posted.

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    I agree with this. If you are trying to teach basic programming concepts using python, then go with the obvious (if non-optimal) way first. Then you can show them the "shortcut" once they understand the theory. (You know, like your math teachers always did? Man that pissed me off :) Then again, if your students already have basic programming skills down and you want to teach them Python specifically, do the slicing method and use it as an opportunity to examine slicing in general and how powerful it can be.
    – Toji
    Mar 13, 2010 at 17:40
  • You should avoid presenting bad code as the first method for anything. Mar 13, 2010 at 17:46
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    Having taught programming I can testify that showing them "bad code" that is easy to understand can be a very good start. Just make sure you have enough time in the period to then show them why it's not a good way to do it. Some of the "optimal" ways have so much below-the-surface magic going on that it will make their eyes glaze over. Don't let them out of the room without having seen other, better ways of accomplishing the same thing, otherwise the "bad code" sinks in overnight and then you have to dig it out of their brains the next day. Mar 13, 2010 at 18:20
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    @Mike Graham: Agreed. I was speaking to the more general idea of using less than optimal solutions to highlight information flow in an algorithm, and then progressing to tighter and tighter implementations, while showing that the same decisions are being made. @TheMachineCharmer: once your class is a little more advanced it can be a lot of fun to put some real howlers up on the board and rip into them. In an Introduction to Formal Logic course back in the early 70's we used to dissect Nixon's speeches with a scalpel -- great fun was had by all, except for a few Republicans in the class. :-) Mar 13, 2010 at 18:57
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    The best solution always depends on the available resources. I'm a Fortran programmer myself (still!) and try to use it the best I can. Good code to do similar operations in different languages looks dramatically different for obvious reasons, and in a given language good vs. bad code is of course quite subjective. Mar 13, 2010 at 19:43
1

Take a look at this discussion.

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Introduce them to enough tools (array slicing and perhaps functional-style recursion, in particular) to accomplish the reversal. Then, let them struggle with trying to figure it out for a while. Take a few different answers and compare them, showing the pros and cons of each way.

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