Write a flash card quizzer from scratch
- practice breaking down a problem and solving it in Python from scratch
- practice command line option parsing
- practice reading from files
- practice working with dictionaries and for loops
Write a Python script that takes a file containing flash card questions and answers as an argument
and quizzes the user based on the contents of that file until the user quits the program. Questions
should be selected randomly (as opposed to going in order through the file), and the user should
type in their guess. The script should say whether or not a guess is correct and provide the correct
answer if an incorrect answer is given.
The file will contain flash card challenges in the form:
question,answer
question,answer
question,answer
question,answer
...
For example, a state capitals flash card file might have the form:
Alabama,Montgomery
Alaska,Juneau
Arizona,Phoenix
...
Running the quizzer script with this file might look like this:
$ python quizzer.py state_capitals.txt
Texas? Austin
Correct! Nice job.
New Mexico? Santa Fe
Correct! Nice job.
Oregon? Portland
Incorrect. The correct answer is Salem.
Virginia? Richmond
Correct! Nice job.
Virginia? Exit
Goodbye
Download: http://web.mit.edu/jesstess/www/IntermediatePythonWorkshop/state_capitals.txt
Write the code to open and read state_capitals.txt (we'll deal with getting a variable
filename from the user later). Create a dictionary, where each comma-separated question and
answer become a key and value in the dictionary. Note that each line in the file ends in a
newline, which you'll need to remove from the word.
Step 1 resources:
- File I/O: http://docs.python.org/tutorial/inputoutput.html#reading-and-writing-files
- Stripping characters (like whitespace and newlines) from a string: http://docs.python.org/library/stdtypes.html#str.strip
Write a while loop that loops forever and at each iteration through the loop randomly
selects a key/value pair from the questions dictionary and prints the question.
To randomly select a key from the dictionary, you can use the random module, and in
particular the random.choice function.
When you run your script, to break out of the while loop you can press Control and then
(while still holding down Control) c.
Step 2 resources:
- While loops: http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Python_Programming/Flow_control#While_loops
- Dictionary manipulation: http://docs.python.org/tutorial/datastructures.html#dictionaries In particular, look at getting a list of the dictionary's keys using the keys method.
- Selecting a random value from a list using the random module: http://docs.python.org/library/random.html#random.choice
Inside your while loop, write the code that gets an answer from the user and compares it to
the answer retrieved from the questions dictionary. If the answer is correct, say so. If
the answer is incorrect, say so and print the correct answer.
You can get input from a user using the raw_input function.
It is up to you how strict you want to be with a user's answer. Do you want capitalization
to matter?
Step 3 resources:
- using raw_input to get data from the user: http://docs.python.org/library/functions.html#raw_input
The while loop currently runs forever. Pick a special phrase (like "Exit") that the user
can type instead of an answer that signals that they want to quit the program. When that
special phrase is given, print a goodbye message and break out of the while loop to end the
program.
Step 4 resources:
-
Using the break keyword to break out of a loop: http://docs.python.org/tutorial/controlflow.html#break-and-continue-statements-and-else-clauses-on-loops
-
Making decisions with if, elif, and else: http://docs.python.org/tutorial/controlflow.html#if-statements
Step 5: Get the quiz questions file from the user
Write the code to get the quiz questions file from a command line argument. Handle the case where a user forgets to supply a file; in this case, print an error message saying they need to supply a file, and then exit the program using the exit() function.
Step 5 resources:
- Command line argument parsing: http://docs.python.org/library/argparse.html#module-argparse
- Getting and checking the number of command line arguments: http://docs.python.org/library/sys.html