Driving from Chicago to Dallas¶
As an example, imagine that you were planning to drive from Chicago to Dallas. If you know how many miles-per-gallon your car gets, and how many miles it is, you can estimate the number of gallons it will take.
Use the CodeLens below to trace through what it would look like for a computer to execute this program:
Now, if we know the average cost of a gallon of gas, we can figure out the cost of the trip from Chicago to Dallas in your car.
Note
Notice that in the code below that we are using variable names like costPerGallon
and costTrip
. A variable name can’t contain any spaces in it, so one way to make a variable name more readable when it contains more than one word is to use uppercase the first letter of each new word, as you see in costPerGallon
and costTrip
. This is also called camel case. Also be aware that case does matter in Python: costTrip
is a different name than costtrip
.
What we’re doing above is tracing a program. Normally, we run a program – tell the computer to execute each step of the program as fast as possible. When we do that, we don’t see individual variable values, as we can above. We can check values (including the values for variables) by printing them. The function print
can take an input (a variable name inside of parentheses) whose value will be displayed. The print
function can also print a string (like "Cost to get from Chicago to Dallas"
) which is a sequence of characters inside a pair of double quotes as seen in line 6. It will print the exact contents of the string. This is useful for explaining the values that you are printing.
Press the below to see this program run at full speed.
How does this program work? Try pressing the button above to listen to an explanation of the program.
Try editing the program above and running it to answer this question:
- Yes
- Yes, the cost would be $89.86 (which you knew by editing the program above and running it)
- No
- Try it -- it's just under $90.
- We should fly instead.
- You might be right, but figure out the cost by editing the above program
csp-3-6-4: If the cost per gallon drops to $3.45, can we drive from Chicago to Dallas for less than $90 in gas?
- 3.45
- This would be true if it was printing the value of original variable.
- 3.65
- This would be true if it was printing the value of the variable after you changed it to figure out the previous question.
- costPerGallon
- Since
costPerGallon
is in double quotes it is a string, and it will print out those exact characters.
csp-3-6-5: What would be printed by print("costPerGallon")
if this line was added to the end of the last program?