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= Reference material: parsing HTML using Nokogiri = | |||
Once you have received some HTML from a web server, you most likely want to analyze it. Use the library nokogiri for this. You can find installation instructions and tutorials here: http://www.nokogiri.org/tutorials/ |
Revision as of 15:27, 16 February 2017
About this course
This course teaches the Ruby programming language. By the end of the course you'll hopefully have a good understanding of:
- the basics of Ruby,
- tools commonly used in the Ruby ecosystem,
- written a few small Ruby applications,
- know about unit testing,
- know how to use third-party code (Ruby gems),
- know how to write web applications using Ruby.
Lecture Recordings
You can find recordings of the lectures here:
https://echo360.e-ope.ee/ess/portal/section/b02ab032-010b-4111-a53d-2f5a47db1fdd
About yourself
To help me make this course interesting for you and meet your expectations, please fill out this survey if you haven't done so already:
Reference material
Here you find a list of useful links to things that have been mentioned or discussed during the lectures:
Editors/IDEs
Grading
Students develop several small projects during the lectures and independent study. At the end of the course students pick one of their projects and are assigned a feature request to implement in their project and a set of questions about the code in their project.
Points are awarded for the following:
- 50 points for a working implementation of the feature request
- 40 points for an implementation of the feature request that works only for expected inputs
- 20 points for a running unfinished implementation (i.e. feature not fully implemented, but the program still runs)
- 10 points for an unfinished implementation (i.e. feature not fully implement and the program does not run).
- 20 points for providing automated tests for their implementation
- 10 points for proper use of version control
- 10 points for adhering to common Ruby coding standards
- 20 points for answering 80% of the questions correctly
The student needs at least 60 points in order to pass the course.
2017-02-02: Lecture and Lab
Analyzing bank statements
Given the following contents of a file called input.csv
transaction_id,date,amount,credit 1,2017-02-02 12:40,1.30,debit 2,2017-02-02 12:55,2.50,debit 3,2017-02-02 13:00,1.00,credit
Goal: find the amount of money left on your bank account.
Steps:
- read the data line by line
- analyze each line to find out whether it's credit or debit and the amount of money
- add all the debit transaction amounts (money lost)
- add all the credit transaction amounts (money gained)
- Output money gained - money lost
Our code so far:
File.open('input.csv', 'r') do |the_file|
lines = the_file.readlines.map do |line|
line.chomp.split(',')
end
lines = lines[1..-1]
debit_total = ''
lines.each do |line|
debit_total = debit_total + line[2]
end
puts debit_total
end
2017-02-09 Lecture
require 'minitest'
require 'minitest/autorun'
class BankAccount
class Error < StandardError; end
class BalanceNegative < Error; end
def initialize
@balance = 0
end
def deposit!(amount)
increse_balance!(amount)
self
end
def withdraw!(amount)
if enough_money?(amount)
reduce_balance!(amount)
else
raise StandardError, 'Not enough money!'
end
self
end
def balance
@balance
end
private
def enough_money?(amount)
balance >= amount
end
def reduce_balance!(amount)
@balance = @balance - amount
end
def increse_balance!(amount)
@balance = @balance + amount
end
end
class BankAccountTest < Minitest::Test
def setup
@account = BankAccount.new
end
def test_if_decreses_the_balance_when_withdrawing_money
@account.deposit!(101).withdraw!(50)
assert_equal 51, @account.balance
end
def test_if_increses_the_balance_when_depositing_money
@account.deposit!(196583)
assert_equal 196583, @account.balance
end
def test_if_account_does_not_go_in_to_negative
assert_raises BankAccount::BalanceNegative do
@account.deposit!(1).withdraw!(20)
end
end
def test_it_raises_bank_account_error_when_withdrawing_too_much_money
@account.deposit!(1).withdraw!(20)
rescue BankAccount::Error => err
assert true, 'everything is ok'
end
end
2017-02-16 Lecture and Lab: using modules and bundler
Modules in Ruby
- Modules are a collection of methods that can be included in another class
- By including the module in a class, objects belonging to that class get access to the methods defined in the module
- If multiple included modules define the same method, the method from the module that was included last counts
Example
module ModuleExample
def foo
'foo'
end
end
# Including modules binds their methods to the class instances
# Extending modules binds their methods to the class itself
class Person
include ModuleExample
end
class Book
extend ModuleExample
end
Person.foo # => NoMethodError: undefined method `foo' for Person:Class
Person.new.foo # => 'foo'
Book.foo # => 'foo'
Book.new.foo # => NoMethodError: undefined method `foo'
Structuring a project with bundler
- bundler is a Ruby program for managing dependencies in your ruby project
- bundler also helps you with creating a template for a project
- redistributable projects/libraries are called "gems" in ruby
- You can start your own project by running
bundle gem YOUR_PROJECT_NAME_HERE
. ReplaceYOUR_PROJECT_NAME_HERE
with the lower-cased name of your project.
Example structure of a project, as generated by bundler
$ tree . ├── bin │ ├── console │ └── setup ├── Gemfile ├── Gemfile.lock ├── I704.gemspec ├── lib │ ├── I704 │ │ ├── bank_account.rb │ │ └── version.rb │ └── I704.rb ├── LICENSE.txt ├── Rakefile ├── README.md └── test ├── I704 │ └── bank_account_test.rb ├── I704_test.rb └── test_helper.rb 5 directories, 14 files
Rule of thumb: put your code into the lib/YOUR_PROJECT_NAME
directory, one file per class (like bank_account.rb
in the example above)
Reference material: making HTTP requests in Ruby
- Require the "net/http" library in your program
- Use that library to make HTTP requests for fetching the HTML code behind a website
- See https://ruby-doc.org/stdlib-2.3.0/libdoc/net/http/rdoc/Net/HTTP.html for more examples of how to use this library
require 'net/http'
google_html = Net::HTTP.get(URI('http://google.com'))
# "<HTML><HEAD><meta http-equiv=\"content-type\" content=\"text/html;charset=utf-8\">\n<TITLE>302 Moved</TITLE></HEAD><BODY>\n<H1>302 Moved</H1>\nThe document has moved\n<A HREF=\"http://www.google.ee/?gfe_rd=cr&ei=o6KlWKCGA9Oq8wfoq5OQAg\">here</A>.\r\n</BODY></HTML>\r\n"
# Now you can work with the HTML returned by the server
Reference material: parsing HTML using Nokogiri
Once you have received some HTML from a web server, you most likely want to analyze it. Use the library nokogiri for this. You can find installation instructions and tutorials here: http://www.nokogiri.org/tutorials/
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