Discussion 6: String Representation, Trees
Representation: Repr, Str
There are two main ways to produce the "string" of an object in Python:
str()
and repr()
. While the two are similar, they are
used for different purposes.
str()
is used to describe
the object to the end user in a "Human-readable" form,
while repr()
can be thought of as a "Computer-readable"
form mainly used for debugging and development.
When we define a class in Python, __str__
and __repr__
are
both built-in methods for the class.
We can call those methods using the
global built-in functions str(obj)
or repr(obj)
instead of
dot notation,
obj.__repr__()
or obj.__str__()
.
In addition, the print()
function calls the __str__
method of the object,
while simply calling the object in interactive mode calls the _repr__
method.
Here's an example:
class Rational:
def __init__(self, numerator, denominator):
self.numerator = numerator
self.denominator = denominator
def __str__(self):
return f'{self.numerator}/{self.denominator}'
def __repr__(self):
return f'Rational({self.numerator},{self.denominator})'
>>> a = Rational(1, 2)
>>> str(a)
'1/2'
>>> repr(a)
'Rational(1,2)'
>>> print(a)
1/2
>>> a
Rational(1,2)
Q1: WWPD: Repr-esentation
Note: This is not the typical way
repr
is used, nor is this way of writingrepr
recommended, this problem is mainly just to make sure you understand howrepr
andstr
work.
class A:
def __init__(self, x):
self.x = x
def __repr__(self):
return self.x
def __str__(self):
return self.x * 2
class B:
def __init__(self):
print('boo!')
self.a = []
def add_a(self, a):
self.a.append(a)
def __repr__(self):
print(len(self.a))
ret = ''
for a in self.a:
ret += str(a)
return ret
Given the above class definitions, what will the following lines output?
>>> A('one')
>>> print(A('one'))
>>> repr(A('two'))
>>> b = B()
>>> b.add_a(A('a'))
>>> b.add_a(A('b'))
>>> b
Trees
In computer science, trees are recursive data structures that are widely used in various settings and can be implemented in many ways. The diagram below is an example of a tree.
Generally in computer science, you may see trees drawn "upside-down" like so. We say the root is the node where the tree begins to branch out at the top, and the leaves are the nodes where the tree ends at the bottom.
Some terminology regarding trees:
- Parent Node: A node that has at least one branch.
- Child Node: A node that has a parent. A child node can only have one parent.
- Root: The top node of the tree.
In our example, this is the
1
node. - Label: The value at a node. In our example, every node's label is an integer.
- Leaf: A node that has no branches.
In our example, the
4
,5
,6
,2
nodes are leaves. - Branch: A subtree of the root. Trees have branches, which are trees themselves: this is why trees are recursive data structures.
- Depth: How far away a node is from the root.
We define this as the number of edges between the root to the node.
As there are no edges between the root and itself, the root has depth 0.
In our example, the
3
node has depth 1 and the4
node has depth 2. - Height: The depth of the lowest (furthest from the root) leaf.
In our example, the
4
,5
, and6
nodes are all the lowest leaves with depth 2. Thus, the entire tree has height 2.
In computer science, there are many different types of trees, used for different purposes. Some vary in the number of branches each node has; others vary in the structure of the tree.
A tree has a root value and a list of branches, where each branch is itself a tree.
- The
Tree
constructor takes in a valuelabel
for the root, and an optional list of branchesbranches
. Ifbranches
isn't given, the constructor uses the empty list[]
as the default. - To get the label of a tree
t
, we access the instance attributest.label
. - Accessing the instance attribute
t.branches
will give us a list of branches. Treating the return value oft.branches
as a list is then part of how we define trees.
With this in mind, we can create the tree from earlier using our constructor:
t = Tree(1,
[Tree(3,
[Tree(4),
Tree(5),
Tree(6)]),
Tree(2)])
Q2: Height
Write a function that returns the height of a tree. Recall that the height of a tree is the length of the longest path from the root to a leaf.
Run in 61A CodeQ3: Maximum Path Sum
Write a function that takes in a tree and returns the maximum sum of the values along any path in the tree. Recall that a path is from the tree's root to any leaf.
Run in 61A CodeQ4: Find Path
Write a function that takes in a tree and a value x
and returns a list containing the nodes along the path required to get from the root of
the tree to a node containing x
.
If x
is not present in the tree, return None
. Assume that the entries of the tree are unique.
For the following tree, find_path(t, 5)
should return [2, 7, 6, 5]
Q5: Prune Small
Complete the function prune_small
that takes in a Tree
t
and a
number n
and prunes t
mutatively. If t
or any of its branches
has more than n
branches, the n
branches with the smallest labels
should be kept and any other branches should be pruned, or removed,
from the tree.