diff options
-rw-r--r-- | bash.html.markdown | 66 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | c++.html.markdown | 146 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | clojure.html.markdown | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | compojure.html.markdown | 8 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | elisp.html.markdown | 12 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | erlang.html.markdown | 96 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | fr-fr/json-fr.html.markdown | 62 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | fr-fr/r-fr.html.markdown | 746 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | fr-fr/typescript-fr.html.markdown | 174 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | groovy.html.markdown | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | haxe.html.markdown | 23 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | it-it/bash-it.html.markdown | 275 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | it-it/c++-it.html.markdown | 720 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | java.html.markdown | 202 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | json.html.markdown | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | julia.html.markdown | 8 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | nim.html.markdown | 20 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | perl6.html.markdown | 5 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | php.html.markdown | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | python3.html.markdown | 42 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | rust.html.markdown | 23 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | standard-ml.html.markdown | 42 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | visualbasic.html.markdown | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | zh-cn/bash-cn.html.markdown | 189 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | zh-cn/javascript-cn.html.markdown | 2 |
25 files changed, 2575 insertions, 298 deletions
diff --git a/bash.html.markdown b/bash.html.markdown index e0c12f97..08182c2c 100644 --- a/bash.html.markdown +++ b/bash.html.markdown @@ -32,39 +32,41 @@ echo Hello world! echo 'This is the first line'; echo 'This is the second line' # Declaring a variable looks like this: -VARIABLE="Some string" +Variable="Some string" # But not like this: -VARIABLE = "Some string" -# Bash will decide that VARIABLE is a command it must execute and give an error +Variable = "Some string" +# Bash will decide that Variable is a command it must execute and give an error # because it can't be found. # Or like this: -VARIABLE= 'Some string' +Variable= 'Some string' # Bash will decide that 'Some string' is a command it must execute and give an -# error because it can't be found. (In this case the 'VARIABLE=' part is seen +# error because it can't be found. (In this case the 'Variable=' part is seen # as a variable assignment valid only for the scope of the 'Some string' # command.) # Using the variable: -echo $VARIABLE -echo "$VARIABLE" -echo '$VARIABLE' +echo $Variable +echo "$Variable" +echo '$Variable' # When you use the variable itself — assign it, export it, or else — you write # its name without $. If you want to use variable's value, you should use $. # Note that ' (single quote) won't expand the variables! # String substitution in variables -echo ${VARIABLE/Some/A} -# This will substitute the first occurance of "Some" with "A" +echo ${Variable/Some/A} +# This will substitute the first occurrence of "Some" with "A" # Substring from a variable -echo ${VARIABLE:0:7} +Length=7 +echo ${Variable:0:Length} # This will return only the first 7 characters of the value # Default value for variable -echo ${FOO:-"DefaultValueIfFOOIsMissingOrEmpty"} -# This works for null (FOO=), empty string (FOO=""), zero (FOO=0) returns 0 +echo ${Foo:-"DefaultValueIfFooIsMissingOrEmpty"} +# This works for null (Foo=) and empty string (Foo=""); zero (Foo=0) returns 0. +# Note that it only returns default value and doesn't change variable value. # Builtin variables: # There are some useful builtin variables, like @@ -72,16 +74,16 @@ echo "Last program return value: $?" echo "Script's PID: $$" echo "Number of arguments: $#" echo "Scripts arguments: $@" -echo "Scripts arguments seperated in different variables: $1 $2..." +echo "Scripts arguments separated in different variables: $1 $2..." # Reading a value from input: echo "What's your name?" -read NAME # Note that we didn't need to declare a new variable -echo Hello, $NAME! +read Name # Note that we didn't need to declare a new variable +echo Hello, $Name! # We have the usual if structure: # use 'man test' for more info about conditionals -if [ $NAME -ne $USER ] +if [ $Name -ne $USER ] then echo "Your name isn't your username" else @@ -93,14 +95,14 @@ echo "Always executed" || echo "Only executed if first command fails" echo "Always executed" && echo "Only executed if first command does NOT fail" # To use && and || with if statements, you need multiple pairs of square brackets: -if [ $NAME == "Steve" ] && [ $AGE -eq 15 ] +if [ $Name == "Steve" ] && [ $Age -eq 15 ] then - echo "This will run if $NAME is Steve AND $AGE is 15." + echo "This will run if $Name is Steve AND $Age is 15." fi -if [ $NAME == "Daniya" ] || [ $NAME == "Zach" ] +if [ $Name == "Daniya" ] || [ $Name == "Zach" ] then - echo "This will run if $NAME is Daniya OR Zach." + echo "This will run if $Name is Daniya OR Zach." fi # Expressions are denoted with the following format: @@ -142,7 +144,7 @@ python hello.py > /dev/null 2>&1 # if you want to append instead, use ">>": python hello.py >> "output.out" 2>> "error.err" -# Overwrite output.txt, append to error.err, and count lines: +# Overwrite output.out, append to error.err, and count lines: info bash 'Basic Shell Features' 'Redirections' > output.out 2>> error.err wc -l output.out error.err @@ -150,7 +152,7 @@ wc -l output.out error.err # see: man fd echo <(echo "#helloworld") -# Overwrite output.txt with "#helloworld": +# Overwrite output.out with "#helloworld": cat > output.out <(echo "#helloworld") echo "#helloworld" > output.out echo "#helloworld" | cat > output.out @@ -169,7 +171,7 @@ echo "There are $(ls | wc -l) items here." echo "There are `ls | wc -l` items here." # Bash uses a case statement that works similarly to switch in Java and C++: -case "$VARIABLE" in +case "$Variable" in #List patterns for the conditions you want to meet 0) echo "There is a zero.";; 1) echo "There is a one.";; @@ -177,10 +179,10 @@ case "$VARIABLE" in esac # for loops iterate for as many arguments given: -# The contents of $VARIABLE is printed three times. -for VARIABLE in {1..3} +# The contents of $Variable is printed three times. +for Variable in {1..3} do - echo "$VARIABLE" + echo "$Variable" done # Or write it the "traditional for loop" way: @@ -191,16 +193,16 @@ done # They can also be used to act on files.. # This will run the command 'cat' on file1 and file2 -for VARIABLE in file1 file2 +for Variable in file1 file2 do - cat "$VARIABLE" + cat "$Variable" done # ..or the output from a command # This will cat the output from ls. -for OUTPUT in $(ls) +for Output in $(ls) do - cat "$OUTPUT" + cat "$Output" done # while loop: @@ -228,7 +230,7 @@ bar () } # Calling your function -foo "My name is" $NAME +foo "My name is" $Name # There are a lot of useful commands you should learn: # prints last 10 lines of file.txt diff --git a/c++.html.markdown b/c++.html.markdown index ae93ceba..ff2a98fd 100644 --- a/c++.html.markdown +++ b/c++.html.markdown @@ -288,7 +288,7 @@ public: // Functions can also be defined inside the class body. // Functions defined as such are automatically inlined. - void bark() const { std::cout << name << " barks!\n" } + void bark() const { std::cout << name << " barks!\n"; } // Along with constructors, C++ provides destructors. // These are called when an object is deleted or falls out of scope. @@ -300,7 +300,7 @@ public: }; // A semicolon must follow the class definition. // Class member functions are usually implemented in .cpp files. -void Dog::Dog() +Dog::Dog() { std::cout << "A dog has been constructed\n"; } @@ -323,7 +323,7 @@ void Dog::print() const std::cout << "Dog is " << name << " and weighs " << weight << "kg\n"; } -void Dog::~Dog() +Dog::~Dog() { cout << "Goodbye " << name << "\n"; } @@ -332,7 +332,7 @@ int main() { Dog myDog; // prints "A dog has been constructed" myDog.setName("Barkley"); myDog.setWeight(10); - myDog.printDog(); // prints "Dog is Barkley and weighs 10 kg" + myDog.print(); // prints "Dog is Barkley and weighs 10 kg" return 0; } // prints "Goodbye Barkley" @@ -341,7 +341,7 @@ int main() { // This class inherits everything public and protected from the Dog class class OwnedDog : public Dog { - void setOwner(const std::string& dogsOwner) + void setOwner(const std::string& dogsOwner); // Override the behavior of the print function for all OwnedDogs. See // http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polymorphism_(computer_science)#Subtyping @@ -425,7 +425,7 @@ int main () { Point up (0,1); Point right (1,0); // This calls the Point + operator - // Point up calls the + (function) with right as its paramater + // Point up calls the + (function) with right as its parameter Point result = up + right; // Prints "Result is upright (1,1)" cout << "Result is upright (" << result.x << ',' << result.y << ")\n"; @@ -433,6 +433,85 @@ int main () { } ///////////////////// +// Templates +///////////////////// + +// Templates in C++ are mostly used for generic programming, though they are +// much more powerful than generics constructs in other languages. It also +// supports explicit and partial specialization, functional-style type classes, +// and also it's Turing-complete. + +// We start with the kind of generic programming you might be familiar with. To +// define a class or function that takes a type parameter: +template<class T> +class Box { +public: + // In this class, T can be used as any other type. + void insert(const T&) { ... } +}; + +// During compilation, the compiler actually generates copies of each template +// with parameters substituted, and so the full definition of the class must be +// present at each invocation. This is why you will see template classes defined +// entirely in header files. + +// To instantiate a template class on the stack: +Box<int> intBox; + +// and you can use it as you would expect: +intBox.insert(123); + +// You can, of course, nest templates: +Box<Box<int> > boxOfBox; +boxOfBox.insert(intBox); + +// Up until C++11, you must place a space between the two '>'s, otherwise '>>' +// will be parsed as the right shift operator. + +// You will sometimes see +// template<typename T> +// instead. The 'class' keyword and 'typename' keyword are _mostly_ +// interchangeable in this case. For full explanation, see +// http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typename +// (yes, that keyword has its own Wikipedia page). + +// Similarly, a template function: +template<class T> +void barkThreeTimes(const T& input) +{ + input.bark(); + input.bark(); + input.bark(); +} + +// Notice that nothing is specified about the type parameters here. The compiler +// will generate and then type-check every invocation of the template, so the +// above function works with any type 'T' that has a const 'bark' method! + +Dog fluffy; +fluffy.setName("Fluffy") +barkThreeTimes(fluffy); // Prints "Fluffy barks" three times. + +// Template parameters don't have to be classes: +template<int Y> +void printMessage() { + cout << "Learn C++ in " << Y << " minutes!" << endl; +} + +// And you can explicitly specialize templates for more efficient code. Of +// course, most real-world uses of specialization are not as trivial as this. +// Note that you still need to declare the function (or class) as a template +// even if you explicitly specified all parameters. +template<> +void printMessage<10>() { + cout << "Learn C++ faster in only 10 minutes!" << endl; +} + +printMessage<20>(); // Prints "Learn C++ in 20 minutes!" +printMessage<10>(); // Prints "Learn C++ faster in only 10 minutes!" + + +///////////////////// // Exception Handling ///////////////////// @@ -440,12 +519,13 @@ int main () { // (see http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/error/exception) // but any type can be thrown an as exception #include <exception> +#include <stdexcept> // All exceptions thrown inside the _try_ block can be caught by subsequent // _catch_ handlers. try { // Do not allocate exceptions on the heap using _new_. - throw std::exception("A problem occurred"); + throw std::runtime_error("A problem occurred"); } // Catch exceptions by const reference if they are objects catch (const std::exception& ex) @@ -536,7 +616,7 @@ void doSomethingWithAFile(const char* filename) { FILE* fh = fopen(filename, "r"); // Open the file in read mode if (fh == nullptr) - throw std::exception("Could not open the file."); + throw std::runtime_error("Could not open the file."); try { doSomethingWithTheFile(fh); @@ -585,8 +665,56 @@ void doSomethingWithAFile(const std::string& filename) // vector (i.e. self-resizing array), hash maps, and so on // all automatically destroy their contents when they fall out of scope. // - Mutexes using lock_guard and unique_lock + + +///////////////////// +// Fun stuff +///////////////////// + +// Aspects of C++ that may be surprising to newcomers (and even some veterans). +// This section is, unfortunately, wildly incomplete; C++ is one of the easiest +// languages with which to shoot yourself in the foot. + +// You can override private methods! +class Foo { + virtual void bar(); +}; +class FooSub : public Foo { + virtual void bar(); // overrides Foo::bar! +}; + + +// 0 == false == NULL (most of the time)! +bool* pt = new bool; +*pt = 0; // Sets the value points by 'pt' to false. +pt = 0; // Sets 'pt' to the null pointer. Both lines compile without warnings. + +// nullptr is supposed to fix some of that issue: +int* pt2 = new int; +*pt2 = nullptr; // Doesn't compile +pt2 = nullptr; // Sets pt2 to null. + +// But somehow 'bool' type is an exception (this is to make `if (ptr)` compile). +*pt = nullptr; // This still compiles, even though '*pt' is a bool! + + +// '=' != '=' != '='! +// Calls Foo::Foo(const Foo&) or some variant copy constructor. +Foo f2; +Foo f1 = f2; + +// Calls Foo::Foo(const Foo&) or variant, but only copies the 'Foo' part of +// 'fooSub'. Any extra members of 'fooSub' are discarded. This sometimes +// horrifying behavior is called "object slicing." +FooSub fooSub; +Foo f1 = fooSub; + +// Calls Foo::operator=(Foo&) or variant. +Foo f1; +f1 = f2; + ``` -Futher Reading: +Further Reading: An up-to-date language reference can be found at <http://cppreference.com/w/cpp> diff --git a/clojure.html.markdown b/clojure.html.markdown index 7917ab08..a125d18f 100644 --- a/clojure.html.markdown +++ b/clojure.html.markdown @@ -22,7 +22,7 @@ and often automatically. ; Clojure is written in "forms", which are just ; lists of things inside parentheses, separated by whitespace. ; -; The clojure reader assumes that the first thing is a +; The clojure reader assumes that the first thing is a ; function or macro to call, and the rest are arguments. ; The first call in a file should be ns, to set the namespace diff --git a/compojure.html.markdown b/compojure.html.markdown index 36a8d123..32181e26 100644 --- a/compojure.html.markdown +++ b/compojure.html.markdown @@ -155,8 +155,8 @@ Now, your handlers may utilize query parameters: ```clojure (defroutes myapp (GET "/posts" req - (let [title (get (:params req) "title") - author (get (:params req) "author")] + (let [title (get (:params req) :title) + author (get (:params req) :author)] (str "Title: " title ", Author: " author)))) ``` @@ -165,8 +165,8 @@ Or, for POST and PUT requests, form parameters as well ```clojure (defroutes myapp (POST "/posts" req - (let [title (get (:params req) "title") - author (get (:params req) "author")] + (let [title (get (:params req) :title) + author (get (:params req) :author)] (str "Title: " title ", Author: " author)))) ``` diff --git a/elisp.html.markdown b/elisp.html.markdown index 3208ffb8..3bed5d1c 100644 --- a/elisp.html.markdown +++ b/elisp.html.markdown @@ -29,7 +29,7 @@ filename: learn-emacs-lisp.el ;; I hereby decline any responsability. Have fun! ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; -;; +;; ;; Fire up Emacs. ;; ;; Hit the `q' key to dismiss the welcome message. @@ -42,9 +42,9 @@ filename: learn-emacs-lisp.el ;; The scratch buffer is the default buffer when opening Emacs. ;; You are never editing files: you are editing buffers that you ;; can save to a file. -;; +;; ;; "Lisp interaction" refers to a set of commands available here. -;; +;; ;; Emacs has a built-in set of commands available in every buffer, ;; and several subsets of commands available when you activate a ;; specific mode. Here we use the `lisp-interaction-mode', which @@ -109,7 +109,7 @@ filename: learn-emacs-lisp.el ;; The empty parentheses in the function's definition means that ;; it does not accept arguments. But always using `my-name' is ;; boring, let's tell the function to accept one argument (here -;; the argument is called "name"): +;; the argument is called "name"): (defun hello (name) (insert "Hello " name)) ;; `C-xC-e' => hello @@ -305,7 +305,7 @@ filename: learn-emacs-lisp.el (defun boldify-names () (switch-to-buffer-other-window "*test*") (goto-char (point-min)) - (while (re-search-forward "Bonjour \\([^!]+\\)!" nil 't) + (while (re-search-forward "Bonjour \\(.+\\)!" nil 't) (add-text-properties (match-beginning 1) (match-end 1) (list 'face 'bold))) @@ -318,7 +318,7 @@ filename: learn-emacs-lisp.el ;; The regular expression is "Bonjour \\(.+\\)!" and it reads: ;; the string "Bonjour ", and ;; a group of | this is the \\( ... \\) construct -;; any character not ! | this is the [^!] +;; any character | this is the . ;; possibly repeated | this is the + ;; and the "!" string. diff --git a/erlang.html.markdown b/erlang.html.markdown index a7390c3e..a3b571d1 100644 --- a/erlang.html.markdown +++ b/erlang.html.markdown @@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ filename: learnerlang.erl % Periods (`.`) (followed by whitespace) separate entire functions and % expressions in the shell. % Semicolons (`;`) separate clauses. We find clauses in several contexts: -% function definitions and in `case`, `if`, `try..catch` and `receive` +% function definitions and in `case`, `if`, `try..catch`, and `receive` % expressions. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% @@ -27,20 +27,20 @@ filename: learnerlang.erl Num = 42. % All variable names must start with an uppercase letter. -% Erlang has single assignment variables, if you try to assign a different value -% to the variable `Num`, you’ll get an error. +% Erlang has single-assignment variables; if you try to assign a different +% value to the variable `Num`, you’ll get an error. Num = 43. % ** exception error: no match of right hand side value 43 % In most languages, `=` denotes an assignment statement. In Erlang, however, -% `=` denotes a pattern matching operation. `Lhs = Rhs` really means this: -% evaluate the right side (Rhs), and then match the result against the pattern -% on the left side (Lhs). +% `=` denotes a pattern-matching operation. `Lhs = Rhs` really means this: +% evaluate the right side (`Rhs`), and then match the result against the +% pattern on the left side (`Lhs`). Num = 7 * 6. -% Floating point number. +% Floating-point number. Pi = 3.14159. -% Atoms, are used to represent different non-numerical constant values. Atoms +% Atoms are used to represent different non-numerical constant values. Atoms % start with lowercase letters, followed by a sequence of alphanumeric % characters or the underscore (`_`) or at (`@`) sign. Hello = hello. @@ -53,34 +53,34 @@ AtomWithSpace = 'some atom with space'. % Tuples are similar to structs in C. Point = {point, 10, 45}. -% If we want to extract some values from a tuple, we use the pattern matching +% If we want to extract some values from a tuple, we use the pattern-matching % operator `=`. {point, X, Y} = Point. % X = 10, Y = 45 % We can use `_` as a placeholder for variables that we’re not interested in. % The symbol `_` is called an anonymous variable. Unlike regular variables, -% several occurrences of _ in the same pattern don’t have to bind to the same -% value. +% several occurrences of `_` in the same pattern don’t have to bind to the +% same value. Person = {person, {name, {first, joe}, {last, armstrong}}, {footsize, 42}}. {_, {_, {_, Who}, _}, _} = Person. % Who = joe % We create a list by enclosing the list elements in square brackets and % separating them with commas. % The individual elements of a list can be of any type. -% The first element of a list is the head of the list. If you imagine removing the -% head from the list, what’s left is called the tail of the list. +% The first element of a list is the head of the list. If you imagine removing +% the head from the list, what’s left is called the tail of the list. ThingsToBuy = [{apples, 10}, {pears, 6}, {milk, 3}]. % If `T` is a list, then `[H|T]` is also a list, with head `H` and tail `T`. % The vertical bar (`|`) separates the head of a list from its tail. % `[]` is the empty list. -% We can extract elements from a list with a pattern matching operation. If we +% We can extract elements from a list with a pattern-matching operation. If we % have a nonempty list `L`, then the expression `[X|Y] = L`, where `X` and `Y` % are unbound variables, will extract the head of the list into `X` and the tail % of the list into `Y`. [FirstThing|OtherThingsToBuy] = ThingsToBuy. % FirstThing = {apples, 10} -% OtherThingsToBuy = {pears, 6}, {milk, 3} +% OtherThingsToBuy = [{pears, 6}, {milk, 3}] % There are no strings in Erlang. Strings are really just lists of integers. % Strings are enclosed in double quotation marks (`"`). @@ -117,17 +117,19 @@ c(geometry). % {ok,geometry} geometry:area({rectangle, 10, 5}). % 50 geometry:area({circle, 1.4}). % 6.15752 -% In Erlang, two functions with the same name and different arity (number of arguments) -% in the same module represent entirely different functions. +% In Erlang, two functions with the same name and different arity (number of +% arguments) in the same module represent entirely different functions. -module(lib_misc). --export([sum/1]). % export function `sum` of arity 1 accepting one argument: list of integers. +-export([sum/1]). % export function `sum` of arity 1 + % accepting one argument: list of integers. sum(L) -> sum(L, 0). sum([], N) -> N; sum([H|T], N) -> sum(T, H+N). -% Funs are "anonymous" functions. They are called this way because they have no -% name. However they can be assigned to variables. -Double = fun(X) -> 2*X end. % `Double` points to an anonymous function with handle: #Fun<erl_eval.6.17052888> +% Funs are "anonymous" functions. They are called this way because they have +% no name. However, they can be assigned to variables. +Double = fun(X) -> 2 * X end. % `Double` points to an anonymous function + % with handle: #Fun<erl_eval.6.17052888> Double(2). % 4 % Functions accept funs as their arguments and can return funs. @@ -140,8 +142,9 @@ Triple(5). % 15 % The notation `[F(X) || X <- L]` means "the list of `F(X)` where `X` is taken % from the list `L`." L = [1,2,3,4,5]. -[2*X || X <- L]. % [2,4,6,8,10] -% A list comprehension can have generators and filters which select subset of the generated values. +[2 * X || X <- L]. % [2,4,6,8,10] +% A list comprehension can have generators and filters, which select subset of +% the generated values. EvenNumbers = [N || N <- [1, 2, 3, 4], N rem 2 == 0]. % [2, 4] % Guards are constructs that we can use to increase the power of pattern @@ -155,17 +158,24 @@ max(X, Y) -> Y. % A guard is a series of guard expressions, separated by commas (`,`). % The guard `GuardExpr1, GuardExpr2, ..., GuardExprN` is true if all the guard -% expressions `GuardExpr1, GuardExpr2, ...` evaluate to true. +% expressions `GuardExpr1`, `GuardExpr2`, ..., `GuardExprN` evaluate to `true`. is_cat(A) when is_atom(A), A =:= cat -> true; is_cat(A) -> false. is_dog(A) when is_atom(A), A =:= dog -> true; is_dog(A) -> false. -% A `guard sequence` is either a single guard or a series of guards, separated -%by semicolons (`;`). The guard sequence `G1; G2; ...; Gn` is true if at least -% one of the guards `G1, G2, ...` evaluates to true. -is_pet(A) when is_dog(A); is_cat(A) -> true; -is_pet(A) -> false. +% A guard sequence is either a single guard or a series of guards, separated +% by semicolons (`;`). The guard sequence `G1; G2; ...; Gn` is true if at +% least one of the guards `G1`, `G2`, ..., `Gn` evaluates to `true`. +is_pet(A) when is_atom(A), (A =:= dog) or (A =:= cat) -> true; +is_pet(A) -> false. + +% Warning: not all valid Erlang expressions can be used as guard expressions; +% in particular, our `is_cat` and `is_dog` functions cannot be used within the +% guard sequence in `is_pet`'s definition. For a description of the +% expressions allowed in guard sequences, refer to this +% [section](http://erlang.org/doc/reference_manual/expressions.html#id81912) +% of the Erlang reference manual. % Records provide a method for associating a name with a particular element in a % tuple. @@ -188,7 +198,7 @@ X = #todo{}. X1 = #todo{status = urgent, text = "Fix errata in book"}. % #todo{status = urgent, who = joe, text = "Fix errata in book"} X2 = X1#todo{status = done}. -% #todo{status = done,who = joe,text = "Fix errata in book"} +% #todo{status = done, who = joe, text = "Fix errata in book"} % `case` expressions. % `filter` returns a list of all elements `X` in a list `L` for which `P(X)` is @@ -209,8 +219,8 @@ max(X, Y) -> true -> nil end. -% Warning: at least one of the guards in the `if` expression must evaluate to true; -% otherwise, an exception will be raised. +% Warning: at least one of the guards in the `if` expression must evaluate to +% `true`; otherwise, an exception will be raised. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% @@ -218,7 +228,7 @@ max(X, Y) -> %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% % Exceptions are raised by the system when internal errors are encountered or -% explicitly in code by calling `throw(Exception)`, `exit(Exception)` or +% explicitly in code by calling `throw(Exception)`, `exit(Exception)`, or % `erlang:error(Exception)`. generate_exception(1) -> a; generate_exception(2) -> throw(a); @@ -227,7 +237,7 @@ generate_exception(4) -> {'EXIT', a}; generate_exception(5) -> erlang:error(a). % Erlang has two methods of catching an exception. One is to enclose the call to -% the function, which raised the exception within a `try...catch` expression. +% the function that raises the exception within a `try...catch` expression. catcher(N) -> try generate_exception(N) of Val -> {N, normal, Val} @@ -241,23 +251,24 @@ catcher(N) -> % exception, it is converted into a tuple that describes the error. catcher(N) -> catch generate_exception(N). -%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% + +%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% %% 4. Concurrency %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% % Erlang relies on the actor model for concurrency. All we need to write -% concurrent programs in erlang are three primitives: spawning processes, +% concurrent programs in Erlang are three primitives: spawning processes, % sending messages and receiving messages. -% To start a new process we use the `spawn` function, which takes a function +% To start a new process, we use the `spawn` function, which takes a function % as argument. F = fun() -> 2 + 2 end. % #Fun<erl_eval.20.67289768> spawn(F). % <0.44.0> -% `spawn` returns a pid (process identifier), you can use this pid to send -% messages to the process. To do message passing we use the `!` operator. -% For all of this to be useful we need to be able to receive messages. This is +% `spawn` returns a pid (process identifier); you can use this pid to send +% messages to the process. To do message passing, we use the `!` operator. +% For all of this to be useful, we need to be able to receive messages. This is % achieved with the `receive` mechanism: -module(calculateGeometry). @@ -272,12 +283,13 @@ calculateArea() -> io:format("We can only calculate area of rectangles or circles.") end. -% Compile the module and create a process that evaluates `calculateArea` in the shell +% Compile the module and create a process that evaluates `calculateArea` in the +% shell. c(calculateGeometry). CalculateArea = spawn(calculateGeometry, calculateArea, []). CalculateArea ! {circle, 2}. % 12.56000000000000049738 -% The shell is also a process, you can use `self` to get the current pid +% The shell is also a process; you can use `self` to get the current pid. self(). % <0.41.0> ``` diff --git a/fr-fr/json-fr.html.markdown b/fr-fr/json-fr.html.markdown new file mode 100644 index 00000000..49c95820 --- /dev/null +++ b/fr-fr/json-fr.html.markdown @@ -0,0 +1,62 @@ +--- +language: json +filename: learnjson-fr.json +contributors: + - ["Anna Harren", "https://github.com/iirelu"] + - ["Marco Scannadinari", "https://github.com/marcoms"] +translators: + - ["Alois de Gouvello","https://github.com/aloisdg"] +lang: fr-fr +--- + +Comme JSON est un format d'échange de données extrêmement simple, ce Apprendre X en Y minutes +est susceptible d'être le plus simple jamais réalisé. + +JSON dans son état le plus pur n'a aucun commentaire, mais la majorité des parseurs accepterons +les commentaires du langage C (`//`, `/* */`). Pour les besoins de ce document, cependant, +tout sera du JSON 100% valide. Heureusement, il s'explique par lui-même. + + +```json +{ + "Clé": "valeur", + + "Clés": "devront toujours être entourées par des guillemets", + "nombres": 0, + "chaînes de caractères": "Hellø, wørld. Tous les caractères Unicode sont autorisés, accompagné d'un \"caractère d'échappement\".", + "a des booléens ?": true, + "rien": null, + + "grand nombre": 1.2e+100, + + "objets": { + "commentaire": "La majorité de votre strucutre sera des objets.", + + "tableau": [0, 1, 2, 3, "Les tableaux peuvent contenir n'importe quoi.", 5], + + "un autre objet": { + "commentaire": "Ces choses peuvent être imbriquées. C'est très utile." + } + }, + + "bêtises": [ + { + "sources de potassium": ["bananes"] + }, + [ + [1, 0, 0, 0], + [0, 1, 0, 0], + [0, 0, 1, "neo"], + [0, 0, 0, 1] + ] + ], + + "style alternatif": { + "commentaire": "regarde ça !" + , "position de la virgule": "n'a pas d'importance - aussi longtemps qu'elle est avant la valeur, alors elle est valide." + , "un autre commentaire": "comme c'est gentil" + }, + + "C'était court": "Et, vous avez terminé. Maintenant, vous savez tout ce que JSON a à offrir." +} +``` diff --git a/fr-fr/r-fr.html.markdown b/fr-fr/r-fr.html.markdown new file mode 100644 index 00000000..3f225a0f --- /dev/null +++ b/fr-fr/r-fr.html.markdown @@ -0,0 +1,746 @@ +--- +language: R +contributors: + - ["e99n09", "http://github.com/e99n09"] + - ["isomorphismes", "http://twitter.com/isomorphisms"] +translators: + - ["Anne-Catherine Dehier", "https://github.com/spellart"] +filename: learnr-fr.r +--- + +R est un langage de programmation statistique. Il dispose de nombreuses +bibliothèques pour le téléchargement et le nettoyage d'ensembles de données, +l'exécution de procédures statistiques, et la réalisation de graphiques. +On peut également exécuter des commmandes `R` au sein d'un document LaTeX. + + +```r + +# Les commentaires commencent avec des symboles numériques. + +# Il n'est pas possible de faire des commentaires multilignes, +# mais on peut placer plusieurs commentaires les uns en dessous +# des autres comme ceci. + +# Sur Mac, taper COMMAND-ENTER pour exécuter une ligne +# et sur Windows taper CTRL-ENTER + + + +######################################################################## +# Les choses que vous pouvez faire sans rien comprendre +# à la programmation +######################################################################## + +# Dans cette section, nous vous montrons quelques trucs cools que vous +# pouvez faire avec R sans rien comprendre à la programmation. +# Ne vous inquiétez pas si vous ne comprenez pas tout ce que le code fait. +# Profitez simplement ! + +data() # parcours les ensembles de données préchargées +data(rivers) # récupère ceci : "Lengths of Major North American Rivers" +ls() # notez que "rivers" apparaît maintenant dans votre espace de travail +head(rivers) # donne un aperçu des données +# 735 320 325 392 524 450 + +length(rivers) # Combien de rivers ont été mesurées ? +# 141 +summary(rivers) # Quelles sont les principales données statistiques ? +# Min. 1st Qu. Median Mean 3rd Qu. Max. +# 135.0 310.0 425.0 591.2 680.0 3710.0 + +# Fait un diagramme à tiges et à feuilles (visualisation de données de +# types histogramme) +stem(rivers) + + +# Le point décimal est de 2 chiffres à droite du | +# +# 0 | 4 +# 2 | 011223334555566667778888899900001111223333344455555666688888999 +# 4 | 111222333445566779001233344567 +# 6 | 000112233578012234468 +# 8 | 045790018 +# 10 | 04507 +# 12 | 1471 +# 14 | 56 +# 16 | 7 +# 18 | 9 +# 20 | +# 22 | 25 +# 24 | 3 +# 26 | +# 28 | +# 30 | +# 32 | +# 34 | +# 36 | 1 + +stem(log(rivers)) # Notez que les données ne sont ni normales +# ni lognormales ! +# Prenez-ça, la courbe en cloche + +# Le point décimal est à 1 chiffre à gauche du | +# +# 48 | 1 +# 50 | +# 52 | 15578 +# 54 | 44571222466689 +# 56 | 023334677000124455789 +# 58 | 00122366666999933445777 +# 60 | 122445567800133459 +# 62 | 112666799035 +# 64 | 00011334581257889 +# 66 | 003683579 +# 68 | 0019156 +# 70 | 079357 +# 72 | 89 +# 74 | 84 +# 76 | 56 +# 78 | 4 +# 80 | +# 82 | 2 + +# Fait un histogramme : +hist(rivers, col="#333333", border="white", breaks=25) # amusez-vous avec ces paramètres +hist(log(rivers), col="#333333", border="white", breaks=25) # vous ferez plus de tracés plus tard + +# Ici d'autres données qui viennent préchargées. R en a des tonnes. +data(discoveries) +plot(discoveries, col="#333333", lwd=3, xlab="Year", + main="Number of important discoveries per year") +plot(discoveries, col="#333333", lwd=3, type = "h", xlab="Year", + main="Number of important discoveries per year") + +# Plutôt que de laisser l'ordre par défaut (par année) +# Nous pourrions aussi trier pour voir ce qu'il y a de typique +sort(discoveries) +# [1] 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 +# [26] 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 3 3 +# [51] 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 +# [76] 4 4 4 4 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 6 6 6 6 6 6 7 7 7 7 8 9 10 12 + +stem(discoveries, scale=2) +# +# Le point décimale est à la | +# +# 0 | 000000000 +# 1 | 000000000000 +# 2 | 00000000000000000000000000 +# 3 | 00000000000000000000 +# 4 | 000000000000 +# 5 | 0000000 +# 6 | 000000 +# 7 | 0000 +# 8 | 0 +# 9 | 0 +# 10 | 0 +# 11 | +# 12 | 0 + +max(discoveries) +# 12 +summary(discoveries) +# Min. 1st Qu. Median Mean 3rd Qu. Max. +# 0.0 2.0 3.0 3.1 4.0 12.0 + +# Lance un dé plusieurs fois +round(runif(7, min=.5, max=6.5)) +# 1 4 6 1 4 6 4 +# Vos numéros diffèreront des miens à moins que nous mettions +# le même random.seed(31337) + +# Dessine à partir d'une normale Gaussienne 9 fois +rnorm(9) +# [1] 0.07528471 1.03499859 1.34809556 -0.82356087 0.61638975 -1.88757271 +# [7] -0.59975593 0.57629164 1.08455362 + + + +############################################################## +# les types de données et l'arithmétique de base +############################################################## + +# Maintenant pour la partie orientée programmation du tutoriel. +# Dans cette section vous rencontrerez les types de données importants de R : +# les entiers, les numériques, les caractères, les logiques, et les facteurs. + +# LES ENTIERS +# Les entiers de type long sont écrits avec L +5L # 5 +class(5L) # "integer" +# (Essayez ?class pour plus d'informations sur la fonction class().) +# Avec R, chaque valeur seule, comme 5L, est considérée comme +# un vecteur de longueur 1 +length(5L) # 1 +# On peut avoir un vecteur d'entiers avec une longueur > 1 : +c(4L, 5L, 8L, 3L) # 4 5 8 3 +length(c(4L, 5L, 8L, 3L)) # 4 +class(c(4L, 5L, 8L, 3L)) # "integer" + +# LES NUMÉRIQUES +# Un "numeric" est un nombre à virgule flottante d'une précision double +5 # 5 +class(5) # "numeric" +# Encore une fois, tout dans R est un vecteur ; +# Vous pouvez faire un vecteur numérique avec plus d'un élément +c(3,3,3,2,2,1) # 3 3 3 2 2 1 +# Vous pouvez aussi utiliser la notation scientifique +5e4 # 50000 +6.02e23 # nombre d'Avogadro +1.6e-35 # longueur de Planck +# Vous pouvez également avoir des nombres infiniments grands ou petits +class(Inf) # "numeric" +class(-Inf) # "numeric" +# Vous pouvez utiliser "Inf", par exemple, dans integrate(dnorm, 3, Inf); +# Ça permet d'éviter de réaliser une table de la loi normale. + +# ARITHMÉTIQUES DE BASE +# Vous pouvez faire de l'arithmétique avec des nombres +# Faire des opérations arithmétiques en mixant des entiers +# et des numériques +# donne un autre numérique +10L + 66L # 76 # un entier plus un entier donne un entier +53.2 - 4 # 49.2 # un numérique moins un numérique donne un numérique +2.0 * 2L # 4 # un numérique multiplié par un entier donne un numérique +3L / 4 # 0.75 # un entier sur un numérique donne un numérique +3 %% 2 # 1 # le reste de deux numériques est un autre numérique +# Les opérations arithmétiques illégales donnent un "Not A Number" : +0 / 0 # NaN +class(NaN) # "numeric" +# Vous pouvez faire des opérations arithmétiques avec deux vecteurs d'une +# longueur plus grande que 1, à condition que la longueur du plus grand +# vecteur soit un multiple entier du plus petit +c(1,2,3) + c(1,2,3) # 2 4 6 + +# LES CARACTÈRES +# Il n'y a pas de différences entre les chaînes de caractères et +# les caractères en R +"Horatio" # "Horatio" +class("Horatio") # "character" +class('H') # "character" +# Ceux-ci sont tous les deux des vecteurs de longueur 1 +# Ici un plus long : +c('alef', 'bet', 'gimmel', 'dalet', 'he') +# => +# "alef" "bet" "gimmel" "dalet" "he" +length(c("Call","me","Ishmael")) # 3 +# Vous pouvez utiliser des expressions rationnelles sur les vecteurs de caractères : +substr("Fortuna multis dat nimis, nulli satis.", 9, 15) # "multis " +gsub('u', 'ø', "Fortuna multis dat nimis, nulli satis.") # "Fortøna møltis dat nimis, nølli satis." +# R possède plusieurs vecteurs de caractères préconstruits : +letters +# => +# [1] "a" "b" "c" "d" "e" "f" "g" "h" "i" "j" "k" "l" "m" "n" "o" "p" "q" "r" "s" +# [20] "t" "u" "v" "w" "x" "y" "z" +month.abb # "Jan" "Feb" "Mar" "Apr" "May" "Jun" "Jul" "Aug" "Sep" "Oct" "Nov" "Dec" + +# LES TYPES BOOLÉENS +# En R, un "logical" est un booléen +class(TRUE) # "logical" +class(FALSE) # "logical" +# Leur comportement est normal +TRUE == TRUE # TRUE +TRUE == FALSE # FALSE +FALSE != FALSE # FALSE +FALSE != TRUE # TRUE +# Les données manquantes (NA) sont logiques également +class(NA) # "logical" +# On utilise | et & pour les operations logiques. +# OR +TRUE | FALSE # TRUE +# AND +TRUE & FALSE # FALSE +# Vous pouvez tester si x est TRUE +isTRUE(TRUE) # TRUE +# Ici nous avons un vecteur de type logique avec plusieurs éléments : +c('Z', 'o', 'r', 'r', 'o') == "Zorro" # FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE +c('Z', 'o', 'r', 'r', 'o') == "Z" # TRUE FALSE FALSE FALSE FALSE + +# LES FACTEURS +# Les facteurs sont généralement utilisés pour y stocker des +# variables qualitatives (catégorielles). +# Les facteurs peuvent être ordonnés (comme le niveau scolaire +# des enfants) ou non ordonnés (comme le sexe) +factor(c("female", "female", "male", NA, "female")) +# female female male <NA> female +# Les niveaux : female male +# Les facteurs possèdent un attribut appelé niveau ("level"). +# Les niveaux sont des vecteurs contenant toutes les valeurs +# que peuvent prendre les données catégorielles. +# Notez que les données manquantes n'entrent pas dans le niveau +levels(factor(c("male", "male", "female", NA, "female"))) # "female" "male" +# Si le vecteur de facteurs a une longueur 1, ses niveaux seront +# de longueur 1 également +length(factor("male")) # 1 +length(levels(factor("male"))) # 1 +# On rencontre communément des facteurs dans des "data frame", +# un type de données que nous couvrirons plus tard +data(infert) # "Infertility after Spontaneous and Induced Abortion" +levels(infert$education) # "0-5yrs" "6-11yrs" "12+ yrs" + +# NULL +# "NULL" est bizarre ; on l'utilise pour effacer un vecteur +class(NULL) # NULL +parakeet = c("beak", "feathers", "wings", "eyes") +parakeet +# => +# [1] "beak" "feathers" "wings" "eyes" +parakeet <- NULL +parakeet +# => +# NULL + +# LES CONVERSIONS DE TYPES +# Les conversions de types servent à forcer une valeur à prendre +# un type différent +as.character(c(6, 8)) # "6" "8" +as.logical(c(1,0,1,1)) # TRUE FALSE TRUE TRUE +# Si vous mettez des éléments de différents types dans un vecteur, +# des coercitions bizarres se produisent : +c(TRUE, 4) # 1 4 +c("dog", TRUE, 4) # "dog" "TRUE" "4" +as.numeric("Bilbo") +# => +# [1] NA +# Message d'avertissement : +# NAs est introduit par coercition + +# Notez également : ce n'étaient que des types de données basiques +# Il y a beaucoup d'autres types de données, comme les dates, +# les séries temporelles, etc ... + + + +####################################### +# Variables, boucles , if/else +####################################### + +# Une variable est comme une boîte dans laquelle on garde une valeur +# pour l'utiliser plus tard. +# Nous appellons ça "assigner" une valeur à une variable. +# Avoir des variables nous permet d'écrire des boucles, des fonctions, et +# des instructions conditionnelles (if/else) + +# LES VARIABLES +# Beaucoup de façons d'assigner des choses : +x = 5 # c'est correct +y <- "1" # c'est préféré +TRUE -> z # ça marche mais c'est bizarre + +# LES BOUCLES +# Il y a les boucles for : +for (i in 1:4) { + print(i) +} +# Il y a les boucles while : +a <- 10 +while (a > 4) { + cat(a, "...", sep = "") + a <- a - 1 +} +# Gardez à l'esprit que les boucles for et while s'exécutent lentement +# en R. +# Des opérations sur la totalité d'un vecteur (ex une ligne entière, +# une colonne entière), +# ou les fonctions de type apply() (nous en parlerons plus tard), +# sont préférées. + +# IF/ELSE +# Encore une fois assez standard +if (4 > 3) { + print("4 is greater than 3") +} else { + print("4 is not greater than 3") +} +# => +# [1] "4 is greater than 3" + +# LES FONCTIONS +# se définissent comme ceci : +jiggle <- function(x) { + x = x + rnorm(1, sd=.1) # ajoute un peu de bruit (contrôlé) + return(x) +} +# Appelées comme n'importe quelles autres fonction R : +jiggle(5) # 5±ε. After set.seed(2716057), jiggle(5)==5.005043 + + + +########################################################################## +# Les structures de données : les vecteurs, les matrices, +# les data frames et les tableaux +########################################################################## + +# À UNE DIMENSION + +# Commençons par le tout début, et avec quelque chose que +# vous connaissez déjà : les vecteurs. +vec <- c(8, 9, 10, 11) +vec # 8 9 10 11 +# Nous demandons des éléments spécifiques en les mettant entre crochets +# (Notez que R commence à compter à partir de 1) +vec[1] # 8 +letters[18] # "r" +LETTERS[13] # "M" +month.name[9] # "September" +c(6, 8, 7, 5, 3, 0, 9)[3] # 7 +# Nous pouvons également rechercher des indices de composants spécifiques, +which(vec %% 2 == 0) # 1 3 +# Récupèrer seulement les premières ou dernières entrées du vecteur, +head(vec, 1) # 8 +tail(vec, 2) # 10 11 +# ou vérifier si un certaine valeur est dans le vecteur +any(vec == 10) # TRUE +# Si un index "dépasse" vous obtiendrez NA : +vec[6] # NA +# Vous pouvez trouver la longueur de votre vecteur avec length() +length(vec) # 4 +# Vous pouvez réaliser des opérations sur des vecteurs entiers ou des +# sous-ensembles de vecteurs +vec * 4 # 16 20 24 28 +vec[2:3] * 5 # 25 30 +any(vec[2:3] == 8) # FALSE +# Et R a beaucoup de méthodes statistiques pré-construites pour les vecteurs : +mean(vec) # 9.5 +var(vec) # 1.666667 +sd(vec) # 1.290994 +max(vec) # 11 +min(vec) # 8 +sum(vec) # 38 +# Quelques fonctions préconstruites sympas supplémentaires : +5:15 # 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 +seq(from=0, to=31337, by=1337) +# => +# [1] 0 1337 2674 4011 5348 6685 8022 9359 10696 12033 13370 14707 +# [13] 16044 17381 18718 20055 21392 22729 24066 25403 26740 28077 29414 30751 + +# À DEUX DIMENSIONS (TOUT DANS UNE CLASSE) + +# Vous pouvez créer une matrice à partir d'entrées du même type comme ceci : +mat <- matrix(nrow = 3, ncol = 2, c(1,2,3,4,5,6)) +mat +# => +# [,1] [,2] +# [1,] 1 4 +# [2,] 2 5 +# [3,] 3 6 +# Différemment du vecteur, la classe d'une matrice est "matrix", +# peut importe ce qu'elle contient +class(mat) # => "matrix" +# Récupérer la première ligne +mat[1,] # 1 4 +# Réaliser une opération sur la première colonne +3 * mat[,1] # 3 6 9 +# Demander une cellule spécifique +mat[3,2] # 6 + +# Transposer la matrice entière +t(mat) +# => +# [,1] [,2] [,3] +# [1,] 1 2 3 +# [2,] 4 5 6 + +# La multiplication de matrices +mat %*% t(mat) +# => +# [,1] [,2] [,3] +# [1,] 17 22 27 +# [2,] 22 29 36 +# [3,] 27 36 45 + +# cbind() colle des vecteurs ensemble en colonne pour faire une matrice +mat2 <- cbind(1:4, c("dog", "cat", "bird", "dog")) +mat2 +# => +# [,1] [,2] +# [1,] "1" "dog" +# [2,] "2" "cat" +# [3,] "3" "bird" +# [4,] "4" "dog" +class(mat2) # matrix +# Encore une fois regardez ce qui se passe ! +# Parce que les matrices peuvent contenir des entrées de toutes sortes de +# classes, tout sera converti en classe caractère +c(class(mat2[,1]), class(mat2[,2])) + +# rbind() colle des vecteurs ensemble par lignes pour faire une matrice +mat3 <- rbind(c(1,2,4,5), c(6,7,0,4)) +mat3 +# => +# [,1] [,2] [,3] [,4] +# [1,] 1 2 4 5 +# [2,] 6 7 0 4 +# Ah, tout de la même classe. Pas de coercitions. Beaucoup mieux. + +# À DEUX DIMENSIONS (DE CLASSES DIFFÉRENTES) + +# Pour des colonnes de différents types, utiliser une data frame +# Cette structure de données est si utile pour la programmation statistique, +# qu'une version a été ajoutée à Python dans le paquet "pandas". + +students <- data.frame(c("Cedric","Fred","George","Cho","Draco","Ginny"), + c(3,2,2,1,0,-1), + c("H", "G", "G", "R", "S", "G")) +names(students) <- c("name", "year", "house") # name the columns +class(students) # "data.frame" +students +# => +# name year house +# 1 Cedric 3 H +# 2 Fred 2 G +# 3 George 2 G +# 4 Cho 1 R +# 5 Draco 0 S +# 6 Ginny -1 G +class(students$year) # "numeric" +class(students[,3]) # "factor" +# Trouver les dimensions +nrow(students) # 6 +ncol(students) # 3 +dim(students) # 6 3 +# La fonction data.frame() convertit les vecteurs caractères en vecteurs de +# facteurs par défaut; désactiver cette fonction en règlant +# stringsAsFactors = FALSE quand vous créer la data.frame +?data.frame + +# Il y a plusieurs façons de subdiviser les data frames, +# toutes subtilement différentes +students$year # 3 2 2 1 0 -1 +students[,2] # 3 2 2 1 0 -1 +students[,"year"] # 3 2 2 1 0 -1 + +# Une version améliorée de la structure data.frame est data.table. +# Si vous travaillez avec des données volumineuses ou des panels, ou avez +# besoin de fusionner quelques ensembles de données, data.table peut être +# un bon choix. Ici un tour éclair : +install.packages("data.table") # télécharge le paquet depuis CRAN +require(data.table) # le charge +students <- as.data.table(students) +students # regardez la différence à l'impression +# => +# name year house +# 1: Cedric 3 H +# 2: Fred 2 G +# 3: George 2 G +# 4: Cho 1 R +# 5: Draco 0 S +# 6: Ginny -1 G +students[name=="Ginny"] # obtiens les lignes avec name == "Ginny" +# => +# name year house +# 1: Ginny -1 G +students[year==2] # obtiens les lignes avec year == 2 +# => +# name year house +# 1: Fred 2 G +# 2: George 2 G +# data.table facilite la fusion entre deux ensembles de données +# Faisons une autre data.table pour fusionner students +founders <- data.table(house=c("G","H","R","S"), + founder=c("Godric","Helga","Rowena","Salazar")) +founders +# => +# house founder +# 1: G Godric +# 2: H Helga +# 3: R Rowena +# 4: S Salazar +setkey(students, house) +setkey(founders, house) +students <- founders[students] # merge les deux ensembles de données qui matchent "house" +setnames(students, c("house","houseFounderName","studentName","year")) +students[,order(c("name","year","house","houseFounderName")), with=F] +# => +# studentName year house houseFounderName +# 1: Fred 2 G Godric +# 2: George 2 G Godric +# 3: Ginny -1 G Godric +# 4: Cedric 3 H Helga +# 5: Cho 1 R Rowena +# 6: Draco 0 S Salazar + +# data.table facilite le résumé des tableaux +students[,sum(year),by=house] +# => +# house V1 +# 1: G 3 +# 2: H 3 +# 3: R 1 +# 4: S 0 + +# Pour supprimer une colonne d'une data.frame ou data.table, +# assignez-lui la valeur NULL +students$houseFounderName <- NULL +students +# => +# studentName year house +# 1: Fred 2 G +# 2: George 2 G +# 3: Ginny -1 G +# 4: Cedric 3 H +# 5: Cho 1 R +# 6: Draco 0 S + +# Supprimer une ligne en subdivisant +# En utilisant data.table : +students[studentName != "Draco"] +# => +# house studentName year +# 1: G Fred 2 +# 2: G George 2 +# 3: G Ginny -1 +# 4: H Cedric 3 +# 5: R Cho 1 +# En utilisant data.frame : +students <- as.data.frame(students) +students[students$house != "G",] +# => +# house houseFounderName studentName year +# 4 H Helga Cedric 3 +# 5 R Rowena Cho 1 +# 6 S Salazar Draco 0 + +# MULTI-DIMENSIONNELLE (TOUS ÉLÉMENTS D'UN TYPE) + +# Les arrays créent des tableaux de n dimensions. +# Tous les éléments doivent être du même type. +# Vous pouvez faire un tableau à 2 dimensions (une sorte de matrice) +array(c(c(1,2,4,5),c(8,9,3,6)), dim=c(2,4)) +# => +# [,1] [,2] [,3] [,4] +# [1,] 1 4 8 3 +# [2,] 2 5 9 6 +# Vous pouvez aussi utiliser array pour faire des matrices à 3 dimensions : +array(c(c(c(2,300,4),c(8,9,0)),c(c(5,60,0),c(66,7,847))), dim=c(3,2,2)) +# => +# , , 1 +# +# [,1] [,2] +# [1,] 2 8 +# [2,] 300 9 +# [3,] 4 0 +# +# , , 2 +# +# [,1] [,2] +# [1,] 5 66 +# [2,] 60 7 +# [3,] 0 847 + +# LES LISTES (MULTI-DIMENSIONNELLES, ÉVENTUELLEMMENT DÉCHIRÉES, +# DE DIFFÉRENTS TYPES) + +# Enfin, R a des listes (de vecteurs) +list1 <- list(time = 1:40) +list1$price = c(rnorm(40,.5*list1$time,4)) # random +list1 +# Vous pouvez obtenir des éléments de la liste comme ceci +list1$time # une façon +list1[["time"]] # une autre façon +list1[[1]] # encore une façon différente +# => +# [1] 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 +# [34] 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 +# Vous pouvez subdiviser les éléments d'une liste comme n'importe quel vecteur +list1$price[4] + +# Les listes ne sont pas les structures de données les plus efficaces +# à utiliser avec R ; +# À moins d'avoir une très bonne raison, vous devriez utiliser data.frames +# Les listes sont souvent retournées par des fonctions qui effectuent +# des régressions linéaires. + +########################################## +# La famille de fonction apply() +########################################## + +# Vous vous rappelez mat ? +mat +# => +# [,1] [,2] +# [1,] 1 4 +# [2,] 2 5 +# [3,] 3 6 +# Utilisez apply(X, MARGIN, FUN) pour appliquer la fonction FUN à la matrice X +# sur les lignes (MAR = 1) ou les colonnes (MAR = 2) +# R exécute FUN à chaque lignes (ou colonnes) de X, beaucoup plus rapidement +# que le ferait une boucle for ou while +apply(mat, MAR = 2, jiggle) +# => +# [,1] [,2] +# [1,] 3 15 +# [2,] 7 19 +# [3,] 11 23 +# D'autres fonctions : ?lapply, ?sapply + +# Ne soyez pas trop intimidé ; tout le monde reconnaît que c'est un peu déroutant + +# Le paquet plyr vise à remplacer (et améliorer !) la famille *apply(). +install.packages("plyr") +require(plyr) +?plyr + + + +############################ +# Charger des données +############################ + +# "pets.csv" est un fichier sur internet +# (mais il pourrait être tout aussi facilement sur votre ordinateur) +pets <- read.csv("http://learnxinyminutes.com/docs/pets.csv") +pets +head(pets, 2) # first two rows +tail(pets, 1) # last row + +# Pour sauvegarder une data frame ou une matrice en fichier .csv +write.csv(pets, "pets2.csv") # to make a new .csv file +# définir le répertoire de travail avec setwd(), le récupérer avec getwd() + +# Essayez ?read.csv et ?write.csv pour plus d'informations + + + +################ +# Les tracés +################ + +# LES FONCTIONS DE TRACÉ PRÉCONSTRUITES +# Les diagrammes de dispersion ! +plot(list1$time, list1$price, main = "fake data") +# Les régressions ! +linearModel <- lm(price ~ time, data = list1) +linearModel # sort le résultat de la régression +# Tracer une ligne de regression sur une tracé existant +abline(linearModel, col = "red") +# Obtenir une variété de diagnostiques sympas +plot(linearModel) +# Les histogrammes ! +hist(rpois(n = 10000, lambda = 5), col = "thistle") +# Les diagrammes en bâtons ! +barplot(c(1,4,5,1,2), names.arg = c("red","blue","purple","green","yellow")) + +# GGPLOT2 +# Mais ceux-ci ne sont même pas les plus jolis tracés de R +# Essayez le paquet ggplot2 pour d'avantages de graphiques +install.packages("ggplot2") +require(ggplot2) +?ggplot2 +pp <- ggplot(students, aes(x=house)) +pp + geom_histogram() +ll <- as.data.table(list1) +pp <- ggplot(ll, aes(x=time,price)) +pp + geom_point() +# ggplot2 a une documentation excellente +#(disponible sur http://docs.ggplot2.org/current/) + + + +``` + +## Comment obtenir R ? + +* Obtiens R et R GUI depuis [http://www.r-project.org/](http://www.r-project.org/) +* [RStudio](http://www.rstudio.com/ide/) est un autre GUI diff --git a/fr-fr/typescript-fr.html.markdown b/fr-fr/typescript-fr.html.markdown new file mode 100644 index 00000000..b8807104 --- /dev/null +++ b/fr-fr/typescript-fr.html.markdown @@ -0,0 +1,174 @@ +--- +language: TypeScript +contributors: + - ["Philippe Vlérick", "https://github.com/pvlerick"] +translators: + - ["Alois de Gouvello", "https://github.com/aloisdg"] +filename: learntypescript-fr.ts +lang: fr-fr +--- + +TypeScript est un langage visant à faciliter le développement d'applications larges et scalables, écrites en JavaScript. +TypeScript ajoute des concepts classiques comme les classes, les modules, les interfaces, les génériques et le typage statique (optionnel) à JavaScript. +C'est une surcouche de JavaScript : tout le code JavaScript est valide en TypeScript ce qui permet de l'ajouter de façon transparente à n'importe quel projet. Le code TypeScript est transcompilé en JavaScript par le compilateur. + +Cet article se concentrera seulement sur la syntaxe supplémentaire de TypeScript, plutôt que celle de [JavaScript] (../javascript/). + +Pour tester le compilateur de TypeScript, rendez-vous au [Playground] (http://www.typescriptlang.org/Playground) où vous pourrez coder, profiter d'une autocomplétion et accéder directement au rendu JavaScript. + +```js +// Il y a 3 types basiques en TypeScript +var isDone: boolean = false; +var lines: number = 42; +var name: string = "Anders"; + +// Si nous ne pouvons pas déterminer le type, on utilise `Any` +var notSure: any = 4; +notSure = "maybe a string instead"; +notSure = false; // ok, définitivement un booléen + +// Pour les collections, il y a les tableaux typés et les tableaux génériques +var list: number[] = [1, 2, 3]; // Un tableaux typé +var list: Array<number> = [1, 2, 3]; // un tableau générique + +// Pour les énumeration +enum Color { Red, Green, Blue }; +var c: Color = Color.Green; + +// Enfin, `void` est utilisé dans le cas spécifique +// d'une fonction ne retournant rien +function bigHorribleAlert(): void { + alert("Je suis une petite boîte ennuyeuse !"); +} + +// Les fonctions sont des entités de première classe. Le langage supporte +// les expressions lambda et utilise l'inférence de type + +// Les fonctions ci-dessous sont équivalentes, une signature identique +// sera inférée par le compilateur, et le même JavaScript sera généré +var f1 = function(i: number): number { return i * i; } +// Retourne un type inféré +var f2 = function(i: number) { return i * i; } +var f3 = (i: number): number => { return i * i; } +// Retourne un type inféré +var f4 = (i: number) => { return i * i; } +// Retourne un type inféré, ici le mot clé `return` n'est pas nécessaire +var f5 = (i: number) => i * i; + +// Les interfaces sont structurées, tout les objets qui ont ces propriétés +// sont compatible avec l'interface +interface Person { + name: string; + // Les propriétés optionnelles sont identifiées avec un "?" + age?: number; + // Et bien sûr, les fonctions + move(): void; +} + +// Un objet implémentant l'interface "Person" peut être traité comme +// une Person car il a les propriétés "name" et "move" +var p: Person = { name: "Bobby", move: () => {} }; +// Des objets implémentants la propriété optionnelle : +// valide car "age" est un nombre +var validPerson: Person = { name: "Bobby", age: 42, move: () => {} }; +// invalide car "age" n'est pas un nombre +var invalidPerson: Person = { name: "Bobby", age: true }; + +// Les interfaces peuvent aussi décrire un type de fonction +interface SearchFunc { + (source: string, subString: string): boolean; +} + +// Seul les types des paramètres sont importants. Les noms ne le sont pas. +var mySearch: SearchFunc; +mySearch = function(src: string, sub: string) { + return src.search(sub) != -1; +} + +// Les membres des classes sont publiques par défaut. +class Point { + // Propriétés + x: number; + + // Constructeur - Les mots clés "public" et "private" dans ce contexte + // génèrent le code de la propriété et son initialisation dans le + // constructeur. Ici, "y" sera défini de la même façon que "x", + // mais avec moins de code. Les valeurs par défaut sont supportées. + constructor(x: number, public y: number = 0) { + this.x = x; + } + + // Fonctions + dist() { return Math.sqrt(this.x * this.x + this.y * this.y); } + + // Membres statiques + static origin = new Point(0, 0); +} + +var p1 = new Point(10 ,20); +var p2 = new Point(25); // y sera 0 + +// Héritage +class Point3D extends Point { + constructor(x: number, y: number, public z: number = 0) { + // Un appel explicite au constructeur de la super classe + // est obligatoire. + super(x, y); + } + + // Redéfinition + dist() { + var d = super.dist(); + return Math.sqrt(d * d + this.z * this.z); + } +} + +// Modules, "." peut être utilisé comme un séparateur de sous modules. +module Geometry { + export class Square { + constructor(public sideLength: number = 0) { + } + area() { + return Math.pow(this.sideLength, 2); + } + } +} + +var s1 = new Geometry.Square(5); + +// Alias local pour référencer un module +import G = Geometry; + +var s2 = new G.Square(10); + +// Génériques +// Classes +class Tuple<T1, T2> { + constructor(public item1: T1, public item2: T2) { + } +} + +// Interfaces +interface Pair<T> { + item1: T; + item2: T; +} + +// Et fonctions +var pairToTuple = function<T>(p: Pair<T>) { + return new Tuple(p.item1, p.item2); +}; + +var tuple = pairToTuple({ item1:"hello", item2:"world"}); + +// Inclure des références à un fichier : +/// <reference path="jquery.d.ts" /> + +``` + +## Lectures complémentaires + * [Site officiel de TypeScript] (http://www.typescriptlang.org/) + * [Spécification du langage TypeScript (pdf)] (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=267238) + * [Anders Hejlsberg - Introducing TypeScript on Channel 9] (http://channel9.msdn.com/posts/Anders-Hejlsberg-Introducing-TypeScript) + * [Code source sur GitHub] (https://github.com/Microsoft/TypeScript) + * [Definitely Typed - repository for type definitions] (http://definitelytyped.org/) diff --git a/groovy.html.markdown b/groovy.html.markdown index 8fb1b346..629b6d18 100644 --- a/groovy.html.markdown +++ b/groovy.html.markdown @@ -405,7 +405,7 @@ assert sum(2,5) == 7 ## Further resources -[Groovy documentation](http://groovy.codehaus.org/Documentation) +[Groovy documentation](http://www.groovy-lang.org/documentation.html) [Groovy web console](http://groovyconsole.appspot.com/) diff --git a/haxe.html.markdown b/haxe.html.markdown index c807d2d7..ee214540 100644 --- a/haxe.html.markdown +++ b/haxe.html.markdown @@ -323,7 +323,7 @@ class LearnHaxe3{ var l = 0; do{ trace("do statement always runs at least once"); - } while (i > 0); + } while (l > 0); // for loop /* @@ -340,7 +340,7 @@ class LearnHaxe3{ // (more on ranges later as well) var n = ['foo', 'bar', 'baz']; for (val in 0...n.length){ - trace(val + " is the value for val (an index for m)"); + trace(val + " is the value for val (an index for n)"); } @@ -375,7 +375,7 @@ class LearnHaxe3{ case "rex" : favorite_thing = "shoe"; case "spot" : favorite_thing = "tennis ball"; default : favorite_thing = "some unknown treat"; - // case _ : "some unknown treat"; // same as default + // case _ : favorite_thing = "some unknown treat"; // same as default } // The "_" case above is a "wildcard" value // that will match anything. @@ -397,7 +397,7 @@ class LearnHaxe3{ // if statements var k = if (true) 10 else 20; - trace("K equals ", k); // outputs 10 + trace("k equals ", k); // outputs 10 var other_favorite_thing = switch(my_dog_name) { case "fido" : "teddy"; @@ -495,8 +495,10 @@ class LearnHaxe3{ // foo_instance.public_read = 4; // this will throw an error if uncommented: // trace(foo_instance.public_write); // as will this. - trace(foo_instance + " is the value for foo_instance"); // calls the toString method - trace(foo_instance.toString() + " is the value for foo_instance.toString()"); // same thing + // calls the toString method: + trace(foo_instance + " is the value for foo_instance"); + // same thing: + trace(foo_instance.toString() + " is the value for foo_instance.toString()"); /* @@ -524,8 +526,8 @@ class LearnHaxe3{ */ class FooClass extends BarClass implements BarInterface{ public var public_any:Int; // public variables are accessible anywhere - public var public_read (default,null): Int; // use this style to only enable public read - public var public_write (null, default): Int; // or public write + public var public_read (default, null): Int; // enable only public read + public var public_write (null, default): Int; // or only public write public var property (get, set): Int; // use this style to enable getters/setters // private variables are not available outside the class. @@ -534,9 +536,10 @@ class FooClass extends BarClass implements BarInterface{ // a public constructor public function new(arg:Int){ - super(); // call the constructor of the parent object, since we extended BarClass + // call the constructor of the parent object, since we extended BarClass: + super(); - this.public_any= 0; + this.public_any = 0; this._private = arg; } diff --git a/it-it/bash-it.html.markdown b/it-it/bash-it.html.markdown new file mode 100644 index 00000000..f892845f --- /dev/null +++ b/it-it/bash-it.html.markdown @@ -0,0 +1,275 @@ +--- +category: tool +tool: bash +contributors: + - ["Max Yankov", "https://github.com/golergka"] + - ["Darren Lin", "https://github.com/CogBear"] + - ["Alexandre Medeiros", "http://alemedeiros.sdf.org"] + - ["Denis Arh", "https://github.com/darh"] + - ["akirahirose", "https://twitter.com/akirahirose"] + - ["Anton Strömkvist", "http://lutic.org/"] + - ["Rahil Momin", "https://github.com/iamrahil"] + - ["Gregrory Kielian", "https://github.com/gskielian"] +filename: LearnBash.sh +translators: + - ["Robert Margelli", "http://github.com/sinkswim/"] +lang: it-it +--- + +Bash è il nome della shell di unix, la quale è stata distribuita anche come shell del sistema oprativo GNU e la shell di default su Linux e Mac OS X. +Quasi tutti gli esempi sottostanti possono fare parte di uno shell script o eseguiti direttamente nella shell. + +[Per saperne di piu'.](http://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/bashref.html) + +```bash +#!/bin/bash +# La prima riga dello script è lo shebang il quale dice al sistema come eseguire +# lo script: http://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shabang +# Come avrai già immaginato, i commenti iniziano con #. Lo shebang stesso è un commento. + +# Semplice esempio ciao mondo: +echo Ciao mondo! + +# Ogni comando inizia su una nuova riga, o dopo un punto e virgola: +echo 'Questa è la prima riga'; echo 'Questa è la seconda riga' + +# Per dichiarare una variabile: +VARIABILE="Una stringa" + +# Ma non così: +VARIABILE = "Una stringa" +# Bash stabilirà che VARIABILE è un comando da eseguire e darà un errore +# perchè non esiste. + +# Usare la variabile: +echo $VARIABILE +echo "$VARIABILE" +echo '$VARIABILE' +# Quando usi la variabile stessa - assegnala, esportala, oppure — scrivi +# il suo nome senza $. Se vuoi usare il valore della variabile, devi usare $. +# Nota che ' (singolo apice) non espande le variabili! + +# Sostituzione di stringhe nelle variabili +echo ${VARIABILE/Una/A} +# Questo sostituirà la prima occorrenza di "Una" con "La" + +# Sottostringa di una variabile +echo ${VARIABILE:0:7} +# Questo ritornerà solamente i primi 7 caratteri + +# Valore di default per la variabile +echo ${FOO:-"ValoreDiDefaultSeFOOMancaOÈ Vuoto"} +# Questo funziona per null (FOO=), stringa vuota (FOO=""), zero (FOO=0) ritorna 0 + +# Variabili builtin: +# Ci sono delle variabili builtin molto utili, come +echo "Valore di ritorno dell'ultimo programma eseguito: $?" +echo "PID dello script: $$" +echo "Numero di argomenti: $#" +echo "Argomenti dello script: $@" +echo "Argomenti dello script separati in variabili distinte: $1 $2..." + +# Leggere un valore di input: +echo "Come ti chiami?" +read NOME # Nota che non abbiamo dovuto dichiarare una nuova variabile +echo Ciao, $NOME! + +# Classica struttura if: +# usa 'man test' per maggiori informazioni sulle condizionali +if [ $NOME -ne $USER ] +then + echo "Il tuo nome non è lo username" +else + echo "Il tuo nome è lo username" +fi + +# C'è anche l'esecuzione condizionale +echo "Sempre eseguito" || echo "Eseguito solo se la prima condizione fallisce" +echo "Sempre eseguito" && echo "Eseguito solo se la prima condizione NON fallisce" + +# Per usare && e || con l'if, c'è bisogno di piu' paia di parentesi quadre: +if [ $NOME == "Steve" ] && [ $ETA -eq 15 ] +then + echo "Questo verrà eseguito se $NOME è Steve E $ETA è 15." +fi + +if [ $NOME == "Daniya" ] || [ $NOME == "Zach" ] +then + echo "Questo verrà eseguito se $NAME è Daniya O Zach." +fi + +# Le espressioni sono nel seguente formato: +echo $(( 10 + 5 )) + +# A differenza di altri linguaggi di programmazione, bash è una shell - quindi lavora nel contesto +# della cartella corrente. Puoi elencare i file e le cartelle nella cartella +# corrente con il comando ls: +ls + +# Questi comandi hanno opzioni che controllano la loro esecuzione: +ls -l # Elenca tutti i file e le cartelle su una riga separata + +# I risultati del comando precedente possono essere passati al comando successivo come input. +# Il comando grep filtra l'input con il pattern passato. Ecco come possiamo elencare i +# file .txt nella cartella corrente: +ls -l | grep "\.txt" + +# Puoi redirezionare l'input e l'output del comando (stdin, stdout, e stderr). +# Leggi da stdin finchè ^EOF$ e sovrascrivi hello.py con le righe +# comprese tra "EOF": +cat > hello.py << EOF +#!/usr/bin/env python +from __future__ import print_function +import sys +print("#stdout", file=sys.stdout) +print("#stderr", file=sys.stderr) +for line in sys.stdin: + print(line, file=sys.stdout) +EOF + +# Esegui hello.py con diverse redirezioni stdin, stdout, e stderr: +python hello.py < "input.in" +python hello.py > "output.out" +python hello.py 2> "error.err" +python hello.py > "output-and-error.log" 2>&1 +python hello.py > /dev/null 2>&1 +# Lo output error sovrascriverà il file se esiste, +# se invece vuoi appendere usa ">>": +python hello.py >> "output.out" 2>> "error.err" + +# Sovrascrivi output.txt, appendi a error.err, e conta le righe: +info bash 'Basic Shell Features' 'Redirections' > output.out 2>> error.err +wc -l output.out error.err + +# Esegui un comando e stampa il suo file descriptor (esempio: /dev/fd/123) +# vedi: man fd +echo <(echo "#ciaomondo") + +# Sovrascrivi output.txt con "#helloworld": +cat > output.out <(echo "#helloworld") +echo "#helloworld" > output.out +echo "#helloworld" | cat > output.out +echo "#helloworld" | tee output.out >/dev/null + +# Pulisci i file temporanei verbosamente (aggiungi '-i' per la modalità interattiva) +rm -v output.out error.err output-and-error.log + +# I comandi possono essere sostituiti con altri comandi usando $( ): +# Il comando seguente mostra il numero di file e cartelle nella +# cartella corrente. +echo "Ci sono $(ls | wc -l) oggetti qui." + +# Lo stesso puo' essere usato usando backticks `` ma non possono essere innestati - il modo migliore +# è usando $( ). +echo "Ci sono `ls | wc -l` oggetti qui." + +# Bash utilizza uno statemente case che funziona in maniera simile allo switch in Java e C++: +case "$VARIABILE" in + #Lista di pattern per le condizioni che vuoi soddisfare + 0) echo "C'è uno zero.";; + 1) echo "C'è un uno.";; + *) echo "Non è null.";; +esac + +# I cicli for iterano per ogni argomento fornito: +# I contenuti di $VARIABILE sono stampati tre volte. +for VARIABILE in {1..3} +do + echo "$VARIABILE" +done + +# O scrivilo con il "ciclo for tradizionale": +for ((a=1; a <= 3; a++)) +do + echo $a +done + +# Possono essere usati anche per agire su file.. +# Questo eseguirà il comando 'cat' su file1 e file2 +for VARIABILE in file1 file2 +do + cat "$VARIABILE" +done + +# ..o dall'output di un comando +# Questo eseguirà cat sull'output di ls. +for OUTPUT in $(ls) +do + cat "$OUTPUT" +done + +# while loop: +while [ true ] +do + echo "corpo del loop..." + break +done + +# Puoi anche definire funzioni +# Definizione: +function foo () +{ + echo "Gli argomenti funzionano come gli argomenti dello script: $@" + echo "E: $1 $2..." + echo "Questa è una funzione" + return 0 +} + +# o semplicemente +bar () +{ + echo "Un altro modo per dichiarare funzioni!" + return 0 +} + +# Per chiamare la funzione +foo "Il mio nome è" $NOME + +# Ci sono un sacco di comandi utili che dovresti imparare: +# stampa le ultime 10 righe di file.txt +tail -n 10 file.txt +# stampa le prime 10 righe di file.txt +head -n 10 file.txt +# ordina le righe di file.txt +sort file.txt +# riporta o ometti le righe ripetute, con -d le riporta +uniq -d file.txt +# stampa solamente la prima colonna prima del carattere ',' +cut -d ',' -f 1 file.txt +# sostituisce ogni occorrenza di 'okay' con 'great' in file.txt (compatible con le regex) +sed -i 's/okay/great/g' file.txt +# stampa su stdout tutte le righe di file.txt che soddisfano una certa regex +# L'esempio stampa le righe che iniziano con "foo" e che finiscono con "bar" +grep "^foo.*bar$" file.txt +# passa l'opzione "-c" per stampare invece il numero delle righe che soddisfano la regex +grep -c "^foo.*bar$" file.txt +# se vuoi letteralmente cercare la stringa, +# e non la regex, usa fgrep (o grep -F) +fgrep "^foo.*bar$" file.txt + + +# Leggi la documentazione dei builtin di bash con il builtin 'help' di bash: +help +help help +help for +help return +help source +help . + +# Leggi la manpage di bash con man +apropos bash +man 1 bash +man bash + +# Leggi la documentazione con info (? per help) +apropos info | grep '^info.*(' +man info +info info +info 5 info + +# Leggi la documentazione di bash: +info bash +info bash 'Bash Features' +info bash 6 +info --apropos bash +``` diff --git a/it-it/c++-it.html.markdown b/it-it/c++-it.html.markdown new file mode 100644 index 00000000..4f5ac8a2 --- /dev/null +++ b/it-it/c++-it.html.markdown @@ -0,0 +1,720 @@ +--- +language: c++ +filename: learncpp.cpp +contributors: + - ["Steven Basart", "http://github.com/xksteven"] + - ["Matt Kline", "https://github.com/mrkline"] +translators: + - ["Robert Margelli", "http://github.com/sinkswim/"] +lang: it-it +--- + +Il C++ è un linguaggio di programmazione il quale, +[secondo il suo inventore Bjarne Stroustrup](http://channel9.msdn.com/Events/Lang-NEXT/Lang-NEXT-2014/Keynote), +è stato progettato per + +- essere un "miglior C" +- supportare l'astrazione dei dati +- supportare la programmazione orientata agli oggetti +- supportare la programmazione generica + +Nonostante la sintassi possa risultare più difficile o complessa di linguaggi più recenti, +è usato in maniera vasta poichè viene compilato in istruzioni macchina che possono +essere eseguite direttamente dal processore ed offre un controllo stretto sull'hardware (come il linguaggio C) +ed allo stesso tempo offre caratteristiche ad alto livello come i generici, le eccezioni, e le classi. +Questa combinazione di velocità e funzionalità rende il C++ +uno dei più utilizzati linguaggi di programmazione. + +```c++ +////////////////// +// Confronto con il C +////////////////// + +// Il C++ è _quasi_ un superset del C e con esso condivide la sintassi di base per +// la dichiarazione di variabili, tipi primitivi, e funzioni. + +// Proprio come nel C, l'inizio del programma è una funzione chiamata +// main con un intero come tipo di ritorno, +// Questo valore serve come stato d'uscita del programma. +// Vedi http://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valore_di_uscita per maggiori informazioni. +int main(int argc, char** argv) +{ + // Gli argomenti a linea di comando sono passati tramite argc e argv così come + // avviene in C. + // argc indica il numero di argomenti, + // e argv è un array di stringhe in stile-C (char*) + // che rappresenta gli argomenti. + // Il primo argomento è il nome che è stato assegnato al programma. + // argc e argv possono essere omessi se non hai bisogno di argomenti, + // in questa maniera la funzione avrà int main() come firma. + + // Lo stato di uscita 0 indica successo. + return 0; +} + +// Tuttavia, il C++ varia nei seguenti modi: + +// In C++, i caratteri come letterali sono da un byte. +sizeof('c') == 1 + +// In C, i caratteri come letterali sono della stessa dimensione degli interi. +sizeof('c') == sizeof(10) + + +// C++ ha prototipizzazione rigida +void func(); // funziona che non accetta argomenti + +// In C +void func(); // funzione che può accettare un qualsiasi numero di argomenti + +// Usa nullptr invece di NULL in C++ +int* ip = nullptr; + +// Gli header C standard sono disponibili in C++, +// ma sono prefissati con "c" e non hanno il suffisso ".h". +#include <cstdio> + +int main() +{ + printf("Ciao, mondo!\n"); + return 0; +} + +/////////////////////////////// +// Overloading per le funzioni +////////////////////////////// + +// Il C++ supporta l'overloading per le funzioni +// sia dato che ogni funzione accetta parametri diversi. + +void print(char const* myString) +{ + printf("Stringa %s\n", myString); +} + +void print(int myInt) +{ + printf("Il mio int è %d", myInt); +} + +int main() +{ + print("Ciao"); // Viene chiamata void print(const char*) + print(15); // Viene chiamata void print(int) +} + +//////////////////////// +// Argomenti di default +/////////////////////// + +// Puoi fornire argomenti di default per una funzione +// se non sono forniti dal chiamante. + +void faiQualcosaConInteri(int a = 1, int b = 4) +{ + // fai qualcosa con gli interi qui +} + +int main() +{ + faiQualcosaConInteri(); // a = 1, b = 4 + faiQualcosaConInteri(20); // a = 20, b = 4 + faiQualcosaConInteri(20, 5); // a = 20, b = 5 +} + +// Gli argomenti di default devono essere alla fine della lista degli argomenti. + +void dichiarazioneInvalida(int a = 1, int b) // Errore! +{ +} + + +///////////// +// Namespaces +///////////// + +// I namespaces forniscono visibilità separata per dichiarazioni di variabili, funzioni, +// ed altro. +// I namespaces possono essere annidati. + +namespace Primo { + namespace Annidato { + void foo() + { + printf("Questa è Primo::Annidato::foo\n"); + } + } // fine di namespace Annidato +} // fine di namespace Primo + +namespace Secondo { + void foo() + { + printf("Questa è Secondo::foo\n") + } +} + +void foo() +{ + printf("Questa è foo globale\n"); +} + +int main() +{ + // Assume che tutto venga dal namespace "Secondo" + // a meno che non venga dichiarato altrimenti. + using namespace Secondo; + + foo(); // stampa "Questa è Secondo::foo" + Primo::Annidato::foo(); // stampa "Questa è Primo::Annidato::foo" + ::foo(); // stampa "Questa è foo globale" +} + +/////////////// +// Input/Output +/////////////// + +// L'input e l'output in C++ utilizza gli streams +// cin, cout, e cerr i quali rappresentano stdin, stdout, e stderr. +// << è l'operatore di inserzione >> è l'operatore di estrazione. + +#include <iostream> // Include gli streams di I/O + +using namespace std; // Gli streams sono nel namespace std (libreria standard) + +int main() +{ + int myInt; + + // Stampa su stdout (o terminalee/schermo) + cout << "Inserisci il tuo numero preferito:\n"; + // Prende l'input + cin >> myInt; + + // cout può anche essere formattato + cout << "Il tuo numero preferito è " << myInt << "\n"; + // stampa "Il tuo numero preferito è <myInt>" + + cerr << "Usato per messaggi di errore"; +} + +//////////// +// Stringhe +/////////// + +// Le stringhe in C++ sono oggetti ed hanno molte funzioni membro +#include <string> + +using namespace std; // Anche le stringhe sono contenute nel namespace std (libreria standard) + +string myString = "Ciao"; +string myOtherString = " Mondo"; + +// + è usato per la concatenazione. +cout << myString + myOtherString; // "Ciao Mondo" + +cout << myString + " Bella"; // "Ciao Bella" + +// le stringhe in C++ possono essere modificate. +myString.append(" Mario"); +cout << myString; // "Ciao Mario" + + +/////////////// +// Riferimenti +////////////// + +// Oltre ai puntatori come quelli in C, +// il C++ ha i _riferimenti_. +// Questi non sono tipi puntatori che non possono essere riassegnati una volta settati +// e non possono essere null. +// Inoltre, essi hanno la stessa sintassi della variabile stessa: +// * non è necessario per la dereferenziazione e +// & ("indirizzo di") non è usato per l'assegnamento. + +using namespace std; + +string foo = "Io sono foo"; +string bar = "Io sono bar"; + + +string& fooRef = foo; // Questo crea un riferimento a foo. +fooRef += ". Ciao!"; // Modifica foo attraverso il riferimento +cout << fooRef; // Stampa "Io sono foo. Ciao!" + +// Non riassegna "fooRef". Questo è come scrivere "foo = bar", e +// foo == "Io sono bar" +// dopo questa riga. +fooRef = bar; + +const string& barRef = bar; // Crea un riferimento const a bar. +// Come in C, i valori const (i puntatori e i riferimenti) non possono essere modificati. +barRef += ". Ciao!"; // Errore, i riferimenti const non possono essere modificati. + +////////////////////////////////////////////////// +// Classi e programmazione orientata agli oggetti +///////////////////////////////////////////////// + +// Primo esempio delle classi +#include <iostream> + +// Dichiara una classe. +// Le classi sono in genere dichiara in un header file (.h o .hpp). +class Cane { + // Variabili e funzioni membro sono private di default. + std::string nome; + int peso; + +// Tutti i membri dopo questo sono pubblici (public) +// finchè "private:" o "protected:" non compaiono. +public: + + // Costruttore di default + Cane(); + + // Dichiarazioni di funzioni membro (le implentazioni sono a seguito) + // Nota che stiamo usando std::string invece di porre + // using namespace std; + // sopra. + // Mai usare uno statement "using namespace" in uno header. + void impostaNome(const std::string& nomeCane); + + void impostaPeso(int pesoCane); + + // Le funzioni che non modificano lo stato dell'oggetto + // dovrebbero essere marcate come const. + // Questo permette di chiamarle con un riferimento const all'oggetto. + // Inoltre, nota che le funzioni devono essere dichiarate espliciamente come _virtual_ + // per essere sovrascritte in classi derivate. + // Le funzioni non sono virtual di default per motivi di performance. + virtual void print() const; + + // Le funzioni possono essere definite anche all'interno del corpo della classe. + // Le funzioni definite in questo modo sono automaticamente inline. + void abbaia() const { std::cout << nome << " abbaia!\n"; } + + // Assieme con i costruttori, il C++ fornisce i distruttori. + // Questi sono chiamati quando un oggetto è rimosso o esce dalla visibilità. + // Questo permette paradigmi potenti come il RAII + // (vedi sotto) + // I distruttori devono essere virtual per permettere a classi di essere derivate da questa. + virtual ~Dog(); + +}; // Un punto e virgola deve seguire la definizione della funzione + +// Le funzioni membro di una classe sono generalmente implementate in files .cpp . +void Cane::Cane() +{ + std::cout << "Un cane è stato costruito\n"; +} + +// Gli oggetti (ad esempio le stringhe) devono essere passati per riferimento +// se li stai modificando o come riferimento const altrimenti. +void Cane::impostaNome(const std::string& nomeCane) +{ + nome = nomeCane; +} + +void Cane::impostaPeso(int pesoCane) +{ + peso = pesoCane; +} + +// Notare che "virtual" è solamente necessario nelle dichiarazioni, non nelle definizioni. +void Cane::print() const +{ + std::cout << "Il cane è " << nome << " e pesa " << peso << "kg\n"; +} + +void Cane::~Cane() +{ + cout << "Ciao ciao " << nome << "\n"; +} + +int main() { + Cane myDog; // stampa "Un cane è stato costruito" + myDog.impostaNome("Barkley"); + myDog.impostaPeso(10); + myDog.print(); // stampa "Il cane è Barkley e pesa 10 kg" + return 0; +} // stampa "Ciao ciao Barkley" + +// Ereditarietà: + +// Questa classe eredita tutto ciò che è public e protected dalla classe Cane +class MioCane : public Cane { + + void impostaProprietario(const std::string& proprietarioCane) + + // Sovrascrivi il comportamento della funzione print per tutti i MioCane. Vedi + // http://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polimorfismo_%28informatica%29 + // per una introduzione più generale se non sei familiare con + // il polimorfismo. + // La parola chiave override è opzionale ma fa sì che tu stia effettivamente + // sovrascrivendo il metodo nella classe base. + void print() const override; + +private: + std::string proprietario; +}; + +// Nel frattempo, nel file .cpp corrispondente: + +void MioCane::impostaProprietario(const std::string& proprietarioCane) +{ + proprietario = proprietarioCane; +} + +void MioCane::print() const +{ + Cane::print(); // Chiama la funzione print nella classe base Cane + std::cout << "Il cane è di " << proprietario << "\n"; + // stampa "Il cane è <nome> e pesa <peso>" + // "Il cane è di <proprietario>" +} + +/////////////////////////////////////////////////// +// Inizializzazione ed Overloading degli Operatori +////////////////////////////////////////////////// + +// In C++ puoi sovrascrivere il comportamento di operatori come +, -, *, /, ecc... +// Questo è possibile definendo una funzione che viene chiamata +// ogniqualvolta l'operatore è usato. + +#include <iostream> +using namespace std; + +class Punto { +public: + // Così si assegna alle variabili membro un valore di default. + double x = 0; + double y = 0; + + // Definisce un costruttore di default che non fa nulla + // ma inizializza il Punto ai valori di default (0, 0) + Punto() { }; + + // La sintassi seguente è nota come lista di inizializzazione + // ed è il modo appropriato di inizializzare i valori membro della classe + Punto (double a, double b) : + x(a), + y(b) + { /* Non fa nulla eccetto inizializzare i valori */ } + + // Sovrascrivi l'operatore +. + Punto operator+(const Punto& rhs) const; + + // Sovrascrivi l'operatore += + Punto& operator+=(const Punto& rhs); + + // Avrebbe senso aggiungere gli operatori - e -=, + // ma li saltiamo per rendere la guida più breve. +}; + +Punto Punto::operator+(const Punto& rhs) const +{ + // Crea un nuovo punto come somma di questo e di rhs. + return Punto(x + rhs.x, y + rhs.y); +} + +Punto& Punto::operator+=(const Punto& rhs) +{ + x += rhs.x; + y += rhs.y; + return *this; +} + +int main () { + Punto su (0,1); + Punto destro (1,0); + // Questo chiama l'operatore + di Punto + // Il Punto su chiama la funzione + con destro come argomento + Punto risultato = su + destro; + // Stampa "Risultato è spostato in (1,1)" + cout << "Risultato è spostato (" << risultato.x << ',' << risultato.y << ")\n"; + return 0; +} + +///////////////// +// Templates +//////////////// + +// Generalmente i templates in C++ sono utilizzati per programmazione generica, anche se +// sono molto più potenti dei costrutti generici in altri linguaggi. Inoltre, +// supportano specializzazione esplicita e parziale, classi in stile funzionale, +// e sono anche complete per Turing. + +// Iniziamo con il tipo di programmazione generica con cui forse sei familiare. Per +// definire una classe o una funzione che prende un parametro di un dato tipo: +template<class T> +class Box { + // In questa classe, T può essere usato come qualsiasi tipo. + void inserisci(const T&) { ... } +}; + +// Durante la compilazione, il compilatore in effetti genera copie di ogni template +// con i parametri sostituiti, e così la definizione completa della classe deve essere +// presente ad ogni invocazione. Questo è il motivo per cui vedrai le classi template definite +// interamente in header files. + +// Per instanziare una classe template sullo stack: +Box<int> intBox; + +// e puoi usarla come aspettato: +intBox.inserisci(123); + +//Puoi, ovviamente, innestare i templates: +Box<Box<int> > boxOfBox; +boxOfBox.inserisci(intBox); + +// Fino al C++11, devi porre uno spazio tra le due '>', altrimenti '>>' +// viene visto come l'operatore di shift destro. + +// Qualche volta vedrai +// template<typename T> +// invece. La parole chiavi 'class' e 'typename' sono _generalmente_ +// intercambiabili in questo caso. Per una spiegazione completa, vedi +// http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typename +// (si, quella parola chiave ha una sua pagina di Wikipedia propria). + +// Similmente, una funzione template: +template<class T> +void abbaiaTreVolte(const T& input) +{ + input.abbaia(); + input.abbaia(); + input.abbaia(); +} + +// Nota che niente è specificato relativamente al tipo di parametri. Il compilatore +// genererà e poi verificherà il tipo di ogni invocazione del template, così che +// la funzione di cui sopra funzione con ogni tipo 'T' che ha const 'abbaia' come metodo! + +Cane fluffy; +fluffy.impostaNome("Fluffy") +abbaiaTreVolte(fluffy); // Stampa "Fluffy abbaia" tre volte. + +// I parametri template non devono essere classi: +template<int Y> +void stampaMessaggio() { + cout << "Impara il C++ in " << Y << " minuti!" << endl; +} + +// E poi esplicitamente specializzare i template per avere codice più efficiente. Ovviamente, +// la maggior parte delle casistiche reali non sono così triviali. +// Notare che avrai comunque bisogna di dichiarare la funzione (o classe) come un template +// anche se hai esplicitamente specificato tutti i parametri. +template<> +void stampaMessaggio<10>() { + cout << "Impara il C++ più velocemente in soli 10 minuti!" << endl; +} + +printMessage<20>(); // Stampa "impara il C++ in 20 minuti!" +printMessage<10>(); // Stampa "Impara il C++ più velocemente in soli 10 minuti!" + +//////////////////////////// +// Gestione delle eccezioni +/////////////////////////// + +// La libreria standard fornisce un paio di tipi d'eccezioni +// (vedi http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/error/exception) +// ma ogni tipo può essere lanciato come eccezione +#include <exception> + +// Tutte le eccezioni lanciate all'interno del blocco _try_ possono essere catturate dai successivi +// handlers _catch_. +try { + // Non allocare eccezioni nello heap usando _new_. + throw std::exception("È avvenuto un problema"); +} +// Cattura le eccezioni come riferimenti const se sono oggetti +catch (const std::exception& ex) +{ + std::cout << ex.what(); +// Cattura ogni eccezioni non catturata dal blocco _catch_ precedente +} catch (...) +{ + std::cout << "Catturata un'eccezione sconosciuta"; + throw; // Rilancia l'eccezione +} + +/////// +// RAII +/////// + +// RAII sta per Resource Allocation Is Initialization. +// Spesso viene considerato come il più potente paradigma in C++. +// È un concetto semplice: un costruttore di un oggetto +// acquisisce le risorse di tale oggetto ed il distruttore le rilascia. + +// Per comprendere come questo sia vantaggioso, +// consideriamo una funzione che usa un gestore di file in C: +void faiQualcosaConUnFile(const char* nomefile) +{ + // Per cominciare, assumiamo che niente possa fallire. + + FILE* fh = fopen(nomefile, "r"); // Apri il file in modalità lettura. + + faiQualcosaConIlFile(fh); + faiQualcosAltroConEsso(fh); + + fclose(fh); // Chiudi il gestore di file. +} + +// Sfortunatamente, le cose vengono complicate dalla gestione degli errori. +// Supponiamo che fopen fallisca, e che faiQualcosaConUnFile e +// faiQualcosAltroConEsso ritornano codici d'errore se falliscono. +// (Le eccezioni sono la maniera preferita per gestire i fallimenti, +// ma alcuni programmatori, specialmente quelli con un passato in C, +// non sono d'accordo con l'utilità delle eccezioni). +// Adesso dobbiamo verificare che ogni chiamata per eventuali fallimenti e chiudere il gestore di file +// se un problema è avvenuto. +bool faiQualcosaConUnFile(const char* nomefile) +{ + FILE* fh = fopen(nomefile, "r"); // Apre il file in modalità lettura + if (fh == nullptr) // Il puntatore restituito è null in caso di fallimento. + return false; // Riporta il fallimento al chiamante. + + // Assumiamo che ogni funzione ritorni false se ha fallito + if (!faiQualcosaConIlFile(fh)) { + fclose(fh); // Chiude il gestore di file così che non sprechi memoria. + return false; // Propaga l'errore. + } + if (!faiQualcosAltroConEsso(fh)) { + fclose(fh); // Chiude il gestore di file così che non sprechi memoria. + return false; // Propaga l'errore. + } + + fclose(fh); // Chiudi il gestore di file così che non sprechi memoria. + return true; // Indica successo +} + +// I programmatori C in genere puliscono questa procedura usando goto: +bool faiQualcosaConUnFile(const char* nomefile) +{ + FILE* fh = fopen(nomefile, "r"); + if (fh == nullptr) + return false; + + if (!faiQualcosaConIlFile(fh)) + goto fallimento; + + if (!faiQualcosAltroConEsso(fh)) + goto fallimento; + + fclose(fh); // Chiude il file + return true; // Indica successo + +fallimento: + fclose(fh); + return false; // Propaga l'errore +} + +// Se le funzioni indicano errori usando le eccezioni, +// le cose sono un pò più pulite, ma sono sempre sub-ottimali. +void faiQualcosaConUnFile(const char* nomefile) +{ + FILE* fh = fopen(nomefile, "r"); // Apre il file in modalità lettura + if (fh == nullptr) + throw std::exception("Non è stato possibile aprire il file."). + + try { + faiQualcosaConIlFile(fh); + faiQualcosAltroConEsso(fh); + } + catch (...) { + fclose(fh); // Fai sì che il file venga chiuso se si ha un errore. + throw; // Poi rilancia l'eccezione. + } + + fclose(fh); // Chiudi il file + // Tutto è andato bene +} + +// Confronta questo con l'utilizzo della classe C++ file stream (fstream) +// fstream usa i distruttori per chiudere il file. +// Come detto sopra, i distruttori sono automaticamente chiamati +// ogniqualvolta un oggetto esce dalla visibilità. +void faiQualcosaConUnFile(const std::string& nomefile) +{ + // ifstream è l'abbreviazione di input file stream + std::ifstream fh(nomefile); // Apre il file + + // Fai qualcosa con il file + faiQualcosaConIlFile(fh); + faiQualcosAltroConEsso(fh); + +} // Il file viene chiuso automaticamente chiuso qui dal distruttore + +// Questo ha vantaggi _enormi_: +// 1. Può succedere di tutto ma +// la risorsa (in questo caso il file handler) verrà ripulito. +// Una volta che scrivi il distruttore correttamente, +// È _impossibile_ scordarsi di chiudere l'handler e sprecare memoria. +// 2. Nota che il codice è molto più pulito. +// Il distruttore gestisce la chiusura del file dietro le scene +// senza che tu debba preoccupartene. +// 3. Il codice è sicuro da eccezioni. +// Una eccezione può essere lanciata in qualunque punto nella funzione e la ripulitura +// avverrà lo stesso. + +// Tutto il codice C++ idiomatico usa RAII in maniera vasta su tutte le risorse. +// Esempi aggiuntivi includono +// - Utilizzo della memoria con unique_ptr e shared_ptr +// - I contenitori - la lista della libreria standard, +// vettori (i.e. array auto-aggiustati), mappe hash, e così via +// sono tutti automaticamente distrutti con i loro contenuti quando escono dalla visibilità. +// - I mutex usano lock_guard e unique_lock + +/////////////////////// +// Roba divertente +////////////////////// + +// Aspetti del C++ che potrebbero sbalordire i nuovi arrivati (e anche qualche veterano). +// Questa sezione è, sfortunatamente, selvaggiamente incompleta; il C++ è uno dei linguaggi +// più facili con cui puoi spararti da solo nel piede. + +// Puoi sovrascrivere metodi privati! +class Foo { + virtual void bar(); +}; +class FooSub : public Foo { + virtual void bar(); // sovrascrive Foo::bar! +}; + + +// 0 == false == NULL (la maggior parte delle volte)! +bool* pt = new bool; +*pt = 0; // Setta il valore puntato da 'pt' come falso. +pt = 0; // Setta 'pt' al puntatore null. Entrambe le righe vengono compilate senza warnings. + +// nullptr dovrebbe risolvere alcune di quei problemi: +int* pt2 = new int; +*pt2 = nullptr; // Non compila +pt2 = nullptr; // Setta pt2 a null. + +// Ma in qualche modo il tipo 'bool' è una eccezione (questo è per rendere compilabile `if (ptr)`. +*pt = nullptr; // Questo compila, anche se '*pt' è un bool! + + +// '=' != '=' != '='! +// Chiama Foo::Foo(const Foo&) o qualche variante del costruttore di copia. +Foo f2; +Foo f1 = f2; + +// Chiama Foo::Foo(const Foo&) o qualche variante, ma solo copie di 'Foo' che fanno parte di +// 'fooSub'. Ogni altro membro di 'fooSub' viene scartato. Questo comportamento +// orribile viene chiamato "object slicing." +FooSub fooSub; +Foo f1 = fooSub; + +// Chiama Foo::operator=(Foo&) o una sua variante. +Foo f1; +f1 = f2; + +``` +Letture consigliate: + +Un riferimento aggiornato del linguaggio può essere trovato qui +<http://cppreference.com/w/cpp> + +Risorse addizionali possono essere trovate qui <http://cplusplus.com> diff --git a/java.html.markdown b/java.html.markdown index 10dd498c..928eb39f 100644 --- a/java.html.markdown +++ b/java.html.markdown @@ -1,16 +1,16 @@ --- - language: java contributors: - ["Jake Prather", "http://github.com/JakeHP"] - - ["Madison Dickson", "http://github.com/mix3d"] - ["Jakukyo Friel", "http://weakish.github.io"] + - ["Madison Dickson", "http://github.com/mix3d"] + - ["Simon Morgan", "http://sjm.io/"] filename: LearnJava.java - --- -Java is a general-purpose, concurrent, class-based, object-oriented computer programming language. -[Read more here.](http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/index.html) +Java is a general-purpose, concurrent, class-based, object-oriented computer +programming language. +[Read more here.](http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/) ```java // Single-line comments start with // @@ -31,17 +31,17 @@ import java.security.*; // the file. public class LearnJava { - // A program must have a main method as an entry point + // A program must have a main method as an entry point. public static void main (String[] args) { - // Use System.out.println to print lines + // Use System.out.println() to print lines. System.out.println("Hello World!"); System.out.println( "Integer: " + 10 + " Double: " + 3.14 + " Boolean: " + true); - // To print without a newline, use System.out.print + // To print without a newline, use System.out.print(). System.out.print("Hello "); System.out.print("World"); @@ -69,7 +69,7 @@ public class LearnJava { // L is used to denote that this variable value is of type Long; // anything without is treated as integer by default. - // Note: Java has no unsigned types + // Note: Java has no unsigned types. // Float - Single-precision 32-bit IEEE 754 Floating Point float fooFloat = 234.5f; @@ -86,7 +86,7 @@ public class LearnJava { // Char - A single 16-bit Unicode character char fooChar = 'A'; - // final variables can't be reassigned to another object + // final variables can't be reassigned to another object. final int HOURS_I_WORK_PER_WEEK = 9001; // Strings @@ -101,10 +101,10 @@ public class LearnJava { System.out.println(bazString); // Arrays - //The array size must be decided upon instantiation - //The following formats work for declaring an array - //<datatype>[] <var name> = new <datatype>[<array size>]; - //<datatype> <var name>[] = new <datatype>[<array size>]; + // The array size must be decided upon instantiation + // The following formats work for declaring an array + // <datatype>[] <var name> = new <datatype>[<array size>]; + // <datatype> <var name>[] = new <datatype>[<array size>]; int[] intArray = new int[10]; String[] stringArray = new String[1]; boolean boolArray[] = new boolean[100]; @@ -122,17 +122,17 @@ public class LearnJava { System.out.println("intArray @ 1: " + intArray[1]); // => 1 // Others to check out - // ArrayLists - Like arrays except more functionality is offered, - // and the size is mutable + // ArrayLists - Like arrays except more functionality is offered, and + // the size is mutable. // LinkedLists - Implementation of doubly-linked list. All of the - // operations perform as could be expected for - // a doubly-linked list. - // Maps - A set of objects that maps keys to values. A map cannot contain - // duplicate keys; each key can map to at most one value. - // HashMaps - This class uses a hashtable to implement the Map interface. - // This allows the execution time of basic operations, - // such as get and insert element, to remain constant even - // for large sets. + // operations perform as could be expected for a + // doubly-linked list. + // Maps - A set of objects that maps keys to values. A map cannot + // contain duplicate keys; each key can map to at most one value. + // HashMaps - This class uses a hashtable to implement the Map + // interface. This allows the execution time of basic + // operations, such as get and insert element, to remain + // constant even for large sets. /////////////////////////////////////// // Operators @@ -160,13 +160,13 @@ public class LearnJava { // Bitwise operators! /* - ~ Unary bitwise complement - << Signed left shift - >> Signed right shift - >>> Unsigned right shift - & Bitwise AND - ^ Bitwise exclusive OR - | Bitwise inclusive OR + ~ Unary bitwise complement + << Signed left shift + >> Signed right shift + >>> Unsigned right shift + & Bitwise AND + ^ Bitwise exclusive OR + | Bitwise inclusive OR */ // Incrementations @@ -175,10 +175,10 @@ public class LearnJava { // The ++ and -- operators increment and decrement by 1 respectively. // If they are placed before the variable, they increment then return; // after the variable they return then increment. - System.out.println(i++); //i = 1, prints 0 (post-increment) - System.out.println(++i); //i = 2, prints 2 (pre-increment) - System.out.println(i--); //i = 1, prints 2 (post-decrement) - System.out.println(--i); //i = 0, prints 0 (pre-decrement) + System.out.println(i++); // i = 1, prints 0 (post-increment) + System.out.println(++i); // i = 2, prints 2 (pre-increment) + System.out.println(i--); // i = 1, prints 2 (post-decrement) + System.out.println(--i); // i = 0, prints 0 (pre-decrement) /////////////////////////////////////// // Control Structures @@ -197,73 +197,69 @@ public class LearnJava { // While loop int fooWhile = 0; - while(fooWhile < 100) - { - //System.out.println(fooWhile); - //Increment the counter - //Iterated 100 times, fooWhile 0,1,2...99 + while(fooWhile < 100) { + System.out.println(fooWhile); + // Increment the counter + // Iterated 100 times, fooWhile 0,1,2...99 fooWhile++; } System.out.println("fooWhile Value: " + fooWhile); // Do While Loop int fooDoWhile = 0; - do - { - //System.out.println(fooDoWhile); - //Increment the counter - //Iterated 99 times, fooDoWhile 0->99 + do { + System.out.println(fooDoWhile); + // Increment the counter + // Iterated 99 times, fooDoWhile 0->99 fooDoWhile++; - }while(fooDoWhile < 100); + } while(fooDoWhile < 100); System.out.println("fooDoWhile Value: " + fooDoWhile); // For Loop int fooFor; - //for loop structure => for(<start_statement>; <conditional>; <step>) - for(fooFor=0; fooFor<10; fooFor++){ - //System.out.println(fooFor); - //Iterated 10 times, fooFor 0->9 + // for loop structure => for(<start_statement>; <conditional>; <step>) + for (fooFor = 0; fooFor < 10; fooFor++) { + System.out.println(fooFor); + // Iterated 10 times, fooFor 0->9 } System.out.println("fooFor Value: " + fooFor); // For Each Loop - // An automatic iteration through an array or list of objects. - int[] fooList = {1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9}; - //for each loop structure => for(<object> : <array_object>) - //reads as: for each object in the array - //note: the object type must match the array. - - for( int bar : fooList ){ - //System.out.println(bar); + // The for loop is also able to iterate over arrays as well as objects + // that implement the Iterable interface. + int[] fooList = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9}; + // for each loop structure => for (<object> : <iterable>) + // reads as: for each element in the iterable + // note: the object type must match the element type of the iterable. + + for (int bar : fooList) { + System.out.println(bar); //Iterates 9 times and prints 1-9 on new lines } // Switch Case // A switch works with the byte, short, char, and int data types. - // It also works with enumerated types (discussed in Enum Types), - // the String class, and a few special classes that wrap - // primitive types: Character, Byte, Short, and Integer. + // It also works with enumerated types (discussed in Enum Types), the + // String class, and a few special classes that wrap primitive types: + // Character, Byte, Short, and Integer. int month = 3; String monthString; - switch (month){ - case 1: - monthString = "January"; - break; - case 2: - monthString = "February"; + switch (month) { + case 1: monthString = "January"; break; - case 3: - monthString = "March"; + case 2: monthString = "February"; break; - default: - monthString = "Some other month"; + case 3: monthString = "March"; break; + default: monthString = "Some other month"; + break; } System.out.println("Switch Case Result: " + monthString); // Conditional Shorthand // You can use the '?' operator for quick assignments or logic forks. - // Reads as "If (statement) is true, use <first value>, otherwise, use <second value>" + // Reads as "If (statement) is true, use <first value>, otherwise, use + // <second value>" int foo = 5; String bar = (foo < 10) ? "A" : "B"; System.out.println(bar); // Prints A, because the statement is true @@ -287,9 +283,8 @@ public class LearnJava { // String // Typecasting - // You can also cast java objects, there's a lot of details and - // deals with some more intermediate concepts. - // Feel free to check it out here: + // You can also cast Java objects, there's a lot of details and deals + // with some more intermediate concepts. Feel free to check it out here: // http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/IandI/subclasses.html @@ -319,9 +314,9 @@ public class LearnJava { // Class Declaration Syntax: -// <public/private/protected> class <class name>{ -// //data fields, constructors, functions all inside. -// //functions are called as methods in Java. +// <public/private/protected> class <class name> { +// // data fields, constructors, functions all inside. +// // functions are called as methods in Java. // } class Bicycle { @@ -342,7 +337,8 @@ class Bicycle { } // This is a constructor that takes arguments - public Bicycle(int startCadence, int startSpeed, int startGear, String name) { + public Bicycle(int startCadence, int startSpeed, int startGear, + String name) { this.gear = startGear; this.cadence = startCadence; this.speed = startSpeed; @@ -388,10 +384,8 @@ class Bicycle { //Method to display the attribute values of this Object. @Override public String toString() { - return "gear: " + gear + - " cadence: " + cadence + - " speed: " + speed + - " name: " + name; + return "gear: " + gear + " cadence: " + cadence + " speed: " + speed + + " name: " + name; } } // end class Bicycle @@ -405,26 +399,26 @@ class PennyFarthing extends Bicycle { super(startCadence, startSpeed, 0, "PennyFarthing"); } - // You should mark a method you're overriding with an @annotation - // To learn more about what annotations are and their purpose - // check this out: http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/annotations/ + // You should mark a method you're overriding with an @annotation. + // To learn more about what annotations are and their purpose check this + // out: http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/annotations/ @Override public void setGear(int gear) { gear = 0; } - } -//Interfaces -//Interface declaration syntax -//<access-level> interface <interface-name> extends <super-interfaces> { -// //Constants -// //Method declarations -//} +// Interfaces +// Interface declaration syntax +// <access-level> interface <interface-name> extends <super-interfaces> { +// // Constants +// // Method declarations +// } -//Example - Food: +// Example - Food: public interface Edible { - public void eat(); //Any class that implements this interface, must implement this method + public void eat(); // Any class that implements this interface, must + // implement this method. } public interface Digestible { @@ -432,33 +426,31 @@ public interface Digestible { } -//We can now create a class that implements both of these interfaces +// We can now create a class that implements both of these interfaces. public class Fruit implements Edible, Digestible { @Override public void eat() { - //... + // ... } @Override public void digest() { - //... + // ... } } -//In java, you can extend only one class, but you can implement many interfaces. -//For example: -public class ExampleClass extends ExampleClassParent implements InterfaceOne, InterfaceTwo { +// In Java, you can extend only one class, but you can implement many +// interfaces. For example: +public class ExampleClass extends ExampleClassParent implements InterfaceOne, + InterfaceTwo { @Override public void InterfaceOneMethod() { - } @Override public void InterfaceTwoMethod() { - } } - ``` ## Further Reading @@ -500,5 +492,3 @@ The links provided here below are just to get an understanding of the topic, fee * [Objects First with Java](http://www.amazon.com/Objects-First-Java-Practical-Introduction/dp/0132492660) * [Java The Complete Reference](http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0071606300) - - diff --git a/json.html.markdown b/json.html.markdown index f5287138..f57b82b8 100644 --- a/json.html.markdown +++ b/json.html.markdown @@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ As JSON is an extremely simple data-interchange format, this is most likely goin to be the simplest Learn X in Y Minutes ever. JSON in its purest form has no actual comments, but most parsers will accept -C-style (//, /\* \*/) comments. For the purposes of this, however, everything is +C-style (`//`, `/* */`) comments. For the purposes of this, however, everything is going to be 100% valid JSON. Luckily, it kind of speaks for itself. ```json diff --git a/julia.html.markdown b/julia.html.markdown index 3a52018c..5ccd6484 100644 --- a/julia.html.markdown +++ b/julia.html.markdown @@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ filename: learnjulia.jl Julia is a new homoiconic functional language focused on technical computing. While having the full power of homoiconic macros, first-class functions, and low-level control, Julia is as easy to learn and use as Python. -This is based on the current development version of Julia, as of October 18th, 2013. +This is based on Julia 0.3. ```ruby @@ -91,7 +91,7 @@ false # $ can be used for string interpolation: "2 + 2 = $(2 + 2)" # => "2 + 2 = 4" -# You can put any Julia expression inside the parenthesis. +# You can put any Julia expression inside the parentheses. # Another way to format strings is the printf macro. @printf "%d is less than %f" 4.5 5.3 # 5 is less than 5.300000 @@ -190,7 +190,7 @@ end # inside the julia folder to find these files. # You can initialize arrays from ranges -a = [1:5] # => 5-element Int64 Array: [1,2,3,4,5] +a = [1:5;] # => 5-element Int64 Array: [1,2,3,4,5] # You can look at ranges with slice syntax. a[1:3] # => [1, 2, 3] @@ -264,7 +264,7 @@ in(("two", 3), filled_dict) # => false haskey(filled_dict, "one") # => true haskey(filled_dict, 1) # => false -# Trying to look up a non-existant key will raise an error +# Trying to look up a non-existent key will raise an error try filled_dict["four"] # => ERROR: key not found: four in getindex at dict.jl:489 catch e diff --git a/nim.html.markdown b/nim.html.markdown index aa15e591..c9548a1c 100644 --- a/nim.html.markdown +++ b/nim.html.markdown @@ -155,7 +155,7 @@ var anotherArray = ["Default index", "starts at", "0"] # More data structures are available, including tables, sets, lists, queues, # and crit bit trees. -# http://nimrod-lang.org/lib.html#collections-and-algorithms +# http://nim-lang.org/docs/lib.html#collections-and-algorithms # # IO and Control Flow @@ -174,7 +174,7 @@ else: # `while`, `if`, `continue`, `break` -import strutils as str # http://nimrod-lang.org/strutils.html +import strutils as str # http://nim-lang.org/docs/strutils.html echo "I'm thinking of a number between 41 and 43. Guess which!" let number: int = 42 var @@ -263,11 +263,11 @@ performance, and compile-time features. ## Further Reading -* [Home Page](http://nimrod-lang.org) -* [Download](http://nimrod-lang.org/download.html) -* [Community](http://nimrod-lang.org/community.html) -* [FAQ](http://nimrod-lang.org/question.html) -* [Documentation](http://nimrod-lang.org/documentation.html) -* [Manual](http://nimrod-lang.org/manual.html) -* [Standard Library](http://nimrod-lang.org/lib.html) -* [Rosetta Code](http://rosettacode.org/wiki/Category:Nimrod) +* [Home Page](http://nim-lang.org) +* [Download](http://nim-lang.org/download.html) +* [Community](http://nim-lang.org/community.html) +* [FAQ](http://nim-lang.org/question.html) +* [Documentation](http://nim-lang.org/documentation.html) +* [Manual](http://nim-lang.org/docs/manual.html) +* [Standard Library](http://nim-lang.org/docs/lib.html) +* [Rosetta Code](http://rosettacode.org/wiki/Category:Nim) diff --git a/perl6.html.markdown b/perl6.html.markdown index b2d7d48c..3bb87916 100644 --- a/perl6.html.markdown +++ b/perl6.html.markdown @@ -10,8 +10,7 @@ contributors: Perl 6 is a highly capable, feature-rich programming language made for the upcoming hundred years. -Perl 6 runs on [the Parrot VM](http://parrot.org/), the JVM -and [the MoarVM](http://moarvm.com). +Perl 6 runs on [the MoarVM](http://moarvm.com) and the JVM. Meta-note : the triple pound signs are here to denote headlines, double paragraphs, and single notes. @@ -211,7 +210,7 @@ say $x; #=> 52 # - `if` # Before talking about `if`, we need to know which values are "Truthy" # (represent True), and which are "Falsey" (or "Falsy") -- represent False. -# Only these values are Falsey: (), 0, "0", "", Nil, A type (like `Str` or `Int`), +# Only these values are Falsey: (), 0, "", Nil, A type (like `Str` or `Int`), # and of course False itself. # Every other value is Truthy. if True { diff --git a/php.html.markdown b/php.html.markdown index 039288a0..2d4565e0 100644 --- a/php.html.markdown +++ b/php.html.markdown @@ -60,7 +60,7 @@ $float = 1.2e3; $float = 7E-10; // Delete variable -unset($int1) +unset($int1); // Arithmetic $sum = 1 + 1; // 2 diff --git a/python3.html.markdown b/python3.html.markdown index 470eb6e4..a112912f 100644 --- a/python3.html.markdown +++ b/python3.html.markdown @@ -39,7 +39,7 @@ Note: This article applies to Python 3 specifically. Check out [here](http://lea # Except division which returns floats by default 35 / 5 # => 7.0 -# Result of integer division truncated down both for positive and negative. +# Result of integer division truncated down both for positive and negative. 5 // 3 # => 1 5.0 // 3.0 # => 1.0 # works on floats too -5 // 3 # => -2 @@ -73,8 +73,8 @@ False or True #=> True # Note using Bool operators with ints 0 and 2 #=> 0 -5 or 0 #=> -5 -0 == False #=> True -2 == True #=> False +0 == False #=> True +2 == True #=> False 1 == True #=> True # Equality is == @@ -145,7 +145,7 @@ bool({}) #=> False # Python has a print function print("I'm Python. Nice to meet you!") -# No need to declare variables before assigning to them. +# No need to declare variables before assigning to them. # Convention is to use lower_case_with_underscores some_var = 5 some_var # => 5 @@ -186,7 +186,7 @@ li[2:] # => [4, 3] li[:3] # => [1, 2, 4] # Select every second entry li[::2] # =>[1, 4] -# Revert the list +# Return a reversed copy of the list li[::-1] # => [3, 4, 2, 1] # Use any combination of these to make advanced slices # li[start:end:step] @@ -196,7 +196,7 @@ del li[2] # li is now [1, 2, 3] # You can add lists # Note: values for li and for other_li are not modified. -li + other_li # => [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6] +li + other_li # => [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6] # Concatenate lists with "extend()" li.extend(other_li) # Now li is [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6] @@ -213,7 +213,7 @@ tup = (1, 2, 3) tup[0] # => 1 tup[0] = 3 # Raises a TypeError -# You can do all those list thingies on tuples too +# You can do most of the list operations on tuples too len(tup) # => 3 tup + (4, 5, 6) # => (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6) tup[:2] # => (1, 2) @@ -235,15 +235,15 @@ filled_dict = {"one": 1, "two": 2, "three": 3} # Look up values with [] filled_dict["one"] # => 1 -# Get all keys as a list with "keys()". -# We need to wrap the call in list() because we are getting back an iterable. We'll talk about those later. -# Note - Dictionary key ordering is not guaranteed. -# Your results might not match this exactly. +# Get all keys as an iterable with "keys()". We need to wrap the call in list() +# to turn it into a list. We'll talk about those later. Note - Dictionary key +# ordering is not guaranteed. Your results might not match this exactly. list(filled_dict.keys()) # => ["three", "two", "one"] -# Get all values as a list with "values()". Once again we need to wrap it in list() to get it out of the iterable. -# Note - Same as above regarding key ordering. +# Get all values as an iterable with "values()". Once again we need to wrap it +# in list() to get it out of the iterable. Note - Same as above regarding key +# ordering. list(filled_dict.values()) # => [3, 2, 1] @@ -281,7 +281,7 @@ some_set = {1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 4} # some_set is now {1, 2, 3, 4} # Can set new variables to a set filled_set = some_set -# Add one more item to the set +# Add one more item to the set filled_set.add(5) # filled_set is now {1, 2, 3, 4, 5} # Do set intersection with & @@ -328,7 +328,7 @@ for animal in ["dog", "cat", "mouse"]: print("{} is a mammal".format(animal)) """ -"range(number)" returns a list of numbers +"range(number)" returns an iterable of numbers from zero to the given number prints: 0 @@ -340,7 +340,7 @@ for i in range(4): print(i) """ -"range(lower, upper)" returns a list of numbers +"range(lower, upper)" returns an iterable of numbers from the lower number to the upper number prints: 4 @@ -458,14 +458,14 @@ all_the_args(**kwargs) # equivalent to foo(a=3, b=4) all_the_args(*args, **kwargs) # equivalent to foo(1, 2, 3, 4, a=3, b=4) -# Function Scope +# Function Scope x = 5 def setX(num): # Local var x not the same as global variable x x = num # => 43 print (x) # => 43 - + def setGlobalX(num): global x print (x) # => 5 @@ -512,8 +512,8 @@ class Human(object): # Basic initializer, this is called when this class is instantiated. # Note that the double leading and trailing underscores denote objects # or attributes that are used by python but that live in user-controlled - # namespaces. Methods(or objects or attributes) like: __init__, __str__, - # __repr__ etc. are called magic methods (or sometimes called dunder methods) + # namespaces. Methods(or objects or attributes) like: __init__, __str__, + # __repr__ etc. are called magic methods (or sometimes called dunder methods) # You should not invent such names on your own. def __init__(self, name): # Assign the argument to the instance's name attribute @@ -600,7 +600,7 @@ def double_numbers(iterable): # double_numbers. # Note range is a generator too. Creating a list 1-900000000 would take lot of # time to be made -# We use a trailing underscore in variable names when we want to use a name that +# We use a trailing underscore in variable names when we want to use a name that # would normally collide with a python keyword range_ = range(1, 900000000) # will double all numbers until a result >=30 found diff --git a/rust.html.markdown b/rust.html.markdown index dcb54733..17f7dc90 100644 --- a/rust.html.markdown +++ b/rust.html.markdown @@ -6,14 +6,21 @@ filename: learnrust.rs --- Rust is an in-development programming language developed by Mozilla Research. -It is relatively unique among systems languages in that it can assert memory -safety *at compile time* without resorting to garbage collection. Rust’s first -release, 0.1, occurred in January 2012, and development moves so quickly that at -the moment the use of stable releases is discouraged, and instead one should use -nightly builds. On January 9 2015, Rust 1.0 Alpha was released, and the rate of -changes to the Rust compiler that break existing code has dropped significantly -since. However, a complete guarantee of backward compatibility will not exist -until the final 1.0 release. +Rust combines low-level control over performance with high-level convenience and +safety guarantees. + +It achieves these goals without requiring a garbage collector or runtime, making +it possible to use Rust libraries as a "drop-in replacement" for C. + +Rust’s first release, 0.1, occurred in January 2012, and for 3 years development +moved so quickly that until recently the use of stable releases was discouraged +and instead the general advise was to use nightly builds. + +On May 15th 2015, Rust 1.0 was released with a complete guarantee of backward +compatibility. Improvements to compile times and other aspects of the compiler are +currently available in the nightly builds. Rust has adopted a train-based release +model with regular releases every six weeks. Rust 1.1 beta was made available at +the same time of the release of Rust 1.0. Although Rust is a relatively low-level language, Rust has some functional concepts that are generally found in higher-level languages. This makes diff --git a/standard-ml.html.markdown b/standard-ml.html.markdown index 07896beb..143980e7 100644 --- a/standard-ml.html.markdown +++ b/standard-ml.html.markdown @@ -4,6 +4,7 @@ contributors: - ["Simon Shine", "http://shine.eu.org/"] - ["David Pedersen", "http://lonelyproton.com/"] - ["James Baker", "http://www.jbaker.io/"] + - ["Leo Zovic", "http://langnostic.inaimathi.ca/"] --- Standard ML is a functional programming language with type inference and some @@ -136,9 +137,29 @@ val mixup = [ ("Alice", 39), val good_bad_stuff = (["ice cream", "hot dogs", "chocolate"], - ["liver", "paying the rent" ]) (* string list * string list *) + ["liver", "paying the rent" ]) (* : string list * string list *) +(* Records are tuples with named slots *) + +val rgb = { r=0.23, g=0.56, b=0.91 } (* : {b:real, g:real, r:real} *) + +(* You don't need to declare their slots ahead of time. Records with + different slot names are considered different types, even if their + slot value types match up. For instance... *) + +val Hsl = { H=310.3, s=0.51, l=0.23 } (* : {H:real, l:real, s:real} *) +val Hsv = { H=310.3, s=0.51, v=0.23 } (* : {H:real, s:real, v:real} *) + +(* ...trying to evaluate `Hsv = Hsl` or `rgb = Hsl` would give a type + error. While they're all three-slot records composed only of `real`s, + they each have different names for at least some slots. *) + +(* You can use hash notation to get values out of tuples. *) + +val H = #H Hsv (* : real *) +val s = #s Hsl (* : real *) + (* Functions! *) fun add_them (a, b) = a + b (* A simple function that adds two numbers *) val test_it = add_them (3, 4) (* gives 7 *) @@ -225,17 +246,26 @@ fun fibonacci 0 = 0 (* Base case *) | fibonacci 1 = 1 (* Base case *) | fibonacci n = fibonacci (n - 1) + fibonacci (n - 2) (* Recursive case *) -(* Pattern matching is also possible on composite types like tuples and lists. - Writing "fun solve2 (a, b, c) = ..." is in fact a pattern match on the one - three-tuple solve2 takes as argument. Similarly, but less intuitively, you - can match on a list consisting of elements in it (from the beginning of the - list only). *) +(* Pattern matching is also possible on composite types like tuples, lists and + records. Writing "fun solve2 (a, b, c) = ..." is in fact a pattern match on + the one three-tuple solve2 takes as argument. Similarly, but less intuitively, + you can match on a list consisting of elements in it (from the beginning of + the list only). *) fun first_elem (x::xs) = x fun second_elem (x::y::xs) = y fun evenly_positioned_elems (odd::even::xs) = even::evenly_positioned_elems xs | evenly_positioned_elems [odd] = [] (* Base case: throw away *) | evenly_positioned_elems [] = [] (* Base case *) +(* When matching on records, you must use their slot names, and you must bind + every slot in a record. The order of the slots doesn't matter though. *) + +fun rgbToTup {r, g, b} = (r, g, b) (* fn : {b:'a, g:'b, r:'c} -> 'c * 'b * 'a *) +fun mixRgbToTup {g, b, r} = (r, g, b) (* fn : {b:'a, g:'b, r:'c} -> 'c * 'b * 'a *) + +(* If called with {r=0.1, g=0.2, b=0.3}, either of the above functions + would return (0.1, 0.2, 0.3). But it would be a type error to call them + with {r=0.1, g=0.2, b=0.3, a=0.4} *) (* Higher order functions: Functions can take other functions as arguments. Functions are just other kinds of values, and functions don't need names diff --git a/visualbasic.html.markdown b/visualbasic.html.markdown index fbfa500d..00d61843 100644 --- a/visualbasic.html.markdown +++ b/visualbasic.html.markdown @@ -159,7 +159,7 @@ Module Module1 Console.Write(a.ToString() + " - " + b.ToString()) Console.WriteLine(" = " + e.ToString.PadLeft(3)) Console.Write(a.ToString() + " / " + b.ToString()) - Console.WriteLine(" = " + e.ToString.PadLeft(3)) + Console.WriteLine(" = " + f.ToString.PadLeft(3)) Console.ReadLine() End Sub @@ -189,7 +189,7 @@ Module Module1 Console.Write(a.ToString() + " - " + b.ToString()) Console.WriteLine(" = " + e.ToString.PadLeft(3)) Console.Write(a.ToString() + " / " + b.ToString()) - Console.WriteLine(" = " + e.ToString.PadLeft(3)) + Console.WriteLine(" = " + f.ToString.PadLeft(3)) Console.ReadLine() 'Ask the question, does the user wish to continue? Unfortunately it 'is case sensitive. diff --git a/zh-cn/bash-cn.html.markdown b/zh-cn/bash-cn.html.markdown index 6afa659a..558d9110 100644 --- a/zh-cn/bash-cn.html.markdown +++ b/zh-cn/bash-cn.html.markdown @@ -5,7 +5,14 @@ contributors: - ["Max Yankov", "https://github.com/golergka"] - ["Darren Lin", "https://github.com/CogBear"] - ["Alexandre Medeiros", "http://alemedeiros.sdf.org"] + - ["Denis Arh", "https://github.com/darh"] + - ["akirahirose", "https://twitter.com/akirahirose"] + - ["Anton Strömkvist", "http://lutic.org/"] + - ["Rahil Momin", "https://github.com/iamrahil"] + - ["Gregrory Kielian", "https://github.com/gskielian"] + - ["Etan Reisner", "https://github.com/deryni"] translators: + - ["Jinchang Ye", "https://github.com/Alwayswithme"] - ["Chunyang Xu", "https://github.com/XuChunyang"] filename: LearnBash-cn.sh lang: zh-cn @@ -23,31 +30,45 @@ Bash 是一个为 GNU 计划编写的 Unix shell,是 Linux 和 Mac OS X 下的 # 如你所见,注释以 # 开头,shebang 也是注释。 # 显示 “Hello world!” -echo Hello, world! +echo Hello world! # 每一句指令以换行或分号隔开: echo 'This is the first line'; echo 'This is the second line' # 声明一个变量: -VARIABLE="Some string" +Variable="Some string" # 下面是错误的做法: -VARIABLE = "Some string" -# Bash 会把 VARIABLE 当做一个指令,由于找不到该指令,因此这里会报错。 +Variable = "Some string" +# Bash 会把 Variable 当做一个指令,由于找不到该指令,因此这里会报错。 +# 也不可以这样: +Variable= 'Some string' +# Bash 会认为 'Some string' 是一条指令,由于找不到该指令,这里再次报错。 +# (这个例子中 'Variable=' 这部分会被当作仅对 'Some string' 起作用的赋值。) # 使用变量: -echo $VARIABLE -echo "$VARIABLE" -echo '$VARIABLE' +echo $Variable +echo "$Variable" +echo '$Variable' # 当你赋值 (assign) 、导出 (export),或者以其他方式使用变量时,变量名前不加 $。 # 如果要使用变量的值, 则要加 $。 # 注意: ' (单引号) 不会展开变量(即会屏蔽掉变量)。 # 在变量内部进行字符串代换 -echo ${VARIABLE/Some/A} -# 会把 VARIABLE 中首次出现的 "some" 替换成 “A”。 +echo ${Variable/Some/A} +# 会把 Variable 中首次出现的 "some" 替换成 “A”。 + +# 变量的截取 +Length=7 +echo ${Variable:0:Length} +# 这样会仅返回变量值的前7个字符 + +# 变量的默认值 +echo ${Foo:-"DefaultValueIfFooIsMissingOrEmpty"} +# 对 null (Foo=) 和空串 (Foo="") 起作用; 零(Foo=0)时返回0 +# 注意这仅返回默认值而不是改变变量的值 # 内置变量: # 下面的内置变量很有用 @@ -55,26 +76,37 @@ echo "Last program return value: $?" echo "Script's PID: $$" echo "Number of arguments: $#" echo "Scripts arguments: $@" -echo "Scripts arguments separeted in different variables: $1 $2..." +echo "Scripts arguments separated in different variables: $1 $2..." # 读取输入: echo "What's your name?" -read NAME # 这里不需要声明新变量 -echo Hello, $NAME! +read Name # 这里不需要声明新变量 +echo Hello, $Name! # 通常的 if 结构看起来像这样: # 'man test' 可查看更多的信息 -if [ $NAME -ne $USER ] +if [ $Name -ne $USER ] then - echo "Your name is you username" + echo "Your name isn't your username" else - echo "Your name isn't you username" + echo "Your name is your username" fi # 根据上一个指令执行结果决定是否执行下一个指令 -echo "Always executed" || echo "Only executed if first command fail" +echo "Always executed" || echo "Only executed if first command fails" echo "Always executed" && echo "Only executed if first command does NOT fail" +# 在 if 语句中使用 && 和 || 需要多对方括号 +if [ $Name == "Steve" ] && [ $Age -eq 15 ] +then + echo "This will run if $Name is Steve AND $Age is 15." +fi + +if [ $Name == "Daniya" ] || [ $Name == "Zach" ] +then + echo "This will run if $Name is Daniya OR Zach." +fi + # 表达式的格式如下: echo $(( 10 + 5 )) @@ -88,18 +120,54 @@ ls -l # 列出文件和目录的详细信息 # 用下面的指令列出当前目录下所有的 txt 文件: ls -l | grep "\.txt" +# 重定向输入和输出(标准输入,标准输出,标准错误)。 +# 以 ^EOF$ 作为结束标记从标准输入读取数据并覆盖 hello.py : +cat > hello.py << EOF +#!/usr/bin/env python +from __future__ import print_function +import sys +print("#stdout", file=sys.stdout) +print("#stderr", file=sys.stderr) +for line in sys.stdin: + print(line, file=sys.stdout) +EOF + # 重定向可以到输出,输入和错误输出。 -python2 hello.py < "input.in" -python2 hello.py > "output.out" -python2 hello.py 2> "error.err" +python hello.py < "input.in" +python hello.py > "output.out" +python hello.py 2> "error.err" +python hello.py > "output-and-error.log" 2>&1 +python hello.py > /dev/null 2>&1 # > 会覆盖已存在的文件, >> 会以累加的方式输出文件中。 +python hello.py >> "output.out" 2>> "error.err" + +# 覆盖 output.out , 追加 error.err 并统计行数 +info bash 'Basic Shell Features' 'Redirections' > output.out 2>> error.err +wc -l output.out error.err + +# 运行指令并打印文件描述符 (比如 /dev/fd/123) +# 具体可查看: man fd +echo <(echo "#helloworld") + +# 以 "#helloworld" 覆盖 output.out: +cat > output.out <(echo "#helloworld") +echo "#helloworld" > output.out +echo "#helloworld" | cat > output.out +echo "#helloworld" | tee output.out >/dev/null + +# 清理临时文件并显示详情(增加 '-i' 选项启用交互模式) +rm -v output.out error.err output-and-error.log # 一个指令可用 $( ) 嵌套在另一个指令内部: # 以下的指令会打印当前目录下的目录和文件总数 echo "There are $(ls | wc -l) items here." +# 反引号 `` 起相同作用,但不允许嵌套 +# 优先使用 $( ). +echo "There are `ls | wc -l` items here." + # Bash 的 case 语句与 Java 和 C++ 中的 switch 语句类似: -case "$VARIABLE" in +case "$Variable" in # 列出需要匹配的字符串 0) echo "There is a zero.";; 1) echo "There is a one.";; @@ -107,11 +175,37 @@ case "$VARIABLE" in esac # 循环遍历给定的参数序列: -# 变量$VARIABLE 的值会被打印 3 次。 -# 注意 ` ` 和 $( ) 等价。seq 返回长度为 3 的数组。 -for VARIABLE in `seq 3` +# 变量$Variable 的值会被打印 3 次。 +for Variable in {1..3} +do + echo "$Variable" +done + +# 或传统的 “for循环” : +for ((a=1; a <= 3; a++)) do - echo "$VARIABLE" + echo $a +done + +# 也可以用于文件 +# 用 cat 输出 file1 和 file2 内容 +for Variable in file1 file2 +do + cat "$Variable" +done + +# 或作用于其他命令的输出 +# 对 ls 输出的文件执行 cat 指令。 +for Output in $(ls) +do + cat "$Output" +done + +# while 循环: +while [ true ] +do + echo "loop body here..." + break done # 你也可以使用函数 @@ -132,17 +226,52 @@ bar () } # 调用函数 -foo "My name is" $NAME +foo "My name is" $Name # 有很多有用的指令需要学习: -tail -n 10 file.txt # 打印 file.txt 的最后 10 行 -head -n 10 file.txt +tail -n 10 file.txt # 打印 file.txt 的前 10 行 -sort file.txt +head -n 10 file.txt # 将 file.txt 按行排序 -uniq -d file.txt +sort file.txt # 报告或忽略重复的行,用选项 -d 打印重复的行 -cut -d ',' -f 1 file.txt +uniq -d file.txt # 打印每行中 ',' 之前内容 +cut -d ',' -f 1 file.txt +# 将 file.txt 文件所有 'okay' 替换为 'great', (兼容正则表达式) +sed -i 's/okay/great/g' file.txt +# 将 file.txt 中匹配正则的行打印到标准输出 +# 这里打印以 "foo" 开头, "bar" 结尾的行 +grep "^foo.*bar$" file.txt +# 使用选项 "-c" 统计行数 +grep -c "^foo.*bar$" file.txt +# 如果只是要按字面形式搜索字符串而不是按正则表达式,使用 fgrep (或 grep -F) +fgrep "^foo.*bar$" file.txt + + +# 以 bash 内建的 'help' 指令阅读 Bash 自带文档: +help +help help +help for +help return +help source +help . + +# 用 mam 指令阅读相关的 Bash 手册 +apropos bash +man 1 bash +man bash + +# 用 info 指令查阅命令的 info 文档 (info 中按 ? 显示帮助信息) +apropos info | grep '^info.*(' +man info +info info +info 5 info + +# 阅读 Bash 的 info 文档: +info bash +info bash 'Bash Features' +info bash 6 +info --apropos bash ``` diff --git a/zh-cn/javascript-cn.html.markdown b/zh-cn/javascript-cn.html.markdown index 64b0aadc..b450ab84 100644 --- a/zh-cn/javascript-cn.html.markdown +++ b/zh-cn/javascript-cn.html.markdown @@ -341,7 +341,7 @@ var myFunc = myObj.myFunc; myFunc(); // = undefined // 相应的,一个函数也可以被指定为一个对象的方法,并且可以通过`this`访问 -// 这个对象的成员,即使在行数被定义时并没有依附在对象上。 +// 这个对象的成员,即使在函数被定义时并没有依附在对象上。 var myOtherFunc = function(){ return this.myString.toUpperCase(); } |