I want to have a command line function, where I give the input (3 words) and the output is a text file with those words in it.
Example:
Input: Cheese; Bacon; Eggs;
Text: I love to eat _____ sandwiches, along with ____ and ____ on a toast.
Output: I love to eat Cheese sandwiches, along with Bacon and Eggs on a toast.
I know this might sound super easy to do, but I honestly don't even know where to begin/what to look for.
I just don't know where to start, so if you could point me to any simple tutorials or functions to get started with, that'd be great.
Cheers,
Maybe it's not exactly what I was looking for, but it does the trick for me. I was planning to replace words from a tex document (Latex), so establishing variables such as what's explained in this link answers my needs:
Is there any way I can define a variable in LaTeX?
Related
Basically I want to implement a fuzzy search that disregards language!
For example - let's say that there's an entry for "Hello World".
Now, I want this to work with:
"hello"
"henlp"
"руддщ" (these are the Russian characters if you try to type "hello" but forget to switch to English)
"рутдз" (same as above but with "henlp" instead of "hello")
"יקמךם" (same as above but in Hebrew)
etc.
Now the things that makes most sense to me is to ignore the actual text and regard their relevant keyCodes, which all obviously work universally).
I did thought about for each entry, saving an array which represents all key codes - and then implement fuzziness based on the already given keyCodes instead of chars, but that feels like I'm doing something wrong, or missing something that already exists.
So, from what I've gathered there's no implementation of fuzzy search that regards this.
Is there maybe an alogrithm (other than fuzzy search) that already regards this which I'm missing?
Currently trying to implement in Node.js but open for more languages and frameworks
I am a beginner and I want to know if there's way to search a text sentence in a large text sequence of data (say 1 million) and search accordingly like when a user type:
I shouldn't be there
then it should search for sequence like this:
I should not be there
similar like this :
I gonna go there.
to
I going to go there.
I have been thinking for couple of days to figure out solution of this
problem.
If you know anything about how to deal with this problem then please provide a solution or just a hint would be more than enough. Thank you.
I would firstly go trough both the sentence and text and replace all contractions with the long form. Then after that use Knuth-Morris-Pratt.
EDIT: I tried the code lines in the link to other questions that were similar, however the programs did not execute correctly
I am a full-on noob trying to complete some free online resources for self improvement and learning. I am using University of Waterloo's 'Python from scratch' and CS circles course I have tried to answer this question and cannot seem to:
Write a program that asks the user for a string and then prints the string in upper case.
I have tried:
print (str(input()).upper)
AS WELL AS
text = input()
print (text.upper)
AND
print(input().upper())
all programs run, but dont have correct output so I dont know what I am missing here. It's likely obvious and I may feel foolish
I would love to learn and move on, thanks for any assistance!
this is 'Python from scratch' 2.11 problem 'g' (7th problem in set)
You were very close, the following works:
input.upper()
so, print(input.upper())
should work for you.
text=input()
print(text.upper())
print(input().upper())
This should have worked for you in Python 3.x
I am new to Notepad++ and have ben researching how to do this, but it seems each answer I try to mimic doesn't work correctly.
Here is the scenario:
I have 2 text files, each with ATM transactions such as time of transaction (In military time, such as 18:09) and transaction amount (Displayed as 43.00)
I need to find a way to search the document so that it only returns matches where both the time and amount are there, and on the same line of the document.
Example would be, I need to find on this huge text file where both 43.00 and 18:09 appear on the same line, allowing my to verify the transaction was valid.
Any ideas on how to do this? I am using the latest Notepad++6.8 and have downloaded the compare plugin.
Thank you and I will begin researching how the coding works in notepad++ in the meantime, as I am not an experienced programmer (Just had 1 college course in C++ which I loved but eh)
Cheers!
Ctrl-F, Select "Regular expression" as Search mode and then write:
8:09.*43.00
Ctrl F, search for 43.00 or 18:09.
I'm searching for a tool that converts text to phonemes, (like text to speech software)
I can program one but it will not be without errors and takes a lot of time!
so my question is:
is there a simple tool for converting e.g.
"hello" to "HH AH0 L OW1"
maybe some command-line tool so i can capture the stdout?
i'm searching for the phonemes in 'Arpabet' style (see the 'hello' example).
espeak does something like that but the output is not in Arpabet style and the phonemes are
not split by some determiner.
If you had searched for Arpabet on wiki you would have found your answer. The CMU guys have prepared scripts which convert most english words to their respective Arpabet phonetic break up.
If you want the phone sequence of a couple of words you can use their interface here. But, if you want it for a big file then you might have to run their scripts on your own. They used to have a working page here, but it seems to be not working now.