HW1


Homework 1

Due: 11:59pm, Thursday, Sep 08, 2022

100 points

For all Racket assignments in this course, set the DrRacket Language to Intermediate Student with lambda (under How to Design Programs). Your assignment will be graded using the specified language level. If you use a different language level, your code may not work when it is graded.

  • Do the following programming problems using only the primitives mentioned in Lectures 2 and 3.  Do not use the functions in the Racket library if they are not mentioned in Lectures 2 and 3.

    1. [10 pts] Develop the function contains? that consumes a symbol and a list of symbols and determines whether or not the symbol occurs in the list.

    2. [10 ptsDevelop the function count-symbols that consumes a list of symbols and produces the number of items in the list.

    3. [10 ptsDevelop the function count-numbers that counts how many numbers are in a list of numbers.  [Note: the function merely works on inputs that are lists of numbers; it may blow up on anything else].

    4. [20 ptsDevelop the function avg-price. It consumes a list of toy prices and computes the average price of a toy. The average is the total of all prices divided by the number of toys. Toy prices are numbers.
       
      Hints:
      1. Develop a few auxiliary functions (following the design recipe for each auxiliary function) to make the definition of avg-price very easy.  Do not use the Racket library other than primitives mentioned in
      2. If the list of toy prices is empty, the function avg-price produces an error message as described in Guidance below. 

    5. [10pts] Develop the function elim-exp to eliminate expensive toys. The function consumes a number, called mp (short for "maximum price") and a list of toy prices, called lotp, and produces a list of all those prices in lotp that are below or equal to mp.  For example
      (check-expect (elim-exp 1.0 (list 2.95 .95 1.0 5) (list .95 1.0)) = #true
    6. [10pts] Develop the function delete to eliminate specific toys from a list. The function consumes the name of a toy, called ty, and a list of names, called lon, and produces a list of names that contains all components of lon with the exception of ty. For example,

      (check-expect (delete 'robot (list 'robot 'doll 'dress)) (list 'doll 'dress)) = #true

       

    7. [30pts] A list can be used to represent a finite set. For example,  

      (list 'c 'o 'm 'p)

      represents the set of symbols {'c , 'o, 'm, 'p}.  In such a representation, we assume all elements in the list are unique; there are no duplicates.   Develop the function power that consumes a list of symbols los (representing a set) and produces a list of list of symbols representing the power set (set of all subsets) of los.  Hint: write an auxiliary function cons-all that consumes a symbol sym and a list of list of symbols lolos and inserts symbol sym at the front of each list in lolos

      For example, 

          (check-expect (cons-all 'a (list (list 'c) (list 'o) (list 'm) (list 'p))  (list (list 'a 'c) (list 'a 'o) (list 'a 'm) (list 'a 'p))) = #true

  • Guidance:

    1. Follow the design recipe imitating Sample Solution to a Programming Problem in the Racket HW Guide.

    2. Problem 4 asks you to write a function that checks for the empty list as an input error and throws an aborting error in the case. (The purpose statement should document this behavior!) In DrRacket, the error function takes a single argument not two arguments as documented in the book. We recommend using a string (text enclosed in double quotation marks) like "An empty list of toy prices triggers this aborting error" as the argument.  You can test the error-throwing behavior of a function using check-error which is documented in the DrRacket Help Desk.

    3. Study Figure 26 in 9.4 for a detailed description of the design recipe and how it is documented in the program text that you develop.

      To follow the design recipe, you must write down the type contract, purpose, provide at least 3 well-chosen examples (more for complex functions like power), write the template for the function (trivial when no recursion is involved), write the code for the function, and include illustrative test cases for the function (using at least the examples you developed ahead of time). You should bundle the examples and test cases together as a block of check-expect invocations, which was not part of DrRacket when the First Edition of the book was written. These tests should precede your template and code.  Your chosen examples should illustrate the output you expect, and the test cases should produce the actual output. You can write these test cases as executable code using the check-expect primitive which exists in the DrRacket teaching languages.  If the function processes an inductive type, make sure that your examples include the base case(s) and sample inductive cases.

 

Write a comment…
  • No labels