You signed in with another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You signed out in another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You switched accounts on another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.Dismiss alert
Now you're ready to start coding. Let's get familiar with the files in our repo:
README.md: a markdown introduction to this project
get-quote.py: the file where we'll write our Python code
quotes.txt: a text file with a list of quotes
Open up get-quote.py and comment out line 2 by removing the # from the beginning of the line. It will look like this:
print("Keep it logically awesome.")
The two spaces (or one tab) in front of the line is important. Python uses whitespace to organize code. This print line is part of the main() function. But more on that in the next step. First, let's try running that Python script.
Use the Python 3 command to run the script. From the command line, type one of the following:
python get-quote.py
python3 get-quote.py
You should see our first quote, the one hard-coded into line 2, printed out in your terminal: Keep it logically awesome.
Push your changes
You've edited your local code, so you have a more recent version than is stored in this repository. You can check that any time by running: git status
It should show one file modified. Every time we want to send our local changes to GitHub, we need to perform three steps:
Add the file(s) with changes: git add get-quote.py
Commit the changes: git commit -m "Hello World"
Push the changes: git push
Once you've completed these steps, we'll write some more Python.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
Now you're ready to start coding. Let's get familiar with the files in our repo:
README.md
: a markdown introduction to this projectget-quote.py
: the file where we'll write our Python codequotes.txt
: a text file with a list of quotesOpen up
get-quote.py
and comment out line 2 by removing the#
from the beginning of the line. It will look like this:The two spaces (or one tab) in front of the line is important. Python uses whitespace to organize code. This print line is part of the
main()
function. But more on that in the next step. First, let's try running that Python script.Use the Python 3 command to run the script. From the command line, type one of the following:
python get-quote.py
python3 get-quote.py
You should see our first quote, the one hard-coded into line 2, printed out in your terminal:
Keep it logically awesome.
Push your changes
You've edited your local code, so you have a more recent version than is stored in this repository. You can check that any time by running:
git status
It should show one file modified. Every time we want to send our local changes to GitHub, we need to perform three steps:
git add get-quote.py
git commit -m "Hello World"
git push
Once you've completed these steps, we'll write some more Python.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: