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You're reading from  Learning Jupyter

Product typeBook
Published inNov 2016
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781785884870
Edition1st Edition
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Dan Toomey
Dan Toomey
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Dan Toomey

Dan Toomey has been developing application software for over 20 years. He has worked in a variety of industries and companies, in roles from sole contributor to VP/CTO-level. For the last few years, he has been contracting for companies in the eastern Massachusetts area. Dan has been contracting under Dan Toomey Software Corp. Dan has also written R for Data Science, Jupyter for Data Sciences, and the Jupyter Cookbook, all with Packt.
Read more about Dan Toomey

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Scala random numbers in Jupyter


In this example, we simulate a rolling dice and count how many times each combination appears. We then present a simple histogram for illustrative purposes.

The script is as follows:

val r = new scala.util.Random
r.setSeed(113L)
val samples = 1000
var dice = new Array[Int](12)
for( i <- 1 to samples){
    var total = r.nextInt(6) + r.nextInt(6)
    dice(total) = dice(total) + 1
}
val max = dice.reduceLeft(_ max _)
for( i <- 0 to 11) {
    var str = ""
    for( j <- 1 to dice(i)/3) {
        str = str + "X"
    }
    print(i+1, str, "\n")
}

We first pull in the Scala random library. We set the seed (in order to have repeatable results). We are drawing 1,000 rolls. For each roll, we increment a counter of how many times the total of pips on die 1 and die 2 appear. Then we present an abbreviated histogram of the results.

Scala has a number of shortcut methods for quick scanning through a list/collection, as seen in the reduceLeft(_ max _) statement. We...

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Learning Jupyter
Published in: Nov 2016Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781785884870

Author (1)

author image
Dan Toomey

Dan Toomey has been developing application software for over 20 years. He has worked in a variety of industries and companies, in roles from sole contributor to VP/CTO-level. For the last few years, he has been contracting for companies in the eastern Massachusetts area. Dan has been contracting under Dan Toomey Software Corp. Dan has also written R for Data Science, Jupyter for Data Sciences, and the Jupyter Cookbook, all with Packt.
Read more about Dan Toomey