Coetry

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Coetry

Recently, I have been really interested in the question what programming really is, and how we can practice getting better at it. I explored many weird things, like the relationship between code and painting. I gave a workshop in Cambridge where people got artwork styles, like Rococo, Graffiti and Expressionism, and they had to create an algorithm in that style. It was really cool and fun, but I was not sure where the learning was.

People in the workshop
Rainbow group people thinking about code as art

More recently, I have been thinking about what we can learn from seeing art a writing, especially poetry. At the awesome conference BoosterConf*, they let me do a workshop on Code and Poetry, and it was really insightful.

An example of a poem, also contained in the text
Code Poetry!

If you missed it, but you still want to explore this lovely ideas, here are the 5 exercises we did. We did it in pairs, which I can really recommend, but alone should be possible too.

Assignment 1: Rhyme 

The first ingredient of a poem, of course, is rhyme. Pick an algorithm and observe just the sounds of the lines of code. In the examples, I use sorting, as they are well known and short, but you may of course also dive into your own code base!

 if len(m) <= 1: #one
       return m #em
   else:
       middle = len(m)) // 2 #two
       left = m[:middle]     #mid-dle
       right = m[middle:]    #mid-dle
       left = merge_sort(left)   #left
       right = merge_sort(right) #right
       result = list(merge(left, right)) #right
       return  #right

What happened here in the workshop, by the way, is that some people interpreted rhyme differently. They said the sound of a line is it’s most important operation, like this:

       return sort(less)+sort(equal)+sort(greater) # lists

It sounds like “lists” since you merge two lists. Lovely!

Assignment 2: Change the rhyme

Now, play with your algorithm. Can you make it rhyme more? Think of renaming variables, rearranging lines of code or adapting expressions:

def merge_sort(m): #em
   if len(m) <= 1: return m #em
   else:
       middle = 0.5 * (len(m))) // 2 #em
       left = m[:middle]     #mid-dle
       right = m[middle:]    #mid-dle
       left = merge_sort(left)   #eft
       right = merge_sort(right) #right
       daft = list(merge(left, right)) #eft
       return daft #eft

Assignment 3: Rhythm

The second ingredient of a poem is of course, rhythm. Pick another (or the same) algorithm and count the syllables of each line, and write them in comments behind the line, like this:

   upper = len(alist) - 1 #9
   for passnum in range(upper,0,-1):  #12
       for i in range(passnum):  #6
           if alist[i] > alist[i+1]:  #12
               temp = alist[i]  #5
               alist[i] = alist[i+1]  #9
               alist[i+1] = temp  #7

You will see soon that this is more tricky that you think, as you will have to vocalize symbols like =. Is this “is”? Is it “e-quals”? Or “be-comes”? My choice is “stores”.

This type of reflection will help you think about what the code means too!

Assignment 4: Change the rhythm

Now, play with your algorithm again. Can you make the “beat” of your algorithm nicer? You can use tricks like changing variable names, and extracting expressions into variables, or even adding non-useful variables or lines:

   x, y = 0, 1  #6
   upper = len(list) - 1  #8
   r = range(upper,0,x)  #8
   for passnum in r:  #5
       for i in range(passnum): #6
           list[i + x] = min(list[i], list[i + 1]) #12
           list[i + 1] = max(list[i], list[i + 1]) #12

 

I found that this type of manipulation helped me to really understand what variables were used where. If I make this name shorter, what lines will be affected?

Assignment 5: Make a real poem

A haiku, a limerick or a sonnet! Abandon any notion of clean code and go crazy!

This one of the poems in the workshop:

int quicksort_partition(int[] from, int below, int above)
{
   var prince = from[above]; // There once was a prince from above
   var pauper = below - dove; // And a pauper from below with no dove
   make(ref pauper, from, prince); // The pauper got princed
   swap(from, above, pauper + hints); // And after he traded hints
   return pauper + love; // The pauper came back with some love
}

Enjoy!

* I can seriously recommend it to everyone. Amazing food, great workshops, lovely city and venue and the best conference wifi I HAVE EVER SEEN!

 

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