temmies/docs/api.md

4.9 KiB

Classes


Themis

Creates the initial connection to Themis.

Usage

from temmies.Themis import Themis

themis = Themis("s-number", "password")

Methods

login()

Logs in to Themis. Runs automatically when the class is initialized.

getYear(start, end)

Returns an instance of a Year(academic year) between start and end.

year = themis.getYear(2023, 2024)

allYears()

Returns a list of Year instances corresponding to all years visible to the user.

years = themis.allYears()

I don't see why you would need this, but it's here.


Year

Usage

year = themis.getYear(2023, 2024)

Methods

getCourse(courseName)

Returns an instance of a Course with the name courseName.

pf = year.getCourse("Programming Fundamentals (for CS)")

allCourses()

Returns a list of Course instances corresponding to all courses visible to the user in a given Year.

courses = year.allCourses()

Course

Usage


pf = year.getCourse("Programming Fundamentals (for CS)")
print(pf.info) # <- course info attribute
assignments = pf.getGroups()

Methods

getGroups(full=False)

Returns a list of ExerciseGroup instances corresponding to all exercise groups visible to the user in a given Course. Default argument is full=False, which will only return the (name, link) of each exercise and folder in the group. If full=True, it will traverse the whole course.

You can traverse the course in both cases, although in different ways.

When you have fully traversed the course, you can access everything via indices and the exercises and folders attributes of the ExerciseGroup instances:

  ai_group = ai_course.getGroups(full=True)
  exercise = ai_group[7].exercises[1] # Week 11 -> Suitcase packing
  exercise.submit("suitcase.py", silent=False)```

This is equivalent to the case in which we don't traverse the full course using getGroup like so:

ai_group = ai_course.getGroup("Week 11")
exercise = ai_group.getGroup("Suitcase packing")
exercise.submit("suitcase.py", silent=False)

getGroup(name, full=False)

Returns an instance of an ExerciseGroup with the name name. Default argument is full=False, which will only return the (name, link) of each exercise and folder in the group. If full=True, it will traverse the whole group.

week1 = pf.getGroup("Week 1")

ExerciseGroup

Setting the full flag to True will traverse the whole course.

You can traverse the course in both cases

  • Both folders and exercises are represented as ExerciseGroup instances.
  • Folders will have the amExercise attribute set to False.
  • Folders can have the downloadFiles method called on them.
  • Exercises can have the submit, downloadFiles and downloadTCs method called on them.

Example of folder traversal

Let's say we have a folder structure like this:

- Course Name
  - Week 1
    - Exercise 1
    - Exercise 2
      - Part 1
      - Part 2
  - Week 2
    - Exercise 1
    - Exercise 2

And we want to get to Part 2 of Week 1's Exercise 2. We would do this:

pf = year.getCourse("Programming Fundamentals (for CS)")
assignments = pf.getExerciseGroups()
week1 = assignments[0] # Week 1
exercise2 = week1.folders[1] # Exercise 2
part2 = exercise2.exercises[1] # Part 2

# Or, if you dont want to traverse the whole course:
week1 = pf.getGroup("Week 1")
exercise2 = week1.getGroup("Exercise 2")
part2 = exercise2.getGroup("Part 2")

Methods

downloadFiles(path=".")

Downloads all files in the exercise group to a directory path. Defaults to the current directory.

  assignment.downloadFiles()

downloadTCs(path=".")

Downloads all test cases in the exercise group to a directory path. Defaults to the current directory.

  assignment.downloadTCs()

getGroup(name, full=False)

This is used when you want to traverse the course dynamically(not recurse through the whole thing). Of course, you can use it even if you've traversed the whole course, but that would overcomplicate things.

  # Week 1 -> Exercise 2 -> Part 2
  week1 = pf.getGroups("Week 1")
  exercise2 = week1.getGroup("Exercise 2")
  part2 = exercise2.getGroup("Part 2")

  # This is equivalent to(but faster than):
  week1 = pf.getGroups("Week 1", full=True)
  exercise2 = week1[1]
  part2 = exercise2[1]

submit(files)

Submits the files to the exercise group. Default arguments are judge=True, wait=True and silent=True. judge will judge the submission instantly, and wait will wait for the submission to finish. Turning off silent will print the submission status dynamically.

  suitcase[7].exercises[1].submit("suitcase.py", silent=False)

  >>> 1: 
  >>> 2: 
  >>> 3: 
  >>> 4: 
  >>> 5: 
  >>> 6: 
  >>> 7: 
  >>> 8: 
  >>> 9: 
  >>> 10: