Write a python program that takes a string parameter called sentence as the input parameter. This parameter may contain any number of words (one or more letters separated by spaces) and the following three punctuation marks '!' ';' '.' . For example, sentence = "here are some words." or another_sentence = "wow!" Your function must extract each word from the sentence, remove the punctuation marks if there is any, and make the first and the last letters of that word uppercase. For example, "here" will be "HerE", "some" will be "SomE", "wow" will be "WoW" etc. Finally, your function must return a dictionary, where keys of this dictionary are the words of the sentence capitalized as above. For each key (i.e., word) the value should be the length of that word. You are not allowed to use the built-in string.title() method or any negative indexing. You may use any other string methods in your solution. Sample outputs: >>> d = cap_ends("here are some words.") >>> print(d) {'HerE': 4, 'ArE': 3, 'SomE': 4, 'WordS': 5} >>> d = cap_ends("Be yourself; everyone else is already taken.") >>> print(d) {'BE': 2, 'YourselF': 8, 'EveryonE': 8, 'ElsE': 4, 'IS': 2, 'AlreadY': 7, 'TakeN': 5} You do not have to write a main() function for this program.
Write a python program that takes a string parameter called sentence as the input parameter. This parameter may contain any number of words (one or more letters separated by spaces) and the following three punctuation marks '!' ';' '.' .
For example, sentence = "here are some words."
or another_sentence = "wow!"
Your function must extract each word from the sentence, remove the punctuation marks if there is any, and make the first and the last letters of that word uppercase.
For example, "here" will be "HerE",
"some" will be "SomE",
"wow" will be "WoW" etc.
Finally, your function must return a dictionary, where keys of this dictionary are the words of the sentence capitalized as above. For each key (i.e., word) the value should be the length of that word.
You are not allowed to use the built-in string.title() method or any negative indexing. You may use any other string methods in your solution.
Sample outputs:
>>> d = cap_ends("here are some words.")
>>> print(d)
{'HerE': 4, 'ArE': 3, 'SomE': 4, 'WordS': 5}
>>> d = cap_ends("Be yourself; everyone else is already taken.")
>>> print(d)
{'BE': 2, 'YourselF': 8, 'EveryonE': 8, 'ElsE': 4, 'IS': 2, 'AlreadY': 7, 'TakeN': 5}
You do not have to write a main() function for this program.
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