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Rousseau, one of the world's most famous philosophers, created a whole new perspective on society. In 1762 he published his book "Social Contract" which outlined a theory of social organization that emphasized the importance of self-made laws being made by citizens in contrast to state law. Rousseau's work became a huge influence on the French Revolution and inspired intellectuals such as Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels. In this blog post we'll present you with a code that can be used to compare two versions of an online text from 1762 known as the "Social Contract". If you're interested in learning more about this work it would make your life much easier if you already had some knowledge or experience with software coding concepts. However, with that said, if you're up for the challenge of learning something new then we can help you thrill your mind with our amazing free code. The objective of this code is simple; it will enable you to compare two documents and point out all of the differences. To accomplish this there are three main parts of this program. The first is the main loop which processes each word in the compared documents one-by-one. The second part compares each word between both documents and counts up how often words appear. And lastly, the third part takes care of creating an overall document summary based on every comparison made by the second part. But before we can get started, let's create a variable to house the destination of destination. Then create another variable to hold the path (file path) for each document you plan on analyzing. Next, create a variable to hold the file name of the source document. Last, you need to create some more variables that will be necessary for holding data about each word that will be analyzed in both documents. We've got another important part of our code that needs to be looked at next. Find the "start loop" and jump down one line where it says "create while loop." We're going to insert some code so this while loop continues until the words in both documents are considered "equal. "We'll use the code "while(count(words) != 0)." We'll leave it to you to figure out how this works, but basically the "count" function counts up how many words are in both documents. So if there are still words remaining, then it's safe to say that the two documents are not yet equal. When this happens, the program will jump onto another part of this while loop where it says "go to test_compare_document." So basically every time either document runs out of words, then continue on to test whether or not they're equal or not. So let's move on and get a better understanding of what this test_compare_document is all about. All you have to do is copy-and-paste the given code from the source document into the given file path from the destination document. This will then get replaced with all of that text from what you just pasted. The last step then is to call the word functions that we created in our previous blog posts and your job is done. The next part of this code gets a lot more intense; we need to make sure we're handling each word in both documents and counting how often it occurs. cfa1e77820
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