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✨ (concepts) Add concept exercise interest-is-interesting
#1670
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✨ (concepts) Add concept exercise interest-is-interesting
#1670
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interest-is-interesting
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Just a couple of nits
exercises/concept/interest-is-interesting/.docs/instructions.md
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Rust implements the IEEE 754-2008 "binary32" and "binary64" floating-point types | ||
as `f32` and `f64`, respectively. | ||
The f32 type is a single-precision float, and f64 has double precision. |
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A general comment that also applies to other documents: our style guide suggests using one sentence per line: https://exercism.org/docs/building/markdown/markdown#h-one-sentence-per-line
Rust implements the IEEE 754-2008 "binary32" and "binary64" floating-point types | |
as `f32` and `f64`, respectively. | |
The f32 type is a single-precision float, and f64 has double precision. | |
Rust implements the IEEE 754-2008 "binary32" and "binary64" floating-point types as `f32` and `f64`, respectively. | |
The f32 type is a single-precision float, and f64 has double precision. |
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I have auto wrap on my editor, that's probably what did it. Do you know of any automated way to format markdown paragraphs perhaps a linter or formatter doesn't necessarily need to have IDE integration.
let mut accumulating_balance = balance; | ||
let mut years = 0; |
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I checked to see if students know about the mut
keyword. It is mentioned in the introduction of the lasagna exercise, but I think adding a hints makes sense.
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I added assignment
as a prerequisites for this concept and, in cars-assemble
#1675 I do exactly that. Should I still include an intro here?
Based on my understanding of the state of rust syllabus & the issues around it. I decided not to rely on existing concept exercise implementations. All of my implementations are either completely independent or only build up on what I have added (& will add soon). My focus currently is to split them into much smaller chunks so later we can implement Rust specific concepts without hesitation.
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} | ||
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pub fn interest(balance: f64) -> f64 { | ||
return balance * interest_rate(balance) / 100.0; |
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return balance * interest_rate(balance) / 100.0; | |
balance * interest_rate(balance) / 100.0 |
} | ||
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pub fn annual_balance_update(balance: f64) -> f64 { | ||
return balance + interest(balance); |
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return balance + interest(balance); | |
balance + interest(balance) |
years += 1; | ||
} | ||
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return years; |
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return years; | |
years |
if balance < 0.0 { | ||
return 3.213; | ||
} | ||
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if balance < 1000.0 { | ||
return 0.5; | ||
} | ||
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if balance < 5000.0 { | ||
return 1.621; | ||
} | ||
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return 2.475; |
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We can avoid explicit return
entirely.
if balance < 0.0 { | |
return 3.213; | |
} | |
if balance < 1000.0 { | |
return 0.5; | |
} | |
if balance < 5000.0 { | |
return 1.621; | |
} | |
return 2.475; | |
if balance < 0.0 { | |
3.213 | |
} else if balance < 1000.0 { | |
0.5 | |
} else if balance < 5000.0 { | |
1.621 | |
} else { | |
2.475 | |
} |
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This is inspired by the same on csharp track. Provides introduction to while loops & floating point numbers.
The author of this PR has stopped responding in the discussions planning the work on the syllabus. But there's been a lot of work put into reviews already, so I'm keeping it open in case it can be salvaged in a future attempt to create a good syllabus. |
This is inspired by the same on csharp track. Provides introduction to while loops & floating point numbers.