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Add resistor-color-duo #262

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8 changes: 8 additions & 0 deletions config.json
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -447,6 +447,14 @@
],
"prerequisites": [],
"difficulty": 10
},
{
"slug": "resistor-color-duo",
"name": "Resistor Color Duo",
"uuid": "5fd540f6-75d1-4b8f-ae56-08c246277e5d",
"practices": [],
"prerequisites": [],
"difficulty": 2
}
],
"foregone": [
Expand Down
33 changes: 33 additions & 0 deletions exercises/practice/resistor-color-duo/.docs/instructions.md
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# Instructions

If you want to build something using a Raspberry Pi, you'll probably use _resistors_.
For this exercise, you need to know two things about them:

- Each resistor has a resistance value.
- Resistors are small - so small in fact that if you printed the resistance value on them, it would be hard to read.

To get around this problem, manufacturers print color-coded bands onto the resistors to denote their resistance values.
Each band has a position and a numeric value.

The first 2 bands of a resistor have a simple encoding scheme: each color maps to a single number.
For example, if they printed a brown band (value 1) followed by a green band (value 5), it would translate to the number 15.

In this exercise you are going to create a helpful program so that you don't have to remember the values of the bands.
The program will take color names as input and output a two digit number, even if the input is more than two colors!

The band colors are encoded as follows:

- black: 0
- brown: 1
- red: 2
- orange: 3
- yellow: 4
- green: 5
- blue: 6
- violet: 7
- grey: 8
- white: 9

From the example above:
brown-green should return 15, and
brown-green-violet should return 15 too, ignoring the third color.
22 changes: 22 additions & 0 deletions exercises/practice/resistor-color-duo/.meta/config.json
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@@ -0,0 +1,22 @@
{
"authors": [
"BNAndras"
],
"files": {
"solution": [
"src/lib.cairo"
],
"test": [
"tests/resistor_color_duo.cairo"
],
"example": [
".meta/example.cairo"
],
"invalidator": [
"Scarb.toml"
]
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},
"blurb": "Convert color codes, as used on resistors, to a numeric value.",
"source": "Maud de Vries, Erik Schierboom",
"source_url": "https://github.com/exercism/problem-specifications/issues/1464"
}
32 changes: 32 additions & 0 deletions exercises/practice/resistor-color-duo/.meta/example.cairo
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@@ -0,0 +1,32 @@
#[derive(Copy, Debug, Drop)]
pub enum Color {
Black,
Brown,
Red,
Orange,
Yellow,
Green,
Blue,
Violet,
Grey,
White,
}

pub fn value(colors: Array<Color>) -> u8 {
color_value(*colors[0]) * 10 + color_value(*colors[1])
}

fn color_value(color: Color) -> u8 {
match color {
Color::Black => 0,
Color::Brown => 1,
Color::Red => 2,
Color::Orange => 3,
Color::Yellow => 4,
Color::Green => 5,
Color::Blue => 6,
Color::Violet => 7,
Color::Grey => 8,
Color::White => 9,
}
}
31 changes: 31 additions & 0 deletions exercises/practice/resistor-color-duo/.meta/tests.toml
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
@@ -0,0 +1,31 @@
# This is an auto-generated file.
#
# Regenerating this file via `configlet sync` will:
# - Recreate every `description` key/value pair
# - Recreate every `reimplements` key/value pair, where they exist in problem-specifications
# - Remove any `include = true` key/value pair (an omitted `include` key implies inclusion)
# - Preserve any other key/value pair
#
# As user-added comments (using the # character) will be removed when this file
# is regenerated, comments can be added via a `comment` key.

[ce11995a-5b93-4950-a5e9-93423693b2fc]
description = "Brown and black"

[7bf82f7a-af23-48ba-a97d-38d59406a920]
description = "Blue and grey"

[f1886361-fdfd-4693-acf8-46726fe24e0c]
description = "Yellow and violet"

[b7a6cbd2-ae3c-470a-93eb-56670b305640]
description = "White and red"

[77a8293d-2a83-4016-b1af-991acc12b9fe]
description = "Orange and orange"

[0c4fb44f-db7c-4d03-afa8-054350f156a8]
description = "Ignore additional colors"

[4a8ceec5-0ab4-4904-88a4-daf953a5e818]
description = "Black and brown, one-digit"
7 changes: 7 additions & 0 deletions exercises/practice/resistor-color-duo/Scarb.toml
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@@ -0,0 +1,7 @@
[package]
name = "resistor_color_duo"
version = "0.1.0"
edition = "2024_07"

[dev-dependencies]
cairo_test = "2.7.1"
17 changes: 17 additions & 0 deletions exercises/practice/resistor-color-duo/src/lib.cairo
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
@@ -0,0 +1,17 @@
#[derive(Debug, Drop)]
pub enum Color {
Black,
Brown,
Red,
Orange,
Yellow,
Green,
Blue,
Violet,
Grey,
White,
}

pub fn value(colors: Array<Color>) -> u8 {
panic!("implement `value`")
}
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
@@ -0,0 +1,63 @@
use resistor_color_duo::{value, Color};

#[test]
fn brown_and_black() {
let colors = array![Color::Brown, Color::Black];
let output = value(colors);
let expected = 10;
assert_eq!(output, expected);
}

#[test]
#[ignore]
fn blue_and_grey() {
let colors = array![Color::Blue, Color::Grey];
let output = value(colors);
let expected = 68;
assert_eq!(output, expected);
}

#[test]
#[ignore]
fn yellow_and_violet() {
let colors = array![Color::Yellow, Color::Violet];
let output = value(colors);
let expected = 47;
assert_eq!(output, expected);
}

#[test]
#[ignore]
fn white_and_red() {
let colors = array![Color::White, Color::Red];
let output = value(colors);
let expected = 92;
assert_eq!(output, expected);
}

#[test]
#[ignore]
fn orange_and_orange() {
let colors = array![Color::Orange, Color::Orange];
let output = value(colors);
let expected = 33;
assert_eq!(output, expected);
}

#[test]
#[ignore]
fn ignore_additional_colors() {
let colors = array![Color::Green, Color::Brown, Color::Orange];
let output = value(colors);
let expected = 51;
assert_eq!(output, expected);
}

#[test]
#[ignore]
fn black_and_brown_one_digit() {
let colors = array![Color::Black, Color::Brown];
let output = value(colors);
let expected = 1;
assert_eq!(output, expected);
}
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