Simple kata to review Ruby's Enumerable module as well as blocks
René Maya edf42a9875 Update readme urls | 6 سال پیش | |
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bin | 8 سال پیش | |
tasks | 8 سال پیش | |
test | 8 سال پیش | |
.autotest | 8 سال پیش | |
.gitignore | 8 سال پیش | |
.pryrc | 8 سال پیش | |
Gemfile | 8 سال پیش | |
Gemfile.lock | 8 سال پیش | |
Rakefile | 8 سال پیش | |
Readme.md | 6 سال پیش |
A simple kata for reviewing Enumerable
and blocks.
Tests review how to use some of Enumerable
's methods. The solution reviews
how to use blocks to implement parts of Enumerable
.
The tests only check for a method's "happy path"; no edge cases, no errors,
no Enumerator
. All tests pass with Ruby's Enumerable
.
Enumerable methods included:
count
find (detect)
inject (reduce)
each_with_object
find_all (select)
map (collect)
group_by
take
drop
each_with_index
first
all?
none?
any?
min_by
max_by
include
reject
The methods in parenthesis aren't actually included but since they are aliases their implementation is considered the same.
In order to get this kata up and running you need to follow
these steps in your terminal from whichever folder will contain the enumerable_rb
folder.
git clone https://notabug.org/rem/enumerable_rb.git ./enumerable_rb
cd enumerable_rb
Install dependencies locally.
bundle install --path .bundle/gems
If you run into problems chances are you need to sudo-gem-install a few
gems. Check Gemfile
for details.
Export your project's environment, as well as the bin
folder to PATH, whenever
we start a new terminal session.
The environment variable allows us to run successfully commands such as autotest
.
Temporarily appending the local bin
directory to the PATH allows us to run
rake <task>
rather than bundle exec rake <task>
.
export ENUMERABLE_RB_ENV="development"
export PATH="$PWD/bin:$PATH"
hash -r 2>/dev/null || true
Alternatively, create a simple shell function to do it for you.
To list all available rake tasks simply run rake -T
.
Most binstubs execute a command rather than start a session. Hence most are run from tasks. Those not included in a task are usually run on their own terminal session.
autotest
Run all tests then only those related to the code you are working on.
repl
Start a REPL session loading all files in lib
. Restart REPL session after
making any changes to lib
's contents.
If you want to step through some of the code during development use from anywhere:
require 'pry-byebug'; binding.pry