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Countdown to Midnight

Objectives

  1. Practice building a while loop
  2. Practice using the subtract-and-assign operator (-=)—the inverse of the add-and-assign operator (+=).

Review

On while Loops

This lab is going to test your skills in writing while loops. Remember, a while loop will execute your block of code only while your defined conditional evaluates as true.

For example, this script:

x = 1
while x < 10
  puts "#{x} is less than 10"
  x += 1
end

Will print this:

1 is less than 10
2 is less than 10
3 is less than 10
4 is less than 10
5 is less than 10
6 is less than 10
7 is less than 10
8 is less than 10
9 is less than 10

And return nil.

String Interpolation

Using the #{} is called interpolation. In this case, it's going to actually print out the value of x. If we just wrote puts "x is less than 10" it would print out the letter 'x' instead of the number x is representing.

The Add-And-Assign Operator (+=)

This is a shorthand useful for incrementing, or "stepping up", values. It's an operator that adds the submitting value to the value of x. In the example above x begins with a value of 1, and is incremented by 1 each time the while loop runs. The line x += 1 is the same as the line x = x + 1.

The loop is going to stop executing as soon as x hits 10, since that was the condition that we set.

The Subtract-And-Assign Operator (-=)

We can also use the subtract-and-assign operator (-=) which instead subtracts the submitted value from the given variable and reassigns that variable to the resulting difference.

Instructions

  1. Fork and clone this lab.
  2. Open it in your IDE and run the test suite. You'll be coding your solution in countdown.rb
  3. Write a method that takes in an integer argument and uses a while loop to countdown from that integer to 0, outputting "#{number} SECOND(S)!" in each iteration of the loop. The method should return "HAPPY NEW YEAR!" after the loop finishes. Hint: In Ruby, a method will return the very last line of code that it executes.
  4. Our Ruby program executes so quickly that it doesn't actually count down at the speed of one second per number. See if you can make the loop pause for one second each trip around (hint). Write this in a new method called countdown_with_sleep that also takes one integer argument for the countdown.

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  • Ruby 100.0%