Kata first in Ruby then in Java...
$ git clone git@github.com:harrywynnwill/string-calculator-kata-java.git
Ruby:
$ cd string-calculator-kata-java/ruby
$ rspec
Java:
under construction
The following is a TDD Kata- an exercise in coding, refactoring and test-first, that you should apply daily for at least 15 minutes (I do 30).
Try not to read ahead. Do one task at a time. The trick is to learn to work incrementally. Make sure you only test for correct inputs. there is no need to test for invalid inputs for this kata String Calculator
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Create a simple String calculator with a method int Add(string numbers)
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The method can take 0, 1 or 2 numbers, and will return their sum (for an empty string it will return 0) for example "" or "1" or "1,2"
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Start with the simplest test case of an empty string and move to 1 and two numbers
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Remember to solve things as simply as possible so that you force yourself to write tests you did not think about
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Remember to refactor after each passing test
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Allow the Add method to handle an unknown amount of numbers
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Allow the Add method to handle new lines between numbers (instead of commas).
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the following input is ok: "1\n2,3" (will equal 6)
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the following input is NOT ok: "1,\n" (not need to prove it - just clarifying)
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Support different delimiters
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to change a delimiter, the beginning of the string will contain a separate line that looks like this: "//[delimiter]\n[numbers...]" for example "//;\n1;2" should return three where the default delimiter is ';' .
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the first line is optional. all existing scenarios should still be supported
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Calling Add with a negative number will throw an exception "negatives not allowed" - and the negative that was passed.if there are multiple negatives, show all of them in the exception message
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Numbers bigger than 1000 should be ignored, so adding 2 + 1001 = 2
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Delimiters can be of any length with the following format:
“//[delimiter]\n”
for example:“//[***]\n1***2***3”
should return 6 -
Allow multiple delimiters like this:
“//[delim1][delim2]\n”
for example“//[*][%]\n1*2%3”
should return 6. -
make sure you can also handle multiple delimiters with length longer than one char