/string-calculator

Parses string and extracts number and returns sum of numbers.

Primary LanguageJava

Coding Exercises

Only do one of the exercises…

Regardless of which one you do, I would suggest that you deliver them as a git repository with appropriately timed commits so we can see that you are following a TDD process and gauge your ability to deliver quality.

Exercise A: String Calculator (A simple Test Driven Development exercise)

It should take less than 40 mins. Try not to read ahead & do one task at a time. Make sure you only test for correct inputs. there is no need to test for invalid inputs for this exercise

  1. Create a simple String calculator with a method int add(string numbers) ..1. 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” ..2. Start with the simplest test case of an empty string and move to 1 and two numbers ..3. Remember to solve things as simply as possible so that you force yourself to write tests you did not think about ..4. Remember to refactor after each passing test
  2. Allow the Add method to handle an unknown amount of numbers
  3. Allow the Add method to handle new lines between numbers (instead of commas). ..1. the following input is ok:  “1\n2,3”  (will equal 6) ..2. the following input is NOT ok:  “1,\n” (not need to prove it - just clarifying)
  4. Support different delimiters ..1. 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‘;’ . ..2. the first line is optional. all existing scenarios should still be supported
  5. Calling Add with a negative number will throw an exception “negatives not allowed” - and the negative thatwas passed. If there are multiple negatives, show all of them in the exception message
  6. Numbers bigger than 1000 should be ignored, so adding 2 + 1001  = 2
  7. Delimiters can be of any length with the following format:  “//[delimiter]\n” for example: “//[]\n12**3” should return 6
  8. Allow multiple delimiters like this:  “//[delim1][delim2]\n” for example “//[][%]\n12%3” should return 6.
  9. Make sure you can also handle multiple delimiters with length longer than one char

Exercise B: A Restful Web API

Please deliver “Exercise A” as a Restful Web API (including the TDD approach) It should take less than an hour. In terms of the interface, Use your best judgement for endpoint names and we’re expecting that the client would POST the “numbers” string parameter as the JSON body eg: { 1,2 } And the response will be delivered as a JSON body such as: { 3 }