tests2 solution

This commit is contained in:
mo8it 2024-06-27 16:40:26 +02:00
parent a4f8826301
commit 803e32dad2
3 changed files with 34 additions and 8 deletions

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@ -1,5 +1,8 @@
// This test has a problem with it -- make the test compile! Make the test pass!
// Make the test fail!
// Calculates the power of 2 using a bit shift.
// `1 << n` is equivalent to "2 to the power of n".
fn power_of_2(n: u8) -> u64 {
1 << n
}
fn main() {
// You can optionally experiment here.
@ -7,8 +10,14 @@ fn main() {
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
use super::*;
#[test]
fn you_can_assert_eq() {
// TODO: Test the function `power_of_2` with some values.
assert_eq!();
assert_eq!();
assert_eq!();
assert_eq!();
}
}

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@ -862,13 +862,9 @@ ones pass, and which ones fail :)"""
name = "tests2"
dir = "17_tests"
hint = """
Like the previous exercise, you don't need to write any code to get this test
to compile and run.
`assert_eq!` is a macro that takes two arguments and compares them. Try giving
it two values that are equal! Try giving it two arguments that are different!
Try giving it two values that are of different types! Try switching which
argument comes first and which comes second!"""
Try switching which argument comes first and which comes second!"""
[[exercises]]
name = "tests3"

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@ -1 +1,22 @@
// Solutions will be available before the stable release. Thank you for testing the beta version 🥰
// Calculates the power of 2 using a bit shift.
// `1 << n` is equivalent to "2 to the power of n".
fn power_of_2(n: u8) -> u64 {
1 << n
}
fn main() {
// You can optionally experiment here.
}
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
use super::*;
#[test]
fn you_can_assert_eq() {
assert_eq!(power_of_2(0), 1);
assert_eq!(power_of_2(1), 2);
assert_eq!(power_of_2(2), 4);
assert_eq!(power_of_2(3), 8);
}
}