From 55ad7c32f2d534b1fbd438204d21738f958c51a5 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Dave Gauer Date: Tue, 9 Feb 2021 18:36:57 -0500 Subject: Moved exercises to exercises because exercises --- 20_quiz3.zig | 45 --------------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 45 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 20_quiz3.zig (limited to '20_quiz3.zig') diff --git a/20_quiz3.zig b/20_quiz3.zig deleted file mode 100644 index e18ef37..0000000 --- a/20_quiz3.zig +++ /dev/null @@ -1,45 +0,0 @@ -// -// Let's see if we can make use of some of things we've learned so far. -// We'll create two functions: one that contains a "for" loop and one -// that contains a "while" loop. -// -// Both of these are simply labeled "loop" below. -// -const std = @import( "std" ); - -pub fn main() void { - const my_numbers = [4]u16{ 5,6,7,8 }; - - printPowersOfTwo(my_numbers); - std.debug.print("\n", .{}); -} - -// -// You won't see this every day: a function that takes an array with -// exactly four u16 numbers. This is not how you would normally pass -// an array to a function. We'll learn about slices and pointers in -// a little while. For now, we're using what we know. -// -// This function prints, but does not return anything. -// -fn printPowersOfTwo(numbers: [4]u16) ??? { - loop (numbers) |n| { - std.debug.print("{} ", .{twoToThe(n)}); - } -} - -// -// This function bears a striking resemblance to twoToThe() in the last -// exercise. But don't be fooled! This one does the math without the aid -// of the standard library! -// -fn twoToThe(number: u16) ??? { - var n: u16 = 0; - var total: u16 = 1; - - loop (n < number) : (n += 1) { - total *= 2; - } - - return ???; -} -- cgit v1.2.3-ZIG