Frederic G. MARAND 934f80933b Resistor color duo. | 9 months ago | |
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.exercism | 9 months ago | |
.yarn | 9 months ago | |
.eslintignore | 9 months ago | |
.eslintrc.cjs | 9 months ago | |
.yarnrc.yml | 9 months ago | |
HELP.md | 9 months ago | |
README.md | 9 months ago | |
babel.config.cjs | 9 months ago | |
jest.config.cjs | 9 months ago | |
package.json | 9 months ago | |
resistor-color-duo.test.ts | 9 months ago | |
resistor-color-duo.ts | 9 months ago | |
tsconfig.json | 9 months ago |
Welcome to Resistor Color Duo on Exercism's TypeScript Track.
If you need help running the tests or submitting your code, check out HELP.md
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If you want to build something using a Raspberry Pi, you'll probably use resistors. For this exercise, you need to know two things about them:
To get around this problem, manufacturers print color-coded bands onto the resistors to denote their resistance values. Each band has a position and a numeric value.
The first 2 bands of a resistor have a simple encoding scheme: each color maps to a single number. For example, if they printed a brown band (value 1) followed by a green band (value 5), it would translate to the number 15.
In this exercise you are going to create a helpful program so that you don't have to remember the values of the bands. The program will take color names as input and output a two digit number, even if the input is more than two colors!
The band colors are encoded as follows:
From the example above: brown-green should return 15 brown-green-violet should return 15 too, ignoring the third color.
Maud de Vries, Erik Schierboom - https://github.com/exercism/problem-specifications/issues/1464