Frederic G. MARAND e33fe15ec3 Resistor color. | 9 meses atrás | |
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.exercism | 9 meses atrás | |
.yarn | 9 meses atrás | |
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.eslintrc.cjs | 9 meses atrás | |
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HELP.md | 9 meses atrás | |
README.md | 9 meses atrás | |
babel.config.cjs | 9 meses atrás | |
jest.config.cjs | 9 meses atrás | |
package.json | 9 meses atrás | |
resistor-color.test.ts | 9 meses atrás | |
resistor-color.ts | 9 meses atrás | |
tsconfig.json | 9 meses atrás |
Welcome to Resistor Color 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.
In this exercise you are going to create a helpful program so that you don't have to remember the values of the bands.
These colors are encoded as follows:
The goal of this exercise is to create a way:
Mnemonics map the colors to the numbers, that, when stored as an array, happen to map to their index in the array: Better Be Right Or Your Great Big Values Go Wrong.
More information on the color encoding of resistors can be found in the Electronic color code Wikipedia article.
Maud de Vries, Erik Schierboom - https://github.com/exercism/problem-specifications/issues/1458