Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
35 lines (22 loc) · 1.72 KB

project_sub_strings.md

File metadata and controls

35 lines (22 loc) · 1.72 KB

Introduction

By now you should feel pretty good working with strings, arrays and hashes. We'll do a couple of classic "intro to programming" problems in the next few lessons to help solidify your knowledge and get warmed up to working on small projects. You'll need to rely on some of your basic knowledge of conditionals and flow control from the prep work but you shouldn't need to do anything you haven't seen before.

If you want to actually write and run your own Ruby code, you can either use IRB from the command line (type irb after the prompt), run it from a script file using $ ruby ./your_file_name_in_the_current_directory.rb, or use any other type of REPL.

Assignment

Implement a method #substrings that takes a word as the first argument and then an array of valid substrings (your dictionary) as the second argument. It should return a hash listing each substring (case insensitive) that was found in the original string and how many times it was found.

  > dictionary = ["below","down","go","going","horn","how","howdy","it","i","low","own","part","partner","sit"]
  => ["below","down","go","going","horn","how","howdy","it","i","low","own","part","partner","sit"]
  > substrings("below", dictionary)
  => { "below" => 1, "low" => 1 }

Next, make sure your method can handle multiple words:

  > substrings("Howdy partner, sit down! How's it going?", dictionary)
  => { "down" => 1, "go" => 1, "going" => 1, "how" => 2, "howdy" => 1, "it" => 2, "i" => 3, "own" => 1, "part" => 1, "partner" => 1, "sit" => 1 }

Quick Tips:

  • Recall how to turn strings into arrays and arrays into strings.