1.5 KiB
1.5 KiB
Raindrops
Welcome to Raindrops on Exercism’s Bash Track. If you need help
running the tests or submitting your code, check out
HELP.md.
Instructions
Your task is to convert a number into a string that contains raindrop sounds corresponding to certain potential factors. A factor is a number that evenly divides into another number, leaving no remainder. The simplest way to test if one number is a factor of another is to use the modulo operation.
The rules of raindrops are that if a given number:
- has 3 as a factor, add ‘Pling’ to the result.
- has 5 as a factor, add ‘Plang’ to the result.
- has 7 as a factor, add ‘Plong’ to the result.
- does not have any of 3, 5, or 7 as a factor, the result should be the digits of the number.
Examples
- 28 has 7 as a factor, but not 3 or 5, so the result would be “Plong”.
- 30 has both 3 and 5 as factors, but not 7, so the result would be “PlingPlang”.
- 34 is not factored by 3, 5, or 7, so the result would be “34”.
Source
Created by
- @kenden
Contributed to by
- @bkhl
- @budmc29
- @glennj
- @guygastineau
- @IsaacG
- @kotp
- @kytrinyx
- @platinumthinker
- @sjwarner-bp
- @Smarticles101
- @ZapAnton
Based on
A variation on FizzBuzz, a famous technical interview question that is intended to weed out potential candidates. That question is itself derived from Fizz Buzz, a popular children’s game for teaching division. - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fizz_buzz