greatTeacherOnizuka

#golang

lets talk about go and have fun.
Feb 7, 2020 02:54
Write two functions in Go with the following function signature: func ([]Person) bool
- The first function should return true if there is a person who is exactly twice as old as any other person in the list, otherwise the function returns false.
- The second function should return true if there is a person who is at least twice as old as any other person in the list, otherwise the function returns false.
Feb 7, 2020 02:54
anyone that can help with
Feb 7, 2020 02:53
Hey guys completely new to go
 

JavaScript

Topic: Anything JavaScript, ECMAScript including Node, React, ...
Sep 20, 2019 16:13
so I would have a string that says NAME_OF_THE_CONTRACT
Sep 20, 2019 16:12
how do I extract just the contract name with a regex
Sep 20, 2019 16:12
contract NAME_OF_THE_CONTRACT {...`
Sep 20, 2019 16:11
I have a piece of code that looks like
Sep 20, 2019 16:11
hey guys can someone help me with a regex
Jul 16, 2019 15:08
that looks good @rlemon thanks
Jul 16, 2019 14:55
and also remove $__ and __$
Jul 16, 2019 14:55
and I want to replace everything between $ and $ with 00000
Jul 16, 2019 14:54
for example I have something like 60806040523480156100105760 0080fd5b5032600090815260208190526040902061275b61006c600480360360208110156100d457600080fd5b50356001600160a01b0316610204565b600073__$adf451eb015a3a786d75bd206b3a06f9e7$__6396e4ee3d61010984610204565b60026
Jul 16, 2019 14:53
hey guys whats the easiest way to write a regex that replaces a substring between two given characters?
Feb 25, 2019 18:13
anyone knows why stdin ignores \n on node?
Feb 25, 2019 16:50
anyone?
Feb 25, 2019 16:50
0
Q: Issues to formatting a stdin to string (removing \n character)

greatTeacherOnizukaI wrote a function that breaks a string when it encounters the newline char and joins all the rest of characters together. E.G. from an input that looks like 2\n1 P 3 B 5 P\n2 P 3 B 4 B\n5 P I would end up with an array that looks like: [ '2', '1P3B5P', '2P3B4B', '5P' ] This works great wh...

Feb 25, 2019 15:59
    const colors = Array.from({ length: numColors }, i => null)
    const found = candidate.every(preference => {
        // if trying to override a readOnly color (or using a readOnly color to override)
        // the solution is not valid
        if (
            colors[preference.colour - 1] &&
            (colors[preference.colour - 1].singleColour || preference.singleColour) &&
            colors[preference.colour - 1].style !== preference.style
        ) {
            return false // stop iteration
Feb 25, 2019 15:59
Hey guys can anyone help me understand whats happening with this code and how can I rewrite it in a different style? possibly without using array.from , every and object.assign
Feb 25, 2019 02:58
oh cool
Feb 25, 2019 02:45
*request
Feb 25, 2019 02:45
you probably won't get anything back as the server does net recognise that response
Feb 25, 2019 02:38
this doesnt seem to really work as the unit tests are failing now
Feb 25, 2019 02:38
I am trying to decompose step by step
Feb 25, 2019 02:38
return customerPreferences.forEach(
    preferences => {
        if (!preferences.some(selection => result[selection.colour - 1] === selection.style)) {
            return false
        }
        return true
    }
)
Feb 25, 2019 02:26
in a different way
Feb 25, 2019 02:26
mainly to really understand how to rewrite that code
Feb 25, 2019 02:26
or another loop
Feb 25, 2019 02:11
so how could the above can be rewritten if I am trying to use a forEach or similar
Feb 25, 2019 02:07
I am trying to rewrite all this code in a different style to really understand what these new methods like every, reduce etc do
Feb 25, 2019 02:06
.every its some kind of test a value rihgt
Feb 25, 2019 02:06
return customerPreferences.every(preferences => {
    return preferences.some(selection => result[selection.colour - 1] === selection.style)
})
Feb 25, 2019 02:06
@david can you also explain me this
Feb 25, 2019 02:03
arr.forEach(element => {
        total = element.length * total
    });
Feb 25, 2019 02:03
ah ok got it
Feb 25, 2019 01:57
is this what the above is doing?
Feb 25, 2019 01:57
?
Feb 25, 2019 01:57
for(i = 0; i < length; i++) {sum *= i}
Feb 25, 2019 01:50
can that be written with a forloop or map?
Feb 25, 2019 01:03
guys whats the above code doing exactly? trying to understand reduce
Feb 25, 2019 01:03
const foo = data.reduce((a, b) => a * b.length, 1);
Feb 24, 2019 20:23
@KevinB any idea on how to rewrite that? I tried but I am confused on how generator really works
Feb 24, 2019 20:19
I don't wana use generators neither as I am trying to rewrite that code
Feb 24, 2019 20:18
no thats why I am asking
Feb 24, 2019 20:18
this is how is being called
Feb 24, 2019 20:18
const candidates = candidateSolutions(finalObj.clientChoice);


    for (let candidate of candidates()) {
        console.log(candidate)
    }
Feb 24, 2019 20:17
guys whats the easiest way to rewrite the above not using generators? maybe with async/await
Feb 24, 2019 20:17
const candidateSolutions = (customerPreferences) => function* getNext() {
    // total number of possible combinations is obtained by multiplying the number of
    // element in every set of preferences (1 set per customer)
    const combinations = customerPreferences.reduce((acc, curr) => acc * curr.length, 1)
    for (let i = 0; i < combinations; i++) {
        console.log(yield getCandidateSolution(i, customerPreferences), 'giuva')
        yield getCandidateSolution(i, customerPreferences)
    }
Feb 22, 2019 03:57
oh nice
Feb 22, 2019 03:56
like this?
Feb 22, 2019 03:56
return arr.reduce((a, b) => {
    return a.concat(b);
}, []);