- screenshots of scores will be posted in comments
- screenshots of completed sections will be posted in comments
- Did you run into any issues?
- How do you open Atom from your Terminal?
- What is the file extension for a Ruby file?
- What is the Atom shortcut for hiding/ showing your file tree view?
- What is the Atom shortcut for quickly finding a file (fuzzy finder)?
- screenshots of your terminal after each exercise will be posted in comments
Day One Questions:
- What does pwd stand for, and how is this command helpful?
- What does hostname tell you, and what shows up in YOUR terminal when you type hostname?
IRB
- How do you start and stop irb?
- What might you use irb for?
Variables
- How do you create a variable?
- What did you learn about the rules for naming variables?
- How do you change the value of a variable?
Datatypes
- How can you find out the class of a variable?
- What are two string methods?
- How can you change an integer to a string?
Strings
- Why might you use double quotes instead of single quotes in Ruby?
- What is this used for in Ruby: #{}?
- How would you remove all the vowels from a string?
Input & Output
- What do 'print' and 'puts' do in Ruby?
- What does 'gets' do in Ruby?
- Add a screenshot in the comments of the program you created that uses 'puts' and 'gets', and give it the title, "I/O".
Numbers & Arithmetic
- What is the difference between integers and floats?
- Complete the challenge, and post a screenshot of your program in the comments with the title, "Numbers".
Booleans
- What do each of the following symbols mean?
- ==
-
=
- <=
- !=
- &&
- ||
- What are two Ruby methods that return booleans?
Conditionals
- What is flow control?
- What will the following code return?
apple_count = 4
if apple_count > 5
puts "Lots of apples!"
else
puts 'Not many apples...'
end
- What is an infinite loop, and how can you get out of one?
- Take a screenshot of your program and terminal showing two different outputs, and post it in the comments with the title, "Conditionals".
nil
- What is nil?
- Take a screenshot of your terminal after working through Step 4, and post it in the comments with the title, "nil".
Symbols
- How can symbols be beneficial in Ruby?
- Does naming symbols use the same rules for naming variables?
- Take a screenshot of your terminal after working through Step 4, and post it in the comments with the title, "Symbols".
Arrays
- What method can you call to find out how many elements are in an array?
- What is the index of pizza in this array: ["pizza", "ice cream", "cauliflower"]?
- What do 'push' and 'pop' do?
Hashes
- Describe some differences between arrays and hashes.
- What is a case when you might prefer an array? What is a case when you might prefer a hash?
-
- Take a screenshot of your terminal after working through Step 2, and post it in the comments with the title, "Hashes".
- Were you able to get through the work? Did you rush to finish, or take your time?
- What are you most looking forward to learning more about?
- What topics would you most like to see reinforced by instructors?
- What is most confusing to you about what you've learned?
- What questions do you have for your student mentor or for your instructors?
(Note: You will most likely only get to the following sections if you have more than a week for your pre-work. If you are doing the one week pre-work schedule, you may delete this section of the Gist.)
- Loops: Take a screenshot of your "Challenge" program, and post it as a comment in your Gist.
- What challenges did you try for "Summary: Basics"? Post a screenshot of one of your programs.
- Functions: How do you call a function and store the result in a variable?
- Describe the purpose of the following in Ruby classes: initialize method, new method, instance variables.
- How to Write a Program: Screenhero with your student mentor and share your program. Write a bit about what you found most challenging, and most enjoyable, in creating your program.
- screenshots will be posted in comments
- What are your three biggest takeaways from working through this book?
- screenshots will be posted in comments
- What are your two biggest takeaways from working through this tutorial?
- What is one question you have about Git & GitHub?
- Describe your thinking on effective workflow. What shortcuts do you think you'll find most useful? What would you like to learn or practice that will most help you improve your speed and workflow?
As you complete each section, respond to the related questions below (mostly taken directly from the tutorial exercises):
- 1.3: By reading the "man" page for echo, determine the command needed to print out “hello” without the trailing newline. How did you do it?
- 1.4: What do Ctrl-A, Ctrl-E, and Ctrl-U do?
- 1.5: What are the shortcuts for clearing your screen, and exiting your terminal?
- 2.1: What is the "cat" command used for? What is the "diff" command used for?
- 2.2: What command would you use to list all txt files? What command would you use to show all hidden files?
- 3.1: How can you download a file from the internet, using the command line?
- 3.3: Describe two commands you can use in conjunction with "less".
- 3.4: What are two things you can do with "grep"?
Nice work on the Haskell typing practice! I haven't done that one yet (but probably should!)
3/6/16: Launch School: Methods Exercises:
Looks like you're feeling comfortable with methods and passing arguments (the 'greeting', 'multiply' and 'scream' methods).
You're correct about the
wrong number of arguments
error. In Ruby, if a method expects a certain number of arguments and when the method is called without those args (and if there aren't default argument values) it spits out that error.3/6/16: Launch School: Language Comparisons and Conditionals
false != !true
You're right that!=
is a comparison operator.!=
asks, "Is it true that the first thing does NOT equal the second thing?" In this case, the first thing isfalse
and the second thing is!true
which isfalse
therefor both the first thing and the second thing arefalse
, which means our question ("Is it true that the first thing does NOT equal the second thing?") is false because the two ARE equal.Note that with
true == 4
true
is not a 'string' type: it's a 'boolean' type.Nice work on all these booleans comparisons! They can get tricky (but it's sort of fun, too!)
Fantastic work with the iterators (
each
andeach_with_index
),while
loops, and recursion.3/8/16: Array Exercises: Tricky stuff going on here but looks like you're understanding it nicely!
"Three: How do you print the word "example" from the following array?"
... Nice job! Note that in addition to
arr.last.first
one can also call the array elements specifically witharr[1][0]
."Seven: Write a program that iterates over an array and builds a new array that is the result of incrementing each value in the original array by a value of 2. You should have two arrays at the end of this program, The original array and the new array you've created. Print both arrays to the screen using the p method instead of puts."
... Great! In the future, you'll learn to use
.map
instead, which allows you to doWe can talk more about this another time.
Nice work with hashes.
You're doing spectacular. Let me know if you'd like to pair on anything or if you have any questions at all. Good work, Denali!