trackler 2.0.8.29 → 2.0.8.30

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@@ -1,3 +1,3 @@
1
1
  module Trackler
2
- VERSION = "2.0.8.29"
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+ VERSION = "2.0.8.30"
3
3
  end
@@ -1,8 +1,15 @@
1
- From the [Perl 6 Introduction](http://perl6intro.com/#_what_is_perl_6):
1
+ From [Perl 6 Introduction](http://perl6intro.com/):
2
2
 
3
+ ## What is Perl 6
3
4
  Perl 6 is a high-level, general-purpose, gradually typed language. Perl 6 is multi-paradigmatic. It supports Procedural, Object Oriented, and Functional programming.
4
5
 
5
- Perl 6 motto:
6
- * TMTOWTDI (Pronounced Tim Toady): There is more than one way to do it.
7
- * Easy things should stay easy, hard things should get easier, and impossible things should get hard.
6
+ ##### Perl 6 motto:
7
+ * TMTOWTDI (Pronounced Tim Toady): There is more than one way to do it.
8
+ * Easy things should stay easy, hard things should get easier, and impossible things should get hard.
8
9
 
10
+ ## Jargon
11
+ * **Perl 6:** Is a language specification with a test suite. Implementations that pass the specification test suite are considered Perl 6.
12
+ * **Rakudo:** Is a compiler for Perl 6.
13
+ * **Rakudobrew:** Is an installation manager for Rakudo.
14
+ * **Zef:** Is a Perl 6 module installer.
15
+ * **Rakudo Star:** Is a bundle that includes Rakudo, Zef, a collection of Perl 6 modules, and documentation.
@@ -1,3 +1,4 @@
1
- See the "[How to get Rakudo Perl 6](http://rakudo.org/how-to-get-rakudo/)" page. It contains detailed instructions for downloading and installing perl 6 for Windows / Mac OS X / Linux.
1
+ ## Installing Rakudo Star
2
+ The [How to get Rakudo Perl 6](http://rakudo.org/how-to-get-rakudo/) page contains detailed instructions for downloading and installing Rakudo Star for Windows / Mac OS X / Linux.
2
3
 
3
- In general installing Rakudo Perl 6 should be as simple as installing any other application on your operating system (downloading an MSI package for Windows / a .dmg on Mac OS X / use your package manager on Linux).
4
+ If you are familiar with [Docker](https://www.docker.com/) there is an official [rakudo-star](https://hub.docker.com/_/rakudo-star/) Docker image available.
@@ -1,3 +1,8 @@
1
- # Learning Perl 6
1
+ ## Learning Perl 6
2
2
 
3
- The [Resources](https://perl6.org/resources/) page on Perl6.org contains a 'For Newcomers' section with a selection of useful material to get you up and running.
3
+ The [Resources](https://perl6.org/resources/) page on [perl6.org](https://perl6.org/) contains a 'For Newcomers' section with a selection of useful material to get you up and running.
4
+
5
+ * [Perl 6 Introduction](http://perl6intro.com/)
6
+ * [Learn Perl 6 in Y minutes](https://learnxinyminutes.com/docs/perl6/)
7
+ * [Perl 6 tutorials](https://github.com/perlpilot/perl6-docs)
8
+ * [SixFix](http://sixfix.nigelhamilton.com/) a weekly dose of Perl 6 delivered by email
@@ -1,3 +1,3 @@
1
- # Resources
1
+ ## Useful Perl 6 Resources
2
2
 
3
- [The Perl6 site](https://perl6.org/) has a [resources](https://perl6.org/resources/) page containing variety of information on the language, such as guides for newcomers, documentation, and screencasts.
3
+ [The Perl 6 site](https://perl6.org/) has a [resources](https://perl6.org/resources/) page containing variety of information on the language, such as guides for newcomers, documentation, and screencasts.
@@ -1,5 +1,3 @@
1
- # Running the Tests
2
-
3
1
  ## Run All Tests
4
2
 
5
3
  There is a Perl 6 script with the extension `.t`, which will be used to test
@@ -10,24 +8,22 @@ your solution. You can run through the tests by using the command:
10
8
  Before you start the exercise, the output will likely look something like:
11
9
 
12
10
  ```
13
- ./hello-world.t .. 1/6
14
- # Failed test 'No argument'
15
- # at ./hello-world.t line 28
11
+ ./hello-world.t .. 1/4
12
+ # Failed test 'Say Hi!'
13
+ # at ./hello-world.t line 37
16
14
  # expected: 'Hello, World!'
17
15
  # got: (Nil)
18
-
19
- # Failed test 'Empty string'
20
- # at ./hello-world.t line 29
21
- # expected: 'Hello, World!'
22
- # got: (Nil)
23
- ./hello-world.t .. Dubious, test returned 2 (wstat 512, 0x200)
24
- Failed 2/6 subtests
16
+ # Looks like you failed 1 test of 4
17
+ ./hello-world.t .. Dubious, test returned 1 (wstat 256, 0x100)
18
+ Failed 1/4 subtests
25
19
 
26
20
  Test Summary Report
27
21
  -------------------
28
- ./hello-world.t (Wstat: 512 Tests: 6 Failed: 2)
29
- Failed tests: 3-4
30
- Non-zero exit status: 2
22
+ ./hello-world.t (Wstat: 256 Tests: 4 Failed: 1)
23
+ Failed test: 3
24
+ Non-zero exit status: 1
25
+ Files=1, Tests=4, 1 wallclock secs ( 0.01 usr 0.00 sys + 0.50 cusr 0.04 csys = 0.55 CPU)
26
+ Result: FAIL
31
27
  ```
32
28
  You will either need to modify or create a module with the extension `.pm6`, and
33
29
  write a solution to pass the tests. Once the tests are passing, the output from
@@ -36,7 +32,7 @@ the command above will likely look something like:
36
32
  ```
37
33
  ./hello-world.t .. ok
38
34
  All tests successful.
39
- Files=1, Tests=6, 0 wallclock secs ( 0.03 usr 0.00 sys + 0.37 cusr 0.04 csys = 0.44 CPU)
35
+ Files=1, Tests=4, 1 wallclock secs ( 0.01 usr 0.00 sys + 0.49 cusr 0.06 csys = 0.56 CPU)
40
36
  Result: PASS
41
37
  ```
42
38
 
@@ -45,34 +41,7 @@ flag `-v` (for 'verbose') to the above command, like so:
45
41
 
46
42
  `prove . --exec=perl6 -v`
47
43
 
48
- The output will likely look something like:
49
-
50
- ```
51
- ./hello-world.t ..
52
- 1..6
53
- ok 1 - The module can be use-d ok
54
- 1..1
55
- ok 1 - &hello
56
- ok 2 - Subroutine(s)
57
- ok 3 - No argument
58
- ok 4 - Empty string
59
- not ok 5 - Camelia # TODO optional test
60
-
61
- # Failed test 'Camelia'
62
- # at ./hello-world.t line 31
63
- # expected: 'Hello, Camelia!'
64
- # got: 'Hello, World!'
65
- not ok 6 - Rakudo # TODO optional test
66
-
67
- # Failed test 'Rakudo'
68
- # at ./hello-world.t line 32
69
- # expected: 'Hello, 楽土!'
70
- # got: 'Hello, World!'
71
- ok
72
- All tests successful.
73
- Files=1, Tests=6, 1 wallclock secs ( 0.03 usr 0.00 sys + 0.58 cusr 0.06 csys = 0.67 CPU)
74
- Result: PASS
75
- ```
44
+ As well as showing optional tests, it will include all of the tests that your solution currently passes.
76
45
 
77
46
  ## Stop After First Failure
78
47
 
metadata CHANGED
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
1
1
  --- !ruby/object:Gem::Specification
2
2
  name: trackler
3
3
  version: !ruby/object:Gem::Version
4
- version: 2.0.8.29
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+ version: 2.0.8.30
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5
  platform: ruby
6
6
  authors:
7
7
  - Katrina Owen
@@ -2882,7 +2882,6 @@ files:
2882
2882
  - tracks/erlang/exercises/hamming/src/example.erl
2883
2883
  - tracks/erlang/exercises/hamming/src/hamming.app.src
2884
2884
  - tracks/erlang/exercises/hamming/test/hamming_tests.erl
2885
- - tracks/erlang/exercises/hello-world/README.md
2886
2885
  - tracks/erlang/exercises/hello-world/include/exercism.hrl
2887
2886
  - tracks/erlang/exercises/hello-world/rebar.config
2888
2887
  - tracks/erlang/exercises/hello-world/src/example.erl
@@ -1,50 +0,0 @@
1
- # Hello World
2
-
3
- Write a program that greets the user by name, or by saying "Hello, World!" if no name is given.
4
-
5
- ["Hello, World!"](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%22Hello,_world!%22_program) is the traditional first program for beginning programming in a new language.
6
-
7
- **Note:** You can skip this exercise by running:
8
-
9
- exercism skip $LANGUAGE hello-world
10
-
11
- ## Specification
12
-
13
- The `Hello World!` program will greet me, the caller.
14
-
15
- If I tell the program my name is Alice, it will greet me by saying "Hello, Alice!".
16
-
17
- If I neglect to give it my name, it will greet me by saying "Hello, World!"
18
-
19
- ## Test-Driven Development
20
-
21
- As programmers mature, they eventually want to test their code.
22
-
23
- Here at Exercism we simulate [Test-Driven Development](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Test-driven_development) (TDD), where you write your tests before writing any functionality. The simulation comes in the form of a pre-written test suite, which will signal that you have solved the problem.
24
-
25
- It will also provide you with a safety net to explore other solutions without breaking the functionality.
26
-
27
- ### A typical TDD workflow on Exercism:
28
-
29
- 1. Run the test file and pick one test that's failing.
30
- 2. Write some code to fix the test you picked.
31
- 3. Re-run the tests to confirm the test is now passing.
32
- 4. Repeat from step 1.
33
- 5. [Submit your solution](http://exercism.io/languages/erlang).
34
-
35
- ## Instructions
36
-
37
- Submissions are encouraged to be general, within reason. Having said that, it's also important not to over-engineer a solution.
38
-
39
- It's important to remember that the goal is to make code as expressive and readable as we can. However, solutions to the hello-world exercise will be not be reviewed by a person, but by rikki- the robot, who will offer an encouraging word.
40
-
41
- ## Running tests
42
-
43
- ```bash
44
- $ erl -make
45
- $ erl -noshell -eval "eunit:test(hello_world, [verbose])" -s init stop
46
- ```
47
-
48
- ## Source
49
-
50
- This is a program to introduce users to using Exercism [view source](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%22Hello,_world!%22_program)