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202 lines
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7.3 KiB
Markdown
202 lines
No EOL
7.3 KiB
Markdown
# Making the Grade
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Welcome to Making the Grade on Exercism's C++ Track.
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If you need help running the tests or submitting your code, check out `HELP.md`.
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If you get stuck on the exercise, check out `HINTS.md`, but try and solve it without using those first :)
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## Introduction
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## Arrays and Vectors
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C++ offers different containers to store elements of the same type in an ordered way.
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There is `std::array` for containers of a fixed size and `std::vector`, which comes with dynamic resizing capabilities.
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### Construction
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When you declare an array or a vector you need to specify the type of elements, that container will hold.
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Arrays also need a size.
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Look at these examples to see the two container types' initializations:
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```cpp
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#include <array>
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#include <string>
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// std::array<element_type, size> variable_name {list of elements}
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std::array<std::string, 3> indie_rock {"yeah", "yeah", "yeah"};
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// indie_rock contains the elements "yeah" three times
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```
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Vectors usually need more space, as they allocate memory for further growth.
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You do not need to specify a size:
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```cpp
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#include <vector>
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// std::vector<element_type> variable_name {list of elements}
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std::vector<int> countdown {3, 2, 1};
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// countdown contains the elements 3, 2 and 1
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```
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> Note: You do not need to know the exact mechanics behind the template concept yet, it will have its own concept further down the syllabus tree.
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### Element access
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Vectors and arrays share the same functions to access their elements.
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You can use the member functions `front` and `back` to get the first and last elements of the container.
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There is also `at` and the `[]` operator to access specific elements.
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```cpp
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countdown[0];
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// => 3
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countdown.at(2);
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// => 1
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countdown[1] = 4;
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// countdown now contains 3, 4 and 1
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indie_rock.back() = "yeahs";
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// indie_rock is now "yeah", "yeah", "yeahs"
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```
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> Note: If you pick a position that is not in the range of your container, `[]` might lead to undefined behavior.
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> The `at` function would raise an exception, which might make your life easier in the long term.
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### Vector modifiers
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As a `vector` is not fixed in size, it is possible to add or remove elements.
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Two common functions for that purpose are `emplace_back` and `pop_back`.
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```cpp
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std::vector<std::string> witches {"Holly", "Alyssa", "Shannen"};
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witches.pop_back();
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// Shannen is no longer with the witches
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witches.emplace_back("Rose");
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// Rose has joined the team
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```
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### Capacity
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You can check the containers for emptiness with the member function `empty`.
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If you want to know the number of elements, you can use `size`.
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## Instructions
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You're a teaching assistant correcting student exams.
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Keeping track of results manually is getting both tedious and mistake-prone.
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You decide to make things a little more interesting by putting together some functions to count and calculate results for the class.
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## 1. Rounding Scores
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While you can give "partial credit" on exam questions, overall exam scores have to be `int`s.
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So before you can do anything else with the class scores, you need to go through the grades and turn any `double` scores into `int`s.
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Create the function `round_down_scores()` that takes a `vector` of `student_scores`.
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The schools' requested rounding is a truncation.
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Lucky for you, C++ can cast one type into another with `static_cast`.
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The `static_cast` conversion from `double` to `int` cuts off any digit after the decimal.
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This function should take the input `vector` and `return` a new vector with all the scores converted to `int`s.
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```cpp
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std::vector<double> student_scores {90.33, 40.5, 55.44, 70.05, 30.55, 25.45, 80.45, 95.3, 38.7, 40.3};
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round_down_scores(student_scores)
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// => {90, 40, 55, 70, 30, 25, 80, 95, 38, 40}
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```
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## 2. Non-Passing Students
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As you were grading the exam, you noticed some students weren't performing as well as you'd hoped.
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But you were distracted, and forgot to note exactly _how many_ students.
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Create the function `count_failed_students()` that takes a `vector` of `student_scores`.
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This function should count up the number of students who don't have passing scores and return that count as an integer.
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A student needs a score greater than **40** to achieve a passing grade on the exam.
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```cpp
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count_failed_students({90,40,55,70,30,25,80,95,38,40});
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// => 5
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```
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## 3. The "Best"
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The teacher you're assisting wants to find the group of students who've performed "the best" on this exam.
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What qualifies as "the best" fluctuates, so you need to find the student scores that are **greater than or equal to** the current threshold.
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Create the function `above_threshold()` taking `student_scores` (a `vector` of grades), and `threshold` (an `int`, the "top score" threshold) as parameters.
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This function should return a `vector` of all scores that are `>=` to `threshold`.
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```cpp
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above_threshold({90,40,55,70,30,68,70,75,83,96}, 75);
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// => {90,75,83,96}
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```
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## 4. Calculating Letter Grades
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The teacher you're assisting likes to assign letter grades as well as numeric scores.
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Since students rarely score 100 on an exam, the "letter grade" lower thresholds are calculated based on the highest score achieved, and increment evenly between the high score and the failing threshold of **<= 40**.
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Create the function `letter_grades()` that takes the "highest" score on the exam as a parameter, and returns an `array` (not a vector) of lower score thresholds for each "American style" grade interval: `["D", "C", "B", "A"]`.
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```cpp
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/*Where the highest score is 100, and failing is <= 40.
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"F" <= 40
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41 <= "D" <= 55
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56 <= "C" <= 70
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71 <= "B" <= 85
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86 <= "A" <= 100
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*/
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letter_grades(100);
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// => {41, 56, 71, 86}
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/*Where the highest score is 88, and failing is <= 40.
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"F" <= 40
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41 <= "D" <= 52
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53 <= "C" <= 64
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65 <= "B" <= 76
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77 <= "A" <= 88
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*/
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letter_grades(88);
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// => {41, 53, 65, 77}
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```
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## 5. Matching Names to Scores
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You have exam scores in descending order, and the respective student names (sorted in the order of their exam scores).
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You would like to match each student's name with their exam score and print out an overall class ranking.
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Create the function `student_ranking()` with parameters `student_scores` and `student_names`.
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Match each student name on the student_names `vector` with their score from the student_scores `vector`.
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You can assume each argument `vector` is sorted from highest score(er) to lowest score(er).
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The function should return a `vector` of strings with the format `<rank>. <student name>: <student score>`.
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```cpp
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std::vector<int> student_scores {100, 99, 90, 84, 66, 53, 47};
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std::vector<std::string> student_names {"Joci", "Sara","Kora","Jan","Indra","Bern", "Fred"};
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student_ranking(student_scores, student_names)
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// =>
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// {"1. Joci: 100", "2. Sara: 99", "3. Kora: 90", "4. Jan: 84", "5. Indra: 66", "6. Bern: 53", "7. Fred: 47"}
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```
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## 6. A "Perfect" Score
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Although a "perfect" score of 100 is rare on an exam, it is interesting to know if at least one student has achieved it.
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Create the function `perfect_score()` with parameters `student_scores` and `student_names`.
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The lists are the same as in task 5.
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The function should `return` _the first_ `<name>` (as a string) of the student who scored 100 on the exam.
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If no 100 scores are found, an empty string `""` should be returned.
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```cpp
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perfect_score({"Nur", "Tony", "Fatima"}, {90, 80, 100});
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// => "Fatima"
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perfect_score({"Nur", "Tony"}, {90, 80});
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// => ""
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```
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## Source
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### Created by
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- @vaeng |