This exercise is intended to help you assess your progress with the concepts and techniques we've covered during the week.
For these questions, write a short snippet of code that meets
the requirement. Fill in your answers on a second sheet of paper or in your
notebook. In cases where the question mentions a "given"
data value, use the variable given
to refer to it (instead of re-writing
the information).
15. Given the array [1,2,3,4]
, return a new array of only the even numbers. Then an array of only the odd numbers.
[
["Horace", "Module 1"],
["Jeff", "Module 1"],
["Rachel", "Module 2"],
["Steve", "Module 4"]
]
17. Given the following array, sort the list alphabetically by the names (i.e. the first element of each sub-array)
[
["Horace", "Module 1"],
["Jeff", "Module 1"],
["Rachel", "Module 2"],
["Steve", "Module 4"]
]
21. Assign the hash from 20 to a variable. Then add to it a new key "kitten" which points to the value "cat"
22. Given the hash from 21, create an array of the strings "puppy" and "kitten" (don't worry about the order)
23. Given the hash from 21, create an array of the strings "dog" and "cat" (don't worry about the order)
24. Given the array ["Jeff", "Horace", "Josh", "Joanne"]
, create a new array containing each name in ALL CAPS
25. Given the array ["Jeff", "Horace", "Josh", "Joanne"]
, create a new array containing only the names that are shorter than 5 characters
27. Given the following list of variable names, circle those that are valid ruby local variable names
TARDIS
apples
@height
3_blind_mice
soda_or_pop
@@x
$pizza
best_teacher
28. Given the string "pizza"
, create an array containing the individual characters, capitalized (i.e. ["P", "I", "Z", "Z", "A"]
)
29. Given the array ["Jeff", "Horace", "Josh", "Joanne"]
, create a new array containing only the names that start with "J"
[
["Horace", "Module 1"],
["Jeff", "Module 1"],
["Rachel", "Module 2"],
["Steve", "Module 4"]
]