From 959008284834bece0196a01e17ac69a7e3590116 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Dan Wilhelm Date: Wed, 29 Apr 2020 19:11:54 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] fix: update iterator and macro text for typos and clarity - /macros/README.md: Typo "modules" => "macros" - iterators2.py: Reduce line length to <90-char width. - iterators4.py: Update 'fun' => 'challenge' as per PR#177 - rustlings hint iterators4: improve clarity --- exercises/macros/README.md | 2 +- exercises/standard_library_types/iterators2.rs | 10 ++++++---- exercises/standard_library_types/iterators4.rs | 6 +++--- info.toml | 8 ++++---- 4 files changed, 14 insertions(+), 12 deletions(-) diff --git a/exercises/macros/README.md b/exercises/macros/README.md index ef9e4bd..b48b880 100644 --- a/exercises/macros/README.md +++ b/exercises/macros/README.md @@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ Rust's macro system is very powerful, but also kind of difficult to wrap your head around. We're not going to teach you how to write your own fully-featured -modules, instead we'll show you how to use and create them. +macros. Instead, we'll show you how to use and create them. #### Book Sections diff --git a/exercises/standard_library_types/iterators2.rs b/exercises/standard_library_types/iterators2.rs index a1274a2..837725f 100644 --- a/exercises/standard_library_types/iterators2.rs +++ b/exercises/standard_library_types/iterators2.rs @@ -1,8 +1,10 @@ // iterators2.rs -// In this module, you'll learn some of unique advantages that iterators can offer -// Step 1. Complete the `capitalize_first` function to pass the first two cases -// Step 2. Apply the `capitalize_first` function to a vector of strings, ensuring that it returns a vector of strings as well -// Step 3. Apply the `capitalize_first` function again to a list, but try and ensure it returns a single string +// In this module, you'll learn some of unique advantages that iterators can offer. +// Step 1. Complete the `capitalize_first` function to pass the first two cases. +// Step 2. Apply the `capitalize_first` function to a vector of strings. +// Ensure that it returns a vector of strings as well. +// Step 3. Apply the `capitalize_first` function again to a list. +// Try to ensure it returns a single string. // As always, there are hints if you execute `rustlings hint iterators2`! // I AM NOT DONE diff --git a/exercises/standard_library_types/iterators4.rs b/exercises/standard_library_types/iterators4.rs index b945613..8886283 100644 --- a/exercises/standard_library_types/iterators4.rs +++ b/exercises/standard_library_types/iterators4.rs @@ -3,13 +3,13 @@ // I AM NOT DONE pub fn factorial(num: u64) -> u64 { - // Complete this function to return factorial of num + // Complete this function to return the factorial of num // Do not use: // - return - // For extra fun don't use: + // Try not to use: // - imperative style loops (for, while) // - additional variables - // For the most fun don't use: + // For an extra challenge, don't use: // - recursion // Execute `rustlings hint iterators4` for hints. } diff --git a/info.toml b/info.toml index 71bb3dd..d7374ab 100644 --- a/info.toml +++ b/info.toml @@ -640,10 +640,10 @@ name = "iterators4" path = "exercises/standard_library_types/iterators4.rs" mode = "test" hint = """ -In an imperative language you might write a for loop to iterate through -multiply the values into a mutable variable. Or you might write code more -functionally with recursion and a match clause. But you can also use ranges -and iterators to solve this in rust.""" +In an imperative language, you might write a for loop that updates +a mutable variable. Or, you might write code utilizing recursion +and a match clause. In Rust you can take another functional +approach, computing the factorial elegantly with ranges and iterators.""" # TRAITS