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This coding exercise comes from Upcase, the online learning platform we run. It's part of the Ruby Challenges course and is just one small sample of all the great material available on Upcase, so be sure to visit and check out the rest.
Difficulty: Easy, but requires isolating an external service during testing.
As a Shakespeare buff, statistics junkie, and Unix lover, Ben finds himself wanting a command-line tool for analyzing Macbeth.
Write a command-line program that prints the number of lines spoken by each character in the play.
To start, you'll want to clone and run the setup script for the repo
git clone [email protected]:thoughtbot-upcase-exercises/analyzing-shakespeare.git
cd analyzing-shakespeare
bin/setup
Sample usage/output (using made-up numbers):
$ ruby macbeth_analyzer.rb
543 Macbeth
345 Banquo
220 Duncan
(etc.)
You can find an XML-encoded version of Macbeth here: http://www.ibiblio.org/xml/examples/shakespeare/macbeth.xml. Your program should download and parse this file at runtime.
Your solution must be tested, preferably via TDD. Running your tests should not download the play from the ibiblio.org server.
Note: some lines are attributed to a speaker called "ALL". Your program should ignore these.
Check out the featured solution branch to see the approach we recommend for this exercise.
If you find yourself stuck, be sure to check out the associated Upcase Forum discussion for this exercise to see what other folks have said.
When you've finished the exercise, head on back to the Ruby Challenges course to find the next exercise, or explore any of the other great content on Upcase.
analyzing-shakespeare is Copyright © 2015-2018 thoughtbot, inc. It is free software, and may be redistributed under the terms specified in the LICENSE file.
This exercise is maintained and funded by thoughtbot, inc.
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