exercism-cpp / darts /
@Wook Song Wook Song authored on 10 Aug 2023
..
.exercism LearningExercises: Solve exercises on the way to reach Loops 2 years ago
test LearningExercises: Solve exercises on the way to reach Loops 2 years ago
CMakeLists.txt LearningExercises: Solve exercises on the way to reach Loops 2 years ago
HELP.md LearningExercises: Solve exercises on the way to reach Loops 2 years ago
README.md LearningExercises: Solve exercises on the way to reach Loops 2 years ago
darts.cpp LearningExercises: Solve exercises on the way to reach Loops 2 years ago
darts.h LearningExercises: Solve exercises on the way to reach Loops 2 years ago
darts_test.cpp LearningExercises: Solve exercises on the way to reach Loops 2 years ago
README.md

Darts

Welcome to Darts on Exercism's C++ Track. If you need help running the tests or submitting your code, check out HELP.md.

Instructions

Write a function that returns the earned points in a single toss of a Darts game.

Darts is a game where players throw darts at a target.

In our particular instance of the game, the target rewards 4 different amounts of points, depending on where the dart lands:

  • If the dart lands outside the target, player earns no points (0 points).
  • If the dart lands in the outer circle of the target, player earns 1 point.
  • If the dart lands in the middle circle of the target, player earns 5 points.
  • If the dart lands in the inner circle of the target, player earns 10 points.

The outer circle has a radius of 10 units (this is equivalent to the total radius for the entire target), the middle circle a radius of 5 units, and the inner circle a radius of 1. Of course, they are all centered at the same point (that is, the circles are [concentric][] defined by the coordinates (0, 0).

Write a function that given a point in the target (defined by its Cartesian coordinates x and y, where x and y are real), returns the correct amount earned by a dart landing at that point.

Source

Created by

  • @KevDi

Contributed to by

  • @kytrinyx

Based on

Inspired by an exercise created by a professor Della Paolera in Argentina