exercism/csharp/space-age
Ben Harris 588f26458c create solution and update all to .net 6 2021-11-10 15:09:57 -05:00
..
.exercism some new ones i've been working on 2021-11-08 14:06:11 -05:00
.editorconfig some new ones i've been working on 2021-11-08 14:06:11 -05:00
HELP.md some new ones i've been working on 2021-11-08 14:06:11 -05:00
README.md some new ones i've been working on 2021-11-08 14:06:11 -05:00
SpaceAge.cs some new ones i've been working on 2021-11-08 14:06:11 -05:00
SpaceAge.csproj create solution and update all to .net 6 2021-11-10 15:09:57 -05:00
SpaceAgeTests.cs some new ones i've been working on 2021-11-08 14:06:11 -05:00

README.md

Space Age

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

Instructions

Given an age in seconds, calculate how old someone would be on:

  • Mercury: orbital period 0.2408467 Earth years
  • Venus: orbital period 0.61519726 Earth years
  • Earth: orbital period 1.0 Earth years, 365.25 Earth days, or 31557600 seconds
  • Mars: orbital period 1.8808158 Earth years
  • Jupiter: orbital period 11.862615 Earth years
  • Saturn: orbital period 29.447498 Earth years
  • Uranus: orbital period 84.016846 Earth years
  • Neptune: orbital period 164.79132 Earth years

So if you were told someone were 1,000,000,000 seconds old, you should be able to say that they're 31.69 Earth-years old.

If you're wondering why Pluto didn't make the cut, go watch this youtube video.

Source

Created by

  • @bressain

Contributed to by

  • @ErikSchierboom
  • @j2jensen
  • @jwood803
  • @kytrinyx
  • @mikecoop
  • @robkeim
  • @wolf99

Based on

Partially inspired by Chapter 1 in Chris Pine's online Learn to Program tutorial. - http://pine.fm/LearnToProgram/?Chapter=01