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-rw-r--r--exercises/18_iterators/iterators2.rs23
1 files changed, 10 insertions, 13 deletions
diff --git a/exercises/18_iterators/iterators2.rs b/exercises/18_iterators/iterators2.rs
index 8d8909b..5903e65 100644
--- a/exercises/18_iterators/iterators2.rs
+++ b/exercises/18_iterators/iterators2.rs
@@ -1,31 +1,28 @@
// In this exercise, you'll learn some of the unique advantages that iterators
-// can offer. Follow the steps to complete the exercise.
+// can offer.
-// Step 1.
-// Complete the `capitalize_first` function.
+// TODO: Complete the `capitalize_first` function.
// "hello" -> "Hello"
fn capitalize_first(input: &str) -> String {
- let mut c = input.chars();
- match c.next() {
+ let mut chars = input.chars();
+ match chars.next() {
None => String::new(),
- Some(first) => ???,
+ Some(first) => todo!(),
}
}
-// Step 2.
-// Apply the `capitalize_first` function to a slice of string slices.
+// TODO: Apply the `capitalize_first` function to a slice of string slices.
// Return a vector of strings.
// ["hello", "world"] -> ["Hello", "World"]
fn capitalize_words_vector(words: &[&str]) -> Vec<String> {
- vec![]
+ // ???
}
-// Step 3.
-// Apply the `capitalize_first` function again to a slice of string slices.
-// Return a single string.
+// TODO: Apply the `capitalize_first` function again to a slice of string
+// slices. Return a single string.
// ["hello", " ", "world"] -> "Hello World"
fn capitalize_words_string(words: &[&str]) -> String {
- String::new()
+ // ???
}
fn main() {