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learngo/08-numbers-and-strings/01-numbers/questions/03-assignment-operations.md
2018-10-15 19:34:48 +03:00

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Which expression increases n by 1?

var n float64
  1. n = +1
  2. n = n++
  3. n = n + 1 CORRECT
  4. ++n
  1. This just assigns 1 to n.
  2. IncDec statement can't be used as an operator.
  3. Go doesn't support prefix incdec notation.

Which expression decreases n by 1?

var n int
  1. n = -1
  2. n = n--
  3. n = n - 1 CORRECT
  4. --n
  1. This just assigns -1 to n.
  2. IncDec statement can't be used as an operator.
  3. Go doesn't support prefix incdec notation.

Which code below equals to n = n + 1?

  1. n++ CORRECT
  2. n = n++
  3. ++n
  4. n = n ++ 1
  1. IncDec statement can't be used as an operator.
  2. Go doesn't support prefix incdec notation.
  3. What's that? ++?

Which code below equals to n = n + 1?

  1. n = n++
  2. n += 1 CORRECT
  3. ++n
  4. n = n ++ 1
  1. IncDec statement can't be used as an operator.
  2. Go doesn't support prefix incdec notation.
  3. What's that? ++?

Which code below equals to n -= 1?

  1. n = n--
  2. n += 1--
  3. n-- CORRECT
  4. --n
  1. IncDec statement can't be used as an operator.
  2. IncDec statement can't be used as an operator. And also, you can't use it with 1--. The value should be addressable. You're going to learn what that means soon.
  3. Go doesn't support prefix incdec notation.

Which code below divides the length by 10?

  1. length = length // 10
  2. length /= 10 CORRECT
  3. length //= 10
  1. What's that? //?
  2. That's right. This equals to: length = length / 10
  3. What's that? //=?

Which code below equals to x = x % 2?

  1. x = x / 2
  2. x =% x
  3. x %= x CORRECT
  1. This is a division. You need to use the remainder operator.
  2. Close... But, the % operator is on the wrong side of the assignment.

Which function below converts a string value into a float value?

  1. fmtconv.ToFloat
  2. conv.ParseFloat
  3. strconv.ParseFloat CORRECT
  4. strconv.ToFloat

Which code is correct?

If you don't remember it, this its function signature:

func ParseFloat(s string, bitSize int) (float64, error)
  1. strconv.ParseFloat("10", 128)
  2. strconv.ParseFloat("10", 64) CORRECT
  3. strconv.ParseFloat("10", "64")
  4. strconv.ParseFloat(10, 64)
  1. There are no 128-bit floating point values in Go (Actually there are, but they only belong to the compile-time).