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export const tests = [] |
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const t = (f) => tests.push(f) |
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t(({ eq }) => eq(dogYears('earth', 1000000000), 221.82)) |
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t(({ eq }) => eq(dogYears('mercury', 2134835688), 1966.16)) |
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t(({ eq }) => eq(dogYears('venus', 189839836), 68.45)) |
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t(({ eq }) => eq(dogYears('mars', 2129871239), 251.19)) |
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t(({ eq }) => eq(dogYears('jupiter', 901876382), 16.86)) |
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t(({ eq }) => eq(dogYears('saturn', 2000000000), 15.07)) |
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t(({ eq }) => eq(dogYears('uranus', 1210123456), 3.19)) |
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t(({ eq }) => eq(dogYears('neptune', 1821023456), 2.45)) |
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Object.freeze(tests) |
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## Dog Years |
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### Instructions |
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Someone once said that a dog makes 7 years for each human year. |
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Create a `dogYears` function that if given a planet name and an age in seconds, |
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calculates how old a dog would be on the given planet. |
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- Earth: orbital period 1.0 Earth years, 365.25 Earth days, or 31,557,600 seconds |
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- Mercury: orbital period 0.2408467 Earth years |
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- Venus: orbital period 0.61519726 Earth years |
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- Mars: orbital period 1.8808158 Earth years |
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- Jupiter: orbital period 11.862615 Earth years |
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- Saturn: orbital period 29.447498 Earth years |
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- Uranus: orbital period 84.016846 Earth years |
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- Neptune: orbital period 164.79132 Earth years |
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So if you were told someone that their dog were 1,000,000,000 seconds old, you should be able to say that the dog is 221.83 Earth-years old. |
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You will have to format the number so that the result is rounded like the example above. |
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