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  3. Friday Programming Quiz [modified]

Friday Programming Quiz [modified]

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved The Lounge
delphihtmldatabasedebuggingxml
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  • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

    BTW: Probably that is why the .NET naming guidelines state that any acronym > 2 letters should not be all capitalized.


    Debugging is twice as hard as writing the code in the first place. Therefore, if you write the code as cleverly as possible, you are, by definition, not smart enough to debug it. -Brian Kernighan

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    PIEBALDconsult
    wrote on last edited by
    #32

    Microsoft doesn't get to decide on the proper capitalization of the technologies created by others.

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    • Steve EcholsS Steve Echols

      Yes! Now I can take the weekend off! :) I guess it would be good to know it, in case I ever see it out in the wild though. Or, I guess I could just look it up when I need it.


      - S 50 cups of coffee and you know it's on!

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      PIEBALDconsult
      wrote on last edited by
      #33

      Too many dialects.

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      • M Marc Clifton

        return lookupUserFriendlyName[columnName];

        ;P Marc

        Thyme In The Country

        People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
        There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer
        People who say that they will refactor their code later to make it "good" don't understand refactoring, nor the art and craft of programming. -- Josh Smith

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        PIEBALDconsult
        wrote on last edited by
        #34

        DoWhatImThinking ( Data )

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        • K Kacee Giger

          Does this handle the BodyHTML -> Body HTML case--I believe your solution would give "Body H T M L"?

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          Dave Kreskowiak
          wrote on last edited by
          #35

          Nope. It should only do it if the previous character was lower case. But, then again, I wrote the "psuedo" in my head after looking at the problem for all of 15 seconds with nothing more than the CP post window in front of me.

          Dave Kreskowiak Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic

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          • M Matt Gerrans

            Well, all we need to do is just compile his solution with the Plain English compiler and try it out! Grande?

            Matt Gerrans

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            Dave Kreskowiak
            wrote on last edited by
            #36

            :laugh:!

            Dave Kreskowiak Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic

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            • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

              I recently encountered/solved this problem and it is fairly simple. Column names in a database are named using Pascal casing, however to display it in a user friendly manner words need to be separated with spaces to generate display names. Following examples show the output for some strings.

              Name Display Name
              BodyHTML -> Body HTML
              LastAccessedTime -> Last Accessed Time
              ESOP -> ESOP

              In a language of your choice implement a procedure that will convert the column names to display names.

              String DisplayNameFromColumnName(String columnName) {
              }

              -- modified at 16:56 Friday 1st December, 2006 Removed XMLValue -> XML Value


              Debugging is twice as hard as writing the code in the first place. Therefore, if you write the code as cleverly as possible, you are, by definition, not smart enough to debug it. -Brian Kernighan

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              Tomas Petricek
              wrote on last edited by
              #37

              My F# solution is following :->

              open Array;;
              open System;;
              open System.Text;;

              let DisplayNameFromColumnName (str:string) =
              let l = str.Length in
              let nb = fun n -> ( (if (n = 0) then 'x' else str.[n-1]),
              (str.[n]), (if (n = l-1) then 'X' else str.[n+1]) ) in
              let sb = new StringBuilder() in
              let ap (c:char) = ignore(sb.Append(c)) in
              let up c = Char.IsUpper(c) in
              let lo c = Char.IsLower(c) in
              str.ToCharArray() |> iteri ( fun n _ -> let (p,c,n) = (nb n) in
              if ((lo(p) && up(c)) || (up(c) && lo(n))) then ap(' '); ap(c) );
              (sb.ToString()).Trim();;

              If works on the "XMLValue" example too...

              Tomas Petricek, C# MVP
              Tomasp.net | My Photos | My Blog (C# 3, LINQ, F# etc..)

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              • T Tomas Petricek

                My F# solution is following :->

                open Array;;
                open System;;
                open System.Text;;

                let DisplayNameFromColumnName (str:string) =
                let l = str.Length in
                let nb = fun n -> ( (if (n = 0) then 'x' else str.[n-1]),
                (str.[n]), (if (n = l-1) then 'X' else str.[n+1]) ) in
                let sb = new StringBuilder() in
                let ap (c:char) = ignore(sb.Append(c)) in
                let up c = Char.IsUpper(c) in
                let lo c = Char.IsLower(c) in
                str.ToCharArray() |> iteri ( fun n _ -> let (p,c,n) = (nb n) in
                if ((lo(p) && up(c)) || (up(c) && lo(n))) then ap(' '); ap(c) );
                (sb.ToString()).Trim();;

                If works on the "XMLValue" example too...

                Tomas Petricek, C# MVP
                Tomasp.net | My Photos | My Blog (C# 3, LINQ, F# etc..)

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                Nemanja Trifunovic
                wrote on last edited by
                #38

                Tomas Petricek wrote:

                My F# solution

                That's OCaml, right? Can't you use pattern matching?


                Programming Blog utf8-cpp

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                • N Nemanja Trifunovic

                  Tomas Petricek wrote:

                  My F# solution

                  That's OCaml, right? Can't you use pattern matching?


                  Programming Blog utf8-cpp

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                  Tomas Petricek
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #39

                  Yeah, F# is based on OCaml :). As I'm thinking about the problem it could be possible to use another very interesting F# feature called active patterns[^], but I have not played with this feature very much and I'm to lazy to think about it now.. it's friday :-O

                  Tomas Petricek, C# MVP
                  Tomasp.net | My Photos | My Blog (C# 3, LINQ, F# etc..)

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                  • D Dave Kreskowiak

                    Nope. It should only do it if the previous character was lower case. But, then again, I wrote the "psuedo" in my head after looking at the problem for all of 15 seconds with nothing more than the CP post window in front of me.

                    Dave Kreskowiak Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic

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                    Matt Gerrans
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #40

                    Dave Kreskowiak wrote:

                    But, then again, I wrote the "psuedo" in my head after looking at the problem for all of 15 seconds with nothing more than the CP post window in front of me.

                    Ship it!

                    Matt Gerrans

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                    • M Matt Gerrans

                      Dave Kreskowiak wrote:

                      But, then again, I wrote the "psuedo" in my head after looking at the problem for all of 15 seconds with nothing more than the CP post window in front of me.

                      Ship it!

                      Matt Gerrans

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                      Dave Kreskowiak
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #41

                      Done! I rewrote it in Plain Portugese, though. Brazil is such an ignored market!

                      Dave Kreskowiak Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic

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                      • N Nemanja Trifunovic

                        Tomas Petricek wrote:

                        My F# solution

                        That's OCaml, right? Can't you use pattern matching?


                        Programming Blog utf8-cpp

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                        Stuart Dootson
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #42

                        Yes - see my Haskell solution :cool:

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                        • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

                          I recently encountered/solved this problem and it is fairly simple. Column names in a database are named using Pascal casing, however to display it in a user friendly manner words need to be separated with spaces to generate display names. Following examples show the output for some strings.

                          Name Display Name
                          BodyHTML -> Body HTML
                          LastAccessedTime -> Last Accessed Time
                          ESOP -> ESOP

                          In a language of your choice implement a procedure that will convert the column names to display names.

                          String DisplayNameFromColumnName(String columnName) {
                          }

                          -- modified at 16:56 Friday 1st December, 2006 Removed XMLValue -> XML Value


                          Debugging is twice as hard as writing the code in the first place. Therefore, if you write the code as cleverly as possible, you are, by definition, not smart enough to debug it. -Brian Kernighan

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                          Stuart Dootson
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #43

                          As usual - a Haskell solution. I decided to use raw list processing rather than regexes, 'cause I couldn't be bothered to look up the regex library functions... It also handles single letter wored like A - try "ThereIsAColumn"

                          wordise [] = []
                          wordise [x] = [x]
                          wordise (x:y:rest)
                             | (isAlpha x) && (isUpper y) = x: (' ': (wordise (y:rest)))
                             | otherwise = x: (wordise (y:rest))
                          

                          -- modified at 19:53 Saturday 2nd December, 2006 OK - so I could be bothered to look up the regex functions...

                          wordise2 s
                             | Just (before, _, after, [lower, upper]) <- matchRegexAll (mkRegex "([a-zA-Z])([A-Z])") s 
                                      = before ++ lower ++ (' ':upper) ++ (wordise after)
                             | otherwise = s
                          

                          This uses a Haskell 98 extension called pattern guards to do pattern matching on the results of a function called on the input, rather than directly on the input. The first guard succeeds in the case of a successful regex match. The second handles a failing regex match by just returning the string.

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                          • T Tomas Petricek

                            Yeah, F# is based on OCaml :). As I'm thinking about the problem it could be possible to use another very interesting F# feature called active patterns[^], but I have not played with this feature very much and I'm to lazy to think about it now.. it's friday :-O

                            Tomas Petricek, C# MVP
                            Tomasp.net | My Photos | My Blog (C# 3, LINQ, F# etc..)

                            S Offline
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                            Stuart Dootson
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #44

                            Active patterns look similar to a Haskell extension called pattern guards[^]. My Haskell solution has an example of their use...

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