I had to make a program to estimate the value of pi using Ramanujan's
method.
I have made the program but it is giving the following error
Question1.rb:8:in 'factorial':Interrupt
where 'factorial' is the name of the method and Question1.rb is the file
name.
Please reply.
Attachments:
http://www.ruby-forum.com/attachment/3904/Question1.rb
···
--
Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/.
Try this snippet, do you see the problem here?
def add(k)
i = 0
loop {
i += 1
if (i == k) then
return i
else
p i, k
end
sleep 1
}
end
k = gets
p add(k)
···
On Sat, Jul 25, 2009 at 4:02 PM, Prateek Agarwal<prateek.agwl@gmail.com> wrote:
I had to make a program to estimate the value of pi using Ramanujan's
method.
I have made the program but it is giving the following error
Question1.rb:8:in 'factorial':Interrupt
where 'factorial' is the name of the method and Question1.rb is the file
name.
Prateek Agarwal wrote:
I had to make a program to estimate the value of pi using Ramanujan's
method.
I have made the program but it is giving the following error
Question1.rb:8:in 'factorial':Interrupt
You pressed ctrl-C?
I'm surprised it even ran at all:
def factorial(x)
if (x==0) then
return (1)
end
else
... something else
This doesn't make sense syntactically - an 'else' without an 'if'. You
need:
if x == 0
return 1
else
... something else
end
···
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I'm surprised it even ran at all:
def factorial(x)
if (x==0) then
return (1)
end
else
... something else
This doesn't make sense syntactically - an 'else' without an 'if'.
An 'else' can live inside a method or a begin...end:
ruby y
y:6: warning: else without rescue is useless
FOO
ELSE
FOO
y:3:in `foo': FOO (RuntimeError)
from y:9
cat y
def foo(n)
puts "FOO"
raise "FOO" if n
rescue
puts "RESCUE"
else
puts "ELSE"
end
foo(false)
foo(true)
ruby y
FOO
ELSE
FOO
RESCUE
http://rubycentral.com/pickaxe/tut_exceptions.html
"The else clause is a similar, although less useful, construct. If
present, it goes after the rescue clauses and before any ensure. The
body of an else clause is executed only if no exceptions are raised by
the main body of code."
···
On Sat, Jul 25, 2009 at 7:24 PM, Brian Candler<b.candler@pobox.com> wrote:
Ugh, thanks - I'd forgotten the use of 'else' as part of a rescue, and
the implicit begin/end around a method body.
ruby y
y:6: warning: else without rescue is useless
Matz send years ago that he regretted not making -w the default.
···
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