Coding Challenge #1
Given an array of forecasted maximum temperatures, the thermometer displays a string with the given temperatures. Example: [17, 21, 23] will print "... 17ºC in 1
days ... 21ºC in 2 days ... 23ºC in 3 days ..."
Your tasks:
- Create a function 'printForecast' which takes in an array 'arr' and logs a string like the above to the console. Try it with both test datasets.
- Use the problem-solving framework: Understand the problem and break it up into sub-problems! Test data: Data 1: [17, 21, 23] Data 2: [12, 5, -5, 0, 4]
Coding Challenge #2
Implement a game rest functionality, so that the player can make a new guess!
Your tasks:
- Select the element with the 'again' class and attach a click event handler
- In the handler function, restore initial values of the 'score' and 'secretNumber' variables
- Restore the initial conditions of the message, number, score and guess input fields
- Also restore the original background color (#222) and number width (15rem)
Coding Challenge #3
We're building a football betting app (soccer for my American friends Suppose we get data from a web service about a certain game ('game' variable on next page). In this challenge we're gonna work with that data.
Your tasks:
- Create one player array for each team (variables 'players1' and 'players2')
- The first player in any player array is the goalkeeper and the others are field players. For Bayern Munich (team 1) create one variable ('gk') with the goalkeeper's name, and one array ('fieldPlayers') with all the remaining 10 field players
- Create an array 'allPlayers' containing all players of both teams (22 players)
- During the game, Bayern Munich (team 1) used 3 substitute players. So create a new array ('players1Final') containing all the original team1 players plus 'Thiago', 'Coutinho' and 'Perisic'
- Based on the game.odds object, create one variable for each odd (called 'team1', 'draw' and 'team2')
- Write a function ('printGoals') that receives an arbitrary number of player names (not an array) and prints each of them to the console, along with the number of goals that were scored in total (number of player names passed in)
- The team with the lower odd is more likely to win. Print to the console which team is more likely to win, without using an if/else statement or the ternary operator. Test data for 6.: First, use players 'Davies', 'Muller', 'Lewandowski' and 'Kimmich'. Then, call the function again with players from game.scored
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