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Collections are a way for you to organize kata so that you can create your own training routines. Every collection you create is public and automatically sharable with other warriors. After you have added a few kata to a collection you and others can train on the kata contained within the collection.
Get started now by creating a new collection.
was easy
Haskell translation
All languages now have random tests, closing.
Fixed for JS
Merged a fix for these.
Merged
JS fork π€
mocha/chai
deep assertions (resolving this issue) +lodash
for randomnessWow! That was really interesting!
What Valuable Information You Gave Me! ππ
when retiring duplicate katas, it is irrelevant to know which one is the older. things to consider are the quality of each one (random tests' coverage, better design / interface, description, etc.). There is a github repositery where duplicate katas (and other content issues) are handled. you can open a new ticket there about that one. you can also vote and comment on other similar tickets.
π An Interesting Discovery
It looks like this problem was designed about three years earlier than the link I shared. π€
Thereβs a chance that the other one is a copy of this, but either way, I really enjoyed solving itβeven the second time! π
π Can We Trace the Original Idea?
Is there a way to determine which user originally came up with an idea for a problem?
That would be really interesting to know! π‘
look at the bottom of the page on a
https://www.codewars.com/kata/{kata_id}
URL. there are statistics thereπ An Interesting Find!
A few days ago, I solved a problem very similar to this one!
π Link: Check it out here
π€ Question: Is there a way on Codewars to determine which of these two problems was created first?
Fastest kata yet! Very simple, yet I appreciated the creative take on the way the problem was presented.
me when im pulsing with nuradrenalin
You have your browser's history for that. Also, you can visit your profile to see "unfinished" katas list.
Focus on learning fundamentals to solve simpler problems, and in a week, you'll likely be able to come back and solve this one (and many more) too.
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