1

Don't understand why @nums.pop won't work in the value method. It seems to tell me that it can't do that for nil, but if I just say @nums, it shows that there is indeed something in the array. So then why can't I pop it out?

class RPNCalculator


    def initialize
        @value = value
        nums ||= []
        @nums = nums
    end


    def push(num)
        @nums << num
    end

    def plus
        if @nums[-2] == nil || @nums[-1] == nil
            raise "calculator is empty"
        else
            @value = @nums.pop + @nums.pop
            @nums.push(@value)
        end

    end

    def minus
        if @nums[-2] == nil || @nums[-1] == nil
            raise "calculator is empty"
        else
        @value = @nums[-2] - @nums[-1]
        @nums.pop(2)
        @nums.push(@value)
        end
    end

    def divide
        if @nums[-2] == nil || @nums[-1] == nil
            raise "calculator is empty"
        else
        @value = @nums[-2].to_f / @nums[-1].to_f
        @nums.pop(2)
        @nums.push(@value)
        end
    end

    def times
        if @nums[-2] == nil || @nums[-1] == nil
            raise "calculator is empty"
        else
        @value = @nums.pop.to_f * @nums.pop.to_f
        @nums.push(@value)
        end
    end

    def value
        @nums #Don't understand why @nums.pop won't work here
    end

    def tokens(str)
        str.split(" ").map { |char| (char.match(/\d/) ? char.to_i : char.to_sym)}
    end

    def evaluate(str)

        tokens(str).each do |x| 

            if x == ":-"
                minus

            elsif x == ":+"
                plus

            elsif x == ":/"
                divide

            elsif x ==":*"
                times

            else
                push(x) 
            end
        end
        value
    end 
end

Error relates to the following part of a spec:

it "adds two numbers" do
    calculator.push(2)
    calculator.push(3)
    calculator.plus
    calculator.value.should == 5
end

Error says either:

Failure/Error: calculator.value.should == 5
expected: 5
got: [5] <using ==>

OR if .pop is used

Failure/Error: @calculator = RPNCalculator.new
NoMethodError:
undefined method 'pop' for nil:NilClass
1
  • Remember that in Ruby the only two logically false values are nil and false. This makes direct comparisons to nil using == nil or .nil? almost always redundant. unless @nums[-2] && @nums[-1] is preferable to what you have here.
    – tadman
    Jun 8, 2014 at 18:54

1 Answer 1

1

Your initialize method assigning @value = value calls the function at def value which returns @nums which has not yet been created in initialize since @nums is created afterwards with nums ||= []; @nums = nums therefore it's nil. This is why .pop won't work.

You've created @nums as an array with nums ||= [] and you're using it with push and pop so why are you checking for the value with value.should == 5 (Integer) when calling value returns an (Array). You would need to write it like value.first.should == 5 or value[0].should == 5 ... otherwise you should change value to return just the element you want

def value
  @nums.pop # or @nums[0], or @nums.first or @nums.last however you plan on using it
end

The problem is @value = value in your initialize method. Fix that then you can add the .pop in value.

EDIT

Also your evaluation is calling methods before you've populated @nums with the values. Then the methods "raise" errors. You can't call minus after only one value has been pushed to @nums.

Here's how I would do the flow for splitting the string

# Multiplication and Division need to happen before addition and subtraction
mylist = "1+3*7".split(/([+|-])/)
=> ["1", "+", "3*7"] 

# Compute multiplication and division
mylist = mylist.map {|x| !!(x =~ /[*|\/]/) ? eval(x) : x }
=> ["1", "+", 21]

# Do the rest of the addition
eval mylist.join
=> 22

I realize this isn't exactly how you're going about solving this... but I think splitting by order of mathematical sequence will be the right way to go. So first evaluate everything between (), then only multiplication and division, then all addition and subtraction.

EDIT I just looked into what a RPN Calculator is. So don't mind my splitting recommendation as it doesn't apply.

7
  • Since I don't want the program to call the value method at initialize, I thought that I should change the variable "value" to "sum". However, that is now causing another ripple effect that I am not understanding either. Should I re-paste the code showing that? Because now I am getting an error in a different part of the spec (error: calculator is empty): it "adds three numbers" do calculator.push(2) calculator.push(3) calculator.push(4) calculator.plus calculator.value.should == 7 calculator.plus calculator.value.should == 9 end Jun 8, 2014 at 19:06
  • Try setting value to either nil or 0 instead. So @value = 0. That way you're not calling the value method.
    – 6ft Dan
    Jun 8, 2014 at 19:07
  • That also leads me to the error of "calculator is empty" for when it adds three numbers Jun 8, 2014 at 19:11
  • 2.1.2 :101 > x.push 2 => [2] 2.1.2 :102 > x.push 3 => [2, 3] 2.1.2 :103 > x.push 4 => [2, 3, 4] 2.1.2 :108 > x.plus => [2, 7] 2.1.2 :109 > x.plus => [9] Your plus feature works. Do you have to do it this way? Because there are much easier ways within Ruby to do this.
    – 6ft Dan
    Jun 8, 2014 at 19:17
  • If I were you I'd change your methods to use inject. For example @nums.inject(:+) or @nums.inject(:*) or @nums.inject(:-) or @nums.inject(:/) ... that will do the math on all the items within the array.
    – 6ft Dan
    Jun 8, 2014 at 19:21

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