Suppose I have the C code below
for(i = 0; i < 10; i++){
printf("Hello");
if(i == 5){
a[3] = a[2] * 2;
if(a[3] == b)
i = a[3]; //Skip to index = a[3]; depends on runtime value
}
}
How to convert to Ruby? I know we can skip one iteration using next
, but I have to skip a few iterations depending on conditional value and I don't know how many iterations to skip before runtime?
Here is the code I am actually working on (as mentioned by Coreyward):
I am looking for "straight line" in the array that the values differs less than 0.1(less than 0.1 will considered as a "straight line"). The range has to be longer than 50 to be considered as a long "line". After I find the line range [a,b], i wanna skip the iterations to upper limit b so it would not start again from a+1, and it will start to find new "straight line" from b+1
for(i=0; i<arr.Length; i++){
if(arr[i] - arr[i + 50] < 0.1){
m = i; //m is the starting point
for(j=i; j<arr.Length; j++){ //this loop makes sure all values differs less than 0.1
if(arr[i] - arr[j] < 0.1){
n = j;
}else{
break;
}
}
if(n - m > 50){ //Found a line with range greater than 50, and store the starting point to line array
line[i] = m
}
i = n //Start new search from n
}
}
feed
) and see the next value (peek
), and you're also able to use afor
loop in Ruby. I'm sure there's a cleaner way of writing this, I just don't know what it's trying to do.arr.Length-50
. This seems like a somewhat convoluted way to find runs of 50 or more whose values are with epsilon of the initial value.