exercism/elixir/roman-numerals
Danil Negrienko 26a8976b52 roman-numbers 2024-06-28 18:12:55 -04:00
..
.exercism roman-numbers 2024-06-28 18:12:55 -04:00
lib roman-numbers 2024-06-28 18:12:55 -04:00
test roman-numbers 2024-06-28 18:12:55 -04:00
.formatter.exs roman-numbers 2024-06-28 18:12:55 -04:00
.gitignore roman-numbers 2024-06-28 18:12:55 -04:00
HELP.md roman-numbers 2024-06-28 18:12:55 -04:00
README.md roman-numbers 2024-06-28 18:12:55 -04:00
mix.exs roman-numbers 2024-06-28 18:12:55 -04:00

README.md

Roman Numerals

Welcome to Roman Numerals on Exercism's Elixir Track. If you need help running the tests or submitting your code, check out HELP.md.

Introduction

Today, most people in the world use Arabic numerals (09). But if you travelled back two thousand years, you'd find that most Europeans were using Roman numerals instead.

To write a Roman numeral we use the following Latin letters, each of which has a value:

M D C L X V I
1000 500 100 50 10 5 1

A Roman numeral is a sequence of these letters, and its value is the sum of the letters' values. For example, XVIII has the value 18 (10 + 5 + 1 + 1 + 1 = 18).

There's one rule that makes things trickier though, and that's that the same letter cannot be used more than three times in succession. That means that we can't express numbers such as 4 with the seemingly natural IIII. Instead, for those numbers, we use a subtraction method between two letters. So we think of 4 not as 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 but instead as 5 - 1. And slightly confusingly to our modern thinking, we write the smaller number first. This applies only in the following cases: 4 (IV), 9 (IX), 40 (XL), 90 (XC), 400 (CD) and 900 (CM).

Order matters in Roman numerals! Letters (and the special compounds above) must be ordered by decreasing value from left to right.

Here are some examples:

 105 => CV
---- => --
 100 => C
+  5 =>  V
 106 => CVI
---- => --
 100 => C
+  5 =>  V
+  1 =>   I
 104 => CIV
---- => ---
 100 => C
+  4 =>  IV

And a final more complex example:

 1996 => MCMXCVI
----- => -------
 1000 => M
+ 900 =>  CM
+  90 =>    XC
+   5 =>      V
+   1 =>       I

Instructions

Your task is to convert a number from Arabic numerals to Roman numerals.

For this exercise, we are only concerned about traditional Roman numerals, in which the largest number is MMMCMXCIX (or 3,999).

There are lots of different ways to convert between Arabic and Roman numerals.
We recommend taking a naive approach first to familiarise yourself with the concept of Roman numerals and then search for more efficient methods.

Make sure to check out our Deep Dive video at the end to explore the different approaches you can take!

Source

Created by

  • @rubysolo

Contributed to by

  • @andrewsardone
  • @angelikatyborska
  • @cetinajero
  • @Cohen-Carlisle
  • @dalexj
  • @devonestes
  • @jinyeow
  • @lpil
  • @neenjaw
  • @parkerl
  • @sotojuan
  • @Teapane
  • @waiting-for-dev

Based on

The Roman Numeral Kata - https://codingdojo.org/kata/RomanNumerals/