Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
189 lines (151 loc) · 5.36 KB

file_search.livemd

File metadata and controls

189 lines (151 loc) · 5.36 KB

File Search

Mix.install([
  {:jason, "~> 1.4"},
  {:kino, "~> 0.9", override: true},
  {:youtube, github: "brooklinjazz/youtube"},
  {:hidden_cell, github: "brooklinjazz/hidden_cell"}
])

Navigation

Mastery

Mastery assignments are bonus projects designed to incorporate curriculum concepts at an advanced level. You have complete freedom with how you complete mastery assignments, and may change requirements as you see fit. Each mastery assignment serves as an independent project you may choose to include on your portfolio of projects.

File Search

Create a FileSearch module which can recursively search files in all nested folders.

Example Solution
defmodule FileSearch do
  def all(folder) do
    File.ls!(folder)
    |> Enum.map(fn file_or_folder ->
      path = Path.join(folder, file_or_folder)

      if File.dir?(path) do
        all(path)
      else
        file_or_folder
      end
    end)
    |> List.flatten()
  end

  def by_extension(folder) do
    all(folder) |> Enum.reduce(%{}, fn file_name, acc ->
      extension = Path.extname(file_name)
      Map.update(acc, extension, [file_name], fn files -> [file_name | files] end)
    end)
  end
end

Implement the FileSearch module as documented.

defmodule FileSearch do
  @moduledoc """
  Documentation for FileSearch
  """

  @doc """
  Find all nested files.

  For example, given the following folder structure
  /main
    /sub1
      file1.txt
    /sub2
      file2.txt
    /sub3
      file3.txt
    file4.txt

  It would return:

  ["file1.txt", "file2.txt", "file3.txt", "file4.txt"]
  """
  def all(folder) do
  end

  @doc """
  Find all nested files and categorize them by their extension.

  For example, given the following folder structure
  /main
    /sub1
      file1.txt
      file1.png
    /sub2
      file2.txt
      file2.png
    /sub3
      file3.txt
      file3.jpg
    file4.txt

  The exact order and return value are up to you as long as it finds all files 
  and categorizes them by file extension.

  For example, it might return the following:

  %{
    ".txt" => ["file1.txt", "file2.txt", "file3.txt", "file4.txt"],
    ".png" => ["file1.png", "file2.png"],
    ".jpg" => ["file3.jpg"]
  }
  """
  def by_extension(folder) do
  end
end

Configure Project As A Script

Create a new mix project.

$ mix new file_search

Configure the project as a script. You should be able to run the following to list all files.

$ mix escript.build
$ ./file_search

You should also be able to use a flag to list files by their extension.

$ ./file_search --by_type

Commit Your Progress

DockYard Academy now recommends you use the latest Release rather than forking or cloning our repository.

Run git status to ensure there are no undesirable changes. Then run the following in your command line from the curriculum folder to commit your progress.

$ git add .
$ git commit -m "finish File Search exercise"
$ git push

We're proud to offer our open-source curriculum free of charge for anyone to learn from at their own pace.

We also offer a paid course where you can learn from an instructor alongside a cohort of your peers. We will accept applications for the June-August 2023 cohort soon.

Navigation