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    • TIGT Offline
      TIG Moderator
      last edited by

      You can test if x==0.678 BUT your code [probably] never returns a decimal value ?????

      What is 'a' ? An array ??
      What is 'counter' - a float or an integer ?
      If it's an integer you'll never get a decimal result as the answer is always an integer ?
      Assuming counter is an integer as 0,1,2,3,4 etc
      if 'counter' is 4 then counter % 4 is 0
      But
      if 'counter' is 0 then counter % 4 is 0
      if 'counter' is 1 then counter % 4 is 1
      if 'counter' is 2 then counter % 4 is 1
      if 'counter' is 3 then counter % 4 is 3
      You will never get a decimal value like 0.5 unless counter ends with 0.5 !
      So you can't rely on this as you get the same % answer for 0,4,8,12 etc - unless that is acceptable in your coding ??
      To test these things simple type into the Ruby Console 0%4 and get 0, 4%4 and get 0 etc etc.., without making a complex test that does NOT give the results you 'assumed'...

      TIG

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      • Dan RathbunD Offline
        Dan Rathbun
        last edited by

        @borg.stef said:

        Can the following be written in ruby? because it does not seem to work correctly

        Try this:

        if counter % 4.0 == 0.0
        	machine = "#{a[counter]}"  	
        elsif counter % 4.0 == 0.25
        	x = a[counter].to_f
        elsif counter % 4.0 == 0.5
        	y = a[counter].to_f
        elsif counter % 4.0 == 0.75
        	rot = a[counter].to_i
        end
        

        Or this:

        if counter / 4.0 == 0.0
        	machine = "#{a[counter]}"  	
        elsif counter / 4.0 == 0.25
        	x = a[counter].to_f
        elsif counter / 4.0 == 0.5
        	y = a[counter].to_f
        elsif counter / 4.0 == 0.75
        	rot = a[counter].to_i
        end
        

        You need to use a Float as the divisor to get a Float result.

        I'm not here much anymore.

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        • B Offline
          borg.stef
          last edited by

          a = []
          	counter = 0
          	file = File.new("trial.txt", "r")
          	while (line = file.gets)
          		a[counter] = line
          
          		if counter % 4 == 0     # lines 0 , 4, 8 etc
          			machine = "#{a[counter]}" 
          		elsif counter % 4 == 0.25      # lines 1, 5, 9 etc
          			x = a[counter].to_f    
          		elsif counter % 4 == 0.5    # lines 2, 6, 10 etc
                			y = a[counter].to_f    
          		elsif counter % 4 == 0.75     # lines 3, 7, 11 etc
          			rot = a[counter].to_i
          end
          end
          
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          • Dan RathbunD Offline
            Dan Rathbun
            last edited by

            This should work:

            a = []
            counter = 0
            file = File.new("trial.txt", "r")
            while (line = file.gets)
            	a[counter] = line
            
            	if counter % 4 == 0.0     # lines 0 , 4, 8 etc
            		machine = "#{a[counter]}" 
            	elsif counter % 4 == 1.0      # lines 1, 5, 9 etc
            		x = a[counter].to_f    
            	elsif counter % 4 == 2.0    # lines 2, 6, 10 etc
                  		y = a[counter].to_f    
            	elsif counter % 4 == 3.0     # lines 3, 7, 11 etc
            		rot = a[counter].to_i
            	end
            end
            

            I'm not here much anymore.

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            • TIGT Offline
              TIG Moderator
              last edited by

              You haven't understood what I said several posts back
              elsif counter % 4 == 0.25 # lines 1, 5, 9 etc
              will never return true as it returns '1' NOT '0.25'... to test this simply type 1%4 or 5%4 in the Ruby Console and you'll get '1' NOT '0.25' !
              Also note how 1/4 will return 0 because dividing an integer by an integer gives an integer [and 5/4 gives 1 !]... BUT 1/4.0 gives 0.25 as you have divided an integer by a float and you get a float.
              SO your test is elsif counter % 4 == 1 # lines 1, 5, 9 etc ๐Ÿ˜’

              TIG

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              • B Offline
                borg.stef
                last edited by

                hmmm this worked now...but I didn't understand why you did 1% 4 = 1.0 etc?

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                • Dan RathbunD Offline
                  Dan Rathbun
                  last edited by

                  You may wish to use the 3rd line as:
                  file = IO.readlines("trial.txt")

                  .. then change the while loop to an array each iterator:
                  ` file.each_with_index do |line,counter|

                  code

                  end`

                  I'm not here much anymore.

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                  • Dan RathbunD Offline
                    Dan Rathbun
                    last edited by

                    @borg.stef said:

                    hmmm this worked now...but I didn't understand why you did 1% 4 = 1.0 etc?

                    Because I did what TIG said, I tested it at the console, and saw it returned 1,2,3, ...

                    I'm not here much anymore.

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                    • B Offline
                      borg.stef
                      last edited by

                      ok sorry TIG i saw your post now ๐Ÿ˜ณ

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • Dan RathbunD Offline
                        Dan Rathbun
                        last edited by

                        @dan rathbun said:

                        You may wish to use the 3rd line as:
                        file = IO.readlines("trial.txt")

                        .. then change the while loop to an array each iterator:
                        ` file.each_with_index do |line,counter|

                        code

                        end`

                        If you do this, you do not need a = [], because the var file is the array ( IO.readlines returns an array of textlines.)

                        I'm not here much anymore.

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                        • B Offline
                          borg.stef
                          last edited by

                          ok thanks both!!

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • C Offline
                            Cleverbeans
                            last edited by

                            From the looks of your code you're interested specifically in blocks of four lines, in which case you may gain some mileage out of the array.slice method by doing the following.

                            
                            for i in 0..a.length/4 #there are i blocks of four lines
                                machine,x,y,rot = a.slice(i*4,4)
                                #more code
                            end
                            
                            
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