zoelabbb / Go-Blackjack-Exercism

In this exercise we will simulate the first turn of a Blackjack game. You will receive two cards and will be able to see the face up card of the dealer. All cards are represented using a string such as "ace", "king", "three", "two", etc

Home Page:https://exercism.org/profiles/zoelabbb

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Blackjack

Welcome to Blackjack on Exercism's Go Track. If you need help running the tests or submitting your code, check out HELP.md. If you get stuck on the exercise, check out HINTS.md, but try and solve it without using those first :)

Introduction

Like other languages, Go also provides a switch statement. Switch statements are a shorter way to write long if ... else if statements. To make a switch, we start by using the keyword switch followed by a value or expression. We then declare each one of the conditions with the case keyword. We can also declare a default case, that will run when none of the previous case conditions matched:

operatingSystem := "windows"

switch operatingSystem {
case "windows":
    // do something if the operating system is windows
case "linux":
    // do something if the operating system is linux
case "macos":
    // do something if the operating system is macos
default:
    // do something if the operating system is none of the above
} 

One interesting thing about switch statements, is that the value after the switch keyword can be omitted, and we can have boolean conditions for each case:

age := 21

switch {
case age > 20 && age < 30:
    // do something if age is between 20 and 30
case age == 10:
    // do something if age is equal to 10
default:
    // do something else for every other case
}

Instructions

In this exercise we will simulate the first turn of a Blackjack game.

You will receive two cards and will be able to see the face up card of the dealer. All cards are represented using a string such as "ace", "king", "three", "two", etc. The values of each card are:

card value card value
ace 11 eight 8
two 2 nine 9
three 3 ten 10
four 4 jack 10
five 5 queen 10
six 6 king 10
seven 7 other 0

Note: Commonly, aces can take the value of 1 or 11 but for simplicity we will assume that they can only take the value of 11.

Depending on your two cards and the card of the dealer, there is a strategy for the first turn of the game, in which you have the following options:

  • Stand (S)
  • Hit (H)
  • Split (P)
  • Automatically win (W)

Although not optimal yet, you will follow the strategy your friend Alex has been developing, which is as follows:

  • If you have a pair of aces you must always split them.
  • If you have a Blackjack (two cards that sum up to a value of 21), and the dealer does not have an ace, a figure or a ten then you automatically win. If the dealer does have any of those cards then you'll have to stand and wait for the reveal of the other card.
  • If your cards sum up to a value within the range [17, 20] you should always stand.
  • If your cards sum up to a value within the range [12, 16] you should always stand unless the dealer has a 7 or higher, in which case you should always hit.
  • If your cards sum up to 11 or lower you should always hit.

1. Calculate the value of any given card.

Implement a function to calculate the numerical value of a card:

value := ParseCard("ace")
fmt.Println(value)
// Output: 11

2. Implement the decision logic for the first turn.

Write a function that implements the decision logic as described above:

func FirstTurn(card1, card2, dealerCard string) string

Here are some examples for the expected outcomes:

FirstTurn("ace", "ace", "jack") == "P"
FirstTurn("ace", "king", "ace") == "S"
FirstTurn("five", "queen", "ace") == "H"

Source

Created by

  • @andres-zartab

Contributed to by

  • @tehsphinx
  • @andrerfcsantos
  • @norbs57

About

In this exercise we will simulate the first turn of a Blackjack game. You will receive two cards and will be able to see the face up card of the dealer. All cards are represented using a string such as "ace", "king", "three", "two", etc

https://exercism.org/profiles/zoelabbb


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