- Break a problem into logical components
- Implement appropriate Ruby syntax
- Utilize methods and classes
Let's write a program that can detect mistakes in a credit card number.
The Luhn algorithm is a check-summing algorithm best known for checking the validity of credit card numbers.
You can checkout the full description on Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luhn_algorithm
(adapted from Wikipedia)
The formula verifies a number against its included check digit, which is usually appended to a partial account number to generate the full account number. This full account number must pass the following test:
- starting with the first digit, double the value of every other digit
- if the product of this doubling operation is greater than 9 (e.g., 7 * 2 = 14), then sum the digits of the products (e.g., 10: 1 + 0 = 1, 14: 1 + 4 = 5).
- take the sum of all the digits
- if the sum is divisible by ten, the number is valid
Using 5541808923795240
as our sample input:
Account number: 5 5 4 1 8 0 8 9 2 3 7 9 5 2 4 0
2x every other digit: 10 5 8 1 16 0 16 9 4 3 14 9 10 2 8 0
Summed digits over 10: 1 5 8 1 7 0 7 9 4 3 5 9 1 2 8 0
Results summed: 70
Divisible by 10?: 70 % 10 == 0
Since the summed results modulo 10 is zero, the account number is valid according to the algorithm.
- Fork this Repository
- Clone your forked repo to your machine with
git clone <ssh key for your repo>
Open credit_check.rb
in your lib
directory. You should see this template:
card_number = "5541808923795240"
# Your Luhn Algorithm Here
# Output
## If it is valid, print "The number [card number] is valid!"
## If it is invalid, print "The number [card number] is invalid!"
Fill out the file so that it will print out the validity of the given card_number. The number included in the template is a valid example.
If helpful, you can use the following sample data:
- Valid: 5541808923795240, 4024007136512380, 6011797668867828
- Invalid: 5541801923795240, 4024007106512380, 6011797668868728
Create a CreditCheck
class based on the following criteria:
- A
CreditCheck
is passed two arguments upon initialization- The first argument is a String representing the card number
- The second argument is an Integer representing the
CreditCheck
's limit
- A
CreditCheck
has getter methods calledcard_number
andlimit
for reading the card number and limit - A
CreditCheck
has a method calledis_valid?
that takes no arguments and returns either true or false based on whether or not the card number is valid. - A
CreditCheck
has a method calledlast_four
that returns a String of the last four digits of the card number
If the previous criteria are met, you should be able to interact with the CreditCheck
class from a Pry session like so:
pry(main)> require './lib/credit_check'
#=> true
pry(main)> credit_check = CreditCheck.new("5541808923795240", 15000)
#=> #<CreditCheck:0x00007fbb1ca5f698 @card_number="5541808923795240", @limit=15000>
pry(main)> credit_check.card_number
#=> "5541808923795240"
pry(main)> credit_check.limit
#=> 15000
pry(main)> credit_check.last_four
#=> "5240"
pry(main)> credit_check.is_valid?
#=> true
Also, if the previous criteria are met, the bank_test.rb
test should pass.
Write tests for your CreditCheck
class that cover that expected behavior described in the previous iteration.
To run the tests already written, you'll need to first install RSpec, our testing gem, by running this in your terminal:
gem instal rspec
Then to run the tests, you'll type: rspec spec/bank_spec.rb
in your terminal.
-
Create a command line interface that allows the user to validate a number
-
Add functionality to calculate the check sum digit.
-
Can you make it work for American Express numbers? 342804633855673 is valid but 342801633855673 is invalid