The Greeting

This Kata is designed to help practice what a test of a pure function ought to look like. It is intentionally designed to start with a very easy, non-branching base case which slowly becomes addled with complexity as additional requirements are added that will require significant branching and eventually a pressure to compose additional units.

This Kata was suggested by Nick Gauthier and inspired a bit by Bob from Exercism.

This Kata is designed to be used with Detroit-school TDD.

Yellow belt

Write a method greet(name) that interpolates name in a simple greeting. For example, when name is "Bob", the method should return a string "Hello, Bob.".

Handle nulls by introducing a stand-in. For example, when name is null, then the method should return the string "Hello, my friend."

Green belt

Handle shouting. When name is all uppercase, then the method should shout back to the user. For example, when name is "JERRY" then the method should return the string "HELLO JERRY!"

Red belt

Handle two names of input. When name is an array of two names (or, in languages that support it, varargs or a splat), then both names should be printed. For example, when name is ["Jill", "Jane"], then the method should return the string "Hello, Jill and Jane."

Handle arbitrarily names of input. When name represents more than two names, separate them with commas and close with an Oxford comma and “and”. For example, when name is ["Amy", "Brian", "Charlotte"], then the method should return the string "Hello, Amy, Brian, and Charlotte."

Allow mixing of normal and shouted names by separating the response into two greetings. For example, when name is ["Amy", "BRIAN", "Charlotte"], then the method should return the string "Hello, Amy and Charlotte. AND HELLO BRIAN!"

Black belt

If any entries in name are a string containing a comma, split it as its own input. For example, when name is ["Bob", "Charlie, Dianne"], then the method should return the string "Hello, Bob, Charlie, and Dianne.".

Allow the input to escape intentional commas introduced by Requirement 7. These can be escaped in the same manner that CSV is, with double quotes surrounding the entry. For example, For example, when name is [“Bob”, ““Charlie, Dianne””], then the method should return the string "Hello, Bob and Charlie, Dianne.".