# README
There is no while loop in Go
Most programming languages have a concept of a while
loop. Because Go allows for the omission of sections of a for
loop, a while
loop is just a for
loop that only has a CONDITION.
for CONDITION {
// do some stuff while CONDITION is true
}
For example:
plantHeight := 1
for plantHeight < 5 {
fmt.Println("still growing! current height:", plantHeight)
plantHeight++
}
fmt.Println("plant has grown to ", plantHeight, "inches")
Which prints:
still growing! current height: 1
still growing! current height: 2
still growing! current height: 3
still growing! current height: 4
plant has grown to 5 inches
Assignment
We have an interesting new cost structure from our SMS vendor. They charge exponentially more money for each consecutive text we send! Let's write a function that can calculate how many messages we can send in a given batch given a costMultiplier
and a maxCostInPennies
.
In a nutshell, the first message costs a penny, and each message after that costs the same as the previous message multiplied by the costMultiplier
. That gets expensive!
There is an infinite loop in the code! Let's add a condition to fix the bug. The loop should exit before incrementing maxMessagesToSend
if the cost of the next message would go over the max cost.