Python/electronics/ohms_law.py
Erdum 4191b95942
Ohm's Law algorithm added (#3934)
* New algorithm added

* Errors resolvedc

* New Algorithm

* New algorithm added

* Added new algorithm

* work

* New algorithm added

* Hope this is final

* Update electronics/ohms_law.py

Co-authored-by: xcodz-dot <71920621+xcodz-dot@users.noreply.github.com>

* update decimal value & negative value test

* update as cclauss suggest

* Update electronics/ohms_law.py

Co-authored-by: Christian Clauss <cclauss@me.com>

* updated as suggested by cclauss

* update as suggested by cclauss

* Update as suggested by cclauss

* Update ohms_law.py

Co-authored-by: xcodz-dot <71920621+xcodz-dot@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Christian Clauss <cclauss@me.com>
2020-11-25 12:01:49 +01:00

40 lines
1.3 KiB
Python

# https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ohm%27s_law
def ohms_law(voltage: float, current: float, resistance: float) -> float:
"""
Apply Ohm's Law, on any two given electrical values, which can be voltage, current,
and resistance, and then in a Python dict return name/value pair of the zero value.
>>> ohms_law(voltage=10, resistance=5, current=0)
{'current': 2.0}
>>> ohms_law(voltage=0, current=0, resistance=10)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: One and only one argument must be 0
>>> ohms_law(voltage=0, current=1, resistance=-2)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError: Resistance cannot be negative
>>> ohms_law(resistance=0, voltage=-10, current=1)
{'resistance': -10.0}
>>> ohms_law(voltage=0, current=-1.5, resistance=2)
{'voltage': -3.0}
"""
if (voltage, current, resistance).count(0) != 1:
raise ValueError("One and only one argument must be 0")
if resistance < 0:
raise ValueError("Resistance cannot be negative")
if voltage == 0:
return {"voltage": float(current * resistance)}
elif current == 0:
return {"current": voltage / resistance}
elif resistance == 0:
return {"resistance": voltage / current}
if __name__ == "__main__":
import doctest
doctest.testmod()