Also, another goal of doing it was to see if I could using a class. Which 
worked. I apologize for the delay, apparently as a Junior our HS does not trust 
us with EMAIL which of all things kids probably don't use for messaging.

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On Tue, Dec 15, 2015 at 12:35 PM -0800, "Gage Morgan via swift-users" 
<[email protected]> wrote:





I understand that mine is a bit more complicated than it needs to be. It works, 
that's good enough for me. It gives proper values. I knew SOMEONE would have an 
issue with the "breaking machine," and I realized it could not be reached 
before typing it. I put it in there as a joke, nothing more (I've done worse in 
actual C).
As for types and other stuff, I will acknowledge that there could possibly be 
up to ten different revisions with much simpler code. I prefer to write things 
out, which is why there's not as many abstract concepts as some would like. I 
did as a test, just to see if it could be done. And the answer is yes, and 
that's good enough for me. The next time I plug in a formula I will consider 
these, but may not use them.
I understand your above points, but there are of course 14000 different ways 
that you could do it. Don't overthink it. I did it the way I did it because I 
could understand it, no intentions to be .selfless or take a .selfie whatsoever 
(THAT WAS A JOKE, FOR THE LOVE OF CHRIST).
There are many ways you can dumb it down. Unfortunately, abstraction and I 
don't play nice. So it would make sense for me to have written it out 
step-by-step. Look at the calculations given by the second revision. They are 
unrounded versions of the CDC website's results, are they not?

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On Mon, Dec 14, 2015 at 9:50 PM -0800, "Gage Morgan via swift-users" 
<[email protected]> wrote:





And a more polished 
version:https://gist.github.com/MGageMorgan/c2166174be878e9cea78

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On Mon, Dec 14, 2015 at 7:20 PM -0800, "Gage Morgan via swift-users" 
<[email protected]> wrote:





For most languages I try out, my own version of "Hello World!" is a BMI 
calculator. Swift has passed, I encourage you to try it out.
There are two methods called towards the end of file:1) bmi.pounds(weight, 
height) - Replace numbers inside with your own if you want to test out in US 
Customary units.
2) bmi.kilograms(weight, height) - Replace numbers inside with your own if you 
want to test out in Metric units used everywhere outside the US.
You already get the gist, the bits can be found 
here:https://gist.github.com/anonymous/9284017644567c29c7f8
If there's a bug please let me know, but it works in IBM's Sandbox. (Yes, ALL 
code was written by me without help. Very close to C, just a bit laid back.)
--MGage--
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