Nested Conditionals in Javascript - Homework
Apply your skills of multilayered conditionals and combine all you've learned so far.
Nested Conditionals Homework: Javascript
Complete the following three problems to practice working with nested conditionals. Each problem increases in difficulty. All problems must be completed in JavaScript.
Problem 1: Complete the Shipping Cost Calculator (Easy)
An online store calculates shipping costs based on the order total and membership status. The partially completed code below needs to be finished.
Rules:
- If order total is $50 or more:
- Free shipping for members
- $5 shipping for non-members
- If order total is less than $50:
- $3 shipping for members
- $8 shipping for non-members
Your task: Complete the nested conditional so that when you run the code with the given initial values (orderTotal = 45 and isMember = true), the output shows a shipping cost of $3.
// Initial conditions - DO NOT CHANGE THESE
let orderTotal = 45;
let isMember = true;
let shippingCost = 0;
console.log(`Order Total: $${orderTotal}`);
console.log(`Member: ${isMember}`);
// YOUR CODE HERE: Complete the nested conditional
if (orderTotal >= 50) {
// Complete this branch
} else {
// Complete this branch
}
console.log(`Shipping Cost: $${shippingCost}`);
// Expected output with given values: Shipping Cost: $3
Problem 2: Build a Restaurant Recommendation System (Medium)
Create a system that recommends a restaurant based on the user’s budget and cuisine preference.
Requirements:
- If budget is “high” (over $30 per person):
- If cuisine is “italian”: recommend “Bella Notte”
- If cuisine is “japanese”: recommend “Sakura Palace”
- For any other cuisine: recommend “The Grand Bistro”
- If budget is “medium” ($15-$30 per person):
- If cuisine is “italian”: recommend “Mario’s Pizzeria”
- If cuisine is “japanese”: recommend “Tokyo Express”
- For any other cuisine: recommend “Downtown Diner”
- If budget is “low” (under $15 per person):
- Recommend “Food Court” regardless of cuisine preference
Your task: Write the complete nested conditional structure. Store the recommendation in the recommendation variable.
// Test variables
let budgetPerPerson = 25;
let cuisine = "japanese";
let recommendation = "";
console.log(`Budget per person: $${budgetPerPerson}`);
console.log(`Preferred cuisine: ${cuisine}`);
// YOUR CODE HERE: Write the complete nested conditional
console.log(`\nRecommendation: ${recommendation}`);
// Test your code with these scenarios:
// budgetPerPerson=35, cuisine="italian" → "Bella Notte"
// budgetPerPerson=25, cuisine="japanese" → "Tokyo Express"
// budgetPerPerson=20, cuisine="mexican" → "Downtown Diner"
// budgetPerPerson=10, cuisine="italian" → "Food Court"
Problem 3: Design a Smart Home Thermostat System (Hard)
You’re designing the logic for a smart thermostat that automatically adjusts temperature based on multiple factors.
Word Problem:
The thermostat needs to decide what action to take based on:
- Current temperature
- Whether anyone is home
- Time of day (represented as “day” or “night”)
- Energy saving mode (on or off)
Logic Requirements:
- If someone is home:
- During the day:
- If temp is above 75°F: set action to “cooling” and targetTemp to 72
- If temp is below 68°F: set action to “heating” and targetTemp to 70
- Otherwise: set action to “maintaining” and keep current temp
- During the night:
- If temp is above 72°F: set action to “cooling” and targetTemp to 68
- If temp is below 65°F: set action to “heating” and targetTemp to 68
- Otherwise: set action to “maintaining” and keep current temp
- During the day:
- If no one is home:
- If energy saving mode is ON:
- If temp is above 80°F: set action to “cooling” and targetTemp to 78
- If temp is below 60°F: set action to “heating” and targetTemp to 62
- Otherwise: set action to “off” and targetTemp to current temp
- If energy saving mode is OFF:
- Set action to “maintaining” and targetTemp to 70
- If energy saving mode is ON:
Your task: Design the complete nested conditional algorithm from scratch. You’re given the framework below with initial values, but NO code. Write the entire logic yourself.
// Test variables
let currentTemp = 78;
let isHomeOccupied = true;
let timeOfDay = "day"; // "day" or "night"
let energySavingMode = false;
// Variables to set
let action = ""; // Will be "heating", "cooling", "maintaining", or "off"
let targetTemp = currentTemp;
console.log("=== Smart Thermostat Status ===");
console.log(`Current Temperature: ${currentTemp}°F`);
console.log(`Home Occupied: ${isHomeOccupied}`);
console.log(`Time of Day: ${timeOfDay}`);
console.log(`Energy Saving Mode: ${energySavingMode}`);
console.log();
// YOUR CODE HERE: Write the complete nested conditional algorithm
console.log("=== Thermostat Action ===");
console.log(`Action: ${action}`);
console.log(`Target Temperature: ${targetTemp}°F`);
// Test your code with these scenarios:
// Scenario 1: currentTemp=78, isHomeOccupied=true, timeOfDay="day", energySavingMode=false
// → action="cooling", targetTemp=72
// Scenario 2: currentTemp=66, isHomeOccupied=true, timeOfDay="night", energySavingMode=true
// → action="maintaining", targetTemp=66
// Scenario 3: currentTemp=85, isHomeOccupied=false, timeOfDay="day", energySavingMode=true
// → action="cooling", targetTemp=78
// Scenario 4: currentTemp=70, isHomeOccupied=false, timeOfDay="night", energySavingMode=false
// → action="maintaining", targetTemp=70
Reflection Questions
After completing all three problems, answer these questions:
- Which problem was the most challenging and why?
- How did you decide on the structure of your nested conditionals in Problem 3?
- Can you think of a real-world situation where you would need even MORE levels of nesting than Problem 3?