Responses for exercises in Exercism.
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# Magazine Cutout
Welcome to Magazine Cutout on Exercism's Rust Track.
If you need help running the tests or submitting your code, check out `HELP.md`.
If you get stuck on the exercise, check out `HINTS.md`, but try and solve it without using those first :)
## Introduction
Rust's entry API provides a view into a single entry in map, which may be either a `HashMap` or a `BTreeMap`. The entry may be either occupied and vacant, and the API provides methods to modify the contents of the entry.
## Instructions
In this exercise you'll be using a `HashMap`, along with entry API methods, to solve a simple algorithm problem.
Given `&[&str]` representing the words of a magazine article, and `&[&str]` representing the words of a note you would like to send, can you compose your note by cutting words out of the magazine and pasting them into a letter?
Notes:
- This implies physical cutting and pasting; the magazine needs to contain at least as many copies of each word as the note requires.
- Capitalization matters; just because you're pasting together a note composed from words of a magazine doesn't mean you're willing to be ungrammatical.
You'll start with the following stubbed function signature:
```rust
pub fn can_construct_note(magazine: &[&str], note: &[&str]) -> bool {
unimplemented!()
}
```
Given the following input
```rust
let magazine = "two times three is not four".split_whitespace().collect::<Vec<&str>>();
let note = "two times two is four".split_whitespace().collect::<Vec<&str>>();
assert!(!can_construct_note(&magazine, &note));
```
The function returns `false` since the magazine only contains one instance of `"two"` when the note requires two of them.
## Source
### Created by
- @seanchen1991