tracks/objective-c/exercises/roman-numerals/README.md in trackler-2.2.1.103 vs tracks/objective-c/exercises/roman-numerals/README.md in trackler-2.2.1.104
- old
+ new
@@ -12,11 +12,11 @@
The Romans wrote numbers using letters - I, V, X, L, C, D, M. (notice
these letters have lots of straight lines and are hence easy to hack
into stone tablets).
-```
+```text
1 => I
10 => X
7 => VII
```
@@ -49,15 +49,21 @@
- Create an Xcode project with a test target which will run the tests.
- Use the ruby gem `objc` as a test runner utility.
Both are described in more detail here: http://exercism.io/languages/objective-c
-
### Submitting Exercises
When submitting an exercise, make sure your solution file is in the same directory as the test code.
-For example, if you're submitting `Bob.m` for the Bob exercise, the submit command would be something like `exercism submit <path_to_exercism_dir>/objective-c/bob/Bob.m`.
+The submit command will look something like:
+
+```shell
+exercism submit <path-to-exercism-workspace>/objective-c/roman-numerals/RomanNumerals.m
+```
+
+You can find the Exercism workspace by running `exercism debug` and looking for the line beginning
+with Workspace.
## Source
The Roman Numeral Kata [http://codingdojo.org/cgi-bin/index.pl?KataRomanNumerals](http://codingdojo.org/cgi-bin/index.pl?KataRomanNumerals)