has_teen

We’ll say that a number is “teen” if it is in the range 13..19 inclusive. Given 3 int values, return true if 1 or more of them are teen.

has_teen(13, 20, 10) -> true
has_teen(20, 19, 10) -> true
has_teen(20, 10, 13) -> true

This exercise was taken from codingbat.com and has been adapted for the Python language. There are many great programming exercises there, but the majority are created for Java.

Starter Code

def has_teen(a: int, b: int, c: int) -> bool:
    pass


result = has_teen(13, 20, 10)
print(result)

Tests

from main import has_teen


def test_has_teen_1():
    assert has_teen(13, 20, 10) == True


def test_has_teen_2():
    assert has_teen(20, 19, 10) == True


def test_has_teen_3():
    assert has_teen(20, 10, 13) == True


def test_has_teen_4():
    assert has_teen(1, 20, 12) == False


def test_has_teen_5():
    assert has_teen(19, 20, 12) == True


def test_has_teen_6():
    assert has_teen(12, 20, 19) == True


def test_has_teen_7():
    assert has_teen(12, 9, 20) == False


def test_has_teen_8():
    assert has_teen(12, 18, 20) == True


def test_has_teen_9():
    assert has_teen(14, 2, 20) == True


def test_has_teen_10():
    assert has_teen(4, 2, 20) == False


def test_has_teen_11():
    assert has_teen(11, 22, 22) == False