# Hello World Write a program that greets the user by name, or by saying "Hello, World!" if no name is given. ["Hello, World!"](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%22Hello,_world!%22_program) is the traditional first program for beginning programming in a new language. **Note:** You can skip this exercise by running: exercism skip $LANGUAGE hello-world ## Specification The `Hello World!` program will greet me, the caller. If I tell the program my name is Alice, it will greet me by saying "Hello, Alice!". If I neglect to give it my name, it will greet me by saying "Hello, World!" ## Test-Driven Development As programmers mature, they eventually want to test their code. Here at Exercism we simulate [Test-Driven Development](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Test-driven_development) (TDD), where you write your tests before writing any functionality. The simulation comes in the form of a pre-written test suite, which will signal that you have solved the problem. It will also provide you with a safety net to explore other solutions without breaking the functionality. ### A typical TDD workflow on Exercism: 1. Run the test file and pick one test that's failing. 2. Write some code to fix the test you picked. 3. Re-run the tests to confirm the test is now passing. 4. Repeat from step 1. 5. [Submit your solution](http://help.exercism.io/submitting-exercises.html). ## Instructions Submissions are encouraged to be general, within reason. Having said that, it's also important not to over-engineer a solution. It's important to remember that the goal is to make code as expressive and readable as we can. However, solutions to the hello-world exercise will be not be reviewed by a person, but by rikki- the robot, who will offer an encouraging word. ## Source This is a program to introduce users to using Exercism [view source](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%22Hello,_world!%22_program)