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This "sandbox" is a place where Code Golf users can get feedback on prospective challenges they wish to post to main. This is useful because writing a clear and fully specified challenge on your first try can be difficult, and there is a much better chance of your challenge being well received if you post it in the sandbox first.

Sandbox FAQ

Posting

To post to the sandbox, scroll to the bottom of this page and click "Answer This Question". Click "OK" when it asks if you really want to add another answer.

Write your challenge just as you would when actually posting it, though you can optionally add a title at the top. You may also add some notes about specific things you would like to clarify before posting it. Other users will help you improve your challenge by rating and discussing it.

When you think your challenge is ready for the public, go ahead and post it, and replace the post here with a link to the challenge and delete the sandbox post.

Discussion

The purpose of the sandbox is to give and receive feedback on posts. If you want to, feel free to give feedback to any posts you see here. Important things to comment about can include:

  • Parts of the challenge you found unclear
  • Comments addressing specific points mentioned in the proposal
  • Problems that could make the challenge uninteresting or unfit for the site

You don't need any qualifications to review sandbox posts. The target audience of most of these challenges is code golfers like you, so anything you find unclear will probably be unclear to others.

If you think one of your posts requires more feedback, but it's been ignored, you can ask for feedback in The Nineteenth Byte. It's not only allowed, but highly recommended! Be patient and try not to nag people though, you might have to ask multiple times.

It is recommended to leave your posts in the sandbox for at least several days, and until it receives upvotes and any feedback has been addressed.

Other

Search the sandbox / Browse your pending proposals

The sandbox works best if you sort posts by active.

To add an inline tag to a proposal, use shortcut link syntax with a prefix: [tag:king-of-the-hill]. To search for posts with a certain tag, include the name in quotes: "king-of-the-hill".

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  • \$\begingroup\$ What if I posted on the sandbox a long time ago and get no response? \$\endgroup\$
    – None1
    Commented May 15 at 14:05
  • \$\begingroup\$ @None1 If you don't get feedback for a while you can ask in the nineteenth byte \$\endgroup\$ Commented May 29 at 13:27

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Note: this is an attempt to fix up a currently closed question by someone else so that they can rescue it, not an attempt to steal their question.

When implementing an algorithm for correcting aliased measurement data, I hit the need to implement following function. The function takes input bitstring on the left, and should produce the integer and list on the right:

               1 =>   1, [0]
              10 =>   1, [0]
             100 =>   1, [0]
             101 =>   2, [0, 1]
            1000 =>   1, [0]
            1011 =>   3, [0, 2, 1]
     ... more test cases at end of post ...

Note that it is guaranteed that the input bitstring is aperiodic.

Physical background

Consider a digital system that changes its output every N clock cycles. A measurement system doesn't know N, so it reads the output every M cycles, where M <= N.

Now some of the measurement samples will be identical to the previous ones, which is represented as 0 in the bitstring and the sample is discarded. When the value changes, 1 is added to the bitstring and the sample is stored.

However, the timestamp of the sample will be too late. The numbers in the output array represent a correction that must be applied. The output format expresses this correction as a fraction of the sample interval, where the standalone integer is the denominator and the array contains the numerators.

As an example with N = 4 and M = 3:

Clock cycle     0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Output          A A A A B B B B C C C C D D D D E E E E
Measurement     A     A     B     C     D     D     E
Bitstring       1     0     1     1     1     0     1
                |---------------------| This is the period of the aliasing

Timestamp       |       |---|   |-|     |       |---|
  correction    0          2/3   1/3    0          2/3

With this example the input would be 1011 and the output would be 3, [0, 2, 1].

Here are a few observations to get you started:

  • The input sequence always begins with 1 and is aperiodic.
  • The output sequence length always equals the number of 1-bits in the input.
  • The output sequence array is always a permutation of 0 to M-1 and begins with 0.

Test cases:

               1 =>   1, [0]
              10 =>   1, [0]
             100 =>   1, [0]
             101 =>   2, [0, 1]
            1000 =>   1, [0]
            1011 =>   3, [0, 2, 1]
           10000 =>   1, [0]
           10010 =>   2, [0, 1]
           10101 =>   3, [0, 1, 2]
           10111 =>   4, [0, 3, 2, 1]
          100000 =>   1, [0]
          101111 =>   5, [0, 4, 3, 2, 1]
         1000000 =>   1, [0]
         1000100 =>   2, [0, 1]
         1001010 =>   3, [0, 2, 1]
         1010101 =>   4, [0, 1, 2, 3]
         1011011 =>   5, [0, 3, 1, 4, 2]
         1011111 =>   6, [0, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1]
        10000000 =>   1, [0]
        10010010 =>   3, [0, 1, 2]
        10101101 =>   5, [0, 2, 4, 1, 3]
        10111111 =>   7, [0, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1]
       100000000 =>   1, [0]
       100001000 =>   2, [0, 1]
       100101010 =>   4, [0, 3, 2, 1]
       101010101 =>   5, [0, 1, 2, 3, 4]
       101110111 =>   7, [0, 5, 3, 1, 6, 4, 2]
       101111111 =>   8, [0, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1]
      1000000000 =>   1, [0]
      1000100100 =>   3, [0, 2, 1]
      1011011011 =>   7, [0, 4, 1, 5, 2, 6, 3]
      1011111111 =>   9, [0, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1]
     10000000000 =>   1, [0]
     10000010000 =>   2, [0, 1]
     10001000100 =>   3, [0, 1, 2]
     10010010010 =>   4, [0, 1, 2, 3]
     10010101010 =>   5, [0, 4, 3, 2, 1]
     10101010101 =>   6, [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
     10101101101 =>   7, [0, 3, 6, 2, 5, 1, 4]
     10110111011 =>   8, [0, 5, 2, 7, 4, 1, 6, 3]
     10111101111 =>   9, [0, 7, 5, 3, 1, 8, 6, 4, 2]
     10111111111 =>  10, [0, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1]
    100101001010 =>   5, [0, 3, 1, 4, 2]
    101010110101 =>   7, [0, 2, 4, 6, 1, 3, 5]
    101111111111 =>  11, [0, 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1]
    111111111111 =>  13, [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11]
   1000000100000 =>   2, [0, 1]
   1000010001000 =>   3, [0, 2, 1]
   1000100100100 =>   4, [0, 3, 2, 1]
   1001001010010 =>   5, [0, 2, 4, 1, 3]
   1001010101010 =>   6, [0, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1]
   1010101010101 =>   7, [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
   1010110101101 =>   8, [0, 3, 6, 1, 4, 7, 2, 5]
   1011011011011 =>   9, [0, 5, 1, 6, 2, 7, 3, 8, 4]
   1011101110111 =>  10, [0, 7, 4, 1, 8, 5, 2, 9, 6, 3]
   1011111011111 =>  11, [0, 9, 7, 5, 3, 1, 10, 8, 6, 4, 2]
   1011111111111 =>  12, [0, 11, 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1]
  10000100001000 =>   3, [0, 1, 2]
  10010010010010 =>   5, [0, 1, 2, 3, 4]
  10101101101101 =>   9, [0, 4, 8, 3, 7, 2, 6, 1, 5]
  10111011110111 =>  11, [0, 8, 5, 2, 10, 7, 4, 1, 9, 6, 3]
  10111111111111 =>  13, [0, 12, 11, 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1]
 100000001000000 =>   2, [0, 1]
 100010001000100 =>   4, [0, 1, 2, 3]
 100101010101010 =>   7, [0, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1]
 101010101010101 =>   8, [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7]
 101101110111011 =>  11, [0, 7, 3, 10, 6, 2, 9, 5, 1, 8, 4]
 101111110111111 =>  13, [0, 11, 9, 7, 5, 3, 1, 12, 10, 8, 6, 4, 2]
 101111111111111 =>  14, [0, 13, 12, 11, 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1]

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Finding isomorphic elementary cellular automata

An elementary cellular automaton is a one-dimensional cellular automaton with two possible states (labeled 0 and 1) and calculates the following state based on a cell and its two immediate neighbors. Each elementary cellular automaton has a rule attached to it that specifies the resulting state for each of the configurations of a cell and its immediate neighbors.

The most common scheme for numbering these rules being the Wolfram code, where we assign each rule a number from 0 to 255 which has become standard. Each possible current configuration is written in order, 111, 110, ..., 001, 000, and the resulting state for each of these configurations is written in the same order and interpreted as the binary representation of an integer. This number is taken to be the rule number of the automaton.

As an example, we look at rule 110:

Cell configuration  111  110  101  100  011  010  001  000
Resulting state      0    1    1    0    1    1    1    0

Converting 01101110 back to decimal gives us 110.

Not all rules are equal, of course. Of the 256 possible rules, many of these rules are trivially equivalent to each other up to a simple transformation of the underlying geometry. Each rule will have three isomorphic rules based on three transformations, though sometimes a rule will be isomorphic to itself under a particular transformation.

The first such transformation is reflection through a vertical axis and the result of applying this transformation to a given rule is called the mirrored rule. These rules will exhibit the same behavior up to reflection through a vertical axis, and so are equivalent in a computational sense.

For example, if the definition of rule 110 is reflected through a vertical line, the following rule (rule 124) is obtained:

Cell configuration  111  110  101  100  011  010  001  000
Resulting state      0    1    1    1    1    1    0    0

We swap only those cell configurations that are different when reflected through a vertical axis. The result of 110 is swapped with the result of 011, and the result of 100 is swapped with the result of 001. Everything else remains in place, as they are symmetrical.

The second such transformation is to exchange the roles of 0 and 1 in the definition. The result of applying this transformation to a given rule is called the complementary rule. For example, if this transformation is applied to rule 110, we get the following rule:

Cell configuration  000  001  010  011  100  101  110  111
Resulting state      1    0    0    1    0    0    0    1

and, after reordering, we discover that this is rule 137:

Cell configuration  111  110  101  100  011  010  001  000
Resulting state      1    0    0    0    1    0    0    1

Finally, the previous two transformations can be applied successively to a rule to obtain the mirrored complementary rule. For example, the mirrored complementary rule of rule 110 is rule 193.

Of the 256 elementary cellular automata, there are 88 which are inequivalent under these transformations.

The challenge

  • Your task is given an input rule number, determine which elementary cellular automata are isomorphic under these rules.
  • The output should be a list (or equivalent) that represents:
    • The smallest Wolfram rule that is isomorphic to the input,
    • Its mirrored rule,
    • Its complementary rule, and
    • Its mirrored complementary rule.
  • The output list may be reordered, though it should always be clear which rule is the smallest, the mirrored rule, and so on. Just sorting the list will not help here.
  • This is code golf. Smallest number of bytes wins.

As always, if this challenge needs clarification or correction, let me know. Good luck and good golfing!

Test cases

All of the following test cases have the format [smallest, mirrored, complementary, mirrored complementary]:

110
[110, 124, 137, 193]

232
[232, 232, 232, 232]

0
[0, 0, 255, 255]

16
[2, 16, 191, 247]

42
[42, 112, 171, 241]

144
[130, 144, 190, 246]

Sandbox questions

  • Can the specification be clearer or shorter?
  • Should I change this challenge from code golf to some other scoring system?
  • Should the input be different and challenge changed? If so, which of the following input systems should it be:
    • The input that is currently used: a single rule number, and the challenge is changed to only finding the isomorphisms.
    • The number of states of the automaton, where finding the complementary rules would be more complex (for 2 states, only two possible complements; for 3 states, six complements are possible). This would extend the definition of both the Wolfram code and the cellular automata.
    • Any other suggestions?
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  • \$\begingroup\$ Wouldn't this be a kind of kolmogorov-complexity challenge, considering the fixed output? \$\endgroup\$ Commented Oct 22, 2016 at 12:34
  • \$\begingroup\$ @LegionMammal978 Nuts, you're right. Well, as the "Sandbox questions" section asks, what should the input be, in your opinion? \$\endgroup\$
    – Sherlock9
    Commented Oct 22, 2016 at 12:36
  • \$\begingroup\$ Perhaps you could input a rule number, and the program should find the smallest isomorphic rule and then output its four-element list. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Oct 22, 2016 at 12:39
  • \$\begingroup\$ @LegionMammal978 Seems reasonable. I'd still like a challenge where you have to find the four-element list for all combinations, but perhaps that can be a sequel. I'll edit the challenge. \$\endgroup\$
    – Sherlock9
    Commented Oct 22, 2016 at 12:40
  • \$\begingroup\$ Surely reflection through a vertical axis is reflection horizontally, not vertically? \$\endgroup\$ Commented Oct 22, 2016 at 18:33
  • \$\begingroup\$ @PeterTaylor Thanks! Any other corrections or suggestions? \$\endgroup\$
    – Sherlock9
    Commented Oct 22, 2016 at 20:35
  • \$\begingroup\$ That was the only thing I noticed. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Oct 22, 2016 at 21:31
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Permutation-Tolerant Hello World

Inspired by Fault-Tolerant Hello World (a.k.a. the Interview).

Task

Write a program that prints Hello World. Sounds easy, right? Ok, lets challenge up a bit : your (real) task is to maximum the number of permutations of the characters of your code that produce a code that when executed prints Hello World as well.

Hmm, I even got myself confused with that last sentence, so let's see an example :

Consider the following code (it's good enough to understand the principle, but as I'll explain later, the score of such a code will be pretty low) :
(it's Perl code, and if you don't trust me when I say it works, you can run it with perl -e 'code' in your terminal)

print+("Hello World")

When ran, it prints Hello World. Well, the following permutations of the code also print Hello World :

+(print"Hello World")
+print("Hello World")
(print+"Hello World")
()+print"Hello World"

Note that only permutations that produce a code that differs from the previous ones should be considered. For instance, the original code where the two l have been swapped isn't a valid permutation.

Scoring

The score of your solution is the number of bytes of your code divided by the number of valid permutations. Lowest score wins. In case of draw, the earliest solution wins.
For instance, my example above was 21 bytes long, and had 5 valid permutations (note that it includes the original code), so its score is 21/5 = 4.2.


For the sandbox

(1- Does it sound like a nice challenge?
2- Is it clear? )

3- I don't really what tags to add...

4- I'm not sure about the scoring method. In particular, I wonder if just adding useless stuff around the "print hello world" part of the program (no matter the language) might allow a lot of permutations to be valid with some languages.
I'd like the code where all permutations are valid and that is the longest possible to win. And I'm not sure my scoring method will produce such results.

5- Is a "print hello world" program the more relevant? Actually I think that the code could do anything : calculating oeis sequence, drawing rectangles or whatever, as long as all the permutations produces the same behavior. But then some people might play on internal behavior of languages such as "by default, this language prints 1", so every permutation of any source will print 1, or stuffs like this... Any thoughts?

6- I thought about making this challenge harder by actually changing "as much permutations as possible should be valid" to "all permutations should be valid". This will of course prevent a lot of languages to compete, but might result in creative and nice answers.

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6
  • 2
    \$\begingroup\$ If I've read this challenge correctly, Unary is going to win with (astronomical number) divided by (astronomical number factorial). Of course, this could still be a good challenge in other languages regardless, but the scoring as is means that it's beneficial to pad the program as long as possible since the denominator grows factorially compared to the linear numerator - so yeah I think a different scoring method might be necessary (no good ideas off the top of my head though) \$\endgroup\$
    – Sp3000
    Commented Oct 24, 2016 at 23:07
  • \$\begingroup\$ @Sp3000 Thanks for your comment. I think that this sentence Note that only permutations that produce a code that differs from the previous ones should be considered (which I wrote right after the examples) will prevent Unary to win since it will have 0 valid permutations. \$\endgroup\$
    – Dada
    Commented Oct 25, 2016 at 7:30
  • \$\begingroup\$ Oh right, jumped the gun and missed that sentence. In that case I think you can use Lenguage instead? (since it's basically Unary but you can choose the chars) \$\endgroup\$
    – Sp3000
    Commented Oct 25, 2016 at 10:49
  • \$\begingroup\$ Something like print"Hello World";123456789123456789 still produces a huge number of permutations. \$\endgroup\$
    – xnor
    Commented Oct 25, 2016 at 17:16
  • \$\begingroup\$ @xnor indeed. I was worried (cf question 4 for the sandbox) that something like that could be possible, and it obviously is. So ask for all the possible permutations to be valid would be a better challenge? Or should I just drop that challenge? \$\endgroup\$
    – Dada
    Commented Oct 25, 2016 at 17:18
  • \$\begingroup\$ If using a language with nops, [hello world program][arbitrary number of nops] will be even worse than xnors example \$\endgroup\$ Commented Oct 26, 2016 at 23:52
2
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Display an xkcd

xkcd is everyone's favorite webcomic, and you will be writing a program that will bring a little bit more humor to us all.
Your objective in this challenge is to write a program which will take a number as input and display that xkcd and its alt-text (mousover text).

Input

Your program will take an integer as input and display that xkcd: for example, an input of 1500 should display the comic "Upside-Down Map" at xkcd.com/1500, and then either print its alt-text to the console or display it with the image.

Due to their proximity across the channel, there's long been tension between North Korea and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Southern Ireland. Due to their proximity across the channel, there's long been tension between North Korea and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Southern Ireland.

Your program should also be able to function without any input, and perform the same task for the most recent xkcd found at xkcd.com, and it should always display the most recent one even when a new one goes up.

You do not have to get the image directly from xkcd.com, you can use another database as long as it is up-to-date and already existed before this challenge went up.

You may not display the entire webpage in an iframe or similar.

You can handle the case that there isn't an image for a particular comic (i.e. it is interactive or the program was passed a number greater than the amount of comics that have been released) in any reasonable way you wish, including throwing an exception, or printing out an at least single-character string, as long as it somehow signifies to the user that there isn't an image for that input.

This is a challenge, so the fewest bytes wins!

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  • \$\begingroup\$ I think this is probably a duplicate of codegolf.stackexchange.com/q/91847/194 \$\endgroup\$ Commented Oct 25, 2016 at 18:29
  • \$\begingroup\$ @PeterTaylor It's similar, however I think that it's different enough to warrant it's own question. That puzzle required the creation of a bot that will display any new xkcd that comes up, this one just displays one, but it can be any requested one. In addition, my puzzle also requires the title text to be displayed. \$\endgroup\$
    – Pavel
    Commented Oct 25, 2016 at 19:23
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Killer Sudoku Pro suggestions

Regular Sudoku is just about creating a enhanced Latin square and features no arithmetic on the digits 1-9 which are traditionally used.

Killer Sudoku goes further: the puzzle is tiled with polyominoes which are labelled with the sum of the cells which they cover. Additionally, no polyomino may cover two cells with the same digit, even though those digits would otherwise have been legal because they are not in the same row, column or square. It is therefore helpful to be aware of the inverse relationship: given a quantity of cells and a sum, calculate the possible values of the cells. This is also useful for solving Kakuro, which also features sums of distinct digits.

Killer Sudoku Pro goes one further step: rather than being the sum of the cells, any of the four basic operations may be used. The digits in the cells must then satisfy that basic operation.

Given a target, operator and number of cells, I would like you write a program or function to output sets of distinct digits that satisfy the arithmetic expression. To minimise the necessary output I only want distinct combinations of digits, rather than all the potential permutations. (Some puzzle creators will not allow all the permutations for subtraction and division, so taking that into account would unnecessarily complicate the question.)

Examples (example input format: target, operator, (number of cells); output format: answers " or "-separated, digits operator-separated in descending order):

14+(4) -> 8+3+2+1 or 7+4+2+1 or 6+5+2+1 or 6+4+3+1 or 5+4+3+2
4-(3) -> 9-4-1 or 9-3-2 or 8-3-1 or 7-2-1
24×(3) -> 8×3×1 or 6×4×1 or 4×3×2
2÷(2) -> 8÷4 or 6÷3 or 4÷2 or 2÷1

I/O may be in any reasonable format as long as it is clear what is going on, so you can't encode the operations as specific integers, although using * and / or their Unicode code points instead is OK, and answers must use a different separator to the digits in each answer.

This is , so the shortest solution in bytes wins.

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6
  • \$\begingroup\$ Could be worth noting that the only numbers to be considered are 1-9 (or you could add a third input for 1-N) \$\endgroup\$ Commented Oct 31, 2016 at 11:23
  • \$\begingroup\$ @JonathanAllan I didn't realise 10 was a digit, but I guess I should specifically exclude 0. \$\endgroup\$
    – Neil
    Commented Oct 31, 2016 at 12:57
  • 1
    \$\begingroup\$ Oh, I didn't notice "digit" :) \$\endgroup\$ Commented Oct 31, 2016 at 12:59
  • \$\begingroup\$ I find the sentence begining "Some puzzle creators allow the digits from the polyomino to be used in any order" to be odd to the point of disruptive. It presupposes a "correct" order to the elements of the polyomino which isn't obvious, and the logical connection is weak. I suggest rewriting it along the lines of "You should only output one representative suggestion for each distinct set of digits; so e.g. one but not both of 9-4-1 and 9-1-4", possibly with a footnote to discuss variations between puzzle setters in whether order is significant. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Oct 31, 2016 at 21:48
  • \$\begingroup\$ @PeterTaylor The justification is only 9-4-1 and 9-1-4 actually evaluate to 4, so some creators will only use 4- for those two permutations, but I decided the question needed editing anyway. \$\endgroup\$
    – Neil
    Commented Oct 31, 2016 at 22:36
  • \$\begingroup\$ My point about permutations was that if the polyomino is e.g. the X pentomino then the "natural" order of the cells is up for debate. But I think the new wording side-steps that concern. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Nov 1, 2016 at 8:03
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Cryptographically secure favicon.

Create a cryptographically secure program which will take a string of up to 24 characters and create an image such that differing inputs can be "easily" distinguished visually. The goal being that the end image is visually appealling, and it is impossible to reverse engineer the string.

The challenge

  • Create a program or function which takes an input string and output an image in any desired format.

  • Pick a secret password and post an image generated with that password along with your submission code.

  • Optionally post some sample inputs and outputs.

OR

  • Try to post someone else's password (or just any existing collision with that password).

The scoring

  • Out of the posts whose password has not been cracked the post with the most upvotes after an arbitrary time period set sometime in the significant future.

Voters are encouraged to vote based on ingenuity and aesthetic appeal, but can vote for whatever posts they like.

\$\endgroup\$
6
  • \$\begingroup\$ This is essentially the same as codegolf.stackexchange.com/q/25443/194 and codegolf.stackexchange.com/q/95836/194 \$\endgroup\$ Commented Oct 29, 2016 at 21:32
  • \$\begingroup\$ @PeterTaylor I think this challenge is fundamentally different in that the format of the output is not fixed, and the method of encoding the image should be interested. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Oct 30, 2016 at 4:05
  • 1
    \$\begingroup\$ To be clear, unlike those two questions, the answers of this question should usually output visually distinguishable images for different secrets, instead of \$\endgroup\$
    – jimmy23013
    Commented Oct 31, 2016 at 12:40
  • \$\begingroup\$ I'd call this too broad. On top of hashing, find a pleasing way to represent it is largely a question of art and aesthetics. Having different outputs be visually distinguishable happens is easy if the hash function already brings close inputs to far outputs. \$\endgroup\$
    – xnor
    Commented Nov 2, 2016 at 3:56
  • \$\begingroup\$ I have to agree with xnor here, as stated, this is too broad. However, I think the idea is interesting, although there will always be the issue of defining what cryptography is "too good" (and thereby already disallowed). Also, it might be that the good essence of this challenge is completely covered by the links from Peter \$\endgroup\$
    – Liam
    Commented Nov 3, 2016 at 1:00
  • \$\begingroup\$ @xnor we have had "art"challenges throughot the graphical output tag. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Nov 3, 2016 at 10:32
2
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Table Math

You should which side of a table is the oldest, from ASCII art. I think the best way to explain is with an example, so here is one.

You have a table, made out of +, |, and -. Here is one.

+--+
|  |
|  |
|  |
+--+

It will alway be a rectangle, just not always square (but it can be square). There will also be people around the table, marked by the letters A-Z. There will never be too many people on a side, or less than one. Just to make it harder, the people will not always be in order, like this:

  P
 +--+
I|  |
O|  |Q
 |  |J
 +--+
   U

There will never be anybody next to a plus sign(+). You will be given input on how old each member is, separated by a newline, from the first letter that appears alphabetically (I in this example) to the last letter that appears alphabetically (U in this example), like this:

20
8
31
56
6
56

As seen here, ties are allowed. You should then output the sides with their ages separated with a space, in order from oldest to youngest, like this.

Top 56
Bottom 56
Left 51
Right 14

Note that for everything in this challenge, you can choose the capitalization of the letters, even the input. The winner is the submission with the shortest code.

\$\endgroup\$
2
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Interpret Developers

Developers is a joke language that parodies an incident at a Microsoft Developer's conference where Steve Ballmer is supposed to have chanted the word developers at least 14 times in a row. It is basically Brainfuck with a few extensions. It appeared briefly in the Wikipedia in the beginning of 2006, but it has not reappeared anywhere since its deletion. [source]

Your job today is to ressurect this beautiful language, and create an interpreter in the fewest number of bytes. You will have to implement the following commands, which contain their Brainfuck and C equivalents:

| Key            | BF Equiv | C Equiv         |
|----------------|----------|-----------------|
| "Developers"   | +        | ++*ptr;         |
| "Developers"*2 | -        | --*ptr;         |
| "Developers"*3 | >        | ++ptr;          |
| "Developers"*4 | <        | --ptr;          |
| "Developers"*5 | ,        | *ptr=getchar(): |
| "Developers"*6 | .        | putchar(*ptr);  |
| "Developers"*7 | [        | while (*ptr) {  |
| "Developers"*8 | ]        | }               |

As this is standard , the aim of the game is to create the shortest interpreter possible.

Specification

Your interpreter should behave accordingly:

  • Developers/Developerz commands are separated by any whitespace.

  • Anything that is not a valid command should be ignored.

  • There will never be any more than 8 Developers (or 3 Developerz) present in the program that are not separated by whitespace.

  • Input can be interactive or provided at runtime.

Bonus

If you would like to earn bonus points, you can also implement the following three extensions to the Developers language. These do not have a Brainfuck equivalent.

| Key            | C Equiv                          |
|----------------|----------------------------------|
| "Developerz"   | Sleep(strlen(buffer)*10);        |
| "Developerz"*2 | system("cls");||system("clear"); |
| "Developerz"*3 | *p = rand() & 0xFF;              |

If the goal of these is not clear:

  • Developerz should sleep the program for 10ms for ever character in an input string

  • DeveloperzDeveloperz should clear the screen.

  • DevelopersDeveloperzDeveloperz should assign the currently pointed to cell to a random integer between 0 and 255.

For each command you implement, you may multiply your score by 0.75. Thus, by implementing all three, your score would be 42.1875% of the byte count.

\$\endgroup\$
3
  • \$\begingroup\$ That's a pretty big bonus for implementing the three extensions. That's probably either such a hard task no one will go for it or such a huge bonus everyone will <i>have</i> to go for it. \$\endgroup\$
    – Pavel
    Commented Nov 8, 2016 at 3:56
  • \$\begingroup\$ @Pavel I had made it that much because I felt that these bonuses would only benefit languages that were verbose enough that they probably wouldn't beat a Jelly/Python/05AB1E answer (except for the random number functionality), and I dont think the shorter languages tend to have sleep functions or system calls available to them. \$\endgroup\$
    – Kade
    Commented Nov 8, 2016 at 11:11
  • 5
    \$\begingroup\$ This seems like a dupe of "Interpret BF" to me. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Nov 8, 2016 at 14:34
2
\$\begingroup\$

Regex Crossword

Challenge

Write the shortest program that outputs a valid solution to a regex crossword. A regex crossword is a crossword that has regular expressions for the clues, like in this Puzzling SE puzzle: The Prognosticator.

Terminology your program needs to know (simplified from here)

Quantifiers:
x*     0 or more of x (any group instruction)
x+     1 or more of x
x?     0 or 1 of x
x{y}   Exactly y of x
x{y,}  y or more of x
x{,y}  y or less of x

Groups:
.      Any char except \n
(x|y)     Strings x or y (may be multichar), indexed from 1 from the start of clue
(xyz)     Multichar string literal, indexed from 1 from the start of clue
[xyz]     Any of characters x, y or z
[^xyz]    Not the characters x, y or z
[^x|y]    Not x or y (may be multichar)
[B-N]     Letters between B and N inclusive (any letters, caps or not)
[3-6]     Numbers between 3 and 6 inclusive (any digits)
[B-NR-Z]  Multiple ranges (could be digit ranges as well)

Escape sequences:
\7  Get the result of the bracketed instruction indexed 7 (any num)
\r  Literal r where r is a character used in an instruction above
\\  Literal backslash
\W  a-z, A-Z, 0-9, _ (underscore)
\w  Not a character in \W
\d  A digit
\D  Not a digit
\s  Space
\S  Not a space

Test Cases

Input can be any format, examples use: Width Length Top down clues from left to right Bottom down clues from left to right (if they don't exist, newline) Left across clues from top to bottom Right across clues from top to bottom (if they don't exist, newline)

Output must be the completed grid.

Sample input (from here):

Input 1:
2 2
[^SPEAK]+
(EP|IP|EF)


(HE|LL|O)+
[PLEASE]+


Output 1:
HE
LP
Input 2:
2 2
[COBRA]+
(AB|O|OR)+


(.)+\1
[^ABRC]+


Output 2:
OO
OO
Input 3:
2 2
.?.+
.+


[*]+
/+


Output 3:
**
//
Input 4:
3 4
(.)\1(.)\2
[C\sOU]+
[^PU\sH]+
[PIF]+
.*[OWE]*
(TN|LF|TF)+
.[LUH]+
(P|K)[^U]+
.*C+[TIF]
(NO|ONE|ION)*
.*(L)+
[PUF\s]*
[TIC]*
[NOI\sE]+
Output 4:
PUL
P F
ICT
ION
Input 5:
3 7
[^ro\se]*(whe|who)
[are](.)[saint]+\1(v)
.{2}[st\sel]+
[^vys]+
.(\ssai).*
(le|\st|s|or)+
(rr|fro)*
[^saint]+
[\sush]*
[a\si]+
[with]*
[hel\s]+
.*
[fr\so]+
(m\s|sm)[rose]
(s|us)+
[^aw](a).*
[^hear]+
.*[fil]
(ve|o|vo)+
Output 5:
fro
m r
uss
ia 
wit
h l
ove

This is , so the shortest answer in bytes wins!

Standard loopholes apply, and no built-ins for regex testing or matching. Your program must terminate in a reasonable amount of time.

You may assume that each input has exactly one solution.

\$\endgroup\$
2
  • 1
    \$\begingroup\$ 1. "No built-ins" means "You may not answer this question". Every program uses built-ins except zero-byte ones in the languages which support them. "No built-ins for regex testing or matching" would, on the other hand, not be unreasonable. 2. There's currently no constraint requiring the answers to complete the test cases before the heat death of the universe. Is this intentional? \$\endgroup\$ Commented Nov 8, 2016 at 21:05
  • \$\begingroup\$ @PeterTaylor Thanks for that, I've added your suggestions in. I'm new to code golf. \$\endgroup\$
    – boboquack
    Commented Nov 8, 2016 at 21:38
2
\$\begingroup\$

Balancing Act

Edit: Challenge Live here

A see-saw (supposedly from the French 'ci-ça', meaning 'this-that') forms a third of the holy trinity of playground equipment, along with the similarly ubiquitous slide and swing. A see-saw is in perfect balance if, and only if, the sum of the moments on each side are equivalent. A see-saw can therefore be balanced by adding a specific quantity of weight to the side with the lower moment sum; achieving this is your goal for this challenge.

Challenge

Your challenge is to take a depiction of a see-saw as input and output it again, with weight added to one end of the see-saw to balance it.

Input

Your program must take, in any reasonable format, an ASCII see-saw such as the following:

100             100
-------------------
         ^         

The first line contains two numbers, each representing weights on the see-saw. Exactly one weight is present on each side, each acting on the very end of its side of the plank. Weights are guaranteed to be integers, and always align with their corresponding end of the plank. These numbers will never overlap the fulcrum (^).

The second line represents the 'plank' of the see-saw. Each dash (-) represents an equal length to each other dash, with the sole exception of the dash directly over the fulcrum (^), which has no length.

The third line represents the fulcrum of the see-saw. This fulcrum is marked by the only character that is not a space on this line, a circumflex ('^'). The fulcrum can be positioned anywhere along the length of the plank in a valid input so long as enough space is left so that the numbers representing weights do not overlap the fulcrum in either the input or the output.

The input is guaranteed to have three lines, and have no white-space prior to or after the characters that constitute the see-saw (excepting, of course, the third line, which requires it).

Output

For output, the same see-saw depiction should be printed to stdout, but with one (and only one) of the weights replaced with a larger weight, so as to balance the see-saw. Inputs are guaranteed to make this possible using integers alone. Therefore, weights must be shown without decimal points or any other similar notations. If your language does not use stdout you should go by community / meta consensus on output. Trailing newlines are fine but any other changes to the depiction format are probably not OK.

Exemplification

Test Inputs and Corresponding Outputs

Input 1

12                22
--------------------
             ^      

Output 1

12                26
--------------------
             ^      

Input 2

42       42
-----------
     ^     

Output 2

42       42
-----------
     ^     

Input 3

3             16
----------------
        ^      

Output 3

14            16
----------------
        ^      

Input 4

1                56
-------------------
    ^              

Output 4

196              56
-------------------
    ^              

Reference Implementation - Python 3

# Takes a list of strings as input
def balance_seesaw(lines):
    weights = [int(w.strip()) for w in lines[0].split()]

    length  = len(lines[1])
    pivot   = lines[2].find("^")
    left_length    = pivot
    right_length   = length - 1 - pivot

    left_torque  = weights[0] * left_length
    right_torque = weights[1] * right_length

    if left_torque > right_torque:
        weights[1] = left_torque // right_length
    elif right_torque > left_torque:
        weights[0] = right_torque // left_length

    weights = [str(w) for w in weights]

    string_gap = " " * (length - sum(len(w) for w in weights))
    lines[0] = weights[0] + string_gap + weights[1]

    print("\n".join(lines))

balance_seesaw(["1                56",
                "-------------------",
                "    ^              "])

Rules

  • This is , so the shortest code wins counted in bytes. Check meta if counting bytes is awkward in your language.

  • Standard rules/loopholes apply.

  • Input must be taken in a reasonable format. A non-exhaustive list of appropriate formats are given as follows:

    • A single string with lines separated by newline characters
    • A list of strings, each string represented a line
    • A 2D Array or Matrix of characters

Sandbox Notes

Please comment on any parts of the spec, especially input / output requirements, that you find confusing or ambiguous. I haven't written a challenge before so I'm open to the fact that there's quite a bit I've missed. Any and all feedback welcome.

Some users in the comments have rightly pointed out similarities between this challenge and others; please weigh in as to if you think this is a dupe or a unique challenge in its own right. Thanks!

\$\endgroup\$
5
  • \$\begingroup\$ Welcome to PPCG! A pretty decent first challenge. It's pretty similar to this one, but yours is, in my opinion, different enough to not be a duplicate. It's also pretty close to this one posted in the Sandbox a few posts down. I think that all three are different enough to not be dupes, but I'll hold off on final judgment to hear what others say. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Nov 10, 2016 at 20:57
  • \$\begingroup\$ @TimmyD thanks for the welcome! Looks like I need to up my searching game! I understand if this is deemed a duplicate but it seems to differ in a fair few ways from the others at least. \$\endgroup\$
    – FourOhFour
    Commented Nov 10, 2016 at 21:01
  • 1
    \$\begingroup\$ Welcome! For me, a nice challenge and well explained with clear examples. I'll also hold back on the dupe side but agree with TimmyD that it may be different enough. Well done for using the Sandbox anyway. It' a shame that more contributors don't. I'm going to +1 just for that. \$\endgroup\$
    – ElPedro
    Commented Nov 10, 2016 at 21:10
  • \$\begingroup\$ @ElPedro thanks, appreciate the feedback and the vote. \$\endgroup\$
    – FourOhFour
    Commented Nov 10, 2016 at 21:13
  • \$\begingroup\$ Having read (again) through the examples mentioned by @TimmyD I would not say this is a dupe. Possibly mention that it is related though. \$\endgroup\$
    – ElPedro
    Commented Nov 10, 2016 at 21:34
2
\$\begingroup\$

Find the optimal sorting network

Sorting networks are an abstract model of "wires" carrying numbers, which outputs them sorted.

A comparator in a sorting network works as follows:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Sorting-network-comparator-demonstration.svg

This is the optimal sorting network for 4 numbers:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:SimpleSortingNetworkFullOperation.svg

Since there are two kinds of "optimal" sorting networks people care about, we are going for the least number of comparators (those vertical lines).


Given a non-negative integer n (so yes, 0 and 1 need to be supported), output a list of comparators which designates an optimal sorting network for n inputs. The "comparators" are a pair of indices which say which indices in the working array to compare / swap. The indices must be 0-based.

So for the example sorting network, this would be a valid output (viewing 0 as the top wire):

(0, 2), (1, 3), (0, 1), (2, 3), (1, 2)

As would this:

(0, 2), (1, 3), (2, 3), (0, 1), (1, 2)

Additionally, any whitespace is ignored (except for tokenizing), and any non-digit is considered whitespace, so this is also a valid output:

0 2 1 3 2 3 0 1 1 2

And also:

(0, 2)
(1
 3)
((2, 3, 0), 1)
(1, 2)

Furthermore, functions may simply return some iterable that - when flattened - gives the list of numbers in the correct order.

\$\endgroup\$
5
  • \$\begingroup\$ I have an algorithm to do this; it's O((n^2)! n! n), so very very slow. It might compute size 3, but not size 4. \$\endgroup\$
    – Justin
    Commented Nov 19, 2016 at 7:04
  • \$\begingroup\$ I think it's worth giving an example of a sorting network in action on some input. \$\endgroup\$
    – xnor
    Commented Nov 19, 2016 at 7:12
  • \$\begingroup\$ What are the bounds on n? Obviously it doesn't make sense to have n < 0, but do answers need to handle n=0 and n=1? \$\endgroup\$ Commented Nov 19, 2016 at 13:00
  • \$\begingroup\$ @Justin are you still planning to release this challenge? I'm asking because I wanted to make a very similar challenge that would probably be considered a dupe. \$\endgroup\$
    – flawr
    Commented Jul 18, 2019 at 6:53
  • \$\begingroup\$ @flawr No, go for it \$\endgroup\$
    – Justin
    Commented Jul 18, 2019 at 12:16
2
\$\begingroup\$

ROT-13? More like ROT-Rand!

This challenge is to take the following list of characters (ASCII 32 to 126):

 !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~

Randomly shuffle it:

wypP+]`=3&IJ6*xAh{zi_l4Y#k~S F?-oReU;(0m,Z5'trs!aLCQ/g}OjM<u[qE2)BTVb$>19%c:HW@8."nD\Nf7dXKv^|G

Take in an input string:

ROT-Rand!

Then replace the characters in the string, with their new shuffled equivalents:

C!/*CB@by

Using this methodology on large ASCII-based/dictionary based texts would result in something that is decipherable using much trial and error and would be a decent way to encode a long message.

 !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~
wypP+]`=3&IJ6*xAh{zi_l4Y#k~S F?-oReU;(0m,Z5'trs!aLCQ/g}OjM<u[qE2)BTVb$>19%c:HW@8."nD\Nf7dXKv^|G
 ^           ^                                    ^              ^  ^         ^^    ^
 !           -                                    R              a  d         no    t

Rules

  1. Your only input is the text to be "encrypted".
  2. Your output is the encrypted string.
  3. The ASCII list must be randomly shuffled, built-ins are allowed.
  4. , shortest in bytes wins.
\$\endgroup\$
3
  • \$\begingroup\$ 1. I'm guessing from context that "their new shuffled equivalents" means that we're generating a random substitution cipher, but I don't see any actual definition of the equivalence. 2. If I'm correct, this is pretty boring, but could be made more interesting with the (justifiable) modification that the substitution should be a random derangement rather than just a random permutation. That will probably force most languages to do more than just apply two built-ins. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Nov 26, 2016 at 22:44
  • \$\begingroup\$ @PeterTaylor derangement? \$\endgroup\$ Commented Nov 27, 2016 at 15:50
  • \$\begingroup\$ en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Derangement \$\endgroup\$ Commented Nov 27, 2016 at 16:05
2
\$\begingroup\$

Roflcopter

Your task is to print animated helicopter.

Rules

  1. Animation should contain at least two frames.

  2. Delay between frames is up to you, but rotation of airscrews should be visible.

  3. Helicopter could be very simple (simpler than standard roflcopter showed below) but it should leave no doubt what is it. All ASCII chars are allowed.

  4. No caption below needed.

  5. Printing animation to file would be hard, although all standard output destinations are allowed.

  6. This is , so etc.

roflcopter

I believe I can fly.

\$\endgroup\$
5
  • 2
    \$\begingroup\$ You should probably place the ASCII of each frame of the Roflcopter in the challenge. Also, is the ROFL COPTER!!! at the end necessary? \$\endgroup\$
    – clismique
    Commented Nov 24, 2016 at 8:43
  • \$\begingroup\$ +1 For caption necessity or not, I updated question. In my opinion providing frames will make challenge too easy. \$\endgroup\$
    – paldir
    Commented Nov 24, 2016 at 8:48
  • \$\begingroup\$ So will the design of the Roflcopter be the same for all submissions, with the same plane body, rotors and stuff? \$\endgroup\$
    – clismique
    Commented Nov 24, 2016 at 9:09
  • \$\begingroup\$ It's up to users, how exactly it will look, but it should be helicopter-like. Ok, I think you're right, this task is too ambiguous. I will try with another question. \$\endgroup\$
    – paldir
    Commented Nov 24, 2016 at 9:12
  • 1
    \$\begingroup\$ You can just standardise the copter itself, and it shouldn't be ambiguous... \$\endgroup\$
    – clismique
    Commented Nov 24, 2016 at 9:18
2
\$\begingroup\$

Hexasweep: A two-part challenge

Part 1: The solver

Your task is to solve a Hexasweep puzzle.

A Hexasweep puzzle is set out on a grid of diamonds arranged in hexagonal shapes, of which the board looks like a hexagon, like so:

         _____
        /\    \
  _____/ X\____\_____
 /\    \  / XX /\    \
/X \____\/____/X \____\
\ X/ XX /\    \ X/    /
 \/____/  \____\/____/
 /\    \  / X  /\    \
/  \____\/____/  \____\
\  / XX /\    \  / XX /
 \/____/  \____\/____/
       \ X/    /
        \/____/

The above image is composed of 7 hexagons (21 diamonds), and is thus a Hexasweep puzzle of size 2. If you want to expand it, cover the current Hexasweep puzzle with more hexagons (so that there are 19 hexagons - that will make a Hexasweep puzzle of size 3).

Each diamond can contain 0, 1 or 2 "bombs", with bombs depicted as X above.

The above image would be read from top to bottom, starting from the left:

2,0,0,2,0,2,1,0,1,0,2,0,1,0,0,2,0,0,0,0,2

That is now the "condensed form" of the puzzle.

Numbers are marked on "intersection points", to show how many bombs are on the diamonds which are touching those intersection points - the intersection points of this grid are shown below using O.

         _____
        /\    \
  _____/  OO___\_____
 /\    \  OO   /\    \
/  OO___OO___OO  OO___\
\  OO   OO   OO  OO   /
 \/___OO  OO___OO____/
 /\   OO  OO   OO    \
/  OO___OO___OO  OO___\
\  OO   OO   OO  OO   /
 \/____/  OO___\/____/
       \  OO   /
        \/____/

As you can see, there are two "types" of intersection points - those with 3 diamonds touching it, and those with 6 (the one that are touching the edge of the board aren't counted):

  _____
 /\  XX\
/X OO___\
\ XOO   /
 \/____/

       /\
 _____/X \_____
 \ XX \ X/    /
  \____OO____/
  / XX OO  X \
 /____/  \____\
      \ X/
       \/

The two intersections would be marked with 4 and 8 respectively.

In the original Hexasweep puzzle above, the intersection numbers would be:

   3
4 5 4 2
 2 1 3
2 4 1 2
   1

Which would be condensed to:

3,4,5,4,2,2,1,3,2,4,1,2,1

Given an input in this "condensed form", you must output the original puzzle, in "condensed form" (see above).

Specs:

  • Any delimiter for the "condensed form" as input are allowed (it doesn't have to be , separating the numbers).
  • You may output a list, or a string with any delimiter.
  • Your program must be generalised: it must be able to solve Hexasweep puzzles of any size (at least up to size 4).
  • If there is more than 1 possible answer, your program must output the single character N.

This is , so shortest code in bytes wins!

If there is a tie, the earlier post is declared the winner.

Part 2: The maker

Your task is to generate the smallest Hexasweep puzzle with a single solution that encodes a binary number.

Because any diamond in a Hexasweep puzzle can have either 1 or 2 bombs (if the diamond has bombs), you can encode binary numbers into it. In this puzzle (condensed form):

2,0,0,2,0,2,1,0,1,0,2,0,1,0,0,2,0,0,0,0,2

The only digits that matter are the non-zero digits, so this turns into:

2,2,2,1,1,2,1,2,2

Decrement each number by 1:

111001011

Which is equal to 459.

Your task is to make a program that generates that Hexasweep puzzle in the smallest grid with a single solution.

Specs:

  • You must output the condensed form of the Hexasweep puzzle.
  • You can output either an array of numbers, or a string with any delimiter.
  • You will be tested on all positive integers from 10,000 to 15,000, and your program is expected to return a value for any integer in 10 minutes.

Your final score is the total size grid for every test integer added together (so if you get a size 3 grid for every number, your final score would be 15,000). The lowest score is declared the winner.

If there is a tie, the earlier post is declared the winner.


Meta:

  • Should this be one challenge or two? If it's one challenge, should the score just be added up for both programs?
  • Any improvements in explanation?
  • Is this a dupe?
\$\endgroup\$
1
  • \$\begingroup\$ Can I post this abandoned proposal? \$\endgroup\$
    – user58826
    Commented Jun 9, 2017 at 12:24
2
\$\begingroup\$

Please do my Martian homework posted

For Sandbox, please note

This was originally conceived of as two related challenges; Please do my Martian homework and Please grade my Martian homework.

Though the task itself is different, the basic description of the task (that is, what is a Martian essay) is the same (though I may edit it later anyway), but just to avoid confusion:

  • Please do my Martian homework was posted
  • Please grade my Martian homework is what's left

Please Grade my Martian Homework

History

Around the turn of the 20th century, spiritualist Catherine-Elise Müller allegedly communicated with Martians. During somnambulatory trances, she would write out Martian scripts. Psychologist Théodore Flourney discovered her Martian writings were very similar to her native French, and in his book "From India to the Planet Mars", he documented Catherine's Martian alphabet. The following is loosely based on that alphabet with an extended mythos.

Problem Description

The Martian language has 21 characters, shown here next to each Latin equivalent:

enter image description here

Unfortunately, there's no Unicode for Martian (despite Mars being part of the universe), so we're stuck using Latin characters.

Whereas in English our phonemes break out into two major types (consonants/vowels) which we loosely map to letters, Martian has three letter types:

  • The vowels: a e i m n o u
  • The hard consonants: b c d g k p t
  • The soft consonants: f h l r s v z

In addition to this, the Martian language contains a single punctuation mark--the period.

A Martian word is a set of 3 to 9 letters. All Martian words have at least one vowel, one hard consonant, and one soft consonant (in any arrangement). For example, fng, cdaz, vpi, and pascal are Martian words.

A Martian sentence is a set of 3 to 9 Martian words delimited by spaces and followed by a period.

A Martian paragraph is a set of 3 to 9 Martian sentences, delimited by spaces, and followed by a newline.

A Martian essay is a collection of Martian paragraphs that contains no contiguous word repetitions.

A contiguous word repetition is any construct S S where S is a contiguous set of words. Note that this definition ignores sentence and paragraph boundaries.

Challenge

The Martian homework assignment is to write an essay between 729 and 810 words. The essay is graded on a pass/fail basis; pass simply means it's a valid Martian essay according to the above definitions, and fail means not pass.

Your challenge is to write a function or program that accepts data as input, and returns a truthy value if that data is a valid Martian essay between 729 and 810 words, or a falsey value if it is not. (Don't forget that you must fail the input if there is a contiguous repetition).

This is code golf. Shortest code in bytes wins. Standard loopholes disallowed.

TBD

Post link to examples in first challenge? Repeat examples? Should second challenge still have word counting?

\$\endgroup\$
1
  • \$\begingroup\$ Whoops; most of the post is almost identical so I thought it was the same, but the task is indeed different. I've deleted my original comment. \$\endgroup\$
    – user62131
    Commented Dec 5, 2016 at 0:22
2
\$\begingroup\$

Monopoly Continued

So you've got your Monopoly board, shall we start a game?

To start with, we'll need some dice and to know where we land!

Write a program that outputs the rolls and resting places of a given number players for a given number turns.

Input

In any suitable format for your language

  • The number of players up to a maximum of 6
  • The number of turns to output up to a maximum of 250

Output

In any meaningful option for your chosen language

  • The output should be in the format: PlayerNumber, Die1, Die2, InitialOfRestingPlace
  • Each roll should be separated by a new line.

Rules

General

  • Use the US Board for the names of squares
    F K C I I B A V W M G 
    N                   P
    T                   N
    C                   C
    S                   P
    P                   S
    V                   C
    S                   P
    E                   L
    S                   B
    J C V C O R I B C M G 
  • All players start on Go (bottom right)
  • A player rolls (pseudo randomly generated) two six-sided dice, once per turn, unless they roll doubles (described below), and moves that many spaces clockwise.

Doubles

  • Rolling doubles means the player can roll again
  • Rolling three doubles in a row lands the player in jail and the players turn ends

Jail

  • Landing on the "Go To Jail" square sends the player to jail
  • While in jail, the player may not move unless they roll a double
  • Rolling a double to get out of jail ends the player's turn
  • Landing on the jail square does not mean a player is in jail

Chance/Community Chest

  • These squares currently have no effect.

Example output

Excluding comments

For input 2,3

//Turn 1
1,2,2,I   //Player lands on Income Tax, Player rolled doubles, roll again
1,2,4,J   //Player lands on Jail and turn ends
2,5,3,V   //Player lands on Vermont Avenue and turn ends

//Turn 2
1,5,5,F   //Player lands on Free Parking, doubles, roll again.
1,5,5,G   //Player lands on Go To Jail, goes to Jail, turn ends
2,3,4,P   //Player lands on Pennsylvania Railroad, and the turn ends.

//Turn 3
1,5,2,J   //No double, player remains in Jail
2,6,3,I   //Player lands on Illinois Avenue and turn ends.

Scoring

This didn't start as a challenge, but in coming up with scoring, a lot of the elements I thought of for scoring were very "golf-y" by nature, so I've changed my mind (before any answers are posted). See the edit history if the previous scoring intrigues you.


Despite first posting this on the sandbox, I'm bound to have missed something! Please feel free to point out mistakes or problems.


Concerns

  • Too complex
  • How to score?
  • Doesn't include Chance or Community Chest cards
\$\endgroup\$
8
  • \$\begingroup\$ I am actually coding monopoly right now which is how I got the idea for the code golf, the movement isn't the most complex thing in the world but the buying and building houses etc is very much so. I am not sure if you will get many takers if it is code-gold, maybe a code-challenge? \$\endgroup\$ Commented Oct 19, 2016 at 14:59
  • \$\begingroup\$ This isn't too complex. However, it is tough to make test cases, as the game is non-deterministic, and testing for edge cases (I landed on Jail, but I'm not in Jail) is tough for the reader to do. I'd still include the Monopoly board this time around. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Oct 19, 2016 at 15:05
  • \$\begingroup\$ Incomplete. What about chance / community chest cards which send the player to a different square? \$\endgroup\$ Commented Oct 19, 2016 at 15:29
  • \$\begingroup\$ @NathanMerrill, do you propose any changes? Or just pointing out a risk? \$\endgroup\$ Commented Oct 19, 2016 at 16:00
  • 1
    \$\begingroup\$ @PeterTaylor I did intentionally leave out chance and community chest to reduce complexity \$\endgroup\$ Commented Oct 19, 2016 at 16:01
  • \$\begingroup\$ @jacksonecac I'm all for code challenge, but I'm unsure how the scoring would work \$\endgroup\$ Commented Oct 19, 2016 at 16:04
  • \$\begingroup\$ Scoring could be by popularity contest. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Oct 19, 2016 at 19:35
  • 2
    \$\begingroup\$ Popularity contest is a terrible idea. Code golf would be much better. \$\endgroup\$
    – user45941
    Commented Oct 21, 2016 at 0:23
2
\$\begingroup\$

Generate me a QFP chip!

This challenge is now live!

QFP is a type of form factor for an electrical component where pins come out the sides of a chip. Here are is a picture of a typical QFP component: enter image description here

you can see that the general formula is to have 4 sides of equal numbers of pins.

Your challenge is to create a program that takes in an integer, thich represents the number of pins on one side, and creates an ASCII QFP component with numbered pins.

Input:

a single integer which represents the number of pins on one side

Output:

An ascii QFP chip with an apropriate pinout.

Example:

input:1

  4
 ┌┴┐
1┤ ├3
 └┬┘
  2

input:2

  87
 ┌┴┴┐
1┤  ├6
2┤  ├5
 └┬┬┘
  34

input:12

   444444444333
   876543210987
  ┌┴┴┴┴┴┴┴┴┴┴┴┴┐
 1┤            ├36
 2┤            ├35
 3┤            ├34
 4┤            ├33
 5┤            ├32
 6┤            ├31
 7┤            ├30
 8┤            ├29
 9┤            ├28
10┤            ├27
11┤            ├26
12┤            ├25
  └┬┬┬┬┬┬┬┬┬┬┬┬┘
   111111122222
   345678901234

Rules:

  • all QFP chips must be enclosed and sealed as well as ascii provides. spacing is of utmost importance.
  • pin numbering must be done as in the examples (Read left to right, top to bottom, numbered counter clockwise)
  • You may start numbering at 0, but this must not affect the chip (an input of 12 still needs 12 pins per side)
  • The only valid characers in your output are 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,0,┌,┴,┐,├,┘,┬,└,┤, spaces, and newlines.

This is a codegolf, and as such, The code with the least number of bytes wins! Good Luck!

\$\endgroup\$
4
  • \$\begingroup\$ @Geobits thank you! fixed. \$\endgroup\$
    – tuskiomi
    Commented Nov 17, 2016 at 20:42
  • 1
    \$\begingroup\$ Do we have to use boxdrawing characters or can we use + instead? If you use them, it means languages that don't support nonascii can't compete. Also what encodings are allowed? codepage 437? UTF-8? Include the codepoints in the question. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Nov 28, 2016 at 22:01
  • \$\begingroup\$ @LevelRiverSt thank you for your feedback! It was my intention to keep those languages out of the challenge. \$\endgroup\$
    – tuskiomi
    Commented Nov 29, 2016 at 15:52
  • \$\begingroup\$ Now that this has been posted you should consider editing it down to a link and deleting the answer. \$\endgroup\$
    – Wheat Wizard Mod
    Commented Mar 3, 2017 at 0:01
2
\$\begingroup\$

The social network

On my social network, two users are "friends" if their name share a common letter. For exemple, bob and bill are friends, as they share the letter b.

Given a list of user names:

  • display a falsy value if there exist in the list two distinct users x and y that cannot be related through a friendship chain;
  • else, display a truthy value.

Examples

abc cde efg ghi should return true, as abc is friend with cde, which is friend with efg, which is friend with ghi : all users are related.

abc cde fgh hij should return false, as for example abc and fgh cannot be related through a friendship chain.

abc should return true, as we cannot find in that list two unrelated users.

Input

  • You can read the name list in any convenient format for your language.
  • You can assume all the names are lowercase and use only the characters a-z.
  • You don't need to handle the empty list, any result (true, false, program crash) is acceptable for it.
\$\endgroup\$
2
  • \$\begingroup\$ We've had transitive closure questions before (1, 2). This may be different enough to run, though (especially because the format increases the chance of a regex solution doing well), although it's particularly close to my second link there. I'd recommend the use of the graph-theory tag, though, as it's clearly heavily related to the other transitive closure questions. \$\endgroup\$
    – user62131
    Commented Dec 31, 2016 at 23:11
  • \$\begingroup\$ @ais523 yes that's almost same than codegolf.stackexchange.com/questions/8647/…... will not post then \$\endgroup\$
    – Arnaud
    Commented Jan 2, 2017 at 3:10
2
\$\begingroup\$

Smallest integer divisible by 2..n

Given an integer n, output the smallest integer divisible by 2,3,4,...,n inclusive.

Example

2520 is divisible by every integer from 2 to 10.

Scoring

Shortest code in bytes wins.

Sandbox

  • Dup?
  • Better Wording?
  • Restrictions/Rules?
\$\endgroup\$
3
  • \$\begingroup\$ So just lcm(2..n)? \$\endgroup\$
    – FlipTack
    Commented Dec 31, 2016 at 12:18
  • \$\begingroup\$ you're right. would be marked as dup I guess :D \$\endgroup\$
    – Seims
    Commented Dec 31, 2016 at 13:09
  • \$\begingroup\$ Actually, I don't think there's been challenges exactly like this before. I wouldn't call it a dupe. \$\endgroup\$
    – FlipTack
    Commented Dec 31, 2016 at 14:41
2
\$\begingroup\$

Pseudoku Cops and Robbers King of the Hill

(I know that another user, @NathanMerrill, is proposing a similar contest. I started playing with the idea for this type of contest independently yesterday, but have since chatted with in The Nineteenth Byte. He is currently undecided on the type of puzzle to use and has some different ideas on how to evaluate participants' performance, so I feel comfortable proposing my idea as a separate challenge.)

Sudoku is a well-known logic puzzle. It is a puzzle of four nines: nine rows of cells, nine columns of cells, nine 3x3 adjacent and distinct blocks of cells, and nine values that any cell can have. A valid Sudoku arrangement or solution is one in which every row, cell, and block has all nine values exactly one time. For example, consider the following valid solution:

+-----+-----+-----+
|4 6 1|5 7 3|2 8 9|
|5 7 8|2 1 9|4 6 3|
|3 2 9|6 8 4|1 7 5|
+-----+-----+-----+
|9 8 4|7 6 2|3 5 1|
|7 5 6|3 4 1|9 2 8|
|2 1 3|9 5 8|7 4 6|
+-----+-----+-----+
|8 3 5|1 2 7|6 9 4|
|6 9 7|4 3 5|8 1 2|
|1 4 2|8 9 6|5 3 7|
+-----+-----+-----+

These are turned into puzzles by removing many of the values in the arrangement in such a way that all blanks are mirrored horizontally and vertically across the puzzle and so there is only one valid way to fill in the blanks to get a valid Sudoku solution. For the above puzzle, this might look like this:

+-----+-----+-----+
|4    |     |2 8  |
|  7  |  1  |    3|
|    9|    4|1    |
+-----+-----+-----+
|     |7 6  |3 5 1|
|     |     |     |
|2 1 3|  5 8|     |
+-----+-----+-----+
|    5|1    |6    |
|6    |  3  |  1  |
|  4 2|     |    7|
+-----+-----+-----+

Someone who wished to play this Sudoku puzzle would then use the information provided to find the original solution.

Sudoku has some interesting properties that allow it to be generalized to similar puzzles with different rules that are sometimes called "Pseudoku" (which is pronounced the same way as the actual puzzle, SOO-DOE-KOO, so please stop saying SOO-DOO-KOO). For our purposes, we will make two differences. First, it may be possible to generate harder puzzles by removing the restriction for symmetric removals. The following is a valid puzzle by Sudoku rules, so why not allow it?

+-----+-----+-----+
|4   1|  7  |2    |
|5    |2   9|     |
|3    |  8  |     |
+-----+-----+-----+
|  8 4|7   2|    1|
|     |3   1|  2  |
|     |     |     |
+-----+-----+-----+
|     |     |6    |
|  9 7|     |     |
|1    |     |5 3  |
+-----+-----+-----+

Second, Sudoku's properties allow us to define games with different sizes. You can define a Pseudoku game with a parameter N where the resulting board has N^2 rows, N^2 columns, N^2 blocks of size NxN, and N^2 values for each cell. Standard Sudoku would be a Pseudoku variant with N=3. So the following would be a valid Pseudoku(2) game:

+---+---+
|1  |   |
|   |  3|
+---+---+
|  1|4  |
|4  |   |
+---+---+

and an example Pseudoku(4) game:

+-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+
|11         |      10  4| 1     9   | 2       16|
| 6     5   |   15  1   |    3     2|12  8      |
|10    13 14|         12| 5       15| 4     7   |
| 2  3      |    6    13|       8 11|    5    10|
+-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+
| 7 11 12  9|14        2|16  1  4   |           |
|           |   10  4   |          3|13    16 11|
| 4       10|   16    15|   12      |          6|
| 1 16  2   |11  3      |   10     8|           |
+-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+
| 3        2|       6   |13         | 5 14     1|
|    7      |          5|           |           |
|   13 14  4|12    16   |           | 8  9      |
|    5 16   |13     9   | 4     2  1|           |
+-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+
|14 12     7|           |   15     4|11     6   |
|    9      | 6         |11 16      |       3   |
|      11   | 8 13     1| 3 14      |    7      |
|13     8   | 7    11   | 2         |      15   |
+-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+

Since Sudoku is NP-complete, so is Pseudoku. That means that it gets more difficult to solve a Pseudoku puzzle the larger N gets. However, it can take more time to generate Pseudoku puzzles than it does to solve them, since the naive algorithm for generating a puzzle requires solving the puzzle each time a value is removed! Solving Pseudoku puzzles is fun, but if it takes longer to generate them than it does to solve them, it becomes more work than play.

So help me out! I propose a Cops and Robbers style King of the Hill. The Cops will compete by writing programs to generate lots of Pseudoku puzzles to consume as much time as possible for solving, while the Robbers will compete by writing programs to solve Pseudoku puzzles to consume as little as time possible solving these puzzles.

I need some help ironing out the format, but here is what I have so far:

  1. I will provide a Java framework for running the contest. This framework will connect to clients by TCP/IP so contestants can choose whatever language they want to write their Cops and Robbers (so long as I can run them on my system). I will also provide a basic Cop and Robber for these users to try out to see what sorts of times they take. I will publish the times they generate on my system so contestants can estimate how their entries will run on my system.

  2. I will give each Cop ten minutes to generate as many Pseudoku(N>= 3) puzzles as they can, but they should be able to generate at least Pseudoku(N=4) puzzles. They can choose what sizes they want the puzzles to be, but they have to be valid with exactly one solution. My server will naively check each one to guarantee their validity; any Cop that generates an invalid puzzle is disqualified. I recommend configuring the Cop programs to be parameterized externally so that Robbers can test their code against basic Cop configurations, but then the Cops can send me secret, optimized configurations before the contest completes for their actual execution. I will provide a couple days after the deadline ends for conferring with the Cop programmers if their settings do not work as expected on my system. Cops should generate different puzzles every time with reasonable expectations; that means no spamming with the same puzzle repeatedly or reading pregenerated puzzles from a file system, Internet source, or internal cache. In addition, I don't want to see a Cop that uses the same removal pattern for every puzzle (that may not guarantee valid puzzles, anyway).

  3. Each Robber will be tested against each puzzle generated by the Cops. The Robber will have to generate the correct solution for each puzzle as quickly as possible. I will probably need to see some timings before I make a final decision, but each Robber will be capped with some amount of time to solve a puzzle (maybe an hour?) before the time-to-completion defaults to twice that cap. These Robbers will be permitted to use any technique for solving the puzzles that my system supports except for packet sniffing. I am on the fence as to whether the Robbers will be on an honor code to not study Cop code since I plan to have secret parameterizations anyway.

  4. All the times for all the puzzles will be sorted from least to greatest and then assigned an index as one would in a Mann-Whitney U test. Each Cop and Robber will be scored using the sum of the indices of their contributions: Cops for the times the Robbers spent solving their puzzzles, and Robbers for the times they spent solving puzzles. The winning Cop will have the highest sum and the winning Robber the lowest. Cop ties will be broken first by the average time required to solve one of its problems (more is better), then by the number of puzzles generated (more is better), then by the name I deem cooler (here's hoping that doesn't happen). Robber ties will be broken first by the average time spent solving puzzles, then by the sum of the time, then by the standard deviation, then by the cooler name.

  5. This scoring scheme poses an interesting challenge to Cops: balancing the size of the problems (and the likely amount of time needed to solve them) against the number of problems generated. A Cop that generates only one puzzle that no Robber can solve in the time limit is likely to lose to another Cop that generates many moderate problems. Similarly, a Cop that spams many small problems is likely to be beaten by another Cop that generates fewer problems of larger sizes. Since the official contest configurations should be kept secret until the contest starts, other Cops can study the other programs to try to determine what their opponents are likely to do and plan accordingly.

I am interested in any and all feedback that the community might have about this challenge.

\$\endgroup\$
9
  • \$\begingroup\$ I pronounce Pseudoku as SOO-do-ku and Sudoku as soo-DO-ku, to align with the pronunciation of Pseudo. \$\endgroup\$
    – Pavel
    Commented Jan 6, 2017 at 0:22
  • \$\begingroup\$ I don't know if you'll get a lot of submissions. Sudoku is a bit difficult to program. Also, TCP-IP is not something people are used to using for their submissions. \$\endgroup\$
    – mbomb007
    Commented Jan 6, 2017 at 16:25
  • \$\begingroup\$ It is? Well, part of what I am looking for is whether people would participate. I would need at a minimum two Cops and two Robbers or there is no point. Could people comment saying whether they would play and whether they would play as a Cop, a Robber, or both? \$\endgroup\$
    – sadakatsu
    Commented Jan 6, 2017 at 17:17
  • \$\begingroup\$ The scoring system you've chosen adds a large incentive to submit a huge number of programs that are almost identical to your own submission but slightly worse. This means that if some opposing programs generate some puzzles that are harder than yours and some puzzles that are easier (which is likely), you'll push the easy ones right down the leaderboard, making your programs look better in comparison. \$\endgroup\$
    – user62131
    Commented Jan 6, 2017 at 17:47
  • \$\begingroup\$ Good point. This can be resolved by a "one-submission-per-category" rule. \$\endgroup\$
    – sadakatsu
    Commented Jan 6, 2017 at 18:07
  • \$\begingroup\$ If you want, I have some code that can help you communicate with submissions (over standard in/out). However, I think the best solution is to run the cops' submission and kill it after 10 minutes. They should write each sudoku puzzle as a file, which you would then read.. I also wouldn't worry about automated checking to see if the puzzles are valid. I generally assume good faith in these types of challenges, unless it becomes an issue. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Jan 6, 2017 at 18:33
  • \$\begingroup\$ Re: validation... there's a problem here. For it to make any sense, I would need to have at least as good a solver as the best Robber entry, in which case someone would just copy mine in a faster language than Java. I think I would still require a unit testing protocol where I pass solutions to the Cops, the Cops return problems, and then I validate that they sent unique puzzles. \$\endgroup\$
    – sadakatsu
    Commented Jan 6, 2017 at 18:45
  • \$\begingroup\$ Re: standard input/output versus sockets... I don't get the aversion to network programming. I used TCP in my Speed Clue contest a couple years ago, and it worked great (though I admittedly had few entries). So long as I guarantee an environment for the contest (probably Linux), even C/C++ developers can write code with platform-specific libraries if they wish. Using networking also allows a good method for timing responses: I start the clock once I get the ACK after sending a command, and I stop the clock after I ACK that I received a response. File dumping makes timing Cops difficult. \$\endgroup\$
    – sadakatsu
    Commented Jan 6, 2017 at 18:50
  • \$\begingroup\$ 1. I don't think you've taken account of how badly things scale. It's easy to spit out valid pseudokus for N=100; validating them in a reasonable time requires supporting every rule which the cop knows. 2. The stuff about secret parameterisations doesn't really make sense to me. Taken to extremes, that could mean that we make the actual generation code the "parameterisation" and the cop "program" is just an eval. 3. The cop/robber setup means there's inherently a submission deadline. That's generally a bad thing, but even more so with something which can get extremely complicated. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Jan 10, 2017 at 15:49
2
\$\begingroup\$

broken keyboard workaround

|nspired by BASTA´s song and memories from earlier work:

Your keyboard is broken but there is some urgent work you have to complete; you have no back^up hardware - and the shops are closed so you can´t buy a new keyboard!

All you have left to work with is your mouse.

6iven two texts as input (the one you have and the one you want to have), create a program or function that tells you the cut, copy&paste actions that will turn the one text into the other.

Using the mouse is strenuous, so you don´t want too many cut/copy/paste actions. Keep your output as short as possible.

Remember: Your keyboard is broken = you can´t use any characters in your code that you don't have ~ you must get alon9 with those that are provided in th1s {["te%t"]}. For7unately your keyboard 7ook qu17e a wh1le 7o bre4k down c0mpletely 4nd y0u used numb3rs 4nd sp3c*4l ch@r$ t0 r3pl@c3 br0k3n l3773r$; $0 y0u $h0uld h@v3 m0$7 0f 7h3m @v@*l@bl3.

Also, you don´t want to do too much C&P to cre8 your code, so keep that as short as possible, too.


  • You can assume that the second text contains no characters that are not present in the first text.
  • You can pick any input format and method that is convenient for you; but the output format should match that. (e.g. if you take input from files, output should also go to a file).

NOTES

Note that the challenge description contains all letters and digits except j and z. If you absolutely need them: they are hidden in the YouTube link. (I didn´t check for upper/lower case though.)

Curlys, brackets, braces, single and double quotes and all operators I could think of are there, so the challenge should be fine for most languages that use printable ASCII.

Still trying to find a more fluent way to include curlys, brackets, double quotes and circumflex, though.

I thought there was a tag [string-manipulation]; but couldn´t find it in the list.

I think about dropping the "output method should match input method" restriction.

\$\endgroup\$
2
  • \$\begingroup\$ Try [tag:code-golf] and [tag:restricted-source] \$\endgroup\$ Commented Jan 9, 2017 at 16:49
  • \$\begingroup\$ The part of your question with weird characters in it is a bit hard to read. Maybe tone it down a bit. Also, some examples would be helpful for understanding the challenge. \$\endgroup\$
    – mbomb007
    Commented Feb 1, 2017 at 4:51
2
\$\begingroup\$

Find B1nar0 Solutions

B1nar0 puzzle is a paper and pencil game with 0 and 1. The goal is to fill the grid accoring to 3 rules :

  1. No more than 2 consecutive 0s or 1s
  2. Each row/column has half 0s and half 1s
  3. No identical row/columns

Example :

[1]

  • A is 0 according to rule 1
  • B is 1 according to rule 1
  • C is 0 according to rule 2
  • D is 1 according to rule 2
  • etc.

Edit : Grids are square grids of even size (4, 6, 8, 10, 12 or 16 are usual sizes).

Input : Any binary grid (array or string) with 0,1 and any other character you want for empty cells.

Output : Same format as input but filled with a correct grid.

Test case (see GIF)

0 11
  0 
 0  
1 1 
\$\endgroup\$
7
  • \$\begingroup\$ Are the grid dimensions always 4x4 ? \$\endgroup\$
    – Arnaud
    Commented Jan 17, 2017 at 8:14
  • \$\begingroup\$ Non, any even number should fit, generally 4-6-8-10-12 or 16 games. \$\endgroup\$
    – Crypto
    Commented Jan 17, 2017 at 8:16
  • \$\begingroup\$ Nice challenge, but I suggest you add some test cases for the larger grid sizes too. Also, may we assume that we will get input that makes it possible to solve the puzzle? For instance not: [[1,1,1, ],[ , , , ],[ , , , ],[ , , , ]]. Can we assume that there will only be one valid solution? For instance, not an empty grid. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Mar 9, 2017 at 14:22
  • \$\begingroup\$ Also, the 6x6 test case is a lot harder than the 4x4. The 4x4 can be solved going through the matrix checking the different rules one after the other. To solve the 6x6 grid you need an algorithm that's a lot more sophisticated. Do you require that the program should be able to solve any input, regardless of the difficulty. Even if it requires brute-forcing the solution (which may take a loong time for a 16x16 matrix \$\endgroup\$ Commented Mar 9, 2017 at 14:22
  • \$\begingroup\$ Then you should add a few 10x10, 12x12 and 16x16 test cases (with solutions). Requiring that submissions can solve all possible boards regardless of difficulty makes this a really hard challenge. You should also impose a time limit. Otherwise I can just write a script that checks all possible combinations and claim that it will eventually find the right solution \$\endgroup\$ Commented Mar 9, 2017 at 14:22
  • \$\begingroup\$ I added the comments I had on the post when it was on main. Some of them are a bit out of context now, but I guess you remember what they're about. :) \$\endgroup\$ Commented Mar 9, 2017 at 14:23
  • \$\begingroup\$ Nice challenge, but I suggest you add some test cases for the larger grid sizes too. Also, may we assume that we will get input that makes it possible to solve the puzzle? For instance not: [[1,1,1, ],[ , , , ],[ , , , ],[ , , , ]]. Can we assume that there will only be one valid solution? For instance, not an empty grid \$\endgroup\$ Commented Mar 9, 2017 at 14:23
2
\$\begingroup\$

Enthusiastically Russianify a String

Greetings Comrades,

Many of you may have interacted with people from Russia on the internet at some point, and a subset of you may have noticed the slightly odd method they have of expressing themselves.

e.g. деинсталляция игра нуб))) - (forgive the google translate)

where the ))) are added for emphasis on the previous statement, I have been working on a theory that the ratio of )'s to the rest of the string is directly proportional to the amount of implied emphasis, however I oftentimes find it difficult to compute the ratio on the fly, as I am also trying to cope with a slew of abuse, so I would like the shortest possible code to help me calculate what the resulting string should be, for a value of enthusiasm between 0 and 500%, given the original, unenthusiastic string, this will aid my research greatly as i will not have to type out bulky scripts every time I wish to test my hypothesis.

so, the challenge:

write a full program or function, which, provided two arguments, a string of unknown length, and a number, in either integer format (between 0 and 500) or in decimal format (between 0 and 5, with 2 points of accuracy) will

  • return the original string, suffixed with a number of )'s
  • the number will be the calculated as a ratio of the input number to the string length.
  • so if the number 200, or 2.00 was provided, 200% of the string must be suffixed as )'s
  • the number of brackets rounded to in decimal situations does not matter.
  • script is required to support Printable ASCII characters.
  • only has to support one input number format, of your choice.

examples:

"codegolf" 125      = codegolf))))))))
"codegolf" 75       = codegolf))))))
"noob team omg" 0.5 = noob team omg))))))
"hi" 4.99           = hi!)))))))))))))))

example code (powershell) (with decimal input):

Function Get-RussianString ([string]$InputStr,[decimal]$Ratio){
    $StrLen = $InputStr.Length
    $SuffixCount = $StrLen * $Ratio
    $Suffix = [string]::New(")",$SuffixCount)
    return $InputStr + $Suffix
}

Get-RussianString "codegolf" 0.5
codegolf))))

this is so shortest code wins!


This is my first challenge, any feedback is greatly appreciated.

\$\endgroup\$
6
  • \$\begingroup\$ Privyet tovarisch, but challenges on PPCG need an objective winning criterion (eg code-golf for shortest code) \$\endgroup\$ Commented Jan 25, 2017 at 16:27
  • \$\begingroup\$ @TùxCräftîñg - apologies this is code-golf, I included a mention of it in the 'background' block shortest possible code i'll include the tag now though. \$\endgroup\$
    – colsw
    Commented Jan 25, 2017 at 16:49
  • \$\begingroup\$ @AdmBorkBork the minimum character set would be that, full Cyrillic alphabet support would be ideal, but I decided to simplify that aspect as much as possible, I could change it to the full ASCII set or otherwise if you believe it would be of benefit? - i'll include space as a default charachter, and remove the ! in the examples for now though. \$\endgroup\$
    – colsw
    Commented Jan 25, 2017 at 16:52
  • 1
    \$\begingroup\$ Restricting the input to "Printable ASCII" would probably be sufficient. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Jan 25, 2017 at 16:58
  • \$\begingroup\$ If anything that's actually more understandable - i'll edit that in now, thanks! \$\endgroup\$
    – colsw
    Commented Jan 25, 2017 at 17:00
  • 3
    \$\begingroup\$ Please edit the answer down to a hyperlink to the posted answer on the main site and delete it now that it is posted. \$\endgroup\$
    – mbomb007
    Commented Feb 1, 2017 at 4:49
2
\$\begingroup\$

How extreme can a letter be?

Challenge

Write a function or program that accepts a rectangular grid of letters (A-Z) as input, and provides an output as follows:

  • If the grid contains repeated letters, output the maximum rectilinear distance between two positions on the grid covered by the same letter.
  • If every letter in the grid is unique, output 0.

Example

Given this grid:

AEBZWZSFUS
XWHZITHJNN
OQDSLRZFCW
KOMBQQVAGT
FAGIBOZZAX
MECUIFYKYB
UGURYVFHAT
IICZSFMUTC
JPPHXNXSEW
TSUTJMVCNI

...your output should be 17. This is the rectilinear distance between the S on the top right corner and the S on the bottom row.

Rules

This is code golf; shortest code in bytes wins. Standard loopholes disallowed.

Formatting

  • Input via standard input, ordered collections (list/array/etc) of strings, or two dimensional array/list/etc of characters is allowed.
  • Output via return value, exit code, or standard output is allowed.

Input guarantees

(If the input doesn't comply with these, you don't have to handle it)

  • The input is a rectangular grid.
  • Every position on the grid is an upper case letter.
  • The grid will be at least 2 characters wide.
  • The grid will be at least 2 characters tall.
  • The grid will be no wider than 98 characters.
  • The grid will be no taller than 98 characters.

Output restriction

  • Your output should be a single non-negative number indicating the request value.

Test Cases

IXHNBFJFQLQGKEWVCXCX
DVBRMDCGENVDYWDJLADY
FPMTNQHOFPPURUMZXPEJ
ZLOIFSYPKLXFOYOIKUMJ
LKZOSZWWKLWLFZBQQLYJ
-> 19

ABCDEFG
HIJKLMN
OPQRSTU
-> 0

DSMPAHNP
JUWYNWOE
AIUOCIPY
MHODAXVG
NFETRIWH
YDQYVLZL
LDTZBYER
JEXPFRDR
-> 13

ZYXWVUTSRQPO
TSRQPOZYXWVU
NMLKGIHGFEDC
HGFEDCNMLKGI
-> 7

QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ
QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ
QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ
QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ
QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ
QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ
QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ
QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ
QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ
QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ
QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ
QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQ
-> 40

\$\endgroup\$
2
\$\begingroup\$

Animate the text in your terminal

The goal

The goal is to "animate" the string "Hello world" in your output so that each character gets capitalised after each other.

Your program can exit after each letter has been capitalised.

For example;

# Iteration 1
Hello world

# Iteration 2
hEllo world

# Iteration 3
heLlo world

# Iteration 4
helLo world

# Iteration 5
hellO world

# Iteration 5
hello world

# Iteration 6
hello World

# Iteration 7
hello wOrld

# Iteration 8
hello woRld

# Iteration 9
hello worLd

# Iteration 10
hello worlD

Input

No input is required, but "Hello world" must be the string that is "animated".

Output

The string "Hello world" must be animated. The output must be as 1 line to create a sort of wave animation. Example gif;

https://i.gyazo.com/be12b693063b463540c5bf1f03d2454a.gif

I saw this on a metasploit youtube video and thought the effect was pretty cool, which is where I recorded the gif from, so it's a little laggy, but I hope it illustrates the output fine

This is code-golf, lowest byte-count will be deemed the winner.

\$\endgroup\$
1
  • \$\begingroup\$ I think that you should make it that you take input and animate that. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Jun 9, 2017 at 15:01
2
\$\begingroup\$

Packing Primes for Posterity

Introduction

You've calculated which of the first n numbers are prime, and want to save your achievement for all future generations. Unfortunately, you're broke, and want to minimize storage costs (you'll be paying them forever, after all.)

You need to determine the best way to pack all of the primes <=n and still be able to answer the question "is p prime?" in O(1) time.

Challenge

A submission to this challenge must include both a compress algorithm and an isPrime algorithm.

compress

Input: n -- the number that you have checked prime-hood through.

Output: Bytes to feed into your isPrime algorithm.

isPrime

Input: The output of your compression algorithm, and an integer i >= 0. i is guaranteed to be <= n.

Output: True if i is prime, otherwise False.

This algorithm must run in O(1).

The winner of this challenge is the (compression, isPrime) pair that is

  • Correct
  • Has the best compression ratio, as determined by the average compression ratio for

    n in {10^3, 10^4, 10^5, 10^6, 10^7, 10^8, 10^9}

as compared to the naive solution below.

Consider the following solution in Python:

def compress(n):
    # simple sieve of Eratosthenes. Note: this is not a 
    # prime generation challenge; a list of the first 
    # billion numbers will be provided in this format.
    primes = [1] * (n + 1)
    primes[0] = 0
    primes[1] = 0
    upper_bound = int(math.sqrt(n)) + 1
    for i in range(2, upper_bound):
        factor = i
        if not primes[factor]:
            continue
        factor += i
        while factor <= n:
            primes[factor] = 0
            factor += i
    primePackStr = ''.join(str(i) for i in primes)
    return primePackStr

def isPrime(compressed, i):
    return compressed[i] == '1'

Example Input and Output

Input to compress:

20

Output:

"001101010001010001010"

Input to isPrime:

("001101010001010001010", 13)

Output:

True

Notes

  • This is not a prime generation challenge. The compress executable can assume that there is a file called primes.txt in the same directory that contains the first billion numbers in the format s[i] = 1 if i is prime, 0 otherwise. (Zero-indexed)
  • Naturally, the isPrime executable cannot make use of this file.
  • The isPrime executable must not hardcode any primes.
  • Please provide instructions on how to compile/run your code on either OSX 10.12 or Ubuntu 16.04, if it's not obvious.
  • This is not a code golf challenge. Any length of code is fine, as long as isPrime doesn't attempt to cheat.

Notes for sandbox

  • I'll include a link to a downloadable primes.txt
  • Any thoughts on a better restriction than "The isPrime executable must not hardcode any primes?"
  • Should I test on random values of n instead?
  • thanks!
\$\endgroup\$
8
  • 1
    \$\begingroup\$ This is an interesting idea, and I hope it can be made to work, but it does have a big problem in the subtlety of what you mean by saying that isPrime must run in O(1) time. Interpreted with maximum pedantry, it's impossible because O(1) time isn't sufficient to read i from the input, even assuming random access to the input (which some key models of computation don't, and many interpreters won't give you). \$\endgroup\$ Commented Mar 8, 2017 at 9:12
  • \$\begingroup\$ If you instead restrict answers to accessing a fixed (independent of n and of the length of the compressed text) number of bytes of the compressed text and doing a fixed (independent of n and i) amount of processing on them, you're pretty much killing the challenge because the only feasible compression will be bit-packing with a wheel and the competition will just be how big to make the wheel. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Mar 8, 2017 at 9:12
  • \$\begingroup\$ In particular, a wheel size of 10^9 would trivialise the challenge. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Mar 8, 2017 at 12:38
  • \$\begingroup\$ As far as your first comment goes, I could clarify to say that isPrime can assume that the entire output of compress is already in memory - or that isPrime may be called many times, with different i but the same compressed and it only has to be amortized O(1). Unfortunately, you're totally right about the prime wheel - though the idea is that the algorithm would work for arbitrary values of n, not just up to 10^9. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Mar 8, 2017 at 14:34
  • \$\begingroup\$ Maybe I could entirely remove the isPrime in O(1) restriction and simply make this a challenge about the most efficient compression algorithm for prime numbers. (Allowing arbitrary compression.) @PeterTaylor \$\endgroup\$ Commented Mar 8, 2017 at 14:34
  • \$\begingroup\$ If you do that then everyone will compress the list to 0 bytes unless you fix the decompression. A variant which might work is to ditch isPrime and say that the output of compress will be passed through zcat | sort -n so that the challenge is finding a good ordering of the primes which exploits Lempel-Ziv behaviour. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Mar 8, 2017 at 14:45
  • \$\begingroup\$ That might be interesting, though I'd need to add some sort of polynomial time restriction - you could theoretically test all O((n/(log n))!) orderings of primes <= n otherwise. I'm going to abandon this for now, but may come back eventually if I have an epiphany. Thanks for your help! \$\endgroup\$ Commented Mar 8, 2017 at 14:56
  • \$\begingroup\$ This is a really interesting idea, and I hope you can come up with a way to make it work successfully. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Mar 8, 2017 at 21:00
2
\$\begingroup\$

Challenge about loudly interjecting in a courtroom

One of the most important things about being a courtroom lawyer is loudly interjecting before you make your point. In this challenge, we're going to edit a typical courtroom transcript to include these interjections.

Any lawyer (and in fact, any character at all in the transcript), uses these rules to interject:

  1. Use an interjection when the character who is speaking changes to you.

Take the following example:

SAHWIT: I remember the time I found the body exactly.
SAHWIT: It was 1 P.M.
PHOENIX: Frankly, I find that hard to believe!
PHOENIX: Your statement directly contradicts the autopsy report.

There is one change in speaker, so an interjection will be added in at that point like this:

SAHWIT: I remember the time I found the body exactly.
SAHWIT: It was 1 P.M.
PHOENIX: Hold it! Frankly, I find that hard to believe!
PHOENIX: Your statement directly contradicts the autopsy report.
  1. Use Hold it! if the previous statement ends with a single full-stop or exclamation mark, Take that! if the previous statement ends with an elipses (...), and Objection! if the previous statement ends with a question mark.

For instance:

JUDGE: What evidence proves the clock is running slow?
PHOENIX: The victim had just returned from abroad the day before the murder.
PHOENIX: The time difference between here and Paris is 9 hours!
PAYNE: But modern day clocks automatically adjust for time zones...
PHOENIX: This is an antique!

Becomes:

JUDGE: What evidence proves the clock is running slow?
PHOENIX: Objection! The victim had just returned from abroad the day before the murder.
PHOENIX: The time difference between here and Paris is 9 hours!
PAYNE: Hold it! But modern day clocks automatically adjust for time zones...
PHOENIX: Take that! This is an antique!

That's about it. I'll write some longer test cases a bit later. This challenge is probably Retina-bait to be honest.

\$\endgroup\$
1
  • \$\begingroup\$ This challenge might work better if the interjections made more sense in context. For example, "Objection!" likely works best after questions (as most objections in an actual court case are to try to invalidate a question that fails to follow the rules). \$\endgroup\$
    – user62131
    Commented Mar 14, 2017 at 4:35
2
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Normal quine, weird quine

Note: This Sandbox entry has a fairly long history, and is basically an attempt to produce a challenge inspired by this comment, but that's immune to wilful misinterpretation (or misunderstanding) of what counts as an error in order to trivialise the question.

Background

In the world of programming languages, there are lots of different ways to produce output on the usual output streams. Most languages have a way to print a string intentionally, called print, write, or something like that. Sometimes you can even just leave a value to be printed implicitly. Most languages also have situations in which the implementation interjects with its own output, e.g. warnings produced during the compile. We'll call this weird output.

Task

For each method of output to standard output or standard error in a programming language, consider how much of that output is under the programmer's control and thus can contain arbitrary text (e.g. specified as a parameter, part of the program's filename, taken from a variable that can be assigned to, or the like), as opposed to being a single possibility (or a finite set of possibilities) hardcoded into the interpreter. We'll call this output method normal if no more than 3 bytes are outside the programmer's control; and weird if there are 4 or more hardcoded bytes that the programmer cannot control.

In this challenge, you need to write a full program that's a variant, obeying the proper quine rules. Specifically, after performing the entire process of building and running the program (i.e. if there's a separate compile step required, its output counts too):

  • All the output produced on standard output and standard error via normal output methods must be identical to the program's source code;
  • All the output produced on standard output and standard error via weird output methods must also, separately, be identical to the program's source code.

In other words, the program is a quine in two different ways. You can think of this as being a quine that's also an error quine (also known as a "Kimian quine"), except that the notion of "error" is restricted in order to avoid abuse (mechanisms which would let the program provide an arbitrary "error message" count as normal output, not weird output, on the above definition), but generalized to allow things like warnings, banners that the implementation prints as it loads, and other weird ways to produce output.

Clarifications

  • For the purpose of the proper quine definition, the fixed part of the output that's inherent in a weird output method is considered to not be encoded by the corresponding part of the program (even if that part of the program causes an error). As such, only the normal part of the quine can fail to be a proper quine.
  • PPCG doesn't normally count output that's inherent to an implementation (such as compiler progress messages and fixed banners). This challenge is about handling that sort of thing, though, so such output is definitely relevant here (in addition to everything else on the standard output and error streams).
  • Unlike in many challenges, the switches given to the compiler, and the program filename, are likely to be highly relevant in this challenge. Using an unusual build configuration may well be required to make the challenge possible, and as such is legal here; however, if you run the implementation in an unusual way, remember that PPCG rules charge a byte penalty for doing so (equal to the number of additional characters that you'd need to add on the command line over the shortest "normal" way to run a program), and thus you'll need to specify the size of the penalty in your post. (For example, if the interpreter you're using reads the program from a file, and has no particular restrictions on the filename, the shortest normal way to run the program would be from a file with a 1-character filename; thus, if you need a 100-character filename to make your program work, you'd incur a byte penalty of +99.)
  • The compiler/interpreter version you use may well be relevant, so as part of your submission, please state a specific compiler or interpreter on which your program works, and which version is required. (For example, a C submission might state "C (gcc 6.2.0)" in the header.)
  • Note that this task may not be possible in all languages. In the languages where it is, the easiest method will likely be to find an error or warning message for which it's possible to customize some subset of the text (via changing the name of something that gets quoted in the message; filenames are a common choice here, but not the only one). Obviously, if you could customize the entire thing, it wouldn't be weird output and thus wouldn't work. I'll be particularly impressed (and surprised) if someone finds a way to do this using only error and warning messages whose text is entirely fixed.

Victory condition

This is a challenge, so an entry is considered to be better if it has a smaller byte count. As such, once you've got your program working at all, you want to optimize it to bring the number of bytes down as far as possible. (However, don't be discouraged if there's already a shorter entry, especially if it's in a different language; what we're really looking for here is to shorten a particular algorithm or idea behind a program as much as possible, but seeing multiple solutions in different languages or that rely on different principles is always worthwhile.)

Sandbox questions

This was moved here from main because many answerers seemed to disagree with everyone else as to what an error message was.

I've aimed to avoid the problem in this rewrite by focusing not on what is and isn't an error message, but rather on the amount of hardcoded content in the message. Is this likely to be interpreted the same way by everyone? Is it objective?

Also, should I edit the original challenge, or should I post it as a new challenge? Out of the two non-deleted answers, one will stay valid (although the explanation will end up somewhat out of context), the other will need to be deleted (although I consider it to be invalid under the original specification too, and thus arguably no changes are being made to which answers are correct).

\$\endgroup\$
0
2
\$\begingroup\$

Garbled Phone Numbers

(de)

You know how you get a voicemail message and the person's connection wasn't great, and you're trying to figure out how to call them back, but you're not sure if that was a "5" or an "8" they said?

That's this challenge.

The good news is that the caller read off their number twice, but it's garbled in both places.

Your program should take input like this:

5551231234 / 5551231234

Where the first seven digits are the first time the phone number is said in the voice mail and the second set are the second time it's said. Only...it'll look more like this:

555?AAA1_36? / 55?522_1?234

A digit followed by a question mark means that that's the best-guess for that digit (e.g. "5?" means "probably a 5, compare with repeat"). An underscore indicates a known missing digit, something too fuzzed by static to be deciphered at all. Letters are just that: letters. Treat them as their respective digits (ABC -> 2, DEF ->3, HIJ -> 4, etc).

You can safely assume the following judgement calls:

5? / _     -> 5  //5 is the best guess we have, use it
5? / 4?    -> ?  //conflict
 5 / 4     -> ?  //conflict
5? / 4     -> 4  //solid information overrides possible value
 5 / 4?    -> 5  //solid information overrides possible value
 _ / _     -> ?  //no information available

Additionally you can assume that all inputs will contain ten-digit phone numbers, not including the question marks. Inputs that aren't ten digits (e.g. 1234567 / 1234567) can either be treated as unsolvable (falsey output) or throw an error.

Output option A: Output a truthy value indicating whether or not a given input can be resolved to a single valid ten-digit phone number.

Output option B: If it can be parsed to a single valid ten-digit phone number, output the phone number. Otherwise output some form of error indication (e.g. -1, false, empty line).

Shortest wins, as per usual.

[Sample inputs]

\$\endgroup\$
7
  • \$\begingroup\$ I'm not sure what your intended meaning for letters is. If it's just A=1,B=2,C=3... then they're a bit pointless and weird in this context. You should also probably choose only one between option A and option B before posting (I vote for B). \$\endgroup\$
    – Leo
    Commented Apr 9, 2017 at 16:39
  • \$\begingroup\$ @Leo Letters as they appear on a dial pad: A,B,C = 1, DEF = 2, GHI = 3, etc. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Apr 9, 2017 at 21:05
  • 2
    \$\begingroup\$ You need an explicit mapping for letter→number. Most phones I've seen map A/B/C to 2 (apparently they follow this international standard). \$\endgroup\$
    – user62131
    Commented Apr 9, 2017 at 22:07
  • \$\begingroup\$ @ais523 Whoops, that's what I get for posting late at night just before bed, then making the comment gia tablet at a rest stop somewhere in western Pennsylvania, 6 hours from home. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Apr 10, 2017 at 4:43
  • \$\begingroup\$ I think you should omit 'output option A' and just keep B; B includes A pretty much. \$\endgroup\$
    – 0xffcourse
    Commented Apr 10, 2017 at 9:36
  • \$\begingroup\$ @officialaimm I think that's the beret idea, yes. There were a mess of ideas running around in my head, such as scoring based on a given input list, but never congealed well enough to make it to paper. A and B were the only two that did. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Apr 10, 2017 at 12:18
  • \$\begingroup\$ Any other comments before I start generating some inputs and posting it? \$\endgroup\$ Commented Apr 17, 2017 at 19:46
2
\$\begingroup\$

Write a "21" game in exactly 21 characters

Challenge

You must write a program which implements the following algorithm:

Let x = 0
Let y = truthy value
while (y is not falsy AND x <= 21) do:
  Let x = x + a uniform random number from {1,2,3,...,11}
  Output the value of x
  Input a value of y from the user (you may assume input is valid)
Output the value of x

(You do not have to follow the pseudocode exactly. For example, if your language happens to initialise variables to a truthy value automatically, you don't have to include the y:=TRUE line. Similarly, you don't have to use a while loop. The important thing is that it repeatedly takes user input until either x exceeds 21 or the user chooses to stop, and it outputs the current value of x after each user input.)

Score

Let n be the length of the shortest program which meets the spec which can be obtained by deleting 0 or more characters from your code. Then your score is:

- 500            if n > 21
- 1 + (n-21)^2   if n < 21

The winner in each language is the program with the lowest score.

Questions

  • Is this a resonable idea? I can't find similar challenges, so maybe there is a problem with ones like this? (Trivial solutions etc.)
  • Is the specification too complicated (maybe more languages could enter if it was a simpler algorithm, for example just taking user input once?)
\$\endgroup\$
1
  • \$\begingroup\$ This victory condition is code-shuffleboard. I don't think it adds much over just doing golf, though; it's normally fairly easy to pad out a program in a way that can't be fooled via simple character deletion. (Also, I suspect 21 characters isn't enough in most languages, although golfing languages should be able to beat that; it'll be interesting to see whether some of the terser practical languages can.) \$\endgroup\$
    – user62131
    Commented Apr 11, 2017 at 12:31
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