Hammerheart

joined 2 years ago
[–] Hammerheart@programming.dev 2 points 10 months ago (2 children)

I think the default mod key is the 'super' key (formerly known as the windows key). It might be alt actually, I don't remember. Super + 1-9 switches between workspaces, which hold your windows. Shift + super + 1-9 moves a window to another workspace. you can find more key bindings by viewing $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/sway/config (or wherever config files go on your system).

[–] Hammerheart@programming.dev 6 points 10 months ago

I think those are more interesting. I like seeing the process.

[–] Hammerheart@programming.dev 9 points 10 months ago

That's kindeof poetic tbh

[–] Hammerheart@programming.dev 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Python

(Part 1) omg I can't believe this actually worked first try!

with open('input') as data:
    parts = data.read().rstrip().split("\n\n")
    ordering_rules = parts[0].split("\n")
    updates = parts[1].split("\n")

correct_updates = []
middle_updates = []

def find_relevant_rules(pg_num: str, rules: list[str]) -> list[str] | None:
    for rule in rules:
        return list(filter(lambda x: x.split("|")[0] == pg_num, rules))

def interpret_rule(rule: str) -> list[str]:
    return rule.split("|")

def interpret_update(update: str) -> list[str]:
    return update.split(",")

def find_middle_update_index(update: list[str]) -> int:
    num_of_elements = len(update)
    return num_of_elements // 2

for update in updates:
    is_correct = True
    for i, page in enumerate(interpret_update(update)):
       rules_to_check = find_relevant_rules(page, ordering_rules) 
       for rule in rules_to_check:
           if rule.split("|")[1] in interpret_update(update)[:i]:
               is_correct = False
    if is_correct:
        correct_updates.append(update)

for update in correct_updates:
    split_update = update.split(",")
    middle_updates.append(int(split_update[find_middle_update_index(split_update)]))
print(sum(middle_updates))
[–] Hammerheart@programming.dev 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Part 1:

with open('input') as data:
    lines = [l.strip() for l in data.readlines()]
# Remove empty line
class Result():
    def __init__(self):
        self.count = 0


def analyze_lines(lines: list[str]):
    ans.count += get_rights(lines)
    ans.count += get_ups(lines)
    ans.count += get_downs(lines)
    ans.count += get_down_rights(lines)
    ans.count += get_down_lefts(lines)
    ans.count += get_up_lefts(lines)
    ans.count += get_up_rights(lines)
    for line in lines:
        ans.count += get_lefts(line)




def get_ups(lines: list[str]) -> int:
    up_count = 0
    for i_l, line in enumerate(lines):
        result = ""
        if i_l < 3:
            continue
        for i_c, char in enumerate(line):
            if char == "X":
                result = char
                result += "".join([lines[i_l - n][i_c] for n in range(1, 4)])
                if result == "XMAS":
                    up_count += 1
                else:
                    result = ""
    return up_count


def get_downs(lines: list[str]) -> int:
    down_count = 0
    for i_l, l in enumerate(lines):
        result = ""
        for i_c, c in enumerate(l):
            if c == "X":
                result += c
                try:
                    result += "".join([lines[i_l + n][i_c] for n in range(1, 4)])
                except IndexError:
                    result = ""
                    continue
                finally:
                    if result == "XMAS":
                        down_count += 1
                    result = ""
    return down_count


        
def get_lefts(line: str) -> int:
    left_count = 0
    for i, char in enumerate(line):
        if i < 3:
            continue
        elif char == "X" and line[i-1] == "M" and line[i-2] == "A" and line[i-3] == "S":
            left_count += 1
    return left_count


def get_rights(lines: list[str]) -> int:
    right_counts = 0
    for l in lines:
        right_counts += l.count("XMAS")
    return right_counts

def get_down_rights(lines: list[str]) -> int:
    down_right_count = 0
    for i_l, l in enumerate(lines):
        result = ""
        for i_c, c in enumerate(l):
            if c == "X":
                result += c
                try:
                    result += "".join(
                            [lines[i_l + n][i_c + n] for n in range(1,4)]
                            )
                except IndexError:
                    result = ""
                    continue
                finally:
                    if result == "XMAS":
                        down_right_count += 1
                    result = ""
    return down_right_count

def get_down_lefts(lines: list[str]) -> int:
    down_left_count = 0
    for i_l, l in enumerate(lines):
        result = ""
        for i_c, c in enumerate(l):
            if i_c < 3:
                continue
            if c == "X":
                result += c
                try:
                    result += "".join(
                            [lines[i_l + n][i_c - n] for n in range(1,4)]
                            )
                except IndexError:
                    result = ""
                    continue
                finally:
                    if result == "XMAS":
                        down_left_count += 1
                    result = ""
    return down_left_count

def get_up_rights(lines: list[str]) -> int:
    up_right_count = 0
    for i_l, l in enumerate(lines):
        result = ""
        if i_l < 3:
            continue
        for i_c, c in enumerate(l):
            if c == "X":
                result += c
                try:
                    result += "".join(
                            [lines[i_l - n][i_c + n] for n in range(1,4)]
                            )
                except IndexError:
                    result = ""
                    continue
                finally:
                    if result == "XMAS":
                        up_right_count += 1
                    result = ""
    return up_right_count


def get_up_lefts(lines: list[str]) -> int:
    up_left_count = 0
    for i_l, l in enumerate(lines):
        result = ""
        if i_l < 3:
            continue
        for i_c, c in enumerate(l):
            if i_c < 3:
                continue
            if c == "X":
                result = c
                try:
                    result += "".join(
                            [lines[i_l - n][i_c - n] for n in range(1,4)]
                            )
                except IndexError as e:
                    result = ""
                    continue
                finally:
                    if result == "XMAS":
                        up_left_count += 1
                    result = ""
    return up_left_count

ans = Result()
analyze_lines(lines)
print(ans.count)

Part 2:

with open('input') as data:
    lines = list(filter(lambda x: x != '', [l.strip() for l in data.readlines()]))
    
xmases = 0
for i in range(1, len(lines)):
    for j in range(1, len(lines[i])):
        if lines[i][j] == "A":
            try:
                up_back = lines[i-1][j-1]
                down_over = lines[i+1][j+1]
                up_over = lines[i-1][j+1]
                down_back = lines[i+1][j-1]
            except IndexError:
                continue
            else:
                if {up_back, down_over} == set("MS") and {up_over, down_back} == set("MS"):
                    xmases += 1

print(xmases)

I actually found part two A LOT easier than part 1.

[–] Hammerheart@programming.dev 2 points 1 year ago

I needed to read this. Thank you.

[–] Hammerheart@programming.dev 1 points 1 year ago

My first insinct was similar, add line breaks to the do and dont modifiers. But I got toa caught up thinking id have to keep track of the added characters, I wound up just abusing split()-

[–] Hammerheart@programming.dev 1 points 1 year ago

I did part 2 live with the python interactive shell. I deleted all the stuff where I was just exploring ideas.

part 1:

import re

def multiply_and_add(data: "str") -> int:
    digit_matches = re.findall(r"mul\(\d{0,3},\d{0,3}\)", data)
    result = 0
    for _ in digit_matches:
        first = _.split("(")[1].split(")")[0].split(",")[0]
        second = _.split("(")[1].split(")")[0].split(",")[1]
        result += int(first) * int(second)

    return result

with open("input") as file:
    data = file.read()


answer = multiply_and_add(data)
print(answer)

part 2:

Python 3.11.2 (main, Aug 26 2024, 07:20:54) [GCC 12.2.0] on linux
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> import solution2
<re.Match object; span=(647, 651), match='do()'>
>>> from solution2 import *
>>> split_on_dont = data.split("don't()")
>>> valid = []
>>> valid.append(split_on_dont[0])
>>> for substring in split_on_dont[1:]:
...     subsubstrings = substring.split("do()", maxsplit=1)
...     for subsubstring in subsubstrings[1:]:
...             valid.append(subsubstring)
...
>>> answer = 0
>>> for _ in valid:
...     answer += multiply_and_add(_)
...
>>> answer
103811193
[–] Hammerheart@programming.dev 1 points 1 year ago

this took me so fucking long and in the end i just went for brute force anyway. there are still remnants of some of previous, overly complicated, failed attempts, like the hideous global removed. In the end, I realized I was fucking up by using remove() instead of pop(), it was causing cases with duplicates where the removal of one would yield a safe result to count as unsafe.

[–] Hammerheart@programming.dev 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)
def is_safe(report: list[int]) -> bool:
    global removed
    acceptable_range = [_ for _ in range(-3,4) if _ != 0]
    diffs = []
    if any([report.count(x) > 2 for x in report]):
        return False
    for i, num in enumerate(report[:-1]):
        cur = num
        next = report[i+1]
        difference = cur - next
        diffs.append(difference)
        if difference not in acceptable_range:
            return False
        if len(diffs) > 1:
            if diffs[-1] * diffs[-2] <= 0:
                return False
    return True

with open('input') as reports:
    list_of_reports = reports.readlines()[:-1]


count = 0

failed_first_pass = []
failed_twice = []

for reportsub in list_of_reports:
    levels = [int(l) for l in reportsub.split()]
    original = levels.copy()
    if is_safe(levels):
        safe = True
        count += 1
    else:
        failed_first_pass.append(levels)

for report in failed_first_pass:
    print(report)
    working_copy = report.copy()
    for i in range(len(report)):
        safe = False
        working_copy.pop(i)
        print("checking", working_copy)
        if is_safe(working_copy):
            count += 1
            safe = True
            break
        else:
            working_copy = report.copy()

print(count)
[–] Hammerheart@programming.dev 2 points 1 year ago

I like that, might try it myself, since I actually use those keys, but never wanted to jump to the highest or lowest visible line. Closest I get is gg and G.

[–] Hammerheart@programming.dev 2 points 1 year ago

The wire mad men

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