master-blaster
Matthew Butterick 9 years ago
parent 8975267073
commit 294acdea40

@ -19,3 +19,4 @@
@include-section[(submod "day8.scrbl" doc)]
@include-section[(submod "day9.scrbl" doc)]
@include-section[(submod "day10.scrbl" doc)]
@include-section[(submod "day11.scrbl" doc)]

@ -0,0 +1 @@
hxbxwxba

@ -0,0 +1,99 @@
#lang scribble/lp2
@(require scribble/manual aoc-racket/helper)
@aoc-title[11]
@link["http://adventofcode.com/day/1q"]{The puzzle}. Our @link-rp["day11-input.txt"]{input} is a short alphabetic key that represents a password.
@chunk[<day11>
<day11-setup>
<day11-q1>
<day11-q2>
<day11-test>]
@section{What's the next password that meets the criteria?}
Though the password is alphabetic, we can increment it as we would a numerical password, by changing the rightmost letter to the next letter (for instance @litchar{x} to @litchar{y}, @litchar{y} to @litchar{z}). When we reach @litchar{z}, we roll over to @litchar{a}, and ``carry over'' the surplus by incrementing the letter to the left.
Furthermore, like @secref{Day_5}, the puzzle provides certain criteria that must be met:
@itemlist[
@item{The password must have a sequence of three consecutive letters (like @litchar{bcd}).}
@item{The password may not contain @litchar{i}, @litchar{o}, or @litchar{l}.}
@item{The password must contain two different, non-overlapping pairs of letters.}
]
As in @secref{Day_5}, we'll use @racket[regexp-match] to implement tests for these conditions. We'll also use @racket[regexp-replace*] to build the function that increments a password alphabetically. Then it's a simple matter of looking at passwords until we find one that works.
The @racket[increment-password] function works by using the observation that if the password ends in any number of @litchar{z}s, you have to roll them over to @litchar{a} and increment the letter to the left. Otherwise, you can just increment the last letter — which is actually the same rule, but with zero @litchar{z}s. This logic can all be captured in one regular expression — @racket[#rx"^(.*?)(.)(z*)$"].
The @racket[three-consecutive-letters?] test works by converting the letters to numbers and creating a list of the differences betweeen adjacent values. Any three consecutive letters will differ by value of @racket[1]. So if the list of differences contains the subsequence @racket['(1 1)], then the string has three consecutive letters.
@chunk[<day11-setup>
(require racket rackunit)
(define (increment-password password)
(define (increment-letter c)
((compose1 ~a integer->char add1 char->integer car string->list) c))
(match-define (list _ prefix letter-to-increment trailing-zs)
(regexp-match #rx"^(.*?)(.)(z*)$" password))
(string-append* (list prefix (increment-letter letter-to-increment)
(regexp-replace* #rx"z" trailing-zs "a"))))
(define (three-consecutive-letters? str)
(define ints (map char->integer (string->list str)))
(let loop ([differences (map - (cdr ints) (drop-right ints 1))])
(if (empty? differences)
#f
(or (list-prefix? '(1 1) differences) (loop (cdr differences))))))
(define (no-iol? str)
(not (regexp-match #rx"[iol]" str)))
(define (two-nonoverlapping-doubles? str)
(regexp-match #px"(\\w)\\1.*?(\\w)\\2" str))
(define (valid? password)
(and (three-consecutive-letters? password)
(no-iol? password)
(two-nonoverlapping-doubles? password)))
(define (find-next-valid-password starting-password)
(define candidate-pw (increment-password starting-password))
(if (valid? candidate-pw)
candidate-pw
(find-next-valid-password candidate-pw)))
]
@chunk[<day11-q1>
(define (q1 input-key)
(find-next-valid-password input-key))]
@section{What's the next valid password after that?}
We take the answer to question 1 and use it as input to the same function.
@chunk[<day11-q2>
(define (q2 input-key)
(find-next-valid-password (q1 input-key))) ]
@section{Testing Day 10}
@chunk[<day11-test>
(module+ test
(define input-key (file->string "day11-input.txt"))
(check-equal? (q1 input-key) "hxbxxyzz")
(check-equal? (q2 input-key) "hxcaabcc"))]

@ -18,19 +18,21 @@ The first question we should ask is — how do we model a wire? We're told that
In other languages, creating functions from text strings would be a difficult trick. But this facility is built into Racket with @racket[define-syntax]. Essentially our program will run in two phases: in the syntax-transformation phase, we'll read in the list of wire descriptions and expand them into code that represents functions. In the second phase, the program — including our new functions, created via syntax transformation — will compile & run as usual.
The @racket[convert-input-to-wire-functions] syntax transformer takes the input strings and converts them into syntax that looks more like Racket code, so that a line like
The @racket[convert-input-to-wire-functions] transformer takes the input strings and first converts each into a @italic{datum} — that is, a fragment of Racket code. So an input string like this:
@racket["bn RSHIFT 2 -> bo"]
becomes
becomes a datum like this:
@racket[(wire bn RSHIFT 2 -> bo)]
Then the @racket[wire] transformer moves the arguments around to define functions, by matching the three definition patterns that appear in the input. Thus, syntax like
Next, this transformer converts the datums into @italic{syntax}, a process that adds contextual information (for instance, the meanings of identifiers) so the code can be evaluated.
Then the @racket[wire] transformer moves the arguments around to define functions, by matching the three definition patterns that appear in the input. Thus, syntax like this:
@racket[(wire bn RSHIFT 2 -> bo)]
becomes
becomes:
@racket[(define (bo) (RSHIFT (evaluate-arg bn) (evaluate-arg 2)))]