this post was submitted on 09 Dec 2023
21 points (95.7% liked)

Advent Of Code

770 readers
75 users here now

An unofficial home for the advent of code community on programming.dev!

Advent of Code is an annual Advent calendar of small programming puzzles for a variety of skill sets and skill levels that can be solved in any programming language you like.

AoC 2023

Solution Threads

M T W T F S S
1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25

Rules/Guidelines

Relevant Communities

Relevant Links

Credits

Icon base by Lorc under CC BY 3.0 with modifications to add a gradient

console.log('Hello World')

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 

Day 9: Mirage Maintenance

Megathread guidelines

  • Keep top level comments as only solutions, if you want to say something other than a solution put it in a new post. (replies to comments can be whatever)
  • Code block support is not fully rolled out yet but likely will be in the middle of the event. Try to share solutions as both code blocks and using something such as https://topaz.github.io/paste/ , pastebin, or github (code blocks to future proof it for when 0.19 comes out and since code blocks currently function in some apps and some instances as well if they are running a 0.19 beta)

FAQ


๐Ÿ”’ Thread is locked until there's at least 100 2 star entries on the global leaderboard

๐Ÿ”“ Unlocked after 5 mins

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[โ€“] pnutzh4x0r@lemmy.ndlug.org 3 points 11 months ago

Language: Python

Part 1

Pretty straightforward. Took advantage of itertools.pairwise.

def predict(history: list[int]) -> int:
    sequences = [history]
    while len(set(sequences[-1])) > 1:
        sequences.append([b - a for a, b in itertools.pairwise(sequences[-1])])
    return sum(sequence[-1] for sequence in sequences)

def main(stream=sys.stdin) -> None:
    histories   = [list(map(int, line.split())) for line in stream]
    predictions = [predict(history) for history in histories]
    print(sum(predictions))

Part 2

Only thing that changed from the first part was that I used functools.reduce to take the differences of the first elements of the generated sequences (rather than the sum of the last elements for Part 1).

def predict(history: list[int]) -> int:
    sequences = [history]
    while len(set(sequences[-1])) > 1:
        sequences.append([b - a for a, b in itertools.pairwise(sequences[-1])])
    return functools.reduce(
        lambda a, b: b - a, [sequence[0] for sequence in reversed(sequences)]
    )

def main(stream=sys.stdin) -> None:
    histories   = [list(map(int, line.split())) for line in stream]
    predictions = [predict(history) for history in histories]
    print(sum(predictions))

GitHub Repo