I'm not the same person. Names look similar, coincidentally.
So if anyone checked out the combinatorics problem, a brute-force method of implementing the solution is to use the example of N = 3 as kind of a base case, then do a near-permutation of all N marbles (we filter out the permutations which don't satisfy the requirement that every marble taken be adjacent to one taken before.
I didn't install and begin coding Python (NumPy, SciPy) until yesterday, which happen to be unavailable libraries to import, but documentation on python.org says to look at the itertools module maybe.
The questions I would ask, as a Python newb, would probably result in downvotes, that's how it is, so I'm staying off the forums, and using my "faker" accounts for now
or figure it out yourself! Don'r waste so much time writing. That's why I'm going to look over some more documentation and go figure this out myself. It's been fun :)
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@JRichardSnape reminds me of a mate that used to clean up a bit before the cleaner arrived because he didn't want them to think he was too unclean/tidy
five showups. Nice. OK, so why do I remember that importing a subpackage doesn't give you access to the containing package, when I just demonstrated that it does in both 2.7 and 3.4. Is that not the case with 2.6?
>>> import logging.handlers
>>> logging.info
<function info at 0x7f389d941378>