Here is my approach. I originally only had one for loop, and did something like pos += heading * distance, but then I could only get doubly-visited points if you happened to stop and change direction at those points
I'm proud enough not to let that happen, giving up I mean. Last year I came in second twice, so I'd like to gun as quickly (maybe top five) at least once, to prove age hasn't entirely rotted my brain yet.
Towards the end I felt like I was playing a game of "try to find the obscure math fact that you can use to have an O(N^2) solution instead of an O(N!) one"
Like, there was one that you could solve in constant time if and only if you already knew what Langton's Ant was
@wim Problems are collaborative for the most part, although individually we come up with the proposals and our initial attempts. Would be somewhat long to list them all here, but the ones I am most proud of are Drunken Tower of Hanoi, Counting Castles, and Roundtable Lottery
@Kevin It's not for everyone -- but that's built in (to some extent) to the intended process. The intention is that you come up against a wall, do some research, possibly learn something cool / new, and use it to help solve the problem more efficiently.
@MarcusS I get where you're coming from. I hope I'm not coming across as too critical here. I wouldn't have stuck with it for as long as I did if I didn't really enjoy it.
Most programs I write start and end under my direct supervision in the space of a few minutes at most, so any errors that occur, I can just read the stack trace straight off the screen
I know lots about logging, but I might not want to get involved until I know your actual problem. Others may feel the same and might not want to speak up until they know what it entails, lest they be dragged in.
We have people latch onto the first people that replies to them, so we always just ask that people state their problem and allow people to help if they want to.
I don't know anything about logging but if your question is something like "how come I keep getting a syntax error on this line: logger.log("an error occurred"))" I might be able to answer it anyway
So there's value in asking even in the absence of self-proclaimed logging experts
... OTOH most questions are not about unbalanced parentheses, so temper your expectations
Are you referring to the behavior as described here: https://docs.python.org/2.6/library/logging.html
Logger.exception() creates a log message similar to Logger.error(). The difference is that Logger.exception() dumps a stack trace along with it. Call this method only from an exception handler.
can someone help me understand what "async_method" is within this docstring for tornado? is this a python keyword function? I can't find any documentation on it and it's the only example I can find for tornado doing what I want to do - github.com/tornadoweb/tornado/blob/…
@wim I do not have any control over that, no -- but I know that Euler (the person who runs the site) is always open to suggestions in the forum: projecteuler.chat/viewforum.php?f=5
@enderland this is only a guess, but I think a decorated async function within tornado allows yoto specify the ioloop and callback-- so that sets it up to run that single function and immediately exit the loop. But it's been a while since I've done tornado
@WayneWerner lol..... for some reason atm i can't think of a better solution than using a forloop to exhaust a generator, to sum the numbers that the generator returns... i think i need a nap
@MooingRawr I normally write up a really complicated SO problem with a really detailed MVCE and then find the solution to my problem about 3 seconds before hitting submit
@wim nah it's more frustrating when you painstakingly put effort into writing up the perfect question with MVCE and everything, only to realize you are an idiot
import turtle
SCALE=1
directions = 'L1, R3'.split(', ')
t = turtle.Turtle()
t.left(90)
for d in directions:
if d[0] == 'L':
t.left(90)
elif d[0] == 'R':
t.right(90)
dist = int(d[1:])*SCALE
t.forward(dist)
print(sum(int(round(abs(x))) for x in t.pos()))
turtle.done()
(change your directions, though. And scale isn't actually necessary)
That's actually less LOC than my non-turtle-y solution
.. is it weird to admit I think a Martijn-avatar-shaped-plushie would be kind of cool? It could sit on my desk and watch over my coding. Instead of talking to a duck I could talk to a ninja!
(This came up obliquely in conversation earlier, Martijn, which is why I was thinking of it. :-)
t = turtle.Turtle()
t.speed(50)
t.left(90)
places_ive_been = set()
def go_to_crossover(directions):
for d in directions:
if d[0] == 'L':
t.left(90)
elif d[0] == 'R':
t.right(90)
dist = int(d[1:])*SCALE
for _ in range(dist):
t.forward(1)
pos = tuple(round(point) for point in t.pos())
if pos in places_ive_been:
return pos
places_ive_been.add(pos)
print(sum(abs(x) for x in go_to_crossover(directions)))
I actually was really curious what the path looked like. I was going to try drawing an ASCII maze, but then I'd have to start shifting the origin and that sounded terrible
Last year I tried to guess at what day 25 would be, and I thought it might have something to do with the main page picture, so I wrote some utilities to parse it. Was fun, but turned out not to be useful. :-/
I had actually wrote something in my algorithms class that created a beautiful ASCII tree
Unfortunately for a sparse tree, there was tons of wasted space, because I didn't have a sane way ahead of time to figure how much would be blank
I tried to write something that would iterate over all the rows of text looking for ' ' or '_' and just removing those columns... but that didn't actually work.
Hey there guys I was looking for a recommendation on how to use python to plot a line of best fit that is a 3rd order polynomial and then becomes linear at a certain point attached is an image of the data that I am trying to fit tinypic.com/r/2076kwk/9
Ive been playing with polyfit and thats what generates the black line on the graph however I can't fix points that it must go for e.g. define a point that it ends so that from there on I can just use a linear region
Thats what I want to do however with poly fit I have no way of defining where the line ends, I can obviously tell it don't consider points after a certain value which is what I have done however the tail of the polynomial is still below the start of the linear region and so I can't just continue with a linear line from there
I did try a couple of methods that I found on stack for fixing data points that a polynomial must pass through such as Lagrange Multipliers but haven't succeeded getting them working for my data only in trail cases
Pretty sure it gets caught as a violation during the creation of the AST; best guess is because [] is allowed for grouping in assignment statements, but I'm lost for ().
You are not comparing for equality. You are assigning.
Python allows you to assign to multiple targets:
foo, bar = 1, 2
assigns the two values to foo and bar, respectively. All you need is a sequence or iterable on the right-hand side, and a list or tuple of names on the left.
When you do:
...
But...is it not weird to have an Application class that is sort of your program? With an infinite loop, sort of? But then you keep calling a function in that class?
For an infinite loop, sure, that's weird. An application class on its own? Nah.
I think their mental model is a bit closer to CSP / goroutines in how they want to do this. As in, it represents a "stream" constantly spitting out values. Maybe they could be pushed towards coroutines