@holdenweb Would be interesting to see how many users have been active in the last say few months. And I'm sure the number of visitors is several folds greater than registered users. :)
@MartijnPieters Is my response to this comment basically correct? Do you have anything you'd like to add / subtract? :)
@PM2Ring aren't operators in Python just functions with alternative syntax? I wouldn't think that any modern language with good optimisation has an inevitable performance penalty in using function calls even over built-in operators – if the function is simple enough, it will be inlined anyway. — leftaroundabout22 hours ago
It pays to read program specs carefully, otherwise you can end up creating code that works perfectly but doesn't do what's actually wanted. That's a good way to attract downvotes on SO, and a good way to get people mad at you if you're employed as a coder. :) — PM 2Ring3 hours ago
Is there a name for a matrix whose values are all nonzero? A matrix with many zeroes is "sparse", a matrix with few zeroes is "dense", a matrix with no zeroes is...?
Part one felt to me like a test that you understood the problem description. If you can't find viable pairs, it's probably because you misread something.
May I humbly request that next year we create a separate AoC room? I don't mind the AoC discussions here, but they do tend to dominate the traffic. And it takes me much longer than usual to catch up on the transcripts.
As I said, I have no major objections to having the AoC stuff in here, and I realise that the majority of room regulars are participating in AoC. But I would prefer it if it were easier for me to ignore the AoC stuff. :)
@AnttiHaapala although I am a fan of gitlab (mostly because they dare to open source their server which could be hosted on your own) but I have to say, you are right, it is freakin' slow
@davidism I was not expecting anything, just playing around. But as I'm not highly familiar with the rules yet, I encountered this issue and I thought that I may have done something wrong
@corvid Programmers like making presentations with super outdated memes in order to demonstrate that they're hip & groovy, fellow kid.
@AndyK return some_object tells the interpreter to exit out of the function it's currently in, and to pass some_object back to the function's caller. The interpreter can't exit a function if it isn't currently inside a function.
it takes me roughtly 20 minutes to compile code, 10 to start the debugger >< i'm getting so use to triple checking simple errors... not enough funny anymore T>T on a side note it's snowing
so im reading david's day 19 part 2 solution, hes a rebel, he doesnt do it in the same order as the question, it's not wrong just a rebel ;3.....
So there's this bug in my project that's supposed to occur when WIDGET_CREATION_DATE is non-null and WIDGET_CREATION_EVENTID is null. I prepare data to try to replicate: I find a row with non null columns and set WIDGET_CREATION_EVENTID to null.
I navigate to the Widget Event Details page and view that widget. All of the event detail is still completely intact, even though the row no longer has any connection to the WIDGET_EVENTS table. I pause the program and examine the object and its WIDGET_CREATION_EVENTID is still the value it was before I made it null.
I check the database again. The EVENTID column is definitely 100% null. Maybe the value is cached? I stop Visual Studio. I close Visual Studio. I terminate IIS. I open Visual Studio. I re-run the program. All of the event detail is still completely intact.
I am beginning to regret promising that I'd have this story finished by 11:00
OP says they want a thing, but my answer which produces the output isn't correct, so...
if you can't understand my simple problem what i demonstrated, and look at your code which is creepy and the stuff which my code makes it works also doesn't suffice your code.. if you don't understand the problem better not to comment.. i have given the output i am getting from the script and expected output also. i have also commented what my second objective was.. if you are not able to understand please don't mislead and comment — kto3 hours ago
@WayneWerner i kinda got a bit triggered when someone says "if you don't understand the problem better not to comment" . . . . . . . how does OP expect us to understand his problem when he doesn't understand it, how can you be so entitled when you are seeking free help and advice from people you don't know. I understand sometimes answers are incorrect but no need to be rude...
Oh I remember that chat, didnt think it was actually a go go... i missed that link (github) would like to help anyway possible... cant wait to support it lol
@vaultah @MartijnPieters thanks ... For your inputs I got 1043 for part A and 185 for part B ... (actually the same answer for both). what was the correct result?
I got part way there with vanilla Python but I didn't get strong conclusions. I think I forgot to filter out the empty slot when deciding whether two slots would ever merge.
I'm going to refuse temptation to polish the code any more, it seems like an extremely difficult problem without relying on the canned data that AoC made for us
Yeah, if the node attributes are sufficiently variegated and high-range, it becomes a mess because you can start moving data around in various ways / orders, arriving at various totals here-and-there, and every single time this happens it's an entirely different state you have to maintain in memory -- and the "next move" may not be contiguous with the last, etc
It's not the first question where it could have been nightmarishly hard with only the change of one or two rules.
Which makes me suspect the author frequently started with "maybe it would be an interesting puzzle to do XYZ...", then discovered XYZ could only be solved in factorial time, then decided to add constraints until it was solvable by mortals
"Let's do a sliding block puzzle where blocks can glob together... On second thought, let's just do a sliding block puzzle"
He probably started off with "I wanna do a 15-puzzle AoC challenge" and tried to find a way to simplify it to a 1-puzzle and obscure it with this data-transfer stuff
Which is also a little frustrating in that it's yet another graph problem
Hey everyone, currently using a python script and some libraries to pull data, what would be the best method/library for me to use to plot this data to a geographic map?
anyone here got their CV (ideally PDF, not a cv-like website) available online? would like to get some ideas on formatting/styling mine nicely without looking at CV templates (since those aren't very original)
I'll need to update mine for the very same company I used the last one successfully - but this time it's for a higher position in my team which I'd really like to get so I want to make sure the CV lists only relevant skills (and not stuff I had on it before like a 1 week internship during high school..), looks nice, etc ;)
@Nightmare I'd have to see the problem description to know for sure -- Grundy numbers are just a form of nim-sum DP (which is also what the code I posted yesterday does implicitly)
@Nightmare Okay: I would think of it this way: A zero-move is actually very much like having an extra stone on each pile
[1, 2, 3] is actually like [2, 3, 4] in disguise, except you can't take the entire pile at once, and [1] states go to [0] (can't have a zero-move on an empty pile)