Day 2: Cube Conundrum
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FAQ
- What is this?: Here is a post with a large amount of details: https://programming.dev/post/6637268
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A solution in Nim language. Pretty straightforward code. Most logic is just parsing input + a bit of functional utils: allIt checks if all items in a list within limits to check if game is possible and
mapIt
collects red, green, blue cubes from each set of game.https://codeberg.org/Archargelod/aoc23-nim/src/branch/master/day_02/solution.nim
import std/[strutils, strformat, sequtils] type AOCSolution[T] = tuple[part1: T, part2: T] type GameSet = object red, green, blue: int Game = object id: int sets: seq[GameSet] const MaxSet = GameSet(red: 12, green: 13, blue: 14) func parseGame(input: string): Game = result.id = input.split({':', ' '})[1].parseInt() let sets = input.split(": ")[1].split("; ").mapIt(it.split(", ")) for gSet in sets: var gs = GameSet() for pair in gSet: let pair = pair.split() cCount = pair[0].parseInt cName = pair[1] case cName: of "red": gs.red = cCount of "green": gs.green = cCount of "blue": gs.blue = cCount result.sets.add gs func isPossible(g: Game): bool = g.sets.allIt( it.red <= MaxSet.red and it.green <= MaxSet.green and it.blue <= MaxSet.blue ) func solve(lines: seq[string]): AOCSolution[int]= for line in lines: let game = line.parseGame() block p1: if game.isPossible(): result.part1 += game.id block p2: let minRed = game.sets.mapIt(it.red).max() minGreen = game.sets.mapIt(it.green).max() minBlue = game.sets.mapIt(it.blue).max() result.part2 += minRed * minGreen * minBlue when isMainModule: let input = readFile("./input.txt").strip() let (part1, part2) = solve(input.splitLines()) echo &"Part 1: The sum of valid game IDs equals {part1}." echo &"Part 2: The sum of the sets' powers equals {part2}."
Another nim person! Have you joined the community? There are dozens of us!
Here’s mine (no code blocks because kbin):
Hi there! Looks like you linked to a Lemmy community using a URL instead of its name, which doesn’t work well for people on different instances. Try fixing it like this: [email protected]
Yep, but it is a bit quiet in there.
Good solution. I like your parsing with scanf. The only reason I didn’t use it myself - is that I found out about std/strscans literally yesterday.
I actually just learned about scanf while writing this. Only ended up using it in the one spot, since split worked well enough for the other bits. I really wanted to be able to use python-style unpacking, but in nim it only works for tuples. At least without writing macros, which I still haven’t been able to wrap my head around.