- PWC 300 › “You there, Perl, may you live forever!”(Yes, the title is a reference to the 2006 Zach Snyder film.) I’d say I can hardly believe we’ve hit the 300th week in a row of the Weekly Challenge. But, then again, knowing a little bit about the persistence and work ethic of Mohammad Anwar, it’s really no surprise. Let’s keep this going for …
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- PWC 290 › Seeing Double, Twice!OK, the title might need some explaining: Both tasks this week have us looking through lists of numbers and doubling some of them. Task 1 › Double Exist Task 1’s premise is simple enough: we take in a list of @ints and return a true value if the list contains a number and its double. …
- PWC 289 › 3rd Maximum and Jbmueld WrodsTask 1 – 3rd Maximum Task 1 this week is to take a list of integers and find the 3rd unique maximum value, or if there are fewer than 3 unique values, return the overall maximum. Examples: Integers 3rd Maximum 5, 6, 4, 1 4 4, 5 5 1, 2, 2, 3 1 To accomplish …
- PWC 277 › We were a Strong Pair, but now we’re Counting CommonThe tasks this week are nice and quick. You can browse the full source code on GitHub. Task 1 › Count Common The first challenge this week has us finding the count of words that appears exactly once in each of two lists. For example: Since it was easy, I opted to support an arbitrary …
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- PWC 276 › Maximum Frequency and now my Day is CompleteI thought I’d take the rare (for me) step of implementing this week’s challenges in Python as well as Perl. Happy Canada Day! Task 1 – Complete Day The first task has us look through a list of hours and count the number of pairs that add up to a multiple of 24. Perl My …
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- PWC 259 › Bank Holidays and Line ParserThis week’s tasks have a little bit more meat on their bones, which I quite enjoyed. They are user-submitted, as well, and it’s always fun to see what people come up with when submitting tasks. Task 1 – Banking Day Offset This task comes from the mind of Lee Johnson. Here, we’re given the following …
- PWC 258 › Counting Digits and Summing ValuesYes, it’s been a long while! Many a curveball has been thrown at my face. This week’s tasks are pretty quick and easy, so let’s dive right in. Count Even Digits Number The first task is simple. Given a list of integers, return the count of integers that have an even number of digits. So, …
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- PWC 171 › Odd Abundant NumbersThis week’s tasks include a simple number theory calculation, and a language feature. Here’s a look at task 1. Odd Abundant Numbers Abundant numbers are numbers where the sum of the proper divisors is greater than the number. The first odd abundant number is 945. 945’s proper divisors are 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 15, …
- PWC 171 › First Class FunctionsTask #2 this week is no doubt about first class functions, but gets more specific, asking us to have a go at function composition: Create sub compose($f, $g) which takes in two parameters $f and $g as subroutine refs and returns subroutine ref i.e. compose($f, $g)->($x) = $f->($g->($x)) Task #2 Before we get too far ahead of ourselves, let’s briefly review what …
- PWC 170 › Primordial Numbers and Kronecker ProductsWe’re back with our noses to the mathematical grindstone this week, with two straightforward tasks. Task 1 › Primordial Numbers The nth primordial number is simply the product of the first n primes. P(1) = 2, P(2) = 2×3 = 6, P(3) = 2x3x5 = 30, etc. P(0) is defined to be 1 as a …
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- PWC 169 › Brilliant and Achilles NumbersThis week, both tasks are quite short, so I’ll combine them into a single blog post. Task 1 › Brilliant Numbers Brilliant numbers are composite numbers with exactly two prime factors. Additionally, the prime factors must be the same length. My complete code is as follows:
- PWC 168 › Perrin PrimesTask #1 this week asks us to find the first 13 Perrin primes. “What’s a Perrin prime,” I can’t hear you asking? To answer that, we first have to look at the Perrin sequence, as described in OEIS A001608. It’s easy to generate: Starting with [3, 0, 2], each new term is determined by adding …
- PWC 168 › Home PrimeTask #2 this week asks us to calculate a so called Home prime. Home primes are found by factoring a number and concatenating the prime factors (including powers, so 20 = 5×2×2), and repeating this until the result is a prime number. The given example, HP(10) can be found via the following steps: HP(10) = …
- PWC 167 › Circular PrimesTask #1 this week has us finding circular primes, 3 digits or more. Circular primes are numbers that remain prime through all of their rotations. For example, since all the rotations of 113 (113, 131, and 311) are all primes, 113 is a circular prime. (131 and 311 are circular primes as well, but based …
- PWC 167 › Lanczos Gamma ApproximationLet’s flex our mathematical legs a bit by implementing an approximation to the gamma function Γ(z). In this article, I’ll introduce what the gamma function is, what it’s for, and how to actually calculate it, using a well known approximation method. This topic leans more heavily into mathematics than usual for this blog. Some of …
- PWC 166 › K-Directory DiffTask #2 this week is another one of mine. The idea is to take any number of pathnames on the command line (and we must support at least three), and output a side-by-side diff of the files that are different. This is a skin-deep analysis, so there is no recursion, and no comparison of file …
- PWC 166 › Hexadecimal WordsThis is another one of my suggested tasks, and another time you’re going to read about a personal story that connects me to a task. For many years, right back to very first days I started hacking filesystems and writing kernel code, I’ve often needed to come up with 16- or 32-bit identifiers for things, …
- PWC 165 › Simple SVG generatorThe tasks this week are ones I devised. Allow me a moment to explain the motivation behind them. I often have a need to quickly visualize some random bits of data, and while I’ve gotten great mileage out of terminal output, and things like gnuplot or spreadsheet imports, sometimes better and more convenient results are …
- PWC 164 › Palindromic PrimesThe first task this week is to list all palindromic primes below 1000. Palindromes are very well known to Weekly Challenge enthusiasts as numbers (or words) that are the same forwards and backwards. Prime numbers should need no introduction. Prime Sieve I’m going to jump straight to it. Since the task is simple, I’m not …
- PWC 164 › Happy NumbersTask #2 this week comes to us from Robert DiCicco, and Robert demands happiness! Or at least numbers that are happy. Either way, I could use some right about now. We are to find the first 8 Happy Numbers in base 10. To test whether a number is Happy: replace the number by the sum …
- PWC 163 › A tail of two sumsThis week’s challenges are very quick, so I’m putting them in one blog post. The title is a bit of a play on words, given the tail recursion in part 2. Full solutions are available at GitHub. Task 1 › Bitwise Sum For the first task, we’re asked to first bitwise AND (&) each unique …
- PWC 162 › Wheatstone–Playfair CipherChallenge #2 this week asks us to implement a version of the Playfair Cipher, which is a simple symmetric key cipher, invented in 1854 by Charles Wheatstone, that was used with pencil and paper. It ended up being called the Playfair Cipher because—as I understand it—the ironically named Lord Playfair promoted its use and basked …
- PWC 162 › ISBN-13This week‘s first task is simple: validate ISBN-13 codes. ISBNs have been around for a long time and come in many different flavours. ISBN-13 is a thirteen-digit code consisting of twelve digits plus a check digit. The checksum calculation is simple. Given the digits x1, x2, …, x12, and the check digit, x13: (10 – …
- PWC 161 › PangramsFor this week’s second challenge, the task is to generate a pangram. A pangram is simply a collection of words that contain every letter in the alphabet (English, in this case). A classic pangram example is: the quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog Wikipedia
- PWC 161 › Abecedarian WordsI know, it’s been a long time! This week, I’m back. I submitted the challenges for this week, so I thought it’s only fair that I give them a go myself. Unfortunately, I realized too late that this Abecedarian Words is essentially the same as Week 111’s “Ordered Letters” submitted by the venerable E. Choroba. …
- PWC 110 › Phone Number ValidationPersonal note: I’ve had to take a break from participating in the PWC, but I’m back for this week, at least. Hopefully I’ll be able to contribute more again. The first task this week is a sort of simple phone number validation, based on provided templates. Numbers must match the following, where n is any …
- PWC 110 › Transpose CSV FileThe second task this week is simple: given a (simplified) comma-separated-value (CSV) file, transpose its rows and columns. For example: The challenge task does not actually refer to the input as CSV, so I’m using that term loosely, with simplified parsing to match the input specification. If more compliant parsing is needed, one could use …
- PWC 056 › Path SumTask #2 this week is a simple tree traversal: You are given a binary tree and a sum, write a script to find if the tree has a path such that adding up all the values along the path equals the given sum. Only complete paths (from root to leaf node) may be considered for …
- PWC 056 › Diff-KTask #1 this week is to implement the Diff-K algorithm, as explained by Mohammad: You are given an array @N of positive integers (sorted) and another non negative integer k. Write a script to find if there exists 2 indices i and j such that A[i] – A[j] = k and i != j. This one is pretty easy. We can boil down the solution …
- PWC 054 › Collatz ConjectureTask #2 this week was one of my devising: It is thought that the following sequence will always reach 1: For example, if we start at 23, we get the following sequence: 23 → 70 → 35 → 106 → 53 → 160 → 80 → 40 → 20 → 10 → 5 → 16 → …
- PWC 054 › kth PermutationTask #1 this week is as follows: Write a script to accept two integers n (>=1) and k (>=1). It should print the kth permutation of n integers. For more information, please follow the wiki page. For example, for n=3 and k=4, the possible permutation sequences are 123, 132, 213, 231, 312, 321. The script should print the 4th permutation sequence, 231. This is fairly straightforward. There are …
- PWC 053 › Vowel StringsTask #2 this week has us construct “vowel strings,” as described by Mohammad: Write a script to accept an integer 1 ≤ N ≤ 5 that would print all possible strings of size N formed by using only vowels (a, e, i, o, u). The string should follow the following rules: ‘a’ can only be followed by ‘e’ and ‘i’. ‘e’ can only be …
- PWC 053 › Matrix RotationTask #1 this week is as follows: Write a script to rotate the following matrix by given 90/180/270 degrees clockwise. At first glance, I thought this was a simple matrix transpose, which is what you get when you swap the rows and columns of a matrix. The transposition (T) of the example matrix would give us:
- PWC 052 › Lucky WinnerTask #2 this week can be as simple or as difficult as you make it. Mohammad’s description: Suppose there are following coins arranged on a table in a line in random order. £1, 50p, 1p, 10p, 5p, 20p, £2, 2p Suppose you are playing against the computer. Player can only pick one coin at a …
- PWC 052 › Stepping NumbersTask #1 this week is straightforward. Here’s what Mohammad had to say about it: Write a script to accept two numbers between 100 and 999. It should then print all Stepping Numbers between them. A number is called a stepping number if the adjacent digits have a difference of 1. For example, 456 is a stepping number …
- PWC 051 › 3Sum and Colourful NumbersPersonal note: It’s been an extremely challenging couple of weeks for me, due to a family emergency. As such I’m combining my solutions into a single, shorter blog post this week. If you also follow my review posts on the perlweeklychallenge.org site, you’ll note they are quite late as well. I’m sorry about that! Hopefully …
- PWC 050 › Noble IntegersTask #2 this week is described as follows: You are given a list, @L, of three or more random integers between 1 and 50. A Noble Integer is an integer N in @L, such that there are exactly N integers greater than N in @L. Output any Noble Integer found in @L, or an empty list if none were found. An interesting question is whether …
- PWC 050 › Merge IntervalsTask #1 this week asks us to merge integer ranges. Here is the task description: Write a script to merge the given intervals where ever possible. [2,7], [3,9], [10,12], [15,19], [18,22] The script should merge [2, 7] and [3, 9] together to return [2, 9]. Similarly it should also merge [15, 19] and [18, 22] together to return [15, 22]. The final result should be …
- PWC 049 › LRU CacheTask #2 this week has us build an LRU cache, which is a cache of fixed capacity, whereby when it is full but a new item needs to be added, the item that was least-recently accessed is evicted from the cache. For example, if a cache of capacity = 3 contains [a b c] (where …
- PWC 049 › Smallest multiple containing only 1 and 0Task #1 this week is as follows: Write a script to accept a positive number as command line argument and print the smallest multiple of the given number consists of digits 0 and 1. Brute Force It’s easy enough to brute force this problem, by checking every multiple in order: $_ now contains the answer. Unfortunately, some numbers—particularly …
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- PWC 048 › Survivor (Josepheus problem)Task #1 this week is described as follows: There are 50 people standing in a circle in position 1 to 50. The person standing at position 1 has a sword. He kills the next person i.e. standing at position 2 and pass on the sword to the immediate next i.e. person standing at position 3. …
- PWC 048 › Palindrome Dates (mm/dd/yyyy)Task #2 this week asks us to (and I quote): print all Palindrome Dates between 2000 and 2999. The format of date is mmddyyyy. For example, the first one was on October 2, 2001 as it is represented as 10022001. It’s pretty easy to avoid using any sort of date library with a couple of key observations about the problem domain. First, we’ll split …
- PWC 047 › Roman CalculatorThe first challenge this week tasks us with evaluating arithmetic operations using Roman numerals. The description seems to indicate that only one operation will be given (for example, II + IV), but I have elected to support arbitrary arithmetic expressions. First, I needed a way to convert to and from Roman and Arabic numerals. I …
- PWC 047 › Gapful NumbersTask 2 this week has us print the first 20 “gapful numbers,” as described by OEIS sequence A108343. Gapful numbers are numbers greater than 99 that are evenly divisible by their first and last digits combined. For example, 132 is a gapful number because 132 ÷ 12 = 11. This is certainly the easier of …
- PWC 046 › Cryptic MessageChallenge #1 this week is the following: The communication system of an office is broken and message received are not completely reliable. To send message Hello, it ended up sending these following:
- PWC 046 › Is the Room Open? (500 Doors)The second of the challenges this week poses the following question (paraphrased): Suppose we have 500 doors, and 500 employees. The first employee opens all the doors. The second employee closes every 2nd door (doors 2, 4, 6, … 500). The third employee closes every third door if it is open, or opens it if …
- QuineChallenge #2 this week asks for “a script that dumps its own source code”. This is almost a quine, although Mohammad did not name it as such. Specifically, we are given the constraint that perl ch-2.pl | diff – ch-2.pl must return nothing. What’s a Quine? A quine, otherwise known as a self-replicating program, is …
- Square Secret CodeTask #1 this week is a simple cipher, described as follows: The square secret code mechanism first removes any space from the original message. Then it lays down the message in a row of 8 columns. The coded message is then obtained by reading down the columns going left to right. Given “The quick brown …
- Make it $200For challenge #2 this week, the task is to start with $1, and by either adding $1 or doubling the amount, reach $200 in the smallest possible number of steps. “Greedy never works” In a 75-minute lecture some decades ago, my Advanced Algorithms professor said, over and over, “greedy never works,” while all the while …
- Only 100, pleaseChallenge #1 this week is as follows: You are given a string “123456789”. Write a script that would insert ”+” or ”-” in between digits so that when you evaluate, the result should be 100. I am going to add the additional constraint that we want all possible solutions, because that is a much stronger statement, and not that difficult to …
- Self-descriptive NumbersChallenge #2 this week (43) is to generate Self-descriptive Numbers in arbitrary bases. A self-descriptive number, as described by Wikipedia, is an integer m that in a given base b is b digits long in which each digit d at position n (the most significant digit being at position 0 and the least significant at position b – 1) counts how many instances of digit n are …
- Olympic RingsChallenge #1 this week (43) is a number puzzle. In short, the task is to fill in the numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, and 6 into the spaces within the intersecting Olympic rings, so that the numbers in each ring sum to 11. Some of the spaces are already filled in (given). Here is the …
- Balanced ParenthesesThe second challenge this week is another old chestnut: Write a script to generate a string with random number of ( and ) brackets. Then make the script validate the string if it has balanced brackets. The question has two parts:
- Octal RepresentationChallenge 1 this week is an easy one: Write a script to print decimal number 0 to 50 in [the] Octal Number System. Perl and Raku We can solve this with the following polyglot (runs in both languages at once): Still, in Raku, we can do the following:
- Leonardo NumbersHappy new year! We are on Week 41, and this is Challenge #2. The Leonardo Numbers (A001595) are a simple recursively defined sequence: The sequence starts: 1, 1, 3, 5, 9, 15, 25, 41, 67, 109, 177, 287, 465, 753, 1219, 1973, 3193, 5167, 8361, 13529, 21891, … You’ll note this sequence is very similar …
- Attractive NumbersThis week, Mohammad asks us to output a list of all Attractive Numbers between 1 and 50. Attractive numbers, as described by the Online Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences (OEIS) are: Numbers with a prime number of prime divisors (counted with multiplicity) OEIS Sequence A063989 The first numbers are 4, 6, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, …
- Zip6The zip6 function has long been a staple of the List::MoreUtils CPAN module. The Week 40 challenge #1 describes it very well. But even more succinctly: zip6 takes an array of arrays (AoA) and returns another AoA of all the 1st elements, then the 2nd, and so on. It’s not a difficult algorithm by any …
- Reverse Polish NotationThis is my first blog post regarding the Perl Weekly Challenge tirelessly maintained by Mohammad Anwar. Although I’ve been doing the challenge for a while now, I haven’t maintained my blog for years. Let’s change that! This week’s challenge #2 from the Perl Weekly Challenge is a computer science classic: create a Reverse Polish Notation …