After a pretty good start, I got stuck on day 7 for a long time and haven't wanted to spend all my precious little free time with AoC. My day 7 recursion was looking pretty good but produced some false positives which I eventually weeded out manually and subtracted from the total. Part 2 is in shambles and I don't have a clear picture of how it should be solved. I heard people are figuring out the puzzles with pen&paper and I might try that, too.
But! I've managed to solve days 6 and 8 with two stars. π Current total: 15π
Nifty datatype: Sets
One way to remove duplicate values from an array is to create a set out of it. Values in sets can only occur once. I used this feature on day 6 part 1: I collected all 'yes' answers from a group in an array first and then created the set:
let groupAsSet = [...new Set(groupArray)];
It was then easy to find the number of unique 'yes' answers from the group by set.length
.
Destructuring vol.2
I enjoyed solving day 8 (at least part 1 π). I started by separating the operation and argument.
let [operation, argument] = command.split(' ');
For my original solution, this time I used a regular expression with match
method to also separate the sign and digits.
let [_, sign, number] = argument.match(/(\+|\-)(\d+)/);
Using the underscore is the influence of @caiangums. π I saw this usage in his code: the first element in the array that match
returns is the whole matched string for the regex between /.../
, which I have no use for, and using an underscore nicely depicts that.
Next I used the sign and number to calculate changes in either accumulator or program position (index). I wanted to use the ternary operator here.
sign === '+' ? accumulator += Number.parseInt(number) : accumulator -= Number.parseInt(number);
(...)
sign === '+' ? index += Number.parseInt(number) : index -= Number.parseInt(number);
But... I ended up cleaning up my code and just converted the argument to number directly:
argument = Number.parseInt(argument);
(...)
accumulator += argument;
index += argument;
Much cleaner! Can't believe I didn't think of it right away. π€¦
Reminder: Arrays are reference types
On day 8, my solution was to for
loop through the boot code changing one command at a time. First I didn't realize I never "reset" the array at the beginning so I ended up just changing it one line at a time. Then I understood I needed a temporary array to make the one change:
let modifiedCommandArray = commandArray;
The same thing happened again! Then it hit me: oh, right, arrays are reference types so I'm actually modifying the same array but just using a different name. Fixed the code by using the spread operator ...
.
let modifiedCommandArray = [...commandArray];
Reminder: Include break
in your switch
I didn't make this mistake β this time β but I'm quite sure I could and then wonder what's going on. For switch
-case
structure, you usually want to end your case
block with break
or all the remaining code will be executed as well. Whoops!
I'm diggin' what my day 8 switch
structure looks like:
switch(operation) {
case 'acc':
accumulator += argument;
index++;
break;
case 'jmp':
index += argument;
break;
case 'nop':
index++;
break;
}
That's all this time! Plodding on. π’π’
Cover photo by Okwaeze Otusi on Unsplash
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