Solution to problem 16 in Python

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David Doblas Jiménez 2023-09-24 18:33:16 +02:00
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# --- Day 16: Dragon Checksum ---
# You're done scanning this part of the network, but you've left traces of your
# presence. You need to overwrite some disks with random-looking data to cover
# your tracks and update the local security system with a new checksum for those
# disks.
# For the data to not be suspicious, it needs to have certain properties; purely
# random data will be detected as tampering. To generate appropriate random
# data, you'll need to use a modified dragon curve.
# Start with an appropriate initial state (your puzzle input). Then, so long as
# you don't have enough data yet to fill the disk, repeat the following steps:
# Call the data you have at this point "a".
# Make a copy of "a"; call this copy "b".
# Reverse the order of the characters in "b".
# In "b", replace all instances of 0 with 1 and all 1s with 0.
# The resulting data is "a", then a single 0, then "b".
# For example, after a single step of this process,
# 1 becomes 100.
# 0 becomes 001.
# 11111 becomes 11111000000.
# 111100001010 becomes 1111000010100101011110000.
# Repeat these steps until you have enough data to fill the desired disk.
# Once the data has been generated, you also need to create a checksum of that
# data. Calculate the checksum only for the data that fits on the disk, even if
# you generated more data than that in the previous step.
# The checksum for some given data is created by considering each
# non-overlapping pair of characters in the input data. If the two characters
# match (00 or 11), the next checksum character is a 1. If the characters do not
# match (01 or 10), the next checksum character is a 0. This should produce a
# new string which is exactly half as long as the original. If the length of the
# checksum is even, repeat the process until you end up with a checksum with an
# odd length.
# For example, suppose we want to fill a disk of length 12, and when we finally
# generate a string of at least length 12, the first 12 characters are
# 110010110100. To generate its checksum:
# Consider each pair: 11, 00, 10, 11, 01, 00.
# These are same, same, different, same, different, same, producing 110101.
# The resulting string has length 6, which is even, so we repeat the
# process.
# The pairs are 11 (same), 01 (different), 01 (different).
# This produces the checksum 100, which has an odd length, so we stop.
# Therefore, the checksum for 110010110100 is 100.
# Combining all of these steps together, suppose you want to fill a disk of
# length 20 using an initial state of 10000:
# Because 10000 is too short, we first use the modified dragon curve to make
# it longer.
# After one round, it becomes 10000011110 (11 characters), still too short.
# After two rounds, it becomes 10000011110010000111110 (23 characters),
# which is enough.
# Since we only need 20, but we have 23, we get rid of all but the first 20
# characters: 10000011110010000111.
# Next, we start calculating the checksum; after one round, we have
# 0111110101, which 10 characters long (even), so we continue.
# After two rounds, we have 01100, which is 5 characters long (odd), so we
# are done.
# In this example, the correct checksum would therefore be 01100.
# The first disk you have to fill has length 272. Using the initial state in
# your puzzle input, what is the correct checksum?
from copy import copy
from itertools import islice
input = "10010000000110000"
def dragon_curve(inp, size):
while len(inp) < size:
b = copy(inp)
rev_b = "".join(reversed(b))
translation_table = str.maketrans("01", "10")
swaped_b = rev_b.translate(translation_table)
inp = inp + "0" + swaped_b
return inp[:size]
def batched(iterable, n):
"Batch data into tuples of length n. The last batch may be shorter."
# batched('ABCDEFG', 3) --> ABC DEF G
if n < 1:
raise ValueError("n must be at least one")
it = iter(iterable)
while batch := tuple(islice(it, n)):
yield batch
def checksum(inp):
while True:
_checksum = ""
pairing = batched(inp, 2)
pairs = ["".join(p) for p in pairing]
for p in pairs:
if p[0] == p[-1]:
_checksum += "1"
else:
_checksum += "0"
if len(_checksum) % 2:
return _checksum
inp = copy(_checksum)
def part1():
a = dragon_curve(input, 272)
res = checksum(a)
print(f"The correct checksum is {res}")
# --- Part Two ---
# The second disk you have to fill has length 35651584. Again using the initial
# state in your puzzle input, what is the correct checksum for this disk?
def part2():
a = dragon_curve(input, 35651584)
res = checksum(a)
print(f"The correct checksum is {res}")
if __name__ == "__main__":
part1()
part2()