Day 2: Red-Nosed Reports
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FAQ
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Haskell
This was quite fun! I got a bit distracted trying to rewrite
safe
in point-free style, but I think this version is the most readable. There’s probably a more monadic way of writinglessOne
as well, but I can’t immediately see it.safe xs = any gradual [diffs, negate <$> diffs] where diffs = zipWith (-) (drop 1 xs) xs gradual = all (`elem` [1 .. 3]) lessOne [] = [] lessOne (x : xs) = xs : map (x :) (lessOne xs) main = do input :: [[Int]] <- map (map read . words) . lines <$> readFile "input02" print . length $ filter safe input print . length $ filter (any safe . lessOne) input
Love to see your haskell solutions!
I am so far very amazed with the compactness of your solutions, your
lessOne
is very much mind-Bending. I have never used or seen<$>
before, is it a monadic$
?Also I can’t seem to find your logic for this safety condition:
The levels are either all increasing or all decreasing
, did you figure that it wasn’t necessary?For the last point, it isn’t needed since the differences between elements should be all positive or all negative for the report to be safe. This is tested with the combination of
negate
andgradual
.I am also enjoying these Haskell solutions. I’m still learning the language, so it’s been cool to compare my solution with these and grow my understanding of Haskell.
<$>
is justfmap
as an infix operator.>>> fmap (+1) [1,2,3] [2,3,4] >>> (+1) <\$> [1,2,3] [2,3,4]