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Coding Challenge

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  • C Chris Maunder

    Back in the Days of Yore we had a couple of small coding challenges such as the Lean and Mean comp. I was thinking that there are a ton of small, well defined problems that can be tackled a zillion ways in a zillion languages and that it would be cool to see what you guys can come up with. I'd like to start the ball rolling with the following simple task: Problem: Given a string of text, trim from each end of the text each all occurrences of a given set of strings Sample input: Input string: "dog cat monkey dog horse dog" Strings that need to be trimmed from each end: { "dog", "cat" } Final output should be: " monkey dog horse" Final output should be " cat monkey dog horse " [Edit: My final sample output was incorrect, so to be fair I'll accept either answer] It's up to you whether you worry about case sensitivity. Let's see who can provide the smallest, neatest most elegant, most unique and/or fastest code. For those who feel like jumping on the "No Programming questions" bandwagon, please re-read the lounge guidelines. The point of this is to have fun, not to solve each other's programming issues.

    cheers, Chris Maunder The Code Project | Co-founder Microsoft C++ MVP

    B Offline
    B Offline
    BillWoodruff
    wrote on last edited by
    #121

    private string inS = "dog cat monkey dog horse dog";

    private List<string> rmS = new List<string> {"dog", "cat"};

    private string finalString = "";

    private string resultString = " ";

    private string removeVarious(string iStr, List<string> iListStr)
    {
    for (int i = 0; i < iListStr.Count; i++)
    {
    string str = iListStr[i];

        if (iStr.StartsWith(str))
        {
            iStr = iStr.Remove(0, str.Length + 1);
            finalString = iStr;
        }
    
        if (iStr.EndsWith(str))
        {
            iStr = iStr.Remove(iStr.Length - str.Length - 1, str.Length + 1);
            finalString = iStr;
        }
    
        if (iListStr.Count > 0)
        {
            iListStr.RemoveAt(0);
            // recursion here
            removeVarious(iStr, iListStr);
        }
        else
        {
            break;
        }
    }
    
    return resultString.Insert(1, finalString);
    

    }

    Note: this was written before Chris changed the accepted output to include the word "cat" at the beginning. Meow. best, Bill

    "It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it." Aristotle

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    • C Chris Maunder

      Back in the Days of Yore we had a couple of small coding challenges such as the Lean and Mean comp. I was thinking that there are a ton of small, well defined problems that can be tackled a zillion ways in a zillion languages and that it would be cool to see what you guys can come up with. I'd like to start the ball rolling with the following simple task: Problem: Given a string of text, trim from each end of the text each all occurrences of a given set of strings Sample input: Input string: "dog cat monkey dog horse dog" Strings that need to be trimmed from each end: { "dog", "cat" } Final output should be: " monkey dog horse" Final output should be " cat monkey dog horse " [Edit: My final sample output was incorrect, so to be fair I'll accept either answer] It's up to you whether you worry about case sensitivity. Let's see who can provide the smallest, neatest most elegant, most unique and/or fastest code. For those who feel like jumping on the "No Programming questions" bandwagon, please re-read the lounge guidelines. The point of this is to have fun, not to solve each other's programming issues.

      cheers, Chris Maunder The Code Project | Co-founder Microsoft C++ MVP

      S Offline
      S Offline
      Slacker007
      wrote on last edited by
      #122

      my $trimWord = "dog";
      my $string = "dog cat monkey dog horse dog";

      $string =~ s/^($trimWord)+|($trimWord)+$//g;

      print $string;

      Just along for the ride. "the meat from that butcher is just the dogs danglies, absolutely amazing cuts of beef." - DaveAuld (2011)
      "No, that is just the earthly manifestation of the Great God Retardon." - Nagy Vilmos (2011) "It is the celestial scrotum of good luck!" - Nagy Vilmos (2011)

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      • N NormDroid

        Shit my eyes are bleeding :)

        Software Kinetics Wear a hard hat it's under construction
        Metro RSS

        S Offline
        S Offline
        Slacker007
        wrote on last edited by
        #123

        You shat your eyes or your eyes are bleeding? :laugh: :-D :thumbsup:

        Just along for the ride. "the meat from that butcher is just the dogs danglies, absolutely amazing cuts of beef." - DaveAuld (2011)
        "No, that is just the earthly manifestation of the Great God Retardon." - Nagy Vilmos (2011) "It is the celestial scrotum of good luck!" - Nagy Vilmos (2011)

        1 Reply Last reply
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        • C Chris Maunder

          Back in the Days of Yore we had a couple of small coding challenges such as the Lean and Mean comp. I was thinking that there are a ton of small, well defined problems that can be tackled a zillion ways in a zillion languages and that it would be cool to see what you guys can come up with. I'd like to start the ball rolling with the following simple task: Problem: Given a string of text, trim from each end of the text each all occurrences of a given set of strings Sample input: Input string: "dog cat monkey dog horse dog" Strings that need to be trimmed from each end: { "dog", "cat" } Final output should be: " monkey dog horse" Final output should be " cat monkey dog horse " [Edit: My final sample output was incorrect, so to be fair I'll accept either answer] It's up to you whether you worry about case sensitivity. Let's see who can provide the smallest, neatest most elegant, most unique and/or fastest code. For those who feel like jumping on the "No Programming questions" bandwagon, please re-read the lounge guidelines. The point of this is to have fun, not to solve each other's programming issues.

          cheers, Chris Maunder The Code Project | Co-founder Microsoft C++ MVP

          C Offline
          C Offline
          CPallini
          wrote on last edited by
          #124

          The function:

          -- function
          require("lpeg")
          d = lpeg.P"dog" + lpeg.P"cat"
          g = d^0 * lpeg.C((1-d)^1 * (d^0 * (1-d))^0) * d^0
          function trm(s) return lpeg.match(g, s) or "" end

          the test:

          -- test
          t = {
          "dog cat monkey dog horse dog",
          "dogcatmonkeycatcatcat",
          "dog",
          "doghorsedogdog dog",
          "monkey",
          "catcatdogcathorse sheep dog cat pig horse sheepcatmonkeydogcat"
          }

          for i,v in ipairs(t) do
          print ("'" .. v .. "'" .. " -> " .. "'" .. trm(v) .. "'")
          end

          the output:

          'dog cat monkey dog horse dog' -> ' cat monkey dog horse '
          'dogcatmonkeycatcatcat' -> 'monkey'
          'dog' -> ''
          'doghorsedogdog dog' -> 'horsedogdog '
          'monkey' -> 'monkey'
          'catcatdogcathorse sheep dog cat pig horse sheepcatmonkeydogcat' -> 'horse sheep dog cat pig horse sheepcatmonkey'

          If the Lord God Almighty had consulted me before embarking upon the Creation, I would have recommended something simpler. -- Alfonso the Wise, 13th Century King of Castile.
          This is going on my arrogant assumptions. You may have a superb reason why I'm completely wrong. -- Iain Clarke
          [My articles]

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          • OriginalGriffO OriginalGriff

            I have discovered a truly marvellous solution of this, which the margin of this website is too narrow to contain.

            Ideological Purity is no substitute for being able to stick your thumb down a pipe to stop the water

            L Offline
            L Offline
            Lost User
            wrote on last edited by
            #125

            I bet that's the last programming challenge you try!

            MVVM# - See how I did MVVM my way ___________________________________________ Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011 .\\axxx (That's an 'M')

            1 Reply Last reply
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            • C Chris Maunder

              Back in the Days of Yore we had a couple of small coding challenges such as the Lean and Mean comp. I was thinking that there are a ton of small, well defined problems that can be tackled a zillion ways in a zillion languages and that it would be cool to see what you guys can come up with. I'd like to start the ball rolling with the following simple task: Problem: Given a string of text, trim from each end of the text each all occurrences of a given set of strings Sample input: Input string: "dog cat monkey dog horse dog" Strings that need to be trimmed from each end: { "dog", "cat" } Final output should be: " monkey dog horse" Final output should be " cat monkey dog horse " [Edit: My final sample output was incorrect, so to be fair I'll accept either answer] It's up to you whether you worry about case sensitivity. Let's see who can provide the smallest, neatest most elegant, most unique and/or fastest code. For those who feel like jumping on the "No Programming questions" bandwagon, please re-read the lounge guidelines. The point of this is to have fun, not to solve each other's programming issues.

              cheers, Chris Maunder The Code Project | Co-founder Microsoft C++ MVP

              L Offline
              L Offline
              Lost User
              wrote on last edited by
              #126

              Chris Maunder wrote:

              Given a string of text, trim from each end of the text each all occurrences of a given set of strings

              Assuming (from your sample) you only want to remove a single item from each end (hence the leading 'cat' remains), then the below would seem to provide the requisite output and I feel earn bonus points for its simplicity, elegance and the fact that it's the first opportunity I've had to do c# for nearly a year!

              private string CodingChallenge(string source, string[] removals)
              {
              string delimiter = " ";
              bool leftDone = false;
              bool rightDone = false;

                      foreach (string s in removals)
                      {
                          if (!leftDone && source.Substring(0, s.Length) == s && source.Substring(s.Length, 1) == delimiter)
                          {
                              source = source.Substring(s.Length);
                              leftDone = true;
                          }
              
                          if (!rightDone && source.Substring(source.Length - s.Length) == s && source.Substring(source.Length - s.Length - 1, 1) == delimiter)
                          {
                              source = source.Substring(0, source.Length - s.Length);
                              rightDone = true;
                          }
                      }
              
                      return source;
                  }
              

              MVVM# - See how I did MVVM my way ___________________________________________ Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011 .\\axxx (That's an 'M')

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              • C Chris Maunder

                Back in the Days of Yore we had a couple of small coding challenges such as the Lean and Mean comp. I was thinking that there are a ton of small, well defined problems that can be tackled a zillion ways in a zillion languages and that it would be cool to see what you guys can come up with. I'd like to start the ball rolling with the following simple task: Problem: Given a string of text, trim from each end of the text each all occurrences of a given set of strings Sample input: Input string: "dog cat monkey dog horse dog" Strings that need to be trimmed from each end: { "dog", "cat" } Final output should be: " monkey dog horse" Final output should be " cat monkey dog horse " [Edit: My final sample output was incorrect, so to be fair I'll accept either answer] It's up to you whether you worry about case sensitivity. Let's see who can provide the smallest, neatest most elegant, most unique and/or fastest code. For those who feel like jumping on the "No Programming questions" bandwagon, please re-read the lounge guidelines. The point of this is to have fun, not to solve each other's programming issues.

                cheers, Chris Maunder The Code Project | Co-founder Microsoft C++ MVP

                E Offline
                E Offline
                ErnestoNet
                wrote on last edited by
                #127

                Need to check this with other strings, debug some more, improve comments and string handling in main(), etc. But still....here it goes:

                #include "stdafx.h"

                const wchar_t whitechar = ' ';
                const bool IncludeWhiteSpace = true;
                const wchar_t* wordstoremove[] = {L"dog", L"cat"};

                const wchar_t* strtoparse = L"dog cat monkey dog horse dog"; //Len 28
                int ltoparse;
                const int numwords = 2;

                int wordlen[numwords];

                //Positions in the original string to rip
                int pos_orig_from;
                int pos_orig_to;

                //Len of left and right copies
                int left_len;
                int right_len;

                //Gets hoy many bytes per char
                void ProcessLeft(wchar_t* strresult)
                {
                bool bContinue = true;

                pos\_orig\_from = left\_len = 0;
                
                while (bContinue)
                {
                	//Check for whitespaces. If there are, copy them
                	if (strtoparse\[pos\_orig\_from\] == whitechar)
                	{
                		pos\_orig\_from ++;
                		if (IncludeWhiteSpace)
                		{
                			strresult\[left\_len\] = whitechar;
                			left\_len ++;
                		}
                	}
                	else
                	{
                		bContinue = false;
                		for (int i = 0; i < numwords; i++)
                		{
                			//Compare strings
                			wchar\_t\* strcompare = (wchar\_t\*)strtoparse + pos\_orig\_from;
                			if (wcsncmp(strcompare, wordstoremove\[i\], wordlen\[i\]) == 0)
                			{
                				pos\_orig\_from += wordlen\[i\];
                				bContinue = true;
                				break;
                			}
                		}
                	}
                }
                

                }
                void ProcessRight(wchar_t* strresult)
                {
                bool bContinue = true;

                pos\_orig\_to = right\_len = ltoparse - 1;
                
                while (bContinue)
                {
                	//Check for whitespaces. If there are, copy them
                	if (strtoparse\[pos\_orig\_to\] == whitechar && IncludeWhiteSpace)
                	{
                		pos\_orig\_to -= 1;
                		if (IncludeWhiteSpace)
                		{
                			strresult\[right\_len\] = whitechar;
                			right\_len -= 1;
                		}
                	}
                	else
                	{
                		bContinue = false;
                		for (int i = 0; i < numwords; i++)
                		{
                			//Compare strings
                			//To check right, start from end and substract string to compare len
                			wchar\_t\* strcompare = (wchar\_t\*)strtoparse + pos\_orig\_to - wordlen\[i\] + 1;
                			if (wcsncmp(strcompare, wordstoremove\[i\], wordlen\[i\]) == 0)
                			{
                				pos\_orig\_to -= wordlen\[i\];
                				bContinue = true;
                				break;
                			}
                		}
                	}
                }
                

                }

                int _tmain(int argc, _TCHAR* argv[])
                {

                //Load len of words to avoid rechecking
                for (int i=0; i
                
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                • M Marc Clifton

                  Dang, what are we, a bunch of whiners? It's a PROGRAMMING CHALLENGE! START YOUR CODING ENGINES!!! Do we need detail specs? Hell NO!!! There's probably a regex solution, but that's gross. Here's something I whipped together in about 15 minutes (took a bit of debugging, a few nuances to it) that I hope readable and somewhat reusable:

                  using System;
                  using System.Collections.Generic;
                  using System.Linq;
                  using System.Text;
                  namespace Stripper
                  {
                  public enum StringPoint
                  {
                  None,
                  Start,
                  End,
                  }
                  public static class StringHelpersExtensions
                  {
                  public static string RightOf(this String src, string s)
                  {
                  string ret = src;
                  int idx = src.IndexOf(s);
                  if (idx != -1)
                  {
                  ret = src.Substring(s.Length);
                  }
                  return ret;
                  }
                  public static string LeftOfRightmostOf(this String src, string s)
                  {
                  string ret = src;
                  int idx = src.LastIndexOf(s);
                  if (idx != -1)
                  {
                  ret = src.Substring(0, idx);
                  }
                  return ret;
                  }
                  public static bool StartsOrEndsWith(this String src, string[] items, out string match, out StringPoint whichEnd)
                  {
                  bool ret = false;
                  whichEnd = StringPoint.None;
                  match = String.Empty;
                  foreach (string item in items)
                  {
                  if (src.StartsWith(item))
                  {
                  match = item;
                  whichEnd = StringPoint.Start;
                  ret = true;
                  break;
                  }
                  if (src.EndsWith(item))
                  {
                  match = item;
                  whichEnd = StringPoint.End;
                  ret = true;
                  break;
                  }
                  }
                  return ret;
                  }
                  }
                  class Program
                  {
                  static void Main(string[] args)
                  {
                  string input = "dog cat monkey dog horse dog";
                  string[] stripOf = { "dog", "cat" };
                  string desiredOutput = " monkey dog horse ";
                  string result = Stripper(input, stripOf);
                  if (result == desiredOutput)
                  {
                  Console.WriteLine("Success");
                  }
                  else
                  {
                  Console.WriteLine("Fail! '" + result + "'");
                  }
                  }
                  static string Stripper(string input, string[] stripOf)
                  {
                  string ret = input;
                  string match;
                  StringPoint whichEnd;
                  string test = ret.Trim();
                  string leftPad = String.Empty;
                  string rightPad = String.Empty;
                  while (test.StartsOrEndsWith(stripOf, out match, out whichEnd))
                  {
                  switch (whichEnd)
                  {
                  case StringPoint.Start:
                  // The result always preserves the leading space separating the token, so add it back in.
                  leftPad = " ";
                  ret = leftPad + test.RightOf(match).Trim() + rightPad;
                  break;
                  case StringPoint.End:
                  // The result always preserves

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                  P Offline
                  Pete OHanlon
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #128

                  Your former client base is showing mate - calling a method Stripper.

                  Forgive your enemies - it messes with their heads

                  "Mind bleach! Send me mind bleach!" - Nagy Vilmos

                  My blog | My articles | MoXAML PowerToys | Mole 2010 - debugging made easier - my favourite utility

                  M 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • C Chris Maunder

                    Back in the Days of Yore we had a couple of small coding challenges such as the Lean and Mean comp. I was thinking that there are a ton of small, well defined problems that can be tackled a zillion ways in a zillion languages and that it would be cool to see what you guys can come up with. I'd like to start the ball rolling with the following simple task: Problem: Given a string of text, trim from each end of the text each all occurrences of a given set of strings Sample input: Input string: "dog cat monkey dog horse dog" Strings that need to be trimmed from each end: { "dog", "cat" } Final output should be: " monkey dog horse" Final output should be " cat monkey dog horse " [Edit: My final sample output was incorrect, so to be fair I'll accept either answer] It's up to you whether you worry about case sensitivity. Let's see who can provide the smallest, neatest most elegant, most unique and/or fastest code. For those who feel like jumping on the "No Programming questions" bandwagon, please re-read the lounge guidelines. The point of this is to have fun, not to solve each other's programming issues.

                    cheers, Chris Maunder The Code Project | Co-founder Microsoft C++ MVP

                    A Offline
                    A Offline
                    AnthonyN1974
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #129

                    I was fed up, so here it is in c#

                    using System;
                    using System.Collections.Generic;
                    using System.Linq;
                    using System.Text;

                    namespace CodeChallenge
                    {
                    class Program
                    {
                    private static List<string> wordsToRemove = new List<string>() { "dog", "cat" };

                    static void Main(string\[\] args)
                    {
                      string text = "dog cat monkey dog horse dog";
                    
                      string\[\] words = text.Split(' ');
                      string\[\] output;
                      int start = 0;
                      int end = 0;
                    
                      // test the start
                      if (wordsToRemove.Contains(words\[0\]) && words.Length > 0)
                        start = 1;
                    
                      // test the end
                      if (wordsToRemove.Contains(words\[words.Length - 1\]) && words.Length != start)
                        end = (words.Length - 1) - start;
                      else
                        end = words.Length - start;
                    
                      //build
                      output = new string\[end\];
                      Array.Copy(words, start, output, 0, end);
                    
                      //output
                      Console.WriteLine(string.Join(" ",output));
                    }
                    

                    }
                    }

                    1 Reply Last reply
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                    • C Chris Maunder

                      Back in the Days of Yore we had a couple of small coding challenges such as the Lean and Mean comp. I was thinking that there are a ton of small, well defined problems that can be tackled a zillion ways in a zillion languages and that it would be cool to see what you guys can come up with. I'd like to start the ball rolling with the following simple task: Problem: Given a string of text, trim from each end of the text each all occurrences of a given set of strings Sample input: Input string: "dog cat monkey dog horse dog" Strings that need to be trimmed from each end: { "dog", "cat" } Final output should be: " monkey dog horse" Final output should be " cat monkey dog horse " [Edit: My final sample output was incorrect, so to be fair I'll accept either answer] It's up to you whether you worry about case sensitivity. Let's see who can provide the smallest, neatest most elegant, most unique and/or fastest code. For those who feel like jumping on the "No Programming questions" bandwagon, please re-read the lounge guidelines. The point of this is to have fun, not to solve each other's programming issues.

                      cheers, Chris Maunder The Code Project | Co-founder Microsoft C++ MVP

                      M Offline
                      M Offline
                      mrchief_2000
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #130

                      Probably not the most efficient, but in C#, this works:

                      using System.Text.RegularExpressions;

                      var source = "dog cat dog horses monkeys dog";
                      var stringsToTrim = new[] { "dog", "cat" };
                      var trimmedString = Regex.Replace(source, string.Format("^({0})|({0})$", string.Join("|", stringsToTrim )), "");
                      Console.WriteLine(trimmedString);

                      Live demo: http://rextester.com/GTLWO64640[^] Making above shorter:

                      using System.Text.RegularExpressions;

                      Console.WriteLine(Regex.Replace("dog cat dog horses monkeys dog", string.Format("^({0})|({0})$", string.Join("|", "dog", "cat")), ""));

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • C Chris Maunder

                        Back in the Days of Yore we had a couple of small coding challenges such as the Lean and Mean comp. I was thinking that there are a ton of small, well defined problems that can be tackled a zillion ways in a zillion languages and that it would be cool to see what you guys can come up with. I'd like to start the ball rolling with the following simple task: Problem: Given a string of text, trim from each end of the text each all occurrences of a given set of strings Sample input: Input string: "dog cat monkey dog horse dog" Strings that need to be trimmed from each end: { "dog", "cat" } Final output should be: " monkey dog horse" Final output should be " cat monkey dog horse " [Edit: My final sample output was incorrect, so to be fair I'll accept either answer] It's up to you whether you worry about case sensitivity. Let's see who can provide the smallest, neatest most elegant, most unique and/or fastest code. For those who feel like jumping on the "No Programming questions" bandwagon, please re-read the lounge guidelines. The point of this is to have fun, not to solve each other's programming issues.

                        cheers, Chris Maunder The Code Project | Co-founder Microsoft C++ MVP

                        C Offline
                        C Offline
                        Clumpco
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #131

                        Here's a solution in APL V←'dog cat monkey dog horse dog' Q←'dog' V←(((V≠Q)⍳1)-⎕IO)↓V V←(⎕IO-(Q≠⌽V)⍳1)↓V Q←'cat' V←(((V≠Q)⍳1)-⎕IO)↓V V←(⎕IO-(Q≠⌽V)⍳1)↓V No doubt a true APL programmer could do it in one line.

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • C Chris Maunder

                          Quote:

                          There's probably a regex solution

                          result = Regex.Replace("dog cat monkey dog horse dog", "^(dog|cat)*(.*?)((dog|cat)*)$", "$2",
                          RegexOptions.IgnoreCase | RegexOptions.SingleLine);

                          cheers, Chris Maunder The Code Project | Co-founder Microsoft C++ MVP

                          M Offline
                          M Offline
                          Marc Clifton
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #132

                          Chris Maunder wrote:

                          result = Regex.Replace

                          That's sweet. And amazingly simple. Marc

                          My Blog
                          An Agile walk on the wild side with Relationship Oriented Programming

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • P Pete OHanlon

                            Your former client base is showing mate - calling a method Stripper.

                            Forgive your enemies - it messes with their heads

                            "Mind bleach! Send me mind bleach!" - Nagy Vilmos

                            My blog | My articles | MoXAML PowerToys | Mole 2010 - debugging made easier - my favourite utility

                            M Offline
                            M Offline
                            Marc Clifton
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #133

                            Pete O'Hanlon wrote:

                            Your former client base is showing mate - calling a method Stripper.

                            I am scarred for life! ;P Marc

                            My Blog
                            An Agile walk on the wild side with Relationship Oriented Programming

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • H hairy_hats

                              Quantum collapse occurs due to quantum interactions with something else ("observation"). There is no need for that interaction to be conscious or human, it just means that one quantum system is disturbed through interaction with something else - such as a cat. :)

                              D Offline
                              D Offline
                              DariusLegion
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #134

                              What the hell is the matter with you guys...? :sigh:

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • C Chris Maunder

                                Won't work if you have "dog dog text". It will only remove the first "dog"

                                cheers, Chris Maunder The Code Project | Co-founder Microsoft C++ MVP

                                J Offline
                                J Offline
                                jsc42
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #135

                                5th Jan: But you said there was nothing in the spec about whitespace, so only removing the first dog is permissible. FWIW: Here is my solution in JavaScript (not the fastest, but still quite short a) Only removing the first dog (if there are multiple dogs)

                                alert(/^(dog|cat)*(.*?)(dog|cat)*$/.exec("dog cat monkey dog horse dog")[2])

                                b) Allowing removal of packs of dogs and cats optionally separated by whitespace chars:

                                alert(/^(\s*(dog|cat))*(.*?)((dog|cat)\s*)*$/.exec("dog cat monkey dog horse dog")[3])

                                6th Jan: Modified Clarifications in other responses suggest that whitespace is to be preserved and is not significant when looking for leading / trailing texts and that a general solution is required rather than looking only for dogs and cats bracketing "dog cat monkey dog horse dog". So, today's JavaScript version is ...

                                function strim(str, texts)
                                {
                                return str.replace(
                                new RegExp(
                                '^((\\s*)(' + // $2 = leading whitespace
                                texts.join('|') +
                                '))*(.*?)((' + // $4 = middle portion
                                texts.join('|') +
                                ')(\\s*)?)*$', // $7 = trailing whitespace
                                'ig'
                                ),
                                '$2$4$7'
                                );
                                }

                                alert(strim('dog cat monkey dog horse dog', [ 'dog', 'cat' ]));
                                alert(strim('dog dog text', [ 'dog', 'cat' ]));

                                To see the spaces, change the alerts to

                                alert(strim('dog cat monkey dog horse dog', [ 'dog', 'cat' ]).replace(/ /g, '~')); // ~~monkey~dog~horse~
                                alert(strim('dog dog text', [ 'dog', 'cat' ]).replace(/ /g, '~')); // ~~text

                                Note: This will not work if the texts for testing at the start and end include any special RegExp chars, e.g.

                                . * + ? {
                                or }.

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                                0
                                • C Chris Maunder

                                  Back in the Days of Yore we had a couple of small coding challenges such as the Lean and Mean comp. I was thinking that there are a ton of small, well defined problems that can be tackled a zillion ways in a zillion languages and that it would be cool to see what you guys can come up with. I'd like to start the ball rolling with the following simple task: Problem: Given a string of text, trim from each end of the text each all occurrences of a given set of strings Sample input: Input string: "dog cat monkey dog horse dog" Strings that need to be trimmed from each end: { "dog", "cat" } Final output should be: " monkey dog horse" Final output should be " cat monkey dog horse " [Edit: My final sample output was incorrect, so to be fair I'll accept either answer] It's up to you whether you worry about case sensitivity. Let's see who can provide the smallest, neatest most elegant, most unique and/or fastest code. For those who feel like jumping on the "No Programming questions" bandwagon, please re-read the lounge guidelines. The point of this is to have fun, not to solve each other's programming issues.

                                  cheers, Chris Maunder The Code Project | Co-founder Microsoft C++ MVP

                                  K Offline
                                  K Offline
                                  klasbj
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #136

                                  Hi, I have gotten the CodeProject newsletters for several years and used the site, but this it the first time I have posted, but this topic was so fun I just had to! :) I found the task was not clear on one topic, namely which resulting string should be the answer if several are possible? It can happen if the matches at the beginning and end overlap, if my assumption that the patterns you remove can not overlap is correct? Anyway, I solved it with the assumption that what is wanted is the shortest possible resulting string, why else would you trim a string :laugh:

                                  #include <cstdio>
                                  #include <vector>

                                  #include "ahocorasick.h"

                                  using namespace std;
                                  using namespace ac;

                                  // arbitraty length limits
                                  #define MAX_TEXT 1000000
                                  #define MAX_PATTERN 1000000

                                  struct interval {
                                  int begin,end;

                                  interval(int b, int e) : begin(b), end(e) { }
                                  
                                  // reverse the interval given the total length is n
                                  interval reverse(int n) const {
                                      return interval(n - end, n - begin);
                                  }
                                  

                                  };

                                  interval trim(int len, vector<interval> & intervals);

                                  int main() {
                                  char * patternbuf;
                                  char ** patterns;
                                  char text[MAX_TEXT];
                                  int npatterns;

                                  scanf("%d", &npatterns); getchar();
                                  patterns = new char\*\[npatterns\];
                                  patternbuf = new char\[npatterns \* MAX\_PATTERN\];
                                  for (int i = 0; i < npatterns; ++i) {
                                      patterns\[i\] = &patternbuf\[i\*MAX\_PATTERN\];
                                      gets(patterns\[i\]);  // is dangerous and should not be used!
                                  }
                                  gets(text);
                                  
                                  // match the patterns to find all the possible places to trim the string
                                  aho\_corasick matcher(npatterns, patterns);
                                  vector<int> \* matches = matcher.get\_matches(text);
                                  
                                  // build a list of intervals of the matches
                                  vector<interval> intervals;
                                  for (int i = 0; i < npatterns; ++i) {
                                      int len = matcher.get\_pattern\_size(i);
                                      for (vector<int>::iterator it = matches\[i\].begin();
                                              it != matches\[i\].end(); ++it)
                                          intervals.push\_back(interval(\*it, \*it+len));
                                  }
                                  
                                  // trim the string as much as possible, i.e. find the shortest interval of
                                  // the original string that can result from trimming
                                  interval result = trim(strlen(text), intervals);
                                  
                                  // print the result
                                  text\[result.end\] = '\\0';
                                  printf("\\"%s\\"\\n", &text\[result.begin\]);
                                  
                                  
                                  // clean up
                                  delete \[\] patternbuf;
                                  delete \[\] patterns;
                                  
                                  return 0;
                                  

                                  }

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • C Chris Maunder

                                    Back in the Days of Yore we had a couple of small coding challenges such as the Lean and Mean comp. I was thinking that there are a ton of small, well defined problems that can be tackled a zillion ways in a zillion languages and that it would be cool to see what you guys can come up with. I'd like to start the ball rolling with the following simple task: Problem: Given a string of text, trim from each end of the text each all occurrences of a given set of strings Sample input: Input string: "dog cat monkey dog horse dog" Strings that need to be trimmed from each end: { "dog", "cat" } Final output should be: " monkey dog horse" Final output should be " cat monkey dog horse " [Edit: My final sample output was incorrect, so to be fair I'll accept either answer] It's up to you whether you worry about case sensitivity. Let's see who can provide the smallest, neatest most elegant, most unique and/or fastest code. For those who feel like jumping on the "No Programming questions" bandwagon, please re-read the lounge guidelines. The point of this is to have fun, not to solve each other's programming issues.

                                    cheers, Chris Maunder The Code Project | Co-founder Microsoft C++ MVP

                                    D Offline
                                    D Offline
                                    darkDercane
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #137

                                    where i can send my solution?? :P

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • C Chris Maunder

                                      Back in the Days of Yore we had a couple of small coding challenges such as the Lean and Mean comp. I was thinking that there are a ton of small, well defined problems that can be tackled a zillion ways in a zillion languages and that it would be cool to see what you guys can come up with. I'd like to start the ball rolling with the following simple task: Problem: Given a string of text, trim from each end of the text each all occurrences of a given set of strings Sample input: Input string: "dog cat monkey dog horse dog" Strings that need to be trimmed from each end: { "dog", "cat" } Final output should be: " monkey dog horse" Final output should be " cat monkey dog horse " [Edit: My final sample output was incorrect, so to be fair I'll accept either answer] It's up to you whether you worry about case sensitivity. Let's see who can provide the smallest, neatest most elegant, most unique and/or fastest code. For those who feel like jumping on the "No Programming questions" bandwagon, please re-read the lounge guidelines. The point of this is to have fun, not to solve each other's programming issues.

                                      cheers, Chris Maunder The Code Project | Co-founder Microsoft C++ MVP

                                      R Offline
                                      R Offline
                                      Rizean
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #138

                                      I'm sorry but this is not a challenge. If you want a real challenge go to ProjectEuler.com. There you will find over 350 easy to difficult challenges. I have learned a ton from the site and have only completed 45 problems so far. Wish I had more time to work the problems. Regards

                                      C 1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • R Rizean

                                        I'm sorry but this is not a challenge. If you want a real challenge go to ProjectEuler.com. There you will find over 350 easy to difficult challenges. I have learned a ton from the site and have only completed 45 problems so far. Wish I had more time to work the problems. Regards

                                        C Offline
                                        C Offline
                                        Chris Maunder
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #139

                                        I'm sorry but I think you missed the point of this entire thread. Alternatively you could post your own challenge. I'd love to see everyone else throwing their challenges into the ring.

                                        cheers, Chris Maunder The Code Project | Co-founder Microsoft C++ MVP

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • C Chris Maunder

                                          Back in the Days of Yore we had a couple of small coding challenges such as the Lean and Mean comp. I was thinking that there are a ton of small, well defined problems that can be tackled a zillion ways in a zillion languages and that it would be cool to see what you guys can come up with. I'd like to start the ball rolling with the following simple task: Problem: Given a string of text, trim from each end of the text each all occurrences of a given set of strings Sample input: Input string: "dog cat monkey dog horse dog" Strings that need to be trimmed from each end: { "dog", "cat" } Final output should be: " monkey dog horse" Final output should be " cat monkey dog horse " [Edit: My final sample output was incorrect, so to be fair I'll accept either answer] It's up to you whether you worry about case sensitivity. Let's see who can provide the smallest, neatest most elegant, most unique and/or fastest code. For those who feel like jumping on the "No Programming questions" bandwagon, please re-read the lounge guidelines. The point of this is to have fun, not to solve each other's programming issues.

                                          cheers, Chris Maunder The Code Project | Co-founder Microsoft C++ MVP

                                          U Offline
                                          U Offline
                                          User 7888059
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #140

                                          Hmm, i read here since more than one, year but never posted something, but this sounds not to difficult. euphoria 4.0.x include std/text.e include std/console.e puts(1,trim("dog cat monkey dog horse dog","dogcat",0)&"\n") any_key() this should produce your final output Andreas

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