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Coding Challenge - Morris Sequence

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  • K Kenneth Haugland

    I suspect that it is using a byte for each boolean value. As per the usual answers: Why is a boolean 4 bytes in .NET? - Stack Overflow[^] I could store them in a BitVector32 or a BitArray and write that to the file, but I don't have the time to implement it now.

    D Offline
    D Offline
    Dave Kreskowiak
    wrote on last edited by
    #64

    I tried doing this in a BitArray, but found it to be limited in flexibility and performance. This was about 10 years that I originally worked on this problem. I was doing some cleaning around the drive to get rid of old stuff and ran into the project. Then, of course, I just had to run it again and maybe update the code a little bit. :)

    System.ItDidntWorkException: Something didn't work as expected. C# - How to debug code[^]. Seriously, go read these articles.
    Dave Kreskowiak

    K 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • M Member_5893260

      My instant impression of it is that there has to be a better way than brute force: there's something very Fibonacci-sequence-like about the output... in my head, I can almost predict the pattern from one iteration to the next, without trying to describe anything... if only I had better coffee... if only Dijkstra were still alive... damn it: now you've got me interested.

      D Offline
      D Offline
      Dave Kreskowiak
      wrote on last edited by
      #65

      I know there has to be a better way to do it because I did find a list that gave the lengths for the first 3000 numbers in the sequence. Let's just say there are more digits in the 3000th number than there are atoms in the observable universe. I'll post the answer and the length of #3000 Monday morning. It does make for any interesting problem!

      System.ItDidntWorkException: Something didn't work as expected. C# - How to debug code[^]. Seriously, go read these articles.
      Dave Kreskowiak

      U 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • D Dave Kreskowiak

        I know there has to be a better way to do it because I did find a list that gave the lengths for the first 3000 numbers in the sequence. Let's just say there are more digits in the 3000th number than there are atoms in the observable universe. I'll post the answer and the length of #3000 Monday morning. It does make for any interesting problem!

        System.ItDidntWorkException: Something didn't work as expected. C# - How to debug code[^]. Seriously, go read these articles.
        Dave Kreskowiak

        U Offline
        U Offline
        User 13162285
        wrote on last edited by
        #66

        level 1 size = 1
        level 2 size = 2
        level 3 size = 2
        level 4 size = 4
        level 5 size = 6
        level 6 size = 6
        level 7 size = 8
        level 8 size = 10
        level 9 size = 14
        level 10 size = 20
        level 11 size = 26
        level 12 size = 34
        level 13 size = 46
        level 14 size = 62
        level 15 size = 78
        level 16 size = 102
        level 17 size = 134
        level 18 size = 176
        level 19 size = 226
        level 20 size = 302
        level 21 size = 408
        level 22 size = 528
        level 23 size = 678
        level 24 size = 904
        level 25 size = 1182
        level 26 size = 1540
        level 27 size = 2012
        level 28 size = 2606
        level 29 size = 3410
        level 30 size = 4462
        level 31 size = 5808
        level 32 size = 7586
        level 33 size = 9898
        level 34 size = 12884
        level 35 size = 16774
        level 36 size = 21890
        level 37 size = 28528
        level 38 size = 37158
        level 39 size = 48410
        level 40 size = 63138
        level 41 size = 82350
        level 42 size = 107312
        level 43 size = 139984
        level 44 size = 182376
        level 45 size = 237746
        level 46 size = 310036
        level 47 size = 403966
        level 48 size = 526646
        level 49 size = 686646
        level 50 size = 894810
        level 51 size = 1166642
        level 52 size = 1520986
        level 53 size = 1982710
        level 54 size = 2584304
        level 55 size = 3369156
        level 56 size = 4391702
        level 57 size = 5724486
        level 58 size = 7462860
        level 59 size = 9727930
        level 60 size = 12680852
        level 61 size = 16530884
        level 62 size = 21549544
        level 63 size = 28091184
        level 64 size = 36619162
        level 65 size = 47736936
        level 66 size = 62226614
        level 67 size = 81117366
        level 68 size = 105745224
        level 69 size = 137842560
        level 70 size = 179691598
        level 71 size = 234241786
        level 72 size = 305351794
        level 73 size = 398049970
        level 74 size = 518891358
        level 75 size = 676414798
        level 76 size = 881752750
        level 77 size = 1149440192
        level 78 size = 1498380104
        level 79 size = 1953245418
        level 80 size = 2546222700
        level 81 size = 3319186080
        level 82 size = 4326816254
        level 83 size = 5640348764
        level 84 size = 7352630884
        level 85 size = 9584715106
        level 86 size = 12494412020
        level 87 size = 16287462624
        level 88 size = 21231903676
        level 89 size = 27677468012
        level 90 size = 36079732206
        level 91 size = 47032657188
        level 92 size = 61310766500
        level 93 size = 79923316046
        level 94 size = 104186199146
        level 95 size = 135814773100
        level 96 size = 177045063068
        level 97 size = 230791944956
        level 98 size = 300854953626
        level 99 size = 392187941864
        level 100 size = 511247092564
        finished computation at Fri Dec 1 16:48:41 2017
        elapsed time: 7205.75secs

        D 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • D Dave Kreskowiak

          It's also known as the Conway Sequence, Look and Say Sequence, and probably some others. It's rather simple. Start with a 1 and then describe what you see for the next iteration. So, starting at 1, the next number is one 1 (11), the next is two 1 (21), then one 2 one 1 (1211), and so on:

          1
          11
          21
          1211
          111221
          312211

          The question to answer is what's the length in digits of the 100th number in the chain, starting with "1" as the first? The first six numbers have been given above. You could write it out by hand, but I wouldn't recommend it, and as developers, that's not what we do. The seemingly simple challenge is to write the code to come up with the answer. The only hint you get is the 50th number is 894,810 digits long. Oh, and don't bother Googling for code. Those examples will only get you so far and definitely won't get you to the answer.

          System.ItDidntWorkException: Something didn't work as expected. C# - How to debug code[^]. Seriously, go read these articles.
          Dave Kreskowiak

          P Offline
          P Offline
          PIEBALDconsult
          wrote on last edited by
          #67

          :elephant: OK, I'll see how far I get doing it "my way" -- but I'll address the more general problem, allowing the starting input to be more than one symbol and not limited to the symbols 1, 2, and 3. Also, allowing the caller to specify the maximum subsequence length -- that'll be the hard part. I think the only alcohol in the place is one shot of tequila; it will have to be enough. Sunday morning update: By midnight I had the basic functionality (subsequence lengths 0 and 1) working and tested -- but using a List<T> which means that there are allocation issues. This morning's immediate goal -- implement a SegmentedList<T> class. Sunday afternoon update: The SegmentedList<T> is working well, and it allows for multiple threads for improved speed.

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • D Dave Kreskowiak

            I tried doing this in a BitArray, but found it to be limited in flexibility and performance. This was about 10 years that I originally worked on this problem. I was doing some cleaning around the drive to get rid of old stuff and ran into the project. Then, of course, I just had to run it again and maybe update the code a little bit. :)

            System.ItDidntWorkException: Something didn't work as expected. C# - How to debug code[^]. Seriously, go read these articles.
            Dave Kreskowiak

            K Offline
            K Offline
            Kenneth Haugland
            wrote on last edited by
            #68

            They definitely store the booleans as bytes. I ran this:

            string MorrisBitVector32(int S, int N)
            {
            //Need the mask for accessing the individual bits
            int[] _masks = new int[32];
            {
            _masks[0] = BitVector32.CreateMask();
            }
            for (int i = 1; i < 32; i++)
            {
            _masks[i] = BitVector32.CreateMask(_masks[i - 1]);
            }

                    //Hopefully setes the path to the project folder
                    string projectPath = System.IO.Path.GetFullPath(@"..\\..\\..\\");
            
            
                    using (BinaryWriter writer = new BinaryWriter(File.Open(projectPath + "input.txt", FileMode.Create)))
                    {
                        BitVector32 v = new BitVector32();
                        // Standard 3 = 11, 2=10,1=01 and 
                        // 00 is not more numbers in this BitVector32
                        v\[\_masks\[0\]\] = S >= 2;
                        v\[\_masks\[1\]\] = S != 2;
                        //Writes a 32bit integer to the file
                        writer.Write(v.Data);
                    }
            
            
                    for (int i = 1; i < N; i++)
                    {
                        Debug.WriteLine(i + 1);
            
                        using (BinaryReader reader = new BinaryReader(File.Open(projectPath + "input.txt", FileMode.Open)))
                        {
                            // Initiates variables for each N run
                            bool currMSB, currLSB, firstRun;
                            firstRun = true;
                            currMSB = false;
                            currLSB = false;
                            int count = 0;
                            int k = 0;
                            BitVector32 outputBits = new BitVector32();
            
                            using (BinaryWriter writer = new BinaryWriter(File.Open(projectPath + "output.txt", FileMode.Create)))
                            {
            
                                while (reader.BaseStream.Position != reader.BaseStream.Length)
                                {
                                    BitVector32 inputBits = new BitVector32(reader.ReadInt32());
                                    if (firstRun)
                                    {
                                        count = 1;
                                        currMSB = inputBits\[\_masks\[0\]\];
                                        currLSB = inputBits\[\_masks\[1\]\];                                
                                    }
            
            
                                    bool nextMSB, nextLSB;
                                    for (int j = (firstRun ? 2 : 0); j < 32; j += 2)
                                    {
                                        nextMSB = inputBits\[\_ma
            
            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • D Dave Kreskowiak

              Nope, not even close.

              System.ItDidntWorkException: Something didn't work as expected. C# - How to debug code[^]. Seriously, go read these articles.
              Dave Kreskowiak

              U Offline
              U Offline
              User 13520686
              wrote on last edited by
              #69

              After a bit more fiddling:

              Test length 48 th : 526646 526,646
              Test length 49 th : 686646 686,646
              Test length 50 th : 894810 894,810
              51st length : 1,166,642
              52nd length : 1,521,070
              53rd length : 1,983,164
              54th length : 2,585,639
              55th length : 3,371,142
              56th length : 4,395,278
              57th length : 5,730,540
              58th length : 7,471,449
              59th length : 9,741,236
              60th length : 12,700,573
              61st length : 16,558,941
              62nd length : 21,589,461
              63rd length : 28,148,228
              64th length : 36,699,513
              65th length : 47,848,635
              66th length : 62,384,802
              67th length : 81,336,981
              68th length : 106,046,733
              69th length : 138,263,181
              70th length : 180,266,818
              71st length : 235,030,941
              72nd length : 306,432,122
              73rd length : 399,524,610
              74th length : 520,898,113
              75th length : 679,144,257
              76th length : 885,464,758
              77th length : 1,154,464,356
              78th length : 1,505,184,637
              79th length : 1,962,451,918
              80th length : 2,558,634,627
              81st length : 3,335,934,550
              82nd length : 4,349,374,155
              83rd length : 5,670,691,453
              84th length : 7,393,418,089
              85th length : 9,639,500,137
              86th length : 12,567,930,256
              87th length : 16,386,002,249
              88th length : 21,363,984,700
              89th length : 27,854,252,387
              90th length : 36,316,229,718
              91st length : 47,348,911,849
              92nd length : 61,733,265,560
              93rd length : 80,487,511,283
              94th length : 104,939,199,534
              95th length : 136,819,183,789
              96th length : 178,384,141,824
              97th length : 232,576,318,416
              98th length : 303,231,797,036
              99th length : 395,352,043,407
              100th length : 515,457,942,582

              Regards , R

              D 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • D Dave Kreskowiak

                It's also known as the Conway Sequence, Look and Say Sequence, and probably some others. It's rather simple. Start with a 1 and then describe what you see for the next iteration. So, starting at 1, the next number is one 1 (11), the next is two 1 (21), then one 2 one 1 (1211), and so on:

                1
                11
                21
                1211
                111221
                312211

                The question to answer is what's the length in digits of the 100th number in the chain, starting with "1" as the first? The first six numbers have been given above. You could write it out by hand, but I wouldn't recommend it, and as developers, that's not what we do. The seemingly simple challenge is to write the code to come up with the answer. The only hint you get is the 50th number is 894,810 digits long. Oh, and don't bother Googling for code. Those examples will only get you so far and definitely won't get you to the answer.

                System.ItDidntWorkException: Something didn't work as expected. C# - How to debug code[^]. Seriously, go read these articles.
                Dave Kreskowiak

                T Offline
                T Offline
                Tony Riddiough
                wrote on last edited by
                #70

                Since the only requirement was to determine the length, it is not necessary to store the full string. A simple 100 level recursion that, at each level, returns the next digit in sequence suffices - it takes a long time to run, but does not need huge amounts of space. At each level above the first it is only necessary to store at most two digits - the digit of which you have just counted the repetitions, and the digit that broke the sequence. Each invocation at any level alternates between returning the count and returning the counted digit.

                P 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • U User 13520686

                  After a bit more fiddling:

                  Test length 48 th : 526646 526,646
                  Test length 49 th : 686646 686,646
                  Test length 50 th : 894810 894,810
                  51st length : 1,166,642
                  52nd length : 1,521,070
                  53rd length : 1,983,164
                  54th length : 2,585,639
                  55th length : 3,371,142
                  56th length : 4,395,278
                  57th length : 5,730,540
                  58th length : 7,471,449
                  59th length : 9,741,236
                  60th length : 12,700,573
                  61st length : 16,558,941
                  62nd length : 21,589,461
                  63rd length : 28,148,228
                  64th length : 36,699,513
                  65th length : 47,848,635
                  66th length : 62,384,802
                  67th length : 81,336,981
                  68th length : 106,046,733
                  69th length : 138,263,181
                  70th length : 180,266,818
                  71st length : 235,030,941
                  72nd length : 306,432,122
                  73rd length : 399,524,610
                  74th length : 520,898,113
                  75th length : 679,144,257
                  76th length : 885,464,758
                  77th length : 1,154,464,356
                  78th length : 1,505,184,637
                  79th length : 1,962,451,918
                  80th length : 2,558,634,627
                  81st length : 3,335,934,550
                  82nd length : 4,349,374,155
                  83rd length : 5,670,691,453
                  84th length : 7,393,418,089
                  85th length : 9,639,500,137
                  86th length : 12,567,930,256
                  87th length : 16,386,002,249
                  88th length : 21,363,984,700
                  89th length : 27,854,252,387
                  90th length : 36,316,229,718
                  91st length : 47,348,911,849
                  92nd length : 61,733,265,560
                  93rd length : 80,487,511,283
                  94th length : 104,939,199,534
                  95th length : 136,819,183,789
                  96th length : 178,384,141,824
                  97th length : 232,576,318,416
                  98th length : 303,231,797,036
                  99th length : 395,352,043,407
                  100th length : 515,457,942,582

                  Regards , R

                  D Offline
                  D Offline
                  Dave Kreskowiak
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #71

                  Wrong again!

                  System.ItDidntWorkException: Something didn't work as expected. C# - How to debug code[^]. Seriously, go read these articles.
                  Dave Kreskowiak

                  U 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • T Tony Riddiough

                    Since the only requirement was to determine the length, it is not necessary to store the full string. A simple 100 level recursion that, at each level, returns the next digit in sequence suffices - it takes a long time to run, but does not need huge amounts of space. At each level above the first it is only necessary to store at most two digits - the digit of which you have just counted the repetitions, and the digit that broke the sequence. Each invocation at any level alternates between returning the count and returning the counted digit.

                    P Offline
                    P Offline
                    PIEBALDconsult
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #72

                    I didn't follow that.

                    T 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • D Dave Kreskowiak

                      It's also known as the Conway Sequence, Look and Say Sequence, and probably some others. It's rather simple. Start with a 1 and then describe what you see for the next iteration. So, starting at 1, the next number is one 1 (11), the next is two 1 (21), then one 2 one 1 (1211), and so on:

                      1
                      11
                      21
                      1211
                      111221
                      312211

                      The question to answer is what's the length in digits of the 100th number in the chain, starting with "1" as the first? The first six numbers have been given above. You could write it out by hand, but I wouldn't recommend it, and as developers, that's not what we do. The seemingly simple challenge is to write the code to come up with the answer. The only hint you get is the 50th number is 894,810 digits long. Oh, and don't bother Googling for code. Those examples will only get you so far and definitely won't get you to the answer.

                      System.ItDidntWorkException: Something didn't work as expected. C# - How to debug code[^]. Seriously, go read these articles.
                      Dave Kreskowiak

                      D Offline
                      D Offline
                      Dave Kreskowiak
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #73

                      The answer for the length of the 100th number is 511,247,092,564 digits. The length escalates frighteningly quickly. The LENGTH of the 3000th number in the chain is, get this, 4029857719515768641307384677908679928310793769651641917926155107836565892187598804862177357001771122238068645667821323998368650130801806344030981271295995422208436642014734696538407619447946889047668430308242548524802874469136450965097114152481264391293269162985708430576259447637028591596189605329702198409448541645531801518246316682171504624370 digits long. That's not the number. That's how long it is in digits! That's more digits than there are the estimated number of atoms in the observable universe, by many orders of magnitude!

                      System.ItDidntWorkException: Something didn't work as expected. C# - How to debug code[^]. Seriously, go read these articles.
                      Dave Kreskowiak

                      P P 2 Replies Last reply
                      0
                      • U User 13162285

                        level 1 size = 1
                        level 2 size = 2
                        level 3 size = 2
                        level 4 size = 4
                        level 5 size = 6
                        level 6 size = 6
                        level 7 size = 8
                        level 8 size = 10
                        level 9 size = 14
                        level 10 size = 20
                        level 11 size = 26
                        level 12 size = 34
                        level 13 size = 46
                        level 14 size = 62
                        level 15 size = 78
                        level 16 size = 102
                        level 17 size = 134
                        level 18 size = 176
                        level 19 size = 226
                        level 20 size = 302
                        level 21 size = 408
                        level 22 size = 528
                        level 23 size = 678
                        level 24 size = 904
                        level 25 size = 1182
                        level 26 size = 1540
                        level 27 size = 2012
                        level 28 size = 2606
                        level 29 size = 3410
                        level 30 size = 4462
                        level 31 size = 5808
                        level 32 size = 7586
                        level 33 size = 9898
                        level 34 size = 12884
                        level 35 size = 16774
                        level 36 size = 21890
                        level 37 size = 28528
                        level 38 size = 37158
                        level 39 size = 48410
                        level 40 size = 63138
                        level 41 size = 82350
                        level 42 size = 107312
                        level 43 size = 139984
                        level 44 size = 182376
                        level 45 size = 237746
                        level 46 size = 310036
                        level 47 size = 403966
                        level 48 size = 526646
                        level 49 size = 686646
                        level 50 size = 894810
                        level 51 size = 1166642
                        level 52 size = 1520986
                        level 53 size = 1982710
                        level 54 size = 2584304
                        level 55 size = 3369156
                        level 56 size = 4391702
                        level 57 size = 5724486
                        level 58 size = 7462860
                        level 59 size = 9727930
                        level 60 size = 12680852
                        level 61 size = 16530884
                        level 62 size = 21549544
                        level 63 size = 28091184
                        level 64 size = 36619162
                        level 65 size = 47736936
                        level 66 size = 62226614
                        level 67 size = 81117366
                        level 68 size = 105745224
                        level 69 size = 137842560
                        level 70 size = 179691598
                        level 71 size = 234241786
                        level 72 size = 305351794
                        level 73 size = 398049970
                        level 74 size = 518891358
                        level 75 size = 676414798
                        level 76 size = 881752750
                        level 77 size = 1149440192
                        level 78 size = 1498380104
                        level 79 size = 1953245418
                        level 80 size = 2546222700
                        level 81 size = 3319186080
                        level 82 size = 4326816254
                        level 83 size = 5640348764
                        level 84 size = 7352630884
                        level 85 size = 9584715106
                        level 86 size = 12494412020
                        level 87 size = 16287462624
                        level 88 size = 21231903676
                        level 89 size = 27677468012
                        level 90 size = 36079732206
                        level 91 size = 47032657188
                        level 92 size = 61310766500
                        level 93 size = 79923316046
                        level 94 size = 104186199146
                        level 95 size = 135814773100
                        level 96 size = 177045063068
                        level 97 size = 230791944956
                        level 98 size = 300854953626
                        level 99 size = 392187941864
                        level 100 size = 511247092564
                        finished computation at Fri Dec 1 16:48:41 2017
                        elapsed time: 7205.75secs

                        D Offline
                        D Offline
                        Dave Kreskowiak
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #74

                        Congratulations! You're the first to post the correct answer. Extra credit: how did you do it in 2 hours?

                        System.ItDidntWorkException: Something didn't work as expected. C# - How to debug code[^]. Seriously, go read these articles.
                        Dave Kreskowiak

                        U 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • D Dave Kreskowiak

                          Congratulations! You're the first to post the correct answer. Extra credit: how did you do it in 2 hours?

                          System.ItDidntWorkException: Something didn't work as expected. C# - How to debug code[^]. Seriously, go read these articles.
                          Dave Kreskowiak

                          U Offline
                          U Offline
                          User 13162285
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #75

                          Since we only need to compute the length, storing the entire string isn't necessary. Furthermore, the computation can be done recursively and requires very little code/storage for each level of recursion. The memory footprint while running was about 16k IIRC. I removed some extraneous code and got the runtime at l=100 to about 1.5 hours. Probably could optimize it even more, but I don't see the point. I'd post code here but it seems to be discouraged.

                          D 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • U User 13162285

                            Since we only need to compute the length, storing the entire string isn't necessary. Furthermore, the computation can be done recursively and requires very little code/storage for each level of recursion. The memory footprint while running was about 16k IIRC. I removed some extraneous code and got the runtime at l=100 to about 1.5 hours. Probably could optimize it even more, but I don't see the point. I'd post code here but it seems to be discouraged.

                            D Offline
                            D Offline
                            Dave Kreskowiak
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #76

                            It would be interesting to see. Code has been an exception in the past for challenges like this.

                            System.ItDidntWorkException: Something didn't work as expected. C# - How to debug code[^]. Seriously, go read these articles.
                            Dave Kreskowiak

                            U 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • D Dave Kreskowiak

                              It would be interesting to see. Code has been an exception in the past for challenges like this.

                              System.ItDidntWorkException: Something didn't work as expected. C# - How to debug code[^]. Seriously, go read these articles.
                              Dave Kreskowiak

                              U Offline
                              U Offline
                              User 13162285
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #77

                              OK, here it is... #include #include #include using namespace std; #define maxLevel 100 static uint32_t currentLevel = 0; static chrono::time_point start, timeFinished; class LevelProcessor { public: LevelProcessor() : currentOccurrence(0), currentPrefix(0), myLevel(currentLevel++), totalSize(0) { } void ProcessLevel(uint32_t prefix); void FinishLevel(); uint32_t currentOccurrence; uint32_t currentPrefix; const uint32_t myLevel; uint64_t totalSize; }; static LevelProcessor processors[maxLevel]; void LevelProcessor::ProcessLevel(uint32_t prefix) { if (prefix == currentPrefix) { ++currentOccurrence; return; } if (currentOccurrence != 0) { if (myLevel < maxLevel - 1) { processors[myLevel + 1].ProcessLevel(currentOccurrence); processors[myLevel + 1].ProcessLevel(currentPrefix); } ++totalSize; } currentPrefix = prefix; currentOccurrence = 1; } void LevelProcessor::FinishLevel() { ++totalSize; if (myLevel < maxLevel - 1) { processors[myLevel + 1].ProcessLevel(currentOccurrence); processors[myLevel + 1].ProcessLevel(currentPrefix); } chrono::time_point timeFinished = chrono::system_clock::now(); chrono::duration elapsed_seconds = timeFinished - start; time_t end_time = chrono::system_clock::to_time_t(timeFinished); cout << "level " << myLevel + 1 << " is done, size = " << totalSize * 2 << " at " << "elapsed time: " << elapsed_seconds.count() << "secs" << endl; if (myLevel < maxLevel - 1) processors[myLevel + 1].FinishLevel(); } int main() { start = chrono::system_clock::now(); processors[1].ProcessLevel(1); processors[1].FinishLevel(); timeFinished = chrono::system_clock::now(); chrono::duration elapsed_seconds = timeFinished - start; time_t end_time = chrono::system_clock::to_time_t(timeFinished); cout << "finished computation at " << ctime(&end_time) << "elapsed time: " << elapsed_seconds.count() << "secs" << endl; } So much for my indenting, oh well.

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                              • U User 13162285

                                OK, here it is... #include #include #include using namespace std; #define maxLevel 100 static uint32_t currentLevel = 0; static chrono::time_point start, timeFinished; class LevelProcessor { public: LevelProcessor() : currentOccurrence(0), currentPrefix(0), myLevel(currentLevel++), totalSize(0) { } void ProcessLevel(uint32_t prefix); void FinishLevel(); uint32_t currentOccurrence; uint32_t currentPrefix; const uint32_t myLevel; uint64_t totalSize; }; static LevelProcessor processors[maxLevel]; void LevelProcessor::ProcessLevel(uint32_t prefix) { if (prefix == currentPrefix) { ++currentOccurrence; return; } if (currentOccurrence != 0) { if (myLevel < maxLevel - 1) { processors[myLevel + 1].ProcessLevel(currentOccurrence); processors[myLevel + 1].ProcessLevel(currentPrefix); } ++totalSize; } currentPrefix = prefix; currentOccurrence = 1; } void LevelProcessor::FinishLevel() { ++totalSize; if (myLevel < maxLevel - 1) { processors[myLevel + 1].ProcessLevel(currentOccurrence); processors[myLevel + 1].ProcessLevel(currentPrefix); } chrono::time_point timeFinished = chrono::system_clock::now(); chrono::duration elapsed_seconds = timeFinished - start; time_t end_time = chrono::system_clock::to_time_t(timeFinished); cout << "level " << myLevel + 1 << " is done, size = " << totalSize * 2 << " at " << "elapsed time: " << elapsed_seconds.count() << "secs" << endl; if (myLevel < maxLevel - 1) processors[myLevel + 1].FinishLevel(); } int main() { start = chrono::system_clock::now(); processors[1].ProcessLevel(1); processors[1].FinishLevel(); timeFinished = chrono::system_clock::now(); chrono::duration elapsed_seconds = timeFinished - start; time_t end_time = chrono::system_clock::to_time_t(timeFinished); cout << "finished computation at " << ctime(&end_time) << "elapsed time: " << elapsed_seconds.count() << "secs" << endl; } So much for my indenting, oh well.

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                                Dave Kreskowiak
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #78

                                Interesting. When I originally did the research into this thing I saw the pattern developing in the brute force results but I was never able to get any code to work that looked for and tracked the pattern. I'll have to dig into this later to see exactly how it works and where I made my mistakes. I still have a couple of the broken projects from way back then. Thanks for sharing!

                                System.ItDidntWorkException: Something didn't work as expected. C# - How to debug code[^]. Seriously, go read these articles.
                                Dave Kreskowiak

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                                • P PIEBALDconsult

                                  I didn't follow that.

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                                  Tony Riddiough
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #79

                                  The quick and dirty code I wrote was

                                  #include
                                  #include

                                  class s {
                                  private:
                                  char indx;
                                  char ondx;
                                  char v[10];
                                  public:
                                  bool done;
                                  unsigned long long count;
                                  s(void) {
                                  indx = '\0';
                                  ondx = '\0';
                                  done = false;
                                  count= 0UL;
                                  }
                                  void put (char c) {
                                  v[indx++] = c;
                                  indx = indx % 10;
                                  }
                                  char get (void) {
                                  char c = v[ondx++];
                                  ondx = ondx %10;
                                  return c;
                                  }
                                  char peek (void) {
                                  return v[ondx];
                                  }
                                  bool isEmpty (void) {
                                  return indx == ondx;
                                  }
                                  };

                                  s context[100];

                                  // the two functions "nextItem" and "doCount" call each other recursively.

                                  bool nextItem (char& c, int level);

                                  // count number of consecutive instances of v from level below
                                  // return count as a character in 'c'; save v with msb set. and
                                  // character which terminated count in context.
                                  void doCount (char& c, char v, int level) {
                                  bool r = false;
                                  s& x = context[level];
                                  c = '1';
                                  x.put (v + 0X80);
                                  while (!x.done) {
                                  char t;
                                  x.done = nextItem (t, level - 1);
                                  if (t == v) {
                                  c++;
                                  }
                                  else {
                                  // count is complete so we need to put the terminating value
                                  // in the buffer, value we are counting is already there
                                  x.put (t);
                                  break;
                                  }
                                  }
                                  }

                                  // return in 'c' the next character from the specified level
                                  // signal done if that character is the last.
                                  // there are two special cases:
                                  // 1) level = 0, the single character '1' is returned and done is signalled
                                  // 2) There are no characters held in the context (this must be the first entry)
                                  // Otherwise there are one or two characters in the context. If the next character
                                  // held in the context ha the msb set, the count has already been returned so the
                                  // character should be returned. Otherwise the character is the terminating character
                                  // from the last count and more repetitions (if any) must be counted, after which the
                                  // count is returned. When the lower level has signalled done, then when the last
                                  // character is returned also signal done.
                                  // Count the number of characters returned and when the last character is returned and
                                  // done s signalled, report the level and the total.

                                  bool nextItem (char& c, int level) {
                                  s& x = context[level];
                                  bool r = false;
                                  if (!x.isEmpty()) {
                                  // more ready to output
                                  char v = x.get();
                                  c = v & 0X7F;
                                  if (v & 0X80) {
                                  r = x.isEmpty();
                                  }
                                  else {
                                  // this is the next value and we need to count any more
                                  doCount (c, v, level);
                                  }
                                  }
                                  else if (level == 0) {
                                  // at the lowest level the seed is a single '1'
                                  c

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                                  • D Dave Kreskowiak

                                    Interesting. When I originally did the research into this thing I saw the pattern developing in the brute force results but I was never able to get any code to work that looked for and tracked the pattern. I'll have to dig into this later to see exactly how it works and where I made my mistakes. I still have a couple of the broken projects from way back then. Thanks for sharing!

                                    System.ItDidntWorkException: Something didn't work as expected. C# - How to debug code[^]. Seriously, go read these articles.
                                    Dave Kreskowiak

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                                    User 13162285
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #80

                                    I wish I could say that this is exploiting some underlying pattern, but it's really just a more efficient brute force implementation. It's more like a depth-first tree traversal - you never have to compute and store the entire string at one level before working on the next.

                                    D 2 Replies Last reply
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                                    • U User 13162285

                                      I wish I could say that this is exploiting some underlying pattern, but it's really just a more efficient brute force implementation. It's more like a depth-first tree traversal - you never have to compute and store the entire string at one level before working on the next.

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                                      Dave Kreskowiak
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #81

                                      That's what I thought. When I originally started looking at this, I found the storage requirements for a single iteration were going to jump exponentially. I was looking for a method to do this, something like what you've done, but couldn't get it to work.

                                      System.ItDidntWorkException: Something didn't work as expected. C# - How to debug code[^]. Seriously, go read these articles.
                                      Dave Kreskowiak

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                                      • U User 13162285

                                        I wish I could say that this is exploiting some underlying pattern, but it's really just a more efficient brute force implementation. It's more like a depth-first tree traversal - you never have to compute and store the entire string at one level before working on the next.

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                                        Dave Kreskowiak
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #82

                                        Wow, I see where my previous mistakes were compared to yours. I got a couple of hints from your code that got my old code working, and what I was misinterpreting. Your code, on my machine, does the 100 numbers in an hour and ten minutes. FAR faster than my brute force runs that store every iteration on disk in a byte-compressed format and takes just under 6 hours to run. Thanks for the help!

                                        System.ItDidntWorkException: Something didn't work as expected. C# - How to debug code[^]. Seriously, go read these articles.
                                        Dave Kreskowiak

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                                        • D Dave Kreskowiak

                                          The answer for the length of the 100th number is 511,247,092,564 digits. The length escalates frighteningly quickly. The LENGTH of the 3000th number in the chain is, get this, 4029857719515768641307384677908679928310793769651641917926155107836565892187598804862177357001771122238068645667821323998368650130801806344030981271295995422208436642014734696538407619447946889047668430308242548524802874469136450965097114152481264391293269162985708430576259447637028591596189605329702198409448541645531801518246316682171504624370 digits long. That's not the number. That's how long it is in digits! That's more digits than there are the estimated number of atoms in the observable universe, by many orders of magnitude!

                                          System.ItDidntWorkException: Something didn't work as expected. C# - How to debug code[^]. Seriously, go read these articles.
                                          Dave Kreskowiak

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                                          PeejayAdams
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #83

                                          I've left my totally brute-force string-based solution running for 4 days and it's only on the 64th iteration having got up to 50 within an hour - so, yeah, that rather underlines how it can never really be achieved in reasonable time without an awful lot more finesse. I really enjoyed this as a coding challenge even though I didn't get remotely close to cracking it. A simple looking task on the surface but one that soon reveals itself to be monumentally problematic.

                                          98.4% of statistics are made up on the spot.

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