...a list of the offsets for each jump. Jumps are relative: -1 moves to the previous instruction, and 2 skips the next one. Start at the first instruction in the list. The goal is to follow the jumps until one leads outside the list.
In addition, these instructions are a little strange; after each jump, the offset of that instruction increases by 1. So, if you come across an offset of 3, you would move three instructions forward, but change it to a 4 for the next time it is encountered.
For example, consider the following list of jump offsets:
0
3
0
1
-3
Positive jumps ("forward") move downward; negative jumps move upward. For legibility in this example, these offset values will be written all on one line, with the current instruction marked in parentheses. The following steps would be taken before an exit is found:
In this example, the exit is reached in 5 steps.
How many steps does it take to reach the exit?
For now, I'm going to assume a starting state with the size of the sequence pre-computed. We need it to define the exit condition and it is a trivial preamble to generate it. We then need and index
and a step-count
, which are both initially zero. Then we have the sequence itself, and some recursive function F
that does the work.
size index step-count [...] F
-----------------------------------
step-count
F == [P] [T] [R1] [R2] genrec
Later on I was thinking about it and the Forth heuristic came to mind, to wit: four things on the stack are kind of much. Immediately I realized that the size properly belongs in the predicate of F
! D'oh!
index step-count [...] F
------------------------------
step-count
So, let's start by nailing down the predicate:
F == [P] [T] [R1] [R2] genrec
== [P] [T] [R1 [F] R2] ifte
0 0 [0 3 0 1 -3] popop 5 >=
P == popop 5 >=
Now we need the else-part:
index step-count [0 3 0 1 -3] roll< popop
E == roll< popop
Last but not least, the recursive branch
0 0 [0 3 0 1 -3] R1 [F] R2
The R1
function has a big job:
R1 == get the value at index
increment the value at the index
add the value gotten to the index
increment the step count
The only tricky thing there is incrementing an integer in the sequence. Joy sequences are not particularly good for random access. We could encode the list of jump offsets in a big integer and use math to do the processing for a good speed-up, but it still wouldn't beat the performance of e.g. a mutable array. This is just one of those places where "plain vanilla" Joypy doesn't shine (in default performance. The legendary Sufficiently-Smart Compiler would of course rewrite this function to use an array "under the hood".)
In the meantime, I'm going to write a primitive function that just does what we need.
In [1]:
from notebook_preamble import D, J, V, define
from joy.library import SimpleFunctionWrapper
from joy.utils.stack import list_to_stack
@SimpleFunctionWrapper
def incr_at(stack):
'''Given a index and a sequence of integers, increment the integer at the index.
E.g.:
3 [0 1 2 3 4 5] incr_at
-----------------------------
[0 1 2 4 4 5]
'''
sequence, (i, stack) = stack
mem = []
while i >= 0:
term, sequence = sequence
mem.append(term)
i -= 1
mem[-1] += 1
return list_to_stack(mem, sequence), stack
D['incr_at'] = incr_at
In [2]:
J('3 [0 1 2 3 4 5] incr_at')
get_value == [roll< at] nullary
incr_value == [[popd incr_at] unary] dip
add_value == [+] cons dipd
incr_step_count == [++] dip
R1 == get_value incr_value add_value incr_step_count
F == [P] [T] [R1] primrec
F == [popop !size! >=] [roll< pop] [get_value incr_value add_value incr_step_count] primrec
In [3]:
from joy.library import DefinitionWrapper
DefinitionWrapper.add_definitions('''
get_value == [roll< at] nullary
incr_value == [[popd incr_at] unary] dip
add_value == [+] cons dipd
incr_step_count == [++] dip
AoC2017.5.0 == get_value incr_value add_value incr_step_count
''', D)
In [4]:
define('F == [popop 5 >=] [roll< popop] [AoC2017.5.0] primrec')
In [5]:
J('0 0 [0 3 0 1 -3] F')
index
, and step-count
We want to go from this to this:
[...] AoC2017.5.preamble
------------------------------
0 0 [...] [popop n >=]
Where n
is the size of the sequence.
The first part is obviously 0 0 roll<
, then dup size
:
[...] 0 0 roll< dup size
0 0 [...] n
Then:
0 0 [...] n [>=] cons [popop] swoncat
So:
init-index-and-step-count == 0 0 roll<
prepare-predicate == dup size [>=] cons [popop] swoncat
AoC2017.5.preamble == init-index-and-step-count prepare-predicate
In [6]:
DefinitionWrapper.add_definitions('''
init-index-and-step-count == 0 0 roll<
prepare-predicate == dup size [>=] cons [popop] swoncat
AoC2017.5.preamble == init-index-and-step-count prepare-predicate
AoC2017.5 == AoC2017.5.preamble [roll< popop] [AoC2017.5.0] primrec
''', D)
In [7]:
J('[0 3 0 1 -3] AoC2017.5')
AoC2017.5 == AoC2017.5.preamble [roll< popop] [AoC2017.5.0] primrec
AoC2017.5.0 == get_value incr_value add_value incr_step_count
AoC2017.5.preamble == init-index-and-step-count prepare-predicate
get_value == [roll< at] nullary
incr_value == [[popd incr_at] unary] dip
add_value == [+] cons dipd
incr_step_count == [++] dip
init-index-and-step-count == 0 0 roll<
prepare-predicate == dup size [>=] cons [popop] swoncat
This is by far the largest program I have yet written in Joy. Even with the incr_at
function it is still a bear. There may be an arrangement of the parameters that would permit more elegant definitions, but it still wouldn't be as efficient as something written in assembly, C, or even Python.