Groups | Search | Server Info | Keyboard shortcuts | Login | Register [http] [https] [nntp] [nntps]
Groups > comp.lang.python > #32651 > unrolled thread
| Started by | foster63@gmail.com |
|---|---|
| First post | 2012-11-02 12:19 -0700 |
| Last post | 2012-11-03 22:16 -0700 |
| Articles | 10 — 6 participants |
Back to article view | Back to comp.lang.python
Haskell -> Python foster63@gmail.com - 2012-11-02 12:19 -0700
Re: Haskell -> Python Dave Angel <d@davea.name> - 2012-11-02 15:56 -0400
Re: Haskell -> Python Simon Foster <simon.foster@inbox.com> - 2012-11-02 20:09 +0000
Re: Haskell -> Python Ian Kelly <ian.g.kelly@gmail.com> - 2012-11-02 15:40 -0600
Re: Haskell -> Python Duncan Booth <duncan.booth@invalid.invalid> - 2012-11-03 16:29 +0000
Re: Haskell -> Python Ian Kelly <ian.g.kelly@gmail.com> - 2012-11-02 15:46 -0600
Re: Haskell -> Python Dave Angel <d@davea.name> - 2012-11-02 18:24 -0400
Re: Haskell -> Python Ian Kelly <ian.g.kelly@gmail.com> - 2012-11-02 16:27 -0600
Re: Haskell -> Python Dave Angel <d@davea.name> - 2012-11-02 22:03 -0400
Re: Haskell -> Python aahz@pythoncraft.com (Aahz) - 2012-11-03 22:16 -0700
| From | foster63@gmail.com |
|---|---|
| Date | 2012-11-02 12:19 -0700 |
| Subject | Haskell -> Python |
| Message-ID | <b19e3922-d86f-426f-afb8-1f75b793f87b@googlegroups.com> |
Hi All,
As part of a Nim solver I'm playing around with I'm trying to code this Haskell snippet:
options [x] = zero : [ [y] | y <- [1..x - 1] ]
options (x:xs) = map (++ xs) (options [x]) ++ map (x:) (options xs)
in Python. So far I have this, which works OK, but somehow doesn't feel right:
def options( heaps ):
if heaps == []: return []
head, tail = heaps[:1], heaps[1:]
# Calculate all possible moves which is the sum of
# prepending all possible head "moves" to the tail
# and appending all possible tail "moves" to the head
return [ [h] + tail for h in range( head[0] ) ] \
+ [ head + t for t in options( tail ) ]
Is there anything anyone could recommend to make it more "Pythonic" or more functional. It looks clumsy next to the Haskell.
Regards
etc.
[toc] | [next] | [standalone]
| From | Dave Angel <d@davea.name> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2012-11-02 15:56 -0400 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.3217.1351886225.27098.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #32651 |
On 11/02/2012 03:19 PM, foster63@gmail.com wrote: > Hi All, > > As part of a Nim solver I'm playing around with I'm trying to code this Haskell snippet: > > options [x] = zero : [ [y] | y <- [1..x - 1] ] > options (x:xs) = map (++ xs) (options [x]) ++ map (x:) (options xs) > > in Python. So far I have this, which works OK, but somehow doesn't feel right: > > def options( heaps ): > > if heaps == []: return [] > > head, tail = heaps[:1], heaps[1:] > > # Calculate all possible moves which is the sum of > # prepending all possible head "moves" to the tail > # and appending all possible tail "moves" to the head > > return [ [h] + tail for h in range( head[0] ) ] \ > + [ head + t for t in options( tail ) ] > > Is there anything anyone could recommend to make it more "Pythonic" or more functional. It looks clumsy next to the Haskell. > > Regards > > etc. You'd save people a lot of time if you'd specify that the parameter heaps is a list of ints, perhaps initially [1,3,5,7] or [3, 4, 5] depending on which variation of Nim you're trying to. There are many. One variant is that some versions of Nim say the winner is the player who does NOT take the last piece. I'll assume that the goal is to end up with [0,0,0,0] My main problem with studying your code is that brute force is totally unnecessary; there's a fairly simple strategy for winning at Nim. Certainly it's simple enough to have perfect strategy without any computer. A "good" move is any one where the xor of all the items in the list ends up as zero. There is always at least one move for an "ungood" position that results in a "good" one. Thus the strategy is to go from good to good, with the opponent always stuck on an ungood one. -- DaveA
[toc] | [prev] | [next] | [standalone]
| From | Simon Foster <simon.foster@inbox.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2012-11-02 20:09 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <1IWdnd9wkMbntQnNnZ2dnUVZ8ridnZ2d@brightview.co.uk> |
| In reply to | #32654 |
On 02/11/12 19:56, Dave Angel wrote:
> On 11/02/2012 03:19 PM, foster63@gmail.com wrote:
>> Hi All,
>>
>> As part of a Nim solver I'm playing around with I'm trying to code this Haskell snippet:
>>
>> options [x] = zero : [ [y] | y <- [1..x - 1] ]
>> options (x:xs) = map (++ xs) (options [x]) ++ map (x:) (options xs)
>>
>> in Python. So far I have this, which works OK, but somehow doesn't feel right:
>>
>> def options( heaps ):
>>
>> if heaps == []: return []
>>
>> head, tail = heaps[:1], heaps[1:]
>>
>> # Calculate all possible moves which is the sum of
>> # prepending all possible head "moves" to the tail
>> # and appending all possible tail "moves" to the head
>>
>> return [ [h] + tail for h in range( head[0] ) ] \
>> + [ head + t for t in options( tail ) ]
>>
>> Is there anything anyone could recommend to make it more "Pythonic" or more functional. It looks clumsy next to the Haskell.
>>
>> Regards
>>
>> etc.
>
> You'd save people a lot of time if you'd specify that the parameter
> heaps is a list of ints, perhaps initially [1,3,5,7] or [3, 4, 5]
> depending on which variation of Nim you're trying to. There are many.
> One variant is that some versions of Nim say the winner is the player
> who does NOT take the last piece. I'll assume that the goal is to end
> up with [0,0,0,0]
>
> My main problem with studying your code is that brute force is totally
> unnecessary; there's a fairly simple strategy for winning at Nim.
> Certainly it's simple enough to have perfect strategy without any computer.
>
> A "good" move is any one where the xor of all the items in the list ends
> up as zero. There is always at least one move for an "ungood" position
> that results in a "good" one. Thus the strategy is to go from good to
> good, with the opponent always stuck on an ungood one.
>
>
Hi Dave,
Thanks for the comments. Yes, I should have specified that the input is
a list of ints giving the size of each heap, and the return value should
be a list of all game positions reachable from the input position.
At the moment I'm not concentrating on any particular Nim flavour, just
trying to enumerate all possible moves from a given position.
I know that there's an easier way to determine winning-losing positions,
but my question was more about programming style than Nim strategy.
My code to calculate the "nim-value" looks like this:
def nim_val( heaps ):
return functools.reduce( operator.xor, heaps, 0 )
Assuming that we're playing "non-misere" Nim then a zero nim-value is a
lose for the player *about* to play.
Regards
Simon
[toc] | [prev] | [next] | [standalone]
| From | Ian Kelly <ian.g.kelly@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2012-11-02 15:40 -0600 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.3222.1351892486.27098.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #32651 |
On Fri, Nov 2, 2012 at 1:19 PM, <foster63@gmail.com> wrote:
> Is there anything anyone could recommend to make it more "Pythonic" or more functional. It looks clumsy next to the Haskell.
def options(heaps):
for i, heap in enumerate(heaps):
head = heaps[:i]
tail = heaps[i+1:]
yield from (head + [x] + tail for x in range(heap))
"yield from" is Python 3.3 syntax. If you're not using Python 3.3,
then that line could be replaced by:
for x in range(heap):
yield head + [x] + tail
Cheers,
Ian
[toc] | [prev] | [next] | [standalone]
| From | Duncan Booth <duncan.booth@invalid.invalid> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2012-11-03 16:29 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <XnsA100A7C85E1E5duncanbooth@127.0.0.1> |
| In reply to | #32661 |
Ian Kelly <ian.g.kelly@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Fri, Nov 2, 2012 at 1:19 PM, <foster63@gmail.com> wrote:
>> Is there anything anyone could recommend to make it more "Pythonic"
>> or more functional. It looks clumsy next to the Haskell.
>
> def options(heaps):
> for i, heap in enumerate(heaps):
> head = heaps[:i]
> tail = heaps[i+1:]
> yield from (head + [x] + tail for x in range(heap))
>
> "yield from" is Python 3.3 syntax. If you're not using Python 3.3,
> then that line could be replaced by:
>
> for x in range(heap):
> yield head + [x] + tail
>
> Cheers,
> Ian
An alternative that is closer to foster63's original but still more
"Pythonic" for some definitions of those words.
def options(heaps):
if not heaps: return []
head, *tail = heaps
for h in range(head):
yield [h]+tail
for t in options(tail):
yield [head]+t
For a more 'functional' version there is also the Python 3.3 variant:
def options(heaps):
if not heaps: return []
head, *tail = heaps
yield from ([h]+tail for h in range(head))
yield from ([head]+t for t in options(tail))
--
Duncan Booth http://kupuguy.blogspot.com
[toc] | [prev] | [next] | [standalone]
| From | Ian Kelly <ian.g.kelly@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2012-11-02 15:46 -0600 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.3223.1351892837.27098.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #32651 |
On Fri, Nov 2, 2012 at 3:40 PM, Ian Kelly <ian.g.kelly@gmail.com> wrote: > On Fri, Nov 2, 2012 at 1:19 PM, <foster63@gmail.com> wrote: >> Is there anything anyone could recommend to make it more "Pythonic" or more functional. It looks clumsy next to the Haskell. > > def options(heaps): > for i, heap in enumerate(heaps): > head = heaps[:i] > tail = heaps[i+1:] > yield from (head + [x] + tail for x in range(heap)) > > "yield from" is Python 3.3 syntax. If you're not using Python 3.3, > then that line could be replaced by: > > for x in range(heap): > yield head + [x] + tail In fact, the more that I look at it, the more that I think the latter might be preferable in any case.
[toc] | [prev] | [next] | [standalone]
| From | Dave Angel <d@davea.name> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2012-11-02 18:24 -0400 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.3225.1351895130.27098.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #32651 |
On 11/02/2012 05:40 PM, Ian Kelly wrote: > On Fri, Nov 2, 2012 at 1:19 PM, <foster63@gmail.com> wrote: >> Is there anything anyone could recommend to make it more "Pythonic" or more functional. It looks clumsy next to the Haskell. > def options(heaps): > for i, heap in enumerate(heaps): > head = heaps[:i] > tail = heaps[i+1:] > yield from (head + [x] + tail for x in range(heap)) > > "yield from" is Python 3.3 syntax. If you're not using Python 3.3, > then that line could be replaced by: > > for x in range(heap): > yield head + [x] + tail > > Cheers, > Ian Perhaps range(heap) should be replaced by range(len(heap)) -- DaveA
[toc] | [prev] | [next] | [standalone]
| From | Ian Kelly <ian.g.kelly@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2012-11-02 16:27 -0600 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.3226.1351895312.27098.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #32651 |
On Fri, Nov 2, 2012 at 4:24 PM, Dave Angel <d@davea.name> wrote: > Perhaps range(heap) should be replaced by range(len(heap)) "heaps" is a list of ints per the OP, so "heap" is an int.
[toc] | [prev] | [next] | [standalone]
| From | Dave Angel <d@davea.name> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2012-11-02 22:03 -0400 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.3229.1351908225.27098.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #32651 |
On 11/02/2012 06:27 PM, Ian Kelly wrote: > On Fri, Nov 2, 2012 at 4:24 PM, Dave Angel <d@davea.name> wrote: >> Perhaps range(heap) should be replaced by range(len(heap)) > "heaps" is a list of ints per the OP, so "heap" is an int. You're right of course <blush>. I was distracted by the fact that a heap is normally a collection of thing, and didn't notice that here it is a count of those things. -- DaveA
[toc] | [prev] | [next] | [standalone]
| From | aahz@pythoncraft.com (Aahz) |
|---|---|
| Date | 2012-11-03 22:16 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <k74tne$qrk$1@panix5.panix.com> |
| In reply to | #32651 |
In article <b19e3922-d86f-426f-afb8-1f75b793f87b@googlegroups.com>, <foster63@gmail.com> wrote: > >def options( heaps ): > > if heaps == []: return [] > > head, tail = heaps[:1], heaps[1:] > > # Calculate all possible moves which is the sum of > # prepending all possible head "moves" to the tail > # and appending all possible tail "moves" to the head > > return [ [h] + tail for h in range( head[0] ) ] \ > + [ head + t for t in options( tail ) ] > >Is there anything anyone could recommend to make it more "Pythonic" or >more functional. It looks clumsy next to the Haskell. If you want more Pythonic, follow PEP8 in your formatting. ;-) -- Aahz (aahz@pythoncraft.com) <*> http://www.pythoncraft.com/ "....Normal is what cuts off your sixth finger and your tail..." --Siobhan
[toc] | [prev] | [standalone]
Back to top | Article view | comp.lang.python
csiph-web