Code Golf: Build Me an Arc

时光毁灭记忆、已成空白 提交于 2019-11-29 05:33:11
ninjalj

Perl, 235 211 225 211 207 196 179 177 175 168 160 156 146 chars

<>=~/-\d+/;for$y(@a=-$'..$'){print+(map$_|$y?!($t=8*($y>0)+atan2(-$y,$_)/atan2 1,1)&-$&/45==8|$t>=$`/45&$t<=-$&/45?qw(- / | \\)[$t%4]:$":o,@a),$/}


Perl using say feature, 161 149 139 chars

$ echo -n '<>=~/-\d+/;for$y(@a=-$'"'"'..$'"'"'){say map$_|$y?!($t=8*($y>0)+atan2(-$y,$_)/atan2 1,1)&-$&/45==8|$t>=$`/45&$t<=-$&/45?qw(- / | \\)[$t%4]:$":o,@a}' | wc -c
139
$ perl -E '<>=~/-\d+/;for$y(@a=-$'"'"'..$'"'"'){say map$_|$y?!($t=8*($y>0)+atan2(-$y,$_)/atan2 1,1)&-$&/45==8|$t>=$`/45&$t<=-$&/45?qw(- / | \\)[$t%4]:$":o,@a}'


Perl without trailing newline, 153 143 chars

<>=~/-\d+/;for$y(@a=-$'..$'){print$/,map$_|$y?!($t=8*($y>0)+atan2(-$y,$_)/atan2 1,1)&-$&/45==8|$t>=$`/45&$t<=-$&/45?qw(- / | \\)[$t%4]:$":o,@a}


Original version commented:

$_=<>;m/(\d+)-(\d+) (\d+)/;$e=$1/45;$f=$2/45; # parse angles and radius, angles are 0-8
for$y(-$3..$3){                               # loop for each row and col
    for$x(-$3..$3){
            $t=atan2(-$y,$x)/atan2 1,1;   # angle of this point
            $t+=8if($t<0);                # normalize negative angles
            @w=split//,"-/|\\"x2;         # array of ASCII symbols for enclosing lines
            $s.=!$x&&!$y?"o":$t==$e||$t==$f?$w[$t]:$t>$e&&$t<$f?"x":$";
            # if it's origin -> "o", if it's enclosing line, get symbol from array
            # if it's between enclosing angles "x", otherwise space
    }
    $s.=$/;
}
print$s;


EDIT 1: Inlined sub, relational and equality operators return 0 or 1.
EDIT 2: Added version with comments.
EDIT 3: Fixed enclosing line at 360º. Char count increased significantly.
EDIT 4: Added a shorter version, bending the rules.
EDIT 5: Smarter fix for the 360º enclosing line. Also, use a number as fill. Both things were obvious. Meh, I should sleep more :/
EDIT 6: Removed unneeded m from match operator. Removed some semicolons.
EDIT 7: Smarter regexp. Under 200 chars!
EDIT 8: Lots of small improvements:

  • Inner for loop -> map (1 char)
  • symbol array from split string -> qw (3 chars)
  • inlined symbol array (6 chars, together with the previous improvement 9 chars!)
  • Logical or -> bitwise or (1 char)
  • Regexp improvement (1 char)
  • Use arithmethic for testing negative angles, inspired by Jacob's answer (5 chars)


EDIT 9: A little reordering in the conditional operators saves 2 chars.
EDIT 10: Use barewords for characters.
EDIT 11: Moved print inside of loop, inspired by Lowjacker's answer.
EDIT 12: Added version using say.
EDIT 13: Reuse angles characters for fill character, as Gwell's answer does. Output isn't as nice as Gwell's though, that would require 5 additional chars :) Also, .. operator doen't need parentheses.
EDIT 14: Apply regex directly to <>. Assign range operator to a variable, as per Adrian's suggestion to bta's answer. Add version without the final newline. Updated say version.
EDIT 15: More inlining. map{block}@a -> map expr,@a.

Lua, 259 characters

Slightly abuses the non-whitespace character clause to produce a dazzling display and more importantly save strokes.

m=math i=io.read():gmatch("%d+")a=i()/45 b=i()/45 r=i()for y=r,-r,-1 do for x=-r,r do c=m.atan2(y,x)/m.pi*4 c=c<0 and c+8 or c k=1+m.modf(c+.5)io.write(x==0 and y==0 and'o'or c>=a and c<=b and('-/|\\-/|\\-'):sub(k,k)or c==0 and b==8 and'-'or' ')end print()end

Input: 45-360 4

\\\|||///
\\\|||// 
\\\\|//  
--\\|/   
----o----
--//|\\--
////|\\\\
///|||\\\
///|||\\\

Able to handle odd angles

Input: 15-75 8

           |/////
          |//////
          |//////
          |//////
          ///////
         |//////-
         ////--- 
         //-     
        o        








MATLAB, 188 chars :)

input '';[w x r]=strread(ans,'%d-%d%d');l='-/|\-/|\-';[X Y]=meshgrid(-r:r);T=atan2(-Y,X)/pi*180;T=T+(T<=0)*360;T(T>w&T<x)=-42;T(T==w)=-l(1+w/45);T(T==x)=-l(1+x/45);T(r+1,r+1)=-'o';char(-T)

Commented code:

%%# Get the string variable (enclose in quotes, e.g. '45-315 4')
input ''
%%# Extract angles and length
[w x r]=strread(ans,'%d-%d%d');
%%# Store characters
l='-/|\-/|\-';
%%# Create the grid
[X Y]=meshgrid(-r:r);
%%# Compute the angles in degrees
T=atan2(-Y,X)/pi*180;
%%# Get all the angles
T=T+(T<=0)*360;
%# Negative numbers indicate valid characters
%%# Add the characters
T(T>w&T<x)=-42;
T(T==w)=-l(1+w/45);
T(T==x)=-l(1+x/45);
%%# Add the origin
T(r+1,r+1)=-'o';
%%# Display
char(-T)
belisarius

Mathematica 100 Chars

Out of competition because graphics are too perfect :)

  f[x_-y_ z_]:=Graphics@Table[
                 {EdgeForm@Red,Disk[{0,0},r,{x °,y °}],{r,z,1,-1}]
                 SetAttributes[f,HoldAll]

Invoke with f[30-70 5]

Result

alt text http://a.imageshack.us/img80/4294/angulosgolf.png

alt text http://a.imageshack.us/img59/7892/angulos2.png

Note

The SetAttributes[f, HoldAll];

is needed because the input

    f[a-b c] 

is otherwise interpreted as

    f[(a-b*c)]

GNU BC, 339 chars

Gnu bc because of read(), else and logical operators.

scale=A
a=read()/45
b=read()/45
c=read()
for(y=c;y>=-c;y--){for(x=-c;x<=c;x++){if(x==0)if(y<0)t=-2else t=2else if(x>0)t=a(y/x)/a(1)else if(y<0)t=a(y/x)/a(1)-4else t=a(y/x)/a(1)+4
if(y<0)t+=8
if(x||y)if(t==a||t==b||t==b-8){scale=0;u=(t%4);scale=A;if(u==0)"-";if(u==1)"/";if(u==2)"|";if(u==3)"\"}else if(t>a&&t<b)"x"else" "else"o"};"
"}
quit
gnovice

MATLAB 7.8.0 (R2009a) - 168 163 162 characters

Starting from Jacob's answer and inspired by gwell's use of any non-whitespace character to fill the arc, I managed the following solution:

[w x r]=strread(input('','s'),'%d-%d%d');
l='o -/|\-/|\-';
X=meshgrid(-r:r);
T=atan2(-X',X)*180/pi;
T=T+(T<=-~w)*360;
T(T>x|T<w)=-1;
T(r+1,r+1)=-90;
disp(l(fix(3+T/45)))

And some test output:

>> arc
0-135 4
\||||////
 \|||///-
  \||//--
   \|/---
    o----

I could reduce it further to 156 characters by removing the call to disp, but this would add an extra ans = preceding the output (which might violate the output formatting rules).

Even still, I feel like there are some ways to reduce this further. ;)

bta

Ruby, 292 276 186 chars

x,y,r=gets.scan(/\d+/).map{|z|z.to_i};s=(-r..r);s.each{|a|s.each{|b|g=Math::atan2(-a,b)/Math::PI*180/1%360;print a|b==0?'o':g==x||g==y%360?'-/|\\'[g/45%4].chr: (x..y)===g ?'*':' '};puts}

Nicer-formatted version:

x, y, r = gets.scan(/\d+/).map{|z| z.to_i}
s = (-r..r)
s.each {|a|
    s.each {|b|
        g = (((Math::atan2(-a,b) / Math::PI) * 180) / 1) % 360
        print ((a | b) == 0) ? 'o' :
            (g == x || g == (y % 360)) ? '-/|\\'[(g / 45) % 4].chr :
                ((x..y) === g) ? '*' : ' '
    }
    puts
}

I'm sure someone out there who got more sleep than I did can condense this more...

Edit 1: Switched if statements in inner loop to nested ? : operator

Edit 2: Stored range to intermediate variable (thanks Adrian), used stdin instead of CLI params (thanks for the clarification Jon), eliminated array in favor of direct output, fixed bug where an ending angle of 360 wouldn't display a line, removed some un-needed parentheses, used division for rounding instead of .round, used modulo instead of conditional add

Ruby, 168 characters

Requires Ruby 1.9 to work

s,e,r=gets.scan(/\d+/).map &:to_i;s/=45;e/=45;G=-r..r;G.map{|y|G.map{|x|a=Math.atan2(-y,x)/Math::PI*4%8;print x|y!=0?a==s||a==e%8?'-/|\\'[a%4]:a<s||a>e ?' ':8:?o};puts}

Readable version:

start, _end, radius = gets.scan(/\d+/).map &:to_i
start /= 45
_end /= 45

(-radius..radius).each {|y|
    (-radius..radius).each {|x|
        angle = Math.atan2(-y, x)/Math::PI * 4 % 8
        print x|y != 0 ? angle==start || angle==_end%8 ? '-/|\\'[angle%4] : angle<start || angle>_end ? ' ' : 8 : ?o
    }
    puts
}

Perl - 388 characters

Since it wouldn't be fair to pose a challenge I couldn't solve myself, here's a solution that uses string substitution instead of trigonometric functions, and making heavy use of your friendly neighbourhood Perl's ability to treat barewords as strings. It's necessarily a little long, but perhaps interesting for the sake of uniqueness:

($x,$y,$r)=split/\D/,<>;for(0..$r-1){$t=$r-1-$_;
$a.=L x$_.D.K x$t.C.J x$t.B.I x$_."\n";
$b.=M x$t.F.N x$_.G.O x$_.H.P x$t."\n"}
$_=$a.E x$r.o.A x$r."\n".$b;$x/=45;$y/=45;$S=' ';
sub A{$v=$_[0];$x==$v||$y==$v?$_[1]:$x<$v&&$y>$v?x:$S}
sub B{$x<=$_[0]&&$y>$_[0]?x:$S}
@a=!$x||$y==8?'-':$S;
push@a,map{A$_,'\\'.qw(- / | \\)[$_%4]}1..7;
push@a,!$x?x:$S,map{B$_}1..7;
eval"y/A-P/".(join'',@a)."/";print

All newlines are optional. It's fairly straightforward:

  • Grab user input.
  • Build the top ($a) and bottom ($b) parts of the pattern.
  • Build the complete pattern ($_).
  • Define a sub A to get the fill character for an angle.
  • Define a sub B to get the fill character for a region.
  • Build an array (@a) of substitution characters using A and B.
  • Perform the substitution and print the results.

The generated format looks like this, for R = 4:

DKKKCJJJB
LDKKCJJBI
LLDKCJBII
LLLDCBIII
EEEEoAAAA
MMMFGHPPP
MMFNGOHPP
MFNNGOOHP
FNNNGOOOH

Where A-H denote angles and I-P denote regions.

(Admittedly, this could probably be golfed further. The operations on @a gave me incorrect output when written as one list, presumably having something to do with how map plays with $_.)

Anton Hansson

C# - 325 319 chars

using System;class P{static void Main(){var s=Console.ReadLine().Split(' ');
var d=s[0].Split('-');int l=s[1][0]-48,x,y,r,a=int.Parse(d[0]),b=int.Parse(d[1]);
for(y=l;y>=-l;y--)for(x=-l;x<=l;)Console.Write((x==0&&y==0?'o':a<=(r=((int)
(Math.Atan2(y,x)*57.3)+360)%360)&&r<b||r==b%360?
@"-/|\"[r/45%4]:' ')+(x++==l?"\n":""));}}

Newlines not significant.

Sample input/output

45-180 8
\||||||||////////
\\|||||||///////
\\\||||||//////
\\\\|||||/////
\\\\\||||////
\\\\\\|||///
\\\\\\\||//
\\\\\\\\|/
--------o
135-360 5
\
\\
\\\
\\\\
\\\\\
-----o-----
----/|\\\\\
---//||\\\\
--///|||\\\
-////||||\\
/////|||||\

Java - 304 chars


class A{public static void main(String[]a){String[]b=a[0].split("-");int e=new Integer(b[1]),r=new Integer(a[1]),g,x,y=r;for(;y>=-r;y--)for(x=-r;x<=r;)System.out.print((x==0&y==0?'o':new Integer(b[0])<=(g=((int)(Math.atan2(y,x)*57.3)+360)%360)&g<e|g==e%360?"-/|\\".charAt(g/45%4):' ')+(x++<r?"":"\n"));}}

More readable version:

class A{
 public static void main(String[]a){
  String[]b=a[0].split("-");
  int e=new Integer(b[1]),r=new Integer(a[1]),g,x,y=r;
  for(;y>=-r;y--)for(x=-r;x<=r;)System.out.print((
   x==0&y==0
    ?'o'
    :new Integer(b[0])<=(g=((int)(Math.atan2(y,x)*57.3)+360)%360)&g<e|g==e%360
     ?"-/|\\".charAt(g/45%4)
     :' '
   )+(x++<r?"":"\n"));
 }
}

C (902 byte)

This doesn't use trigonometric functions (like the original perl version), so it's quite ``bloated''. Anyway, here is my first code-golf submission:

#define V(r) (4*r*r+6*r+3)
#define F for(i=0;i<r;i++)
#define C ;break;case
#define U p-=2*r+2,
#define D p+=2*r+2,
#define R *++p=
#define L *--p=
#define H *p='|';
#define E else if
#define G(a) for(j=0;j<V(r)-1;j++)if(f[j]==i+'0')f[j]=a;
#define O(i) for(i=0;i<2*r+1;i++){
main(int i,char**v){char*p,f[V(8)];
int j,m,e,s,x,y,r;p=*++v;x=atoi(p);while(*p!=45)p++;
char*h="0123";y=atoi(p+1);r=atoi(*++v);
for(p=f+2*r+1;p<f+V(r);p+=2*r+2)*p=10;
*(p-2*r-2)=0;x=x?x/45:x;y/=45;s=0;e=2*r;m=r;p=f;O(i)O(j)
if(j>e)*p=h[0];E(j>m)*p=h[1];E(j>s)*p=h[2];else*p=h[3];p++;}
if(i+1==r){h="7654";m--;e--;}E(i==r){s--;}E(i>r){s--;e++;}
else{s++;e--;}p++;}for(p=f+V(r)/2-1,i=0;i<r;i++)*++p=48;
for(i=0;i<8;i++)if(i>=x&&i<y){G(64);}else G(32);
y=y==8?0:y;q:p=f+V(r)/2-1;*p='o';switch(x){
C 0:F R 45 C 1:F U R 47 C 2:F U H C 3:F U L 92
C 4:F L 45 C 5:F D L 47 C 6:F D H C 7:F D R 92;}
if(y!=8){x=y;y=8;goto q;}puts(f);}

also, the #defines look rather ugly, but they save about 200 bytes so I kept them in, anyway. It is valid ANSI C89/C90 and compiles with very few warnings (two about atoi and puts and two about crippled form of main).

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