Day 4: Scratchcards


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  • cacheson
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    51 year ago

    Nim

    This one was pretty simple, just parse the numbers into sets and check the size of the intersection. Part 2 just made the scoring mechanism a little more complicated.

      • cacheson
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        31 year ago

        I’m rather spoiled by python, so I feel like it could be more elegant. xD

        But yeah, I do like how this one turned out, and nim runs a whole lot faster than python does. I really like nim’s “method call syntax”. Instead of having methods associated with an individual type, you can just call any procedure as x.f(remaining_args) to call f with x as its first argument. Makes it easy to chain procedures. Since nim is strongly typed, it’ll know which procedure you mean to use by the signature.

        • @Andy@programming.dev
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          31 year ago

          Aside from the general conciseness, the “universal function call syntax” is my favorite aspect of nim.

          If you want to take chaining procedures to the next level, try a concatenative language like Factor (I have a day 4 solution in this thread – with no assignment to variables).

          I also suggest having a look at Roc if you want a functional programming adventure, which offers great chaining syntax, a very friendly community, and is in an exciting development phase.

          • cacheson
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            21 year ago

            Thank you, I’ll keep those in mind. Functional programming seems interesting to me, but I don’t have any practical experience with it. At some point I want to learn one of the languages that are dedicated to it. Nim does have some features for enabling a functional style, but the overall flexibility of the language probably makes it harder to learn said style.

    • CommunityLinkFixerBotB
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      11 year ago

      Hi there! Looks like you linked to a Lemmy community using a URL instead of its name, which doesn’t work well for people on different instances. Try fixing it like this: !nim@programming.dev