Added/updated problems

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2019-11-08 15:01:07 -06:00
parent 83313cc77b
commit 0044574db3
27 changed files with 1816 additions and 430 deletions

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@@ -1 +1,3 @@
module day02
go 1.13

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@@ -2,17 +2,33 @@ Advent of Code
--- Day 2: Inventory Management System ---
You stop falling through time, catch your breath, and check the screen on the device. "Destination reached. Current Year: 1518. Current Location: North Pole Utility Closet 83N10." You made it! Now, to find those anomalies.
You stop falling through time, catch your breath, and check the screen on
the device. "Destination reached. Current Year: 1518. Current Location:
North Pole Utility Closet 83N10." You made it! Now, to find those anomalies.
Outside the utility closet, you hear footsteps and a voice. "...I'm not sure either. But now that so many people have chimneys, maybe he could sneak in that way?" Another voice responds, "Actually, we've been working on a new kind of suit that would let him fit through tight spaces like that. But, I heard that
a few days ago, they lost the prototype fabric, the design plans, everything! Nobody on the team can even seem to remember important details of the project!"
Outside the utility closet, you hear footsteps and a voice. "...I'm not sure
either. But now that so many people have chimneys, maybe he could sneak in
that way?" Another voice responds, "Actually, we've been working on a new
kind of suit that would let him fit through tight spaces like that. But, I
heard that a few days ago, they lost the prototype fabric, the design plans,
everything! Nobody on the team can even seem to remember important details
of the project!"
"Wouldn't they have had enough fabric to fill several boxes in the warehouse? They'd be stored together, so the box IDs should be similar. Too bad it would take forever to search the warehouse for two similar box IDs..." They walk too far away to hear any more.
"Wouldn't they have had enough fabric to fill several boxes in the
warehouse? They'd be stored together, so the box IDs should be similar. Too
bad it would take forever to search the warehouse for two similar box
IDs..." They walk too far away to hear any more.
Late at night, you sneak to the warehouse - who knows what kinds of paradoxes you could cause if you were discovered - and use your fancy wrist device to quickly scan every box and produce a list of the likely candidates (your puzzle input).
Late at night, you sneak to the warehouse - who knows what kinds of
paradoxes you could cause if you were discovered - and use your fancy wrist
device to quickly scan every box and produce a list of the likely candidates
(your puzzle input).
To make sure you didn't miss any, you scan the likely candidate boxes again, counting the number that have an ID containing exactly two of any letter and then separately counting those with exactly three of any letter. You can multiply those two counts together to get a rudimentary checksum and compare it to
what your device predicts.
To make sure you didn't miss any, you scan the likely candidate boxes again,
counting the number that have an ID containing exactly two of any letter and
then separately counting those with exactly three of any letter. You can
multiply those two counts together to get a rudimentary checksum and compare
it to what your device predicts.
For example, if you see the following box IDs:
@@ -24,7 +40,9 @@ Advent of Code
 abcdee contains two e.
 ababab contains three a and three b, but it only counts once.
Of these box IDs, four of them contain a letter which appears exactly twice, and three of them contain a letter which appears exactly three times. Multiplying these together produces a checksum of 4 * 3 = 12.
Of these box IDs, four of them contain a letter which appears exactly twice,
and three of them contain a letter which appears exactly three times.
Multiplying these together produces a checksum of 4 * 3 = 12.
What is the checksum for your list of box IDs?
@@ -32,9 +50,11 @@ Advent of Code
--- Part Two ---
Confident that your list of box IDs is complete, you're ready to find the boxes full of prototype fabric.
Confident that your list of box IDs is complete, you're ready to find the
boxes full of prototype fabric.
The boxes will have IDs which differ by exactly one character at the same position in both strings. For example, given the following box IDs:
The boxes will have IDs which differ by exactly one character at the same
position in both strings. For example, given the following box IDs:
abcde
fghij
@@ -44,9 +64,13 @@ Advent of Code
axcye
wvxyz
The IDs abcde and axcye are close, but they differ by two characters (the second and fourth). However, the IDs fghij and fguij differ by exactly one character, the third (h and u). Those must be the correct boxes.
The IDs abcde and axcye are close, but they differ by two characters (the
second and fourth). However, the IDs fghij and fguij differ by exactly one
character, the third (h and u). Those must be the correct boxes.
What letters are common between the two correct box IDs? (In the example above, this is found by removing the differing character from either ID, producing fgij.)
What letters are common between the two correct box IDs? (In the example
above, this is found by removing the differing character from either ID,
producing fgij.)
Your puzzle answer was mxhwoglxgeauywfkztndcvjqr.