Tag: coding
Project Euler #312
Sometimes I wish I could share solutions to PE problems. They’re so great! I totally enjoyed every bit of this week’s puzzle. At first you don’t know where to start, it seems so complicated and then you just immense yourself in the pleasure of thinking and bit by bit everything […]
OpenMPI and Precomputed Values in Shared Memory
Think OpenMPI. Let’s say you have a 12-node cluster at your disposal. Every node has 16GB of RAM and two 4-core processors which in normal situations enables you to run 8 processes per node. What happens if you want to precompute a huge constant lookup table (e.g. 3GB in size) […]
Project Euler #311
Yay! It’s finally getting hard again! The thrill of many hours of computing and being uncertain whether the result will be correct to the last digit… I love it ;D Now I have to figure out the _correct_ (i.e. non semi-brute-force with smart-ass pruning and nifty little optimizations) method of […]
Project Euler #309
Oh… GOD! This time I was SO close, soooo close :/ Precision issues played tricks on me again. Long double just doesn’t seem to be good enough with PE problems most of the time. Anyway, crossed ladders problem is a classic (a very fascinating classic nonetheless) and you will figure […]
Project Euler #308
You just gotta take a look at this one! It’s one of the absolutely coolest things I’ve seen recently 🙂 A virtual machine with internal state consisting of just one integer number! And its instruction codes are… fractions! Whoa. It’s Turing-complete and unlike Brainfuck and some other quirky esoteric languages […]
File-based merge sort
Time for the file-based merge sort code promised long ago. BSD licensed. Yes, I know it’s way too verbose, quite inefficient and probably pretty ugly but hey it’s just a general idea for you to improve and adjust to your specific needs. It’s intentionally this clear 😉 It can sort […]
I'm alive
I’m alive and well. In case you wondered what was stopping me from posting recently, the answer is PE #289, PE #294 and now the most recent PE #304. The last one was really easy (I had fallen asleep right before it was posted 😉 and got to it the […]
Project Euler #303
For a positive integer n, define f(n) as the least positive multiple of n that, written in base 10, uses only digits <=2. Thus f(2)=2, f(3)=12, f(7)=21, f(42)=210, f(89)=1121222. Also sum_n=1^100 {f(n)/n} = 11363107 Find sum_n=1^10000 {f(n)/n}. Phew… this was an easy one 😉 I made it to the top […]
Merge file sort and swap iterator
During my struggles with Project Euler Problem #302 I made an attempt to semi-brute force it. Unfortunately it required huge amounts of RAM (about 2e9 * 16 bytes) so I figured I could use some help from permanent storage. I implemented two helper classes, namely MergeSort and SwapIterator which look […]
Project Euler #300
In a very simplified form, we can consider proteins as strings consisting of hydrophobic (H) and polar (P) elements, e.g. HHPPHHHPHHPH. For this problem, the orientation of a protein is important; e.g. HPP is considered distinct from PPH. Thus, there are 2n distinct proteins consisting of n elements. When one […]
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