view day4.txt @ 24:19481b061461

Implement tilting and cycling for Day 14 part 2 Lots of false starts trying to iterate. Eventually looked for "back in same position" to spot a loop. Then took longer to spot that "same position" isn't necessarily "start position" and loop can be offset!
author IBBoard <dev@ibboard.co.uk>
date Sat, 16 Dec 2023 20:39:02 +0000
parents 1e16a25a9553
children
line wrap: on
line source

--- Day 4: Scratchcards ---

Each scratchcard has two lists of numbers separated by a vertical bar (|): a list of winning numbers and then a list of numbers you have. You organize the information into a table (your puzzle input).

You have to figure out which of the numbers you have appear in the list of winning numbers. The first match makes the card worth one point and each match after the first doubles the point value of that card.

For example:

Card 1: 41 48 83 86 17 | 83 86  6 31 17  9 48 53
Card 2: 13 32 20 16 61 | 61 30 68 82 17 32 24 19
Card 3:  1 21 53 59 44 | 69 82 63 72 16 21 14  1
Card 4: 41 92 73 84 69 | 59 84 76 51 58  5 54 83
Card 5: 87 83 26 28 32 | 88 30 70 12 93 22 82 36
Card 6: 31 18 13 56 72 | 74 77 10 23 35 67 36 11

In the above example, card 1 has five winning numbers (41, 48, 83, 86, and 17) and eight numbers you have (83, 86, 6, 31, 17, 9, 48, and 53). Of the numbers you have, four of them (48, 83, 17, and 86) are winning numbers! That means card 1 is worth 8 points (1 for the first match, then doubled three times for each of the three matches after the first).

    Card 2 has two winning numbers (32 and 61), so it is worth 2 points.
    Card 3 has two winning numbers (1 and 21), so it is worth 2 points.
    Card 4 has one winning number (84), so it is worth 1 point.
    Card 5 has no winning numbers, so it is worth no points.
    Card 6 has no winning numbers, so it is worth no points.

So, in this example, the scratchcards are worth 13 points.

How many points is the puzzle input worth in total?

--- Part Two ---

Actually, there's no such thing as "points". Instead, scratchcards only cause you to win more scratchcards equal to the number of winning numbers you have.

Specifically, you win copies of the scratchcards below the winning card equal to the number of matches. So, if card 10 were to have 5 matching numbers, you would win one copy each of cards 11, 12, 13, 14, and 15.

Copies of scratchcards are scored like normal scratchcards and have the same card number as the card they copied. So, if you win a copy of card 10 and it has 5 matching numbers, it would then win a copy of the same cards that the original card 10 won: cards 11, 12, 13, 14, and 15. This process repeats until none of the copies cause you to win any more cards. (Cards will never make you copy a card past the end of the table.)

This time, the above example goes differently:

Card 1: 41 48 83 86 17 | 83 86  6 31 17  9 48 53
Card 2: 13 32 20 16 61 | 61 30 68 82 17 32 24 19
Card 3:  1 21 53 59 44 | 69 82 63 72 16 21 14  1
Card 4: 41 92 73 84 69 | 59 84 76 51 58  5 54 83
Card 5: 87 83 26 28 32 | 88 30 70 12 93 22 82 36
Card 6: 31 18 13 56 72 | 74 77 10 23 35 67 36 11

    Card 1 has four matching numbers, so you win one copy each of the next four cards: cards 2, 3, 4, and 5.
    Your original card 2 has two matching numbers, so you win one copy each of cards 3 and 4.
    Your copy of card 2 also wins one copy each of cards 3 and 4.
    Your four instances of card 3 (one original and three copies) have two matching numbers, so you win four copies each of cards 4 and 5.
    Your eight instances of card 4 (one original and seven copies) have one matching number, so you win eight copies of card 5.
    Your fourteen instances of card 5 (one original and thirteen copies) have no matching numbers and win no more cards.
    Your one instance of card 6 (one original) has no matching numbers and wins no more cards.

Once all of the originals and copies have been processed, you end up with 1 instance of card 1, 2 instances of card 2, 4 instances of card 3, 8 instances of card 4, 14 instances of card 5, and 1 instance of card 6. In total, this example pile of scratchcards causes you to ultimately have 30 scratchcards!

Process all of the original and copied scratchcards until no more scratchcards are won. Including the original set of scratchcards, how many total scratchcards do you end up with?