mirror of
https://github.com/theoludwig/programming-challenges.git
synced 2024-10-29 22:17:23 +01:00
.. | ||
solutions | ||
test | ||
README.md |
offset-arrays
Created by @Divlo on 29 June 2021.
Instructions
Goal
To settle the debate of 0-based vs 1-based indexing I have created a language where you must explicitly state the range of indices an array should have.
For example, given an array definition "A[-1..1] = 1 2 3", you would have:
- A[-1] = 1
- A[0] = 2
- A[1] = 3
You are given a list of n
array definitions and your job is to figure out what number is found in a given index i
of an array arr
. Note that the indexing operations may be nested (in the above example, A[A[-1]] would produce result 3).
Input
- Line 1: An integer
n
for the number of array assignments n
next lines: One array assignment per line:array_identifier
[first_index
..last_index
] =last_index - first_index + 1
integers separated by space- Line
n+2
: Element to print:arr
[i
]
Constraints
- 1 <=
n
<= 100 - Array names consist only of uppercase letters A to Z
- Array lengths are between 1 and 100 (no empty arrays)
- Indexing operations have at most 50 levels of nesting
- Indices are always within bounds in the test cases
Source
Examples
See the test
folder for examples of input/output.
Example 1
Input
3
A[-1..1] = 1 2 3
B[3..7] = 3 4 5 6 7
C[-2..1] = 1 2 3 4
A[0]
Output
2