The code at one time used cached responses for in range bools, but it seems that does not improve performance. Some IP addresses are allowed multiple times, so min() and set() are used to find the distinct values. |
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| .. | ||
| output | ||
| aoc.py | ||
| README.md | ||
Advent of Code 2016
Solutions for #aoc2016 in Python 3 (3.12.7).
Setup
Since I want to remember, this is what was used to solve the puzzles.
- Lenovo Thinkpad x260 laptop with Arch Linux.
- Hyprland with gBar.
- Editor: Zed.
- Terminal: Alacritty.
Help scripts
Display all solved puzzles:
python aoc.py
To bootstrap a new puzzle (creates input/<day_no>.txt and output/day_<day_no>.py):
python aoc.py <day_no> <puzzle_name>
Manually copy the puzzle input from https://adventofcode.com and paste it in input/<day_no>.txt
to start coding.
wl-paste > input/<day_no>.txt
Solve separate puzzle (replace XX with the puzzle number):
python -m output.day_XX
Solve separate puzzle using stdin (replace XX with the puzzle number):
wl-paste | python -m output.day_XX
cat tmpfile | python -m output.day_XX
Execute separate puzzle on file save (replace XX with the puzzle number):
ls output/*.py | entr -c -s 'wlpaste | python -m output.day_XX'
ls output/*.py | entr -c -s 'cat tmpfile | python -m output.day_XX'
ls output/*.py | entr -c -r python -m output.day_XX
(requires entr and wl-paste, Mac users can instead use pbpaste. If you
prefer X at Linux, use xclip -selection clipboard -o).
To lint files:
ls output/*.py | entr -r -c flake8 output --ignore=E741,E501,E203