Difference between revisions of "FP Homework 2"
Line 179: | Line 179: | ||
== 6 - Components == | == 6 - Components == | ||
− | Lets assume, that we have a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graph_(discrete_mathematics) graph]. In our exercise, a graph will be defined as a set of nodes. Each node have a unique '''index''' (<code>Int</code>), that distinguish this node form all other nodes. Nodes are connected by edges. Every node | + | Lets assume, that we have a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graph_(discrete_mathematics) graph]. In our exercise, a graph will be defined as a set of nodes. Each node have a unique '''index''' (<code>Int</code>), that distinguish this node form all other nodes. Nodes are connected by edges. Every node has a set of indexes of its neighbors, in other words, this list contains indexes of all nodes that shares some edge with the original node. It is represented by type: <code>Node</code> |
<syntaxhighlight lang="Haskell"> | <syntaxhighlight lang="Haskell"> | ||
data Node = Node {index::Int, neighbors::[Int] } deriving (Show, Eq) | data Node = Node {index::Int, neighbors::[Int] } deriving (Show, Eq) | ||
type Graph = [Node] | type Graph = [Node] | ||
</syntaxhighlight> | </syntaxhighlight> | ||
− | + | A ''component'' is a set of nodes, where if we take two distinct nodes <math>n_x</math> and <math>n_y</math> from the component, then they are connected. Two nodes are connected, if there is a path (composed from edges) that we can take to get from <math>n_x</math> to <math>n_y</math>. | |
Write a function <code>components</code> that takes a list of cubes (<code>[Cube]</code>) and as a result divides these cubes into components. The result will be <code><nowiki>[[Cube]]</nowiki></code>, where each of inner lists represents a component (as was defined above). You can use function <code>printIt</code> to print each of these components on a separated line. | Write a function <code>components</code> that takes a list of cubes (<code>[Cube]</code>) and as a result divides these cubes into components. The result will be <code><nowiki>[[Cube]]</nowiki></code>, where each of inner lists represents a component (as was defined above). You can use function <code>printIt</code> to print each of these components on a separated line. |
Revision as of 14:24, 10 November 2022
Contents
Basic notes
In all exercises you are required to write something to standard output. You can use the same strategy as in Laboratory 7.
Lets define a type for the result:
type Result = [String]
Now, if you want to print this result nicely on the screen, you can use:
pp :: Result -> IO ()
pp x = putStr (concat (map (++"\n") x))
2022
1 - Painting
Lets define a new data types representing a ellipse and a square.
data Point = Point Int Int
data Shape = Ellipse Point Point Int
| Square {topLeft:: Point, size::Int}
Using these types write a function view
that creates a view of defined shapes. The first parameter is a tuple (columns, rows) defining the size of the resulting view. Left top corner has a coordinate (0,0). Second argument is a list of shapes (either ellipses or squares). Ellipse is given by two focal points and a distance a. Then all points on this ellipse have the distance from both focal points 2a. Square si given by the coordinates of the top most corner (given as Point
) and a size of its sides.
view :: (Int,Int) -> [Shape] -> Result
The result may differ based on rounding. In following example '.'
was used for the free spot, '#'
for the filled spot.
Prelude>pp(view (40,15) [Ellipse (Point 8 4) (Point 16 4) 6, Square {topLeft = Point 15 5, size = 6 }, Ellipse (Point 25 7) (Point 35 12) 7] )
........#########........................
.......##.......##.......................
.......#.........#.......................
......#...........#......................
......#...........#........##............
......#........#######...########........
.......#.......#.#...#..#......###.......
.......##......###...#..#........##......
........#########....#.##.........##.....
...........###.#.....#..#..........##....
...............#.....#..##..........#....
...............#######...##.........##...
..........................##........#....
...........................###......#....
............................########.....
................................##.......
2 - Drawing
Lets define a new data types representing a point and a triangle.
data Point = Point Int Int
data Triangle = Triangle Point Point Point
Using these types write a function drawTriangles
that creates a view of defined triangles. The first parameter is a tuple (columns, rows) defining the size of the resulting view. Left top corner has a coordinate (0,0). Second argument is a list of triangles.
drawTriangles :: (Int,Int) -> [Triangle] -> Result
The result may differ based on rounding. In following example '.'
was used for the free spot, '#'
for the filled spot.
Prelude>pp(drawTriangles (40,15) [(Triangle (Point 7 4) (Point 33 4) (Point 20 14)),(Triangle (Point 7 11) (Point 33 11) (Point 20 1))])
.........................................
....................#....................
..................##.##..................
.................##....#.................
.......###########################.......
........##....##.........#.....##........
..........#..##...........##..##.........
..........###..............###...........
..........###..............###...........
..........#..##...........##..##.........
........##....##.........#.....##........
.......###########################.......
.................##....#.................
..................##.##..................
....................#....................
.........................................
3 - Filling
Lets define a picture that is composed from '.'
which is used for a free spot and '#'
is used for the filled spot.
sampleInput =
["....................",
"....................",
"....#####...........",
"...##...##..........",
"..##.....##.........",
"..#.......#.........",
"..#...############..",
"..#...#...#......#..",
"..##..#..##......#..",
"...##.#.##.......#..",
"....#####........#..",
"......#..........#..",
"......############..",
"....................",
"...................."]
Write a function fill
that has a three arguments. First argument is the defined picture (mentioned above). Second is a starting position as a tuple (column, row). The function fills the continuous area of free cells starting from the defined starting position. You should use the algorithm flood fill. Third argument is a palette, in a form of: String
, from which the function takes individual characters when filling the continuous area. Starting position is painted with the first character from the palette, neighbors of this starting position are painted with the second character, neighbors of these neighbors are painted with the third character from the palette, ad so on. If we have no more characters in the palette, we use the first character again.
fill :: Result -> (Int,Int) -> String -> Result
ghci> pp(fill sampleInput (15,10) "0123456789")
....................
....................
....#####...........
...##...##..........
..##.....##.........
..#.......#.........
..#...############..
..#...#...#765434#..
..##..#..##654323#..
...##.#.##6543212#..
....#####65432101#..
......#9876543212#..
......############..
....................
....................
ghci> pp(fill sampleInput (0,0) ".xX")
.xX.xX.xX.xX.xX.xX.x
xX.xX.xX.xX.xX.xX.xX
X.xX#####X.xX.xX.xX.
.xX##...##xX.xX.xX.x
xX##.....##.xX.xX.xX
X.#.......#xX.xX.xX.
.x#...############.x
xX#...#...#......#xX
X.##..#..##......#X.
.xX##.#.##.......#.x
xX.x#####........#xX
X.xX.x#..........#X.
.xX.xX############.x
xX.xX.xX.xX.xX.xX.xX
X.xX.xX.xX.xX.xX.xX.
4 - Maze
Implement the function solveMaze
. It has 1 argument. It is a list of strings representing a maze row by row from top to bottom ('*' - wall, ' ' - empty square, 's' - starting position, 'e' - ending possition). At the beginning we are at position 's' and we want to get the length of the shortest path to the position denotated by 'e'. Such path compose from steps. in each step we can move one square left, right, up or down. The function returns a number of these steps in the shortest path from 's' to 'e'.
solveMaze :: Result -> Int
sampleInput1 = ["*********",
"*s* *e*",
"* * * *",
"* * * *",
"* *",
"******* *",
" *",
"*********"]
sampleInput2 = ["*********",
"*s* * *",
"* * * *",
"* * * *",
"* *",
"******* *",
"e *",
"*********"
ghci> solveMaze sampleInput1
12
ghci> solveMaze sampleInput2
18
6 - Components
Lets assume, that we have a graph. In our exercise, a graph will be defined as a set of nodes. Each node have a unique index (Int
), that distinguish this node form all other nodes. Nodes are connected by edges. Every node has a set of indexes of its neighbors, in other words, this list contains indexes of all nodes that shares some edge with the original node. It is represented by type: Node
data Node = Node {index::Int, neighbors::[Int] } deriving (Show, Eq)
type Graph = [Node]
A component is a set of nodes, where if we take two distinct nodes and from the component, then they are connected. Two nodes are connected, if there is a path (composed from edges) that we can take to get from to .
Write a function components
that takes a list of cubes ([Cube]
) and as a result divides these cubes into components. The result will be [[Cube]]
, where each of inner lists represents a component (as was defined above). You can use function printIt
to print each of these components on a separated line.
graph1 :: Graph
graph1=[
Node 1 [2,3],
Node 2 [1],
Node 3 [1],
Node 4 [5,6],
Node 5 [7,4],
Node 6 [4,7],
Node 7 [5,6,8],
Node 8 [7]
]
components::Graph -> [[Int]]
ghci> components graph1
[[1,2,3],[4,5,6,7,8]]
2021
1 - Painting
Lets define a new data types representing a circle and a rectangle.
data Point = Point Int Int
data Shape = Circle Point Int
| Rectangle {topLeft:: Point, bottomRight::Point}
Using these types write a function view
that creates a view of defined shapes. The first parameter is a tuple (columns, rows) defining the size of the resulting view. Left top corner has a coordinate (0,0). Second argument is a list of shapes (either circles or rectangles).
view :: (Int,Int) -> [Shape] -> Result
The result may differ based on rounding. In following example '.'
was used for the free spot, '#'
for the filled spot.
Prelude>pp(view (40,15) [Circle (Point 8 4) 5, Rectangle {topLeft = (Point 15 5), bottomRight = (Point 35 12) }, Circle (Point 30 12) 8] )
....###...###...........................
....#.......#...........................
...##.......##..........................
...#.........#..........................
...#.........#.............#######......
...#.........#.#####################....
...##.......##.#........##.........##...
....#.......#..#.......##..........###..
....###...###..#.......#...........#.#..
......#####....#......##...........#.##.
...............#......#............#..#.
...............#......#............#..#.
...............#####################..#.
......................#...............#.
......................#...............#.
2 - Drawing
Lets define a new data types representing a point and a line.
data Point = Point Int Int
data Line = Line Point Point
Using these types write a function drawLines
that creates a view of defined lines. The first parameter is a tuple (columns, rows) defining the size of the resulting view. Left top corner has a coordinate (0,0). Second argument is a list of lines.
drawLines :: (Int,Int) -> [Line] -> Result
The result may differ based on rounding. In following example '.'
was used for the free spot, '#'
for the filled spot.
Prelude>pp(drawLines (31,15) [Line (Point x y) (Point 15 7)|(x,y)<-concat [[(x,y)|y<-[0,7,14]]|x<-[0,15,30]]])
##.............#.............##
..##...........#...........##..
....##.........#.........##....
.....###.......#.......###.....
........##.....#.....##........
..........###..#..###..........
.............#####.............
###############################
.............#####.............
..........###..#..###..........
........##.....#.....##........
.....###.......#.......###.....
....##.........#.........##....
..##...........#...........##..
##.............#.............##
3 - Filling
Lets define a picture that is composed from '.'
which is used for a free spot and '#'
is used for the filled spot.
sampleInput =
["....................",
"....................",
"....#####...........",
"...##...##..........",
"..##.....##.........",
"..#.......#.........",
"..#...############..",
"..#...#...#......#..",
"..##..#..##......#..",
"...##.#.##.......#..",
"....#####........#..",
"......#..........#..",
"......############..",
"....................",
"...................."]
Write a function fill
that takes a defined picture and a starting position (tuple (column, row)) and it fills the continuous area of free cells starting from the defined starting position with character '*'
. You can use the algorithm flood fill.
fill :: Result -> (Int,Int) -> Result
Prelude> pp(fill sampleInput (0,0))
********************
********************
****#####***********
***##...##**********
**##.....##*********
**#.......#*********
**#...############**
**#...#...#......#**
**##..#..##......#**
***##.#.##.......#**
****#####........#**
******#..........#**
******############**
********************
********************
4 - Poker
Lets define a data types representing a deck of Poker cards. In Poker, a player gets 5 cards into the hand. Dealt hands are classified into several categories. These categories are important to define who is the winner. Rules for each category cen be found Here
data Suit = Hearts | Clubs | Diamonds | Spades deriving (Eq, Show)
data Rank = Numeric Int | Jack | Queen | King | Ace deriving (Eq, Show)
data Card = Card Rank Suit deriving (Eq, Show)
type Hand = [Card]
data Category = RoyalFlush
| StraightFlush
| Four
| FullHouse
| Flush
| Straight
| Three
| TwoPair
| Pair
| HighCard deriving (Eq, Show)
Write a function decide
that takes 5 dealt cards - Hand
and returns a poker category in which it fits.
decide:: Hand -> Category
Prelude> decide [Card (Numeric 2) Hearts,Card (Numeric 2) Clubs,Card Ace Hearts,Card Ace Clubs,Card King Spades]
TwoPair
Prelude> decide [Card (Numeric 2) Hearts,Card (Numeric 2) Clubs,Card Ace Hearts,Card Ace Clubs,Card Ace Spades]
FullHouse
Prelude> decide [Card Ace Hearts,Card (Numeric 2) Hearts,Card (Numeric 5) Hearts,Card (Numeric 3) Hearts,Card (Numeric 4) Clubs]
Straight
Prelude> decide [Card (Numeric 2) Hearts,Card (Numeric 5) Clubs,Card Ace Hearts,Card King Clubs,Card Jack Spades]
HighCard
5 - Cubes
Lets assume, that we have a 3D model composed from cubes in standard Euclidean space. In our model, we are using only positive integers. Each of these cubes is defined by its corner with the smallest x, y and z coordinates and by its size. Also each of these boxes have a color. In our case, while we are using only a text mode, it will be a character. You can assume, that the cubes in our model do not overlap, but there can be cubes placed above other cubes. In the code, it will be represented by following type Cube
-- Point x y z
data Point = Point Int Int Int
data Cube = Cube {start::Point, size::Int, color::Char }
Write a function view
that takes a list of cubes ([Cube]
) and returns a floor plan (a view from the top). The size of this floor plan will be computed based on the size of the boxes in the input. The result will be a list of strings. Use following function pp
to print it on the screen. For the output format, see the sample output bellow. The bottom left corner has the coordinates (0,0), y-axis corresponds to rows and x-axis to columns. Visible parts of the cubes are visualized by its colors. Empty space is represented by character ' '
.
sampleInput :: [Cube]
sampleInput = [Cube { start = Point 1 1 10, size = 4, color = 'X'},
Cube { start = Point 1 5 10, size = 3, color = 'O'},
Cube { start = Point 10 8 0, size = 2, color = '#'},
Cube { start = Point 0 0 0, size = 10, color = '*'}]
view :: [Cube] -> Result
*Main> pp (view sampleInput )
**********##
**********##
*OOO******
*OOO******
*OOO******
*XXXX*****
*XXXX*****
*XXXX*****
*XXXX*****
**********
6 - Components
Lets assume, that we have a 3D model composed from cubes in standard Euclidean space. In our model, we are using only positive integers. Each of these cubes is defined by its corner with the smallest x, y and z coordinates and by its size. It will be represented by following type Cube
-- Point x y z
data Point = Point Int Int Int deriving (Eq, Show)
data Cube = Cube {start::Point, size::Int } deriving (Eq, Show)
Cubes in our model do overlap. To overlap, they need to have some shared volume, just touching is not enough. A component is a set of cubes that are overlapping. In other words, if we want to add a cube x
to a component, we need to find a cube from the component, that overlaps with the cube x
Write a function components
that takes a list of cubes ([Cube]
) and as a result divides these cubes into components. The result will be [[Cube]]
, where each of inner lists represents a component (as was defined above). You can use function printIt
to print each of these components on a separated line.
sampleInput :: [Cube]
sampleInput = [Cube { start = Point 0 0 0, size = 5},
Cube { start = Point 4 4 4, size = 5},
Cube { start = Point 8 8 8, size = 4},
Cube { start = Point 12 12 12, size = 2},
Cube { start = Point 13 13 13, size = 2},
Cube { start = Point 10 10 0, size = 2},
Cube { start = Point 9 9 0, size = 4}]
printIt :: [[Cube]] -> IO ()
printIt components = putStr (concat [show component ++ "\n" |component<-components])
components::[Cube] -> [[Cube]]
*Main> printIt (components sampleInput)
[Cube {start = Point 0 0 0, size = 5},Cube {start = Point 4 4 4, size = 5},Cube {start = Point 8 8 8, size = 4}]
[Cube {start = Point 12 12 12, size = 2},Cube {start = Point 13 13 13, size = 2}]
[Cube {start = Point 10 10 0, size = 2},Cube {start = Point 9 9 0, size = 4}]