Output the ŋarâþ crîþ alphabet song without using (m)any letters Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern) The PPCG Site design is on its way - help us make it awesome! Sandbox for Proposed ChallengesThe reversible reverserAlphanumeric balanceFinding prime numbers without using “prime characters”Output your username without using any of the characters in your username!Holy Hole In A Donut, Batman!Shoot the ASCII MoonAvoid repeating letters between five simple programsCreate an Alphabet SongThe Speed of LettersOutput your Score!
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Output the ŋarâþ crîþ alphabet song without using (m)any letters
Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)
The PPCG Site design is on its way - help us make it awesome!
Sandbox for Proposed ChallengesThe reversible reverserAlphanumeric balanceFinding prime numbers without using “prime characters”Output your username without using any of the characters in your username!Holy Hole In A Donut, Batman!Shoot the ASCII MoonAvoid repeating letters between five simple programsCreate an Alphabet SongThe Speed of LettersOutput your Score!
$begingroup$
Your goal is to write a program that takes no input and outputs the following text:
ca e na ŋa va o sa;
þa ša ra la ła.
ma a pa fa ga ta ča;
în ja i da ða.
ar ħo ên ôn ân uħo;
carþ taŋ neŋ es nem.
elo cenvos.
But there's a catch: for each letter (any character whose general category in Unicode starts with L
) in your source, you get a penalty of 20 characters! (For reference, the text to be printed has 81 letters.)
The Perl 6 code below has 145 bytes and 84 letters, so it gets a score of 1,845:
say "ca e na ŋa va o sa;
þa ša ra la ła.
ma a pa fa ga ta ča;
în ja i da ða.
ar ħo ên ôn ân uħo;
carþ taŋ neŋ es nem.
elo cenvos."
The code below has 152 bytes and 70 letters, so it gets a score of 1,552:
$_="C e N ŋa V o S;
Þ Š R L Ł.
M a P F G T Č;
în J i D Ð.
ar ħo ên ôn ân uħo;
Crþ Tŋ neŋ es nem.
elo cenvos.";s:g/<:Lu>/$/.lc~'a'/;.say
Standard loopholes are forbidden.
Originally, I thought of forbidding letters altogether, but I don't think there are many languages that make this possible. You're more than welcome to try.
(ŋarâþ crîþ [ˈŋaɹa̰θ kɹḭθ] is one of my conlangs. I wanted to capitalise its name here, but I get the ugly big eng here. Oh well, the language doesn't use capital letters in its romanisation anyway.)
code-golf kolmogorov-complexity restricted-source
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Your goal is to write a program that takes no input and outputs the following text:
ca e na ŋa va o sa;
þa ša ra la ła.
ma a pa fa ga ta ča;
în ja i da ða.
ar ħo ên ôn ân uħo;
carþ taŋ neŋ es nem.
elo cenvos.
But there's a catch: for each letter (any character whose general category in Unicode starts with L
) in your source, you get a penalty of 20 characters! (For reference, the text to be printed has 81 letters.)
The Perl 6 code below has 145 bytes and 84 letters, so it gets a score of 1,845:
say "ca e na ŋa va o sa;
þa ša ra la ła.
ma a pa fa ga ta ča;
în ja i da ða.
ar ħo ên ôn ân uħo;
carþ taŋ neŋ es nem.
elo cenvos."
The code below has 152 bytes and 70 letters, so it gets a score of 1,552:
$_="C e N ŋa V o S;
Þ Š R L Ł.
M a P F G T Č;
în J i D Ð.
ar ħo ên ôn ân uħo;
Crþ Tŋ neŋ es nem.
elo cenvos.";s:g/<:Lu>/$/.lc~'a'/;.say
Standard loopholes are forbidden.
Originally, I thought of forbidding letters altogether, but I don't think there are many languages that make this possible. You're more than welcome to try.
(ŋarâþ crîþ [ˈŋaɹa̰θ kɹḭθ] is one of my conlangs. I wanted to capitalise its name here, but I get the ugly big eng here. Oh well, the language doesn't use capital letters in its romanisation anyway.)
code-golf kolmogorov-complexity restricted-source
$endgroup$
4
$begingroup$
kolmogorov-complexity, restricted-source, and special scoring are all sorts of things that benefit greatly from careful consideration in the sandbox. Currently, it seems like the best approach to this challenge would be to just write out all of the codepoints in decimal then turn them into text with a builtin, with some shortcut to encode all of thea
s--or not, depending on how many letters it would take, because 20 characters is a really big penalty (although when everything else is scored by bytes, it's not quite well defined...)!
$endgroup$
– Unrelated String
3 hours ago
$begingroup$
And considering the invocation of Unicode, some explicit rules governing special codepages as used by most golflangs are probably called for (alongside maybe a link to a script to validate scoring).
$endgroup$
– Unrelated String
2 hours ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Your goal is to write a program that takes no input and outputs the following text:
ca e na ŋa va o sa;
þa ša ra la ła.
ma a pa fa ga ta ča;
în ja i da ða.
ar ħo ên ôn ân uħo;
carþ taŋ neŋ es nem.
elo cenvos.
But there's a catch: for each letter (any character whose general category in Unicode starts with L
) in your source, you get a penalty of 20 characters! (For reference, the text to be printed has 81 letters.)
The Perl 6 code below has 145 bytes and 84 letters, so it gets a score of 1,845:
say "ca e na ŋa va o sa;
þa ša ra la ła.
ma a pa fa ga ta ča;
în ja i da ða.
ar ħo ên ôn ân uħo;
carþ taŋ neŋ es nem.
elo cenvos."
The code below has 152 bytes and 70 letters, so it gets a score of 1,552:
$_="C e N ŋa V o S;
Þ Š R L Ł.
M a P F G T Č;
în J i D Ð.
ar ħo ên ôn ân uħo;
Crþ Tŋ neŋ es nem.
elo cenvos.";s:g/<:Lu>/$/.lc~'a'/;.say
Standard loopholes are forbidden.
Originally, I thought of forbidding letters altogether, but I don't think there are many languages that make this possible. You're more than welcome to try.
(ŋarâþ crîþ [ˈŋaɹa̰θ kɹḭθ] is one of my conlangs. I wanted to capitalise its name here, but I get the ugly big eng here. Oh well, the language doesn't use capital letters in its romanisation anyway.)
code-golf kolmogorov-complexity restricted-source
$endgroup$
Your goal is to write a program that takes no input and outputs the following text:
ca e na ŋa va o sa;
þa ša ra la ła.
ma a pa fa ga ta ča;
în ja i da ða.
ar ħo ên ôn ân uħo;
carþ taŋ neŋ es nem.
elo cenvos.
But there's a catch: for each letter (any character whose general category in Unicode starts with L
) in your source, you get a penalty of 20 characters! (For reference, the text to be printed has 81 letters.)
The Perl 6 code below has 145 bytes and 84 letters, so it gets a score of 1,845:
say "ca e na ŋa va o sa;
þa ša ra la ła.
ma a pa fa ga ta ča;
în ja i da ða.
ar ħo ên ôn ân uħo;
carþ taŋ neŋ es nem.
elo cenvos."
The code below has 152 bytes and 70 letters, so it gets a score of 1,552:
$_="C e N ŋa V o S;
Þ Š R L Ł.
M a P F G T Č;
în J i D Ð.
ar ħo ên ôn ân uħo;
Crþ Tŋ neŋ es nem.
elo cenvos.";s:g/<:Lu>/$/.lc~'a'/;.say
Standard loopholes are forbidden.
Originally, I thought of forbidding letters altogether, but I don't think there are many languages that make this possible. You're more than welcome to try.
(ŋarâþ crîþ [ˈŋaɹa̰θ kɹḭθ] is one of my conlangs. I wanted to capitalise its name here, but I get the ugly big eng here. Oh well, the language doesn't use capital letters in its romanisation anyway.)
code-golf kolmogorov-complexity restricted-source
code-golf kolmogorov-complexity restricted-source
edited 3 hours ago
bb94
asked 4 hours ago
bb94bb94
1,127711
1,127711
4
$begingroup$
kolmogorov-complexity, restricted-source, and special scoring are all sorts of things that benefit greatly from careful consideration in the sandbox. Currently, it seems like the best approach to this challenge would be to just write out all of the codepoints in decimal then turn them into text with a builtin, with some shortcut to encode all of thea
s--or not, depending on how many letters it would take, because 20 characters is a really big penalty (although when everything else is scored by bytes, it's not quite well defined...)!
$endgroup$
– Unrelated String
3 hours ago
$begingroup$
And considering the invocation of Unicode, some explicit rules governing special codepages as used by most golflangs are probably called for (alongside maybe a link to a script to validate scoring).
$endgroup$
– Unrelated String
2 hours ago
add a comment |
4
$begingroup$
kolmogorov-complexity, restricted-source, and special scoring are all sorts of things that benefit greatly from careful consideration in the sandbox. Currently, it seems like the best approach to this challenge would be to just write out all of the codepoints in decimal then turn them into text with a builtin, with some shortcut to encode all of thea
s--or not, depending on how many letters it would take, because 20 characters is a really big penalty (although when everything else is scored by bytes, it's not quite well defined...)!
$endgroup$
– Unrelated String
3 hours ago
$begingroup$
And considering the invocation of Unicode, some explicit rules governing special codepages as used by most golflangs are probably called for (alongside maybe a link to a script to validate scoring).
$endgroup$
– Unrelated String
2 hours ago
4
4
$begingroup$
kolmogorov-complexity, restricted-source, and special scoring are all sorts of things that benefit greatly from careful consideration in the sandbox. Currently, it seems like the best approach to this challenge would be to just write out all of the codepoints in decimal then turn them into text with a builtin, with some shortcut to encode all of the
a
s--or not, depending on how many letters it would take, because 20 characters is a really big penalty (although when everything else is scored by bytes, it's not quite well defined...)!$endgroup$
– Unrelated String
3 hours ago
$begingroup$
kolmogorov-complexity, restricted-source, and special scoring are all sorts of things that benefit greatly from careful consideration in the sandbox. Currently, it seems like the best approach to this challenge would be to just write out all of the codepoints in decimal then turn them into text with a builtin, with some shortcut to encode all of the
a
s--or not, depending on how many letters it would take, because 20 characters is a really big penalty (although when everything else is scored by bytes, it's not quite well defined...)!$endgroup$
– Unrelated String
3 hours ago
$begingroup$
And considering the invocation of Unicode, some explicit rules governing special codepages as used by most golflangs are probably called for (alongside maybe a link to a script to validate scoring).
$endgroup$
– Unrelated String
2 hours ago
$begingroup$
And considering the invocation of Unicode, some explicit rules governing special codepages as used by most golflangs are probably called for (alongside maybe a link to a script to validate scoring).
$endgroup$
– Unrelated String
2 hours ago
add a comment |
7 Answers
7
active
oldest
votes
$begingroup$
PowerShell, scores 601 546
-join(67,65,0,69,0,78,65,0,299,65,0,86,65,0,79,0,83,65,27,-22,222,65,0,321,65,0,82,65,0,76,65,0,290,65,14,-22,77,65,0,65,0,80,65,0,70,65,0,71,65,0,84,65,0,237,65,27,-22,206,78,0,74,65,0,73,0,68,65,0,208,65,14,-22,65,82,0,263,79,0,202,78,0,212,78,0,194,78,0,85,263,79,27,-22,67,65,82,222,0,84,65,299,0,78,69,299,0,69,83,0,78,69,77,14,-22,69,76,79,0,67,69,78,86,79,83,14|%[char]($_+32))
Try it online!
Naive approach; I just took the code points and converted them to decimal, subtracted 32, then this code treats them as a char
before -join
ing it back together into a single string.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Haskell, 0 letters, 423 bytes = score 423
(['10'..]!!)<$>[89,87,22,91,22,100,87,22,321,87,22,108,87,22,101,22,105,87,49,0,244,87,22,343,87,22,104,87,22,98,87,22,312,87,36,0,99,87,22,87,22,102,87,22,92,87,22,93,87,22,106,87,22,259,87,49,0,228,100,22,96,87,22,95,22,90,87,22,230,87,36,0,87,104,22,285,101,22,224,100,22,234,100,22,216,100,22,107,285,101,49,0,89,87,104,244,22,106,87,321,22,100,91,321,22,91,105,22,100,91,99,36,0,91,98,101,22,89,91,100,108,101,105,36]
Try it online!
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Jelly, 321 bytes + 2 letters = score 361
3343781777797791350694255572961968519437585132057650209974147122192542459108221624793330048943528237823681411832154316740173721249435700067706302064570847610741421342406380917446310820012503592770000532190167243585300911078873144513786923305473352724133578818457026824110152529235136461572588027747840738399150398304b354Ọ
Try it online!
This is hideous and someone can definitely do better.
Verify score.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Jelly, 274 261 bytes + 2 letters = 314 301
98,8,7577,64,137+Ọ“24461267,1691524401827737“39“199183“2¤;108¤+“@36841915390646457101051137247389928597014417227222832154722739623607566349606250000571655631221597252888655305356086227145497408221809227156852666405895387397931203673256733239614440865652”;";/V
(Uses "+,/0123456789;@V¤Ọ“”
of which V
and Ọ
are Unicode letters and are used once each)
Try it online!
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Python 3, 397 bytes + 19 letters = 777 score
print(''.join(chr(i+32)for i in[67,65,0,69,0,78,65,0,299,65,0,86,65,0,79,0,83,65,27,-22,222,65,0,321,65,0,82,65,0,76,65,0,290,65,14,-22,77,65,0,65,0,80,65,0,70,65,0,71,65,0,84,65,0,237,65,27,-22,206,78,0,74,65,0,73,0,68,65,0,208,65,14,-22,65,82,0,263,79,0,202,78,0,212,78,0,194,78,0,85,263,79,27,-22,67,65,82,222,0,84,65,299,0,78,69,299,0,69,83,0,78,69,77,14,-22,69,76,79,0,67,69,78,86,79,83,14]))
Try it online!
Port of AdmBorkBork's answer.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Retina, 141 characters, 160 bytes, 15 letters = score 460
K`%# ' 1# !# 9# 2 6#;¶þ# š# 5# /# ł#.¶0# # 3# (# )# 7# č#;¶î1 ,# + &# ð#.¶#5 ħ2 ê1 ô1 â1 8ħ2;¶%#5þ 7#! 1'! '6 1'0.¶'/2 %'1926.
T`!--/-9`ŋ`-{
Try it online!
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Jelly, 249 bytes (UTF-8) plus 2 letters; score = 289
“@@@ࣙ@@@[*ࢌ@࣯@@@࣐*@@@@@@࢛[*ࡼ@@@@ࡾ*@ࢵ@ࡸ@ࢂ@ࡰ@ࢵ[*ࢌ@ࣙ@ࣙ@@*@”O_>999×1902$$$_32Ọ
Try it online!
I couldn’t get this to work with TIO’s Jelly option, so the TIO link uses Python 3 to call Jelly. I think this is because of all the UTF-8 characters not in Jelly’s codepage.
Verify score!
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
So should this bePython 3 with jelly
? (in which case the header & footer count).
$endgroup$
– Jonathan Allan
5 mins ago
add a comment |
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7 Answers
7
active
oldest
votes
7 Answers
7
active
oldest
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active
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active
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$begingroup$
PowerShell, scores 601 546
-join(67,65,0,69,0,78,65,0,299,65,0,86,65,0,79,0,83,65,27,-22,222,65,0,321,65,0,82,65,0,76,65,0,290,65,14,-22,77,65,0,65,0,80,65,0,70,65,0,71,65,0,84,65,0,237,65,27,-22,206,78,0,74,65,0,73,0,68,65,0,208,65,14,-22,65,82,0,263,79,0,202,78,0,212,78,0,194,78,0,85,263,79,27,-22,67,65,82,222,0,84,65,299,0,78,69,299,0,69,83,0,78,69,77,14,-22,69,76,79,0,67,69,78,86,79,83,14|%[char]($_+32))
Try it online!
Naive approach; I just took the code points and converted them to decimal, subtracted 32, then this code treats them as a char
before -join
ing it back together into a single string.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
PowerShell, scores 601 546
-join(67,65,0,69,0,78,65,0,299,65,0,86,65,0,79,0,83,65,27,-22,222,65,0,321,65,0,82,65,0,76,65,0,290,65,14,-22,77,65,0,65,0,80,65,0,70,65,0,71,65,0,84,65,0,237,65,27,-22,206,78,0,74,65,0,73,0,68,65,0,208,65,14,-22,65,82,0,263,79,0,202,78,0,212,78,0,194,78,0,85,263,79,27,-22,67,65,82,222,0,84,65,299,0,78,69,299,0,69,83,0,78,69,77,14,-22,69,76,79,0,67,69,78,86,79,83,14|%[char]($_+32))
Try it online!
Naive approach; I just took the code points and converted them to decimal, subtracted 32, then this code treats them as a char
before -join
ing it back together into a single string.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
PowerShell, scores 601 546
-join(67,65,0,69,0,78,65,0,299,65,0,86,65,0,79,0,83,65,27,-22,222,65,0,321,65,0,82,65,0,76,65,0,290,65,14,-22,77,65,0,65,0,80,65,0,70,65,0,71,65,0,84,65,0,237,65,27,-22,206,78,0,74,65,0,73,0,68,65,0,208,65,14,-22,65,82,0,263,79,0,202,78,0,212,78,0,194,78,0,85,263,79,27,-22,67,65,82,222,0,84,65,299,0,78,69,299,0,69,83,0,78,69,77,14,-22,69,76,79,0,67,69,78,86,79,83,14|%[char]($_+32))
Try it online!
Naive approach; I just took the code points and converted them to decimal, subtracted 32, then this code treats them as a char
before -join
ing it back together into a single string.
$endgroup$
PowerShell, scores 601 546
-join(67,65,0,69,0,78,65,0,299,65,0,86,65,0,79,0,83,65,27,-22,222,65,0,321,65,0,82,65,0,76,65,0,290,65,14,-22,77,65,0,65,0,80,65,0,70,65,0,71,65,0,84,65,0,237,65,27,-22,206,78,0,74,65,0,73,0,68,65,0,208,65,14,-22,65,82,0,263,79,0,202,78,0,212,78,0,194,78,0,85,263,79,27,-22,67,65,82,222,0,84,65,299,0,78,69,299,0,69,83,0,78,69,77,14,-22,69,76,79,0,67,69,78,86,79,83,14|%[char]($_+32))
Try it online!
Naive approach; I just took the code points and converted them to decimal, subtracted 32, then this code treats them as a char
before -join
ing it back together into a single string.
answered 3 hours ago
AdmBorkBorkAdmBorkBork
28k468241
28k468241
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Haskell, 0 letters, 423 bytes = score 423
(['10'..]!!)<$>[89,87,22,91,22,100,87,22,321,87,22,108,87,22,101,22,105,87,49,0,244,87,22,343,87,22,104,87,22,98,87,22,312,87,36,0,99,87,22,87,22,102,87,22,92,87,22,93,87,22,106,87,22,259,87,49,0,228,100,22,96,87,22,95,22,90,87,22,230,87,36,0,87,104,22,285,101,22,224,100,22,234,100,22,216,100,22,107,285,101,49,0,89,87,104,244,22,106,87,321,22,100,91,321,22,91,105,22,100,91,99,36,0,91,98,101,22,89,91,100,108,101,105,36]
Try it online!
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Haskell, 0 letters, 423 bytes = score 423
(['10'..]!!)<$>[89,87,22,91,22,100,87,22,321,87,22,108,87,22,101,22,105,87,49,0,244,87,22,343,87,22,104,87,22,98,87,22,312,87,36,0,99,87,22,87,22,102,87,22,92,87,22,93,87,22,106,87,22,259,87,49,0,228,100,22,96,87,22,95,22,90,87,22,230,87,36,0,87,104,22,285,101,22,224,100,22,234,100,22,216,100,22,107,285,101,49,0,89,87,104,244,22,106,87,321,22,100,91,321,22,91,105,22,100,91,99,36,0,91,98,101,22,89,91,100,108,101,105,36]
Try it online!
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Haskell, 0 letters, 423 bytes = score 423
(['10'..]!!)<$>[89,87,22,91,22,100,87,22,321,87,22,108,87,22,101,22,105,87,49,0,244,87,22,343,87,22,104,87,22,98,87,22,312,87,36,0,99,87,22,87,22,102,87,22,92,87,22,93,87,22,106,87,22,259,87,49,0,228,100,22,96,87,22,95,22,90,87,22,230,87,36,0,87,104,22,285,101,22,224,100,22,234,100,22,216,100,22,107,285,101,49,0,89,87,104,244,22,106,87,321,22,100,91,321,22,91,105,22,100,91,99,36,0,91,98,101,22,89,91,100,108,101,105,36]
Try it online!
$endgroup$
Haskell, 0 letters, 423 bytes = score 423
(['10'..]!!)<$>[89,87,22,91,22,100,87,22,321,87,22,108,87,22,101,22,105,87,49,0,244,87,22,343,87,22,104,87,22,98,87,22,312,87,36,0,99,87,22,87,22,102,87,22,92,87,22,93,87,22,106,87,22,259,87,49,0,228,100,22,96,87,22,95,22,90,87,22,230,87,36,0,87,104,22,285,101,22,224,100,22,234,100,22,216,100,22,107,285,101,49,0,89,87,104,244,22,106,87,321,22,100,91,321,22,91,105,22,100,91,99,36,0,91,98,101,22,89,91,100,108,101,105,36]
Try it online!
answered 2 hours ago
niminimi
32.7k32489
32.7k32489
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Jelly, 321 bytes + 2 letters = score 361
3343781777797791350694255572961968519437585132057650209974147122192542459108221624793330048943528237823681411832154316740173721249435700067706302064570847610741421342406380917446310820012503592770000532190167243585300911078873144513786923305473352724133578818457026824110152529235136461572588027747840738399150398304b354Ọ
Try it online!
This is hideous and someone can definitely do better.
Verify score.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Jelly, 321 bytes + 2 letters = score 361
3343781777797791350694255572961968519437585132057650209974147122192542459108221624793330048943528237823681411832154316740173721249435700067706302064570847610741421342406380917446310820012503592770000532190167243585300911078873144513786923305473352724133578818457026824110152529235136461572588027747840738399150398304b354Ọ
Try it online!
This is hideous and someone can definitely do better.
Verify score.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Jelly, 321 bytes + 2 letters = score 361
3343781777797791350694255572961968519437585132057650209974147122192542459108221624793330048943528237823681411832154316740173721249435700067706302064570847610741421342406380917446310820012503592770000532190167243585300911078873144513786923305473352724133578818457026824110152529235136461572588027747840738399150398304b354Ọ
Try it online!
This is hideous and someone can definitely do better.
Verify score.
$endgroup$
Jelly, 321 bytes + 2 letters = score 361
3343781777797791350694255572961968519437585132057650209974147122192542459108221624793330048943528237823681411832154316740173721249435700067706302064570847610741421342406380917446310820012503592770000532190167243585300911078873144513786923305473352724133578818457026824110152529235136461572588027747840738399150398304b354Ọ
Try it online!
This is hideous and someone can definitely do better.
Verify score.
answered 3 hours ago
HyperNeutrinoHyperNeutrino
19k437148
19k437148
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Jelly, 274 261 bytes + 2 letters = 314 301
98,8,7577,64,137+Ọ“24461267,1691524401827737“39“199183“2¤;108¤+“@36841915390646457101051137247389928597014417227222832154722739623607566349606250000571655631221597252888655305356086227145497408221809227156852666405895387397931203673256733239614440865652”;";/V
(Uses "+,/0123456789;@V¤Ọ“”
of which V
and Ọ
are Unicode letters and are used once each)
Try it online!
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Jelly, 274 261 bytes + 2 letters = 314 301
98,8,7577,64,137+Ọ“24461267,1691524401827737“39“199183“2¤;108¤+“@36841915390646457101051137247389928597014417227222832154722739623607566349606250000571655631221597252888655305356086227145497408221809227156852666405895387397931203673256733239614440865652”;";/V
(Uses "+,/0123456789;@V¤Ọ“”
of which V
and Ọ
are Unicode letters and are used once each)
Try it online!
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Jelly, 274 261 bytes + 2 letters = 314 301
98,8,7577,64,137+Ọ“24461267,1691524401827737“39“199183“2¤;108¤+“@36841915390646457101051137247389928597014417227222832154722739623607566349606250000571655631221597252888655305356086227145497408221809227156852666405895387397931203673256733239614440865652”;";/V
(Uses "+,/0123456789;@V¤Ọ“”
of which V
and Ọ
are Unicode letters and are used once each)
Try it online!
$endgroup$
Jelly, 274 261 bytes + 2 letters = 314 301
98,8,7577,64,137+Ọ“24461267,1691524401827737“39“199183“2¤;108¤+“@36841915390646457101051137247389928597014417227222832154722739623607566349606250000571655631221597252888655305356086227145497408221809227156852666405895387397931203673256733239614440865652”;";/V
(Uses "+,/0123456789;@V¤Ọ“”
of which V
and Ọ
are Unicode letters and are used once each)
Try it online!
edited 8 mins ago
answered 59 mins ago
Jonathan AllanJonathan Allan
54.4k537174
54.4k537174
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Python 3, 397 bytes + 19 letters = 777 score
print(''.join(chr(i+32)for i in[67,65,0,69,0,78,65,0,299,65,0,86,65,0,79,0,83,65,27,-22,222,65,0,321,65,0,82,65,0,76,65,0,290,65,14,-22,77,65,0,65,0,80,65,0,70,65,0,71,65,0,84,65,0,237,65,27,-22,206,78,0,74,65,0,73,0,68,65,0,208,65,14,-22,65,82,0,263,79,0,202,78,0,212,78,0,194,78,0,85,263,79,27,-22,67,65,82,222,0,84,65,299,0,78,69,299,0,69,83,0,78,69,77,14,-22,69,76,79,0,67,69,78,86,79,83,14]))
Try it online!
Port of AdmBorkBork's answer.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Python 3, 397 bytes + 19 letters = 777 score
print(''.join(chr(i+32)for i in[67,65,0,69,0,78,65,0,299,65,0,86,65,0,79,0,83,65,27,-22,222,65,0,321,65,0,82,65,0,76,65,0,290,65,14,-22,77,65,0,65,0,80,65,0,70,65,0,71,65,0,84,65,0,237,65,27,-22,206,78,0,74,65,0,73,0,68,65,0,208,65,14,-22,65,82,0,263,79,0,202,78,0,212,78,0,194,78,0,85,263,79,27,-22,67,65,82,222,0,84,65,299,0,78,69,299,0,69,83,0,78,69,77,14,-22,69,76,79,0,67,69,78,86,79,83,14]))
Try it online!
Port of AdmBorkBork's answer.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Python 3, 397 bytes + 19 letters = 777 score
print(''.join(chr(i+32)for i in[67,65,0,69,0,78,65,0,299,65,0,86,65,0,79,0,83,65,27,-22,222,65,0,321,65,0,82,65,0,76,65,0,290,65,14,-22,77,65,0,65,0,80,65,0,70,65,0,71,65,0,84,65,0,237,65,27,-22,206,78,0,74,65,0,73,0,68,65,0,208,65,14,-22,65,82,0,263,79,0,202,78,0,212,78,0,194,78,0,85,263,79,27,-22,67,65,82,222,0,84,65,299,0,78,69,299,0,69,83,0,78,69,77,14,-22,69,76,79,0,67,69,78,86,79,83,14]))
Try it online!
Port of AdmBorkBork's answer.
$endgroup$
Python 3, 397 bytes + 19 letters = 777 score
print(''.join(chr(i+32)for i in[67,65,0,69,0,78,65,0,299,65,0,86,65,0,79,0,83,65,27,-22,222,65,0,321,65,0,82,65,0,76,65,0,290,65,14,-22,77,65,0,65,0,80,65,0,70,65,0,71,65,0,84,65,0,237,65,27,-22,206,78,0,74,65,0,73,0,68,65,0,208,65,14,-22,65,82,0,263,79,0,202,78,0,212,78,0,194,78,0,85,263,79,27,-22,67,65,82,222,0,84,65,299,0,78,69,299,0,69,83,0,78,69,77,14,-22,69,76,79,0,67,69,78,86,79,83,14]))
Try it online!
Port of AdmBorkBork's answer.
edited 3 hours ago
answered 3 hours ago
Artemis FowlArtemis Fowl
27111
27111
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Retina, 141 characters, 160 bytes, 15 letters = score 460
K`%# ' 1# !# 9# 2 6#;¶þ# š# 5# /# ł#.¶0# # 3# (# )# 7# č#;¶î1 ,# + &# ð#.¶#5 ħ2 ê1 ô1 â1 8ħ2;¶%#5þ 7#! 1'! '6 1'0.¶'/2 %'1926.
T`!--/-9`ŋ`-{
Try it online!
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Retina, 141 characters, 160 bytes, 15 letters = score 460
K`%# ' 1# !# 9# 2 6#;¶þ# š# 5# /# ł#.¶0# # 3# (# )# 7# č#;¶î1 ,# + &# ð#.¶#5 ħ2 ê1 ô1 â1 8ħ2;¶%#5þ 7#! 1'! '6 1'0.¶'/2 %'1926.
T`!--/-9`ŋ`-{
Try it online!
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Retina, 141 characters, 160 bytes, 15 letters = score 460
K`%# ' 1# !# 9# 2 6#;¶þ# š# 5# /# ł#.¶0# # 3# (# )# 7# č#;¶î1 ,# + &# ð#.¶#5 ħ2 ê1 ô1 â1 8ħ2;¶%#5þ 7#! 1'! '6 1'0.¶'/2 %'1926.
T`!--/-9`ŋ`-{
Try it online!
$endgroup$
Retina, 141 characters, 160 bytes, 15 letters = score 460
K`%# ' 1# !# 9# 2 6#;¶þ# š# 5# /# ł#.¶0# # 3# (# )# 7# č#;¶î1 ,# + &# ð#.¶#5 ħ2 ê1 ô1 â1 8ħ2;¶%#5þ 7#! 1'! '6 1'0.¶'/2 %'1926.
T`!--/-9`ŋ`-{
Try it online!
answered 1 hour ago
NeilNeil
82.8k745179
82.8k745179
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Jelly, 249 bytes (UTF-8) plus 2 letters; score = 289
“@@@ࣙ@@@[*ࢌ@࣯@@@࣐*@@@@@@࢛[*ࡼ@@@@ࡾ*@ࢵ@ࡸ@ࢂ@ࡰ@ࢵ[*ࢌ@ࣙ@ࣙ@@*@”O_>999×1902$$$_32Ọ
Try it online!
I couldn’t get this to work with TIO’s Jelly option, so the TIO link uses Python 3 to call Jelly. I think this is because of all the UTF-8 characters not in Jelly’s codepage.
Verify score!
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
So should this bePython 3 with jelly
? (in which case the header & footer count).
$endgroup$
– Jonathan Allan
5 mins ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Jelly, 249 bytes (UTF-8) plus 2 letters; score = 289
“@@@ࣙ@@@[*ࢌ@࣯@@@࣐*@@@@@@࢛[*ࡼ@@@@ࡾ*@ࢵ@ࡸ@ࢂ@ࡰ@ࢵ[*ࢌ@ࣙ@ࣙ@@*@”O_>999×1902$$$_32Ọ
Try it online!
I couldn’t get this to work with TIO’s Jelly option, so the TIO link uses Python 3 to call Jelly. I think this is because of all the UTF-8 characters not in Jelly’s codepage.
Verify score!
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
So should this bePython 3 with jelly
? (in which case the header & footer count).
$endgroup$
– Jonathan Allan
5 mins ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Jelly, 249 bytes (UTF-8) plus 2 letters; score = 289
“@@@ࣙ@@@[*ࢌ@࣯@@@࣐*@@@@@@࢛[*ࡼ@@@@ࡾ*@ࢵ@ࡸ@ࢂ@ࡰ@ࢵ[*ࢌ@ࣙ@ࣙ@@*@”O_>999×1902$$$_32Ọ
Try it online!
I couldn’t get this to work with TIO’s Jelly option, so the TIO link uses Python 3 to call Jelly. I think this is because of all the UTF-8 characters not in Jelly’s codepage.
Verify score!
$endgroup$
Jelly, 249 bytes (UTF-8) plus 2 letters; score = 289
“@@@ࣙ@@@[*ࢌ@࣯@@@࣐*@@@@@@࢛[*ࡼ@@@@ࡾ*@ࢵ@ࡸ@ࢂ@ࡰ@ࢵ[*ࢌ@ࣙ@ࣙ@@*@”O_>999×1902$$$_32Ọ
Try it online!
I couldn’t get this to work with TIO’s Jelly option, so the TIO link uses Python 3 to call Jelly. I think this is because of all the UTF-8 characters not in Jelly’s codepage.
Verify score!
edited 21 mins ago
answered 39 mins ago
Nick KennedyNick Kennedy
1,66649
1,66649
$begingroup$
So should this bePython 3 with jelly
? (in which case the header & footer count).
$endgroup$
– Jonathan Allan
5 mins ago
add a comment |
$begingroup$
So should this bePython 3 with jelly
? (in which case the header & footer count).
$endgroup$
– Jonathan Allan
5 mins ago
$begingroup$
So should this be
Python 3 with jelly
? (in which case the header & footer count).$endgroup$
– Jonathan Allan
5 mins ago
$begingroup$
So should this be
Python 3 with jelly
? (in which case the header & footer count).$endgroup$
– Jonathan Allan
5 mins ago
add a comment |
If this is an answer to a challenge…
…Be sure to follow the challenge specification. However, please refrain from exploiting obvious loopholes. Answers abusing any of the standard loopholes are considered invalid. If you think a specification is unclear or underspecified, comment on the question instead.
…Try to optimize your score. For instance, answers to code-golf challenges should attempt to be as short as possible. You can always include a readable version of the code in addition to the competitive one.
Explanations of your answer make it more interesting to read and are very much encouraged.…Include a short header which indicates the language(s) of your code and its score, as defined by the challenge.
More generally…
…Please make sure to answer the question and provide sufficient detail.
…Avoid asking for help, clarification or responding to other answers (use comments instead).
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4
$begingroup$
kolmogorov-complexity, restricted-source, and special scoring are all sorts of things that benefit greatly from careful consideration in the sandbox. Currently, it seems like the best approach to this challenge would be to just write out all of the codepoints in decimal then turn them into text with a builtin, with some shortcut to encode all of the
a
s--or not, depending on how many letters it would take, because 20 characters is a really big penalty (although when everything else is scored by bytes, it's not quite well defined...)!$endgroup$
– Unrelated String
3 hours ago
$begingroup$
And considering the invocation of Unicode, some explicit rules governing special codepages as used by most golflangs are probably called for (alongside maybe a link to a script to validate scoring).
$endgroup$
– Unrelated String
2 hours ago