6444abd2b71c
Problem 145
author | Steve Losh <steve@stevelosh.com> |
---|---|
date | Tue, 28 Feb 2017 23:05:30 +0000 |
parents | 5ece176de174 |
children | 639c1d3616ce |
branches/tags | (none) |
files | src/euler.lisp |
Changes
--- a/src/euler.lisp Tue Feb 28 22:19:51 2017 +0000 +++ b/src/euler.lisp Tue Feb 28 23:05:30 2017 +0000 @@ -1650,6 +1650,34 @@ (iterate (for i :from 1 :below 1000000) (counting (= 60 (term-count i)))))) +(defun problem-145 () + ;; Some positive integers n have the property that the sum [ n + reverse(n) ] + ;; consists entirely of odd (decimal) digits. For instance, 36 + 63 = 99 and + ;; 409 + 904 = 1313. We will call such numbers reversible; so 36, 63, 409, and + ;; 904 are reversible. Leading zeroes are not allowed in either n or + ;; reverse(n). + ;; + ;; There are 120 reversible numbers below one-thousand. + ;; + ;; How many reversible numbers are there below one-billion (10^9)? + (labels ((reverse-integer (n) + (digits-to-number (nreverse (digits n)))) + (reversiblep (n) + (let ((reversed (reverse-integer n))) + (values (unless (zerop (digit 0 n)) + (every #'oddp (digits (+ n reversed)))) + reversed)))) + (iterate + ;; TODO: improve this one + ;; (with limit = 1000000000) there are no 9-digit reversible numbers... + (with limit = 100000000) + (with done = (make-array limit :element-type 'bit :initial-element 0)) + (for i :from 1 :below limit) + (unless (= 1 (aref done i)) + (for (values reversible j) = (reversiblep i)) + (setf (aref done j) 1) + (when reversible + (sum (if (= i j) 1 2))))))) ;;;; Tests -------------------------------------------------------------------- @@ -1712,6 +1740,7 @@ (test p56 (is (= 972 (problem-56)))) (test p74 (is (= 402 (problem-74)))) +(test p145 (is (= 608720 (problem-145)))) ;; (run! :euler)