Ryan Palo
Posted on October 28, 2018
I was recently doing a challenge on Exercism, on the Ruby track, and I struggled a lot, but when I ended up with a final solution, I was amazed at how much the power of Ruby let me simplify my code.
It's a pretty cool challenge, so, I'll lay out the premise first, and then you can try it out. If you're really into it, the Ruby tests for this exercise are in the Exercism Ruby repo. Most of the repos for the other languages have similar test suites for this exercise as well. This exercise is called Robot Name.
The Premise
You are creating a line of robots that each have a unique name. Their names all follow the pattern letter letter number number number
. A couple of valid names might be AB123
, YE801
, or RP100
. This means that there are 26 * 26 * 10 * 10 * 10
possible names. So here's the challenge.
- Write a class that creates Robots.
- Each Robot created must have a unique name that matches the pattern above.
- Robots must be able to be
reset
, wiping their memory and forgetting their name, receiving a new one that is still unique. Don't worry about recycling their name and returning it to the pool. We'll assume that once a name is taken, it's used up. - The name sequence must be random. That means the sequence must not be predictable.
- The Robot Class must have a
forget
method that makes it forget the current state of robots, resetting any shared state it may have.
Make sense? OK, if you're going to attempt this challenge, off you go. I'm going to share my journey below.
My Journey
1. Naive Guess and Check
The difficulty of this exercise is mainly in the fact that there are so many possibilities for names. Any attempt to build all of those strings and combinations through looping or appending to a list are just waaaay too slow. I tried a bunch of different approaches, and there were actually several false-start versions before I reached version 1. My first thought was to naively keep track of the names used, generate a random name, and check if it's in the list:
class Robot
LETTERS = ('A'..'Z').to_a
NUMBERS = ('0'..'9').to_a
@@taken_names = []
def self.forget
@@taken_names = []
end
attr_reader :name
def initialize
reset
end
def reset
name = ""
loop do
name = LETTERS.sample(2) + NUMBERS.sample(3)
break if ! @@taken_names.include?(name)
end
@name = name
end
end
This works great for the first bunch of robots created, but as soon as you get high enough that there start to be collisions, you quickly realize you've got an algorithm that could, in theory, run infinitely long searching for a needle in a 676,000-strand haystack!
But this is Ruby! There's got to be a better way! Maybe we should do it the other way, starting with a list of possible names and then popping them out, guaranteeing no collisions.
2. Popping Names Off a List
So that's a great thought, but how to build the list of names? Something like this?
@@names = LETTERS
.product(LETTERS, NUMBERS, NUMBERS, NUMBERS)
.map(&:join)
# => @@names = ['AA000', 'AA001' ... 'ZZ998', 'ZZ999']
OK, that works. The product
method creates a "Cartesian Product" between all of its arguments. For example:
[1, 2, 3].product([4, 5])
# => [
# [1, 4],
# [1, 5],
# [2, 4],
# [2, 5],
# [3, 4],
# [3, 5],
# ]
That giant product above creates a list like this:
[
['A', 'A', '0', '0', '0'],
['A', 'A', '0', '0', '1'],
...
That's why we join them all together into single strings via the .map(&:join)
method.
Startup time for our class (as well as forget
run time) is pretty long, but maybe that's allowable, seeing how much time it saves us on our algorithm. Right? Right?
Wrong. When our list is huge, randomly choosing an index and then popping that out takes FOR. EVER. Because, each time we pop an item out, all of the items behind that item have to figure out what to do with the gap that it left. This list of names is so huge, it's like trying to turn the Titanic. And how'd that work out for Leo?! (Too soon?)
I even tried generating a giant list of integers instead and converting each integer to my own custom numbering system that was (base 26, base 26, base 10, base 10, base 10), but that was more confusing and not any better.
class Robot
LETTERS = ('A'..'Z').to_a
NUMBERS = ('0'..'9').to_a
@@possible_names = LETTERS
.product(LETTERS, NUMBERS, NUMBERS, NUMBERS)
.map(&:join)
def self.forget
@@possible_names = LETTERS
.product(LETTERS, NUMBERS, NUMBERS, NUMBERS)
.map(&:join)
end
def initialize
reset
end
def reset
next_index = rand(0...@@possible_names.length)
@name = @@possible_names.pop(next_index)
end
end
This is Ruby! There must be a better way!
The Final Solution
As it turns out, there is. My fundamental idea of working from a pre-built list was the right idea, but I wasn't letting Ruby work for me enough. There were a lot of things I could improve upon.
First, the building of the list of names. I forgot how awesome ranges in Ruby are.
@@names = 'AA000'..'ZZ999'
That's right. Ruby knows how to increment each character in the string (even the letters) to fill in the gaps. I'll be honest, when this was pointed out to me by the Ruby Track Mentor after all of that work, I only cried for like 12 minutes.
Next, random access. Rather than randomly selecting each time, why not shuffle once, up front? But you can't shuffle a range in Ruby! Not a problem!
@@names = ('AA000'..'ZZ999').to_a.shuffle
This crying session only lasted 7 minutes.
Lastly, dealing with modifying this great giant list over and over. The solution? Don't. The best way to deal with a large dataset isn't to pop off of it. It's to let Ruby work for you and use an Enumerator. This lazily yields each element. It's similar to having a pointer point at the element you want and then moving the pointer to the next element, but way less work.
class Robot
POSSIBLE_NAMES = 'AA000'..'ZZ999'
@@names = POSSIBLE_NAMES.to_a.shuffle.each
def self.forget
@@names = POSSIBLE_NAMES.to_a.shuffle.each
end
attr_reader :name
def initialize
reset
end
def reset
@name = @@names.next
end
end
This way, you walk through the names until you run out. Handily, when the @@names
Enumerator runs out of names, a call to @@names.next
will raise a StopIteration
exception, telling the user that you're out of names. If you want, you could catch that exception and raise your own RobotNamesDepletedError
too. And a call to Robot.forget
renews the list of names with a new random shuffle.
What did you come up with? Did you try the exercise in another language? How did it turn out? Let me know.
Originally posted on assert_not magic?
Posted on October 28, 2018
Join Our Newsletter. No Spam, Only the good stuff.
Sign up to receive the latest update from our blog.