https://wiki.haskell.org/api.php?action=feedcontributions&user=Roerd&feedformat=atomHaskellWiki - User contributions [en]2024-03-29T01:38:24ZUser contributionsMediaWiki 1.35.5https://wiki.haskell.org/index.php?title=Talk:H-99:_Ninety-Nine_Haskell_Problems&diff=9457Talk:H-99: Ninety-Nine Haskell Problems2006-12-15T15:28:43Z<p>Roerd: example uses only standard functions now</p>
<hr />
<div>What does "Lisp solution?" mean? Lots of them are listed "Yes", and lots are listed "No", but I can't detect a difference between these entries...<br />
-- dmwit<br />
<br />
It's just whether or not there's a lisp solution available. If you go to the description of the problem, and click on the problem number, it'll either link you to actual lisp code, or a "not found" page. There are 25 of them which actually have lisp code available. -- chessguy<br />
<br />
What is the meaning of that scoreboard? Even though there is no solution on the L-99 site, there may still exist a LISP solution, even a trivial one. And since that L-99 site is no wiki and this site is, the scoreboard seems just misleading to me.<br />
<br />
Just an example for Problem 12:<br />
<br />
(defun decode-modified (list)<br />
(reduce #'append<br />
(mapcar (lambda (item)<br />
(if (atom item)<br />
(list item)<br />
(make-list (car item) :initial-element (cadr item))))<br />
list)))<br />
-- roerd</div>Roerdhttps://wiki.haskell.org/index.php?title=Talk:H-99:_Ninety-Nine_Haskell_Problems&diff=9455Talk:H-99: Ninety-Nine Haskell Problems2006-12-15T15:16:02Z<p>Roerd: </p>
<hr />
<div>What does "Lisp solution?" mean? Lots of them are listed "Yes", and lots are listed "No", but I can't detect a difference between these entries...<br />
-- dmwit<br />
<br />
It's just whether or not there's a lisp solution available. If you go to the description of the problem, and click on the problem number, it'll either link you to actual lisp code, or a "not found" page. There are 25 of them which actually have lisp code available. -- chessguy<br />
<br />
What is the meaning of that scoreboard? Even though there is no solution on the L-99 site, there may still exist a LISP solution, even a trivial one. And since that L-99 site is no wiki and this site is, the scoreboard seems just misleading to me.<br />
<br />
Just an example for Problem 12:<br />
<br />
(defun decode-modified (list)<br />
(flatten<br />
(mapcar (lambda (item)<br />
(if (atom item)<br />
item<br />
(make-list (car item) :initial-element (cadr item))))<br />
list)))<br />
-- roerd</div>Roerdhttps://wiki.haskell.org/index.php?title=Talk:H-99:_Ninety-Nine_Haskell_Problems&diff=9454Talk:H-99: Ninety-Nine Haskell Problems2006-12-15T15:13:50Z<p>Roerd: </p>
<hr />
<div>What does "Lisp solution?" mean? Lots of them are listed "Yes", and lots are listed "No", but I can't detect a difference between these entries...<br />
-- dmwit<br />
<br />
It's just whether or not there's a lisp solution available. If you go to the description of the problem, and click on the problem number, it'll either link you to actual lisp code, or a "not found" page. There are 25 of them which actually have lisp code available. -- chessguy<br />
<br />
What is the meaning of that scoreboard? Even though there is no solution on the L-99 site, there may still exist a LISP solution, even a trivial one. And since that L-99 site is no wiki and this site is, the scoreboard seems just misleading to me.<br />
<br />
Just an example for Problem 12:<br />
<br />
(defun decode-modified (list)<br />
(mapcar (lambda (item)<br />
(if (atom item)<br />
item<br />
(make-list (car item) :initial-element (cadr item))))<br />
list))<br />
-- roerd</div>Roerdhttps://wiki.haskell.org/index.php?title=Talk:H-99:_Ninety-Nine_Haskell_Problems&diff=9453Talk:H-99: Ninety-Nine Haskell Problems2006-12-15T15:12:03Z<p>Roerd: </p>
<hr />
<div>What does "Lisp solution?" mean? Lots of them are listed "Yes", and lots are listed "No", but I can't detect a difference between these entries...<br />
-- dmwit<br />
<br />
It's just whether or not there's a lisp solution available. If you go to the description of the problem, and click on the problem number, it'll either link you to actual lisp code, or a "not found" page. There are 25 of them which actually have lisp code available. -- chessguy<br />
<br />
What is the meaning of that scoreboard? Even though there is no solution on the L-99 site, there may still exist a LISP solution, even a trivial one. And since that L-99 site is no wiki and this site is, the scoreboard seems just misleading to me.<br />
<br />
Just an example for Problem 12:<br />
<br />
(defun decode-modified (list)<br />
(mapcar (lambda (item)<br />
(if (atom item)<br />
item<br />
(make-list (car item)<br />
:initial-element (cadr item))))<br />
list))<br />
-- roerd</div>Roerd