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Usage

npm start --part=Year.Day.Part
  • E.g: To run year 2023, day 7, part 2 that would be npm start --part=2023.7.2

Util

The parseInput function is already imported and called at the top of each file.

By default, the function will return the input.txt (for the according day which is determined by the flag mentioned above) splitted by '\n' as the delimiter and it will also be mapped into numbers by default.

This behaviour can be modified by overriding these options via the SplitOptions param, here are some examples to illustrate that:

Let's say the input.txt looks like

1
2
3

In most cases, [1, 2, 3] is what we want, which is exactly what parseInput() would do (parseInput({ split: { delim: '\n', mapper: (e) => Number(e) } })) would also do the exact same).


Now, let's say the input looked like

A
B
C

Obviously, we don't want the SplitOptions.mapper to be Number (which is the default), so we can override this like so: parseInput({ split: { mapper: false } }). This would split the input by the default '\n' and since we passed false it would not map the splitted string.


There may also be inputs where the delimiter new lines like so

1 2 3

As shown above the delimiter here is infact ' ' which we can pass as the SplitOptions.delimiter and since we probably want to map that into numbers we don't need to worry about setting the mapper property since that is what it does by default: parseInput({ split: { delimiter: ' ' } })


Lastly, there may be an input that we don't want to modify at all and just handle the raw input such as

ABC

We can get that by doing: parseInput({ split: false })


There may a scenrio where we need to map each item in the input, for example let's say that we wanted to double each number:

1
2
3

We can do that like so: parseInput({ split: { mapper: (n) => Number(n) * 2 } }), the parameters of the function is identical to how it would be with Array#map() (and it will be passed into map in the same way) which is (e: string, i: number, a: string[]).

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