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- Current State of Exceptions in Rakudo and Perl 6
- Meet DBIish, a Perl 6 Database Interface
- doc.perl6.org and p6doc
- Exceptions Grant Report for May 2012
- Exceptions Grant Report -- Final update
- Perl 6 Hackathon in Oslo: Be Prepared!
- Localization for Exception Messages
- News in the Rakudo 2012.05 release
- News in the Rakudo 2012.06 release
- Perl 6 Hackathon in Oslo: Report From The First Day
- Perl 6 Hackathon in Oslo: Report From The Second Day
- Quo Vadis Perl?
- Rakudo Hack: Dynamic Export Lists
- SQLite support for DBIish
- Stop The Rewrites!
- Upcoming Perl 6 Hackathon in Oslo, Norway
- A small regex optimization for NQP and Rakudo
- Pattern Matching and Unpacking
- Rakudo's Abstract Syntax Tree
- The REPL trick
- First day at YAPC::Europe 2013 in Kiev
- YAPC Europe 2013 Day 2
- YAPC Europe 2013 Day 3
- A new Perl 6 community server - call for funding
- New Perl 6 community server now live, accepting signups
- A new Perl 6 community server - update
- All Perl 6 modules in a box
- doc.perl6.org: some stats, future directions
- Profiling Perl 6 code on IRC
- Why is it hard to write a compiler for Perl 6?
- Writing docs helps you take the user's perspective
- Perl 6 Advent Calendar 2016 -- Call for Authors
- Perl 6 By Example: Running Rakudo
- Perl 6 By Example: Formatting a Sudoku Puzzle
- Perl 6 By Example: Testing the Say Function
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- Perl 6 By Example: Datetime Conversion for the Command Line
- What is Perl 6?
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- What's a Variable, Exactly?
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- Perl 6 Books Landscape in June 2017
- Living on the (b)leading edge
- The Loss of Name and Orientation
- Perl 6 Fundamentals Now Available for Purchase
- My Ten Years of Perl 6
- Perl 6 Coding Contest 2019: Seeking Task Makers
- A shiny perl6.org site
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- An offer for software developers: free IRC logging
- Sprixel, a 6 compiler powered by JavaScript
- Announcing try.rakudo.org, an interactive Perl 6 shell in your browser
- Another perl6.org iteration
- Blackjack and Perl 6
- Why I commit Crud to the Perl 6 Test Suite
- This Week's Contribution to Perl 6 Week 5: Implement Str.trans
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- This Week's Contribution to Perl 6 Week 1: A website for proto
- This Week's Contribution to Perl 6 Week 4: Implement :samecase for .subst
- This Week's Contribution to Perl 6 Week 10: Implement samespace for Rakudo
- This Week's Contribution to Perl 6 Week 7: Implement try.rakudo.org
- What is the "Cool" class in Perl 6?
- Report from the Perl 6 Hackathon in Copenhagen
- Custom operators in Rakudo
- A Perl 6 Date Module
- Defined Behaviour with Undefined Values
- Dissecting the "Starry obfu"
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- Perl 6 Compiler Feature Matrix
- The first Perl 6 module on CPAN
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- First Grant Report: Structured Error Messages
- Second Grant Report: Structured Error Messages
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- Google Summer of Code Mentor Recap
- How core is core?
- How fast is Rakudo's "nom" branch?
- Building a Huffman Tree With Rakudo
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- Mini-Challenge: Write Your Prisoner's Dilemma Strategy
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- Perl 6: Lost in Wonderland
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- My first YAPC - YAPC::EU 2010 in Pisa
- Trying to implement new operators - failed
- Programming Languages Are Not Zero Sum
- Perl 6 notes from February 2011
- Notes from the YAPC::EU 2010 Rakudo hackathon
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- The Real World Strikes Back - or why you shouldn't forbid stuff just because you think it's wrong
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- Set Phasers to Stun!
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- Recent Perl 6 Developments August 2008
- The State of Regex Modifiers in Rakudo
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- We write a Perl 6 book for you
- When we reach 100% we did something wrong
- Where Rakudo Lives Now
- Why Rakudo needs NQP
- Why was the Perl 6 Advent Calendar such a Success?
- What you can write in Perl 6 today
- Why you don't need the Y combinator in Perl 6
- You are good enough!
Mon, 04 May 2009
Blackjack and Perl 6
Permanent link
When you play Blackjack, you need to collect cards so that the sum of their values gets as close as possible to 21, but not above.
The tricky thing is that an Ace can count both as 1 or 11, whatever suits better for you. So how do we find the best value of a dealt set of cards?
Well, somhow we have to sum over all combinations. For example if you have
an ace and a three, you could represent them as 3
and
[1, 11]
in your program. What you want as a result is the array
[4, 14]
.
The cross meta-operator lets us apply a +
pairwise on all
possible combinations of a list (shown on Rakudo's REPL):
> say (1, 11 X+ 3).perl [4, 14]
In principle some of the values could have been greater than 21 (if you had two aces), so let's filter out only those that are at most as large as 21, and find the maximum:
> say [max] (1, 11 X+ 3).grep({$_ <= 21}) 14
max
is an operator that gives us the larger of two values, and
the reduction operator [...]
applies this pair wise to all list
items.
Now that works, but you can have more than two cards on your hand, so we need to generalize it a bit..
In a perfect Perl 6 world we could simply write
[max] ([X+] @cards).grep: {$_ <= 21};
, but that requires a quite
complicated thing named slice context, which Rakudo doesn't
implement yet.
So we have to work around the non-working [X+]
by doing the
reduction manually:
> my @cards = [1, 11], 4, [1, 11]; say [max] @cards.reduce({ @^a X+ @^b }).grep: { $_ <= 21 } 16
(Note: splitted on two lines for readability, but should really be on one line.)
The reduce
method does (roughly) the same as the equally named
sub in
Perl 5's List::Util
module: it calls the block with two arguments, where the first one is the
previous return value from the block (or the first array item on the first
call), and the second is the next list item. The difference is that in Perl 5
the arguments are stored in the special variables $a
and
$b
(about which strict.pm
doesn't complain), whereas
in Perl 6 they are passed as ordinary arguments to the block. The
^
twigil (secondary sigil) specifies that the value of that
variable should be taken from the parameter list, in lexicographic order of
all such variables in the block.
Since X+
operates on lists and not on array references, the
arguments needs to be derefences. In Perl 5 you'd write that as
@{...}
, in Perl 6 you can simply bind to a @
-sigiled
variable - with the slight
difference that the derefencing on a number is not an error, but simply
returns a list of that number.
(you can write the same thing a bit simpler with junctions, but that doesn't demonstrate the meta operators, and is discouraged for other reasons).
You see that you can still write scary code with Perl 6, and I hope you will play around with it a bit, join us on #perl6 and have the appropriate amount of fun!