CSE 101: Introduction to Computational and Algorithmic Thinking Homework Assignment #3

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This homework assignment will give you practices on if-statements, lists and while-loops.
Getting Started
Visit Piazza and download the β€œbare bones” file homework3.py onto your computer, as well as
homework3 driver.py. Open homework3.py in PyCharm and fill in the following information at the top:
1. your first and last name as they appear in Blackboard
2. your Net ID (e.g., jsmith)
3. your Stony Brook ID # (e.g., 111999999)
4. the course number (CSE 101)
5. the assignment name and number (Homework #3)
Do not, under any circumstances, change the names of the functions or their argument lists. The grading software
will be looking for exactly those functions provided in homework3.py.
Submit your final homework3.py file to Blackboard by the due date and time. Late work will not be graded.
Code that crashes and cannot be graded will earn no credit. It is your responsibility to test your code by running
it through homework3.py and by creating your own test cases.
Part I: Virtual Pet Frog (20 points)
You are now the proud owner of a virtual pet – a cute, green frog that leads a simple, yet somehow busy life. You
will write some code that updates the frog’s mood as he (or she) engages in certain activities. Write a function
frog() that takes the following arguments, in this order:
β€’ mood: a positive integer that indicates the starting mood of the frog. A higher value indicates a happier
mood.
β€’ actions: a list of strings containing some combination of ’eat’, ’work’, ’play’ and ’read’
Throughout the day the frog eats, works, plays and reads books. These actions affect the frog in different ways:
β€’ If the action is ’play’, then add 3 to the frog’s current mood.
CSE 101 – Spring 2018 Homework #3 Page 1
β€’ If the action is ’eat’ and the frog’s current mood is at least 50% of his starting mood, then add 1 to the
frog’s current mood.
β€’ If the action is ’eat’ and the frog’s current mood is less than 50% of his starting mood, then subtract 2
from the frog’s current mood.
β€’ If the action is ’read’ and the frog’s current mood is at least 75% of his starting mood, then subtract 3
from the frog’s current mood.
β€’ If the action is ’read’ and the frog’s current mood is less than 75% of his starting mood, then subtract 4
from the frog’s current mood.
β€’ If the action is ’work’, then subtract 5 from the frog’s current mood.
Regardless of the frog’s mood, any action reduces his mood by 1.
If at any time the frog’s mood becomes zero or negative, the function stops performing actions and returns 0.
Otherwise, the function processes the entire list of actions and returns the frog’s final mood.
Examples:
Function Call Return Value
frog(44, [’eat’, ’play’) 46
frog(16, [’play’, ’eat’, ’work’) 12
frog(27, [’play’, ’eat’, ’read’, ’play’, ’read’, ’read’,
’work’, ’read’, ’eat’, ’eat’, ’work’, ’work’, ’work’)
0
frog(41, [’play’, ’work’, ’eat’, ’play’) 39
frog(23, [’work’, ’play’, ’eat’, ’read’, ’work’, ’read’,
’play’)
6
frog(50, [’read’, ’eat’, ’eat’, ’read’, ’work’, ’read’,
’work’)
25
frog(10, [’eat’, ’read’, ’work’, ’eat’, ’read’, ’read’,
’read’, ’work’)
0
frog(38, [’play’, ’eat’, ’work’, ’play’, ’eat’, ’work’,
’read’, ’play’, ’play’, ’work’, ’read’, ’work’)
13
frog(7, [’work’, ’play’, ’play’, ’read’, ’work’) 0
frog(24, [’work’, ’play’, ’eat’) 20
Part II: A Pac-Man Puzzler (20 points)
Pac-Man is a video game character who normally eats dots, power pellets, and the occasional ghost. Recently,
he’s fallen on hard times and has been reduced to eating letters of the alphabet. Pac-Man can eat most letters
of the alphabet, but he is unable to digest any of the characters in the word β€œGHOST” (uppercase or lowercase).
When he reaches one of these characters in a list, he loses his appetite and stops eating.
Complete the pacman(line) function, which traces Pac-Man’s progress through a list of uppercase and lowercase letters (with no spaces, digits, or symbols) and returns the final state of the list. The initial list might be
empty. Use underscores ( ) to represent consumed characters and a less-than sign (<) to represent Pac-Man’s
final position (either at the very beginning or end of the list, or right before the character that stopped him). The
returned value also includes any uneaten letters of the list.
CSE 101 – Spring 2018 Homework #3 Page 2
For example, consider the list [’b’, ’a’, ’t’, ’c’, ’h’]. Pac-Man can eat the ’b’ and the ’a’, but
stops when he reaches ’t’ (because it is one of the letters in β€œGHOST”). Thus, the final list will be [’ ’, ’<’,
’t’, ’c’, ’h’].
If Pac-Man stops eating in the middle of the input, you will need to replace the last character that he successfully
consumed with Pac-Man himself. If he eats all the characters in the list, append him to the list. If the first character
in the list is from β€œGHOST”, simply insert him at the front of the list.
Hint #1: Use a while-loop to have Pac-Man eat as many characters as possible before stopping.
Hint #2: You can use the insert method to insert an item into a list. Take a look at the documentation at
https://docs.python.org/3.6/tutorial/datastructures.html.
Examples:
Function Call Return Value
pacman([’D’]) [’ ’, ’<’]
pacman([’g’, ’y’, ’o’, ’R’, ’C’,
’l’, ’s’, ’U’, ’m’, ’q’])
[’<’, ’g’, ’y’, ’o’, ’R’, ’C’, ’l’,
’s’, ’U’, ’m’, ’q’]
pacman([’m’, ’j]’) [’ ’, ’ ’, ’<’]
pacman([’H’]) [’<’, ’H’]
pacman([’s’, ’c’, ’P’, ’u’, ’U’,
’I’, ’T’, ’z’, ’R’])
[’<’, ’s’, ’c’, ’P’, ’u’, ’U’, ’I’,
’T’, ’z’, ’R’]
pacman([’j’, ’F’, ’Q’, ’K’, ’t’,
’i’])
[’ ’, ’ ’, ’ ’, ’<’, ’t’, ’i’]
pacman([’m’, ’K’, ’x’, ’J’, ’s’]) [’ ’, ’ ’, ’ ’, ’<’, ’s’]
pacman([’h’, ’i’, ’o’, ’J’, ’x’,
’e’, ’u’, ’s’])
[’<’, ’h’, ’i’, ’o’, ’J’, ’x’, ’e’,
’u’, ’s’]
pacman([’a’, ’B’, ’K’, ’m’, ’n’,
’X’, ’j’])
[’ ’, ’ ’, ’ ’, ’ ’, ’ ’, ’ ’, ’ ’,
’<’]
pacman([’u’, ’I’, ’a’, ’U’, ’P’,
’c’, ’k’, ’M’, ’R’, ’x’])
[’ ’, ’ ’, ’ ’, ’ ’, ’ ’, ’ ’, ’ ’,
’ ’, ’ ’, ’ ’, ’<’]
Part III: Matching Brackets (20 points)
Write a function brackets(expr) that takes a string consisting only of the symbols (, ), {, }, [ and ] and
analyzes the string to make sure that the brackets are all β€œbalanced” (matched) properly. For example the strings
’{{[()]()()}}’ and ’(()[{[]}(([]))])’ contain balanced brackets, whereas ’{{[()][()()}}’,
’{{[()]})’ and ’({[()]}’ are unbalanced.
We refer to (, { and [ as β€œleft brackets”, and ), } and ] as β€œright brackets”.
The basic algorithm to implement works like this:
input: a string S
output: a list L
for each character in S
CSE 101 – Spring 2018 Homework #3 Page 3
if the character is a left bracket
append the character to L
else if the character is a right bracket, but L is empty
return the string ’error’
else if the character is a right bracket and
the rightmost element of L is a matching left bracket
delete the rightmost element of L (because we have a match)
else we must have a mismatch, so return L
Note that if the original string is properly balanced, the return value should be an empty list.
Hint: You can use the pop method to remove an item from a list. Take a look at the documentation at
https://docs.python.org/3.6/tutorial/datastructures.html.
Examples:
Function Call Return Value
brackets(’(((({}))))’) []
brackets(’(([[({}{)(())]]))’)} [’(’, ’(’, ’[’, ’[’, ’(’, ’{’]
brackets(’[][{[]}{}]{[]()}’) []
brackets(’()[]’) []
brackets(’[]{}[]’) []
brackets(’())[({{}[{{{[]}}}]})]’) ’error’
brackets(’(([][()[[]]([])][]]))’) [’(’, ’(’]
brackets(’{}[]’) []
brackets(’[(){}][()]{}[{}]’) []
brackets(’[{([()])}]’) []
brackets(’([{}([])])’) []
brackets(’[]{)[({([])}){}]}’) [’{’]
brackets(’{[()]]}[]’) [’{’]
brackets(’(()[])[]{}{}[}][]’) [’[’]
brackets(’[](()([(}[]{}){}]))’) [’(’, ’(’, ’[’, ’(’]
brackets(’([]{}{}[{((([[]])))}])’) []
brackets(’{[{}]{[]}}{{()}}[]’) []
brackets(’{}(({[[[[]]]]}))’) []
brackets(’}[[([][{}])]]’) ’error’
brackets(’{}[[{]]’) [’[’, ’[’, ’{’]
Part IV: It’s Hailing! (20 points)
The hailstone sequence is defined as the integer sequence that results from manipulating a positive integer value
n as follows:
β€’ If n is even, divide it by 2 (using integer division)
β€’ If n is odd, multiply it by 3 and then add 1
Repeat this process until you reach 1.
CSE 101 – Spring 2018 Homework #3 Page 4
For example, starting with n = 5, we get the sequence 5, 16, 8, 4, 2, 1.
If n = 6, we get the sequence 6, 3, 10, 5, 16, 8, 4, 2, 1.
If n = 7, we get 7, 22, 11, 34, 17, 52, 26, 13, 40, 20, 10, 5, 16, 8, 4, 2, 1.
As far as anyone can tell, this process will eventually reach 1 for any starting value, although mathematicians have
been unable to formally prove this property as of yet.
For this part of the assignment you will actually write two functions, although only the second one will actually
be tested:
β€’ hail length(n) returns the total number of values in the hailstone sequence generated from the function
argument (including the initial value and the final 1). For example, hail length(5) would return the
value 6.
β€’ siblings(length, maximum), which uses hail length() internally to find all of the integers
from 1 through the maximum (inclusive) that generate a hailstone sequence of the specified length.
These values are added to a list which is returned by siblings(). For example, siblings(6,35)
would return the list [5, 32]. siblings(10,100) would return [12, 13, 80, 84, 85]. The
values in the list need not be sorted, as in these examples.
Examples:
Function Call Return Value
siblings(1, 968) [1]
siblings(15, 853) [11, 68, 69, 70, 75, 384, 416, 424, 426, 452, 453, 454]
siblings(20, 107) [9, 56, 58, 60, 61]
siblings(13, 825) [17, 96, 104, 106, 113, 640, 672, 680, 682]
siblings(8, 700) [3, 20, 21, 128]
siblings(15, 181) [11, 68, 69, 70, 75]
siblings(10, 748) [12, 13, 80, 84, 85, 512]
siblings(6, 205) [5, 32]
siblings(9, 113) [6, 40, 42]
siblings(7, 152) [10, 64]
Part V: Vampire Hunters (20 points)
An intrepid band of vampire hunters has just arrived at a town where a coven of vampires is preying on the
townspeople. Your job is to write a function vampire hunt(humans, vampires, hunters) that will
simulate how the populations of townspeople and vampires will change over time as the vampire hunters set to
work.
The town is populated by humans people, is threatened by vampires scary vampires, and is protected by
hunters vampire hunters. Each vampire can convert one person a day into a new vampire. (Luckily, the
vampire hunters are all immune to vampire bites.) Each vampire hunter can destroy one vampire per day. Since
we don’t know how many days it might take to reduce one of the populations to 0 (i.e., humans or vampires),
we cant use a for-loop to simulate the fight. Instead, we will use a while-loop, which will run until one of the two
CSE 101 – Spring 2018 Homework #3 Page 5
populations reaches 0.
The bulk of your program will take place in a while-loop. As long as each population (humans and vampires)
is greater than 0, your program should:
1. Determine how many vampires are destroyed that day (the vampire hunters always strike first, during daylight hours), and update the vampire population appropriately. This counter may reach 0, but it must never
be allowed to become negative.
2. If there are any vampires remaining, they attack the remaining townspeople that night. Each vampire
converts one person into a new vampire. Update the vampire population and human population accordingly.
Like the previous step, the human population can reach 0, but it should never become negative.
Sample Simulation #1
Starting values: humans = 84, vampires = 6, hunters = 2.
Day #1:
Humans: 84 Vampires: 6.
Hunters destroyed 2 vampires.
Vampires converted 4 people into vampires.
Day #2:
Humans: 80 Vampires: 8.
Hunters destroyed 2 vampires.
Vampires converted 6 people into vampires.
Day #3:
Humans: 74 Vampires: 12.
Hunters destroyed 2 vampires.
Vampires converted 10 people into vampires.
Day #4:
Humans: 64 Vampires: 20.
Hunters destroyed 2 vampires.
Vampires converted 18 people into vampires.
Day #5:
Humans: 46 Vampires: 36.
Hunters destroyed 2 vampires.
Vampires converted 34 people into vampires.
Day #6:
Humans: 12 Vampires: 68.
Hunters destroyed 2 vampires.
Vampires converted 12 people into vampires.
Function will return [0, 78]
Sample Simulation #2:
Starting values: humans = 29, vampires = 11, hunters = 7.
Day #1:
Humans: 29 Vampires: 11.
Hunters destroyed 7 vampires.
CSE 101 – Spring 2018 Homework #3 Page 6
Vampires converted 4 people into vampires.
Day #2:
Humans: 25 Vampires: 8.
Hunters destroyed 7 vampires.
Vampires converted 1 people into vampires.
Day #3:
Humans: 24 Vampires: 2.
Hunters destroyed 2 vampires.
Function will return [24, 0]
Examples:
Function Call Return Value
vampire hunt(51, 2, 8) [51, 0]
vampire hunt(33, 2, 2) [33, 0]
vampire hunt(67, 11, 5) [0, 48]
vampire hunt(83, 11, 8) [80, 0]
vampire hunt(59, 15, 4) [0, 62]
vampire hunt(26, 2, 3) [26, 0]
vampire hunt(50, 3, 4) [50, 0]
vampire hunt(84, 11, 2) [0, 87]
vampire hunt(20, 9, 4) [0, 13]
vampire hunt(61, 12, 7) [53, 0]
How to Submit Your Work for Grading
To submit your .py file for grading:
1. Login to Blackboard and locate the course account for CSE 101.
2. Click on β€œAssignments” in the left-hand menu and find the link for this assignment.
3. Click on the link for this assignment.
4. Click the β€œBrowse My Computer” button and locate the .py file you wish to submit. Submit only that one
.py file.
5. Click the β€œSubmit” button to submit your work for grading.
Oops, I messed up and I need to resubmit a file!
No worries! Just follow the above directions again. We will grade only your last submission.
CSE 101 – Spring 2018 Homework #3 Page 7