Description Usage Arguments Details Value Examples
1 2 3 |
x |
password data |
Part One
Your flight departs in a few days from the coastal airport; the easiest way down to the coast from here is via toboggan.
The shopkeeper at the North Pole Toboggan Rental Shop is having a bad day. \"Something\'s wrong with our computers; we can\'t log in!\" You ask if you can take a look.
Their password database seems to be a little corrupted: some of the passwords wouldn\'t have been allowed by the [Official Toboggan Corporate Policy]title="To ensure your safety, your password must be the following string..." that was in effect when they were chosen.
To try to debug the problem, they have created a list (your puzzle input) of passwords (according to the corrupted database) and the corporate policy when that password was set.
For example, suppose you have the following list:
1-3 a: abcde 1-3 b: cdefg 2-9 c: ccccccccc
Each line gives the password policy and then the password. The password
policy indicates the lowest and highest number of times a given letter must
appear for the password to be valid. For example, 1-3 a
means that the
password must contain a
at least 1
time and at most 3
times.
In the above example, 2
passwords are valid. The middle password, cdefg
,
is not; it contains no instances of b
, but needs at least 1
. The first
and third passwords are valid: they contain one a
or nine c
, both within
the limits of their respective policies.
How many passwords are valid according to their policies?
Part Two
While it appears you validated the passwords correctly, they don\'t seem to be what the Official Toboggan Corporate Authentication System is expecting.
The shopkeeper suddenly realizes that he just accidentally explained the password policy rules from his old job at the sled rental place down the street! The Official Toboggan Corporate Policy actually works a little differently.
Each policy actually describes two positions in the password, where
1
means the first character, 2
means the second character, and so
on. (Be careful; Toboggan Corporate Policies have no concept of \"index
zero\"!) Exactly one of these positions must contain the given letter.
Other occurrences of the letter are irrelevant for the purposes of
policy enforcement.
Given the same example list from above:
1-3 a: abcde
is valid: position 1
contains a
and position
3
does not.
1-3 b: cdefg
is invalid: neither position 1
nor position 3
contains b
.
2-9 c: ccccccccc
is invalid: both position 2
and position 9
contain c
.
How many passwords are valid according to the new interpretation of the policies?
For Part One, check_for_valid_passwords(x)
returns a dataframe of
parsed and validated passwords. For Part Two,
check_for_valider_passwords(x)
returns a dataframe of parsed and
validated passwords.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 | input <- "
1-3 a: abcde
1-3 b: cdefg
2-9 c: ccccccccc
"
x <- read_text_lines(input)
check_for_valid_passwords(x)
check_for_valider_passwords(x)
|
Add the following code to your website.
For more information on customizing the embed code, read Embedding Snippets.