ssTTsSTtRrriinInnnnNNNIiinngg












5












$begingroup$


Challenge



For each character of the string except for the last one, do the following:




  • Output the current character.



  • Followed by randomly outputting from the following list a random number of times between 1 and 5 (inclusive):




    • The current character

    • The next character of the string

    • The switchcase version of the character that you are currently on

    • The switchcase version of the next character of the string.




Test Cases



String --> SSSTSStrTrIiinIIngn



, . , . , . Hello world! --> ,,, .. , ,, .... , , .. .. . HHH HHEeelLlLllooO wwOworOOrrrRllDd!!D



Programming Puzzles and Code Golf --> PrPPrRrOooooogggRgGraAraaaMMMmmmimMIiininGGgG PPPPuZzZZzZzzZzllLLEEeEsEsssS a aANnNddD C COCoooOOdeDe E GGGoOllFFf



Notes




  • You only need to apply the upper/lowercase form of a character if the character is part of the upper/lowercase alphabet (A-Z/a-z).

  • Your random function does not need to be uniform but it still needs to have a chance of returning any element in the list given.

  • You are allowed to use any standard I/O format.

  • You may assume that the length of the input is greater than or equal to two.

  • You may assume that the input only consists of ASCII characters.










share|improve this question











$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    In addition to '... does not need to be uniform', I think you probably want to specify that given some input, all finite legal outputs should in principle be possible to generate (otherwise, my non-uniform random integer in [1,2,3,4,5] is always going to be 2, and I'll just output the original string).
    $endgroup$
    – Chas Brown
    1 hour ago










  • $begingroup$
    @ChasBrown Yeah, I'll edit the question
    $endgroup$
    – MilkyWay90
    1 hour ago
















5












$begingroup$


Challenge



For each character of the string except for the last one, do the following:




  • Output the current character.



  • Followed by randomly outputting from the following list a random number of times between 1 and 5 (inclusive):




    • The current character

    • The next character of the string

    • The switchcase version of the character that you are currently on

    • The switchcase version of the next character of the string.




Test Cases



String --> SSSTSStrTrIiinIIngn



, . , . , . Hello world! --> ,,, .. , ,, .... , , .. .. . HHH HHEeelLlLllooO wwOworOOrrrRllDd!!D



Programming Puzzles and Code Golf --> PrPPrRrOooooogggRgGraAraaaMMMmmmimMIiininGGgG PPPPuZzZZzZzzZzllLLEEeEsEsssS a aANnNddD C COCoooOOdeDe E GGGoOllFFf



Notes




  • You only need to apply the upper/lowercase form of a character if the character is part of the upper/lowercase alphabet (A-Z/a-z).

  • Your random function does not need to be uniform but it still needs to have a chance of returning any element in the list given.

  • You are allowed to use any standard I/O format.

  • You may assume that the length of the input is greater than or equal to two.

  • You may assume that the input only consists of ASCII characters.










share|improve this question











$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    In addition to '... does not need to be uniform', I think you probably want to specify that given some input, all finite legal outputs should in principle be possible to generate (otherwise, my non-uniform random integer in [1,2,3,4,5] is always going to be 2, and I'll just output the original string).
    $endgroup$
    – Chas Brown
    1 hour ago










  • $begingroup$
    @ChasBrown Yeah, I'll edit the question
    $endgroup$
    – MilkyWay90
    1 hour ago














5












5








5





$begingroup$


Challenge



For each character of the string except for the last one, do the following:




  • Output the current character.



  • Followed by randomly outputting from the following list a random number of times between 1 and 5 (inclusive):




    • The current character

    • The next character of the string

    • The switchcase version of the character that you are currently on

    • The switchcase version of the next character of the string.




Test Cases



String --> SSSTSStrTrIiinIIngn



, . , . , . Hello world! --> ,,, .. , ,, .... , , .. .. . HHH HHEeelLlLllooO wwOworOOrrrRllDd!!D



Programming Puzzles and Code Golf --> PrPPrRrOooooogggRgGraAraaaMMMmmmimMIiininGGgG PPPPuZzZZzZzzZzllLLEEeEsEsssS a aANnNddD C COCoooOOdeDe E GGGoOllFFf



Notes




  • You only need to apply the upper/lowercase form of a character if the character is part of the upper/lowercase alphabet (A-Z/a-z).

  • Your random function does not need to be uniform but it still needs to have a chance of returning any element in the list given.

  • You are allowed to use any standard I/O format.

  • You may assume that the length of the input is greater than or equal to two.

  • You may assume that the input only consists of ASCII characters.










share|improve this question











$endgroup$




Challenge



For each character of the string except for the last one, do the following:




  • Output the current character.



  • Followed by randomly outputting from the following list a random number of times between 1 and 5 (inclusive):




    • The current character

    • The next character of the string

    • The switchcase version of the character that you are currently on

    • The switchcase version of the next character of the string.




Test Cases



String --> SSSTSStrTrIiinIIngn



, . , . , . Hello world! --> ,,, .. , ,, .... , , .. .. . HHH HHEeelLlLllooO wwOworOOrrrRllDd!!D



Programming Puzzles and Code Golf --> PrPPrRrOooooogggRgGraAraaaMMMmmmimMIiininGGgG PPPPuZzZZzZzzZzllLLEEeEsEsssS a aANnNddD C COCoooOOdeDe E GGGoOllFFf



Notes




  • You only need to apply the upper/lowercase form of a character if the character is part of the upper/lowercase alphabet (A-Z/a-z).

  • Your random function does not need to be uniform but it still needs to have a chance of returning any element in the list given.

  • You are allowed to use any standard I/O format.

  • You may assume that the length of the input is greater than or equal to two.

  • You may assume that the input only consists of ASCII characters.







code-golf random






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 1 hour ago







MilkyWay90

















asked 3 hours ago









MilkyWay90MilkyWay90

619213




619213












  • $begingroup$
    In addition to '... does not need to be uniform', I think you probably want to specify that given some input, all finite legal outputs should in principle be possible to generate (otherwise, my non-uniform random integer in [1,2,3,4,5] is always going to be 2, and I'll just output the original string).
    $endgroup$
    – Chas Brown
    1 hour ago










  • $begingroup$
    @ChasBrown Yeah, I'll edit the question
    $endgroup$
    – MilkyWay90
    1 hour ago


















  • $begingroup$
    In addition to '... does not need to be uniform', I think you probably want to specify that given some input, all finite legal outputs should in principle be possible to generate (otherwise, my non-uniform random integer in [1,2,3,4,5] is always going to be 2, and I'll just output the original string).
    $endgroup$
    – Chas Brown
    1 hour ago










  • $begingroup$
    @ChasBrown Yeah, I'll edit the question
    $endgroup$
    – MilkyWay90
    1 hour ago
















$begingroup$
In addition to '... does not need to be uniform', I think you probably want to specify that given some input, all finite legal outputs should in principle be possible to generate (otherwise, my non-uniform random integer in [1,2,3,4,5] is always going to be 2, and I'll just output the original string).
$endgroup$
– Chas Brown
1 hour ago




$begingroup$
In addition to '... does not need to be uniform', I think you probably want to specify that given some input, all finite legal outputs should in principle be possible to generate (otherwise, my non-uniform random integer in [1,2,3,4,5] is always going to be 2, and I'll just output the original string).
$endgroup$
– Chas Brown
1 hour ago












$begingroup$
@ChasBrown Yeah, I'll edit the question
$endgroup$
– MilkyWay90
1 hour ago




$begingroup$
@ChasBrown Yeah, I'll edit the question
$endgroup$
– MilkyWay90
1 hour ago










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















2












$begingroup$


Gaia, 21 bytes



ṅ@ṇ+†⟨(₌¤:~+ṛ5ṛ&⟩¦$


Try it online!



ṅ			| delete the first character from the input
@ṇ | push the input again and delete the last character
+† | concatenate together, so for example 'abc' 'bcd' becomes ['ab' 'bc' 'cd']
⟨ ⟩¦ | for each of the elements, do:
(₌ | take the first character and push again
¤ | swap
: | dup
~ | swap case
+ | combine strings
ṛ | select a character at random
5ṛ | select a random integer from [1..5]
& | run-length decode
$ | convert to string





share|improve this answer









$endgroup$





















    0












    $begingroup$


    APL (dzaima/APL), 19 bytes





    Anonymous tacit prefix function.



    ∊2(⊣,{?5⍴4}⊇,,-⍤,)/


    Try it online!



    2()/ apply the following infix tacit function between each character pair:



    - the switchcase

     of

    , the concatenation of the pair



    ,, prepend the concatenation of the pair to that



    {}⊇ pick the following elements from that:



      5⍴4 five fours



      ? random indices for those



    ϵnlist (flatten)






    share|improve this answer









    $endgroup$





















      0












      $begingroup$


      Charcoal, 27 bytes



      FLθ«F∧ι⊕‽⁵‽⭆✂θ⊖ι⊕ι¹⁺↥λ↧λ§θι


      Try it online! Link is to verbose version of code. Explanation:



      FLθ«


      Loop over all of the indices of the input string.



      F∧ι⊕‽⁵


      Except for the first index, loop over a random number from 1 to 5 inclusive...



      ‽⭆✂θ⊖ι⊕ι¹⁺↥λ↧λ


      ... extract the previous and next characters from the string, take the upper and lower case versions, and pick a random character of the four.



      §θι


      Print the character at the current index.






      share|improve this answer









      $endgroup$














        Your Answer





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        3 Answers
        3






        active

        oldest

        votes








        3 Answers
        3






        active

        oldest

        votes









        active

        oldest

        votes






        active

        oldest

        votes









        2












        $begingroup$


        Gaia, 21 bytes



        ṅ@ṇ+†⟨(₌¤:~+ṛ5ṛ&⟩¦$


        Try it online!



        ṅ			| delete the first character from the input
        @ṇ | push the input again and delete the last character
        +† | concatenate together, so for example 'abc' 'bcd' becomes ['ab' 'bc' 'cd']
        ⟨ ⟩¦ | for each of the elements, do:
        (₌ | take the first character and push again
        ¤ | swap
        : | dup
        ~ | swap case
        + | combine strings
        ṛ | select a character at random
        5ṛ | select a random integer from [1..5]
        & | run-length decode
        $ | convert to string





        share|improve this answer









        $endgroup$


















          2












          $begingroup$


          Gaia, 21 bytes



          ṅ@ṇ+†⟨(₌¤:~+ṛ5ṛ&⟩¦$


          Try it online!



          ṅ			| delete the first character from the input
          @ṇ | push the input again and delete the last character
          +† | concatenate together, so for example 'abc' 'bcd' becomes ['ab' 'bc' 'cd']
          ⟨ ⟩¦ | for each of the elements, do:
          (₌ | take the first character and push again
          ¤ | swap
          : | dup
          ~ | swap case
          + | combine strings
          ṛ | select a character at random
          5ṛ | select a random integer from [1..5]
          & | run-length decode
          $ | convert to string





          share|improve this answer









          $endgroup$
















            2












            2








            2





            $begingroup$


            Gaia, 21 bytes



            ṅ@ṇ+†⟨(₌¤:~+ṛ5ṛ&⟩¦$


            Try it online!



            ṅ			| delete the first character from the input
            @ṇ | push the input again and delete the last character
            +† | concatenate together, so for example 'abc' 'bcd' becomes ['ab' 'bc' 'cd']
            ⟨ ⟩¦ | for each of the elements, do:
            (₌ | take the first character and push again
            ¤ | swap
            : | dup
            ~ | swap case
            + | combine strings
            ṛ | select a character at random
            5ṛ | select a random integer from [1..5]
            & | run-length decode
            $ | convert to string





            share|improve this answer









            $endgroup$




            Gaia, 21 bytes



            ṅ@ṇ+†⟨(₌¤:~+ṛ5ṛ&⟩¦$


            Try it online!



            ṅ			| delete the first character from the input
            @ṇ | push the input again and delete the last character
            +† | concatenate together, so for example 'abc' 'bcd' becomes ['ab' 'bc' 'cd']
            ⟨ ⟩¦ | for each of the elements, do:
            (₌ | take the first character and push again
            ¤ | swap
            : | dup
            ~ | swap case
            + | combine strings
            ṛ | select a character at random
            5ṛ | select a random integer from [1..5]
            & | run-length decode
            $ | convert to string






            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered 1 hour ago









            GiuseppeGiuseppe

            17.3k31152




            17.3k31152























                0












                $begingroup$


                APL (dzaima/APL), 19 bytes





                Anonymous tacit prefix function.



                ∊2(⊣,{?5⍴4}⊇,,-⍤,)/


                Try it online!



                2()/ apply the following infix tacit function between each character pair:



                - the switchcase

                 of

                , the concatenation of the pair



                ,, prepend the concatenation of the pair to that



                {}⊇ pick the following elements from that:



                  5⍴4 five fours



                  ? random indices for those



                ϵnlist (flatten)






                share|improve this answer









                $endgroup$


















                  0












                  $begingroup$


                  APL (dzaima/APL), 19 bytes





                  Anonymous tacit prefix function.



                  ∊2(⊣,{?5⍴4}⊇,,-⍤,)/


                  Try it online!



                  2()/ apply the following infix tacit function between each character pair:



                  - the switchcase

                   of

                  , the concatenation of the pair



                  ,, prepend the concatenation of the pair to that



                  {}⊇ pick the following elements from that:



                    5⍴4 five fours



                    ? random indices for those



                  ϵnlist (flatten)






                  share|improve this answer









                  $endgroup$
















                    0












                    0








                    0





                    $begingroup$


                    APL (dzaima/APL), 19 bytes





                    Anonymous tacit prefix function.



                    ∊2(⊣,{?5⍴4}⊇,,-⍤,)/


                    Try it online!



                    2()/ apply the following infix tacit function between each character pair:



                    - the switchcase

                     of

                    , the concatenation of the pair



                    ,, prepend the concatenation of the pair to that



                    {}⊇ pick the following elements from that:



                      5⍴4 five fours



                      ? random indices for those



                    ϵnlist (flatten)






                    share|improve this answer









                    $endgroup$




                    APL (dzaima/APL), 19 bytes





                    Anonymous tacit prefix function.



                    ∊2(⊣,{?5⍴4}⊇,,-⍤,)/


                    Try it online!



                    2()/ apply the following infix tacit function between each character pair:



                    - the switchcase

                     of

                    , the concatenation of the pair



                    ,, prepend the concatenation of the pair to that



                    {}⊇ pick the following elements from that:



                      5⍴4 five fours



                      ? random indices for those



                    ϵnlist (flatten)







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered 3 hours ago









                    AdámAdám

                    28.8k276207




                    28.8k276207























                        0












                        $begingroup$


                        Charcoal, 27 bytes



                        FLθ«F∧ι⊕‽⁵‽⭆✂θ⊖ι⊕ι¹⁺↥λ↧λ§θι


                        Try it online! Link is to verbose version of code. Explanation:



                        FLθ«


                        Loop over all of the indices of the input string.



                        F∧ι⊕‽⁵


                        Except for the first index, loop over a random number from 1 to 5 inclusive...



                        ‽⭆✂θ⊖ι⊕ι¹⁺↥λ↧λ


                        ... extract the previous and next characters from the string, take the upper and lower case versions, and pick a random character of the four.



                        §θι


                        Print the character at the current index.






                        share|improve this answer









                        $endgroup$


















                          0












                          $begingroup$


                          Charcoal, 27 bytes



                          FLθ«F∧ι⊕‽⁵‽⭆✂θ⊖ι⊕ι¹⁺↥λ↧λ§θι


                          Try it online! Link is to verbose version of code. Explanation:



                          FLθ«


                          Loop over all of the indices of the input string.



                          F∧ι⊕‽⁵


                          Except for the first index, loop over a random number from 1 to 5 inclusive...



                          ‽⭆✂θ⊖ι⊕ι¹⁺↥λ↧λ


                          ... extract the previous and next characters from the string, take the upper and lower case versions, and pick a random character of the four.



                          §θι


                          Print the character at the current index.






                          share|improve this answer









                          $endgroup$
















                            0












                            0








                            0





                            $begingroup$


                            Charcoal, 27 bytes



                            FLθ«F∧ι⊕‽⁵‽⭆✂θ⊖ι⊕ι¹⁺↥λ↧λ§θι


                            Try it online! Link is to verbose version of code. Explanation:



                            FLθ«


                            Loop over all of the indices of the input string.



                            F∧ι⊕‽⁵


                            Except for the first index, loop over a random number from 1 to 5 inclusive...



                            ‽⭆✂θ⊖ι⊕ι¹⁺↥λ↧λ


                            ... extract the previous and next characters from the string, take the upper and lower case versions, and pick a random character of the four.



                            §θι


                            Print the character at the current index.






                            share|improve this answer









                            $endgroup$




                            Charcoal, 27 bytes



                            FLθ«F∧ι⊕‽⁵‽⭆✂θ⊖ι⊕ι¹⁺↥λ↧λ§θι


                            Try it online! Link is to verbose version of code. Explanation:



                            FLθ«


                            Loop over all of the indices of the input string.



                            F∧ι⊕‽⁵


                            Except for the first index, loop over a random number from 1 to 5 inclusive...



                            ‽⭆✂θ⊖ι⊕ι¹⁺↥λ↧λ


                            ... extract the previous and next characters from the string, take the upper and lower case versions, and pick a random character of the four.



                            §θι


                            Print the character at the current index.







                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered 3 hours ago









                            NeilNeil

                            82.3k745178




                            82.3k745178






























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                                • …Try to optimize your score. For instance, answers to code-golf challenges should attempt to be as short as possible. You can always include a readable version of the code in addition to the competitive one.
                                  Explanations of your answer make it more interesting to read and are very much encouraged.


                                • …Include a short header which indicates the language(s) of your code and its score, as defined by the challenge.



                                More generally…




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