Get your puzzle data with a single import statement:
from aocd import data
Might be useful for lazy Pythonistas and speedhackers.
Note: Please use version 0.3+ of this library. It memoizes successful requests client side and rate-limits the get_data function, as requested by the AoC author. Thanks!
Install with pip
pip install advent-of-code-data
Puzzle inputs differ by user. So export your session ID, for example:
export AOC_SESSION=cafef00db01dfaceba5eba11deadbeef
This is a cookie which is set when you login to AoC. You can find it with your browser inspector. If you're hacking on AoC at all you probably already know these kind of tricks, but if you need help with that part then you can look here.
Note: If you don't like the env var, you could also put into a text file
in your home directory (use the filename ~/.config/aocd/token
).
New in version 0.4.0. Basic use:
from aocd import submit
submit(my_answer, part="a", day=25, year=2017)
Note that the same filename introspection of year/day also works for automated submission. There's also introspection of the "level", i.e. part a or part b, aocd can automatically determine if you have already completed part a or not and submit your answer for the correct part accordingly. In this case, just use:
from aocd import submit
submit(my_answer)
The response message from AoC will be printed in the terminal. If you gave the right answer, then the puzzle will be refreshed in your web browser (so you can read the instructions for the next part, for example). Proceed with caution! If you submit wrong guesses, your user WILL get rate-limited by Eric, so don't call submit until you're fairly confident you have a correct answer!
New in version 0.8.0.
Input data is via regular attribute access. Example usage:
>>> from aocd.models import Puzzle
>>> puzzle = Puzzle(year=2017, day=20)
>>> puzzle
<Puzzle(2017, 20) at 0x107322978 - Particle Swarm>
>>> puzzle.input_data
'p=<-1027,-979,-188>, v=<7,60,66>, a=<9,1,-7>\np=<-1846,-1539,-1147>, v=<88,145,67>, a=<6,-5,2> ...
Submitting answers is also by regular attribute access. Any incorrect answers you submitted are remembered, and aocd will prevent you from attempting to submit the same incorrect value twice:
>>> puzzle.answer_a = 299
That's not the right answer; your answer is too high. If you're stuck, there are some general tips on the about page, or you can ask for hints on the subreddit. Please wait one minute before trying again. (You guessed 299.) [Return to Day 20]
>>> puzzle.answer_a = 299
aocd will not submit that answer again. You've previously guessed 299 and the server responded:
That's not the right answer; your answer is too high. If you're stuck, there are some general tips on the about page, or you can ask for hints on the subreddit. Please wait one minute before trying again. (You guessed 299.) [Return to Day 20]
Solutions can be executed using setuptools style plugins for your code, i.e. the pkg_resources
"entry-points". My entry-point name is "wim" so an example for running my code (after pip install advent-of-code-wim
) would be:
>>> puzzle = Puzzle(year=2018, day=10)
>>> puzzle.solve_for("wim")
('XLZAKBGZ', '10656')
New in version 0.8.0.
Ever tried running your code against other people's inputs? AoC is full of tricky edge cases. You may find that sometimes you're only getting the right answer by luck, and your code will fail on some other dataset. Using aocd, you can collect a few different auth tokens for each of your accounts (github/google/reddit/twitter) and verify your answers across multiple datasets.
To see an example of how to setup the entry-point for your code, look at advent-of-code-sample for some inspiration. After dumping a bunch of session tokens into ~/.config/aocd/tokens.json
you could do something like this by running the aoc
console script:
As you can see above, I actually had incorrect code for 2017 Day 20: Particle Swarm, but that bug only showed up for the google token's dataset. Whoops. Also, it looks like my algorithm for 2017 Day 13: Packet Scanners was kinda garbage. Too slow. According to AoC FAQ:
every problem has a solution that completes in at most 15 seconds on ten-year-old hardware
By the way, the aoc
runner will kill your code if it takes more than 60 seconds, you can increase/decrease this by passing a command-line option, e.g. --timeout=120
.
It will automatically get today's data at import time, if used within the
interactive interpreter. Otherwise, the date is found by introspection of the
path and file name from which aocd
module was imported.
This means your filenames should be something sensible. The examples below should all parse correctly, because they have digits in the path that are unambiguously recognisable as AoC years (2015+) or days (1-25).
q03.py xmas_problem_2016_25b_dawg.py ~/src/aoc/2015/p8.py
A filename like problem_one.py
will not work, so don't do that. If
you don't like weird frame hacks, just use the aocd.get_data()
function
instead and have a nice day!
>>> from aocd import get_data
>>> get_data(day=2)
'UULDRRRDDLRLURUUURUURDRUURRDRRURUD...
>>> get_data(day=24, year=2015)
'1\n2\n3\n7\n11\n13\n17\n19\n23\n31...
aocd
saves puzzle inputs, answers, names, and your bad guesses to avoid hitting
the AoC servers any more often than strictly necessary (this also speeds things up).
All data is persisted in plain text files under ~/.config/aocd
. To remove any
caches, you may simply delete whatever files you want under that directory tree.
If you'd prefer to use a different path, then export an AOCD_DIR
environment
variable with the desired location.