2

I want javascript to be able to interpret the following (a and b are always going to be different, so these are just an example)

a=(3x)+y  
b=x+(4y)  

and return the following

a+b=(4x)+(5y)  

all variables are strings and not integers so math can not be applied to a,b,x or y

I have not started on this particular instance, due to the fact that i don't know where to start.

P.S. I have not had any experience with jQuery, so if possible, try and avoid it

EDIT: The program is designed to help find raw materials in the game minecraft. For example if you want a diamond sword (a) and a diamond pickaxe (b), a requires 1 wood (x) and 2 diamonds (y), and b requires 1 wood (x) and 3 diamonds (y). Once i run it through this program, i would like a response saying that it requires 2 wood and 5 diamonds. Sorry for any prior confusion...

3 Answers 3

2

First, let's program three little helper functions:

// exprToDict("3x + y") -> {x:3, y:1}
function exprToDict(e) {
    var d = {};
    e.replace(/(\d+)\s*(\w+)|(\w+)/g, function($0, $1, $2, $3) {
        d[$2 || $3] = parseInt($1 || 1);
    });
    return d;
}

// addDicts({x:1, y:2}, {x:100, y:3}) -> {x:101, y:5}
function addDicts(a, b) {
    var d = {};
    for(var x in a) d[x] = a[x];
    for(var x in b) d[x] = (d[x] || 0) + b[x];
    return d;
}

// dictToExpr({x:1, y:2}) -> x + (2 y)
function dictToExpr(d) {
    var e = [];
    for(var x in d)
        if(d[x] == 1)
            e.push(x);
        else
            e.push("(" + d[x] + " " + x + ")");
    return e.join(" + ")
}

Once we've got that, we're ready to code the main function:

function addThings(a, b) {
    return dictToExpr(
        addDicts(
            exprToDict(a),
            exprToDict(b)
    ))
}

Let's test it:

sword = "(3 wood) + diamond"
pickaxe = "wood + (2 diamond)"

console.log(addThings(sword, pickaxe))

Result:

(4 wood) + (3 diamond)

In order to process more than two things, modify addDicts to accept arrays:

function addDicts(dicts) {
    var sum = {};
    dicts.forEach(function(d) {
        for(var x in d)
            sum[x] = (sum[x] || 0) + d[x];
    });
    return sum;
}

and rewrite addThings to be:

function addThings(things) {
    return dictToExpr(
        addDicts(
            things.map(exprToDict)));
}

Example:

sword = "(3 wood) + diamond"
pickaxe = "wood + (2 diamond)"
house = "10 wood + iron"


console.log(addThings([sword, pickaxe, house]))
3
  • Thank you, but I am unable to implement this into my code, it is not returning a value into my HTML page. Secondly, does this support say, if something was made from 3 things, not just 2 and if there is more than 2 items you want to add, thanks, nice logic too, it seems like quite a reasonable approach
    – VikeStep
    Jan 11, 2013 at 10:43
  • I am getting this error Uncaught TypeError: Cannot call method 'replace' of undefined website
    – VikeStep
    Jan 11, 2013 at 10:50
  • @VikeStep: regarding more than 2 things - see the updated answer.
    – georg
    Jan 11, 2013 at 10:52
1

First, parse the input string - according to your grammar - to an object to work with:

function parseLine(input) { // pass a string like "a=(3x)+y"
    var parts = input.split("=");
    if (parts.length != 2) return alert("Invalid equation");
    for (var i=0; i<2; i++) {
        var summands = parts[i].split("+");
        parts[i] = {};
        for (var j=0; j<summands.length; j++) {
            summands[j] = summands[j].replace(/^\s*\(?|\)?\s*$/g, "");
            var match = summands[j].match(/^(-?\d*\.?\d+)?\s*([a-z]+)$/);
            if (!match) return alert("Parse error: "+summands[i]);
            var mul = parseFloat(match[1] || 1);
            if (match[2] in parts[i])
                parts[i][match[2]] += mul;
            else
                parts[i][match[2]] = mul;
         }
    }
    return parts;
}
// example:
parseLine("a=(3x)+y")
// [{"a":1},{"x":3,"y":1}]

Then, apply an algorithm for solving linear equation systems on it. I leave the implementation of that to you :-)

1
  • hmmm. i guess i have to clarify one more thing, a=(3x)+y is not a string in total, a is a variable and its value is (3x+y), catch my drift. I guess what i think might work is to get a+b to return (3x)+y+x+(4y) and then implement an algorithm to solve it, but idk how to do any of these. Sorry about the confusion and thanks for the time put into that code
    – VikeStep
    Jan 11, 2013 at 8:04
0

Wow, you're question has so radically changed that I'll write a completely new answer:

You can just use objects for that. Store the materials needed for the tools in key-value-maps:

var diamondSword = {
    diamond: 2,
    stick: 1
};
var diamondPickaxe = {
    diamond: 3,
    stick: 2
};

An addition function is very simple then:

function add() {
    var result = {};
    for (var i=0; i<arguments.length; i++)
        for (var item in arguments[i])
            result[item] = (result[item] || 0) + arguments[i][item];
    return result;
}
// usage:
add(diamondSword, diamondPickaxe)
// {"diamond":5, "stick":3}

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