vote up 27 vote down star
14

The challenge

The shortest code by character count, that will output musical notation based on user input.

Input will be composed of a series of letters and numbers - letters will represent the name of the note and the number will represent the length of the note. A note is made of 4 vertical columns. The note's head will be a capital O, stem, if present will be 3 lines tall, made from the pipe character |, and the flag(s) will be made from backward slash \.

Valid note lengths are none, 1/4 of a note, 1/8 of a note, 1/16 of a note and 1/32 of a note.

       |    |\    |\    |\
       |    |     |\    |\
       |    |     |     |\
 O    O    O     O     O
 1   1/4  1/8  1/16   1/32

Notes are places on the Staff, according to their note name:

  ----

D ----
C     
B ----
A     
G ----
F     
E ----

All input can be assumed to be valid and without errors - Each note separated with a white space on a single line, with at least one valid note.

Test cases

Input:
    B B/4 B/8 B/16 B/32 G/4 D/8 C/16 D B/16
Output:
                              |\               
    --------------------------|---|\--------
          |   |\  |\  |\      |   |\      |\
    ------|---|---|\--|\-----O----|--O----|\
          |   |   |   |\  |      O        | 
    -O---O---O---O---O----|--------------O--
                          |                 
    ---------------------O------------------

    ----------------------------------------


Input:
    E/4 F/8 G/16 A/32 E/4 F/8 G/16 A/32 
Output:

    --------------------------------

    --------------|\--------------|\
              |\  |\          |\  |\ 
    ------|\--|\--|\------|\--|\--|\
      |   |   |  O    |   |   |  O  
    --|---|--O--------|---|--O------
      |  O            |  O          
    -O---------------O--------------


Input:
    C E/32 B/8 A/4 B F/32 B C/16
Output:

    ------------------------------|\
              |\                  |\
    ----------|---|---------------|-
     O        |   |              O   
    ---------O----|--O----|\-O------
          |\     O        |\        
    ------|\--------------|\--------
          |\             O           
    -----O--------------------------

Code count includes input/output (i.e full program).

flag
2  
@Idigas - fixed, SO's preview != final output – LiraNuna Oct 15 at 21:15
5  
I think it's an awesome code golf! Very original! – Sander Versluys Oct 15 at 22:44
3  
I don't want to change the spec. Challenge is made. I know how to design my challenges and don't do it lightly. – LiraNuna Oct 15 at 23:59
8  
@Noldorin: Please, oh PLEASE, stop changing the title. while you're at it, why won't we change all of my golf questions to "Code Golf: Determine if the laser hits the target" or even "Code Golf: Seven Segment display in ASCII art using _ and |". This is ridiculous. I see no one complaining about the title. – LiraNuna Oct 16 at 21:12
4  
How about "Musical Notes", at least? As it is, the title barely gives a clue about the content. – mmyers Oct 16 at 22:03
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12 Answers

vote up 18 vote down check

Golfscript (112 characters)

' '%:A;10,{):y;A{2/.0~|1=~:r;0=0=5\- 7%
4y@--:q'  '' O'if-4q&!q*r*{16q/r<'|\\'
'| 'if}'  'if+{.32=y~&{;45}*}%}%n}%
link|flag
4  
Must...beat...perl :) – gnibbler Oct 18 at 8:27
@gnibbler, Exactly my thinking. =] – strager Oct 18 at 15:16
1  
Thanks for the explanation – gnibbler Oct 19 at 4:08
2  
Must ... beat ... GolfScript – mobrule Oct 19 at 22:57
4  
@Lutz, Perl's a real language? – strager Oct 21 at 18:14
show 9 more comments
vote up 14 vote down

C89 (186 characters)

#define P,putchar(
N[99];*n=N;y;e=45;main(q){for(;scanf(" %c/%d",n,n+1)>0;n
+=2);for(;y<11;q=y-(75-*n++)%7 P+q-4?e:79)P*n&&q<4&q>0?
124:e)P*n++/4>>q&&q?92:e))*n||(e^=13,n=N,y++P+10))P+e);}

Half-note support (+7 characters)

#define P,putchar(
N[99];*n=N;y;e=45;main(q){for(;scanf(" %c/%d",n,n+1)>0;n
+=2);for(;y<11;q=y-(75-*n++)%7 P+q-4?e:v<4?79:64)P*n&&q<4&q>0?
124:e)P*n++/4>>q&&q?92:e))*n||(e^=13,n=N,y++P+10))P+e);}
link|flag
Seems like it needs EOF to finish input. Works if I execute it as echo 'E/4 F/8 G/16 A/32 E/4 F/8 G/16 A/32' | ./notes – LiraNuna Oct 15 at 22:07
Will likely crash if you give it more than 50 notes... – Chris Dodd Oct 16 at 1:04
2  
@Chris, it's common for golf entries to be 'fragile'. – LiraNuna Oct 16 at 1:08
1  
What does y++P(10) mean? – gnibbler Oct 16 at 4:51
1  
@gnibbler: Because of #define P,putchar, it means y++,putchar(10). – ephemient Oct 16 at 5:00
show 2 more comments
vote up 6 vote down

F#, 458 chars

Reasonably short, and still mostly readable:

let s=Array.init 10(fun _->new System.Text.StringBuilder())
System.Console.ReadLine().Split([|' '|])
|>Array.iter(fun n->
for i in 0..9 do s.[i].Append(if i%2=1 then"----"else"    ")
let l=s.[0].Length
let i=68-int n.[0]+if n.[0]>'D'then 7 else 0
s.[i+3].[l-3]<-'O'
if n.Length>1 then
 for j in i..i+2 do s.[j].[l-2]<-'|'
 for j in i..i-1+(match n.[2]with|'4'->0|'8'->1|'1'->2|_->3)do s.[j].[l-1]<-'\\')
for x in s do printfn"%s"(x.ToString())

With brief commentary:

// create 10 stringbuilders that represent each line of output
let s=Array.init 10(fun _->new System.Text.StringBuilder())
System.Console.ReadLine().Split([|' '|])
// for each note on the input line
|>Array.iter(fun n->
// write the staff
for i in 0..9 do s.[i].Append(if i%2=1 then"----"else"    ")
// write note (math so that 'i+3' is which stringbuilder should hold the 'O')
let l=s.[0].Length
let i=68-int n.[0]+if n.[0]>'D'then 7 else 0
s.[i+3].[l-3]<-'O'
// if partial note
if n.Length>1 then
 // write the bar
 for j in i..i+2 do s.[j].[l-2]<-'|'
 // write the tails if necessary
 for j in i..i-1+(match n.[2]with|'4'->0|'8'->1|'1'->2|_->3)do s.[j].[l-1]<-'\\')
// print output
for x in s do printfn"%s"(x.ToString())
link|flag
1  
thanks for the commented version :) – Zeus Oct 16 at 8:21
Your F should have # after it. – strager Oct 18 at 7:12
vote up 22 vote down

Perl, 126 characters (115/122 with switches)

Perl in 239 226 218 216 183 180 178 172 157 142 136 133 129 128 126 chars

This 126 character solution in Perl is the result of a lengthy collaboration between myself and A. Rex.

@o=($/)x10;$/=$";map{m[/];$p=4+(5-ord)%7;
$_.=--$p?!($p&~3)*$'?16<$p*$'?"  |\\":"  | ":$/x4:" O  ",
$|--&&y@ @-@for@o}<>;print@o

A. Rex also proposes a solution to run with the perl -ap switch. With 111(!) characters in this solution plus 4 strokes for the extra command-line switch, this solution has a total score of 115.

$\="$:
"x5;$p=4+(5-ord)%7,s#..##,$\=~s#(.)\K$#--$p?
$_*!($p&~3)?"$1|".(16<$p*$_?"\\":$1).$1:$1x4:O.$1x3#gemfor@F

The first newline in this solution is significant.

Or 122 characters embedding the switches in the shebang line:

#!perl -ap
$\="$:
"x5;$p=4+(5-ord)%7,s#..##,$\=~s#(.)\K$#--$p?$_*!($p&~3)?"$1|".(16<$p*$_?
"\\":$1).$1:$1x4:O.$1x3#gemfor@F

(first two newlines are significant).

Half-notes can be supported with an additional 12 chars:

@o=($/)x10;$/=$";map{m[/];$p=4+(5-ord)%7;
$_.=--$p?!($p&~3)*$'?16<$p*$'?"  |\\":"  | ":$/x4:$'>2?" @  ":" O  ",
$|--&&y@ @-@for@o}<>;print@o
link|flag
2  
split//,"D3C4B5A6G7F8E9" -> "D3C4B5A6G7F8E9"=~/./g – Kinopiko Oct 16 at 7:36
2  
@Kinopiko, it's generally frowned upon to perform optimizations on other people's solutions. You can write a comment (as you did), but please don't edit answers unless they say it's okay. – strager Oct 16 at 12:41
2  
grep -> map for one less character. – Kinopiko Oct 16 at 17:34
12  
I'd seriously would like to a read a lengthy step-by-step article of the process the Perl hacker's mind goes through when creating something like this. – Esko Oct 17 at 20:33
4  
You golf it then debug? Crikey! – Kinopiko Oct 18 at 4:20
show 27 more comments
vote up 1 vote down

C -- 293 characters

Still needs more compression, and it takes the args on the command line instead of reading them...

i,j,k,l;main(c,v)char **v;{char*t;l=4*(c-1)+2;t=malloc(10*l)+1;for(i=0;i<10;i
++){t[i*l-1]='\n';for(j=0;j<l;j++)t[i*l+j]=i&1?'-':' ';}t[10*l-1]=0;i=1;while
(--c){j='G'-**++v;if(j<3)j+=7;t[j*l+i++]='O';if(*++*v){t[--j*l+i]='|';t[--j*l
+i]='|';t[--j*l+i]='|';if(*++*v!='4'){t[j++*l+i+1]='\\';if(**v!='8'){t[j++*l+
i+1]='\\';if(**v!='1'){t[j++*l+i+1]='\\';}}}}i+=3;}puts(t);}

edit: fixed the E

edit: down to 293 characters, including the newlines...

#define X t[--j*l+i]='|'
#define Y t[j++*l+i+1]=92
i,j,k,l;main(c,v)char**v;{char*t;l=4*(c-1)+2;t=malloc(10*l)+1;for(i=10;i;)t[--i*
l-1]=10,memset(t+i*l,i&1?45:32,l-1);t[10*l-1]=0;for(i=1;--c;i+=3)j=71-**++v,j<3?
j+=7:0,t[j*l+i++]=79,*++*v?X,X,X,*++*v-52?Y,**v-56?Y,**v-49?Y:0:0:0:0;puts(t);}
link|flag
Wrong position for note E. – LiraNuna Oct 15 at 22:30
12  
Wow, nice work. Also, one of the rare times I found the perl implementation more readable ;) – ldigas Oct 15 at 22:32
@ldigas, Haha! +1 to your comment. =] – strager Oct 15 at 22:50
vote up 10 vote down

159 Ruby chars

n=gets.split;9.downto(0){|p|m='- '[p%2,1];n.each{|t|r=(t[0]-62)%7;g=t[2..-1]
print m+(r==p ?'O'+m*2:p>=r&&g&&p<r+4?m+'|'+(g.to_i>1<<-p+r+5?'\\':m):m*3)}
puts}
link|flag
Specification has changed. Extra - or is not required at the end or beginning of the line (depending how you did the answer). – strager Oct 18 at 4:32
yes I did just notice that. And got it down to 182 chars while I was at it :P – jeremy Ruten Oct 18 at 5:19
I see 182 then refresh to find 159. Crazy! – strager Oct 18 at 7:11
Darn, I knew ruby could go shorter, but you beat me to it and yours is even shorter – gnibbler Oct 18 at 8:26
1  
you can save one byte if you use '|'<< instead of '|'+ and change the '\\' to 92 – gnibbler Oct 18 at 22:42
vote up 4 vote down

Lua, 307 Characters

b,s,o="\\",io.read("*l"),io.write for i=1,10 do for n,l in
s:gmatch("(%a)/?(%d*)")do x=n:byte() w=(x<69 and 72 or 79)-x
l=tonumber(l)or 1 d=i%2>0 and" "or"-"o(d..(i==w and"O"or
d)..(l>3 and i<w and i+4>w and"|"or d)..(l>7 and i==w-3
and b or l>15 and i==w-2 and b or l>31 and i==w-1 and b or
d))end o"\n"end
link|flag
vote up 14 vote down

Python 178 characters

The 167 was a false alarm, I forgot to suppress the stems on the whole notes.

R=raw_input().split()
for y in range(10):
 r=""
 for x in R:o=y-(5-ord(x[0]))%7;b=" -"[y&1]+"O\|";r+=b[0]+b[o==3]+b[-(-1<o<3and''<x[1:])]+b[2*(-1<o<":862".find(x[-1]))]
 print r

Python 167 characters (Broken)

No room for the evil eye in this one, although there are 2 filler characters in there, so I added a smiley. This technique takes advantage of the uniqueness of the last character of the note lengths, so lucky for me that there are no 1/2 notes or 1/64 notes

R=raw_input().split()
for y in range(10):
 r=""
 for x in R:o=y-(5-ord(x[0]))%7;b=" -"[y&1]+"O\|";r+=b[0]+b[o==3]+b[-(-1<o<3)]+b[2*(-1<o<":862".find(x[-1]))]
 print r

Python 186 characters <<o>>

Python uses the <<o>> evil eye operator to great effect here. The find() method returns -1 if the item is not found, so that is why D doesn't need to appear in the notes.


R=raw_input().split()
for y in range(10):
 r=""
 for x in R:o='CBAGFE'.find(x[0])+4;B=" -"[y%2];r+=B+(B,'O')[o==y]+(x[2:]and
y+4>o>y and"|"+(B,'\\')[int(x[2:])<<o>>6+y>0]or B*2)
 print r

11 extra bytes gives a version with half notes


R=raw_input().split()
for y in range(10):
 r=""
 for x in R:t='CBAGFE'.find(x[0])+4;l=x[2:];B=" -"[y%2];r+=B+(B,'@O'[l
in'2'])[t==y]+(l and y+4>t>y and"|"+(B,'\\')[int(l)>>(6+y-t)>0]or B*2)
 print r
$ echo B B/2 B/4 B/8 B/16 B/32 G/4 D/8 C/16 D B/16| python notes.py 
                              |\            
------------------------------|---|\--------
      |   |   |\  |\  |\      |   |\      |\
------|---|---|---|\--|\-----@----|--O----|\
      |   |   |   |   |\  |      @        | 
-O---O---@---@---@---@----|--------------@--
                          |                 
-------------------------@------------------

--------------------------------------------
link|flag
Must use O not o. Great solution, though; time to beat it. =] – strager Oct 15 at 23:49
ok, using big O now – gnibbler Oct 15 at 23:51
Nice half notes! – mobrule Oct 16 at 6:04
170, nice. :) – strager Oct 18 at 3:48
y-'CBAGFE'.find(x[0]) can be y+1-(5-ord(x[0]))%7 to save 3 chars. Then you probably factor out the +1. – mobrule Oct 18 at 4:41
show 6 more comments
vote up 4 vote down

C 196 characters <<o>>

Borrowing a few ideas off strager. Interesting features include the n+++1 "triple +" operator and the <<o>> "evil eye" operator

#define P,putchar
N[99];*n=N;y;b;main(o){for(;scanf(" %c/%d",n,n+1)>0;n+=2);for(;y<11;)
n=*n?n:(y++P(10),N)P(b=y&1?32:45)P((o=10-(*n+++1)%7-y)?b:79)P(0<o&o<4&&*n?'|':b)
P(*n++<<o>>6&&0<o&o<4?92:b);}
link|flag
1  
Sweet Jeebus... – Chris Lutz Oct 16 at 8:16
I managed to get 196 when SO was down but couldn't post. Your solution (well, modifications of mine) has hinted me at more optimizations. Thanks, but I'm gonna win this one. ;D – strager Oct 16 at 12:25
1  
Ahh, but will you have the evil eye? and the triple +? :) – gnibbler Oct 16 at 12:51
Evil eye? Why the face? – mobrule Oct 16 at 15:33
@gnibbler, Erm... No... =[ – strager Oct 16 at 20:39
show 6 more comments
vote up 4 vote down

168 characters in Perl 5.10

My original solution was 276 characters, but lots and lots of tweaking reduced it by more than 100 characters!

$_=<>;
y#481E-GA-D62 #0-9#d;
s#.(/(.))?#$"x(7+$&).O.$"x($k=10).($1?"|":$")x3 .$"x(10-$2)."\\"x$2.$"x(9-$&)#ge;
s#(..)*?\K (.)#-$2#g;
print$/while--$k,s#.{$k}\K.#!print$&#ge

If you have a minor suggestion that improves this, please feel free to just edit my code.

link|flag
Nice! (Comment limit...) – strager Oct 17 at 20:53
vote up 10 vote down

LilyPond - 246 bytes

Technically speaking, this doesn't adhere to the output specification, as the output is a nicely engraved PDF rather than a poor ASCII text substitute, but I figured the problem was just crying out for a LilyPond solution. In fact, you can remove the "\autoBeamOff\cadenzaOn\stemUp" to make it look even more nicely formatted. You can also add "\midi{}" after the "\layout{}" to get a MIDI file to listen to.

o=#(open-file"o""w")p=#ly:string-substitute
#(format o"~(~a~)"(p"2'1""2"(p"4'1""4"(p"6'1""6"(p"8'1""8"(p"/""'"(p"C""c'"(p"D""d'"(p" ""/1"(p"
"" "(ly:gulp-file"M")))))))))))#(close-port o)\score{{\autoBeamOff\cadenzaOn\stemUp\include"o"}\layout{}}

Usage: lilypond thisfile.ly

Notes:

  1. The input must be in a file named "M" in the same directory as the program.
  2. The input file must end in a newline. (Or save 9 bytes by having it end in a space.)
  3. The output is a PDF named "thisfile.pdf", where "thisfile.ly" is the name of the program.
  4. I tested this with LilyPond 2.12.2; other versions might not work.

I haven't done much in LilyPond, so I'm not sure this is the best way to do this, since it has to convert the input to LilyPond format, write it to an auxiliary file, and then read it in. I currently can't get the built-in LilyPond parser/evaluator to work. :(

Now working on an ASCII-output solution.... :)

link|flag
2  
Wow, just wow. Though the point is ASCII printing of patterns :). Still wow – LiraNuna Oct 18 at 7:08
What is this I don't even – strager Oct 18 at 7:13
1  
I should mention that LilyPond is a music typesetting engine (lilypond.org/web). It has a built-in Scheme interpreter, but amazingly enough can still manage to beat Scheme on some golfing tasks (see stackoverflow.com/questions/1433263/…) – KirarinSnow Oct 18 at 9:35
vote up 8 vote down

Ruby 136

n=gets;10.times{|y|puts (b=' -'[y&1,1])+n.split.map{|t|r=y-(5-t[0])%7
(r==3?'O':b)+(t[1]&&0<=r&&r<3?'|'<<(r<t[2,2].to_i/8?92:b):b+b)}*b}

Ruby 139 (Tweet)

n=gets;10.times{|y|puts (b=' -'[y&1,1])+n.split.map{|t|r=y-(5-t[0])%7
(r==3?'O':b)+(t[1]&&0<=r&&r<3?'|'<<(r<141>>(t[-1]&7)&3?92:b):b+b)}*b}

Ruby 143

n=gets.split;10.times{|y|puts (b=' -'[y&1,1])+n.map{|t|r=y-(5-t[0])%7;m=t[-1]
(r==3?'O':b)+(m<65&&0<=r&&r<3?'|'<<(r<141>>(m&7)&3?92:b):b+b)}*b}

Ruby 148

Here is another way to calculate the flags,
where m=ord(last character), #flags=1+m&3-(1&m/4)

and another way #flags=141>>(m&7)&3, that saves one more byte

n=gets.split;10.times{|y|b=' -'[y&1,1];n.each{|t|r=y-(5-t[0])%7;m=t[-1]
print b+(r==3?'O':b)+(m<65&&0<=r&&r<3?'|'<<(r<141>>(m&7)&3?92:b):b+b)}
puts}

Ruby 181

First try is a transliteration of my Python solution

n=gets.split;10.times{|y|r="";n.each{|x|o=y-(5-x[0])%7
r+=(b=" -"[y&1,1]+"O\\|")[0,1]+b[o==3?1:0,1]+b[-1<o&&o<3&&x[-1]<64?3:0,1]+b[-1<o&&o<(":862".index(x[-1]).to_i)?2:0,1]}
puts r}
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