86
votes

Inspired by http://xkcd.com/710/ here is a code golf for it.

The Challenge

Given a positive integer greater than 0, print out the hailstone sequence for that number.

The Hailstone Sequence

See Wikipedia for more detail..

  • If the number is even, divide it by two.
  • If the number is odd, triple it and add one.

Repeat this with the number produced until it reaches 1. (if it continues after 1, it will go in an infinite loop of 1 -> 4 -> 2 -> 1...)

Sometimes code is the best way to explain, so here is some from Wikipedia

function collatz(n)
  show n
  if n > 1
    if n is odd
      call collatz(3n + 1)
    else
      call collatz(n / 2)

This code works, but I am adding on an extra challenge. The program must not be vulnerable to stack overflows. So it must either use iteration or tail recursion.

Also, bonus points for if it can calculate big numbers and the language does not already have it implemented. (or if you reimplement big number support using fixed-length integers)

Test case

Number: 21
Results: 21 -> 64 -> 32 -> 16 -> 8 -> 4 -> 2 -> 1

Number: 3
Results: 3 -> 10 -> 5 -> 16 -> 8 -> 4 -> 2 -> 1

Also, the code golf must include full user input and output.

12
  • 4
  • 20
    must not be vulnerable to stack overflows : You should not have posted it here then! ;) Mar 5, 2010 at 16:35
  • 51
    My friends stopped calling me, does that mean I solved the problem?
    – Martin
    Mar 5, 2010 at 16:38
  • 18
    You're on SO, but once had friends? ... what was that like?
    – Pops
    Mar 5, 2010 at 17:11
  • 5
    The assembler answer is cool, but it's a bit anti-code-golf to select the longest answer! Mar 6, 2010 at 6:30

70 Answers 70

129
votes

x86 assembly, 1337 characters

;
; To assemble and link this program, just run:
;
; >> $ nasm -f elf collatz.asm && gcc -o collatz collatz.o
;
; You can then enjoy its output by passing a number to it on the command line:
;
; >> $ ./collatz 123
; >> 123 --> 370 --> 185 --> 556 --> 278 --> 139 --> 418 --> 209 --> 628 --> 314
; >> --> 157 --> 472 --> 236 --> 118 --> 59 --> 178 --> 89 --> 268 --> 134 --> 67
; >> --> 202 --> 101 --> 304 --> 152 --> 76 --> 38 --> 19 --> 58 --> 29 --> 88
; >> --> 44 --> 22 --> 11 --> 34 --> 17 --> 52 --> 26 --> 13 --> 40 --> 20 --> 10
; >> --> 5 --> 16 --> 8 --> 4 --> 2 --> 1
; 
; There's even some error checking involved:
; >> $ ./collatz
; >> Usage: ./collatz NUMBER
;
section .text
global main
extern printf
extern atoi

main:

  cmp dword [esp+0x04], 2
  jne .usage

  mov ebx, [esp+0x08]
  push dword [ebx+0x04]
  call atoi
  add esp, 4

  cmp eax, 0
  je .usage

  mov ebx, eax
  push eax
  push msg

.loop:
  mov [esp+0x04], ebx
  call printf

  test ebx, 0x01
  jz .even

.odd:
  lea ebx, [1+ebx*2+ebx]
  jmp .loop

.even:

  shr ebx, 1
  cmp ebx, 1
  jne .loop

  push ebx
  push end
  call printf

  add esp, 16
  xor eax, eax
  ret

.usage:
  mov ebx, [esp+0x08]
  push dword [ebx+0x00]
  push usage
  call printf
  add esp, 8
  mov eax, 1
  ret

msg db "%d --> ", 0
end db "%d", 10, 0
usage db "Usage: %s NUMBER", 10, 0
3
  • 27
    x86 asm and 1337 chars. I weep with joy.
    – ZoogieZork
    Mar 5, 2010 at 18:06
  • 10
    I like the (ab)use of lea for 3n+1.
    – wowest
    Mar 5, 2010 at 22:40
  • how do i complie in linux cant wait to try it
    – hidroto
    Feb 14, 2011 at 7:37
64
votes

Befunge

&>:.:1-|
  >3*^ @
  |%2: <
 v>2/>+
3
  • 2
    You should read this in 2D. <>^v are arrows that change direction the "program counter" wanders. | and _ are conditionals that go up/down or left/right depending on whether the value on stack is true or false. The whole "code arena" wraps around through top-bottom and left-right.
    – SF.
    Mar 10, 2010 at 10:18
  • And only 35 chars including whitespace! Not bad at all! Mar 18, 2010 at 2:28
  • 6
    Are you sure it's not Perl?
    – ijw
    Jan 7, 2011 at 2:21
51
votes

Python - 95 64 51 46 char

Obviously does not produce a stack overflow.

n=input()
while n>1:n=(n/2,n*3+1)[n%2];print n
6
  • 4
    You might want to specify Python 2.x. IIRC, Python 3.x input doesn't do an eval.
    – Mike D.
    Mar 6, 2010 at 4:55
  • 5
    This doesn't fulfil the requirements - it doesn't print the first number
    – Ben Lings
    Mar 7, 2010 at 17:45
  • 7
    why is this accepted? it's not the shortest one and it doesn't print the first number
    – Claudiu
    Mar 8, 2010 at 6:25
  • 1
    I guess input() echoes the characters you type, so this does print the first number :) Mar 8, 2010 at 10:04
  • 17
    You can print the first number for a cost of only 2 bytes by using n=input()*2 Mar 12, 2010 at 1:40
51
votes

LOLCODE: 406 CHARAKTERZ

HAI
BTW COLLATZ SOUNDZ JUS LULZ

CAN HAS STDIO?

I HAS A NUMBAR
BTW, I WANTS UR NUMBAR
GIMMEH NUMBAR

VISIBLE NUMBAR

IM IN YR SEQUENZ
  MOD OF NUMBAR AN 2
  BOTH SAEM IT AN 0, O RLY?
    YA RLY, NUMBAR R QUOSHUNT OF NUMBAR AN 2
    NO WAI, NUMBAR R SUM OF PRODUKT OF NUMBAR AN 3 AN 1
  OIC
  VISIBLE NUMBAR
  DIFFRINT 2 AN SMALLR OF 2 AN NUMBAR, O RLY?
    YA RLY, GTFO
  OIC
IM OUTTA YR SEQUENZ

KTHXBYE

TESTD UNDR JUSTIN J. MEZA'S INTERPRETR. KTHXBYE!

23
votes

Perl

I decided to be a little anticompetitive, and show how you would normally code such problem in Perl.
There is also a 46 (total) char code-golf entry at the end.

These first three examples all start out with this header.

#! /usr/bin/env perl
use Modern::Perl;
# which is the same as these three lines:
# use 5.10.0;
# use strict;
# use warnings;

while( <> ){
  chomp;
  last unless $_;
  Collatz( $_ );
}
  • Simple recursive version

    use Sub::Call::Recur;
    sub Collatz{
      my( $n ) = @_;
      $n += 0; # ensure that it is numeric
      die 'invalid value' unless $n > 0;
      die 'Integer values only' unless $n == int $n;
      say $n;
      given( $n ){
        when( 1 ){}
        when( $_ % 2 != 0 ){ # odd
          recur( 3 * $n + 1 );
        }
        default{ # even
          recur( $n / 2 );
        }
      }
    }
    
  • Simple iterative version

    sub Collatz{
      my( $n ) = @_;
      $n += 0; # ensure that it is numeric
      die 'invalid value' unless $n > 0;
      die 'Integer values only' unless $n == int $n;
      say $n;
      while( $n > 1 ){
        if( $n % 2 ){ # odd
          $n = 3 * $n + 1;
        } else { #even
          $n = $n / 2;
        }
        say $n;
      }
    }
    
  • Optimized iterative version

    sub Collatz{
      my( $n ) = @_;
      $n += 0; # ensure that it is numeric
      die 'invalid value' unless $n > 0;
      die 'Integer values only' unless $n == int $n;
      #
      state @next;
      $next[1] //= 0; # sets $next[1] to 0 if it is undefined
      #
      # fill out @next until we get to a value we've already worked on
      until( defined $next[$n] ){
        say $n;
        #
        if( $n % 2 ){ # odd
          $next[$n] = 3 * $n + 1;
        } else { # even
          $next[$n] = $n / 2;
        }
        #
        $n = $next[$n];
      }
      say $n;
      # finish running until we get to 1
      say $n while $n = $next[$n];
    }
    

Now I'm going to show how you would do that last example with a version of Perl prior to v5.10.0

#! /usr/bin/env perl
use strict;
use warnings;

while( <> ){
  chomp;
  last unless $_;
  Collatz( $_ );
}
{
  my @next = (0,0); # essentially the same as a state variable
  sub Collatz{
    my( $n ) = @_;
    $n += 0; # ensure that it is numeric
    die 'invalid value' unless $n > 0;

    # fill out @next until we get to a value we've already worked on
    until( $n == 1 or defined $next[$n] ){
      print $n, "\n";

      if( $n % 2 ){ # odd
        $next[$n] = 3 * $n + 1;
      } else { # even
        $next[$n] = $n / 2;
      }
      $n = $next[$n];
    }
    print $n, "\n";

    # finish running until we get to 1
    print $n, "\n" while $n = $next[$n];
  }
}

Benchmark

First off the IO is always going to be the slow part. So if you actually benchmarked them as-is you should get about the same speed out of each one.

To test these then, I opened a file handle to /dev/null ($null), and edited every say $n to instead read say {$null} $n. This is to reduce the dependence on IO.

#! /usr/bin/env perl
use Modern::Perl;
use autodie;

open our $null, '>', '/dev/null';

use Benchmark qw':all';

cmpthese( -10,
{
  Recursive => sub{ Collatz_r( 31 ) },
  Iterative => sub{ Collatz_i( 31 ) },
  Optimized => sub{ Collatz_o( 31 ) },
});

sub Collatz_r{
  ...
  say {$null} $n;
  ...
}
sub Collatz_i{
  ...
  say {$null} $n;
  ...
}
sub Collatz_o{
  ...
  say {$null} $n;
  ...
}

After having run it 10 times, here is a representative sample output:

            Rate Recursive Iterative Optimized
Recursive 1715/s        --      -27%      -46%
Iterative 2336/s       36%        --      -27%
Optimized 3187/s       86%       36%        --

Finally, a real code-golf entry:

perl -nlE'say;say$_=$_%2?3*$_+1:$_/2while$_>1'

46 chars total

If you don't need to print the starting value, you could remove 5 more characters.

perl -nE'say$_=$_%2?3*$_+1:$_/2while$_>1'

41 chars total
31 chars for the actual code portion, but the code won't work without the -n switch. So I include the entire example in my count.

8
  • Your optimized version, isn't.
    – Motti
    Mar 8, 2010 at 14:16
  • @Motti These examples are very IO dependent. Having tested them multiple times, the optimized version always maintains a significant lead. Mar 8, 2010 at 18:33
  • @Brad, when you run Collatz on one number then the optimization is a pessimization since no number should appear more than once (unless the conjecture is wrong). The reason you're seeing an improvement is that you're running many numbers (as in the Euler problem), in fact I wrote a blog post about this recently lanzkron.wordpress.com/2010/01/18/…
    – Motti
    Mar 9, 2010 at 8:32
  • 2
    @Motti that's the optimization I was talking about. Also, in Perl $i + 1 is always addition (response to the blog entry). Also using Sub::Call::Recur is also an optimization. Otherwise I would use @_=$n;goto &Collatz. (It is 10-20% slower if you change state @next to my @next Mar 9, 2010 at 15:37
  • 3
    I believe perl golf stroke counting standards do not count the mandatory strokes for invoking the interpreter nor the quotes, but do count one for each flag beside E. Using those rules, your last entries count respectively 37 chars and 32 chars. Mar 10, 2010 at 7:14
23
votes

Haskell, 62 chars 63 76 83, 86, 97, 137

c 1=[1]
c n=n:c(div(n`mod`2*(5*n+2)+n)2)
main=readLn>>=print.c

User input, printed output, uses constant memory and stack, works with arbitrarily big integers.

A sample run of this code, given an 80 digit number of all '1's (!) as input, is pretty fun to look at.


Original, function only version:

Haskell 51 chars

f n=n:[[],f([n`div`2,3*n+1]!!(n`mod`2))]!!(1`mod`n)

Who the @&^# needs conditionals, anyway?

(edit: I was being "clever" and used fix. Without it, the code dropped to 54 chars. edit2: dropped to 51 by factoring out f())

10
  • After doing my Miranda post (which is basically just older Haskell), at least in Miranda you can cut that down by using just one exclamation mark each - f n=n:[[],[f(n div 2),f(3*n+1)]!(n mod 2)]!(1 mod n) - Works :)
    – Elle H
    Mar 5, 2010 at 20:25
  • Oh, yes, you're missing input and output. Mar 5, 2010 at 20:26
  • @Martinho: Me too, but thanks to lazy evaluation, the tables are even much cooler than in other languages.
    – Dario
    Mar 6, 2010 at 19:46
  • 1
    Using jleedev's idea: c 1=[1];c n=n:(c$div(nmod2*(5*n+2)+n)2) - 41 characters, this uses the fact that this is k*(3n+1)+(1-k)*n/2 where k=n mod 2
    – sdcvvc
    Mar 6, 2010 at 23:49
  • 2
    I deleted my other entry, and moved my code here, and incorporated yet more of the ideas from these comments. Increased to 76 characters, but does input and output. Mar 8, 2010 at 14:52
22
votes

Golfscript : 20 chars

  ~{(}{3*).1&5*)/}/1+`
# 
# Usage: echo 21 | ruby golfscript.rb collatz.gs

This is equivalent to

stack<int> s;
s.push(21);
while (s.top() - 1) {
  int x = s.top();
  int numerator = x*3+1;
  int denominator = (numerator&1) * 5 + 1;
  s.push(numerator/denominator);
}
s.push(1);
return s;
4
  • 2
    "must include full user input and output"
    – F'x
    Mar 7, 2010 at 14:28
  • 2
    @FX, replacing the 21 with ~ will cause the program to use a number from stdin Mar 8, 2010 at 21:06
  • @gnibbler: Is Golfscript.rb updated? I got (eval):1:in initialize': undefined method leftparen' for nil:NilClass (NoMethodError) when replacing 21 with ~.
    – kennytm
    Mar 8, 2010 at 21:44
  • @KennyTM, Sadly GolfScript can't read stdin interactively you have to pipe something into stdin, like echo 21 | ruby golfscript.rb collatz.gs Mar 8, 2010 at 22:31
19
votes

bc 41 chars

I guess this kind of problems is what bc was invented for:

for(n=read();n>1;){if(n%2)n=n*6+2;n/=2;n}

Test:

bc1 -q collatz.bc
21
64
32
16
8
4
2
1

Proper code:

for(n=read();n>1;){if(n%2)n=n*3+1else n/=2;print n,"\n"}

bc handles numbers with up to INT_MAX digits

Edit: The Wikipedia article mentions this conjecture has been checked for all values up to 20x258 (aprox. 5.76e18). This program:

c=0;for(n=2^20000+1;n>1;){if(n%2)n=n*6+2;n/=2;c+=1};n;c

tests 220,000+1 (aprox. 3.98e6,020) in 68 seconds, 144,404 cycles.

3
  • Change 'n!=1' to `n>1' for 54 chars. Mar 5, 2010 at 21:15
  • 4
    Here's a command line for generating random arbitrary-length numbers for this entry (10000 digits in this case): cat /dev/urandom | tr -dc '0-9' | head -c 10000 | bc collatz-conjecture.bc
    – indiv
    Mar 5, 2010 at 22:18
  • 3
    @indiv - I had to test it :), it took 3 minutes and 12 seconds to process the 10,000 digits number. I saved the output to a file, it's about 1.2gb long, but yes it did finish correctly in 1. Point for bc Mar 5, 2010 at 22:34
16
votes

Perl : 31 chars

perl -nE 'say$_=$_%2?$_*3+1:$_/2while$_>1'
#         123456789 123456789 123456789 1234567

Edited to remove 2 unnecessary spaces.

Edited to remove 1 unnecessary space.

7
  • You can remove two unnecessary spaces (after say and after while)
    – sorpigal
    Mar 5, 2010 at 17:40
  • Try perl -E 'say$_=10;say$_=$_%2?$_*3+1:$_/2 while$_>1'
    – sorpigal
    Mar 5, 2010 at 17:46
  • I figured that the user would be aware of the starting number of the sequence ;-).
    – a'r
    Mar 5, 2010 at 17:49
  • 41
    Sometimes when I come across base64 encoded text, I sometimes mistake it for Perl source code.
    – Martin
    Mar 5, 2010 at 18:05
  • 21
    @Martin:I can't imagine how you'd do that. Base64 is much more readable. Mar 5, 2010 at 19:51
15
votes

MS Excel, 35 chars

=IF(A1/2=ROUND(A1/2,0),A1/2,A1*3+1)

Taken straight from Wikipedia:

In cell A1, place the starting number.
In cell A2 enter this formula =IF(A1/2=ROUND(A1/2,0),A1/2,A1*3+1) 
Drag and copy the formula down until 4, 2, 1

It only took copy/pasting the formula 111 times to get the result for a starting number of 1000. ;)

3
  • 16
    I guess it's too late for me to point out that this is what the fill handle is for, huh? ehow.com/how_2284668_use-fill-handle-microsoft-excel.html :) Mar 5, 2010 at 18:34
  • That's a pretty handy feature that I didn't even know existed. I just copied the first cell and then highlight all of the other cells and pasted once. Mar 5, 2010 at 19:04
  • I learned about area-paste roughly ten years after i discovered the fill handle. figures.
    – Jimmy
    Mar 6, 2010 at 1:56
14
votes

C : 64 chars

main(x){for(scanf("%d",&x);x>=printf("%d,",x);x=x&1?3*x+1:x/2);}

With big integer support: 431 (necessary) chars

#include <stdlib.h>
#define B (w>=m?d=realloc(d,m=m+m):0)
#define S(a,b)t=a,a=b,b=t
main(m,w,i,t){char*d=malloc(m=9);for(w=0;(i=getchar()+2)/10==5;)
B,d[w++]=i%10;for(i=0;i<w/2;i++)S(d[i],d[w-i-1]);for(;;w++){
while(w&&!d[w-1])w--;for(i=w+1;i--;)putchar(i?d[i-1]+48:10);if(
w==1&&*d==1)break;if(*d&1){for(i=w;i--;)d[i]*=3;*d+=1;}else{
for(i=w;i-->1;)d[i-1]+=d[i]%2*10,d[i]/=2;*d/=2;}B,d[w]=0;for(i=0
;i<w;i++)d[i+1]+=d[i]/10,d[i]%=10;}}

Note: Do not remove #include <stdlib.h> without at least prototyping malloc/realloc, as doing so will not be safe on 64-bit platforms (64-bit void* will be converted to 32-bit int).

This one hasn't been tested vigorously yet. It could use some shortening as well.


Previous versions:

main(x){for(scanf("%d",&x);printf("%d,",x),x-1;x=x&1?3*x+1:x/2);} // 66

(removed 12 chars because no one follows the output format... :| )

12
votes

Another assembler version. This one is not limited to 32 bit numbers, it can handle numbers up to 1065534 although the ".com" format MS-DOS uses is limited to 80 digit numbers. Written for A86 assembler and requires a Win-XP DOS box to run. Assembles to 180 bytes:

    mov ax,cs
    mov si,82h
    add ah,10h
    mov es,ax
    mov bh,0
    mov bl,byte ptr [80h]
    cmp bl,1
    jbe ret
    dec bl
    mov cx,bx
    dec bl
    xor di,di
 p1:lodsb
    sub al,'0'
    cmp al,10
    jae ret
    stosb
    loop p1
    xor bp,bp
    push es
    pop ds
 p2:cmp byte ptr ds:[bp],0
    jne p3
    inc bp
    jmp p2
    ret
 p3:lea si,[bp-1]
    cld
 p4:inc si
    mov dl,[si]
    add dl,'0'
    mov ah,2
    int 21h
    cmp si,bx
    jne p4
    cmp bx,bp
    jne p5
    cmp byte ptr [bx],1
    je ret
 p5:mov dl,'-'
    mov ah,2
    int 21h
    mov dl,'>'
    int 21h
    test byte ptr [bx],1
    jz p10
    ;odd
    mov si,bx
    mov di,si
    mov dx,3
    dec bp
    std
 p6:lodsb
    mul dl
    add al,dh
    aam
    mov dh,ah
    stosb
    cmp si,bp
    jnz p6
    or dh,dh
    jz p7
    mov al,dh
    stosb
    dec bp
 p7:mov si,bx
    mov di,si
 p8:lodsb
    inc al
    xor ah,ah
    aaa
    stosb
    or ah,ah
    jz p9
    cmp si,bp
    jne p8
    mov al,1
    stosb
    jmp p2
 p9:inc bp
    jmp p2
    p10:mov si,bp
    mov di,bp
    xor ax,ax
p11:lodsb
    test ah,1
    jz p12
    add al,10
p12:mov ah,al
    shr al,1
    cmp di,bx
    stosb
    jne p11
    jmp p2
10
votes

dc - 24 chars 25 28

dc is a good tool for this sequence:

?[d5*2+d2%*+2/pd1<L]dsLx
dc -f collatz.dc
21
64
32
16
8
4
2
1

Also 24 chars using the formula from the Golfscript entry:

?[3*1+d2%5*1+/pd1<L]dsLx

57 chars to meet the specs:

[Number: ]n?[Results: ]ndn[d5*2+d2%*+2/[ -> ]ndnd1<L]dsLx
dc -f collatz-spec.dc
Number: 3
Results: 3 -> 10 -> 5 -> 16 -> 8 -> 4 -> 2 -> 1
9
votes

Scheme: 72

(define(c n)(if(= n 1)`(1)(cons n(if(odd? n)(c(+(* n 3)1))(c(/ n 2))))))

This uses recursion, but the calls are tail-recursive so I think they'll be optimized to iteration. In some quick testing, I haven't been able to find a number for which the stack overflows anyway. Just for example:

(c 9876543219999999999000011234567898888777766665555444433332222 7777777777777777777777777777777798797657657651234143375987342987 5398709812374982529830983743297432985230985739287023987532098579 058095873098753098370938753987)

...runs just fine. [that's all one number -- I've just broken it to fit on screen.]

8
votes

Mathematica, 45 50 chars

c=NestWhileList[If[OddQ@#,3#+1,#/2]&,#,#>1&]&
2
  • I counted 58 chars. And you can replace OddQ[#] with OddQ@# to save 1 char.
    – kennytm
    Mar 5, 2010 at 17:45
  • 2
    50 characters: c[n_]:=NestWhileList[If[OddQ@#,3#+1,#/2]&,n,#>1&] Mar 6, 2010 at 0:02
7
votes

Ruby, 50 chars, no stack overflow

Basically a direct rip of makapuf's Python solution:

def c(n)while n>1;n=n.odd?? n*3+1: n/2;p n end end

Ruby, 45 chars, will overflow

Basically a direct rip of the code provided in the question:

def c(n)p n;n.odd?? c(3*n+1):c(n/2)if n>1 end
3
  • What version of Ruby is that? I get n.odd?? not defined. Also, that is vulnerable to stack overflows with large numbers.
    – Earlz
    Mar 5, 2010 at 17:01
  • That's interesting. I have 1.8.7. Adding a space between the question marks should fix that. And you're right about the stack overflow. I'll edit my answer to make a note of that. Mar 5, 2010 at 17:07
  • 3
    You can save four characters with p n=[n/2,n*3+1][n%2] Mar 7, 2010 at 15:00
7
votes
import java.math.BigInteger;
public class SortaJava {

    static final BigInteger THREE = new BigInteger("3");
    static final BigInteger TWO = new BigInteger("2");

    interface BiFunc<R, A, B> {
      R call(A a, B b);
    }

    interface Cons<A, B> {
      <R> R apply(BiFunc<R, A, B> func);
    }

    static class Collatz implements Cons<BigInteger, Collatz> {
      BigInteger value;
      public Collatz(BigInteger value) { this.value = value; }
      public <R> R apply(BiFunc<R, BigInteger, Collatz> func) {
        if(BigInteger.ONE.equals(value))
          return func.call(value, null);
        if(value.testBit(0))
          return func.call(value, new Collatz((value.multiply(THREE)).add(BigInteger.ONE)));
        return func.call(value, new Collatz(value.divide(TWO)));
      }
    }

    static class PrintAReturnB<A, B> implements BiFunc<B, A, B> {
      boolean first = true;
      public B call(A a, B b) {
        if(first)
          first = false;
        else
          System.out.print(" -> ");
        System.out.print(a);
        return b;
      }
    }

    public static void main(String[] args) {
      BiFunc<Collatz, BigInteger, Collatz> printer = new PrintAReturnB<BigInteger, Collatz>();
      Collatz collatz = new Collatz(new BigInteger(args[0]));
      while(collatz != null)
        collatz = collatz.apply(printer);
    }
}
2
  • 50
    Java: the language where you have to use BigIntegers just to count the number of characters in the code of the solution. Mar 5, 2010 at 19:52
  • 3
    @Jared I totally agree that Java is verbose. You have to admit that the solution presented a) meets the requirements b) is way longer than really necessary and c) plays with the java type system in a pleasing way
    – wowest
    Mar 5, 2010 at 22:33
7
votes

Python 45 Char

Shaved a char off of makapuf's answer.

n=input()
while~-n:n=(n/2,n*3+1)[n%2];print n
1
  • very clever use of the ~ operator. I had to look it up to see what it did (I try to avoid binary operators in Python, so I', not very familiar with them). Mar 7, 2010 at 20:06
5
votes

TI-BASIC

Not the shortest, but a novel approach. Certain to slow down considerably with large sequences, but it shouldn't overflow.

PROGRAM:COLLATZ
:ClrHome
:Input X
:Lbl 1
:While X≠1
:If X/2=int(X/2)
:Then
:Disp X/2→X
:Else
:Disp X*3+1→X
:End
:Goto 1
:End
4
votes

Haskell : 50

c 1=[1];c n=n:(c$if odd n then 3*n+1 else n`div`2)
1
  • Using jkff's idea: c 1=[1];c n=n:(c$[ndiv2,3*n+1]!!(nmod2)), 44 chars
    – sdcvvc
    Mar 6, 2010 at 22:34
4
votes

not the shortest, but an elegant clojure solution

(defn collatz [n]
 (print n "")
 (if (> n 1)
  (recur
   (if (odd? n)
    (inc (* 3 n))
    (/ n 2)))))
4
votes

C#: 216 Characters

using C=System.Console;class P{static void Main(){var p="start:";System.Action<object> o=C.Write;o(p);ulong i;while(ulong.TryParse(C.ReadLine(),out i)){o(i);while(i > 1){i=i%2==0?i/2:i*3+1;o(" -> "+i);}o("\n"+p);}}}

in long form:

using C = System.Console;
class P
{
    static void Main()
    {
        var p = "start:"; 
        System.Action<object> o = C.Write; 
        o(p); 
        ulong i; 
        while (ulong.TryParse(C.ReadLine(), out i))
        {
            o(i); 
            while (i > 1)
            {
                i = i % 2 == 0 ? i / 2 : i * 3 + 1; 
                o(" -> " + i);
            } 
            o("\n" + p);
        }
    }
}

New Version, accepts one number as input provided through the command line, no input validation. 173 154 characters.

using System;class P{static void Main(string[]a){Action<object>o=Console.Write;var i=ulong.Parse(a[0]);o(i);while(i>1){i=i%2==0?i/2:i*3+1;o(" -> "+i);}}}

in long form:

using System;
class P
{
    static void Main(string[]a)
    {
        Action<object>o=Console.Write;
        var i=ulong.Parse(a[0]);
        o(i);
        while(i>1)
        {
            i=i%2==0?i/2:i*3+1;
            o(" -> "+i);
        }
    }
}

I am able to shave a few characters by ripping off the idea in this answer to use a for loop rather than a while. 150 characters.

using System;class P{static void Main(string[]a){Action<object>o=Console.Write;for(var i=ulong.Parse(a[0]);i>1;i=i%2==0?i/2:i*3+1)o(i+" -> ");o(1);}}
4
  • You should mention your code accepts more than one input. Or take that away and shave off a few chars. Mar 5, 2010 at 20:55
  • You could shorten Action<object> and possibly more to dynamic in C#4.
    – Dykam
    Mar 7, 2010 at 9:29
  • @Dykam: Just checked it: fails with "error CS0428: Cannot convert method group 'Write' to non-delegate type 'dynamic'. Did you intend to invoke the method?". Mar 10, 2010 at 7:21
  • Oh, ofcourse... implicit converting to delegates... requires denoting the delegate. Bummer...
    – Dykam
    Mar 10, 2010 at 7:37
4
votes

Ruby, 43 characters

bignum supported, with stack overflow susceptibility:

def c(n)p n;n%2>0?c(3*n+1):c(n/2)if n>1 end

...and 50 characters, bignum supported, without stack overflow:

def d(n)while n>1 do p n;n=n%2>0?3*n+1:n/2 end end

Kudos to Jordan. I didn't know about 'p' as a replacement for puts.

4
votes

nroff1

Run with nroff -U hail.g

.warn
.pl 1
.pso (printf "Enter a number: " 1>&2); read x; echo .nr x $x
.while \nx>1 \{\
.  ie \nx%2 .nr x \nx*3+1
.  el .nr x \nx/2
\nx
.\}

1. groff version

2
  • 2
    Scary! Still, at least the output should be formatted nicely. Mar 7, 2010 at 8:17
  • 3
    Hey, run it as groff -U hail.g and you get PostScript! :-) Mar 7, 2010 at 8:23
4
votes

Scala + Scalaz

import scalaz._
import Scalaz._
val collatz = 
   (_:Int).iterate[Stream](a=>Seq(a/2,3*a+1)(a%2)).takeWhile(1<) // This line: 61 chars

And in action:

scala> collatz(7).toList
res15: List[Int] = List(7, 22, 11, 34, 17, 52, 26, 13, 40, 20, 10, 5, 16, 8, 4, 2)

Scala 2.8

val collatz = 
   Stream.iterate(_:Int)(a=>Seq(a/2,3*a+1)(a%2)).takeWhile(1<) :+ 1

This also includes the trailing 1.

scala> collatz(7)
res12: scala.collection.immutable.Stream[Int] = Stream(7, 22, 11, 34, 17, 52, 26, 13, 40, 20, 10, 5, 16, 8, 4, 2, 1)

With the following implicit

implicit def intToEven(i:Int) = new {
  def ~(even: Int=>Int, odd: Int=>Int) = { 
    if (i%2==0) { even(i) } else { odd(i) }
  }
}

this can be shortened to

val collatz = Stream.iterate(_:Int)(_~(_/2,3*_+1)).takeWhile(1<) :+ 1

Edit - 58 characters (including input and output, but not including initial number)

var n=readInt;while(n>1){n=Seq(n/2,n*3+1)(n%2);println(n)}

Could be reduced by 2 if you don't need newlines...

3
votes

F#, 90 characters

let c=Seq.unfold(function|n when n<=1->None|n when n%2=0->Some(n,n/2)|n->Some(n,(3*n)+1))

> c 21;;
val it : seq<int> = seq [21; 64; 32; 16; ...]

Or if you're not using F# interactive to display the result, 102 characters:

let c=Seq.unfold(function|n when n<=1->None|n when n%2=0->Some(n,n/2)|n->Some(n,(3*n)+1))>>printf"%A"
3
votes

Common Lisp, 141 characters:

(defun c ()
  (format t"Number: ")
  (loop for n = (read) then (if(oddp n)(+ 1 n n n)(/ n 2))
     until (= n 1)
     do (format t"~d -> "n))
  (format t"1~%"))

Test run:

Number: 171
171 -> 514 -> 257 -> 772 -> 386 -> 193 -> 580 -> 290 -> 145 -> 436 ->
218 -> 109 -> 328 -> 164 -> 82 -> 41 -> 124 -> 62 -> 31 -> 94 -> 47 ->
142 -> 71 -> 214 -> 107 -> 322 -> 161 -> 484 -> 242 -> 121 -> 364 ->
182 -> 91 -> 274 -> 137 -> 412 -> 206 -> 103 -> 310 -> 155 -> 466 ->
233 -> 700 -> 350 -> 175 -> 526 -> 263 -> 790 -> 395 -> 1186 -> 593 ->
1780 -> 890 -> 445 -> 1336 -> 668 -> 334 -> 167 -> 502 -> 251 -> 754 ->
377 -> 1132 -> 566 -> 283 -> 850 -> 425 -> 1276 -> 638 -> 319 ->
958 -> 479 -> 1438 -> 719 -> 2158 -> 1079 -> 3238 -> 1619 -> 4858 ->
2429 -> 7288 -> 3644 -> 1822 -> 911 -> 2734 -> 1367 -> 4102 -> 2051 ->
6154 -> 3077 -> 9232 -> 4616 -> 2308 -> 1154 -> 577 -> 1732 -> 866 ->
433 -> 1300 -> 650 -> 325 -> 976 -> 488 -> 244 -> 122 -> 61 -> 184 ->
92 -> 46 -> 23 -> 70 -> 35 -> 106 -> 53 -> 160 -> 80 -> 40 -> 20 ->
10 -> 5 -> 16 -> 8 -> 4 -> 2 -> 1 
1
  • Almost. There's no header for the 2nd line. I could've shaved 3 chars off ignoring the arrow, another 3-4 eliding unnecessary spaces, but I'm happy with a multiple of 3.
    – Vatine
    Mar 7, 2010 at 10:46
3
votes

The program frm Jerry Coffin has integer over flow, try this one:

#include <iostream>

int main(unsigned long long i)
{
    int j = 0;
    for(  std::cin>>i; i>1; i = i&1? i*3+1:i/2, ++j)
        std::cout<<i<<" -> ";

    std::cout<<"\n"<<j << " iterations\n";
}

tested with

The number less than 100 million with the longest total stopping time is 63,728,127, with 949 steps.

The number less than 1 billion with the longest total stopping time is 670,617,279, with 986 steps.

1
  • Any finite integer types cannot prevent integer overflow. Not even unsigned long long.
    – kennytm
    Mar 7, 2010 at 8:58
3
votes

ruby, 43, possibly meeting the I/O requirement


Run with ruby -n hail

n=$_.to_i
(n=n%2>0?n*3+1: n/2
p n)while n>1
3
votes

C# : 659 chars with BigInteger support

using System.Linq;using C=System.Console;class Program{static void Main(){var v=C.ReadLine();C.Write(v);while(v!="1"){C.Write("->");if(v[v.Length-1]%2==0){v=v.Aggregate(new{s="",o=0},(r,c)=>new{s=r.s+(char)((c-48)/2+r.o+48),o=(c%2)*5}).s.TrimStart('0');}else{var q=v.Reverse().Aggregate(new{s="",o=0},(r, c)=>new{s=(char)((c-48)*3+r.o+(c*3+r.o>153?c*3+r.o>163?28:38:48))+r.s,o=c*3+r.o>153?c*3+r.o>163?2:1:0});var t=(q.o+q.s).TrimStart('0').Reverse();var x=t.First();q=t.Skip(1).Aggregate(new{s=x>56?(x-57).ToString():(x-47).ToString(),o=x>56?1:0},(r,c)=>new{s=(char)(c-48+r.o+(c+r.o>57?38:48))+r.s,o=c+r.o>57?1:0});v=(q.o+q.s).TrimStart('0');}C.Write(v);}}}

Ungolfed

using System.Linq;
using C = System.Console;
class Program
{
    static void Main()
    {
        var v = C.ReadLine();
        C.Write(v);
        while (v != "1")
        {
            C.Write("->");
            if (v[v.Length - 1] % 2 == 0)
            {
                v = v
                    .Aggregate(
                        new { s = "", o = 0 }, 
                        (r, c) => new { s = r.s + (char)((c - 48) / 2 + r.o + 48), o = (c % 2) * 5 })
                    .s.TrimStart('0');
            }
            else
            {
                var q = v
                    .Reverse()
                    .Aggregate(
                        new { s = "", o = 0 }, 
                        (r, c) => new { s = (char)((c - 48) * 3 + r.o + (c * 3 + r.o > 153 ? c * 3 + r.o > 163 ? 28 : 38 : 48)) + r.s, o = c * 3 + r.o > 153 ? c * 3 + r.o > 163 ? 2 : 1 : 0 });
                var t = (q.o + q.s)
                    .TrimStart('0')
                    .Reverse();
                var x = t.First();
                q = t
                    .Skip(1)
                    .Aggregate(
                        new { s = x > 56 ? (x - 57).ToString() : (x - 47).ToString(), o = x > 56 ? 1 : 0 }, 
                        (r, c) => new { s = (char)(c - 48 + r.o + (c + r.o > 57 ? 38 : 48)) + r.s, o = c + r.o > 57 ? 1 : 0 });
                v = (q.o + q.s)
                    .TrimStart('0');
            }
            C.Write(v);
        }
    }
}

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