25
votes

Print all 12 verses of the popular holiday song.

By 12 verses I mean the repetition of each line as is sung in the song, ie

Verse One: On the first day of Christmas my true love gave to me a partridge in a pear tree.

Verse Two On the second day of Christmas my true love gave to me two turtle doves and a partridge in a pear tree.

...

Verse N: On the nth day of Christmas my true love gave to me (Verse N-1 without the first line) (line added in verse N)

5
  • I do not get it... a simple echo with the smallest verses will win... not really a code golf... Dec 20, 2008 at 15:51
  • A link to the 12 verses for non-Americans?
    – some
    Dec 20, 2008 at 16:08
  • @Daok - the verses accumulate, so there are about 90 lines - too much to echo.
    – fizzer
    Dec 20, 2008 at 16:13
  • Ok before your edit I thought you asked to show those 12 lines :P Dec 20, 2008 at 16:30
  • 2
    Some of us would prefer Hava Nagila code golf. ;)
    – Robert S.
    Dec 23, 2008 at 17:01

45 Answers 45

44
votes

Common Lisp:

(mapc #'princ
      (reverse (maplist #'(lambda(l)
         (format nil 
            "On the ~:R day of Christmas my true love gave to me~%~{~a~%~}~%" 
                (length l) l)) 
    '("twelve drummers drumming,"
      "eleven pipers piping,"
      "ten lords a-leaping,"
      "nine ladies dancing,"
      "eight maids a-milking,"
      "seven swans a-swimming,"
      "six geese a-laying,"
      "five gold rings,"
      "four calling birds,"
      "three french hens,"
      "two turtle doves, and"
      "a partridge in a pear tree."))))

Edit:

Above is 412 characters if you take out the whitespace.

This one:

(let ((g))
  (dotimes (i 12)
    (format t
        "On the ~:R day of Christmas my true love gave to me~%~{~R ~:*~
         ~[~;~;turtle doves and~;french hens,~;calling birds,~;gold rings,~
         ~;geese a-laying,~;swans a-swimming,~;maids a-milking,~
         ~;ladies dancing,~;lords a-leaping,~;pipers piping,~
         ~;drummers drumming,~]~%~}a partridge in a pear tree~2%"
        (1+ i) g)
    (push (+ i 2) g)))

is 344 characters if you take out whitespace and ~ quoted newlines in the format string:

(let((g))(dotimes(i 12)(format t"On the ~:R day of Christmas my true love gave to me~%~{~R ~:*~[~;~;turtle doves and~;french hens,~;calling birds,~;gold rings,~;geese a-laying,~;swans a-swimming,~;maids a-milking,~;ladies dancing,~;lords a-leaping,~;pipers piping,~;drummers drumming,~]~%~}a partridge in a pear tree~2%"(1+ i)g)(push(+ i 2)g)))

Edit:

It looks like the question has run its course, and the site is nagging me to accept an answer. As far as I can see, this one is the shortest. I'm a little afraid of what the site will do if I accept my own answer - probably award me a Narcissist or Masturbator badge.

You can't accept your own answers. Fair enough. I'll leave it open. Thanks to everyone who responded.

4
  • There will be a smart way to get rid of the cardinals with ~R, but it escapes me at the moment
    – fizzer
    Dec 20, 2008 at 16:37
  • You have a typo on day 8. "eigth" should be "eight". Dec 21, 2008 at 15:03
  • Since when does lisp come with a perl interpreter? Dec 23, 2008 at 2:29
  • its ok to accept your own answers, you just don't get reputation for it.
    – Jimmy
    Jan 16, 2009 at 19:20
37
votes

Using F#:

#light
open System.Net; open System.Text.RegularExpressions
printf "%s" ((new WebClient()).DownloadString("http://www.textfiles.com/holiday/12-bugs")
    |> (fun x -> (new Regex("Lines: \d+\s+([\s\S]+)--")).Match(x).Groups.[1].Value))

Twelth day outputs:

For the twelfth bug of Christmas, my manager said to me
     Tell them it's a feature
     Say it's not supported
     Change the documentation
     Blame it on the hardware
     Find a way around it
     Say they need an upgrade
     Reinstall the software
     Ask for a dump
     Run with the debugger
     Try to reproduce it
     Ask them how they did it and
     See if they can do it again.
4
  • 4
    I think that downloading the text might be stretching the rules :)
    – Dan Vinton
    Dec 20, 2008 at 18:12
  • I love the twelth bug of Christmas so much I've stuck it to the coffee machine. Dec 22, 2008 at 0:44
  • 3
    Try singing it to yourself, but make sure you're alone when you get to number five.
    – Mike B
    Jan 15, 2009 at 5:06
  • This is hysterical! Did you make it up or find it somewhere?
    – Dinah
    Mar 6, 2010 at 14:15
27
votes

Not mine, but interesting...

This is a well-known example from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obfuscated_code (author: James O. Coplien):

#include <stdio.h>
main(t,_,a)char *a;{return!0<t?t<3?main(-79,-13,a+main(-87,1-_,
main(-86,0,a+1)+a)):1,t<_?main(t+1,_,a):3,main(-94,-27+t,a)&&t==2?_<13?
main(2,_+1,"%s %d %d\n"):9:16:t<0?t<-72?main(_,t,
"@n'+,#'/*{}w+/w#cdnr/+,{}r/*de}+,/*{*+,/w{%+,/w#q#n+,/#{l,+,/n{n+,/+#n+,/#\
;#q#n+,/+k#;*+,/'r :'d*'3,}{w+K w'K:'+}e#';dq#'l \
q#'+d'K#!/+k#;q#'r}eKK#}w'r}eKK{nl]'/#;#q#n'){)#}w'){){nl]'/+#n';d}rw' i;# \
){nl]!/n{n#'; r{#w'r nc{nl]'/#{l,+'K {rw' iK{;[{nl]'/w#q#n'wk nw' \
iwk{KK{nl]!/w{%'l##w#' i; :{nl]'/*{q#'ld;r'}{nlwb!/*de}'c \
;;{nl'-{}rw]'/+,}##'*}#nc,',#nw]'/+kd'+e}+;#'rdq#w! nr'/ ') }+}{rl#'{n' ')# \
}'+}##(!!/")
:t<-50?_==*a?putchar(31[a]):main(-65,_,a+1):main((*a=='/')+t,_,a+1)
  :0<t?main(2,2,"%s"):*a=='/'||main(0,main(-61,*a,
"!ek;dc i@bK'(q)-[w]*%n+r3#l,{}:\nuwloca-O;m .vpbks,fxntdCeghiry"),a+1);}

"Although unintelligible at first glance, it is a legal C program that when compiled and run will generate the 12 verses of The 12 Days of Christmas. It contains all the strings required for the poem in an encoded form inlined in the code. The code iterates through the 12 days displaying what it needs to."

It won't win golf though, it is about 830 bytes.

3
  • 3
    @BoltBait: no, the peer review would be very short and very easy to commence, in my opinion ;-) Dec 22, 2008 at 22:33
  • I use to give this code out to the programmers on my team as a 'Christmas present' - yes, that's the kind of guy I am. Actually the author is Ian Phillips (ioccc.org/years.html#1988_phillipps) who wrote it as a winning entry in an obfuscated code contest. James Coplien challenged Tom Ball to reverse engineer it in the late 90's. See research.microsoft.com/en-us/um/people/tball/papers/XmasGift Sep 14, 2009 at 15:39
  • 3
    The recursive use of main is somehow cool. Never seen that before. Nov 29, 2009 at 3:46
15
votes
class TrueLove: ITrueLove 
{
  List<IPresent> give(int day) 
  {
    List<IPresent> lovesLabourLost = new List<IPresent>();

    //if this was C++ could you replace this with a Figgy Duff Device?
    for (int i=1; i<=day; i++)
    {
      if(day > 1 && i<=2) {lovesLabourLost .Add(new TurtleDove());}
      if(day > 2 && i<=3) {lovesLabourLost .Add(new FrenchHen());}
      if(day > 3 && i<=4) {lovesLabourLost .Add(new CallingBird());}
      if(day > 4 && i<=5) {lovesLabourLost .Add(new GOLDRING());}
      if(day > 5 && i<=6) {lovesLabourLost .Add(new LayingGeese());}
      if(day > 6 && i<=7) {lovesLabourLost .Add(new SwimmingSwan());}
      if(day > 7 && i<=8) {lovesLabourLost .Add(new MilikingMaid());}
      if(day > 8 && i<=9) {lovesLabourLost .Add(new DancingLady());}
      if(day > 9 && i<=10) {lovesLabourLost .Add(new LeapingLord());}
      if(day > 10 && i<=11) {lovesLabourLost .Add(new PipingPiper());}
      if(day > 11 && i<=12) {lovesLabourLost .Add(new DrummingDrummer());}
    }

    return lovesLabourLost && (new PartridgeInPearTree());
  }
}

static class Me: IDemanding
{
  static ITrueLove myTrueLove = new TrueLove();

  static List<IPresent> myPresents = new List<IPresent>();

  static void demandPresents()
  {
    for (int i=1; i<=daysOfChristmas; i++)
    {
      List<IPresent> MOAR = myTrueLove.give(i);

      foreach (IPresent another in MOAR)
      {
        myPresents.Add(another);
      }
    }
  }
}

const int daysOfChristmas = 12;

Me.demandPresents();
6
  • You should say what language this is, I can only assume it is Java. Dec 20, 2008 at 22:35
  • 5
    Either it's a joke about C# or someone doesn't know how to play code golf :)
    – Karl
    Dec 21, 2008 at 16:23
  • Yeah it's kind of a meta-joke, obviously a terrible one - move along nothing to see here...
    – annakata
    Dec 21, 2008 at 22:01
  • 2
    i have up voted as I got the joke straight away looking an assuming the female gender and (lost labours love) likes the Me.demandPresents()
    – littlegeek
    Dec 22, 2008 at 14:42
  • I was thinking of using and IDisposable TrueLove, but it would cost the myTrueLove then. No takers for the figgy duff device either :P
    – annakata
    Dec 22, 2008 at 19:06
15
votes

In the D programming language, using switch statement fall-through:

import std.stdio;

void main() {
    for(uint i = 1; i < 13; i++) {
        writeln("On the ", i, " day of Christmas, my true love gave to me:");
        switch(i) {
            case 12:
                writeln("twelve drummers drumming,");
            case 11:
                writeln("eleven pipers piping,");
            case 10:
                writeln("ten lords a-leaping,");
            case 9:
                writeln("nine ladies dancing,");
            case 8:
                writeln("eight maids a-milking,");
            case 7:
                writeln("seven swans a-swimming,");
            case 6:
                writeln("six geese a-laying,");
            case 5:
                writeln("five gold rings,");
            case 4:
                writeln("four calling birds,");
            case 3:
                writeln("three french hens,");
            case 2:
                writeln("two turtle doves, and");
            case 1:
                writeln("a partridge in a pear tree.\n");
        }
    }
}
1
  • Duff's device! (15char limit).
    – LiraNuna
    Sep 12, 2009 at 9:31
14
votes

Bash:

wget -qO- http://tinyurl.com/a3xw8b

I used the output of frizzer.myopenid.com's CLisp implementation as a start.

1
  • @EricSchaefer, Odd, that doesn't work with my version of wget. I'll edit it anyway...
    – strager
    Dec 21, 2008 at 19:43
14
votes

In C++ you'd

std::cout << boost::12_days_of_christmas;
3
  • 1
    you forgot to #include <boost/golfing_for_cats.h>
    – metao
    Feb 11, 2009 at 2:03
  • 4
    I hate to nitpick such a lovely solution, but I'm fairly sure C++ identifiers cannot begin with a digit. Jul 8, 2009 at 5:10
  • @TokenMacGuy I've been expecting that answer since I hit the post button :-) Jul 8, 2009 at 12:23
11
votes

C#, 421 Characters

var t="";for(int i=0;i++<12;)Console.Write("On the {0}{1} day of Christmas, my true love gave to me: {2}\n",i,i<2?"st":i<3?"nd":i<4?"rd":"th",t="|a partridge in a pear tree.|two turtle doves, and |three french hens,|four calling birds,|five gold rings|six geese a-lay@seven swans a-swimm@eight maids a-milk@nine ladies danc@ten lords a-leap@eleven pipers pip@twelve drummers drumm@".Replace("@","ing,|").Split('|')[i]+t);

Spaced out version:

var t="";

for(int i = 0; i++ < 12;)
    Console.Write("On the {0}{1} day of Christmas, my true love gave to me: {2}\n",
            i,
            i < 2 ? "st" : i < 3 ? "nd" : i < 4 ? "rd" : "th",
            t="|a partridge in a pear tree.
               |two turtle doves, and 
               |three french hens,
               |four calling birds,
               |five gold rings
               |six geese a-lay
               @seven swans a-swimm
               @eight maids a-milk
               @nine ladies danc
               @ten lords a-leap
               @eleven pipers pip
               @twelve drummers drumm@"
            .Replace("@","ing,|")
            .Split('|')[i]+t);
2
  • Correct me if I'm wrong, but this looks as though it would print out "five golden ring". Where's the 's'???
    – RobH
    Dec 23, 2008 at 3:39
  • You're absolutely correct. A small mistake by Martin Brown, who came up with a clever idea to use .Replace("@","ing,|"). Fixed. Jan 16, 2009 at 19:21
9
votes

PHP: 375 characters

$v=split(":",":a partridge in a pear tree.\n:two turtle doves, and:three french hens:four calling birds:five gold rings:six geese a-lay:seven swans a-swimm:eigth maids a-milk:nine ladies danc:ten lords a-leap:eleven pipers pip:twelve drummers drumm");while($i<12){?>On the <?=date(jS,$i*86400)," day of Christmas my true love gave to me",$s=", ".$v[++$i].($i>5?'ing':'').$s;}

Edit: updated runnable version (377) characters

<?$v=split(":",":a partridge in a pear tree.\n:two turtle doves, and:three french hens:four calling birds:five gold rings:six geese a-lay:seven swans a-swimm:eigth maids a-milk:nine ladies danc:ten lords a-leap:eleven pipers pip:twelve drummers drumm");while($i<12){?>On the <?=date(jS,$i*86400)," day of Christmas my true love gave to me",$s=", ".$v[++$i].($i>5?'ing':'').$s;}
2
  • This looks to be winning so far. One question: how do I run it?
    – fizzer
    Dec 22, 2008 at 11:08
  • See the edit, I've made an even smaller version that is below 380 characters (377 for the runnable version). Simply save as a .php file and run in a webserver. When submitting the 380 (previous) version, I omitted <? because all other PHP submissions seem to do that as well. Dec 22, 2008 at 22:31
7
votes

Linq to objects, in 580 characters (without whitespace)

Console.WriteLine(Enumerable.Range(1, 13).SelectMany(day =>
    Enumerable.Repeat("\nOn the " + day + 
                      (day == 1 ? "st" : 
                      (day == 2 ? "nd" : 
                      (day == 3 ? "rd" : 
                      "th"))) + " day of Christmas my true love gave to me ", 1)
              .Concat((new []
                {
                    "twelve drummers drumming,",
                    "eleven pipers piping,",
                    "ten lords a-leaping,",
                    "nine ladies dancing,",
                    "eight maids a-milking,",
                    "seven swans a-swimming,",
                    "six geese a-laying,",
                    "five gold rings,",
                    "four calling birds,",
                    "three french hens,",
                    "two turtle doves, and",
                    "a partridge in a pear tree."
                }).Reverse().Take(day).Reverse()))
              .Aggregate((a, b) => a + "\n" + b));
2
  • Kinda sad that my joke answer is higher rated than this, which I really worked on! Dec 21, 2008 at 18:30
  • Okay, situation reversed. Now I'm annoyed that no one likes my joke version. This is the worst Christmas ever! Dec 23, 2008 at 10:38
7
votes

VB.Net - 530 Chars (no spaces), 634 (spaces)

Module ChristmasSong
    Sub Main()
        Dim i&, f$ : Dim d$() = {"first", "second", "third", "fourth", "fifth", "sixth", "seventh", "eighth", "ninth", "tenth", "eleventh", "twelfth"}, g$() = {"a partridge in a pear tree.", "two turtle doves, and ", "three french hens, ", "four calling birds, ", "five gold rings, ", "six geese a-laying, ", "seven swans a-swimming, ", "eigth maids a-milking, ", "nine ladies dancing, ", "ten lords a-leaping, ", "eleven pipers piping, ", "twelve drummers drumming, "}
        For i = 0 To 11 : f = g(i) & f : Console.WriteLine("On the {0} day of Christmas, my true love gave to me {1}", d(i), f) : Next
    End Sub
End Module
3
  • You could cut this down a bit. =) * Don't waste characters on meaningful variable names in code golf when X,Y, and Z will do fine. * Don't initialize your string, rely on the compiler default. At least use "" instead of string.empty Of course all of these are horrible advice normally.
    – JohnFx
    Jan 16, 2009 at 20:59
  • You could also combine the two arrays into a single array and just add an offset to get the gifts and save yourself at least these characters "Dim gifts() {}
    – JohnFx
    Jan 16, 2009 at 21:08
  • I could also get rid of j, I don't use it anywhere. I noticed that a log time a go and just let is slide.
    – jrcs3
    Jan 16, 2009 at 22:01
6
votes

Perl.

use Lingua::EN::Numbers qw(num2en_ordinal);
print 'On the ', num2en_ordinal($_+1),' day of Christmas my true love gave to me, ', reverse(( split /\|/, "a partridge in a pear tree.\n|two turtle doves, and |three french hens, |four calling birds, |five gold rings, |six geese a-laying, |seven swans a-swimming, |eight maids a-milking, |nine ladies dancing, |ten lords a leaping, |eleven pipers piping, |twelve drummers drumming, ")[ 0 .. $_ ]) for 0 .. 11;

( 459 Chars )

I wanted to make it a bit nicer and expressive, but this is a golf challenge.

This style violates proper coding standards somewhat. But that's golf for you.

Lingua::EN::Number

Here's the less compact version with less sneaky tricks.

use Lingua::EN::Numbers qw(num2en_ordinal);
my @gifts = (
    'a partridge in a pear tree.',
    'two turtle doves, and ',
    'three french hens, ',
    'four calling birds, ',
    'five gold rings, ',
    'six geese a-laying, ',
    'seven swans a-swimming, ',
    'eight maids a-milking, ',
    'nine ladies dancing, ',
    'ten lords a leaping, ',
    'eleven pipers piping, ',
    'twelve drummers drumming, '
);
for my $verse_id ( 0 .. $#gifts ) {
    printf 'On the %s day of Christmas my true love gave to me, ', num2en_ordinal($verse_id +1);
    print reverse @verse[ 0 .. $verse_id ];
    print "\n";
}
1
  • Couldn't you make it from 1 .. 12 instead of 0 .. 11, and then not have to do $_ + 1? You'd also have to change 0 .. $_ to 1 .. $_, but you would shave off 2 characters, and this is golf.
    – Chris Lutz
    Feb 28, 2009 at 7:33
6
votes
for d in range(12):print"On the %s day of Christmas, my true love gave to me\n\t%s\n"%("first|second|third|fourth|fifth|sixth|seventh|eighth|ninth|tenth|eleventh|twelfth".split("|")[d],"\n\t".join("twelve drummers drumming|eleven pipers piping|ten lords a-leaping|nine ladies dancing|eight maids a-milking|seven swans a-swimming|six geese a-laying|five gold rings|four calling birds|three french hens|two turtle doves and|a partridge in a pear tree.".split("|")[11-d:]))

Python, 422 chars

0
6
votes

LilyPond, 340 characters (shorter than Common Lisp)

'Tis the season! (And rather fitting, given that LilyPond is primarily used to typeset music... One can easily adapt this code to produce sheet music for the song in addition to just the lyrics.)

Adapted from fizzer's solution.

#(map(lambda(x)(format #t"On the ~:R day of Christmas my true love gave to me~{ ~R~:*~[~;~;turtle doves and~;French hens,~;calling birds,~;gold rings,~;geese a-laying,~;swans a-swimming,~;maids a-milking,~;ladies dancing,~;lords a-leaping,~;pipers piping,~;drummers drumming,~]~} a partridge in a pear tree.
"x(iota(1- x)x -1)))(iota 12 1))

Usage: $ lilypond thisfile.ly

This version, in 341 characters, matches fizzer's output exactly, but is three bytes shorter:

#(map(lambda(x)(format #t"On the ~:R day of Christmas my true love gave to me~{
~R ~:*~[~;~;turtle doves and~;french hens,~;calling birds,~;gold rings,~;geese a-laying,~;swans a-swimming,~;maids a-milking,~;ladies dancing,~;lords a-leaping,~;pipers piping,~;drummers drumming,~]~}
a partridge in a pear tree

"x(iota(1- x)x -1)))(iota 12 1))
5
votes

Ruby. I think this is pretty concise (the hard work is all on one line):

days = %w{First Second Third Fourth Fifth Sixth Seventh Eighth Ninth Tenth Eleventh Twelfth}

presents = [
    "twelve drummers drumming",
    "eleven pipers piping",
    "ten lords a leaping",
    "nine ladies dancing",
    "eight maids a-milking",
    "seven swans a-swimming",
    "six geese a-laying",
    "five gold rings",
    "four calling birds",
    "three french hens",
    "two turtle doves, and",
    "a partridge in a pear tree"
    ]

0.upto(11) { |i| 
    puts "On the #{days[i]} of Christmas my true love gave to me " + presents.last(i+1).join(", ")
}
2
  • It looks as though this one will generate a comma after the "and"--where none should exist.
    – RobH
    Dec 23, 2008 at 3:44
  • Yes it does. I like to think of that as my own personal interpretation of the line, and where I'd put in a caesura for emphasis. Dec 23, 2008 at 10:09
4
votes

Using Template Toolkit

perl -MTemplate -e 'Template->new()->process("12dayxmas.tt")'

12dayxmas.tt

[%
  list = [
    { day => 'first',    item => 'A partridge in a pear tree.'},
    { day => 'second',   item => 'Two turtle doves, and '},
    { day => 'third',    item => 'Three french hens, '},
    { day => 'fourth',   item => 'Four calling birds, '},
    { day => 'fifth',    item => 'Five gold rings, '},
    { day => 'sixth',    item => 'Six geese a-laying, '},
    { day => 'seventh',  item => 'Seven swans a-swimming, '},
    { day => 'eighth',   item => 'Eight maids a-milking, '},
    { day => 'nineth',   item => 'Nine ladies dancing, '},
    { day => 'tenth',    item => 'Ten lords a-leaping, '},
    { day => 'eleventh', item => 'Eleven pipers piping, '},
    { day => 'twelfth',  item => 'Twelve drummers drumming, '}
  ];
-%]
[%
  FOREACH list;
  present = item _ present;
-%]
On the [% day %] day of Christmas my true love gave me [% present %]

[% END %]
4
votes

Here's a PHP solution:

$day = Array('first','second','third','fourth','fifth','sixth','seventh',
             'eighth','ninth','tenth','eleventh','twelfth');
$gifts = Array('Twelve drummers drumming,',
               'Eleven pipers piping,',
               'Ten lords a-leaping,',
               'Nine ladies dancing,',
               'Eight maids a-milking,',
               'Seven swans a-swimming,',
               'Six geese a-laying,',
               'FIVE GOLDEN RINGS,',
               'Four calling birds,',
               'Three French hens,',
               'Two turtle doves, and',
               'A partridge in a pear tree');

for ($i = 0; $i < 12; ++$i) {
    printf("On the $day[$i] of Christmas my true love gave to me\n" . 
         implode("\n", array_slice($gifts,-($i+1))) . "\n\n");
}
4
votes
h

In my made-up language where the command h prints "Hello, World!". Oh wait, you mean that's not what we're talking about?

4
votes

Python (71+467 including whitespaces)

import sys
sys.path += ["TDOC.zip"]
import TDOC
TDOC.print_verse()

Where TDOC.zip (467 bytes) contains TDOC.py:

def print_verse(presents="""\
twelve drummers drumming,
eleven pipers piping,
ten lords a-leaping,
nine ladies dancing,
eigth maids a-milking,
seven swans a-swimming,
six geese a-laying,
five gold rings,
four calling birds,
three french hens,
two turtle doves, and
a partridge in a pear tree.""".split("\n")):
    if presents: 
        print_verse(presents[1:])

        number = presents[0].split(" ", 1)[0]
        print("On the %s day of Christmas my true love gave to me %s" % (
            dict(a="first", two="second", three="third", five="fifth").get(number, number+"th"),
            " ".join(presents)))
3
votes

C#:

string[] s = new string[]{
    "a partridge in a pear tree.",
    "two turtle doves, and ",
    "three french hens, ",
    "four calling birds, ",
    "five gold rings, ",
    "six geese a-laying, ",
    "seven swans a-swimming, ",
    "eight maids a-milking, ",
    "nine ladies dancing, ",
    "ten lords a-leaping, ",
    "eleven pipers piping, ",
    "twelve drummers drumming, "
    };
string t = "";
for (int x = 0; x < s.Length; x++) {
    t = s[x] + t;
    Console.Write("On the " 
      + (x + 1).ToString() 
      + (x == 0 ? "st" : (x == 1 ? "nd" : (x == 2 ? "rd" : "th"))) 
      + " day of christmas, my true love gave to me: " + t + "\n");
}

574 chars, not counting indenting. Adds some extra chars in getting the number extensions right. Can probably be improved on quite a bit, though.

3
votes

I can't beat the Lisp version, but it's still fun.

The Delphi version:

procedure TheTwelfDaysOfChristmas(const AVerse: TStrings);
const 
  cPresentList : array[1..12] of string = (
    'a partridge in a pear tree',
    'two turtle doves, and ',
    'three french hens, ',
    'four calling birds, ',
    'five gold rings, ',
    'six geese a-laying, ',
    'seven swans a-swimming, ',
    'eigth maids a-milking, ',
    'nine ladies dancing, ',
    'ten lords a-leaping, ',
    'eleven pipers piping, ',
    'twelve drummers drumming, '
  );
  cTime : array[1..12] of string = (
    'first',
    'second',
    'third',
    'fourth',
    'fifth',
    'sixth',
    'seventh',
    'eighth',
    'nineth',
    'tenth',
    'eleventh',
    'twelfth'
  );
var
  present : string;
  i       : Integer;

begin
  present := '';
  for i := 1 to 12 do begin
    present := cPresentList[i] + present;
    AVerse.Add(Format('On the %s day of Christmas my true love gave me %s.',
      [cTime[i], present]));
  end;
end;

By the way, for all of you, Happy holidays and great programming in 2009.

3
votes

PHP

$g = array("a partridge in a pear tree.\n",
    "two turtle doves, and",
"three french hens,",
"four calling birds,",
"five gold rings,",
"six geese a-laying,",
"seven swans a-swimming,",
"eight maids a-milking,",
"nine ladies dancing,",
"ten lords a-leaping,",
"eleven pipers piping,",
"twelve drummers drumming,"
);
$d = array("first", "second", "third", "fourth", "fifth", "sixth",
 "seventh", "eighth", "nineth", "tenth", "eleventh", "twelfth");
foreach($d as $i=>$v){
    echo "On the $v day of Christmas my true love gave to me";
    for($j=$i;$j>=0;$j--) echo " ",$g[$j];
}
3
votes

26 bytes!..

As the URL implies, it may be considered.. cheating:

http://github.com/dbr/so_scripts/tree/master/golf_tdoc/cheating.bash

3
votes

Ruby

a=["and a partridge in a pear tree","turtle doves","French hens","calling birds","golden rings","geese a-laying","swans a-swimming","maids a-milking","ladies dancing","lords a-leaping","pipers piping","drummers drumming"]     
b=["","two","three","four","five","six","seven","eight","nine","ten","eleven","twelve"]
c=["first","second","third","fourth","fifth","sixth","seventh","eighth","nineth","tenth","eleventh","twelfth"]
0.upto(11){|d|puts "On the "+c[d]+" day of Christmas, my true love gave to me:\n"+b[d]+" "+a[d]+",";(d-1).downto(0){|e| f=", ";f = "." if e==0;puts b[e]+" "+a[e]+f;}}

Total: 593bytes using UNIX LF.

3
votes

C#

     string[] days = new string[] {"First", 
    "Second", "Third", "Fourth", "Fifth", "Sixth", 
    "Seventh", "Eighth", "Ninth", "Tenth", "Eleventh", "Twelfth"};

    string[] presents = new string[] {"a partridge in a pear tree.",
    "two turtle doves, and",
    "three french hens,", 
    "four calling birds,", 
    "five gold rings,", 
    "six geese a-laying,", 
    "seven swans a-swimming,", 
    "eigth maids a-milking,", 
    "nine ladies dancing,", 
    "ten lords a-leaping,", 
    "eleven pipers piping,", 
    "twelve drummers drumming,"};

     int cnt =0;
     foreach (string s in presents)
     {
           Console.WriteLine(string.Format("On the {0} day of Christmas my true love gave to me", days[cnt++]));
           foreach (string p in presents.Take(cnt).Reverse())
                Console.WriteLine(p);
           Console.WriteLine(System.Environment.NewLine);
     }
5
  • Wah! My C# version beats this by 382 characters, but I don't have any upvotes ... :( But this is nicer b/c it uses the spelled out ordinals, and I like the .Take.Reverse trick.
    – Ian Varley
    Dec 20, 2008 at 18:30
  • Ian, some people have edited your version and it is now beats this by more that 382 characters. Dec 22, 2008 at 0:30
  • I could take out the days array as well as the spacing and that would reduce the the count by about 200....
    – cgreeno
    Dec 22, 2008 at 18:11
  • why cnt++; instead of ++cnt in the Take()?
    – Svish
    Mar 22, 2009 at 1:02
  • I need to put it into the days[cnt++] vs the take, but your point is still valid.
    – cgreeno
    Jun 10, 2010 at 17:23
2
votes

Here's a Haskell version:

import Data.List
main=putStrLn$unlines$map(uncurry(\n->(++)("On the "++show n++case n of{1->"st";2->"nd";3->"rd";_->"th"}++" day of Christmas, my true love gave to me: ")))$zip[1..]$(\a->(drop 4$head a):tail a)$ map(intercalate", ".reverse)$tail$inits["and a partridge in a pair tree","two turtle doves","three french hens","four calling birds","five gold rings","six geese a-laying","seven swans a-swimming","eight maids a milking","nine ladies dancing","ten lords a-leaping","eleven pipers piping","twelve drummers drumming"]

It comes in at 527 characters. Since without good spacing it's rather incomprehensible, here's a more spread-out version:

import Data.List
main = putStrLn
       $ unlines
       $ map (uncurry (\n -> (++) ("On the " ++ show n ++ case n of { 1 -> "st"; 2 -> "nd"; 3 -> "rd"; _ -> "th"} ++ " day of Christmas, my true love gave to me: ")))
       $ zip [1..]
       $ (\a -> (drop 4 $ head a) : tail a)
       $ tail
       $ map (intercalate ", " . reverse)
             (inits ["and a partridge in a pair tree", "two turtle doves", "three french hens", "four calling birds", "five gold rings", "six geese a-laying", "seven swans a-swimming", "eight maids a milking", "nine ladies dancing", "ten lords a-leaping", "eleven pipers piping", "twelve drummers drumming"])
2
votes

Objective-C / Cocoa

NSArray *days = [NSArray arrayWithObjects:@"first", @"second", @"third", @"forth", 
                    @"fifth", @"six", @"seventh", @"eigth", 
                    @"ninth", @"tenth", @"eleventh", @"twelth", nil];

NSArray *gifts = [NSArray arrayWithObjects:
                    @"a partridge in a pear tree.\n\n",
                    @"two turtle doves, and\n",
                    @"three french hens,\n",
                    @"four calling birds,\n",                      
                    @"five gold rings,\n",
                    @"six geese a-laying,\n",
                    @"seven swans a-swimming,\n",
                    @"eigth maids a-milking,\n",                     
                    @"nine ladies dancing,\n",
                    @"ten lords a-leaping,\n",
                    @"eleven pipers piping,\n",    
                    @"twelve drummers drumming,\n",
                    nil];

NSMutableString *aggregator = [NSMutableString string];
for(int i = 0; i < 12; i++) {
    [aggregator insertString:[gifts objectAtIndex:i] atIndex:0];
    printf("on the %s day of xmas, my true love gave to me %s", [[days objectAtIndex:i] UTF8String], [aggregator UTF8String]);
}
2
votes

Another C#

var l="a partridge in a pear tree.|two turtle doves, and|three french hens,|four calling birds,|five gold rings,|six geese a-laying,|seven swans a-swimming,|eight maids a-milking,|nine ladies dancing,|ten lords a-leaping,|eleven pipers piping,|twelve drummers drumming,".Split('|');

for (int i = 1; i < 13; i++)
    Console.Write(
        "On the {0}{2} day of christmas\rmy true love gave to me \r{1}\r\r", 
            i, 
            string.Join("\r", l.Take(i).Reverse().ToArray()), 
            (i==1?"st":i==2?"nd":i==3?"rd":"th"));

Borrowed heavily from previous answers (hey, code reuse) while adding extra savings.

481 characters once you take out unnecessary whitespace:

var l="a partridge in a pear tree.|two turtle doves, and|three french hens,|four calling birds,|five gold rings,|six geese a-laying,|seven swans a-swimming,|eight maids a-milking,|nine ladies dancing,|ten lords a-leaping,|eleven pipers piping,|twelve drummers drumming,".Split('|');for(int i=1;i<13;i++)Console.Write("On the {0}{2} day of christmas, my true love gave to me \r{1}\r\r",i,String.Join("\r",l.Take(i).Reverse().ToArray()),(i==1?"st":i==2?"nd":i==3?"rd":"th")); 
1
  • lines can be written as a one-letter variable, of course. =]
    – strager
    Dec 21, 2008 at 4:29
2
votes

How about one line! This is in C#.

Xmas(){Console.WriteLine("On the first day of Christmas,\r\nmy true love sent to me\r\nA partridge in a pear tree.\r\n\r\nOn the second day of Christmas,\r\nmy true love sent to me\r\nTwo turtle doves,\r\nAnd a partridge in a pear tree.\r\n\r\nOn the third day of Christmas,\r\nmy true love sent to me\r\nThree French hens,\r\nTwo turtle doves,\r\nAnd a partridge in a pear tree.\r\n\r\nOn the fourth day of Christmas,\r\nmy true love sent to me\r\nFour calling birds,\r\nThree French hens,\r\nTwo turtle doves,\r\nAnd a partridge in a pear tree.\r\n\r\nOn the fifth day of Christmas,\r\nmy true love sent to me\r\nFive golden rings,\r\nFour calling birds,\r\nThree French hens,\r\nTwo turtle doves,\r\nAnd a partridge in a pear tree.\r\n\r\nOn the sixth day of Christmas,\r\nmy true love sent to me\r\nSix geese a-laying,\r\nFive golden rings,\r\nFour calling birds,\r\nThree French hens,\r\nTwo turtle doves,\r\nAnd a partridge in a pear tree.\r\n\r\nOn the seventh day of Christmas,\r\nmy true love sent to me\r\nSeven swans a-swimming,\r\nSix geese a-laying,\r\nFive golden rings,\r\nFour calling birds,\r\nThree French hens,\r\nTwo turtle doves,\r\nAnd a partridge in a pear tree.\r\n\r\nOn the eighth day of Christmas,\r\nmy true, love sent to me\r\nEight maids a-milking,\r\nSeven swans a-swimming,\r\nSix geese a-laying,\r\nFive golden rings,\r\nFour calling birds,\r\nThree French hens,\r\nTwo turtle doves,\r\nAnd a partridge in a pear tree.\r\n\r\nOn the ninth day of Christmas,\r\nmy true love sent to me\r\nNine ladies dancing,\r\nEight maids a-milking,\r\nSeven swans a-swimming,\r\nSix geese a-laying,\r\nFive golden rings,\r\nFour calling birds,\r\nThree French hens,\r\nTwo turtle doves,\r\nAnd a partridge in a pear tree.\r\n\r\nOn the tenth day of Christmas,\r\nmy true love sent to me\r\nTen lords a-leaping,\r\nNine ladies dancing,\r\nEight maids a-milking,\r\nSeven swans a-swimming,\r\nSix geese a-laying,\r\nfive golden rings,\r\nFour calling birds,\r\nThree French hens,\r\nTwo turtle doves,\r\nAnd a partridge in a pear tree.\r\n\r\nOn the eleventh day of Christmas,\r\nmy true love sent to me\r\nEleven pipers piping,\r\nTen lords a-leaping,\r\nNine ladies dancing,\r\nEight maids a-milking,\r\nSeven swans a-swimming,\r\nSix geese a-laying\r\nFive golden rings,\r\nFour calling birds,\r\nThree French hens,\r\nTwo turtle doves,\r\nAnd a partridge in a pear tree.\r\n\r\nOn the twelfth day of Christmas,\r\nmy true love sent to me\r\nTwelve drummers drumming,\r\nEleven pipers piping,\r\nTen lords a-leaping,\r\nNine ladies dancing,\r\nEight maids a-milking,\r\nSeven swans a-swimming,\r\nSix geese a-laying,\r\nFive golden rings,\r\nFour calling birds,\r\nThree French hens,\r\nTwo turtle doves,\r\nAnd a partridge in a pear tree!");}
0
2
votes

Here's an erlang version (~586 chars):

-module (xmas).
-export ([xmas/0]).
xmas() ->
    W = ["twelve drummers drumming, ",
    "eleven pipers piping, ",
    "ten lords a-leaping, ",
    "nine ladies dancing, ",
    "eight maids a-milking, ",
    "seven swans a-swimming, ",
    "six geese a-laying, ",
    "five gold rings, ",
    "four calling birds, ",
    "three french hens, ",
    "two turtle doves, and ",
    "a partridge in a pear tree."],
    io:format(lists:foldl(
    fun(X,Acc) -> Acc ++ X ++ "~n" end, "",
    ["On the " ++ day_str(Q) ++ 
    " day of Christmas, my true love gave me " ++ 
    lists:foldl(
        fun(X,Acc)-> Acc++X end,
        "", lists:nthtail(12-Q,W)) || 
        Q <- lists:seq(1,12)]),[]).
day_str(Q) ->
    case Q of
        1 -> "1st";
        2 -> "2nd";
        3 -> "3rd";
        N -> erlang:integer_to_list(N,10) ++ "th"
    end.

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