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For a school project I have to create a wordle in Python. The program I created compares the letters of the target word and the guessed word. An example: the target word is "compulsory" and the guessed word is "submission". The output should be "-O-O--X-O-".

"X" meaning the letter in the guessed word is also in the target word and is at the same spot. "O" meaning the letter in the guessed word is also in the target word but isn't at the same spot. "-" means that it's the wrong letter.

But I can't seem to find a way to cope with duplicate letters. For example, if the target word is "teethe" and the guessed word is "health" it should give me the output: "OX--O-". Though my program returns the output: "OX--OO".

My code:

    def compare(guess, target):
        output = ""
        for i in range(target.__len__()):
            if guess[i] == target[i]:
                output = output + "X"
            elif guess[i] in target:
                 output = output + "O"
            else:
                output = output + "-"
        return output
    print(compare("health", "teethe")) 

I hope I provided enough information for you to understand my question/problem.

Thank you in advance for your help!

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4 Answers 4

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This took me a while to solve, but I got it I think.

Here's the solution the way I implemented it:

def compare(guess: str, target: str):
    output = ["-"] * len(target)

    for index, (guess_letter, target_letter) in enumerate(zip(guess, target)):
        if guess_letter == target_letter:
            output[index] = "X"
            target = target.replace(guess_letter, "-", 1)
    
    for index, (guess_letter, target_letter) in enumerate(zip(guess, target)):
        if guess_letter in target and output[index] == "-":
            output[index] = "O"
            target = target.replace(guess_letter, "-", 1)

    return ''.join(output)


print(compare('health', 'teethe'))
print(compare('submission', 'compulsory'))

Here's an identical solution that uses simpler (but less "Pythonic") tools:

def compare(guess, target):
    length = len(target)
    output = ["-"] * length

    for index in range(length):
        if guess[index] == target[index]:
            output[index] = "X"
            target = target.replace(guess[index], "-", 1)

    for index in range(length):
        if guess[index] in target and output[index] == "-":
            output[index] = "O"
            target = target.replace(guess[index], "-", 1)

    return ''.join(output)


print(compare('health', 'teethe'))
print(compare('submission', 'compulsory'))

Output:

OX--O-
-O-O--X-O-

Here are my key techniques:

  • Create the output string first, so that we have a way to check whether or not a given spot has already been marked with an 'X'. I'm initially maintaining this as a list, then converting it to a string when returning.
  • If we "use up" a letter in the target string, we "disable" it by setting it to a '-'.
  • Check for all the exact matches (i.e., something that results in an 'X') first.
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eccentricOrange - thanks for the Code Help. I was able to utilize the Python code and convert it to Visual Basic. So for those that need a VB version here's the code I came up with.

Function Compare(Guess As String, Target as String) As String
    Dim Output As String = "-----"

    'Match all of the Exact Match Characters first
    For i = 1 To 5
        If Guess.Substring(i - 1, 1) = Target.Substring(i - 1, 1) Then
            Output = Output.Remove(i - 1, 1).Insert(i - 1, "X")
            Target = Target.Remove(i - 1, 1).Insert(i - 1, "-")
        End If
    Next

    'Next Match Characters in the word but in the wrong spot
    For i = 1 To 5
        For j = 1 To 5
            If (Guess.Substring(j - 1, 1) = Target.Substring(i - 1, 1)) And Output.Substring(j - 1, 1) = "-" Then
                Output = Output.Remove(j - 1, 1).Insert(j - 1, "O")
                Target = Target.Remove(i - 1, 1).Insert(i - 1, "-")
            End If
        Next
    Next
    Compare = Output
End Function  
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It is probably not the most beautiful way to solve it. But one way you could to, it is to save the letter that are in the target an extra string, so you can "remember" them. After that you can add the the string into your elif, if the guess letter is not in the array, it adds an "O", if it is, the else will be computed and "-" will be added. This should process your wished out come. Hope that helped

def compare(guess, target):
  output = ""
  isGuessInTarget = ""
  for i in range(target.__len__()):
     if guess[i] == target[i]:
       output = output + "X"
     elif (guess[i] in target) and not (guess[i] in isGuessInTarget):
       output = output + "O"
       isGuessInTarget = isGuessInTarget + guess[i]
     else:
      output = output + "-"
  return output
print(compare("health", "teethe")) 
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  • This is not correct. print(compare("eeeeee", "teethe")) yields OXX--X instead of -XX--X. Oct 24, 2022 at 22:20
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Here is a compact solution:

def compare(guess, target):
    output = ["X" if target[i]==guess[i] else "-" for i in range(len(guess))]
    for tLetter in [letter for (k,letter) in enumerate(target) \
                    if letter != guess[k]]: 
       idx = next((j for (j,gLetter) in enumerate(guess) if gLetter==tLetter\
                      and output[j]=="-"),None)
       if idx != None:
            output[idx]="O"
    return "".join(output)

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