04. Encoding the Board
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Now, in order to implement an agent, let's start by coding the board in Python. Then, we'll code the necessary functions to solve the Sudoku. We'll record the puzzles in two ways — as a string
and as a dictionary
.
The string will consist of a concatenation of all the readings of the digits in the rows, taking the rows from top to bottom. If the puzzle is not solved, we can use a .
as a placeholder for an empty box.
For example, the unsolved puzzle at the above left will be written as:
..3.2.6..9..3.5..1..18.64....81.29..7.......8..67.82....26.95..8..2.3..9..5.1.3..
And the solved puzzle at the above right, will be recorded as:
483921657967345821251876493548132976729564138136798245372689514814253769695417382
We'll implement the dictionary as follows. The keys will be strings corresponding to the boxes — namely, 'A1'
, 'A2'
, …, 'I9'
. The values will either be the digit in each box (if there is one) or a '.'
(if not).
So, let's get started. First, we'll record rows and columns as strings.
rows = 'ABCDEFGHI'
cols = '123456789'
We'll start by writing a helper function, cross(a, b)
, which, given two strings — a
and b
— will return the list formed by all the possible concatenations of a letter s
in string a
with a letter t
in string b
.
So cross('abc', 'def')
will return ['ad', 'ae', 'af', 'bd', 'be', 'bf', 'cd', 'ce', 'cf']
.
def cross(a, b):
return [s+t for s in a for t in b]
Now, to create the labels of the boxes:
boxes = cross(rows, cols)
boxes =
['A1', 'A2', 'A3', 'A4', 'A5', 'A6', 'A7', 'A8', 'A9',
'B1', 'B2', 'B3', 'B4', 'B5', 'B6', 'B7', 'B8', 'B9',
'C1', 'C2', 'C3', 'C4', 'C5', 'C6', 'C7', 'C8', 'C9',
'D1', 'D2', 'D3', 'D4', 'D5', 'D6', 'D7', 'D8', 'D9',
'E1', 'E2', 'E3', 'E4', 'E5', 'E6', 'E7', 'E8', 'E9',
'F1', 'F2', 'F3', 'F4', 'F5', 'F6', 'F7', 'F8', 'F9',
'G1', 'G2', 'G3', 'G4', 'G5', 'G6', 'G7', 'G8', 'G9',
'H1', 'H2', 'H3', 'H4', 'H5', 'H6', 'H7', 'H8', 'H9',
'I1', 'I2', 'I3', 'I4', 'I5', 'I6', 'I7', 'I8', 'I9']
And for the units:
row_units = [cross(r, cols) for r in rows]
# Element example:
# row_units[0] = ['A1', 'A2', 'A3', 'A4', 'A5', 'A6', 'A7', 'A8', 'A9']
# This is the top most row.
column_units = [cross(rows, c) for c in cols]
# Element example:
# column_units[0] = ['A1', 'B1', 'C1', 'D1', 'E1', 'F1', 'G1', 'H1', 'I1']
# This is the left most column.
square_units = [cross(rs, cs) for rs in ('ABC','DEF','GHI') for cs in ('123','456','789')]
# Element example:
# square_units[0] = ['A1', 'A2', 'A3', 'B1', 'B2', 'B3', 'C1', 'C2', 'C3']
# This is the top left square.
unitlist = row_units + column_units + square_units
Now, we're ready to turn the string representation of a sudoku into a dictionary representation. That'll be your turn to shine!
Implement grid_values()
A function to convert the string representation of a puzzle into a dictionary form.
Recall that for the string:
'..3.2.6..9..3.5..1..18.64....81.29..7.......8..67.82....26.95..8..2.3..9..5.1.3..'
…we'd like to return the dictionary:
{
'A1': '.'
'A2': '.',
'A3': '3',
'A4': '.',
'A5': '2',
...
'I9': '.'
}
Implement a function called grid_values()
that performs this task.
Following is an example of what you should see when you implement this function correctly. The display()
function shows a nice visual representation of the dictionary, and has been provided in utils.py
.
>>> from utils import display
>>> display(grid_values('..3.2.6..9..3.5..1..18.64....81.29..7.......8..67.82....26.95..8..2.3..9..5.1.3..'))
. . 3 |. 2 . |6 . .
9 . . |3 . 5 |. . 1
. . 1 |8 . 6 |4 . .
------+------+------
. . 8 |1 . 2 |9 . .
7 . . |. . . |. . 8
. . 6 |7 . 8 |2 . .
------+------+------
. . 2 |6 . 9 |5 . .
8 . . |2 . 3 |. . 9
. . 5 |. 1 . |3 . .
Note:
- All your code should go in
function.py
. - You can use the helper functions and variables defined in
utils.py
. - Hit Test Run to execute your code and Submit to verify it against our grader.
- Once you're done, compare your implementation with ours in
solution.py
.
Give it a shot!
Start Quiz:
from utils import *
# `grid` is defined in the test code scope as the following:
# (note: changing the value here will _not_ change the test code)
# grid = '..3.2.6..9..3.5..1..18.64....81.29..7.......8..67.82....26.95..8..2.3..9..5.1.3..'
def grid_values(grid):
"""Convert grid string into {<box>: <value>} dict with '.' value for empties.
Args:
grid: Sudoku grid in string form, 81 characters long
Returns:
Sudoku grid in dictionary form:
- keys: Box labels, e.g. 'A1'
- values: Value in corresponding box, e.g. '8', or '.' if it is empty.
"""
pass
rows = 'ABCDEFGHI'
cols = '123456789'
def cross(a, b):
return [s+t for s in a for t in b]
boxes = cross(rows, cols)
row_units = [cross(r, cols) for r in rows]
column_units = [cross(rows, c) for c in cols]
square_units = [cross(rs, cs) for rs in ('ABC','DEF','GHI') for cs in ('123','456','789')]
unitlist = row_units + column_units + square_units
units = dict((s, [u for u in unitlist if s in u]) for s in boxes)
peers = dict((s, set(sum(units[s],[]))-set([s])) for s in boxes)
def display(values):
"""
Display the values as a 2-D grid.
Input: The sudoku in dictionary form
Output: None
"""
width = 1+max(len(values[s]) for s in boxes)
line = '+'.join(['-'*(width*3)]*3)
for r in rows:
print(''.join(values[r+c].center(width)+('|' if c in '36' else '')
for c in cols))
if r in 'CF': print(line)
return
from utils import *
def grid_values(grid):
"""Convert grid string into {<box>: <value>} dict with '.' value for empties.
Args:
grid: Sudoku grid in string form, 81 characters long
Returns:
Sudoku grid in dictionary form:
- keys: Box labels, e.g. 'A1'
- values: Value in corresponding box, e.g. '8', or '.' if it is empty.
"""
assert len(grid) == 81, "Input grid must be a string of length 81 (9x9)"
return dict(zip(boxes, grid))
User's Answer:
(Note: The answer done by the user is not guaranteed to be correct)
from utils import *
def grid_values(grid):
"""Convert grid string into {<box>: <value>} dict with '.' value for empties.
Args:
grid: Sudoku grid in string form, 81 characters long
Returns:
Sudoku grid in dictionary form:
- keys: Box labels, e.g. 'A1'
- values: Value in corresponding box, e.g. '8', or '.' if it is empty.
"""
if len(grid) != 81:
print("Grid must be 81 length")
else:
zip_data = zip(boxes, grid)
my_grid = dict(zip_data)
return my_grid
rows = 'ABCDEFGHI'
cols = '123456789'
def cross(a, b):
return [s+t for s in a for t in b]
boxes = cross(rows, cols)
row_units = [cross(r, cols) for r in rows]
column_units = [cross(rows, c) for c in cols]
square_units = [cross(rs, cs) for rs in ('ABC','DEF','GHI') for cs in ('123','456','789')]
unitlist = row_units + column_units + square_units
units = dict((s, [u for u in unitlist if s in u]) for s in boxes)
peers = dict((s, set(sum(units[s],[]))-set([s])) for s in boxes)
def display(values):
"""
Display the values as a 2-D grid.
Input: The sudoku in dictionary form
Output: None
"""
width = 1+max(len(values[s]) for s in boxes)
line = '+'.join(['-'*(width*3)]*3)
for r in rows:
print(''.join(values[r+c].center(width)+('|' if c in '36' else '')
for c in cols))
if r in 'CF': print(line)
return
from utils import *
def grid_values(grid):
"""Convert grid string into {<box>: <value>} dict with '.' value for empties.
Args:
grid: Sudoku grid in string form, 81 characters long
Returns:
Sudoku grid in dictionary form:
- keys: Box labels, e.g. 'A1'
- values: Value in corresponding box, e.g. '8', or '.' if it is empty.
"""
assert len(grid) == 81, "Input grid must be a string of length 81 (9x9)"
return dict(zip(boxes, grid))