A batteries included starter pack for participating in Advent of Code using Elixir!
There are 25 modules, 25 tests, and 1 mix task.
- Fill in the tests with the example solutions.
- Write your implementation.
- Fill in the final problem inputs into the mix task and run
mix advent -d 1
!- Benchmark your solution by passing the
-b
flag,mix advebt -d 1 -b
- Benchmark your solution by passing the
defmodule AdventOfCode.Day01 do
def part1(args) do
end
def part2(args) do
end
end
defmodule AdventOfCode.Day01Test do
use ExUnit.Case
import AdventOfCode.Day01
@tag :skip # Make sure to remove to run your test.
test "part1" do
input = nil
result = part1(input)
assert result
end
@tag :skip # Make sure to remove to run your test.
test "part2" do
input = nil
result = part2(input)
assert result
end
end
The mix advent
task accepts combination of following arguments:
-y
or--year
year of the advent of code (default value current year)-d
or--day
day-p
or--part
part1
or2
(default value1
)-b
or--benchmark
whether to benchmark the run
This starter comes with a module that will automatically get your inputs so you
don't have to mess with copy/pasting. Don't worry, it automatically caches your
inputs to your machine so you don't have to worry about slamming the Advent of
Code server. You will need to configure it with your cookie and make sure to
enable it. You can do this by creating a config/secrets.exs
file containing
the following:
import Config
config :advent_of_code, AdventOfCode.Input,
allow_network?: true,
session_cookie: "..." # yours will be longer
After which, you can retrieve your inputs using the module:
day = 1
year = 2020
AdventOfCode.Input.get!(day, year)
# or just have it auto-detect the current year
AdventOfCode.Input.get!(7)
# and if your input somehow gets mangled and you need a fresh one:
AdventOfCode.Input.delete!(7, 2019)
# and the next time you `get!` it will download a fresh one -- use this sparingly!
# clone
$ git clone [email protected]:martinhrvn/advent-of-code-elixir-starter.git advent-of-code
$ cd advent-of-code
# Reinitialize your git repo
$ rm -rf .git && rm -rf .github
$ git init
- Install Docker Desktop
- Open project directory in VS Code
- Press F1, and select
Remote-Containers: Reopen in Container...
- Wait a few minutes as it pulls image down and builds Dev Conatiner Docker image (this should only need to happen once unless you modify the Dockerfile)
- You can see progress of the build by clicking
Starting Dev Container (show log): Building image
that appears in bottom right corner - During the build process it will also automatically run
mix deps.get
- You can see progress of the build by clicking
- Once complete VS Code will connect your running Dev Container and will feel like your doing local development
- If you would like to use a specific version of Elixir change the
VARIANT
version in.devcontainer/devcontainer.json
- If you would like more information about VS Code Dev Containers check out the dev container documentation
- If you dont have Github Codespaces beta access, sign up for the beta https://github.com/features/codespaces/signup
- On GitHub, navigate to the main page of the repository.
- Under the repository name, use the Code drop-down menu, and select Open with Codespaces.
- If you already have a codespace for the branch, click New codespace.