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Add solution for Project Euler problem 38. (#3115)
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* Added solution for Project Euler problem 38. Fixes: #2695

* Update docstring and 0-padding in directory name. Reference: #3256

* Renamed is_9_palindromic to is_9_pandigital.

* Changed just-in-case return value for solution() to None.

* Moved exmplanation to module-level docstring and deleted unnecessary import
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fpringle committed Oct 24, 2020
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77 changes: 77 additions & 0 deletions project_euler/problem_038/sol1.py
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"""
Project Euler Problem 38: https://projecteuler.net/problem=38
Take the number 192 and multiply it by each of 1, 2, and 3:
192 × 1 = 192
192 × 2 = 384
192 × 3 = 576
By concatenating each product we get the 1 to 9 pandigital, 192384576. We will call
192384576 the concatenated product of 192 and (1,2,3)
The same can be achieved by starting with 9 and multiplying by 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5,
giving the pandigital, 918273645, which is the concatenated product of 9 and
(1,2,3,4,5).
What is the largest 1 to 9 pandigital 9-digit number that can be formed as the
concatenated product of an integer with (1,2, ... , n) where n > 1?
Solution:
Since n>1, the largest candidate for the solution will be a concactenation of
a 4-digit number and its double, a 5-digit number.
Let a be the 4-digit number.
a has 4 digits => 1000 <= a < 10000
2a has 5 digits => 10000 <= 2a < 100000
=> 5000 <= a < 10000
The concatenation of a with 2a = a * 10^5 + 2a
so our candidate for a given a is 100002 * a.
We iterate through the search space 5000 <= a < 10000 in reverse order,
calculating the candidates for each a and checking if they are 1-9 pandigital.
In case there are no 4-digit numbers that satisfy this property, we check
the 3-digit numbers with a similar formula (the example a=192 gives a lower
bound on the length of a):
a has 3 digits, etc...
=> 100 <= a < 334, candidate = a * 10^6 + 2a * 10^3 + 3a
= 1002003 * a
"""

from typing import Union


def is_9_pandigital(n: int) -> bool:
"""
Checks whether n is a 9-digit 1 to 9 pandigital number.
>>> is_9_pandigital(12345)
False
>>> is_9_pandigital(156284973)
True
>>> is_9_pandigital(1562849733)
False
"""
s = str(n)
return len(s) == 9 and set(s) == set("123456789")


def solution() -> Union[int, None]:
"""
Return the largest 1 to 9 pandigital 9-digital number that can be formed as the
concatenated product of an integer with (1,2,...,n) where n > 1.
"""
for base_num in range(9999, 4999, -1):
candidate = 100002 * base_num
if is_9_pandigital(candidate):
return candidate

for base_num in range(333, 99, -1):
candidate = 1002003 * base_num
if is_9_pandigital(candidate):
return candidate

return None


if __name__ == "__main__":
print(f"{solution() = }")

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