I'm making a function that converts a number into a string with predefined characters. Original, I know. I started it, because it seemed fun at the time. To do on my own. Well, it's frustrating and not fun.
I want it to be like binary as in that any left character is worth more than its right neigbour. Binary is inefficient because every bit has only 1 positive value. Xnary is efficient, because a 'bit' is never 0.
The character set (in this case): A - Z
.
A = 1 ..
Z = 26
AA = 27 ..
AZ = 52
BA = 53 ..
BZ = 2 * 26 (B) + 26 * 1 (Z) = 78... Right?
ZZ = 26 * 26 (Z) + 26 * 1 (Z) = 702?? Right??
I found this here, but there AA
is the same as A
and AAA
. The result of the function is never AA
or AAA
.
The string A
is different from AA
and AAA
however, so the number should be too. (Unlike binary 1
, 01
, 001
etc.) And since a longer string is always more valuable than a shorter... A < AA < AAA
.
Does this make sense? I've tried to explain it before and have failed. I've also tried to make it before. =)
The most important thing: since A < AA < AAA
, the value of 'my' ABC
is higher than the value of the other script. Another difference: my script doesn't exist, because I keep failing.
I've tried with this algorithm:
N = 1000, Size = 3, (because 26 log(1000) = 2.x), so use 676, 26 and 1 for positions:
N = 1000
P0 = 1000 / 676 = 1.x = 1 = A
N = 1000 - 1 * 676 = 324
P1 = 324 / 26 = 12.x = 12 = L
N = 324 - 12 * 26 = 12
P1 = 12 / 1 = 12 = L
1000 => ALL
Sounds fair? Apparently it's crap. Because:
N = 158760, Size = 4, so use 17576, 676, 26 and 1
P0 = 158760 / 17576 = 9.x = 9 = I
N = 158760 - 9 * 17576 = 576
P1 = 576 / 676 = 0.x = 0 <<< OOPS
If 1
is A
(the very first of the xnary), what's 0
? Impossible is what it is.
So this one is a bust. The other one (on jsFiddle) is also a bust, because A != AA != AAA
and that's a fact.
So what have I been missing for a few long nights?
Oh BTW: if you don't like numbers, don't read this.
PS. I've tried searching for similar questions but none are similar enough. The one references is most similar, but 'faulty' IMO.
See Question&Answers more detail:
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