Arbitrary Randomness











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Randomness is fun. Challenges with no point are fun.



Write a function that, given integer input n, will output a set (unordered, unique) of exactly n random integers between 1 and n^2 (inclusive) such that the sum of all integers is equal to n^2.



Randomness does not have to be uniform, provided each valid set has a non-zero chance to occur.



Shortest answer in bytes (per each language) wins.



Examples



Input (n) = 1, Target (n^2) = 1
Sample of possible outputs:
1

Input = 2, Target = 4
Sample of possible outputs:
3, 1
1, 3

Input = 3, Target = 9
Sample of possible outputs:
6, 1, 2
3, 5, 1
4, 3, 2

Input = 4, Target = 16
Sample of possible outputs:
1, 3, 5, 7
2, 4, 1, 9
8, 3, 1, 4

Input = 5, Target = 25
Sample of possible outputs:
11, 4, 7, 1, 2
2, 3, 1, 11, 8
6, 1, 3, 7, 8

Input = 8, Target = 64
Sample of possible outputs:
10, 3, 9, 7, 6, 19, 8, 2
7, 16, 2, 3, 9, 4, 13, 10
7, 9, 21, 2, 5, 13, 6, 1


Bonus Task: Is there a formula to calculate the number of valid permutations for a given n?










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  • 2




    related, but quite different
    – Giuseppe
    Nov 20 at 14:49








  • 1




    (p/s: If you have a fast algorithm but takes more bytes, consider waiting until the speed edition (currently in sandbox) to post it.)
    – user202729
    Nov 20 at 15:04






  • 1




    @EriktheOutgolfer Although there are (much) better ways than generating all sets and pick a random one, they're much harder to implement and likely longer. Keep them for the speed edition.
    – user202729
    Nov 20 at 15:08






  • 2




    The number of sets is OEIS A107379.
    – nwellnhof
    Nov 20 at 23:16






  • 1




    It's both. See the comment "Also the number of partitions of n^2 into n distinct parts."
    – nwellnhof
    2 days ago















up vote
22
down vote

favorite
2












Randomness is fun. Challenges with no point are fun.



Write a function that, given integer input n, will output a set (unordered, unique) of exactly n random integers between 1 and n^2 (inclusive) such that the sum of all integers is equal to n^2.



Randomness does not have to be uniform, provided each valid set has a non-zero chance to occur.



Shortest answer in bytes (per each language) wins.



Examples



Input (n) = 1, Target (n^2) = 1
Sample of possible outputs:
1

Input = 2, Target = 4
Sample of possible outputs:
3, 1
1, 3

Input = 3, Target = 9
Sample of possible outputs:
6, 1, 2
3, 5, 1
4, 3, 2

Input = 4, Target = 16
Sample of possible outputs:
1, 3, 5, 7
2, 4, 1, 9
8, 3, 1, 4

Input = 5, Target = 25
Sample of possible outputs:
11, 4, 7, 1, 2
2, 3, 1, 11, 8
6, 1, 3, 7, 8

Input = 8, Target = 64
Sample of possible outputs:
10, 3, 9, 7, 6, 19, 8, 2
7, 16, 2, 3, 9, 4, 13, 10
7, 9, 21, 2, 5, 13, 6, 1


Bonus Task: Is there a formula to calculate the number of valid permutations for a given n?










share|improve this question




















  • 2




    related, but quite different
    – Giuseppe
    Nov 20 at 14:49








  • 1




    (p/s: If you have a fast algorithm but takes more bytes, consider waiting until the speed edition (currently in sandbox) to post it.)
    – user202729
    Nov 20 at 15:04






  • 1




    @EriktheOutgolfer Although there are (much) better ways than generating all sets and pick a random one, they're much harder to implement and likely longer. Keep them for the speed edition.
    – user202729
    Nov 20 at 15:08






  • 2




    The number of sets is OEIS A107379.
    – nwellnhof
    Nov 20 at 23:16






  • 1




    It's both. See the comment "Also the number of partitions of n^2 into n distinct parts."
    – nwellnhof
    2 days ago













up vote
22
down vote

favorite
2









up vote
22
down vote

favorite
2






2





Randomness is fun. Challenges with no point are fun.



Write a function that, given integer input n, will output a set (unordered, unique) of exactly n random integers between 1 and n^2 (inclusive) such that the sum of all integers is equal to n^2.



Randomness does not have to be uniform, provided each valid set has a non-zero chance to occur.



Shortest answer in bytes (per each language) wins.



Examples



Input (n) = 1, Target (n^2) = 1
Sample of possible outputs:
1

Input = 2, Target = 4
Sample of possible outputs:
3, 1
1, 3

Input = 3, Target = 9
Sample of possible outputs:
6, 1, 2
3, 5, 1
4, 3, 2

Input = 4, Target = 16
Sample of possible outputs:
1, 3, 5, 7
2, 4, 1, 9
8, 3, 1, 4

Input = 5, Target = 25
Sample of possible outputs:
11, 4, 7, 1, 2
2, 3, 1, 11, 8
6, 1, 3, 7, 8

Input = 8, Target = 64
Sample of possible outputs:
10, 3, 9, 7, 6, 19, 8, 2
7, 16, 2, 3, 9, 4, 13, 10
7, 9, 21, 2, 5, 13, 6, 1


Bonus Task: Is there a formula to calculate the number of valid permutations for a given n?










share|improve this question















Randomness is fun. Challenges with no point are fun.



Write a function that, given integer input n, will output a set (unordered, unique) of exactly n random integers between 1 and n^2 (inclusive) such that the sum of all integers is equal to n^2.



Randomness does not have to be uniform, provided each valid set has a non-zero chance to occur.



Shortest answer in bytes (per each language) wins.



Examples



Input (n) = 1, Target (n^2) = 1
Sample of possible outputs:
1

Input = 2, Target = 4
Sample of possible outputs:
3, 1
1, 3

Input = 3, Target = 9
Sample of possible outputs:
6, 1, 2
3, 5, 1
4, 3, 2

Input = 4, Target = 16
Sample of possible outputs:
1, 3, 5, 7
2, 4, 1, 9
8, 3, 1, 4

Input = 5, Target = 25
Sample of possible outputs:
11, 4, 7, 1, 2
2, 3, 1, 11, 8
6, 1, 3, 7, 8

Input = 8, Target = 64
Sample of possible outputs:
10, 3, 9, 7, 6, 19, 8, 2
7, 16, 2, 3, 9, 4, 13, 10
7, 9, 21, 2, 5, 13, 6, 1


Bonus Task: Is there a formula to calculate the number of valid permutations for a given n?







code-golf random combinatorics






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edited 2 days ago









nwellnhof

6,1981125




6,1981125










asked Nov 20 at 14:45









Skidsdev

6,0762767




6,0762767








  • 2




    related, but quite different
    – Giuseppe
    Nov 20 at 14:49








  • 1




    (p/s: If you have a fast algorithm but takes more bytes, consider waiting until the speed edition (currently in sandbox) to post it.)
    – user202729
    Nov 20 at 15:04






  • 1




    @EriktheOutgolfer Although there are (much) better ways than generating all sets and pick a random one, they're much harder to implement and likely longer. Keep them for the speed edition.
    – user202729
    Nov 20 at 15:08






  • 2




    The number of sets is OEIS A107379.
    – nwellnhof
    Nov 20 at 23:16






  • 1




    It's both. See the comment "Also the number of partitions of n^2 into n distinct parts."
    – nwellnhof
    2 days ago














  • 2




    related, but quite different
    – Giuseppe
    Nov 20 at 14:49








  • 1




    (p/s: If you have a fast algorithm but takes more bytes, consider waiting until the speed edition (currently in sandbox) to post it.)
    – user202729
    Nov 20 at 15:04






  • 1




    @EriktheOutgolfer Although there are (much) better ways than generating all sets and pick a random one, they're much harder to implement and likely longer. Keep them for the speed edition.
    – user202729
    Nov 20 at 15:08






  • 2




    The number of sets is OEIS A107379.
    – nwellnhof
    Nov 20 at 23:16






  • 1




    It's both. See the comment "Also the number of partitions of n^2 into n distinct parts."
    – nwellnhof
    2 days ago








2




2




related, but quite different
– Giuseppe
Nov 20 at 14:49






related, but quite different
– Giuseppe
Nov 20 at 14:49






1




1




(p/s: If you have a fast algorithm but takes more bytes, consider waiting until the speed edition (currently in sandbox) to post it.)
– user202729
Nov 20 at 15:04




(p/s: If you have a fast algorithm but takes more bytes, consider waiting until the speed edition (currently in sandbox) to post it.)
– user202729
Nov 20 at 15:04




1




1




@EriktheOutgolfer Although there are (much) better ways than generating all sets and pick a random one, they're much harder to implement and likely longer. Keep them for the speed edition.
– user202729
Nov 20 at 15:08




@EriktheOutgolfer Although there are (much) better ways than generating all sets and pick a random one, they're much harder to implement and likely longer. Keep them for the speed edition.
– user202729
Nov 20 at 15:08




2




2




The number of sets is OEIS A107379.
– nwellnhof
Nov 20 at 23:16




The number of sets is OEIS A107379.
– nwellnhof
Nov 20 at 23:16




1




1




It's both. See the comment "Also the number of partitions of n^2 into n distinct parts."
– nwellnhof
2 days ago




It's both. See the comment "Also the number of partitions of n^2 into n distinct parts."
– nwellnhof
2 days ago










21 Answers
21






active

oldest

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up vote
7
down vote














05AB1E, 11 bytes



nÅœʒDÙQ}sùΩ


Try it online or verify all test cases.



Explanation:





n             # Take the square of the (implicit) input
# i.e. 3 → 9
Ŝ # Get all integer-lists using integers in the range [1, val) that sum to val
# i.e. 9 → [[1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1],...,[1,3,5],...,[9]]
ʒ } # Filter the list to only keep lists with unique values:
D # Duplicate the current value
Ù # Uniquify it
# i.e. [2,2,5] → [2,5]
Q # Check if it's still the same
# i.e. [2,2,5] and [2,5] → 0 (falsey)
s # Swap to take the (implicit) input again
ù # Only leave lists of that size
# i.e. [[1,2,6],[1,3,5],[1,8],[2,3,4],[2,7],[3,6],[4,5],[9]] and 3
# → [[1,2,6],[1,3,5],[2,3,4]]
Ω # Pick a random list from the list of lists (and output implicitly)





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    up vote
    6
    down vote














    Brachylog (v2), 15 bytes (random) or 13 bytes (all possibilities)



    Random



    ~lℕ₁ᵐA+√?∧A≜₁ᵐ≠


    Try it online!



    Function submission (seen in TIO with a wrapper making it into a full program).



    Explanation



    ~lℕ₁ᵐA+√?∧A≜₁ᵐ≠
    ~l Specify a property of a list: its length is equal to the input,
    ᵐ and it is composed entirely of
    ℕ₁ integers ≥ 1,
    √ for which the square root of the
    + sum of the list
    ? is the input.
    A ∧A Restricting yourself to lists with that property,
    ≜₁ pick random possible values
    ᵐ for each element in turn,
    ≠ until you find one whose elements are all distinct.


    All possibilities



    ~lℕ₁ᵐ<₁.+√?∧≜


    Try it online!



    Function submission, which generates all possible outputs.



    Explanation



    ~lℕ₁ᵐ<₁.+√?∧≜
    ~l Specify a property of a list: its length is equal to the input,
    ᵐ it is composed entirely of
    ℕ₁ integers ≥ 1,
    <₁ it is strictly increasing,
    √ and the square root of the
    + sum of the list
    ? is the input.
    . ∧≜ Generate all specific lists with that property.


    I'm fairly surprised that ∧≜ works (you'd normally have to write ∧~≜ in order to brute-force the output rather than the input), but it turns out that has an input=output assumption so it doesn't matter which way round you run it.



    Bonus task



    In order to get some insight into the sequence of the number of possibilities, I created a different TIO wrapper which runs the program on successive integers to give the sequence of output counts:



    1,1,3,9,30,110,436,1801,7657,33401


    A trip to OEIS discovers that this is already a known sequence, A107379, described pretty much as in the question (apparently you get the same sequence if you restrict it to odd numbers). The page lists several formulas for the sequence (although none is particularly simple; the second looks like a direct formula for the value but I don't understand the notation).






    share|improve this answer























    • The second formula is "the coefficient of x^(n*(n-1)/2) in the series expansion of Product_{k=1..n} 1/(1 - x^k)" (not direct at all, unfortunately)
      – user202729
      Nov 20 at 17:18












    • Placing the "all different" constraint before the random labelization step (e.g. A≠≜₁ᵐ) makes the run time much faster on average.
      – Fatalize
      2 days ago










    • I don't understand why you made this a community wiki. Those are an archaic way to have editable posts before it was possible to edit.
      – pipe
      2 days ago










    • @pipe codegolf.stackexchange.com/questions/172716/true-color-code/…
      – guest271314
      2 days ago


















    up vote
    5
    down vote














    Python (2 or 3), 85 bytes





    def f(n):r=sample(range(1,n*n+1),n);return(n*n==sum(r))*r or f(n)
    from random import*


    Try it online!






    share|improve this answer




























      up vote
      4
      down vote














      Jelly, 9 bytes



      ²œcS=¥Ƈ²X


      Try it online!



      Generate all n-combinations of the list [1..n²], filter to keep those with sum n², then pick a random one.






      share|improve this answer




























        up vote
        4
        down vote













        Java 10, 250 242 222 bytes





        import java.util.*;n->{for(;;){int i=n+1,r=new int[i],d=new int[n];for(r[n<2?0:1]=n*n;i-->2;r[i]=(int)(Math.random()*n*n));var S=new HashSet();for(Arrays.sort(r),i=n;i-->0;)S.add(d[i]=r[i+1]-r[i]);if(!S.contains(0)&S.size()==n)return S;}}


        -20 bytes thanks to @nwellnhof.



        Watch out, Java coming through.. It's 'only' five times as long as the other four answers combined, so not too bad I guess.. rofl.

        It does run n=1 through n=25 (combined) in less than 2 seconds though, so I'll probably post a modified version to the speed version of this challenge (that's currently still in the Sandbox) as well.



        Try it online.



        Explanation:



        In pseudo-code we do the following:



        1) Generate an array of size n+1 containing: 0, n squared, and n-1 amount of random integers in the range [0, n squared)

        2) Sort this array

        3) Create a second array of size n containing the forward differences of pairs

        These first three steps will give us an array containing n random integers (in the range [0, n squared) that sum to n squared.

        4a) If not all random values are unique, or any of them is 0: try again from step 1

        4b) Else: return this differences array as result



        As for the actual code:



        import java.util.*;      // Required import for HashSet and Arrays
        n->{ // Method with int parameter and Set return-type
        for(;;){ // Loop indefinitely
        int i=n+1, // Set `i` to `n+1`
        r=new int[i]; // Create an array of size `n+1`
        var S=new HashSet(); // Result-set, starting empty
        for(r[n<2? // If `n` is 1:
        0 // Set the first item in the first array to:
        : // Else:
        1] // Set the second item in the first array to:
        =n*n; // `n` squared
        i-->2;) // Loop `i` in the range [`n`, 2]:
        r[i]= // Set the `i`'th value in the first array to:
        (int)(Math.random()*n*n);
        // A random value in the range [0, `n` squared)
        for(Arrays.sort(r), // Sort the first array
        i=n;i-->0;) // Loop `i` in the range (`n`, 0]:
        S.add( // Add to the Set:
        r[i+1]-r[i]); // The `i+1`'th and `i`'th difference of the first array
        if(!S.contains(0) // If the Set does not contain a 0
        &S.size()==n) // and its size is equal to `n`:
        return S;}} // Return this Set as the result
        // (Implicit else: continue the infinite loop)





        share|improve this answer



















        • 1




          n=25 in under 2 seconds is impressive! I'll have to read through the explanation and see how it does it. Is it still a bruteforce method?
          – Skidsdev
          Nov 20 at 16:59










        • Is it uniform? -
          – user202729
          Nov 20 at 17:13










        • @user202729 Although I'm not sure how to prove it, I think it is. The Java builtin is uniform, and it uses that to get random values in the range [0, n squared) first, and then calculates the differences between those sorted random values (including leading 0 and trailing n squared. So I'm pretty sure those differences are uniform as well. But again, I'm not sure how to prove it. Uniformity in randomness isn't really my expertise tbh.
          – Kevin Cruijssen
          Nov 20 at 17:27






        • 3




          You never read from the differences array d or am I missing something?
          – nwellnhof
          Nov 20 at 21:31






        • 1




          I'm kind of happy with my 127 bytes solution :D
          – Olivier Grégoire
          2 days ago


















        up vote
        4
        down vote














        R, 68, 75 48 bytes (random) and 70 bytes (deterministic)



        @Giuseppe's rejection sampling method:





        function(n){while(sum(F)!=n^2)F=sample(n^2,n);F}


        Try it online!



        Golfed original:





        function(n,m=combn(1:n^2,n))m[,sample(which(colSums(m)==n^2)*!!1:2,1)]


        Try it online!



        The *!!1:2 business is to avoid the odd way sample act when the first argument has length 1.






        share|improve this answer























        • @Giuseppe "fixed" :-)
          – ngm
          Nov 20 at 18:57












        • very nice. using p directly as an index instead of calculating it and re-using it should save some bytes.
          – Giuseppe
          Nov 20 at 18:59






        • 1




          I have function(n){while(sum(F)!=n^2)F=sample(n^2,n);F} for 48 as well...
          – Giuseppe
          Nov 20 at 19:00






        • 1




          @J.Doe to avoid the issue when calling something like sample(2,1) which happens with n=2. So rep just guarantees that this will never happen. There might be a better way but this was quick and I was mad at sample.
          – ngm
          Nov 20 at 20:17








        • 1




          You can save a byte with x*!!1:2 over rep(x,2) if your meta question gets a no.
          – J.Doe
          Nov 20 at 20:35


















        up vote
        4
        down vote














        Perl 6, 41 bytes



        {first *.sum==$_²,(1..$_²).pick($_)xx*}


        Try it online!





        • (1 .. $_²) is the range of numbers from 1 to the square of the input number


        • .pick($_) randomly chooses a distinct subset of that range


        • xx * replicates the preceding expression infinitely


        • first *.sum == $_² selects the first of those number sets that sums to the square of the input number






        share|improve this answer























        • 40 bytes
          – Jo King
          Nov 20 at 21:59


















        up vote
        2
        down vote













        Pyth, 13 12 bytes



        Ofq*QQsT.cS*


        Try it online here. Note that the online interpreter runs into a MemoryError for inputs greater than 5.



        Ofq*QQsT.cS*QQQ   Implicit: Q=eval(input())
        Trailing QQQ inferred
        S*QQQ [1-Q*Q]
        .c Q All combinations of the above of length Q, without repeats
        f Keep elements of the above, as T, where the following is truthy:
        sT Is the sum of T...
        q ... equal to...
        *QQ ... Q*Q?
        O Choose a random element of those remaining sets, implicit print


        Edit: saved a byte by taking an alternative approach. Previous version: Of&qQlT{IT./*






        share|improve this answer






























          up vote
          2
          down vote














          Python 3, 136 134 127 121 114 bytes





          from random import*
          def f(n):
          s={randint(1,n*n)for _ in range(n)}
          return len(s)==n and sum(s)==n*n and s or f(n)


          Try it online!



          A commenter corrected me, and this now hits recursion max depth at f(5) instead of f(1). Much closer to being a real competing answer.



          I've seen it do f(5) once, and I'm working on trying to implement this with shuffle.



          I tried making some lambda expressions for s=..., but that didn't help on bytes. Maybe someone else can do something with this:
          s=(lambda n:{randint(1,n*n)for _ in range(n)})(n)



          Thanks to Kevin for shaving off another 7 bytes.






          share|improve this answer



















          • 1




            So this uses recursion to "regenerate" the set if the one generated is invalid? Definitely something wrong with your code if it's hitting recursion depth at f(1), the only possible array that should be generable at n=1 is [1] Also there's a lot of extraneous whitespace to be removed here. Remember this is a code-golf challenge, so the goal is to achieve the lowest bytecount
            – Skidsdev
            Nov 20 at 18:32






          • 1




            range(1,n) -> range(n) I believe should resolve the bug.
            – Jonathan Allan
            Nov 20 at 18:34






          • 1




            This should fix your bug, and also removes extraneous whitespace. I imagine there's a lot more room for golfing too
            – Skidsdev
            Nov 20 at 18:35






          • 1




            Although the recursion slightly worsens from 5 to 4, you can combine your two return statements like this: return len(s)==n and sum(s)==n*n and s or f(n) (Try it online 114 bytes).
            – Kevin Cruijssen
            Nov 20 at 19:38






          • 1




            You can have it all on one line. 111 bytes
            – Jo King
            Nov 20 at 22:02


















          up vote
          1
          down vote














          MATL, 18 13 bytes



          `xGU:GZrtsGU-


          Try it online!



          `	# do..while:
          x # delete from stack. This implicitly reads input the first time
          # and removes it. It also deletes the previous invalid answer.
          GU: # paste input and push [1...n^2]
          GZr # select a single combination of n elements from [1..n^2]
          tsGU- # is the sum equal to N^2? if yes, terminate and print results, else goto top





          share|improve this answer























          • I wouldn't try this in R - random characters almost never produce a valid program.
            – ngm
            Nov 20 at 18:48










          • @ngm hahaha I suppose an explanation is in order.
            – Giuseppe
            Nov 20 at 18:48


















          up vote
          1
          down vote













          Japt, 12 bytes



          ²õ àU ö@²¥Xx


          Try it



                           :Implicit input of integer U
          ² :U squared
          õ :Range [1,U²]
          àU :Combinations of length U
          ö@ :Return a random element that returns true when passed through the following function as X
          ² : U squared
          ¥ : Equals
          Xx : X reduced by addition





          share|improve this answer























          • According to a comment made by the OP, order of elements in the output is irrelevant so à should be fine.
            – Kamil Drakari
            Nov 20 at 18:52










          • Thanks, @KamilDrakari. Updated.
            – Shaggy
            Nov 20 at 19:15


















          up vote
          1
          down vote














          Java (JDK), 127 bytes





          n->{for(int s;;){var r=new java.util.TreeSet();for(s=n*n;s>0;)r.add(s-(s-=Math.random()*n*n+1));if(r.size()==n&s==0)return r;}}


          Try it online!



          Infinite loop until a set with the criteria matches.



          I hope you have the time, because it's very sloooooow! It can't even go to 10 without timing out.






          share|improve this answer























          • You can golf 3 bytes by changing if(r.size()==n&s==0) to if(r.size()+s==n).
            – Kevin Cruijssen
            yesterday










          • @KevinCruijssen I've thought about it too, but no I can't because s could be -1 and n could be size() - 1.
            – Olivier Grégoire
            yesterday










          • Ah wait, you keep adding items to the set as long as s>0, so the size can be larger than n. Ok, in that case it indeed doesn't work. n is a constant, but unfortunately both s and r.size() are variables that can be both below or above 0 and n respectively.
            – Kevin Cruijssen
            12 hours ago


















          up vote
          1
          down vote













          Batch, 182 145 bytes



          @set/an=%1,r=n*n,l=r+1
          @for /l %%i in (%1,-1,1)do @set/at=n*(n-=1)/2,m=(r+t+n)/-~n,r-=l=m+%random%%%((l-=x=r+1-t)*(l^>^>31)+x-m)&call echo %%l%%


          Explanation: Calculates the minimum and maximum allowable pick, given that the numbers are to be picked in descending order, and chooses a random value within the range. Example for an input of 4:




          • We start with 16 left. We can't pick 11 or more because the remaining 3 picks must add to at least 6. We also need to pick at least 6, because if we only pick 5, the remaining 3 picks can only add to 9, which isn't enough for 16. We pick a random value from 6 to 10, say 6.

          • We have 10 left. We can't pick 8 or more because the remaining 2 picks must add to at least 3. As it happens, we can't pick 6 or more because we picked 6 last time. We also need to pick at least 5, because if we only pick 4, the remaining 2 picks can only add to 5, for a grand total of 15. We pick a random value from 5 to 5, say 5 (!).

          • We have 5 left. We can't pick 5 or more because the remaining pick must add to at least 1, and also because we picked 5 last time. We also need to pick at least 3, because if we only pick 2, the remaining pick can only be 1, for a grand total of 14. We pick a random value from 3 to 4, say 4.

          • We have 1 left. As it turns out, the algorithm chooses a range of 1 to 1, and we pick 1 as the final number.






          share|improve this answer






























            up vote
            1
            down vote













            JavaScript, 647 291 bytes



            Thanks to @Veskah for -10 bytes at original version and "Oh yeah, you're outputting all the sets whereas the challenge asks for a random one to be returned"



            (n,g=n**2,r=[...Array(g)].map((_,k)=>k+1).sort(_=>.5-Math.random()).slice(-n+-2,-2),c=_=>eval(_.join `+`))=>n<2?[n]:[...function*(){z:while(1){for(x=0;x<r.length;x++){d=r[x];if(c(r)>g&&!(d-1==0||r.find(_=>d-1==_)))r[x]-=1;if(c(r)<g&&!r.find(_=>d+1==_))r[x]+=1;if(c(r)==g)break z}}yield*r}()]


            Try it online!



            Create an array of n^2 1-based indexes, sort array randomly, slice -n-2 through -2 (or again randomly select) elements of array. While the sum of the random elements does not equal n^2 loop array of random elements; if sum of array elements is greater than n^2 and current element -1 does not equal zero or current element -1 is not in current array, subtract 1; if sum of array is less than n^2 and current element +1 is not in array, add 1 to element. If array sum is equal to n^2 break loop, output array.






            share|improve this answer



















            • 1




              637 bytes by pulling z.join into a variable, and k++
              – Veskah
              yesterday










            • @Veskah The two while loops could probably also be reduced to the body of a single function which accepts parameters; and could substitute conditional operators (ternary) for the if..else statements; among other portions of the code that could more than likely be adjusted for golf; i.e.g., removing let statements.
              – guest271314
              23 hours ago












            • @Veskah 601 bytes without substituting ternary for if..else
              – guest271314
              23 hours ago






            • 1




              Oh yeah, you're outputting all the sets whereas the challenge asks for a random one to be returned (See the OP comments for more details)
              – Veskah
              23 hours ago










            • @Veskah Must have misinterpreted the challenge and examples, or was too focused on solving this part of the question "Bonus Task: Is there a formula to calculate the number of valid permutations for a given n?". testing if the algorithm consistently returned expected result for n^2 output arrays generated in a single call to the function, and simultaneously considering the similarities to this question N-dimensional N^N array filled with N.
              – guest271314
              23 hours ago




















            up vote
            0
            down vote














            Japt, 20 bytes



            ²õ ö¬oU íUõ+)Õæ@²¥Xx


            Try it online!



            Extremely heavily takes advantage of "Non-uniform" randomness, almost always outputs the first n odd numbers, which happens to sum to n^2. In theory it can output any other valid set, though I've only been able to confirm that for small n.



            Explanation:



            ²õ                      :Generate the range [1...n^2]
            ö¬ :Order it randomly
            oU :Get the last n items
            í )Õ :Put it in an array with...
            Uõ+ : The first n odd numbers
            æ_ :Get the first one where...
            Xx : The sum
            ²¥ : equals n^2





            share|improve this answer




























              up vote
              0
              down vote














              Ruby, 46 bytes





              ->n{z=0until(z=[*1..n*n].sample n).sum==n*n;z}


              Try it online!






              share|improve this answer




























                up vote
                0
                down vote














                C (gcc), 128 125 bytes





                p(_){printf("%d ",_);}f(n,x,y,i){x=n*n;y=1;for(i=0;++i<n;p(y),x-=y++)while(rand()&&(n-i)*(n-i+1)/2+(n-i)*(y+1)+y<x)y++;p(x);}


                Try it online!



                -3 bytes thanks to ceilingcat



                NOTE: The probability is very very far from uniform. See explanation for what I mean and a better means to test that it works (by making the distribution closer to uniform [but still a far cry from it]).



                How?



                The basic idea is to only choose increasing numbers so as to not worry about duplicates. Whenever we pick a number we have a non-zero chance of 'skipping' it if allowable.



                To decide if we can skip a number we need to know x the total left to be reached, k the number of elements we still have to use, and y the current candidate value. The smallest possible number that we could still pick would consist of $$y+(y+1)+(y+2)+...$$ added to the current value. In particular we require the above expression to be less than x. The formula will be $$frac{k(k+1)}{2}+k(y+1)+y<x$$ Unfortunately we have to be a bit careful about rearranging this formula due to integer truncation in C, so I couldn't really find a way to golf it.



                Nonetheless the logic is to have a chance to discard any y that satisfies the above equation.



                The code



                p(_){printf("%d ",_);}  // Define print(int)
                f(n,x,y,i){ // Define f(n,...) as the function we want
                x=n*n; // Set x to n^2
                y=1; // Set y to 1
                for(i=0;++i<n;){ // n-1 times do...
                while(rand()&& // While rand() is non-zero [very very likely] AND
                (n-i)* // (n-i) is the 'k' in the formula
                (n-i+1)/2+ // This first half takes care of the increment
                (n-i)*(y+1) // This second half takes care of the y+1 starting point
                +y<x) // The +y takes care of the current value of y
                y++; // If rand() returned non-zero and we can skip y, do so
                p(y); // Print y
                x-=y++; // Subtract y from the total and increment it
                }p(x);} // Print what's left over.


                The trick I mentioned to better test the code involves replacing rand()&& with rand()%2&& so that there is a 50-50 chance that any given y is skipped, rather than a 1 in RAND_MAX chance that any given y is used.






                share|improve this answer























                • I would love it if someone checked my math for consistency. I also wonder if this type of solution could make the uniform random speed challenge simple. The formula places an upper and lower bound on the answer, does a uniform random number in that range result in uniform random results? I don't see why not - but I haven't done much combinatorics in awhile.
                  – LambdaBeta
                  Nov 20 at 22:43










                • Suggest p(y),x-=y++)while(rand()&&(i-n)*((~n+i)/2+~y)+y<x)y++; instead of ){while(rand()&&(n-i)*(n-i+1)/2+(n-i)*(y+1)+y<x)y++;p(y);x-=y++;}
                  – ceilingcat
                  Nov 20 at 23:30












                • @ceilingcat I love these little improvements you find. I always get so focussed on the overall algorithm I forget to optimize for implementation (I basically go autopilot golfing mode once I have a non-golfed source that works - so I miss a lot of savings)
                  – LambdaBeta
                  2 days ago










                • Hey, it's not just you who has those syntax-golfs. I find little improvements in a lot of C/C++ answers like that (except not in yours, @ceilingcat usually snaps those up).
                  – Zacharý
                  2 days ago












                • Yeah, I've noticed that you two are probably the most active C/C++ putters (can we use putting to extend the golf analogy to the last few strokes? Why not!). It always impresses me that you can even understand the golfed code well enough to improve it.
                  – LambdaBeta
                  2 days ago


















                up vote
                0
                down vote














                Clean, 172 bytes



                import StdEnv,Math.Random,Data.List
                ? ::!Int->Int
                ?_=code{
                ccall time "I:I"
                }
                $n=find(s=length s==n&&sum s==n^2)(subsequences(nub(map(inc oe=e rem n^2)(genRandInt(?0)))))


                Try it online!






                share|improve this answer






























                  up vote
                  0
                  down vote














                  Python (2 or 3), 84 bytes





                  from random import*;l=lambda n,s=:(sum(s)==n*n)*s or l(n,sample(range(1,n*n+1),n))


                  Try it online!



                  Hits max recursion depth at around l(5)






                  share|improve this answer




























                    up vote
                    0
                    down vote













                    Mathematica 40 bytes



                    RandomChoice[IntegerPartitions[2^n, {n}]]





                    share|improve this answer




























                      up vote
                      0
                      down vote













                      JavaScript, 291 bytes




                      Bonus Task: Is there a formula to calculate the number of valid permutations for a given n?




                      Solves for n=3






                      f=(n=3,x=Math.pow(n,2),p=,r=,z=RegExp(`^[1-${x}]+$`))=>{for(c=n;c;c--){p.unshift(c)};p[p.length-1]=x-n;let i=+p.join``,m= +p.reverse().join``,s=i+'',l=s.length;for(;i<=m;i++){let c=[...''+i];if(new Set(c).size==l&&c.every(_=>z.test(_))&&eval(c.join`+`)==x){r.push([...''+i].map(Number))}}return r}

                      let r=f();
                      console.log(JSON.stringify(r,null,2),r.length);





                      Try it online!



                      Formula for number of valid permutations for n=3 using addition, comparison and exclusion




                      • Find the minimum integer which sums to n=3^2=9, in this case 126

                      • Convert n=3 to array [1,2,3] and integer 123

                      • To derive 126 from n=3 programmatically, subtract last digit of 123 from n=3^2=9 9=3=6, [1,2,3] -> [1,2,(9-3)] - > [1,2,6] -> 126

                      • The last valid lexicographic permutation of n=3 will be 621; 126 with digits in reverse order

                      • Increment 126 to and including 621, match numbers where the .size as a Set is equal to .length of string '123' and every index of current number as a string in an array tests true for RegExp ^[1-(n^2-n=6)]$ and the number of the digits is equal to n^2, push matches to an array in lexicographic order

                      • Convert matched integers as string to integers in array

                      • The number of valid permutations for the given n, 3, is 18






                      share|improve this answer























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                        21 Answers
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                        up vote
                        7
                        down vote














                        05AB1E, 11 bytes



                        nÅœʒDÙQ}sùΩ


                        Try it online or verify all test cases.



                        Explanation:





                        n             # Take the square of the (implicit) input
                        # i.e. 3 → 9
                        Ŝ # Get all integer-lists using integers in the range [1, val) that sum to val
                        # i.e. 9 → [[1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1],...,[1,3,5],...,[9]]
                        ʒ } # Filter the list to only keep lists with unique values:
                        D # Duplicate the current value
                        Ù # Uniquify it
                        # i.e. [2,2,5] → [2,5]
                        Q # Check if it's still the same
                        # i.e. [2,2,5] and [2,5] → 0 (falsey)
                        s # Swap to take the (implicit) input again
                        ù # Only leave lists of that size
                        # i.e. [[1,2,6],[1,3,5],[1,8],[2,3,4],[2,7],[3,6],[4,5],[9]] and 3
                        # → [[1,2,6],[1,3,5],[2,3,4]]
                        Ω # Pick a random list from the list of lists (and output implicitly)





                        share|improve this answer



























                          up vote
                          7
                          down vote














                          05AB1E, 11 bytes



                          nÅœʒDÙQ}sùΩ


                          Try it online or verify all test cases.



                          Explanation:





                          n             # Take the square of the (implicit) input
                          # i.e. 3 → 9
                          Ŝ # Get all integer-lists using integers in the range [1, val) that sum to val
                          # i.e. 9 → [[1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1],...,[1,3,5],...,[9]]
                          ʒ } # Filter the list to only keep lists with unique values:
                          D # Duplicate the current value
                          Ù # Uniquify it
                          # i.e. [2,2,5] → [2,5]
                          Q # Check if it's still the same
                          # i.e. [2,2,5] and [2,5] → 0 (falsey)
                          s # Swap to take the (implicit) input again
                          ù # Only leave lists of that size
                          # i.e. [[1,2,6],[1,3,5],[1,8],[2,3,4],[2,7],[3,6],[4,5],[9]] and 3
                          # → [[1,2,6],[1,3,5],[2,3,4]]
                          Ω # Pick a random list from the list of lists (and output implicitly)





                          share|improve this answer

























                            up vote
                            7
                            down vote










                            up vote
                            7
                            down vote










                            05AB1E, 11 bytes



                            nÅœʒDÙQ}sùΩ


                            Try it online or verify all test cases.



                            Explanation:





                            n             # Take the square of the (implicit) input
                            # i.e. 3 → 9
                            Ŝ # Get all integer-lists using integers in the range [1, val) that sum to val
                            # i.e. 9 → [[1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1],...,[1,3,5],...,[9]]
                            ʒ } # Filter the list to only keep lists with unique values:
                            D # Duplicate the current value
                            Ù # Uniquify it
                            # i.e. [2,2,5] → [2,5]
                            Q # Check if it's still the same
                            # i.e. [2,2,5] and [2,5] → 0 (falsey)
                            s # Swap to take the (implicit) input again
                            ù # Only leave lists of that size
                            # i.e. [[1,2,6],[1,3,5],[1,8],[2,3,4],[2,7],[3,6],[4,5],[9]] and 3
                            # → [[1,2,6],[1,3,5],[2,3,4]]
                            Ω # Pick a random list from the list of lists (and output implicitly)





                            share|improve this answer















                            05AB1E, 11 bytes



                            nÅœʒDÙQ}sùΩ


                            Try it online or verify all test cases.



                            Explanation:





                            n             # Take the square of the (implicit) input
                            # i.e. 3 → 9
                            Ŝ # Get all integer-lists using integers in the range [1, val) that sum to val
                            # i.e. 9 → [[1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1],...,[1,3,5],...,[9]]
                            ʒ } # Filter the list to only keep lists with unique values:
                            D # Duplicate the current value
                            Ù # Uniquify it
                            # i.e. [2,2,5] → [2,5]
                            Q # Check if it's still the same
                            # i.e. [2,2,5] and [2,5] → 0 (falsey)
                            s # Swap to take the (implicit) input again
                            ù # Only leave lists of that size
                            # i.e. [[1,2,6],[1,3,5],[1,8],[2,3,4],[2,7],[3,6],[4,5],[9]] and 3
                            # → [[1,2,6],[1,3,5],[2,3,4]]
                            Ω # Pick a random list from the list of lists (and output implicitly)






                            share|improve this answer














                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer








                            edited Nov 20 at 15:08

























                            answered Nov 20 at 14:55









                            Kevin Cruijssen

                            34.4k554182




                            34.4k554182






















                                up vote
                                6
                                down vote














                                Brachylog (v2), 15 bytes (random) or 13 bytes (all possibilities)



                                Random



                                ~lℕ₁ᵐA+√?∧A≜₁ᵐ≠


                                Try it online!



                                Function submission (seen in TIO with a wrapper making it into a full program).



                                Explanation



                                ~lℕ₁ᵐA+√?∧A≜₁ᵐ≠
                                ~l Specify a property of a list: its length is equal to the input,
                                ᵐ and it is composed entirely of
                                ℕ₁ integers ≥ 1,
                                √ for which the square root of the
                                + sum of the list
                                ? is the input.
                                A ∧A Restricting yourself to lists with that property,
                                ≜₁ pick random possible values
                                ᵐ for each element in turn,
                                ≠ until you find one whose elements are all distinct.


                                All possibilities



                                ~lℕ₁ᵐ<₁.+√?∧≜


                                Try it online!



                                Function submission, which generates all possible outputs.



                                Explanation



                                ~lℕ₁ᵐ<₁.+√?∧≜
                                ~l Specify a property of a list: its length is equal to the input,
                                ᵐ it is composed entirely of
                                ℕ₁ integers ≥ 1,
                                <₁ it is strictly increasing,
                                √ and the square root of the
                                + sum of the list
                                ? is the input.
                                . ∧≜ Generate all specific lists with that property.


                                I'm fairly surprised that ∧≜ works (you'd normally have to write ∧~≜ in order to brute-force the output rather than the input), but it turns out that has an input=output assumption so it doesn't matter which way round you run it.



                                Bonus task



                                In order to get some insight into the sequence of the number of possibilities, I created a different TIO wrapper which runs the program on successive integers to give the sequence of output counts:



                                1,1,3,9,30,110,436,1801,7657,33401


                                A trip to OEIS discovers that this is already a known sequence, A107379, described pretty much as in the question (apparently you get the same sequence if you restrict it to odd numbers). The page lists several formulas for the sequence (although none is particularly simple; the second looks like a direct formula for the value but I don't understand the notation).






                                share|improve this answer























                                • The second formula is "the coefficient of x^(n*(n-1)/2) in the series expansion of Product_{k=1..n} 1/(1 - x^k)" (not direct at all, unfortunately)
                                  – user202729
                                  Nov 20 at 17:18












                                • Placing the "all different" constraint before the random labelization step (e.g. A≠≜₁ᵐ) makes the run time much faster on average.
                                  – Fatalize
                                  2 days ago










                                • I don't understand why you made this a community wiki. Those are an archaic way to have editable posts before it was possible to edit.
                                  – pipe
                                  2 days ago










                                • @pipe codegolf.stackexchange.com/questions/172716/true-color-code/…
                                  – guest271314
                                  2 days ago















                                up vote
                                6
                                down vote














                                Brachylog (v2), 15 bytes (random) or 13 bytes (all possibilities)



                                Random



                                ~lℕ₁ᵐA+√?∧A≜₁ᵐ≠


                                Try it online!



                                Function submission (seen in TIO with a wrapper making it into a full program).



                                Explanation



                                ~lℕ₁ᵐA+√?∧A≜₁ᵐ≠
                                ~l Specify a property of a list: its length is equal to the input,
                                ᵐ and it is composed entirely of
                                ℕ₁ integers ≥ 1,
                                √ for which the square root of the
                                + sum of the list
                                ? is the input.
                                A ∧A Restricting yourself to lists with that property,
                                ≜₁ pick random possible values
                                ᵐ for each element in turn,
                                ≠ until you find one whose elements are all distinct.


                                All possibilities



                                ~lℕ₁ᵐ<₁.+√?∧≜


                                Try it online!



                                Function submission, which generates all possible outputs.



                                Explanation



                                ~lℕ₁ᵐ<₁.+√?∧≜
                                ~l Specify a property of a list: its length is equal to the input,
                                ᵐ it is composed entirely of
                                ℕ₁ integers ≥ 1,
                                <₁ it is strictly increasing,
                                √ and the square root of the
                                + sum of the list
                                ? is the input.
                                . ∧≜ Generate all specific lists with that property.


                                I'm fairly surprised that ∧≜ works (you'd normally have to write ∧~≜ in order to brute-force the output rather than the input), but it turns out that has an input=output assumption so it doesn't matter which way round you run it.



                                Bonus task



                                In order to get some insight into the sequence of the number of possibilities, I created a different TIO wrapper which runs the program on successive integers to give the sequence of output counts:



                                1,1,3,9,30,110,436,1801,7657,33401


                                A trip to OEIS discovers that this is already a known sequence, A107379, described pretty much as in the question (apparently you get the same sequence if you restrict it to odd numbers). The page lists several formulas for the sequence (although none is particularly simple; the second looks like a direct formula for the value but I don't understand the notation).






                                share|improve this answer























                                • The second formula is "the coefficient of x^(n*(n-1)/2) in the series expansion of Product_{k=1..n} 1/(1 - x^k)" (not direct at all, unfortunately)
                                  – user202729
                                  Nov 20 at 17:18












                                • Placing the "all different" constraint before the random labelization step (e.g. A≠≜₁ᵐ) makes the run time much faster on average.
                                  – Fatalize
                                  2 days ago










                                • I don't understand why you made this a community wiki. Those are an archaic way to have editable posts before it was possible to edit.
                                  – pipe
                                  2 days ago










                                • @pipe codegolf.stackexchange.com/questions/172716/true-color-code/…
                                  – guest271314
                                  2 days ago













                                up vote
                                6
                                down vote










                                up vote
                                6
                                down vote










                                Brachylog (v2), 15 bytes (random) or 13 bytes (all possibilities)



                                Random



                                ~lℕ₁ᵐA+√?∧A≜₁ᵐ≠


                                Try it online!



                                Function submission (seen in TIO with a wrapper making it into a full program).



                                Explanation



                                ~lℕ₁ᵐA+√?∧A≜₁ᵐ≠
                                ~l Specify a property of a list: its length is equal to the input,
                                ᵐ and it is composed entirely of
                                ℕ₁ integers ≥ 1,
                                √ for which the square root of the
                                + sum of the list
                                ? is the input.
                                A ∧A Restricting yourself to lists with that property,
                                ≜₁ pick random possible values
                                ᵐ for each element in turn,
                                ≠ until you find one whose elements are all distinct.


                                All possibilities



                                ~lℕ₁ᵐ<₁.+√?∧≜


                                Try it online!



                                Function submission, which generates all possible outputs.



                                Explanation



                                ~lℕ₁ᵐ<₁.+√?∧≜
                                ~l Specify a property of a list: its length is equal to the input,
                                ᵐ it is composed entirely of
                                ℕ₁ integers ≥ 1,
                                <₁ it is strictly increasing,
                                √ and the square root of the
                                + sum of the list
                                ? is the input.
                                . ∧≜ Generate all specific lists with that property.


                                I'm fairly surprised that ∧≜ works (you'd normally have to write ∧~≜ in order to brute-force the output rather than the input), but it turns out that has an input=output assumption so it doesn't matter which way round you run it.



                                Bonus task



                                In order to get some insight into the sequence of the number of possibilities, I created a different TIO wrapper which runs the program on successive integers to give the sequence of output counts:



                                1,1,3,9,30,110,436,1801,7657,33401


                                A trip to OEIS discovers that this is already a known sequence, A107379, described pretty much as in the question (apparently you get the same sequence if you restrict it to odd numbers). The page lists several formulas for the sequence (although none is particularly simple; the second looks like a direct formula for the value but I don't understand the notation).






                                share|improve this answer















                                Brachylog (v2), 15 bytes (random) or 13 bytes (all possibilities)



                                Random



                                ~lℕ₁ᵐA+√?∧A≜₁ᵐ≠


                                Try it online!



                                Function submission (seen in TIO with a wrapper making it into a full program).



                                Explanation



                                ~lℕ₁ᵐA+√?∧A≜₁ᵐ≠
                                ~l Specify a property of a list: its length is equal to the input,
                                ᵐ and it is composed entirely of
                                ℕ₁ integers ≥ 1,
                                √ for which the square root of the
                                + sum of the list
                                ? is the input.
                                A ∧A Restricting yourself to lists with that property,
                                ≜₁ pick random possible values
                                ᵐ for each element in turn,
                                ≠ until you find one whose elements are all distinct.


                                All possibilities



                                ~lℕ₁ᵐ<₁.+√?∧≜


                                Try it online!



                                Function submission, which generates all possible outputs.



                                Explanation



                                ~lℕ₁ᵐ<₁.+√?∧≜
                                ~l Specify a property of a list: its length is equal to the input,
                                ᵐ it is composed entirely of
                                ℕ₁ integers ≥ 1,
                                <₁ it is strictly increasing,
                                √ and the square root of the
                                + sum of the list
                                ? is the input.
                                . ∧≜ Generate all specific lists with that property.


                                I'm fairly surprised that ∧≜ works (you'd normally have to write ∧~≜ in order to brute-force the output rather than the input), but it turns out that has an input=output assumption so it doesn't matter which way round you run it.



                                Bonus task



                                In order to get some insight into the sequence of the number of possibilities, I created a different TIO wrapper which runs the program on successive integers to give the sequence of output counts:



                                1,1,3,9,30,110,436,1801,7657,33401


                                A trip to OEIS discovers that this is already a known sequence, A107379, described pretty much as in the question (apparently you get the same sequence if you restrict it to odd numbers). The page lists several formulas for the sequence (although none is particularly simple; the second looks like a direct formula for the value but I don't understand the notation).







                                share|improve this answer














                                share|improve this answer



                                share|improve this answer








                                edited Nov 20 at 15:30


























                                community wiki





                                3 revs
                                ais523













                                • The second formula is "the coefficient of x^(n*(n-1)/2) in the series expansion of Product_{k=1..n} 1/(1 - x^k)" (not direct at all, unfortunately)
                                  – user202729
                                  Nov 20 at 17:18












                                • Placing the "all different" constraint before the random labelization step (e.g. A≠≜₁ᵐ) makes the run time much faster on average.
                                  – Fatalize
                                  2 days ago










                                • I don't understand why you made this a community wiki. Those are an archaic way to have editable posts before it was possible to edit.
                                  – pipe
                                  2 days ago










                                • @pipe codegolf.stackexchange.com/questions/172716/true-color-code/…
                                  – guest271314
                                  2 days ago


















                                • The second formula is "the coefficient of x^(n*(n-1)/2) in the series expansion of Product_{k=1..n} 1/(1 - x^k)" (not direct at all, unfortunately)
                                  – user202729
                                  Nov 20 at 17:18












                                • Placing the "all different" constraint before the random labelization step (e.g. A≠≜₁ᵐ) makes the run time much faster on average.
                                  – Fatalize
                                  2 days ago










                                • I don't understand why you made this a community wiki. Those are an archaic way to have editable posts before it was possible to edit.
                                  – pipe
                                  2 days ago










                                • @pipe codegolf.stackexchange.com/questions/172716/true-color-code/…
                                  – guest271314
                                  2 days ago
















                                The second formula is "the coefficient of x^(n*(n-1)/2) in the series expansion of Product_{k=1..n} 1/(1 - x^k)" (not direct at all, unfortunately)
                                – user202729
                                Nov 20 at 17:18






                                The second formula is "the coefficient of x^(n*(n-1)/2) in the series expansion of Product_{k=1..n} 1/(1 - x^k)" (not direct at all, unfortunately)
                                – user202729
                                Nov 20 at 17:18














                                Placing the "all different" constraint before the random labelization step (e.g. A≠≜₁ᵐ) makes the run time much faster on average.
                                – Fatalize
                                2 days ago




                                Placing the "all different" constraint before the random labelization step (e.g. A≠≜₁ᵐ) makes the run time much faster on average.
                                – Fatalize
                                2 days ago












                                I don't understand why you made this a community wiki. Those are an archaic way to have editable posts before it was possible to edit.
                                – pipe
                                2 days ago




                                I don't understand why you made this a community wiki. Those are an archaic way to have editable posts before it was possible to edit.
                                – pipe
                                2 days ago












                                @pipe codegolf.stackexchange.com/questions/172716/true-color-code/…
                                – guest271314
                                2 days ago




                                @pipe codegolf.stackexchange.com/questions/172716/true-color-code/…
                                – guest271314
                                2 days ago










                                up vote
                                5
                                down vote














                                Python (2 or 3), 85 bytes





                                def f(n):r=sample(range(1,n*n+1),n);return(n*n==sum(r))*r or f(n)
                                from random import*


                                Try it online!






                                share|improve this answer

























                                  up vote
                                  5
                                  down vote














                                  Python (2 or 3), 85 bytes





                                  def f(n):r=sample(range(1,n*n+1),n);return(n*n==sum(r))*r or f(n)
                                  from random import*


                                  Try it online!






                                  share|improve this answer























                                    up vote
                                    5
                                    down vote










                                    up vote
                                    5
                                    down vote










                                    Python (2 or 3), 85 bytes





                                    def f(n):r=sample(range(1,n*n+1),n);return(n*n==sum(r))*r or f(n)
                                    from random import*


                                    Try it online!






                                    share|improve this answer













                                    Python (2 or 3), 85 bytes





                                    def f(n):r=sample(range(1,n*n+1),n);return(n*n==sum(r))*r or f(n)
                                    from random import*


                                    Try it online!







                                    share|improve this answer












                                    share|improve this answer



                                    share|improve this answer










                                    answered Nov 20 at 18:55









                                    Jonathan Allan

                                    50.2k534165




                                    50.2k534165






















                                        up vote
                                        4
                                        down vote














                                        Jelly, 9 bytes



                                        ²œcS=¥Ƈ²X


                                        Try it online!



                                        Generate all n-combinations of the list [1..n²], filter to keep those with sum n², then pick a random one.






                                        share|improve this answer

























                                          up vote
                                          4
                                          down vote














                                          Jelly, 9 bytes



                                          ²œcS=¥Ƈ²X


                                          Try it online!



                                          Generate all n-combinations of the list [1..n²], filter to keep those with sum n², then pick a random one.






                                          share|improve this answer























                                            up vote
                                            4
                                            down vote










                                            up vote
                                            4
                                            down vote










                                            Jelly, 9 bytes



                                            ²œcS=¥Ƈ²X


                                            Try it online!



                                            Generate all n-combinations of the list [1..n²], filter to keep those with sum n², then pick a random one.






                                            share|improve this answer













                                            Jelly, 9 bytes



                                            ²œcS=¥Ƈ²X


                                            Try it online!



                                            Generate all n-combinations of the list [1..n²], filter to keep those with sum n², then pick a random one.







                                            share|improve this answer












                                            share|improve this answer



                                            share|improve this answer










                                            answered Nov 20 at 15:05









                                            user202729

                                            13.6k12550




                                            13.6k12550






















                                                up vote
                                                4
                                                down vote













                                                Java 10, 250 242 222 bytes





                                                import java.util.*;n->{for(;;){int i=n+1,r=new int[i],d=new int[n];for(r[n<2?0:1]=n*n;i-->2;r[i]=(int)(Math.random()*n*n));var S=new HashSet();for(Arrays.sort(r),i=n;i-->0;)S.add(d[i]=r[i+1]-r[i]);if(!S.contains(0)&S.size()==n)return S;}}


                                                -20 bytes thanks to @nwellnhof.



                                                Watch out, Java coming through.. It's 'only' five times as long as the other four answers combined, so not too bad I guess.. rofl.

                                                It does run n=1 through n=25 (combined) in less than 2 seconds though, so I'll probably post a modified version to the speed version of this challenge (that's currently still in the Sandbox) as well.



                                                Try it online.



                                                Explanation:



                                                In pseudo-code we do the following:



                                                1) Generate an array of size n+1 containing: 0, n squared, and n-1 amount of random integers in the range [0, n squared)

                                                2) Sort this array

                                                3) Create a second array of size n containing the forward differences of pairs

                                                These first three steps will give us an array containing n random integers (in the range [0, n squared) that sum to n squared.

                                                4a) If not all random values are unique, or any of them is 0: try again from step 1

                                                4b) Else: return this differences array as result



                                                As for the actual code:



                                                import java.util.*;      // Required import for HashSet and Arrays
                                                n->{ // Method with int parameter and Set return-type
                                                for(;;){ // Loop indefinitely
                                                int i=n+1, // Set `i` to `n+1`
                                                r=new int[i]; // Create an array of size `n+1`
                                                var S=new HashSet(); // Result-set, starting empty
                                                for(r[n<2? // If `n` is 1:
                                                0 // Set the first item in the first array to:
                                                : // Else:
                                                1] // Set the second item in the first array to:
                                                =n*n; // `n` squared
                                                i-->2;) // Loop `i` in the range [`n`, 2]:
                                                r[i]= // Set the `i`'th value in the first array to:
                                                (int)(Math.random()*n*n);
                                                // A random value in the range [0, `n` squared)
                                                for(Arrays.sort(r), // Sort the first array
                                                i=n;i-->0;) // Loop `i` in the range (`n`, 0]:
                                                S.add( // Add to the Set:
                                                r[i+1]-r[i]); // The `i+1`'th and `i`'th difference of the first array
                                                if(!S.contains(0) // If the Set does not contain a 0
                                                &S.size()==n) // and its size is equal to `n`:
                                                return S;}} // Return this Set as the result
                                                // (Implicit else: continue the infinite loop)





                                                share|improve this answer



















                                                • 1




                                                  n=25 in under 2 seconds is impressive! I'll have to read through the explanation and see how it does it. Is it still a bruteforce method?
                                                  – Skidsdev
                                                  Nov 20 at 16:59










                                                • Is it uniform? -
                                                  – user202729
                                                  Nov 20 at 17:13










                                                • @user202729 Although I'm not sure how to prove it, I think it is. The Java builtin is uniform, and it uses that to get random values in the range [0, n squared) first, and then calculates the differences between those sorted random values (including leading 0 and trailing n squared. So I'm pretty sure those differences are uniform as well. But again, I'm not sure how to prove it. Uniformity in randomness isn't really my expertise tbh.
                                                  – Kevin Cruijssen
                                                  Nov 20 at 17:27






                                                • 3




                                                  You never read from the differences array d or am I missing something?
                                                  – nwellnhof
                                                  Nov 20 at 21:31






                                                • 1




                                                  I'm kind of happy with my 127 bytes solution :D
                                                  – Olivier Grégoire
                                                  2 days ago















                                                up vote
                                                4
                                                down vote













                                                Java 10, 250 242 222 bytes





                                                import java.util.*;n->{for(;;){int i=n+1,r=new int[i],d=new int[n];for(r[n<2?0:1]=n*n;i-->2;r[i]=(int)(Math.random()*n*n));var S=new HashSet();for(Arrays.sort(r),i=n;i-->0;)S.add(d[i]=r[i+1]-r[i]);if(!S.contains(0)&S.size()==n)return S;}}


                                                -20 bytes thanks to @nwellnhof.



                                                Watch out, Java coming through.. It's 'only' five times as long as the other four answers combined, so not too bad I guess.. rofl.

                                                It does run n=1 through n=25 (combined) in less than 2 seconds though, so I'll probably post a modified version to the speed version of this challenge (that's currently still in the Sandbox) as well.



                                                Try it online.



                                                Explanation:



                                                In pseudo-code we do the following:



                                                1) Generate an array of size n+1 containing: 0, n squared, and n-1 amount of random integers in the range [0, n squared)

                                                2) Sort this array

                                                3) Create a second array of size n containing the forward differences of pairs

                                                These first three steps will give us an array containing n random integers (in the range [0, n squared) that sum to n squared.

                                                4a) If not all random values are unique, or any of them is 0: try again from step 1

                                                4b) Else: return this differences array as result



                                                As for the actual code:



                                                import java.util.*;      // Required import for HashSet and Arrays
                                                n->{ // Method with int parameter and Set return-type
                                                for(;;){ // Loop indefinitely
                                                int i=n+1, // Set `i` to `n+1`
                                                r=new int[i]; // Create an array of size `n+1`
                                                var S=new HashSet(); // Result-set, starting empty
                                                for(r[n<2? // If `n` is 1:
                                                0 // Set the first item in the first array to:
                                                : // Else:
                                                1] // Set the second item in the first array to:
                                                =n*n; // `n` squared
                                                i-->2;) // Loop `i` in the range [`n`, 2]:
                                                r[i]= // Set the `i`'th value in the first array to:
                                                (int)(Math.random()*n*n);
                                                // A random value in the range [0, `n` squared)
                                                for(Arrays.sort(r), // Sort the first array
                                                i=n;i-->0;) // Loop `i` in the range (`n`, 0]:
                                                S.add( // Add to the Set:
                                                r[i+1]-r[i]); // The `i+1`'th and `i`'th difference of the first array
                                                if(!S.contains(0) // If the Set does not contain a 0
                                                &S.size()==n) // and its size is equal to `n`:
                                                return S;}} // Return this Set as the result
                                                // (Implicit else: continue the infinite loop)





                                                share|improve this answer



















                                                • 1




                                                  n=25 in under 2 seconds is impressive! I'll have to read through the explanation and see how it does it. Is it still a bruteforce method?
                                                  – Skidsdev
                                                  Nov 20 at 16:59










                                                • Is it uniform? -
                                                  – user202729
                                                  Nov 20 at 17:13










                                                • @user202729 Although I'm not sure how to prove it, I think it is. The Java builtin is uniform, and it uses that to get random values in the range [0, n squared) first, and then calculates the differences between those sorted random values (including leading 0 and trailing n squared. So I'm pretty sure those differences are uniform as well. But again, I'm not sure how to prove it. Uniformity in randomness isn't really my expertise tbh.
                                                  – Kevin Cruijssen
                                                  Nov 20 at 17:27






                                                • 3




                                                  You never read from the differences array d or am I missing something?
                                                  – nwellnhof
                                                  Nov 20 at 21:31






                                                • 1




                                                  I'm kind of happy with my 127 bytes solution :D
                                                  – Olivier Grégoire
                                                  2 days ago













                                                up vote
                                                4
                                                down vote










                                                up vote
                                                4
                                                down vote









                                                Java 10, 250 242 222 bytes





                                                import java.util.*;n->{for(;;){int i=n+1,r=new int[i],d=new int[n];for(r[n<2?0:1]=n*n;i-->2;r[i]=(int)(Math.random()*n*n));var S=new HashSet();for(Arrays.sort(r),i=n;i-->0;)S.add(d[i]=r[i+1]-r[i]);if(!S.contains(0)&S.size()==n)return S;}}


                                                -20 bytes thanks to @nwellnhof.



                                                Watch out, Java coming through.. It's 'only' five times as long as the other four answers combined, so not too bad I guess.. rofl.

                                                It does run n=1 through n=25 (combined) in less than 2 seconds though, so I'll probably post a modified version to the speed version of this challenge (that's currently still in the Sandbox) as well.



                                                Try it online.



                                                Explanation:



                                                In pseudo-code we do the following:



                                                1) Generate an array of size n+1 containing: 0, n squared, and n-1 amount of random integers in the range [0, n squared)

                                                2) Sort this array

                                                3) Create a second array of size n containing the forward differences of pairs

                                                These first three steps will give us an array containing n random integers (in the range [0, n squared) that sum to n squared.

                                                4a) If not all random values are unique, or any of them is 0: try again from step 1

                                                4b) Else: return this differences array as result



                                                As for the actual code:



                                                import java.util.*;      // Required import for HashSet and Arrays
                                                n->{ // Method with int parameter and Set return-type
                                                for(;;){ // Loop indefinitely
                                                int i=n+1, // Set `i` to `n+1`
                                                r=new int[i]; // Create an array of size `n+1`
                                                var S=new HashSet(); // Result-set, starting empty
                                                for(r[n<2? // If `n` is 1:
                                                0 // Set the first item in the first array to:
                                                : // Else:
                                                1] // Set the second item in the first array to:
                                                =n*n; // `n` squared
                                                i-->2;) // Loop `i` in the range [`n`, 2]:
                                                r[i]= // Set the `i`'th value in the first array to:
                                                (int)(Math.random()*n*n);
                                                // A random value in the range [0, `n` squared)
                                                for(Arrays.sort(r), // Sort the first array
                                                i=n;i-->0;) // Loop `i` in the range (`n`, 0]:
                                                S.add( // Add to the Set:
                                                r[i+1]-r[i]); // The `i+1`'th and `i`'th difference of the first array
                                                if(!S.contains(0) // If the Set does not contain a 0
                                                &S.size()==n) // and its size is equal to `n`:
                                                return S;}} // Return this Set as the result
                                                // (Implicit else: continue the infinite loop)





                                                share|improve this answer














                                                Java 10, 250 242 222 bytes





                                                import java.util.*;n->{for(;;){int i=n+1,r=new int[i],d=new int[n];for(r[n<2?0:1]=n*n;i-->2;r[i]=(int)(Math.random()*n*n));var S=new HashSet();for(Arrays.sort(r),i=n;i-->0;)S.add(d[i]=r[i+1]-r[i]);if(!S.contains(0)&S.size()==n)return S;}}


                                                -20 bytes thanks to @nwellnhof.



                                                Watch out, Java coming through.. It's 'only' five times as long as the other four answers combined, so not too bad I guess.. rofl.

                                                It does run n=1 through n=25 (combined) in less than 2 seconds though, so I'll probably post a modified version to the speed version of this challenge (that's currently still in the Sandbox) as well.



                                                Try it online.



                                                Explanation:



                                                In pseudo-code we do the following:



                                                1) Generate an array of size n+1 containing: 0, n squared, and n-1 amount of random integers in the range [0, n squared)

                                                2) Sort this array

                                                3) Create a second array of size n containing the forward differences of pairs

                                                These first three steps will give us an array containing n random integers (in the range [0, n squared) that sum to n squared.

                                                4a) If not all random values are unique, or any of them is 0: try again from step 1

                                                4b) Else: return this differences array as result



                                                As for the actual code:



                                                import java.util.*;      // Required import for HashSet and Arrays
                                                n->{ // Method with int parameter and Set return-type
                                                for(;;){ // Loop indefinitely
                                                int i=n+1, // Set `i` to `n+1`
                                                r=new int[i]; // Create an array of size `n+1`
                                                var S=new HashSet(); // Result-set, starting empty
                                                for(r[n<2? // If `n` is 1:
                                                0 // Set the first item in the first array to:
                                                : // Else:
                                                1] // Set the second item in the first array to:
                                                =n*n; // `n` squared
                                                i-->2;) // Loop `i` in the range [`n`, 2]:
                                                r[i]= // Set the `i`'th value in the first array to:
                                                (int)(Math.random()*n*n);
                                                // A random value in the range [0, `n` squared)
                                                for(Arrays.sort(r), // Sort the first array
                                                i=n;i-->0;) // Loop `i` in the range (`n`, 0]:
                                                S.add( // Add to the Set:
                                                r[i+1]-r[i]); // The `i+1`'th and `i`'th difference of the first array
                                                if(!S.contains(0) // If the Set does not contain a 0
                                                &S.size()==n) // and its size is equal to `n`:
                                                return S;}} // Return this Set as the result
                                                // (Implicit else: continue the infinite loop)






                                                share|improve this answer














                                                share|improve this answer



                                                share|improve this answer








                                                edited Nov 20 at 22:29

























                                                answered Nov 20 at 16:20









                                                Kevin Cruijssen

                                                34.4k554182




                                                34.4k554182








                                                • 1




                                                  n=25 in under 2 seconds is impressive! I'll have to read through the explanation and see how it does it. Is it still a bruteforce method?
                                                  – Skidsdev
                                                  Nov 20 at 16:59










                                                • Is it uniform? -
                                                  – user202729
                                                  Nov 20 at 17:13










                                                • @user202729 Although I'm not sure how to prove it, I think it is. The Java builtin is uniform, and it uses that to get random values in the range [0, n squared) first, and then calculates the differences between those sorted random values (including leading 0 and trailing n squared. So I'm pretty sure those differences are uniform as well. But again, I'm not sure how to prove it. Uniformity in randomness isn't really my expertise tbh.
                                                  – Kevin Cruijssen
                                                  Nov 20 at 17:27






                                                • 3




                                                  You never read from the differences array d or am I missing something?
                                                  – nwellnhof
                                                  Nov 20 at 21:31






                                                • 1




                                                  I'm kind of happy with my 127 bytes solution :D
                                                  – Olivier Grégoire
                                                  2 days ago














                                                • 1




                                                  n=25 in under 2 seconds is impressive! I'll have to read through the explanation and see how it does it. Is it still a bruteforce method?
                                                  – Skidsdev
                                                  Nov 20 at 16:59










                                                • Is it uniform? -
                                                  – user202729
                                                  Nov 20 at 17:13










                                                • @user202729 Although I'm not sure how to prove it, I think it is. The Java builtin is uniform, and it uses that to get random values in the range [0, n squared) first, and then calculates the differences between those sorted random values (including leading 0 and trailing n squared. So I'm pretty sure those differences are uniform as well. But again, I'm not sure how to prove it. Uniformity in randomness isn't really my expertise tbh.
                                                  – Kevin Cruijssen
                                                  Nov 20 at 17:27






                                                • 3




                                                  You never read from the differences array d or am I missing something?
                                                  – nwellnhof
                                                  Nov 20 at 21:31






                                                • 1




                                                  I'm kind of happy with my 127 bytes solution :D
                                                  – Olivier Grégoire
                                                  2 days ago








                                                1




                                                1




                                                n=25 in under 2 seconds is impressive! I'll have to read through the explanation and see how it does it. Is it still a bruteforce method?
                                                – Skidsdev
                                                Nov 20 at 16:59




                                                n=25 in under 2 seconds is impressive! I'll have to read through the explanation and see how it does it. Is it still a bruteforce method?
                                                – Skidsdev
                                                Nov 20 at 16:59












                                                Is it uniform? -
                                                – user202729
                                                Nov 20 at 17:13




                                                Is it uniform? -
                                                – user202729
                                                Nov 20 at 17:13












                                                @user202729 Although I'm not sure how to prove it, I think it is. The Java builtin is uniform, and it uses that to get random values in the range [0, n squared) first, and then calculates the differences between those sorted random values (including leading 0 and trailing n squared. So I'm pretty sure those differences are uniform as well. But again, I'm not sure how to prove it. Uniformity in randomness isn't really my expertise tbh.
                                                – Kevin Cruijssen
                                                Nov 20 at 17:27




                                                @user202729 Although I'm not sure how to prove it, I think it is. The Java builtin is uniform, and it uses that to get random values in the range [0, n squared) first, and then calculates the differences between those sorted random values (including leading 0 and trailing n squared. So I'm pretty sure those differences are uniform as well. But again, I'm not sure how to prove it. Uniformity in randomness isn't really my expertise tbh.
                                                – Kevin Cruijssen
                                                Nov 20 at 17:27




                                                3




                                                3




                                                You never read from the differences array d or am I missing something?
                                                – nwellnhof
                                                Nov 20 at 21:31




                                                You never read from the differences array d or am I missing something?
                                                – nwellnhof
                                                Nov 20 at 21:31




                                                1




                                                1




                                                I'm kind of happy with my 127 bytes solution :D
                                                – Olivier Grégoire
                                                2 days ago




                                                I'm kind of happy with my 127 bytes solution :D
                                                – Olivier Grégoire
                                                2 days ago










                                                up vote
                                                4
                                                down vote














                                                R, 68, 75 48 bytes (random) and 70 bytes (deterministic)



                                                @Giuseppe's rejection sampling method:





                                                function(n){while(sum(F)!=n^2)F=sample(n^2,n);F}


                                                Try it online!



                                                Golfed original:





                                                function(n,m=combn(1:n^2,n))m[,sample(which(colSums(m)==n^2)*!!1:2,1)]


                                                Try it online!



                                                The *!!1:2 business is to avoid the odd way sample act when the first argument has length 1.






                                                share|improve this answer























                                                • @Giuseppe "fixed" :-)
                                                  – ngm
                                                  Nov 20 at 18:57












                                                • very nice. using p directly as an index instead of calculating it and re-using it should save some bytes.
                                                  – Giuseppe
                                                  Nov 20 at 18:59






                                                • 1




                                                  I have function(n){while(sum(F)!=n^2)F=sample(n^2,n);F} for 48 as well...
                                                  – Giuseppe
                                                  Nov 20 at 19:00






                                                • 1




                                                  @J.Doe to avoid the issue when calling something like sample(2,1) which happens with n=2. So rep just guarantees that this will never happen. There might be a better way but this was quick and I was mad at sample.
                                                  – ngm
                                                  Nov 20 at 20:17








                                                • 1




                                                  You can save a byte with x*!!1:2 over rep(x,2) if your meta question gets a no.
                                                  – J.Doe
                                                  Nov 20 at 20:35















                                                up vote
                                                4
                                                down vote














                                                R, 68, 75 48 bytes (random) and 70 bytes (deterministic)



                                                @Giuseppe's rejection sampling method:





                                                function(n){while(sum(F)!=n^2)F=sample(n^2,n);F}


                                                Try it online!



                                                Golfed original:





                                                function(n,m=combn(1:n^2,n))m[,sample(which(colSums(m)==n^2)*!!1:2,1)]


                                                Try it online!



                                                The *!!1:2 business is to avoid the odd way sample act when the first argument has length 1.






                                                share|improve this answer























                                                • @Giuseppe "fixed" :-)
                                                  – ngm
                                                  Nov 20 at 18:57












                                                • very nice. using p directly as an index instead of calculating it and re-using it should save some bytes.
                                                  – Giuseppe
                                                  Nov 20 at 18:59






                                                • 1




                                                  I have function(n){while(sum(F)!=n^2)F=sample(n^2,n);F} for 48 as well...
                                                  – Giuseppe
                                                  Nov 20 at 19:00






                                                • 1




                                                  @J.Doe to avoid the issue when calling something like sample(2,1) which happens with n=2. So rep just guarantees that this will never happen. There might be a better way but this was quick and I was mad at sample.
                                                  – ngm
                                                  Nov 20 at 20:17








                                                • 1




                                                  You can save a byte with x*!!1:2 over rep(x,2) if your meta question gets a no.
                                                  – J.Doe
                                                  Nov 20 at 20:35













                                                up vote
                                                4
                                                down vote










                                                up vote
                                                4
                                                down vote










                                                R, 68, 75 48 bytes (random) and 70 bytes (deterministic)



                                                @Giuseppe's rejection sampling method:





                                                function(n){while(sum(F)!=n^2)F=sample(n^2,n);F}


                                                Try it online!



                                                Golfed original:





                                                function(n,m=combn(1:n^2,n))m[,sample(which(colSums(m)==n^2)*!!1:2,1)]


                                                Try it online!



                                                The *!!1:2 business is to avoid the odd way sample act when the first argument has length 1.






                                                share|improve this answer















                                                R, 68, 75 48 bytes (random) and 70 bytes (deterministic)



                                                @Giuseppe's rejection sampling method:





                                                function(n){while(sum(F)!=n^2)F=sample(n^2,n);F}


                                                Try it online!



                                                Golfed original:





                                                function(n,m=combn(1:n^2,n))m[,sample(which(colSums(m)==n^2)*!!1:2,1)]


                                                Try it online!



                                                The *!!1:2 business is to avoid the odd way sample act when the first argument has length 1.







                                                share|improve this answer














                                                share|improve this answer



                                                share|improve this answer








                                                edited 2 days ago

























                                                answered Nov 20 at 18:47









                                                ngm

                                                3,07923




                                                3,07923












                                                • @Giuseppe "fixed" :-)
                                                  – ngm
                                                  Nov 20 at 18:57












                                                • very nice. using p directly as an index instead of calculating it and re-using it should save some bytes.
                                                  – Giuseppe
                                                  Nov 20 at 18:59






                                                • 1




                                                  I have function(n){while(sum(F)!=n^2)F=sample(n^2,n);F} for 48 as well...
                                                  – Giuseppe
                                                  Nov 20 at 19:00






                                                • 1




                                                  @J.Doe to avoid the issue when calling something like sample(2,1) which happens with n=2. So rep just guarantees that this will never happen. There might be a better way but this was quick and I was mad at sample.
                                                  – ngm
                                                  Nov 20 at 20:17








                                                • 1




                                                  You can save a byte with x*!!1:2 over rep(x,2) if your meta question gets a no.
                                                  – J.Doe
                                                  Nov 20 at 20:35


















                                                • @Giuseppe "fixed" :-)
                                                  – ngm
                                                  Nov 20 at 18:57












                                                • very nice. using p directly as an index instead of calculating it and re-using it should save some bytes.
                                                  – Giuseppe
                                                  Nov 20 at 18:59






                                                • 1




                                                  I have function(n){while(sum(F)!=n^2)F=sample(n^2,n);F} for 48 as well...
                                                  – Giuseppe
                                                  Nov 20 at 19:00






                                                • 1




                                                  @J.Doe to avoid the issue when calling something like sample(2,1) which happens with n=2. So rep just guarantees that this will never happen. There might be a better way but this was quick and I was mad at sample.
                                                  – ngm
                                                  Nov 20 at 20:17








                                                • 1




                                                  You can save a byte with x*!!1:2 over rep(x,2) if your meta question gets a no.
                                                  – J.Doe
                                                  Nov 20 at 20:35
















                                                @Giuseppe "fixed" :-)
                                                – ngm
                                                Nov 20 at 18:57






                                                @Giuseppe "fixed" :-)
                                                – ngm
                                                Nov 20 at 18:57














                                                very nice. using p directly as an index instead of calculating it and re-using it should save some bytes.
                                                – Giuseppe
                                                Nov 20 at 18:59




                                                very nice. using p directly as an index instead of calculating it and re-using it should save some bytes.
                                                – Giuseppe
                                                Nov 20 at 18:59




                                                1




                                                1




                                                I have function(n){while(sum(F)!=n^2)F=sample(n^2,n);F} for 48 as well...
                                                – Giuseppe
                                                Nov 20 at 19:00




                                                I have function(n){while(sum(F)!=n^2)F=sample(n^2,n);F} for 48 as well...
                                                – Giuseppe
                                                Nov 20 at 19:00




                                                1




                                                1




                                                @J.Doe to avoid the issue when calling something like sample(2,1) which happens with n=2. So rep just guarantees that this will never happen. There might be a better way but this was quick and I was mad at sample.
                                                – ngm
                                                Nov 20 at 20:17






                                                @J.Doe to avoid the issue when calling something like sample(2,1) which happens with n=2. So rep just guarantees that this will never happen. There might be a better way but this was quick and I was mad at sample.
                                                – ngm
                                                Nov 20 at 20:17






                                                1




                                                1




                                                You can save a byte with x*!!1:2 over rep(x,2) if your meta question gets a no.
                                                – J.Doe
                                                Nov 20 at 20:35




                                                You can save a byte with x*!!1:2 over rep(x,2) if your meta question gets a no.
                                                – J.Doe
                                                Nov 20 at 20:35










                                                up vote
                                                4
                                                down vote














                                                Perl 6, 41 bytes



                                                {first *.sum==$_²,(1..$_²).pick($_)xx*}


                                                Try it online!





                                                • (1 .. $_²) is the range of numbers from 1 to the square of the input number


                                                • .pick($_) randomly chooses a distinct subset of that range


                                                • xx * replicates the preceding expression infinitely


                                                • first *.sum == $_² selects the first of those number sets that sums to the square of the input number






                                                share|improve this answer























                                                • 40 bytes
                                                  – Jo King
                                                  Nov 20 at 21:59















                                                up vote
                                                4
                                                down vote














                                                Perl 6, 41 bytes



                                                {first *.sum==$_²,(1..$_²).pick($_)xx*}


                                                Try it online!





                                                • (1 .. $_²) is the range of numbers from 1 to the square of the input number


                                                • .pick($_) randomly chooses a distinct subset of that range


                                                • xx * replicates the preceding expression infinitely


                                                • first *.sum == $_² selects the first of those number sets that sums to the square of the input number






                                                share|improve this answer























                                                • 40 bytes
                                                  – Jo King
                                                  Nov 20 at 21:59













                                                up vote
                                                4
                                                down vote










                                                up vote
                                                4
                                                down vote










                                                Perl 6, 41 bytes



                                                {first *.sum==$_²,(1..$_²).pick($_)xx*}


                                                Try it online!





                                                • (1 .. $_²) is the range of numbers from 1 to the square of the input number


                                                • .pick($_) randomly chooses a distinct subset of that range


                                                • xx * replicates the preceding expression infinitely


                                                • first *.sum == $_² selects the first of those number sets that sums to the square of the input number






                                                share|improve this answer















                                                Perl 6, 41 bytes



                                                {first *.sum==$_²,(1..$_²).pick($_)xx*}


                                                Try it online!





                                                • (1 .. $_²) is the range of numbers from 1 to the square of the input number


                                                • .pick($_) randomly chooses a distinct subset of that range


                                                • xx * replicates the preceding expression infinitely


                                                • first *.sum == $_² selects the first of those number sets that sums to the square of the input number







                                                share|improve this answer














                                                share|improve this answer



                                                share|improve this answer








                                                edited 2 days ago

























                                                answered Nov 20 at 20:21









                                                Sean

                                                3,14636




                                                3,14636












                                                • 40 bytes
                                                  – Jo King
                                                  Nov 20 at 21:59


















                                                • 40 bytes
                                                  – Jo King
                                                  Nov 20 at 21:59
















                                                40 bytes
                                                – Jo King
                                                Nov 20 at 21:59




                                                40 bytes
                                                – Jo King
                                                Nov 20 at 21:59










                                                up vote
                                                2
                                                down vote













                                                Pyth, 13 12 bytes



                                                Ofq*QQsT.cS*


                                                Try it online here. Note that the online interpreter runs into a MemoryError for inputs greater than 5.



                                                Ofq*QQsT.cS*QQQ   Implicit: Q=eval(input())
                                                Trailing QQQ inferred
                                                S*QQQ [1-Q*Q]
                                                .c Q All combinations of the above of length Q, without repeats
                                                f Keep elements of the above, as T, where the following is truthy:
                                                sT Is the sum of T...
                                                q ... equal to...
                                                *QQ ... Q*Q?
                                                O Choose a random element of those remaining sets, implicit print


                                                Edit: saved a byte by taking an alternative approach. Previous version: Of&qQlT{IT./*






                                                share|improve this answer



























                                                  up vote
                                                  2
                                                  down vote













                                                  Pyth, 13 12 bytes



                                                  Ofq*QQsT.cS*


                                                  Try it online here. Note that the online interpreter runs into a MemoryError for inputs greater than 5.



                                                  Ofq*QQsT.cS*QQQ   Implicit: Q=eval(input())
                                                  Trailing QQQ inferred
                                                  S*QQQ [1-Q*Q]
                                                  .c Q All combinations of the above of length Q, without repeats
                                                  f Keep elements of the above, as T, where the following is truthy:
                                                  sT Is the sum of T...
                                                  q ... equal to...
                                                  *QQ ... Q*Q?
                                                  O Choose a random element of those remaining sets, implicit print


                                                  Edit: saved a byte by taking an alternative approach. Previous version: Of&qQlT{IT./*






                                                  share|improve this answer

























                                                    up vote
                                                    2
                                                    down vote










                                                    up vote
                                                    2
                                                    down vote









                                                    Pyth, 13 12 bytes



                                                    Ofq*QQsT.cS*


                                                    Try it online here. Note that the online interpreter runs into a MemoryError for inputs greater than 5.



                                                    Ofq*QQsT.cS*QQQ   Implicit: Q=eval(input())
                                                    Trailing QQQ inferred
                                                    S*QQQ [1-Q*Q]
                                                    .c Q All combinations of the above of length Q, without repeats
                                                    f Keep elements of the above, as T, where the following is truthy:
                                                    sT Is the sum of T...
                                                    q ... equal to...
                                                    *QQ ... Q*Q?
                                                    O Choose a random element of those remaining sets, implicit print


                                                    Edit: saved a byte by taking an alternative approach. Previous version: Of&qQlT{IT./*






                                                    share|improve this answer














                                                    Pyth, 13 12 bytes



                                                    Ofq*QQsT.cS*


                                                    Try it online here. Note that the online interpreter runs into a MemoryError for inputs greater than 5.



                                                    Ofq*QQsT.cS*QQQ   Implicit: Q=eval(input())
                                                    Trailing QQQ inferred
                                                    S*QQQ [1-Q*Q]
                                                    .c Q All combinations of the above of length Q, without repeats
                                                    f Keep elements of the above, as T, where the following is truthy:
                                                    sT Is the sum of T...
                                                    q ... equal to...
                                                    *QQ ... Q*Q?
                                                    O Choose a random element of those remaining sets, implicit print


                                                    Edit: saved a byte by taking an alternative approach. Previous version: Of&qQlT{IT./*







                                                    share|improve this answer














                                                    share|improve this answer



                                                    share|improve this answer








                                                    edited Nov 20 at 16:26

























                                                    answered Nov 20 at 15:09









                                                    Sok

                                                    3,379722




                                                    3,379722






















                                                        up vote
                                                        2
                                                        down vote














                                                        Python 3, 136 134 127 121 114 bytes





                                                        from random import*
                                                        def f(n):
                                                        s={randint(1,n*n)for _ in range(n)}
                                                        return len(s)==n and sum(s)==n*n and s or f(n)


                                                        Try it online!



                                                        A commenter corrected me, and this now hits recursion max depth at f(5) instead of f(1). Much closer to being a real competing answer.



                                                        I've seen it do f(5) once, and I'm working on trying to implement this with shuffle.



                                                        I tried making some lambda expressions for s=..., but that didn't help on bytes. Maybe someone else can do something with this:
                                                        s=(lambda n:{randint(1,n*n)for _ in range(n)})(n)



                                                        Thanks to Kevin for shaving off another 7 bytes.






                                                        share|improve this answer



















                                                        • 1




                                                          So this uses recursion to "regenerate" the set if the one generated is invalid? Definitely something wrong with your code if it's hitting recursion depth at f(1), the only possible array that should be generable at n=1 is [1] Also there's a lot of extraneous whitespace to be removed here. Remember this is a code-golf challenge, so the goal is to achieve the lowest bytecount
                                                          – Skidsdev
                                                          Nov 20 at 18:32






                                                        • 1




                                                          range(1,n) -> range(n) I believe should resolve the bug.
                                                          – Jonathan Allan
                                                          Nov 20 at 18:34






                                                        • 1




                                                          This should fix your bug, and also removes extraneous whitespace. I imagine there's a lot more room for golfing too
                                                          – Skidsdev
                                                          Nov 20 at 18:35






                                                        • 1




                                                          Although the recursion slightly worsens from 5 to 4, you can combine your two return statements like this: return len(s)==n and sum(s)==n*n and s or f(n) (Try it online 114 bytes).
                                                          – Kevin Cruijssen
                                                          Nov 20 at 19:38






                                                        • 1




                                                          You can have it all on one line. 111 bytes
                                                          – Jo King
                                                          Nov 20 at 22:02















                                                        up vote
                                                        2
                                                        down vote














                                                        Python 3, 136 134 127 121 114 bytes





                                                        from random import*
                                                        def f(n):
                                                        s={randint(1,n*n)for _ in range(n)}
                                                        return len(s)==n and sum(s)==n*n and s or f(n)


                                                        Try it online!



                                                        A commenter corrected me, and this now hits recursion max depth at f(5) instead of f(1). Much closer to being a real competing answer.



                                                        I've seen it do f(5) once, and I'm working on trying to implement this with shuffle.



                                                        I tried making some lambda expressions for s=..., but that didn't help on bytes. Maybe someone else can do something with this:
                                                        s=(lambda n:{randint(1,n*n)for _ in range(n)})(n)



                                                        Thanks to Kevin for shaving off another 7 bytes.






                                                        share|improve this answer



















                                                        • 1




                                                          So this uses recursion to "regenerate" the set if the one generated is invalid? Definitely something wrong with your code if it's hitting recursion depth at f(1), the only possible array that should be generable at n=1 is [1] Also there's a lot of extraneous whitespace to be removed here. Remember this is a code-golf challenge, so the goal is to achieve the lowest bytecount
                                                          – Skidsdev
                                                          Nov 20 at 18:32






                                                        • 1




                                                          range(1,n) -> range(n) I believe should resolve the bug.
                                                          – Jonathan Allan
                                                          Nov 20 at 18:34






                                                        • 1




                                                          This should fix your bug, and also removes extraneous whitespace. I imagine there's a lot more room for golfing too
                                                          – Skidsdev
                                                          Nov 20 at 18:35






                                                        • 1




                                                          Although the recursion slightly worsens from 5 to 4, you can combine your two return statements like this: return len(s)==n and sum(s)==n*n and s or f(n) (Try it online 114 bytes).
                                                          – Kevin Cruijssen
                                                          Nov 20 at 19:38






                                                        • 1




                                                          You can have it all on one line. 111 bytes
                                                          – Jo King
                                                          Nov 20 at 22:02













                                                        up vote
                                                        2
                                                        down vote










                                                        up vote
                                                        2
                                                        down vote










                                                        Python 3, 136 134 127 121 114 bytes





                                                        from random import*
                                                        def f(n):
                                                        s={randint(1,n*n)for _ in range(n)}
                                                        return len(s)==n and sum(s)==n*n and s or f(n)


                                                        Try it online!



                                                        A commenter corrected me, and this now hits recursion max depth at f(5) instead of f(1). Much closer to being a real competing answer.



                                                        I've seen it do f(5) once, and I'm working on trying to implement this with shuffle.



                                                        I tried making some lambda expressions for s=..., but that didn't help on bytes. Maybe someone else can do something with this:
                                                        s=(lambda n:{randint(1,n*n)for _ in range(n)})(n)



                                                        Thanks to Kevin for shaving off another 7 bytes.






                                                        share|improve this answer















                                                        Python 3, 136 134 127 121 114 bytes





                                                        from random import*
                                                        def f(n):
                                                        s={randint(1,n*n)for _ in range(n)}
                                                        return len(s)==n and sum(s)==n*n and s or f(n)


                                                        Try it online!



                                                        A commenter corrected me, and this now hits recursion max depth at f(5) instead of f(1). Much closer to being a real competing answer.



                                                        I've seen it do f(5) once, and I'm working on trying to implement this with shuffle.



                                                        I tried making some lambda expressions for s=..., but that didn't help on bytes. Maybe someone else can do something with this:
                                                        s=(lambda n:{randint(1,n*n)for _ in range(n)})(n)



                                                        Thanks to Kevin for shaving off another 7 bytes.







                                                        share|improve this answer














                                                        share|improve this answer



                                                        share|improve this answer








                                                        edited Nov 20 at 20:12

























                                                        answered Nov 20 at 18:29









                                                        Gigaflop

                                                        1816




                                                        1816








                                                        • 1




                                                          So this uses recursion to "regenerate" the set if the one generated is invalid? Definitely something wrong with your code if it's hitting recursion depth at f(1), the only possible array that should be generable at n=1 is [1] Also there's a lot of extraneous whitespace to be removed here. Remember this is a code-golf challenge, so the goal is to achieve the lowest bytecount
                                                          – Skidsdev
                                                          Nov 20 at 18:32






                                                        • 1




                                                          range(1,n) -> range(n) I believe should resolve the bug.
                                                          – Jonathan Allan
                                                          Nov 20 at 18:34






                                                        • 1




                                                          This should fix your bug, and also removes extraneous whitespace. I imagine there's a lot more room for golfing too
                                                          – Skidsdev
                                                          Nov 20 at 18:35






                                                        • 1




                                                          Although the recursion slightly worsens from 5 to 4, you can combine your two return statements like this: return len(s)==n and sum(s)==n*n and s or f(n) (Try it online 114 bytes).
                                                          – Kevin Cruijssen
                                                          Nov 20 at 19:38






                                                        • 1




                                                          You can have it all on one line. 111 bytes
                                                          – Jo King
                                                          Nov 20 at 22:02














                                                        • 1




                                                          So this uses recursion to "regenerate" the set if the one generated is invalid? Definitely something wrong with your code if it's hitting recursion depth at f(1), the only possible array that should be generable at n=1 is [1] Also there's a lot of extraneous whitespace to be removed here. Remember this is a code-golf challenge, so the goal is to achieve the lowest bytecount
                                                          – Skidsdev
                                                          Nov 20 at 18:32






                                                        • 1




                                                          range(1,n) -> range(n) I believe should resolve the bug.
                                                          – Jonathan Allan
                                                          Nov 20 at 18:34






                                                        • 1




                                                          This should fix your bug, and also removes extraneous whitespace. I imagine there's a lot more room for golfing too
                                                          – Skidsdev
                                                          Nov 20 at 18:35






                                                        • 1




                                                          Although the recursion slightly worsens from 5 to 4, you can combine your two return statements like this: return len(s)==n and sum(s)==n*n and s or f(n) (Try it online 114 bytes).
                                                          – Kevin Cruijssen
                                                          Nov 20 at 19:38






                                                        • 1




                                                          You can have it all on one line. 111 bytes
                                                          – Jo King
                                                          Nov 20 at 22:02








                                                        1




                                                        1




                                                        So this uses recursion to "regenerate" the set if the one generated is invalid? Definitely something wrong with your code if it's hitting recursion depth at f(1), the only possible array that should be generable at n=1 is [1] Also there's a lot of extraneous whitespace to be removed here. Remember this is a code-golf challenge, so the goal is to achieve the lowest bytecount
                                                        – Skidsdev
                                                        Nov 20 at 18:32




                                                        So this uses recursion to "regenerate" the set if the one generated is invalid? Definitely something wrong with your code if it's hitting recursion depth at f(1), the only possible array that should be generable at n=1 is [1] Also there's a lot of extraneous whitespace to be removed here. Remember this is a code-golf challenge, so the goal is to achieve the lowest bytecount
                                                        – Skidsdev
                                                        Nov 20 at 18:32




                                                        1




                                                        1




                                                        range(1,n) -> range(n) I believe should resolve the bug.
                                                        – Jonathan Allan
                                                        Nov 20 at 18:34




                                                        range(1,n) -> range(n) I believe should resolve the bug.
                                                        – Jonathan Allan
                                                        Nov 20 at 18:34




                                                        1




                                                        1




                                                        This should fix your bug, and also removes extraneous whitespace. I imagine there's a lot more room for golfing too
                                                        – Skidsdev
                                                        Nov 20 at 18:35




                                                        This should fix your bug, and also removes extraneous whitespace. I imagine there's a lot more room for golfing too
                                                        – Skidsdev
                                                        Nov 20 at 18:35




                                                        1




                                                        1




                                                        Although the recursion slightly worsens from 5 to 4, you can combine your two return statements like this: return len(s)==n and sum(s)==n*n and s or f(n) (Try it online 114 bytes).
                                                        – Kevin Cruijssen
                                                        Nov 20 at 19:38




                                                        Although the recursion slightly worsens from 5 to 4, you can combine your two return statements like this: return len(s)==n and sum(s)==n*n and s or f(n) (Try it online 114 bytes).
                                                        – Kevin Cruijssen
                                                        Nov 20 at 19:38




                                                        1




                                                        1




                                                        You can have it all on one line. 111 bytes
                                                        – Jo King
                                                        Nov 20 at 22:02




                                                        You can have it all on one line. 111 bytes
                                                        – Jo King
                                                        Nov 20 at 22:02










                                                        up vote
                                                        1
                                                        down vote














                                                        MATL, 18 13 bytes



                                                        `xGU:GZrtsGU-


                                                        Try it online!



                                                        `	# do..while:
                                                        x # delete from stack. This implicitly reads input the first time
                                                        # and removes it. It also deletes the previous invalid answer.
                                                        GU: # paste input and push [1...n^2]
                                                        GZr # select a single combination of n elements from [1..n^2]
                                                        tsGU- # is the sum equal to N^2? if yes, terminate and print results, else goto top





                                                        share|improve this answer























                                                        • I wouldn't try this in R - random characters almost never produce a valid program.
                                                          – ngm
                                                          Nov 20 at 18:48










                                                        • @ngm hahaha I suppose an explanation is in order.
                                                          – Giuseppe
                                                          Nov 20 at 18:48















                                                        up vote
                                                        1
                                                        down vote














                                                        MATL, 18 13 bytes



                                                        `xGU:GZrtsGU-


                                                        Try it online!



                                                        `	# do..while:
                                                        x # delete from stack. This implicitly reads input the first time
                                                        # and removes it. It also deletes the previous invalid answer.
                                                        GU: # paste input and push [1...n^2]
                                                        GZr # select a single combination of n elements from [1..n^2]
                                                        tsGU- # is the sum equal to N^2? if yes, terminate and print results, else goto top





                                                        share|improve this answer























                                                        • I wouldn't try this in R - random characters almost never produce a valid program.
                                                          – ngm
                                                          Nov 20 at 18:48










                                                        • @ngm hahaha I suppose an explanation is in order.
                                                          – Giuseppe
                                                          Nov 20 at 18:48













                                                        up vote
                                                        1
                                                        down vote










                                                        up vote
                                                        1
                                                        down vote










                                                        MATL, 18 13 bytes



                                                        `xGU:GZrtsGU-


                                                        Try it online!



                                                        `	# do..while:
                                                        x # delete from stack. This implicitly reads input the first time
                                                        # and removes it. It also deletes the previous invalid answer.
                                                        GU: # paste input and push [1...n^2]
                                                        GZr # select a single combination of n elements from [1..n^2]
                                                        tsGU- # is the sum equal to N^2? if yes, terminate and print results, else goto top





                                                        share|improve this answer















                                                        MATL, 18 13 bytes



                                                        `xGU:GZrtsGU-


                                                        Try it online!



                                                        `	# do..while:
                                                        x # delete from stack. This implicitly reads input the first time
                                                        # and removes it. It also deletes the previous invalid answer.
                                                        GU: # paste input and push [1...n^2]
                                                        GZr # select a single combination of n elements from [1..n^2]
                                                        tsGU- # is the sum equal to N^2? if yes, terminate and print results, else goto top






                                                        share|improve this answer














                                                        share|improve this answer



                                                        share|improve this answer








                                                        edited Nov 20 at 19:09

























                                                        answered Nov 20 at 18:37









                                                        Giuseppe

                                                        16k31052




                                                        16k31052












                                                        • I wouldn't try this in R - random characters almost never produce a valid program.
                                                          – ngm
                                                          Nov 20 at 18:48










                                                        • @ngm hahaha I suppose an explanation is in order.
                                                          – Giuseppe
                                                          Nov 20 at 18:48


















                                                        • I wouldn't try this in R - random characters almost never produce a valid program.
                                                          – ngm
                                                          Nov 20 at 18:48










                                                        • @ngm hahaha I suppose an explanation is in order.
                                                          – Giuseppe
                                                          Nov 20 at 18:48
















                                                        I wouldn't try this in R - random characters almost never produce a valid program.
                                                        – ngm
                                                        Nov 20 at 18:48




                                                        I wouldn't try this in R - random characters almost never produce a valid program.
                                                        – ngm
                                                        Nov 20 at 18:48












                                                        @ngm hahaha I suppose an explanation is in order.
                                                        – Giuseppe
                                                        Nov 20 at 18:48




                                                        @ngm hahaha I suppose an explanation is in order.
                                                        – Giuseppe
                                                        Nov 20 at 18:48










                                                        up vote
                                                        1
                                                        down vote













                                                        Japt, 12 bytes



                                                        ²õ àU ö@²¥Xx


                                                        Try it



                                                                         :Implicit input of integer U
                                                        ² :U squared
                                                        õ :Range [1,U²]
                                                        àU :Combinations of length U
                                                        ö@ :Return a random element that returns true when passed through the following function as X
                                                        ² : U squared
                                                        ¥ : Equals
                                                        Xx : X reduced by addition





                                                        share|improve this answer























                                                        • According to a comment made by the OP, order of elements in the output is irrelevant so à should be fine.
                                                          – Kamil Drakari
                                                          Nov 20 at 18:52










                                                        • Thanks, @KamilDrakari. Updated.
                                                          – Shaggy
                                                          Nov 20 at 19:15















                                                        up vote
                                                        1
                                                        down vote













                                                        Japt, 12 bytes



                                                        ²õ àU ö@²¥Xx


                                                        Try it



                                                                         :Implicit input of integer U
                                                        ² :U squared
                                                        õ :Range [1,U²]
                                                        àU :Combinations of length U
                                                        ö@ :Return a random element that returns true when passed through the following function as X
                                                        ² : U squared
                                                        ¥ : Equals
                                                        Xx : X reduced by addition





                                                        share|improve this answer























                                                        • According to a comment made by the OP, order of elements in the output is irrelevant so à should be fine.
                                                          – Kamil Drakari
                                                          Nov 20 at 18:52










                                                        • Thanks, @KamilDrakari. Updated.
                                                          – Shaggy
                                                          Nov 20 at 19:15













                                                        up vote
                                                        1
                                                        down vote










                                                        up vote
                                                        1
                                                        down vote









                                                        Japt, 12 bytes



                                                        ²õ àU ö@²¥Xx


                                                        Try it



                                                                         :Implicit input of integer U
                                                        ² :U squared
                                                        õ :Range [1,U²]
                                                        àU :Combinations of length U
                                                        ö@ :Return a random element that returns true when passed through the following function as X
                                                        ² : U squared
                                                        ¥ : Equals
                                                        Xx : X reduced by addition





                                                        share|improve this answer














                                                        Japt, 12 bytes



                                                        ²õ àU ö@²¥Xx


                                                        Try it



                                                                         :Implicit input of integer U
                                                        ² :U squared
                                                        õ :Range [1,U²]
                                                        àU :Combinations of length U
                                                        ö@ :Return a random element that returns true when passed through the following function as X
                                                        ² : U squared
                                                        ¥ : Equals
                                                        Xx : X reduced by addition






                                                        share|improve this answer














                                                        share|improve this answer



                                                        share|improve this answer








                                                        edited Nov 20 at 19:14

























                                                        answered Nov 20 at 17:55









                                                        Shaggy

                                                        18.2k21663




                                                        18.2k21663












                                                        • According to a comment made by the OP, order of elements in the output is irrelevant so à should be fine.
                                                          – Kamil Drakari
                                                          Nov 20 at 18:52










                                                        • Thanks, @KamilDrakari. Updated.
                                                          – Shaggy
                                                          Nov 20 at 19:15


















                                                        • According to a comment made by the OP, order of elements in the output is irrelevant so à should be fine.
                                                          – Kamil Drakari
                                                          Nov 20 at 18:52










                                                        • Thanks, @KamilDrakari. Updated.
                                                          – Shaggy
                                                          Nov 20 at 19:15
















                                                        According to a comment made by the OP, order of elements in the output is irrelevant so à should be fine.
                                                        – Kamil Drakari
                                                        Nov 20 at 18:52




                                                        According to a comment made by the OP, order of elements in the output is irrelevant so à should be fine.
                                                        – Kamil Drakari
                                                        Nov 20 at 18:52












                                                        Thanks, @KamilDrakari. Updated.
                                                        – Shaggy
                                                        Nov 20 at 19:15




                                                        Thanks, @KamilDrakari. Updated.
                                                        – Shaggy
                                                        Nov 20 at 19:15










                                                        up vote
                                                        1
                                                        down vote














                                                        Java (JDK), 127 bytes





                                                        n->{for(int s;;){var r=new java.util.TreeSet();for(s=n*n;s>0;)r.add(s-(s-=Math.random()*n*n+1));if(r.size()==n&s==0)return r;}}


                                                        Try it online!



                                                        Infinite loop until a set with the criteria matches.



                                                        I hope you have the time, because it's very sloooooow! It can't even go to 10 without timing out.






                                                        share|improve this answer























                                                        • You can golf 3 bytes by changing if(r.size()==n&s==0) to if(r.size()+s==n).
                                                          – Kevin Cruijssen
                                                          yesterday










                                                        • @KevinCruijssen I've thought about it too, but no I can't because s could be -1 and n could be size() - 1.
                                                          – Olivier Grégoire
                                                          yesterday










                                                        • Ah wait, you keep adding items to the set as long as s>0, so the size can be larger than n. Ok, in that case it indeed doesn't work. n is a constant, but unfortunately both s and r.size() are variables that can be both below or above 0 and n respectively.
                                                          – Kevin Cruijssen
                                                          12 hours ago















                                                        up vote
                                                        1
                                                        down vote














                                                        Java (JDK), 127 bytes





                                                        n->{for(int s;;){var r=new java.util.TreeSet();for(s=n*n;s>0;)r.add(s-(s-=Math.random()*n*n+1));if(r.size()==n&s==0)return r;}}


                                                        Try it online!



                                                        Infinite loop until a set with the criteria matches.



                                                        I hope you have the time, because it's very sloooooow! It can't even go to 10 without timing out.






                                                        share|improve this answer























                                                        • You can golf 3 bytes by changing if(r.size()==n&s==0) to if(r.size()+s==n).
                                                          – Kevin Cruijssen
                                                          yesterday










                                                        • @KevinCruijssen I've thought about it too, but no I can't because s could be -1 and n could be size() - 1.
                                                          – Olivier Grégoire
                                                          yesterday










                                                        • Ah wait, you keep adding items to the set as long as s>0, so the size can be larger than n. Ok, in that case it indeed doesn't work. n is a constant, but unfortunately both s and r.size() are variables that can be both below or above 0 and n respectively.
                                                          – Kevin Cruijssen
                                                          12 hours ago













                                                        up vote
                                                        1
                                                        down vote










                                                        up vote
                                                        1
                                                        down vote










                                                        Java (JDK), 127 bytes





                                                        n->{for(int s;;){var r=new java.util.TreeSet();for(s=n*n;s>0;)r.add(s-(s-=Math.random()*n*n+1));if(r.size()==n&s==0)return r;}}


                                                        Try it online!



                                                        Infinite loop until a set with the criteria matches.



                                                        I hope you have the time, because it's very sloooooow! It can't even go to 10 without timing out.






                                                        share|improve this answer















                                                        Java (JDK), 127 bytes





                                                        n->{for(int s;;){var r=new java.util.TreeSet();for(s=n*n;s>0;)r.add(s-(s-=Math.random()*n*n+1));if(r.size()==n&s==0)return r;}}


                                                        Try it online!



                                                        Infinite loop until a set with the criteria matches.



                                                        I hope you have the time, because it's very sloooooow! It can't even go to 10 without timing out.







                                                        share|improve this answer














                                                        share|improve this answer



                                                        share|improve this answer








                                                        edited 2 days ago

























                                                        answered 2 days ago









                                                        Olivier Grégoire

                                                        8,26711842




                                                        8,26711842












                                                        • You can golf 3 bytes by changing if(r.size()==n&s==0) to if(r.size()+s==n).
                                                          – Kevin Cruijssen
                                                          yesterday










                                                        • @KevinCruijssen I've thought about it too, but no I can't because s could be -1 and n could be size() - 1.
                                                          – Olivier Grégoire
                                                          yesterday










                                                        • Ah wait, you keep adding items to the set as long as s>0, so the size can be larger than n. Ok, in that case it indeed doesn't work. n is a constant, but unfortunately both s and r.size() are variables that can be both below or above 0 and n respectively.
                                                          – Kevin Cruijssen
                                                          12 hours ago


















                                                        • You can golf 3 bytes by changing if(r.size()==n&s==0) to if(r.size()+s==n).
                                                          – Kevin Cruijssen
                                                          yesterday










                                                        • @KevinCruijssen I've thought about it too, but no I can't because s could be -1 and n could be size() - 1.
                                                          – Olivier Grégoire
                                                          yesterday










                                                        • Ah wait, you keep adding items to the set as long as s>0, so the size can be larger than n. Ok, in that case it indeed doesn't work. n is a constant, but unfortunately both s and r.size() are variables that can be both below or above 0 and n respectively.
                                                          – Kevin Cruijssen
                                                          12 hours ago
















                                                        You can golf 3 bytes by changing if(r.size()==n&s==0) to if(r.size()+s==n).
                                                        – Kevin Cruijssen
                                                        yesterday




                                                        You can golf 3 bytes by changing if(r.size()==n&s==0) to if(r.size()+s==n).
                                                        – Kevin Cruijssen
                                                        yesterday












                                                        @KevinCruijssen I've thought about it too, but no I can't because s could be -1 and n could be size() - 1.
                                                        – Olivier Grégoire
                                                        yesterday




                                                        @KevinCruijssen I've thought about it too, but no I can't because s could be -1 and n could be size() - 1.
                                                        – Olivier Grégoire
                                                        yesterday












                                                        Ah wait, you keep adding items to the set as long as s>0, so the size can be larger than n. Ok, in that case it indeed doesn't work. n is a constant, but unfortunately both s and r.size() are variables that can be both below or above 0 and n respectively.
                                                        – Kevin Cruijssen
                                                        12 hours ago




                                                        Ah wait, you keep adding items to the set as long as s>0, so the size can be larger than n. Ok, in that case it indeed doesn't work. n is a constant, but unfortunately both s and r.size() are variables that can be both below or above 0 and n respectively.
                                                        – Kevin Cruijssen
                                                        12 hours ago










                                                        up vote
                                                        1
                                                        down vote













                                                        Batch, 182 145 bytes



                                                        @set/an=%1,r=n*n,l=r+1
                                                        @for /l %%i in (%1,-1,1)do @set/at=n*(n-=1)/2,m=(r+t+n)/-~n,r-=l=m+%random%%%((l-=x=r+1-t)*(l^>^>31)+x-m)&call echo %%l%%


                                                        Explanation: Calculates the minimum and maximum allowable pick, given that the numbers are to be picked in descending order, and chooses a random value within the range. Example for an input of 4:




                                                        • We start with 16 left. We can't pick 11 or more because the remaining 3 picks must add to at least 6. We also need to pick at least 6, because if we only pick 5, the remaining 3 picks can only add to 9, which isn't enough for 16. We pick a random value from 6 to 10, say 6.

                                                        • We have 10 left. We can't pick 8 or more because the remaining 2 picks must add to at least 3. As it happens, we can't pick 6 or more because we picked 6 last time. We also need to pick at least 5, because if we only pick 4, the remaining 2 picks can only add to 5, for a grand total of 15. We pick a random value from 5 to 5, say 5 (!).

                                                        • We have 5 left. We can't pick 5 or more because the remaining pick must add to at least 1, and also because we picked 5 last time. We also need to pick at least 3, because if we only pick 2, the remaining pick can only be 1, for a grand total of 14. We pick a random value from 3 to 4, say 4.

                                                        • We have 1 left. As it turns out, the algorithm chooses a range of 1 to 1, and we pick 1 as the final number.






                                                        share|improve this answer



























                                                          up vote
                                                          1
                                                          down vote













                                                          Batch, 182 145 bytes



                                                          @set/an=%1,r=n*n,l=r+1
                                                          @for /l %%i in (%1,-1,1)do @set/at=n*(n-=1)/2,m=(r+t+n)/-~n,r-=l=m+%random%%%((l-=x=r+1-t)*(l^>^>31)+x-m)&call echo %%l%%


                                                          Explanation: Calculates the minimum and maximum allowable pick, given that the numbers are to be picked in descending order, and chooses a random value within the range. Example for an input of 4:




                                                          • We start with 16 left. We can't pick 11 or more because the remaining 3 picks must add to at least 6. We also need to pick at least 6, because if we only pick 5, the remaining 3 picks can only add to 9, which isn't enough for 16. We pick a random value from 6 to 10, say 6.

                                                          • We have 10 left. We can't pick 8 or more because the remaining 2 picks must add to at least 3. As it happens, we can't pick 6 or more because we picked 6 last time. We also need to pick at least 5, because if we only pick 4, the remaining 2 picks can only add to 5, for a grand total of 15. We pick a random value from 5 to 5, say 5 (!).

                                                          • We have 5 left. We can't pick 5 or more because the remaining pick must add to at least 1, and also because we picked 5 last time. We also need to pick at least 3, because if we only pick 2, the remaining pick can only be 1, for a grand total of 14. We pick a random value from 3 to 4, say 4.

                                                          • We have 1 left. As it turns out, the algorithm chooses a range of 1 to 1, and we pick 1 as the final number.






                                                          share|improve this answer

























                                                            up vote
                                                            1
                                                            down vote










                                                            up vote
                                                            1
                                                            down vote









                                                            Batch, 182 145 bytes



                                                            @set/an=%1,r=n*n,l=r+1
                                                            @for /l %%i in (%1,-1,1)do @set/at=n*(n-=1)/2,m=(r+t+n)/-~n,r-=l=m+%random%%%((l-=x=r+1-t)*(l^>^>31)+x-m)&call echo %%l%%


                                                            Explanation: Calculates the minimum and maximum allowable pick, given that the numbers are to be picked in descending order, and chooses a random value within the range. Example for an input of 4:




                                                            • We start with 16 left. We can't pick 11 or more because the remaining 3 picks must add to at least 6. We also need to pick at least 6, because if we only pick 5, the remaining 3 picks can only add to 9, which isn't enough for 16. We pick a random value from 6 to 10, say 6.

                                                            • We have 10 left. We can't pick 8 or more because the remaining 2 picks must add to at least 3. As it happens, we can't pick 6 or more because we picked 6 last time. We also need to pick at least 5, because if we only pick 4, the remaining 2 picks can only add to 5, for a grand total of 15. We pick a random value from 5 to 5, say 5 (!).

                                                            • We have 5 left. We can't pick 5 or more because the remaining pick must add to at least 1, and also because we picked 5 last time. We also need to pick at least 3, because if we only pick 2, the remaining pick can only be 1, for a grand total of 14. We pick a random value from 3 to 4, say 4.

                                                            • We have 1 left. As it turns out, the algorithm chooses a range of 1 to 1, and we pick 1 as the final number.






                                                            share|improve this answer














                                                            Batch, 182 145 bytes



                                                            @set/an=%1,r=n*n,l=r+1
                                                            @for /l %%i in (%1,-1,1)do @set/at=n*(n-=1)/2,m=(r+t+n)/-~n,r-=l=m+%random%%%((l-=x=r+1-t)*(l^>^>31)+x-m)&call echo %%l%%


                                                            Explanation: Calculates the minimum and maximum allowable pick, given that the numbers are to be picked in descending order, and chooses a random value within the range. Example for an input of 4:




                                                            • We start with 16 left. We can't pick 11 or more because the remaining 3 picks must add to at least 6. We also need to pick at least 6, because if we only pick 5, the remaining 3 picks can only add to 9, which isn't enough for 16. We pick a random value from 6 to 10, say 6.

                                                            • We have 10 left. We can't pick 8 or more because the remaining 2 picks must add to at least 3. As it happens, we can't pick 6 or more because we picked 6 last time. We also need to pick at least 5, because if we only pick 4, the remaining 2 picks can only add to 5, for a grand total of 15. We pick a random value from 5 to 5, say 5 (!).

                                                            • We have 5 left. We can't pick 5 or more because the remaining pick must add to at least 1, and also because we picked 5 last time. We also need to pick at least 3, because if we only pick 2, the remaining pick can only be 1, for a grand total of 14. We pick a random value from 3 to 4, say 4.

                                                            • We have 1 left. As it turns out, the algorithm chooses a range of 1 to 1, and we pick 1 as the final number.







                                                            share|improve this answer














                                                            share|improve this answer



                                                            share|improve this answer








                                                            edited 22 hours ago

























                                                            answered 23 hours ago









                                                            Neil

                                                            78.1k744175




                                                            78.1k744175






















                                                                up vote
                                                                1
                                                                down vote













                                                                JavaScript, 647 291 bytes



                                                                Thanks to @Veskah for -10 bytes at original version and "Oh yeah, you're outputting all the sets whereas the challenge asks for a random one to be returned"



                                                                (n,g=n**2,r=[...Array(g)].map((_,k)=>k+1).sort(_=>.5-Math.random()).slice(-n+-2,-2),c=_=>eval(_.join `+`))=>n<2?[n]:[...function*(){z:while(1){for(x=0;x<r.length;x++){d=r[x];if(c(r)>g&&!(d-1==0||r.find(_=>d-1==_)))r[x]-=1;if(c(r)<g&&!r.find(_=>d+1==_))r[x]+=1;if(c(r)==g)break z}}yield*r}()]


                                                                Try it online!



                                                                Create an array of n^2 1-based indexes, sort array randomly, slice -n-2 through -2 (or again randomly select) elements of array. While the sum of the random elements does not equal n^2 loop array of random elements; if sum of array elements is greater than n^2 and current element -1 does not equal zero or current element -1 is not in current array, subtract 1; if sum of array is less than n^2 and current element +1 is not in array, add 1 to element. If array sum is equal to n^2 break loop, output array.






                                                                share|improve this answer



















                                                                • 1




                                                                  637 bytes by pulling z.join into a variable, and k++
                                                                  – Veskah
                                                                  yesterday










                                                                • @Veskah The two while loops could probably also be reduced to the body of a single function which accepts parameters; and could substitute conditional operators (ternary) for the if..else statements; among other portions of the code that could more than likely be adjusted for golf; i.e.g., removing let statements.
                                                                  – guest271314
                                                                  23 hours ago












                                                                • @Veskah 601 bytes without substituting ternary for if..else
                                                                  – guest271314
                                                                  23 hours ago






                                                                • 1




                                                                  Oh yeah, you're outputting all the sets whereas the challenge asks for a random one to be returned (See the OP comments for more details)
                                                                  – Veskah
                                                                  23 hours ago










                                                                • @Veskah Must have misinterpreted the challenge and examples, or was too focused on solving this part of the question "Bonus Task: Is there a formula to calculate the number of valid permutations for a given n?". testing if the algorithm consistently returned expected result for n^2 output arrays generated in a single call to the function, and simultaneously considering the similarities to this question N-dimensional N^N array filled with N.
                                                                  – guest271314
                                                                  23 hours ago

















                                                                up vote
                                                                1
                                                                down vote













                                                                JavaScript, 647 291 bytes



                                                                Thanks to @Veskah for -10 bytes at original version and "Oh yeah, you're outputting all the sets whereas the challenge asks for a random one to be returned"



                                                                (n,g=n**2,r=[...Array(g)].map((_,k)=>k+1).sort(_=>.5-Math.random()).slice(-n+-2,-2),c=_=>eval(_.join `+`))=>n<2?[n]:[...function*(){z:while(1){for(x=0;x<r.length;x++){d=r[x];if(c(r)>g&&!(d-1==0||r.find(_=>d-1==_)))r[x]-=1;if(c(r)<g&&!r.find(_=>d+1==_))r[x]+=1;if(c(r)==g)break z}}yield*r}()]


                                                                Try it online!



                                                                Create an array of n^2 1-based indexes, sort array randomly, slice -n-2 through -2 (or again randomly select) elements of array. While the sum of the random elements does not equal n^2 loop array of random elements; if sum of array elements is greater than n^2 and current element -1 does not equal zero or current element -1 is not in current array, subtract 1; if sum of array is less than n^2 and current element +1 is not in array, add 1 to element. If array sum is equal to n^2 break loop, output array.






                                                                share|improve this answer



















                                                                • 1




                                                                  637 bytes by pulling z.join into a variable, and k++
                                                                  – Veskah
                                                                  yesterday










                                                                • @Veskah The two while loops could probably also be reduced to the body of a single function which accepts parameters; and could substitute conditional operators (ternary) for the if..else statements; among other portions of the code that could more than likely be adjusted for golf; i.e.g., removing let statements.
                                                                  – guest271314
                                                                  23 hours ago












                                                                • @Veskah 601 bytes without substituting ternary for if..else
                                                                  – guest271314
                                                                  23 hours ago






                                                                • 1




                                                                  Oh yeah, you're outputting all the sets whereas the challenge asks for a random one to be returned (See the OP comments for more details)
                                                                  – Veskah
                                                                  23 hours ago










                                                                • @Veskah Must have misinterpreted the challenge and examples, or was too focused on solving this part of the question "Bonus Task: Is there a formula to calculate the number of valid permutations for a given n?". testing if the algorithm consistently returned expected result for n^2 output arrays generated in a single call to the function, and simultaneously considering the similarities to this question N-dimensional N^N array filled with N.
                                                                  – guest271314
                                                                  23 hours ago















                                                                up vote
                                                                1
                                                                down vote










                                                                up vote
                                                                1
                                                                down vote









                                                                JavaScript, 647 291 bytes



                                                                Thanks to @Veskah for -10 bytes at original version and "Oh yeah, you're outputting all the sets whereas the challenge asks for a random one to be returned"



                                                                (n,g=n**2,r=[...Array(g)].map((_,k)=>k+1).sort(_=>.5-Math.random()).slice(-n+-2,-2),c=_=>eval(_.join `+`))=>n<2?[n]:[...function*(){z:while(1){for(x=0;x<r.length;x++){d=r[x];if(c(r)>g&&!(d-1==0||r.find(_=>d-1==_)))r[x]-=1;if(c(r)<g&&!r.find(_=>d+1==_))r[x]+=1;if(c(r)==g)break z}}yield*r}()]


                                                                Try it online!



                                                                Create an array of n^2 1-based indexes, sort array randomly, slice -n-2 through -2 (or again randomly select) elements of array. While the sum of the random elements does not equal n^2 loop array of random elements; if sum of array elements is greater than n^2 and current element -1 does not equal zero or current element -1 is not in current array, subtract 1; if sum of array is less than n^2 and current element +1 is not in array, add 1 to element. If array sum is equal to n^2 break loop, output array.






                                                                share|improve this answer














                                                                JavaScript, 647 291 bytes



                                                                Thanks to @Veskah for -10 bytes at original version and "Oh yeah, you're outputting all the sets whereas the challenge asks for a random one to be returned"



                                                                (n,g=n**2,r=[...Array(g)].map((_,k)=>k+1).sort(_=>.5-Math.random()).slice(-n+-2,-2),c=_=>eval(_.join `+`))=>n<2?[n]:[...function*(){z:while(1){for(x=0;x<r.length;x++){d=r[x];if(c(r)>g&&!(d-1==0||r.find(_=>d-1==_)))r[x]-=1;if(c(r)<g&&!r.find(_=>d+1==_))r[x]+=1;if(c(r)==g)break z}}yield*r}()]


                                                                Try it online!



                                                                Create an array of n^2 1-based indexes, sort array randomly, slice -n-2 through -2 (or again randomly select) elements of array. While the sum of the random elements does not equal n^2 loop array of random elements; if sum of array elements is greater than n^2 and current element -1 does not equal zero or current element -1 is not in current array, subtract 1; if sum of array is less than n^2 and current element +1 is not in array, add 1 to element. If array sum is equal to n^2 break loop, output array.







                                                                share|improve this answer














                                                                share|improve this answer



                                                                share|improve this answer








                                                                edited 4 hours ago

























                                                                answered yesterday









                                                                guest271314

                                                                271211




                                                                271211








                                                                • 1




                                                                  637 bytes by pulling z.join into a variable, and k++
                                                                  – Veskah
                                                                  yesterday










                                                                • @Veskah The two while loops could probably also be reduced to the body of a single function which accepts parameters; and could substitute conditional operators (ternary) for the if..else statements; among other portions of the code that could more than likely be adjusted for golf; i.e.g., removing let statements.
                                                                  – guest271314
                                                                  23 hours ago












                                                                • @Veskah 601 bytes without substituting ternary for if..else
                                                                  – guest271314
                                                                  23 hours ago






                                                                • 1




                                                                  Oh yeah, you're outputting all the sets whereas the challenge asks for a random one to be returned (See the OP comments for more details)
                                                                  – Veskah
                                                                  23 hours ago










                                                                • @Veskah Must have misinterpreted the challenge and examples, or was too focused on solving this part of the question "Bonus Task: Is there a formula to calculate the number of valid permutations for a given n?". testing if the algorithm consistently returned expected result for n^2 output arrays generated in a single call to the function, and simultaneously considering the similarities to this question N-dimensional N^N array filled with N.
                                                                  – guest271314
                                                                  23 hours ago
















                                                                • 1




                                                                  637 bytes by pulling z.join into a variable, and k++
                                                                  – Veskah
                                                                  yesterday










                                                                • @Veskah The two while loops could probably also be reduced to the body of a single function which accepts parameters; and could substitute conditional operators (ternary) for the if..else statements; among other portions of the code that could more than likely be adjusted for golf; i.e.g., removing let statements.
                                                                  – guest271314
                                                                  23 hours ago












                                                                • @Veskah 601 bytes without substituting ternary for if..else
                                                                  – guest271314
                                                                  23 hours ago






                                                                • 1




                                                                  Oh yeah, you're outputting all the sets whereas the challenge asks for a random one to be returned (See the OP comments for more details)
                                                                  – Veskah
                                                                  23 hours ago










                                                                • @Veskah Must have misinterpreted the challenge and examples, or was too focused on solving this part of the question "Bonus Task: Is there a formula to calculate the number of valid permutations for a given n?". testing if the algorithm consistently returned expected result for n^2 output arrays generated in a single call to the function, and simultaneously considering the similarities to this question N-dimensional N^N array filled with N.
                                                                  – guest271314
                                                                  23 hours ago










                                                                1




                                                                1




                                                                637 bytes by pulling z.join into a variable, and k++
                                                                – Veskah
                                                                yesterday




                                                                637 bytes by pulling z.join into a variable, and k++
                                                                – Veskah
                                                                yesterday












                                                                @Veskah The two while loops could probably also be reduced to the body of a single function which accepts parameters; and could substitute conditional operators (ternary) for the if..else statements; among other portions of the code that could more than likely be adjusted for golf; i.e.g., removing let statements.
                                                                – guest271314
                                                                23 hours ago






                                                                @Veskah The two while loops could probably also be reduced to the body of a single function which accepts parameters; and could substitute conditional operators (ternary) for the if..else statements; among other portions of the code that could more than likely be adjusted for golf; i.e.g., removing let statements.
                                                                – guest271314
                                                                23 hours ago














                                                                @Veskah 601 bytes without substituting ternary for if..else
                                                                – guest271314
                                                                23 hours ago




                                                                @Veskah 601 bytes without substituting ternary for if..else
                                                                – guest271314
                                                                23 hours ago




                                                                1




                                                                1




                                                                Oh yeah, you're outputting all the sets whereas the challenge asks for a random one to be returned (See the OP comments for more details)
                                                                – Veskah
                                                                23 hours ago




                                                                Oh yeah, you're outputting all the sets whereas the challenge asks for a random one to be returned (See the OP comments for more details)
                                                                – Veskah
                                                                23 hours ago












                                                                @Veskah Must have misinterpreted the challenge and examples, or was too focused on solving this part of the question "Bonus Task: Is there a formula to calculate the number of valid permutations for a given n?". testing if the algorithm consistently returned expected result for n^2 output arrays generated in a single call to the function, and simultaneously considering the similarities to this question N-dimensional N^N array filled with N.
                                                                – guest271314
                                                                23 hours ago






                                                                @Veskah Must have misinterpreted the challenge and examples, or was too focused on solving this part of the question "Bonus Task: Is there a formula to calculate the number of valid permutations for a given n?". testing if the algorithm consistently returned expected result for n^2 output arrays generated in a single call to the function, and simultaneously considering the similarities to this question N-dimensional N^N array filled with N.
                                                                – guest271314
                                                                23 hours ago












                                                                up vote
                                                                0
                                                                down vote














                                                                Japt, 20 bytes



                                                                ²õ ö¬oU íUõ+)Õæ@²¥Xx


                                                                Try it online!



                                                                Extremely heavily takes advantage of "Non-uniform" randomness, almost always outputs the first n odd numbers, which happens to sum to n^2. In theory it can output any other valid set, though I've only been able to confirm that for small n.



                                                                Explanation:



                                                                ²õ                      :Generate the range [1...n^2]
                                                                ö¬ :Order it randomly
                                                                oU :Get the last n items
                                                                í )Õ :Put it in an array with...
                                                                Uõ+ : The first n odd numbers
                                                                æ_ :Get the first one where...
                                                                Xx : The sum
                                                                ²¥ : equals n^2





                                                                share|improve this answer

























                                                                  up vote
                                                                  0
                                                                  down vote














                                                                  Japt, 20 bytes



                                                                  ²õ ö¬oU íUõ+)Õæ@²¥Xx


                                                                  Try it online!



                                                                  Extremely heavily takes advantage of "Non-uniform" randomness, almost always outputs the first n odd numbers, which happens to sum to n^2. In theory it can output any other valid set, though I've only been able to confirm that for small n.



                                                                  Explanation:



                                                                  ²õ                      :Generate the range [1...n^2]
                                                                  ö¬ :Order it randomly
                                                                  oU :Get the last n items
                                                                  í )Õ :Put it in an array with...
                                                                  Uõ+ : The first n odd numbers
                                                                  æ_ :Get the first one where...
                                                                  Xx : The sum
                                                                  ²¥ : equals n^2





                                                                  share|improve this answer























                                                                    up vote
                                                                    0
                                                                    down vote










                                                                    up vote
                                                                    0
                                                                    down vote










                                                                    Japt, 20 bytes



                                                                    ²õ ö¬oU íUõ+)Õæ@²¥Xx


                                                                    Try it online!



                                                                    Extremely heavily takes advantage of "Non-uniform" randomness, almost always outputs the first n odd numbers, which happens to sum to n^2. In theory it can output any other valid set, though I've only been able to confirm that for small n.



                                                                    Explanation:



                                                                    ²õ                      :Generate the range [1...n^2]
                                                                    ö¬ :Order it randomly
                                                                    oU :Get the last n items
                                                                    í )Õ :Put it in an array with...
                                                                    Uõ+ : The first n odd numbers
                                                                    æ_ :Get the first one where...
                                                                    Xx : The sum
                                                                    ²¥ : equals n^2





                                                                    share|improve this answer













                                                                    Japt, 20 bytes



                                                                    ²õ ö¬oU íUõ+)Õæ@²¥Xx


                                                                    Try it online!



                                                                    Extremely heavily takes advantage of "Non-uniform" randomness, almost always outputs the first n odd numbers, which happens to sum to n^2. In theory it can output any other valid set, though I've only been able to confirm that for small n.



                                                                    Explanation:



                                                                    ²õ                      :Generate the range [1...n^2]
                                                                    ö¬ :Order it randomly
                                                                    oU :Get the last n items
                                                                    í )Õ :Put it in an array with...
                                                                    Uõ+ : The first n odd numbers
                                                                    æ_ :Get the first one where...
                                                                    Xx : The sum
                                                                    ²¥ : equals n^2






                                                                    share|improve this answer












                                                                    share|improve this answer



                                                                    share|improve this answer










                                                                    answered Nov 20 at 18:48









                                                                    Kamil Drakari

                                                                    2,581416




                                                                    2,581416






















                                                                        up vote
                                                                        0
                                                                        down vote














                                                                        Ruby, 46 bytes





                                                                        ->n{z=0until(z=[*1..n*n].sample n).sum==n*n;z}


                                                                        Try it online!






                                                                        share|improve this answer

























                                                                          up vote
                                                                          0
                                                                          down vote














                                                                          Ruby, 46 bytes





                                                                          ->n{z=0until(z=[*1..n*n].sample n).sum==n*n;z}


                                                                          Try it online!






                                                                          share|improve this answer























                                                                            up vote
                                                                            0
                                                                            down vote










                                                                            up vote
                                                                            0
                                                                            down vote










                                                                            Ruby, 46 bytes





                                                                            ->n{z=0until(z=[*1..n*n].sample n).sum==n*n;z}


                                                                            Try it online!






                                                                            share|improve this answer













                                                                            Ruby, 46 bytes





                                                                            ->n{z=0until(z=[*1..n*n].sample n).sum==n*n;z}


                                                                            Try it online!







                                                                            share|improve this answer












                                                                            share|improve this answer



                                                                            share|improve this answer










                                                                            answered 2 days ago









                                                                            G B

                                                                            7,5561328




                                                                            7,5561328






















                                                                                up vote
                                                                                0
                                                                                down vote














                                                                                C (gcc), 128 125 bytes





                                                                                p(_){printf("%d ",_);}f(n,x,y,i){x=n*n;y=1;for(i=0;++i<n;p(y),x-=y++)while(rand()&&(n-i)*(n-i+1)/2+(n-i)*(y+1)+y<x)y++;p(x);}


                                                                                Try it online!



                                                                                -3 bytes thanks to ceilingcat



                                                                                NOTE: The probability is very very far from uniform. See explanation for what I mean and a better means to test that it works (by making the distribution closer to uniform [but still a far cry from it]).



                                                                                How?



                                                                                The basic idea is to only choose increasing numbers so as to not worry about duplicates. Whenever we pick a number we have a non-zero chance of 'skipping' it if allowable.



                                                                                To decide if we can skip a number we need to know x the total left to be reached, k the number of elements we still have to use, and y the current candidate value. The smallest possible number that we could still pick would consist of $$y+(y+1)+(y+2)+...$$ added to the current value. In particular we require the above expression to be less than x. The formula will be $$frac{k(k+1)}{2}+k(y+1)+y<x$$ Unfortunately we have to be a bit careful about rearranging this formula due to integer truncation in C, so I couldn't really find a way to golf it.



                                                                                Nonetheless the logic is to have a chance to discard any y that satisfies the above equation.



                                                                                The code



                                                                                p(_){printf("%d ",_);}  // Define print(int)
                                                                                f(n,x,y,i){ // Define f(n,...) as the function we want
                                                                                x=n*n; // Set x to n^2
                                                                                y=1; // Set y to 1
                                                                                for(i=0;++i<n;){ // n-1 times do...
                                                                                while(rand()&& // While rand() is non-zero [very very likely] AND
                                                                                (n-i)* // (n-i) is the 'k' in the formula
                                                                                (n-i+1)/2+ // This first half takes care of the increment
                                                                                (n-i)*(y+1) // This second half takes care of the y+1 starting point
                                                                                +y<x) // The +y takes care of the current value of y
                                                                                y++; // If rand() returned non-zero and we can skip y, do so
                                                                                p(y); // Print y
                                                                                x-=y++; // Subtract y from the total and increment it
                                                                                }p(x);} // Print what's left over.


                                                                                The trick I mentioned to better test the code involves replacing rand()&& with rand()%2&& so that there is a 50-50 chance that any given y is skipped, rather than a 1 in RAND_MAX chance that any given y is used.






                                                                                share|improve this answer























                                                                                • I would love it if someone checked my math for consistency. I also wonder if this type of solution could make the uniform random speed challenge simple. The formula places an upper and lower bound on the answer, does a uniform random number in that range result in uniform random results? I don't see why not - but I haven't done much combinatorics in awhile.
                                                                                  – LambdaBeta
                                                                                  Nov 20 at 22:43










                                                                                • Suggest p(y),x-=y++)while(rand()&&(i-n)*((~n+i)/2+~y)+y<x)y++; instead of ){while(rand()&&(n-i)*(n-i+1)/2+(n-i)*(y+1)+y<x)y++;p(y);x-=y++;}
                                                                                  – ceilingcat
                                                                                  Nov 20 at 23:30












                                                                                • @ceilingcat I love these little improvements you find. I always get so focussed on the overall algorithm I forget to optimize for implementation (I basically go autopilot golfing mode once I have a non-golfed source that works - so I miss a lot of savings)
                                                                                  – LambdaBeta
                                                                                  2 days ago










                                                                                • Hey, it's not just you who has those syntax-golfs. I find little improvements in a lot of C/C++ answers like that (except not in yours, @ceilingcat usually snaps those up).
                                                                                  – Zacharý
                                                                                  2 days ago












                                                                                • Yeah, I've noticed that you two are probably the most active C/C++ putters (can we use putting to extend the golf analogy to the last few strokes? Why not!). It always impresses me that you can even understand the golfed code well enough to improve it.
                                                                                  – LambdaBeta
                                                                                  2 days ago















                                                                                up vote
                                                                                0
                                                                                down vote














                                                                                C (gcc), 128 125 bytes





                                                                                p(_){printf("%d ",_);}f(n,x,y,i){x=n*n;y=1;for(i=0;++i<n;p(y),x-=y++)while(rand()&&(n-i)*(n-i+1)/2+(n-i)*(y+1)+y<x)y++;p(x);}


                                                                                Try it online!



                                                                                -3 bytes thanks to ceilingcat



                                                                                NOTE: The probability is very very far from uniform. See explanation for what I mean and a better means to test that it works (by making the distribution closer to uniform [but still a far cry from it]).



                                                                                How?



                                                                                The basic idea is to only choose increasing numbers so as to not worry about duplicates. Whenever we pick a number we have a non-zero chance of 'skipping' it if allowable.



                                                                                To decide if we can skip a number we need to know x the total left to be reached, k the number of elements we still have to use, and y the current candidate value. The smallest possible number that we could still pick would consist of $$y+(y+1)+(y+2)+...$$ added to the current value. In particular we require the above expression to be less than x. The formula will be $$frac{k(k+1)}{2}+k(y+1)+y<x$$ Unfortunately we have to be a bit careful about rearranging this formula due to integer truncation in C, so I couldn't really find a way to golf it.



                                                                                Nonetheless the logic is to have a chance to discard any y that satisfies the above equation.



                                                                                The code



                                                                                p(_){printf("%d ",_);}  // Define print(int)
                                                                                f(n,x,y,i){ // Define f(n,...) as the function we want
                                                                                x=n*n; // Set x to n^2
                                                                                y=1; // Set y to 1
                                                                                for(i=0;++i<n;){ // n-1 times do...
                                                                                while(rand()&& // While rand() is non-zero [very very likely] AND
                                                                                (n-i)* // (n-i) is the 'k' in the formula
                                                                                (n-i+1)/2+ // This first half takes care of the increment
                                                                                (n-i)*(y+1) // This second half takes care of the y+1 starting point
                                                                                +y<x) // The +y takes care of the current value of y
                                                                                y++; // If rand() returned non-zero and we can skip y, do so
                                                                                p(y); // Print y
                                                                                x-=y++; // Subtract y from the total and increment it
                                                                                }p(x);} // Print what's left over.


                                                                                The trick I mentioned to better test the code involves replacing rand()&& with rand()%2&& so that there is a 50-50 chance that any given y is skipped, rather than a 1 in RAND_MAX chance that any given y is used.






                                                                                share|improve this answer























                                                                                • I would love it if someone checked my math for consistency. I also wonder if this type of solution could make the uniform random speed challenge simple. The formula places an upper and lower bound on the answer, does a uniform random number in that range result in uniform random results? I don't see why not - but I haven't done much combinatorics in awhile.
                                                                                  – LambdaBeta
                                                                                  Nov 20 at 22:43










                                                                                • Suggest p(y),x-=y++)while(rand()&&(i-n)*((~n+i)/2+~y)+y<x)y++; instead of ){while(rand()&&(n-i)*(n-i+1)/2+(n-i)*(y+1)+y<x)y++;p(y);x-=y++;}
                                                                                  – ceilingcat
                                                                                  Nov 20 at 23:30












                                                                                • @ceilingcat I love these little improvements you find. I always get so focussed on the overall algorithm I forget to optimize for implementation (I basically go autopilot golfing mode once I have a non-golfed source that works - so I miss a lot of savings)
                                                                                  – LambdaBeta
                                                                                  2 days ago










                                                                                • Hey, it's not just you who has those syntax-golfs. I find little improvements in a lot of C/C++ answers like that (except not in yours, @ceilingcat usually snaps those up).
                                                                                  – Zacharý
                                                                                  2 days ago












                                                                                • Yeah, I've noticed that you two are probably the most active C/C++ putters (can we use putting to extend the golf analogy to the last few strokes? Why not!). It always impresses me that you can even understand the golfed code well enough to improve it.
                                                                                  – LambdaBeta
                                                                                  2 days ago













                                                                                up vote
                                                                                0
                                                                                down vote










                                                                                up vote
                                                                                0
                                                                                down vote










                                                                                C (gcc), 128 125 bytes





                                                                                p(_){printf("%d ",_);}f(n,x,y,i){x=n*n;y=1;for(i=0;++i<n;p(y),x-=y++)while(rand()&&(n-i)*(n-i+1)/2+(n-i)*(y+1)+y<x)y++;p(x);}


                                                                                Try it online!



                                                                                -3 bytes thanks to ceilingcat



                                                                                NOTE: The probability is very very far from uniform. See explanation for what I mean and a better means to test that it works (by making the distribution closer to uniform [but still a far cry from it]).



                                                                                How?



                                                                                The basic idea is to only choose increasing numbers so as to not worry about duplicates. Whenever we pick a number we have a non-zero chance of 'skipping' it if allowable.



                                                                                To decide if we can skip a number we need to know x the total left to be reached, k the number of elements we still have to use, and y the current candidate value. The smallest possible number that we could still pick would consist of $$y+(y+1)+(y+2)+...$$ added to the current value. In particular we require the above expression to be less than x. The formula will be $$frac{k(k+1)}{2}+k(y+1)+y<x$$ Unfortunately we have to be a bit careful about rearranging this formula due to integer truncation in C, so I couldn't really find a way to golf it.



                                                                                Nonetheless the logic is to have a chance to discard any y that satisfies the above equation.



                                                                                The code



                                                                                p(_){printf("%d ",_);}  // Define print(int)
                                                                                f(n,x,y,i){ // Define f(n,...) as the function we want
                                                                                x=n*n; // Set x to n^2
                                                                                y=1; // Set y to 1
                                                                                for(i=0;++i<n;){ // n-1 times do...
                                                                                while(rand()&& // While rand() is non-zero [very very likely] AND
                                                                                (n-i)* // (n-i) is the 'k' in the formula
                                                                                (n-i+1)/2+ // This first half takes care of the increment
                                                                                (n-i)*(y+1) // This second half takes care of the y+1 starting point
                                                                                +y<x) // The +y takes care of the current value of y
                                                                                y++; // If rand() returned non-zero and we can skip y, do so
                                                                                p(y); // Print y
                                                                                x-=y++; // Subtract y from the total and increment it
                                                                                }p(x);} // Print what's left over.


                                                                                The trick I mentioned to better test the code involves replacing rand()&& with rand()%2&& so that there is a 50-50 chance that any given y is skipped, rather than a 1 in RAND_MAX chance that any given y is used.






                                                                                share|improve this answer















                                                                                C (gcc), 128 125 bytes





                                                                                p(_){printf("%d ",_);}f(n,x,y,i){x=n*n;y=1;for(i=0;++i<n;p(y),x-=y++)while(rand()&&(n-i)*(n-i+1)/2+(n-i)*(y+1)+y<x)y++;p(x);}


                                                                                Try it online!



                                                                                -3 bytes thanks to ceilingcat



                                                                                NOTE: The probability is very very far from uniform. See explanation for what I mean and a better means to test that it works (by making the distribution closer to uniform [but still a far cry from it]).



                                                                                How?



                                                                                The basic idea is to only choose increasing numbers so as to not worry about duplicates. Whenever we pick a number we have a non-zero chance of 'skipping' it if allowable.



                                                                                To decide if we can skip a number we need to know x the total left to be reached, k the number of elements we still have to use, and y the current candidate value. The smallest possible number that we could still pick would consist of $$y+(y+1)+(y+2)+...$$ added to the current value. In particular we require the above expression to be less than x. The formula will be $$frac{k(k+1)}{2}+k(y+1)+y<x$$ Unfortunately we have to be a bit careful about rearranging this formula due to integer truncation in C, so I couldn't really find a way to golf it.



                                                                                Nonetheless the logic is to have a chance to discard any y that satisfies the above equation.



                                                                                The code



                                                                                p(_){printf("%d ",_);}  // Define print(int)
                                                                                f(n,x,y,i){ // Define f(n,...) as the function we want
                                                                                x=n*n; // Set x to n^2
                                                                                y=1; // Set y to 1
                                                                                for(i=0;++i<n;){ // n-1 times do...
                                                                                while(rand()&& // While rand() is non-zero [very very likely] AND
                                                                                (n-i)* // (n-i) is the 'k' in the formula
                                                                                (n-i+1)/2+ // This first half takes care of the increment
                                                                                (n-i)*(y+1) // This second half takes care of the y+1 starting point
                                                                                +y<x) // The +y takes care of the current value of y
                                                                                y++; // If rand() returned non-zero and we can skip y, do so
                                                                                p(y); // Print y
                                                                                x-=y++; // Subtract y from the total and increment it
                                                                                }p(x);} // Print what's left over.


                                                                                The trick I mentioned to better test the code involves replacing rand()&& with rand()%2&& so that there is a 50-50 chance that any given y is skipped, rather than a 1 in RAND_MAX chance that any given y is used.







                                                                                share|improve this answer














                                                                                share|improve this answer



                                                                                share|improve this answer








                                                                                edited 2 days ago

























                                                                                answered Nov 20 at 22:36









                                                                                LambdaBeta

                                                                                2,099418




                                                                                2,099418












                                                                                • I would love it if someone checked my math for consistency. I also wonder if this type of solution could make the uniform random speed challenge simple. The formula places an upper and lower bound on the answer, does a uniform random number in that range result in uniform random results? I don't see why not - but I haven't done much combinatorics in awhile.
                                                                                  – LambdaBeta
                                                                                  Nov 20 at 22:43










                                                                                • Suggest p(y),x-=y++)while(rand()&&(i-n)*((~n+i)/2+~y)+y<x)y++; instead of ){while(rand()&&(n-i)*(n-i+1)/2+(n-i)*(y+1)+y<x)y++;p(y);x-=y++;}
                                                                                  – ceilingcat
                                                                                  Nov 20 at 23:30












                                                                                • @ceilingcat I love these little improvements you find. I always get so focussed on the overall algorithm I forget to optimize for implementation (I basically go autopilot golfing mode once I have a non-golfed source that works - so I miss a lot of savings)
                                                                                  – LambdaBeta
                                                                                  2 days ago










                                                                                • Hey, it's not just you who has those syntax-golfs. I find little improvements in a lot of C/C++ answers like that (except not in yours, @ceilingcat usually snaps those up).
                                                                                  – Zacharý
                                                                                  2 days ago












                                                                                • Yeah, I've noticed that you two are probably the most active C/C++ putters (can we use putting to extend the golf analogy to the last few strokes? Why not!). It always impresses me that you can even understand the golfed code well enough to improve it.
                                                                                  – LambdaBeta
                                                                                  2 days ago


















                                                                                • I would love it if someone checked my math for consistency. I also wonder if this type of solution could make the uniform random speed challenge simple. The formula places an upper and lower bound on the answer, does a uniform random number in that range result in uniform random results? I don't see why not - but I haven't done much combinatorics in awhile.
                                                                                  – LambdaBeta
                                                                                  Nov 20 at 22:43










                                                                                • Suggest p(y),x-=y++)while(rand()&&(i-n)*((~n+i)/2+~y)+y<x)y++; instead of ){while(rand()&&(n-i)*(n-i+1)/2+(n-i)*(y+1)+y<x)y++;p(y);x-=y++;}
                                                                                  – ceilingcat
                                                                                  Nov 20 at 23:30












                                                                                • @ceilingcat I love these little improvements you find. I always get so focussed on the overall algorithm I forget to optimize for implementation (I basically go autopilot golfing mode once I have a non-golfed source that works - so I miss a lot of savings)
                                                                                  – LambdaBeta
                                                                                  2 days ago










                                                                                • Hey, it's not just you who has those syntax-golfs. I find little improvements in a lot of C/C++ answers like that (except not in yours, @ceilingcat usually snaps those up).
                                                                                  – Zacharý
                                                                                  2 days ago












                                                                                • Yeah, I've noticed that you two are probably the most active C/C++ putters (can we use putting to extend the golf analogy to the last few strokes? Why not!). It always impresses me that you can even understand the golfed code well enough to improve it.
                                                                                  – LambdaBeta
                                                                                  2 days ago
















                                                                                I would love it if someone checked my math for consistency. I also wonder if this type of solution could make the uniform random speed challenge simple. The formula places an upper and lower bound on the answer, does a uniform random number in that range result in uniform random results? I don't see why not - but I haven't done much combinatorics in awhile.
                                                                                – LambdaBeta
                                                                                Nov 20 at 22:43




                                                                                I would love it if someone checked my math for consistency. I also wonder if this type of solution could make the uniform random speed challenge simple. The formula places an upper and lower bound on the answer, does a uniform random number in that range result in uniform random results? I don't see why not - but I haven't done much combinatorics in awhile.
                                                                                – LambdaBeta
                                                                                Nov 20 at 22:43












                                                                                Suggest p(y),x-=y++)while(rand()&&(i-n)*((~n+i)/2+~y)+y<x)y++; instead of ){while(rand()&&(n-i)*(n-i+1)/2+(n-i)*(y+1)+y<x)y++;p(y);x-=y++;}
                                                                                – ceilingcat
                                                                                Nov 20 at 23:30






                                                                                Suggest p(y),x-=y++)while(rand()&&(i-n)*((~n+i)/2+~y)+y<x)y++; instead of ){while(rand()&&(n-i)*(n-i+1)/2+(n-i)*(y+1)+y<x)y++;p(y);x-=y++;}
                                                                                – ceilingcat
                                                                                Nov 20 at 23:30














                                                                                @ceilingcat I love these little improvements you find. I always get so focussed on the overall algorithm I forget to optimize for implementation (I basically go autopilot golfing mode once I have a non-golfed source that works - so I miss a lot of savings)
                                                                                – LambdaBeta
                                                                                2 days ago




                                                                                @ceilingcat I love these little improvements you find. I always get so focussed on the overall algorithm I forget to optimize for implementation (I basically go autopilot golfing mode once I have a non-golfed source that works - so I miss a lot of savings)
                                                                                – LambdaBeta
                                                                                2 days ago












                                                                                Hey, it's not just you who has those syntax-golfs. I find little improvements in a lot of C/C++ answers like that (except not in yours, @ceilingcat usually snaps those up).
                                                                                – Zacharý
                                                                                2 days ago






                                                                                Hey, it's not just you who has those syntax-golfs. I find little improvements in a lot of C/C++ answers like that (except not in yours, @ceilingcat usually snaps those up).
                                                                                – Zacharý
                                                                                2 days ago














                                                                                Yeah, I've noticed that you two are probably the most active C/C++ putters (can we use putting to extend the golf analogy to the last few strokes? Why not!). It always impresses me that you can even understand the golfed code well enough to improve it.
                                                                                – LambdaBeta
                                                                                2 days ago




                                                                                Yeah, I've noticed that you two are probably the most active C/C++ putters (can we use putting to extend the golf analogy to the last few strokes? Why not!). It always impresses me that you can even understand the golfed code well enough to improve it.
                                                                                – LambdaBeta
                                                                                2 days ago










                                                                                up vote
                                                                                0
                                                                                down vote














                                                                                Clean, 172 bytes



                                                                                import StdEnv,Math.Random,Data.List
                                                                                ? ::!Int->Int
                                                                                ?_=code{
                                                                                ccall time "I:I"
                                                                                }
                                                                                $n=find(s=length s==n&&sum s==n^2)(subsequences(nub(map(inc oe=e rem n^2)(genRandInt(?0)))))


                                                                                Try it online!






                                                                                share|improve this answer



























                                                                                  up vote
                                                                                  0
                                                                                  down vote














                                                                                  Clean, 172 bytes



                                                                                  import StdEnv,Math.Random,Data.List
                                                                                  ? ::!Int->Int
                                                                                  ?_=code{
                                                                                  ccall time "I:I"
                                                                                  }
                                                                                  $n=find(s=length s==n&&sum s==n^2)(subsequences(nub(map(inc oe=e rem n^2)(genRandInt(?0)))))


                                                                                  Try it online!






                                                                                  share|improve this answer

























                                                                                    up vote
                                                                                    0
                                                                                    down vote










                                                                                    up vote
                                                                                    0
                                                                                    down vote










                                                                                    Clean, 172 bytes



                                                                                    import StdEnv,Math.Random,Data.List
                                                                                    ? ::!Int->Int
                                                                                    ?_=code{
                                                                                    ccall time "I:I"
                                                                                    }
                                                                                    $n=find(s=length s==n&&sum s==n^2)(subsequences(nub(map(inc oe=e rem n^2)(genRandInt(?0)))))


                                                                                    Try it online!






                                                                                    share|improve this answer















                                                                                    Clean, 172 bytes



                                                                                    import StdEnv,Math.Random,Data.List
                                                                                    ? ::!Int->Int
                                                                                    ?_=code{
                                                                                    ccall time "I:I"
                                                                                    }
                                                                                    $n=find(s=length s==n&&sum s==n^2)(subsequences(nub(map(inc oe=e rem n^2)(genRandInt(?0)))))


                                                                                    Try it online!







                                                                                    share|improve this answer














                                                                                    share|improve this answer



                                                                                    share|improve this answer








                                                                                    edited 2 days ago

























                                                                                    answered 2 days ago









                                                                                    Οurous

                                                                                    5,80311031




                                                                                    5,80311031






















                                                                                        up vote
                                                                                        0
                                                                                        down vote














                                                                                        Python (2 or 3), 84 bytes





                                                                                        from random import*;l=lambda n,s=:(sum(s)==n*n)*s or l(n,sample(range(1,n*n+1),n))


                                                                                        Try it online!



                                                                                        Hits max recursion depth at around l(5)






                                                                                        share|improve this answer

























                                                                                          up vote
                                                                                          0
                                                                                          down vote














                                                                                          Python (2 or 3), 84 bytes





                                                                                          from random import*;l=lambda n,s=:(sum(s)==n*n)*s or l(n,sample(range(1,n*n+1),n))


                                                                                          Try it online!



                                                                                          Hits max recursion depth at around l(5)






                                                                                          share|improve this answer























                                                                                            up vote
                                                                                            0
                                                                                            down vote










                                                                                            up vote
                                                                                            0
                                                                                            down vote










                                                                                            Python (2 or 3), 84 bytes





                                                                                            from random import*;l=lambda n,s=:(sum(s)==n*n)*s or l(n,sample(range(1,n*n+1),n))


                                                                                            Try it online!



                                                                                            Hits max recursion depth at around l(5)






                                                                                            share|improve this answer













                                                                                            Python (2 or 3), 84 bytes





                                                                                            from random import*;l=lambda n,s=:(sum(s)==n*n)*s or l(n,sample(range(1,n*n+1),n))


                                                                                            Try it online!



                                                                                            Hits max recursion depth at around l(5)







                                                                                            share|improve this answer












                                                                                            share|improve this answer



                                                                                            share|improve this answer










                                                                                            answered 2 days ago









                                                                                            ArBo

                                                                                            1




                                                                                            1






















                                                                                                up vote
                                                                                                0
                                                                                                down vote













                                                                                                Mathematica 40 bytes



                                                                                                RandomChoice[IntegerPartitions[2^n, {n}]]





                                                                                                share|improve this answer

























                                                                                                  up vote
                                                                                                  0
                                                                                                  down vote













                                                                                                  Mathematica 40 bytes



                                                                                                  RandomChoice[IntegerPartitions[2^n, {n}]]





                                                                                                  share|improve this answer























                                                                                                    up vote
                                                                                                    0
                                                                                                    down vote










                                                                                                    up vote
                                                                                                    0
                                                                                                    down vote









                                                                                                    Mathematica 40 bytes



                                                                                                    RandomChoice[IntegerPartitions[2^n, {n}]]





                                                                                                    share|improve this answer












                                                                                                    Mathematica 40 bytes



                                                                                                    RandomChoice[IntegerPartitions[2^n, {n}]]






                                                                                                    share|improve this answer












                                                                                                    share|improve this answer



                                                                                                    share|improve this answer










                                                                                                    answered yesterday









                                                                                                    David G. Stork

                                                                                                    1857




                                                                                                    1857






















                                                                                                        up vote
                                                                                                        0
                                                                                                        down vote













                                                                                                        JavaScript, 291 bytes




                                                                                                        Bonus Task: Is there a formula to calculate the number of valid permutations for a given n?




                                                                                                        Solves for n=3






                                                                                                        f=(n=3,x=Math.pow(n,2),p=,r=,z=RegExp(`^[1-${x}]+$`))=>{for(c=n;c;c--){p.unshift(c)};p[p.length-1]=x-n;let i=+p.join``,m= +p.reverse().join``,s=i+'',l=s.length;for(;i<=m;i++){let c=[...''+i];if(new Set(c).size==l&&c.every(_=>z.test(_))&&eval(c.join`+`)==x){r.push([...''+i].map(Number))}}return r}

                                                                                                        let r=f();
                                                                                                        console.log(JSON.stringify(r,null,2),r.length);





                                                                                                        Try it online!



                                                                                                        Formula for number of valid permutations for n=3 using addition, comparison and exclusion




                                                                                                        • Find the minimum integer which sums to n=3^2=9, in this case 126

                                                                                                        • Convert n=3 to array [1,2,3] and integer 123

                                                                                                        • To derive 126 from n=3 programmatically, subtract last digit of 123 from n=3^2=9 9=3=6, [1,2,3] -> [1,2,(9-3)] - > [1,2,6] -> 126

                                                                                                        • The last valid lexicographic permutation of n=3 will be 621; 126 with digits in reverse order

                                                                                                        • Increment 126 to and including 621, match numbers where the .size as a Set is equal to .length of string '123' and every index of current number as a string in an array tests true for RegExp ^[1-(n^2-n=6)]$ and the number of the digits is equal to n^2, push matches to an array in lexicographic order

                                                                                                        • Convert matched integers as string to integers in array

                                                                                                        • The number of valid permutations for the given n, 3, is 18






                                                                                                        share|improve this answer



























                                                                                                          up vote
                                                                                                          0
                                                                                                          down vote













                                                                                                          JavaScript, 291 bytes




                                                                                                          Bonus Task: Is there a formula to calculate the number of valid permutations for a given n?




                                                                                                          Solves for n=3






                                                                                                          f=(n=3,x=Math.pow(n,2),p=,r=,z=RegExp(`^[1-${x}]+$`))=>{for(c=n;c;c--){p.unshift(c)};p[p.length-1]=x-n;let i=+p.join``,m= +p.reverse().join``,s=i+'',l=s.length;for(;i<=m;i++){let c=[...''+i];if(new Set(c).size==l&&c.every(_=>z.test(_))&&eval(c.join`+`)==x){r.push([...''+i].map(Number))}}return r}

                                                                                                          let r=f();
                                                                                                          console.log(JSON.stringify(r,null,2),r.length);





                                                                                                          Try it online!



                                                                                                          Formula for number of valid permutations for n=3 using addition, comparison and exclusion




                                                                                                          • Find the minimum integer which sums to n=3^2=9, in this case 126

                                                                                                          • Convert n=3 to array [1,2,3] and integer 123

                                                                                                          • To derive 126 from n=3 programmatically, subtract last digit of 123 from n=3^2=9 9=3=6, [1,2,3] -> [1,2,(9-3)] - > [1,2,6] -> 126

                                                                                                          • The last valid lexicographic permutation of n=3 will be 621; 126 with digits in reverse order

                                                                                                          • Increment 126 to and including 621, match numbers where the .size as a Set is equal to .length of string '123' and every index of current number as a string in an array tests true for RegExp ^[1-(n^2-n=6)]$ and the number of the digits is equal to n^2, push matches to an array in lexicographic order

                                                                                                          • Convert matched integers as string to integers in array

                                                                                                          • The number of valid permutations for the given n, 3, is 18






                                                                                                          share|improve this answer

























                                                                                                            up vote
                                                                                                            0
                                                                                                            down vote










                                                                                                            up vote
                                                                                                            0
                                                                                                            down vote









                                                                                                            JavaScript, 291 bytes




                                                                                                            Bonus Task: Is there a formula to calculate the number of valid permutations for a given n?




                                                                                                            Solves for n=3






                                                                                                            f=(n=3,x=Math.pow(n,2),p=,r=,z=RegExp(`^[1-${x}]+$`))=>{for(c=n;c;c--){p.unshift(c)};p[p.length-1]=x-n;let i=+p.join``,m= +p.reverse().join``,s=i+'',l=s.length;for(;i<=m;i++){let c=[...''+i];if(new Set(c).size==l&&c.every(_=>z.test(_))&&eval(c.join`+`)==x){r.push([...''+i].map(Number))}}return r}

                                                                                                            let r=f();
                                                                                                            console.log(JSON.stringify(r,null,2),r.length);





                                                                                                            Try it online!



                                                                                                            Formula for number of valid permutations for n=3 using addition, comparison and exclusion




                                                                                                            • Find the minimum integer which sums to n=3^2=9, in this case 126

                                                                                                            • Convert n=3 to array [1,2,3] and integer 123

                                                                                                            • To derive 126 from n=3 programmatically, subtract last digit of 123 from n=3^2=9 9=3=6, [1,2,3] -> [1,2,(9-3)] - > [1,2,6] -> 126

                                                                                                            • The last valid lexicographic permutation of n=3 will be 621; 126 with digits in reverse order

                                                                                                            • Increment 126 to and including 621, match numbers where the .size as a Set is equal to .length of string '123' and every index of current number as a string in an array tests true for RegExp ^[1-(n^2-n=6)]$ and the number of the digits is equal to n^2, push matches to an array in lexicographic order

                                                                                                            • Convert matched integers as string to integers in array

                                                                                                            • The number of valid permutations for the given n, 3, is 18






                                                                                                            share|improve this answer














                                                                                                            JavaScript, 291 bytes




                                                                                                            Bonus Task: Is there a formula to calculate the number of valid permutations for a given n?




                                                                                                            Solves for n=3






                                                                                                            f=(n=3,x=Math.pow(n,2),p=,r=,z=RegExp(`^[1-${x}]+$`))=>{for(c=n;c;c--){p.unshift(c)};p[p.length-1]=x-n;let i=+p.join``,m= +p.reverse().join``,s=i+'',l=s.length;for(;i<=m;i++){let c=[...''+i];if(new Set(c).size==l&&c.every(_=>z.test(_))&&eval(c.join`+`)==x){r.push([...''+i].map(Number))}}return r}

                                                                                                            let r=f();
                                                                                                            console.log(JSON.stringify(r,null,2),r.length);





                                                                                                            Try it online!



                                                                                                            Formula for number of valid permutations for n=3 using addition, comparison and exclusion




                                                                                                            • Find the minimum integer which sums to n=3^2=9, in this case 126

                                                                                                            • Convert n=3 to array [1,2,3] and integer 123

                                                                                                            • To derive 126 from n=3 programmatically, subtract last digit of 123 from n=3^2=9 9=3=6, [1,2,3] -> [1,2,(9-3)] - > [1,2,6] -> 126

                                                                                                            • The last valid lexicographic permutation of n=3 will be 621; 126 with digits in reverse order

                                                                                                            • Increment 126 to and including 621, match numbers where the .size as a Set is equal to .length of string '123' and every index of current number as a string in an array tests true for RegExp ^[1-(n^2-n=6)]$ and the number of the digits is equal to n^2, push matches to an array in lexicographic order

                                                                                                            • Convert matched integers as string to integers in array

                                                                                                            • The number of valid permutations for the given n, 3, is 18






                                                                                                            f=(n=3,x=Math.pow(n,2),p=,r=,z=RegExp(`^[1-${x}]+$`))=>{for(c=n;c;c--){p.unshift(c)};p[p.length-1]=x-n;let i=+p.join``,m= +p.reverse().join``,s=i+'',l=s.length;for(;i<=m;i++){let c=[...''+i];if(new Set(c).size==l&&c.every(_=>z.test(_))&&eval(c.join`+`)==x){r.push([...''+i].map(Number))}}return r}

                                                                                                            let r=f();
                                                                                                            console.log(JSON.stringify(r,null,2),r.length);





                                                                                                            f=(n=3,x=Math.pow(n,2),p=,r=,z=RegExp(`^[1-${x}]+$`))=>{for(c=n;c;c--){p.unshift(c)};p[p.length-1]=x-n;let i=+p.join``,m= +p.reverse().join``,s=i+'',l=s.length;for(;i<=m;i++){let c=[...''+i];if(new Set(c).size==l&&c.every(_=>z.test(_))&&eval(c.join`+`)==x){r.push([...''+i].map(Number))}}return r}

                                                                                                            let r=f();
                                                                                                            console.log(JSON.stringify(r,null,2),r.length);






                                                                                                            share|improve this answer














                                                                                                            share|improve this answer



                                                                                                            share|improve this answer








                                                                                                            edited 20 hours ago

























                                                                                                            answered 20 hours ago









                                                                                                            guest271314

                                                                                                            271211




                                                                                                            271211






























                                                                                                                 

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