I would like to convert a few Python lines on Ruby, from this excellent article signed by Thomas Guest at: http://wordaligned.org/articles/drawing-chess-positions
(note: I'm a really bigger Python noob)
Here is a copy of the original Python version:
def expand_blanks(fen):
'''Expand the digits in an FEN string into spaces
>>> expand_blanks("rk4q3")
'rk q '
'''
def expand(match):
return ' ' * int(match.group(0))
return re.compile(r'\d').sub(expand, fen)
def outer_join(sep, ss):
'''Like string.join, but encloses the result with outer separators.
Example:
>>> outer_join('|', ['1', '2', '3'])
'|1|2|3|'
'''
return '%s%s%s' % (sep, sep.join(ss), sep)
def ascii_draw_chess_position(fen):
'''Returns an ASCII picture of pieces on a chessboard.'''
pieces = expand_blanks(fen).replace('/', '')
divider = '+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+\n'
rows = ((outer_join('|', pieces[r: r + 8]) + '\n')
for r in range(0, 8 * 8, 8))
return outer_join(divider, rows)
Usage example:
>>> fen = "r2q1rk1/pp2ppbp/1np2np1/2Q3B1/3PP1b1/2N2N2/PP3PPP/3RKB1R"
>>> print ascii开发者_Python百科_draw_chess_position(fen)
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|r| | |q| |r|k| |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|p|p| | |p|p|b|p|
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| |n|p| | |n|p| |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| | |Q| | | |B| |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| | | |P|P| |b| |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| | |N| | |N| | |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|P|P| | | |P|P|P|
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| | | |R|K|B| |R|
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
I have trying to do some modifications to convert each line in Ruby... And I wonder if it's bad start :s But I publish it anyway:
def expand_blanks(fen)
def expand(match)
return ' ' * int(match.group(0))
end
# bugged:
re.compile(r'\d').sub(expand, fen)
end
def outer_join(sep, ss)
sep + sep.join(ss) + sep
end
def ascii_draw_chess_position(fen)
pieces = expand_blanks(fen).replace('/', '')
puts pieces.class
divider = "+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+\n"
# bugged lines:
rows = ((outer_join('|', pieces[r, r + 8]) + '\n')
for r in range(0, 8 * 8, 8))
return outer_join(divider, rows)
end
end
fen = "rnbqkbnr/pppppppp/8/8/8/8/PPPPPPPP/RNBQKBNR"
puts ascii_draw_chess_position(fen)
If you see some lines that I can fix, I would be cool for me. Thank you all.
Looking at each method in turn, starting with outer_join
.
In Python, join
is a method on strings that takes a sequence and joins the elements delimited by the string. e.g. '|'.join(['p, 'p', 'p'])
In Ruby, join
is a method on arrays that takes the delimiter as an argument e.g. ['p', 'p', 'p'].join('|')
so the Ruby version of outer_join
would be:
def outer_join(sep, ss):
sep + ss.join(sep) + sep
end
Next look at expand_blanks
, the intention here is to replace a digit with the equivalent number of spaces. In Ruby this can be achieved using gsub
to replace all occurrences of a pattern in a string. gsub
can be called with a block that will be passed each match substring and returns the string that the match should be replaced with. So the Ruby code would be:
def expand_blanks(fen)
fen.gsub(/\d/) { |match| ' ' * match.to_i }
end
Finally in ascii_draw_chess_position
we can use gsub
again as an equivalent to Python's replace
method and use Ruby's map
function in place of what was achieved using a list comprehension in Python as follows:
def ascii_draw_chess_position(fen)
pieces = expand_blanks(fen).gsub('/', '')
divider = "+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+\n"
rows = (0...8).map do |i|
row = pieces[i * 8...(i + 1) * 8].split('')
outer_join("|",row) + "\n"
end
puts outer_join(divider, rows)
end
Let me know if you need any more details on the above.
This will do what you want:
def expand(match)
' ' * match.to_i
end
def expand_blanks(fen)
fen.gsub(/\d/) {|d| expand d}
end
def outer_join(sep, ss)
sep + ss.join(sep) + sep
end
def ascii_draw_chess_position(fen)
pieces = expand_blanks(fen).gsub('/', '')
divider = "+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+\n"
rows = (0...8).collect do |i|
row = pieces[i*8...(i+1)*8].split('')
outer_join("|",row) + "\n"
end
puts outer_join(divider, rows)
end
Let me know if there's any code here you don't understand - but make sure you've looked up the methods in the ruby docs
If you're interested in the differences between ruby and python, see here https://stackoverflow.com/questions/234721/what-are-the-biggest-differences-between-python-and-ruby-from-a-philosophical-per or http://www.ruby-lang.org/en/documentation/ruby-from-other-languages/to-ruby-from-python/, and for some good examples, see http://ruby.brian-amberg.de/editierdistanz/.
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