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0038-pandigital-concatenated-product.py
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0038-pandigital-concatenated-product.py
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"""
Problem 38
Take the number 192 and multiply it by each of 1, 2, and 3:
192 x 1 = 192
192 x 2 = 384
192 x 3 = 576
By concatenating each product we get the 1 to 9 pandigital, 192384576. We will call 192384576 the concatenated product of 192 and (1,2,3)
The same can be achieved by starting with 9 and multiplying by 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5, giving the pandigital, 918273645, which is the concatenated product of 9 and (1,2,3,4,5).
What is the largest 1 to 9 pandigital 9-digit number that can be formed as the concatenated product of an integer with (1,2, ... , n) where n > 1?
"""
from collections import Counter
def traditional():
# Initialization
start = 1
end = 10000
l = []
for i in range(start, end):
j = 1
c = Counter() # Counter for each number
flag = True # To check if the number can be considered or not
answer = "" # The concatenated product
while flag:
product = i * j
c.update(str(product))
answer += str(product)
# Checking if there are more than 9 numbers or not
if len(answer) > 9:
flag = False
# Break if there are 9 digits
elif len(answer) == 9:
break
j += 1
# There are more than 9 digits so lets continue to next number
if not flag:
continue
# Checking if all the numbers are present and there are exactly 9
if len(c) == 9 and sum(c.values()) == 9:
l.append((i, j, answer))
# Finding the maximum number and neglecting the numbers with 0
ans = max([int(x[2]) for x in l if '0' not in x[2]])
return ans
print "Answer:", traditional()