I am wondering why if I change the line
"sub = sub.SelectMany(x => x.Next(i)).ToList();"
to
"sub = sub.SelectMany(x => x.Next(i));"
I get the error
Line 48: System.IndexOutOfRangeException: Index was outside the bounds of the array" when I provide an input of 4 to the method SolveNQueens.
I believe it may have something to do with lazy evaluation.
The full code sample is listed below and is a valid solution to the n queens problem.
public class Solution {
public IList<IList<string>> SolveNQueens(int n)
{
IEnumerable<PartialQueens> sub = new List<PartialQueens>(){
new PartialQueens(n)};
for(int i=0;i<n;i++)
{
sub = sub.SelectMany(x => x.Next(i)).ToList();
}
return sub.Select(x => x.ToPosition()).ToList();
}
}
public class PartialQueens
{
public byte FREE = 0;
public byte BLOCKED = 1;
public byte QUEEN = 2;
public byte[,] fill;
int n;
public PartialQueens(int n)
{
this.n = n;
fill = new byte[n,n];
}
public PartialQueens(byte[,] fill, int n)
{
this.fill = fill;
this.n = n;
}
public PartialQueens Fill(int row, int column)
{
byte[,] newFill = fill.Clone() as byte[,];
newFill[row,column] = QUEEN;
Action<int,int> f = (x,y) =>
{
if(y >= 0 && y < n)
newFill[x,y] = BLOCKED;
};
for(int i=1;i<n-row;i++)
{
f(row+i,column+i);
f(row+i,column-i);
f(row+i,column);
}
return new PartialQueens(newFill,n);
}
public IEnumerable<PartialQueens> Next(int row)
{
for(int j=0;j<n;j++)
{
if(fill[row,j] == FREE)
yield return Fill(row,j);
}
}
public IList<string> ToPosition()
{
return Enumerable.Range(0,n).Select(i => ConvertRow(i)).ToList();
}
public string ConvertRow(int i)
{
StringBuilder builder = new StringBuilder();
for(int j=0;j<n;j++)
{
if(fill[i,j] == QUEEN)
builder.Append("Q");
else
builder.Append(".");
}
return builder.ToString();
}
}
The reason this fails is because of the way that the iterator variable used in a for loop is evaluated when it is captured by a closure. When you remove the ToList() inside the loop, the sub IEnumerable is only evaluated when sub is materialized in the return statement return sub.Select(x => x.ToPosition()).ToList();. At this time, the for loop variable i will have a value of n (e.g. 8 on a standard chess board), which is outside the array bounds.
However, when you materialize the List immediately, the side effect isn't encountered, since the value of i is used before the next iteration (ToList materializes).
Works:
for (int i = 0; i < n; i++)
{
// Materialized here so `i` evaluated immediately
sub = sub.SelectMany(x => x.Next(i)).ToList();
}
Broken:
for (int i = 0; i < n; i++)
{
sub = sub.SelectMany(x => x.Next(i));
}
return sub.Select(x => x.ToPosition()).ToList(); // `i` evaluated here
To fix the for loop variable evaluation issue, you can explicitly capture the current value of the iterator variable:
for (int i = 0; i < n; i++)
{
var loop = i;
sub = sub.SelectMany(x => x.Next(loop)); // No To List - lazy evaluation
}
Re : Avoiding for loops in FP Paradigm code
OP's SolveNQueens method uses a loop which progressively changes the sub, rather than recursion, but the for can also be replaced with a foreach and a range:
foreach(var i in Enumerable.Range(0, n))
{
sub = sub.SelectMany(x => x.Next(i));
}
Which Resharper then offers to re-write as a left fold:
sub = Enumerable.Range(0, n)
.Aggregate(sub, (current, i) => current.SelectMany(x => x.Next(i)));
Either way, the flaw in lazy evaluation of the iterator variable inside a for loop is avoided.
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