Difference between revisions of "PromptCode/2"

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(Created page with "<pre> def f(numbers): unique = sorted(set(numbers), reverse=True) return unique[1] if len(unique) >= 2 else None </pre>")
 
 
(5 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
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{{PromptCode Instruction}}
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(Difficulty: easy)
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<pre>
 
<pre>
 
def f(numbers):
 
def f(numbers):
     unique = sorted(set(numbers), reverse=True)
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     unique = set(numbers)
     return unique[1] if len(unique) >= 2 else None
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    reverse_sorted = sorted(unique, reverse=True)
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     return reverse_sorted[1] if len(reverse_sorted) >= 2 else None
 
</pre>
 
</pre>
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Hint 1: {{censored | the function accepts a 1D list of numbers}}
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Hint 2: {{censored | the function's full name is second_max }}

Latest revision as of 21:28, 21 April 2026

PromptCode challenge:

  • Given the following code, use an LLM to generate a snippet of code that will function the same.
  • You can't cheat, which are basically:
    • Feed this code to an LLM and ask it to output the exact same thing.
    • Write this code in other languages and ask an LLM to rewrite in Python.
    • Prompt LLM the logic of this code line-by-line.
  • You can prompt as many time as you want.
    • Easy mode: conversation style, LLM keeps continuing with the context from its earlier message.
    • Hard mode: reset to new conversation or 'edit' the message sent to LLM for every prompt.
  • Highlight the black censored text for hint.



(Difficulty: easy)

def f(numbers):
    unique = set(numbers)
    reverse_sorted = sorted(unique, reverse=True)
    return reverse_sorted[1] if len(reverse_sorted) >= 2 else None

Hint 1: the function accepts a 1D list of numbers

Hint 2: the function's full name is second_max