retroforth/example/hanoi.retro
crc 848ba7303b use .retro instead of .forth in examples
FossilOrigin-Name: b5feea667d30aac255d1cfca61fed355d438d2ce6021677f1e53af6302b15eee
2019-08-20 18:46:40 +00:00

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1.2 KiB
Forth

The Tower of Hanoi (also called the Tower of Brahma or Lucas' Tower
and sometimes pluralized) is a mathematical game or puzzle. It
consists of three rods and a number of disks of different sizes,
which can slide onto any rod. The puzzle starts with the disks in
a neat stack in ascending order of size on one rod, the smallest
at the top, thus making a conical shape.
The objective of the puzzle is to move the entire stack to another
rod, obeying the following simple rules:
- Only one disk can be moved at a time.
- Each move consists of taking the upper disk from one of the
stacks and placing it on top of another stack.
- No disk may be placed on top of a smaller disk.
With 3 disks, the puzzle can be solved in 7 moves. The minimal
number of moves required to solve a Tower of Hanoi puzzle is
2^n-1, where n is the number of disks.
Taken from https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tower_of_Hanoi
~~~
{ 'Num 'From 'To 'Via } [ var ] a:for-each
:set !Via !To !From !Num ;
:display @To @From 'Move_a_ring_from_%n_to_%n\n s:format s:put ;
:hanoi (num,from,to,via-)
set @Num n:-zero?
[ @Num @From @To @Via
@Num n:dec @From @Via @To hanoi set display
@Num n:dec @Via @To @From hanoi ] if ;
#3 #1 #3 #2 hanoi nl
~~~