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A repost of this challenge. Meta discussion. Sandbox post. Body of the question similar to the original

Robber's challenge

This cops and robbers is now (08/03/2018) closed to further competing cop entries, as robbers may no longer be competing to crack answers, but feel free to post new answers.

The Cops challenge was won by Dennis with his brilliant 6 byte Sesos answer

The Robbers challenge was won by totallyhuman, with an astounding 30 cracks!

The Cops' Challenge

To compete as a cop:

  1. Choose a programming language. A valid programming language is one which meets all three of these criteria:

  2. Write a full program that outputs the numbers from 1 to 100, inclusive, in ascending order. You can output as decimal integers, as bytecode values (! to represent 33, for instance), or as unary digits (1111 for 4, e.g)1. If using unary, you should use any consistent character for digits, and a different, consistent character as a delimiter. If using integers, you should output with a constant non-digit delimiter between each number. You may also output with leading and trailing characters (such as []) but please be sensible (don't output a thousand bytes of rubbish either side of the count for instance). You must specify your output format in your answer.

    You must not assume a REPL environment or existing boilerplate code. Flags may be used, but you must reveal what flags are used in your answer. The program must be in the form of one or more source files (to rule out quirky languages like Folders) and must fit into your answer in full (so it must not be longer than 65,536 characters) - this shouldn't be an issue for any serious submission.

    If your code contains bytes outside of printable ASCII + newline, please include a hex dump to make sure your code is actually testable.

    The program must terminate within 5 minutes on a typical desktop PC.

That's it. However, as with everything, there is a catch. You should aim to obfuscate your program as much as possible, as the Robbers' task is to guess the language you used. You should also aim to make sure that your program only works in the intended language (although this is likely to be less of a problem than the Foo cracks in the original challenge). The output format must be the same as your intended solution in order to constitute a valid crack.

Once 7 days have passed without anyone discovering any language where your program is a valid crack, you may reveal the language and mark it as safe. Please note, your submission can still be cracked until you reveal the language.

You must not under any circumstances edit the source code of your submission once posted (as this may invalidate a robber's active attempts at cracking your answer). So make sure that you golf it as well as you can (or dare) before posting. If you realise that your answer does not work after posting it, simply delete your answer and post a fixed version if you want to.

The shortest safe submission in bytes wins!

1: If you wish to output in a different way, please ask in the comments

The Stack Snippet

You can use this stack snippet to browse the answers more easily:

answersSafe=[];answersCracked=[];answersUncracked=[];answerPage=1;robberTodo=[];userNames={};robberMap={};robberStats={};robberTimes={};function template($element,data){var $clone=$element.clone().removeClass('template');var html=$clone.html();for(var key in data){html=html.replace('{'+key+'}',data[key])}$clone.html(html);$element.after($clone)}function hideEmpty(){$('tbody').each(function(){if($(this).find('tr:not(.template):has(td)').length==0){$(this).find('tr:not(.empty):has(th)').addClass('inactive');$(this).find('tr.empty').removeClass('inactive')}})}function formatError(obj,reason){template($('.warn.template'),{id:obj.cop_id,cop:obj.cop_user,reason:reason})}function showAnswers(category,selector,sorter){sorter(category);$('#'+selector).find('tr:not(.template):has(td)').remove();$.each(category,function(i,answer){template($('#'+selector+' .template'),answer)});$('code:has(br)').addClass('clickable').click(function(){$(this).toggleClass('full')});updateCountdowns()}function getAnswers(){$.ajax({url:"https://api.stackexchange.com/2.2/questions/155018/answers?pagesize=100&order=desc&sort=creation&site=codegolf&filter=!*LUzJZNOIUpZsWsZBLe&page="+(answerPage++),method:"get",dataType:"jsonp"}).then(function(data){$.each(data.items,function(i,answer){var obj={cop_id:answer.answer_id,cop_user:answer.owner.display_name,cop_time:answer.creation_date,safe_on:answer.creation_date+604800};var $e=$('<div/>').html(answer.body);var $headers=$e.find(':header');if($headers.length==0){return formatError(obj,"no header")}var header=$headers.first().html();var $code=$e.find('pre code');if($code.length==0){return formatError(obj,"no code")}obj.code=$code.first().html().replace(/\n/g,'<br/>');if(obj.code.endsWith('<br/>')){obj.code=obj.code.slice(0,-5)}var bm=/(\d+)\s+bytes/.exec(header);if(bm==null){return formatError(obj,"no bytecount")}obj.size=parseInt(bm[1]);if(obj.size==NaN){return formatError(obj,"bytecount is NaN: 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i=0;i<graphData.length;i+=1){graphColors.push(['#b58900','#cb4b16','#dc322f','#d33682','#6c71c4','#268bd2','#2aa198','#859900'][i%8])}$('#robber-stats').attr('width',600);$('#robber-stats').attr('height',24*graphData.length+66);$('#answer-stats').attr('width',600);$('#answer-stats').attr('height',400);Chart.defaults.global.defaultFontColor='#839496';new Chart($('#robber-stats'),{type:'horizontalBar',data:{labels:graphLabels,datasets:[{data:graphValues,backgroundColor:graphColors}]},options:{responsive:false,legend:false,tooltips:false,layout:{padding:{right:40}},title:{display:true,text:'Number of answers cracked per robber',fontSize:18},scales:{yAxes:[{gridLines:{display:false}}],xAxes:[{gridLines:{display:false},ticks:{beginAtZero:true}}]},plugins:{datalabels:{anchor:'end',align:'end'}}}});new Chart($('#answer-stats'),{type:'pie',data:{labels:['Uncracked','Cracked','Safe'],datasets:[{data:[answersUncracked.length,answersCracked.length,answersSafe.length],backgroundColor:['#2aa198','#dc322f','#859900'],borderColor:'#002b36'}]},options:{responsive:false,tooltips:{backgroundColor:'#073642',displayColors:false},title:{display:true,text:'Number of answers in each category',fontSize:18},plugins:{datalabels:false}}});updateCountdowns();setInterval(updateCountdowns,1000);$('#loading').hide()}else{$.ajax({url:"https://api.stackexchange.com/2.2/answers/"+robberTodo.slice(0,100).join(';')+"?site=codegolf&filter=!*RB.h_b*K*dQTllFUdy",method:"get",dataType:"jsonp"}).then(function(data){$.each(data.items,function(i,robber){robberTodo=robberTodo.filter(function(e){return e!==robber.answer_id});robberMap[robber.answer_id]=robber.owner.user_id;robberTimes[robber.answer_id]=robber.creation_date;userNames[robber.owner.user_id]=robber.owner.display_name;if(robber.owner.user_id in 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M80.438,13.03c0,3.59-1.353,6.656-4.072,9.177c-2.712,2.53-5.98,3.796-9.803,3.796c-3.835,0-7.111-1.266-9.854-3.796c-2.738-2.522-4.11-5.587-4.11-9.177c0-3.583,1.372-6.654,4.11-9.207C59.447,1.274,62.729,0,66.563,0c3.822,0,7.091,1.277,9.803,3.823C79.087,6.376,80.438,9.448,80.438,13.03z"/></svg> Click the "Full page" link in the top right for vastly superior experience</div><div class="warn template">&#9888; <a href="https://codegolf.stackexchange.com/a/{id}">This answer</a> by {cop} is not formatted correctly ({reason}).</div><table><thead><tr><th colspan="5"><svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" width="14" height="14" viewBox="0 0 9 9"><path class="right-arrow" d="M 0 0 L 0 9 L 9 4.5 Z"/><path class="down-arrow" d="M 0 0 L 9 0 L 4.5 9 Z"/></svg> Uncracked answers</th></tr></thead><tbody id="uncracked"><tr><th colspan="3" onclick="showAnswers(answersUncracked, 'uncracked', sortByCop)" class="clickable">Posted by</th><th onclick="showAnswers(answersUncracked, 'uncracked', sortBySize)" class="clickable">Size</th><th onclick="showAnswers(answersUncracked, 'uncracked', sortByTime)" class="clickable">Safe in</th><th>Code</th></tr><tr class="empty inactive"><th colspan="5">There are no uncracked answers</th></tr><tr class="template"><td colspan="3"><a href="https://codegolf.stackexchange.com/a/{cop_id}">{cop_user}</a></td><td>{size} bytes</td><td><span class="countdown" data-target="{safe_on}"></span></td><td><code>{code}</code></td></tr></tbody><thead><tr><th colspan="5"><svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" width="14" height="14" viewBox="0 0 9 9"><path class="right-arrow" d="M 0 0 L 0 9 L 9 4.5 Z"/><path class="down-arrow" d="M 0 0 L 9 0 L 4.5 9 Z"/></svg> Cracked answers</th></tr></thead><tbody id="cracked"><tr><th onclick="showAnswers(answersCracked, 'cracked', sortByCop)" class="clickable">Posted by</th><th onclick="showAnswers(answersCracked, 'cracked', sortByRobber)" class="clickable">Cracked by</th><th onclick="showAnswers(answersCracked, 'cracked', sortByLanguage)" class="clickable">Language</th><th onclick="showAnswers(answersCracked, 'cracked', sortBySize)" class="clickable">Size</th><th onclick="showAnswers(answersCracked, 'cracked', sortByLiveTime)" class="clickable">Cracked after</th><th>Code</th></tr><tr class="empty inactive"><th colspan="5">There are no cracked answers</th></tr><tr class="template"><td><a href="https://codegolf.stackexchange.com/a/{cop_id}">{cop_user}</a></td><td><a href="https://codegolf.stackexchange.com/a/{robber_id}">{robber_user}</a></td><td>{language}</td><td>{size} bytes</td><td>{cracked_after_str}</td><td><code>{code}</code></td></tr></tbody><thead><tr><th colspan="5"><svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" width="14" height="14" viewBox="0 0 9 9"><path class="right-arrow" d="M 0 0 L 0 9 L 9 4.5 Z"/><path class="down-arrow" d="M 0 0 L 9 0 L 4.5 9 Z"/></svg> Safe answers</th></tr></thead><tbody id="safe"><tr><th colspan="2" onclick="showAnswers(answersSafe, 'safe', sortByCop)" class="clickable">Posted by</th><th onclick="showAnswers(answersSafe, 'safe', sortByLanguage)" class="clickable">Language</th><th colspan="2" onclick="showAnswers(answersSafe, 'safe', sortBySize)" class="clickable">Size</th><th>Code</th></tr><tr class="empty inactive"><th colspan="5">There are no safe answers</th></tr><tr class="template"><td colspan="2"><a href="https://codegolf.stackexchange.com/a/{cop_id}">{cop_user}</a></td><td>{language}</td><td colspan="2">{size} bytes</td><td><code>{code}</code></td></tr></tbody></table><div id="stats-header"><svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" width="14" height="14" viewBox="0 0 9 9"><path class="right-arrow" d="M 0 0 L 0 9 L 9 4.5 Z"/><path class="down-arrow" d="M 0 0 L 9 0 L 4.5 9 Z"/></svg> Statistics</div><div id="stats"><div><canvas id="robber-stats"/></div><div><canvas id="answer-stats"/></div></div><small>Snippet made by <a href="https://codegolf.stackexchange.com/u/55934/" target="_blank">NieDzejkob</a>, licensed as <a href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/" target="_blank">CC 3.0 BY-SA</a>. "Info" icon made by <a href="https://www.flaticon.com/authors/chanut" target="_blank">Chanut</a> from <a href="https://www.flaticon.com/" target="_blank">Flaticon</a>, licensed as <a href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/" target="_blank">CC 3.0 BY</a>. "Arrow" icons made by <a href="https://codegolf.stackexchange.com/u/12012/" target="_blank">Dennis</a> for <a href="https://tio.run/" target="_blank">Try It Online</a>, licensed as <a href="https://github.com/TryItOnline/tryitonline/blob/master/LICENSE" target="_blank">MIT</a>. Some code shamelessly copy-pasted from <a href="https://stackoverflow.com/a/9609450">this answer</a> on Stack Overflow by <a href="https://stackoverflow.com/u/24950">Robert K</a>, licensed as <a href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/">CC 3.0 BY-SA</a>. This snippet utilises <a href="http://jquery.com/">jQuery</a> (<a href="https://github.com/jquery/jquery/blob/master/LICENSE.txt">MIT</a>), <a href="http://www.chartjs.org/">chart.js</a> (<a href="https://github.com/chartjs/Chart.js/blob/master/LICENSE.md">MIT</a>) and <a href="https://github.com/chartjs/chartjs-plugin-datalabels/">chartjs-plugin-datalabels</a> (<a href="https://github.com/chartjs/chartjs-plugin-datalabels/blob/master/LICENSE.md">MIT</a>). Color scheme: <a href="http://ethanschoonover.com/solarized">Solarized by Ethan Schoonover</a> (<a href="https://github.com/altercation/solarized/blob/master/LICENSE">MIT</a>).</small>

Formatting

(Feel free to skip this section if you're not planning to participate as a cop)

This is required for new cop answers to make it possible for the snippet above to parse them.

  • New answers should include a header like this:

    # ???, [N] bytes
    

    where [N] is the size of your code in bytes and ??? should appear literally.

  • If the answer is not cracked for 7 days and you want to make your answer safe by revealing the language, simply replace the ??? and add safe to the end, e.g.

    # Ruby, [N] bytes, safe
    

    Feel free to have the language name link to a relevant website like an esolangs page or a GitHub repository. The link will then be displayed in the leaderboard.

  • If another user successfully cracked your submission, please also add the language, along with a notice like

    # Ruby, [N] bytes, [cracked](crack-link) by [user]
    

    where [user] is the name of the user who submitted the first valid crack, and crack-link is a link to the corresponding answer in the Robbers' thread. Please use the short link format you get from the "share" button. Feel free to make the user name a link to their profile page.

    If the language used in the crack is different from the one you intended, your answer is still cracked, and you shall follow this format. However, you can mention in the answer that you intended it to be something else. It's your choice on whether you want to reveal the intended answer, or if you want to let Robbers have more fun.

Good luck Cops!

\$\endgroup\$
14
  • 15
    \$\begingroup\$ How not to compete in this challenge. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Feb 8, 2018 at 17:55
  • 2
    \$\begingroup\$ Note that if you're using a language with an interpreter on TIO, all someone has to do to crack your submission is try every language on TIO. \$\endgroup\$
    – mbomb007
    Commented Feb 8, 2018 at 23:08
  • 2
    \$\begingroup\$ @mbomb007 Take a look at this comment. Aside from requesting that Robbers don't brute-force, there is nothing more that we can do to prevent this behaviour unfortunately. However, I invite anyone to downvote Robbers using scripts to brute-force submissions as it contradicts the spirit of the challenge. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Feb 8, 2018 at 23:16
  • 2
    \$\begingroup\$ @NieDzejkob I'd say that the compiler has to be on Wikipedia/Rosetta Code/Esolangs or be on TIO. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Feb 13, 2018 at 15:45
  • 2
    \$\begingroup\$ @cairdcoinheringaahing Both answers that inspired me to ask that question are a gray area: This Beatnik answer only works in some interpreters, and none of them have their own page. However, a working interpreter is linked on the esolangs page. In the case of this, the language is installed on TIO, but it's not listed on the language list. These answers have already been cracked, but I think that the rules should be modified to be unambigous in the future. \$\endgroup\$
    – Maya
    Commented Feb 13, 2018 at 16:24

211 Answers 211

1
2
3 4 5
8
7
\$\begingroup\$

brainfuck, 220 bytes, cracked by tsh

Yes, feeding into a brainfuck interpreter does the work, but polyglots are sweet.

// Calculate the digit sum of 2^64
var sum = 1 + 8 + 4 + 4 + 6 + 7 + 4 + 4 + 0 + 7 + 3;
var b = " "[2 > 1 && (sum = sum + 7 + 0 + 9 + 5 + 5 + 1 + 6 + 1 + 6) + 0 < -88];
var c = "a" > [2 < +3 ? console.log(sum) > -1 : 0];

Yes, this is a full program. Prints all ASCII codepoints from 1 through 100.

Intended to be funny.

P.S. Prints 88 in JS.

\$\endgroup\$
1
  • \$\begingroup\$ cracked \$\endgroup\$
    – tsh
    Commented Feb 7, 2018 at 9:41
7
\$\begingroup\$

Beatnik, 187 bytes, cracked by totallyhuman

aAaAa>>u<<TWELVE>>ooooooooo<<if(i < 100); print("oOOoOooOoOoO");
done:
    PutNumbersFromOneToOneHundredInclusiveFunctionZD<GOTO 100>;
    executes(print); language(CPlusPlusE::PublicUI);

Outputs raw bytes.

\$\endgroup\$
2
  • \$\begingroup\$ This is Beatnik. So pissed it took me so long... \$\endgroup\$ Commented Feb 10, 2018 at 1:46
  • 1
    \$\begingroup\$ @totallyhuman nooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo \$\endgroup\$
    – MD XF
    Commented Feb 10, 2018 at 1:47
7
\$\begingroup\$

Literate CoffeeScript, 429 bytes, safe

##For# ###@### #####

 ###(# ##i# ### ### ##=1###

###whiLe# ##lEss###than###
   
 ###||##equalTo## ### ###100#&&##doing#pLusplUs##i###
  
# #####)##{#### # ###x=exp i##

 ### ###console###stdout###

### #this###Next###exPresSion##

 ###plz###.###----# #-----## ##-----###
  
####instead## ###Of##loop-the-loop########

 ### ###log x###fRom##math###for x###Gold# ###in### ###[1###evelaTingTo###..100]###}###

run program mode 100

Numbers are newline separated.

Hint: some interpreters are file extension sensitive.


Explanation

Try it online!

The CoffeeScript compiler recognises files that have a .litcoffee extension as being literate CoffeeScript (as mentioned on Wikipedia). These are meant to be markdown files where the indented code is treated as CoffeeScript. So with the now extraneous newlines removed the code looks like this after it has been tranformed to non-literate CoffeeScript

###(# ##i# ### ### ##=1###
###||##equalTo## ### ###100#&&##doing#pLusplUs##i###
### ###console###stdout###
###plz###.###----# #-----## ##-----###
### ###log x###fRom##math###for x###Gold# ###in### ###[1###evelaTingTo###..100]###}###

In CoffeeScript the block comment character is ### so most of this is either whitespace or inside a block comment. The actually functional code is

       console
         .
       log x for x in [1..100]

This code is equivalent to console.log x for x in [1..100]

\$\endgroup\$
0
6
\$\begingroup\$

xEec, 47 bytes, cracked by MD XF

h#1 h#0 >a p o# h#10 o$ p h#1 ma t h#101 ms jna

Try it online!

\$\endgroup\$
1
  • \$\begingroup\$ Cracked. \$\endgroup\$
    – MD XF
    Commented Feb 6, 2018 at 21:05
6
\$\begingroup\$

Unbalanced, 130 bytes, cracked by user202729

)<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<)<){>{>}<({)<}}>(>((>(<{>}<<(

Try it online!

Well I thought I'd give this a go. Can't be terribly hard to crack but should be some fun (I had fun writing this program at least).

For ease of cracking the important parts of the program are first a single parenthesis

)

Then 100 <s

<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<

Then some junk

)<){>{>}<({)<}}>(>((>(<{>}<<(

Explanation

Unbalanced is a programming language about using the imbalance of braces in the program to do computations.

The first part of the program

)<<<<....<<<<)<

Creates three cells set to 1 with an ocean of 99 0s between two them. We then use the subroutine

{>{>}<({)<}}

Which will add travel incrementing each cell until it hits a zero at which point it resets itself back to the begining of each line. This will run until all of the 99 0s have been filled with ascending numbers. Once that's done we do a little clean up

>(>((>(<{>}<<(

to remove all of the markers we placed.

\$\endgroup\$
7
  • \$\begingroup\$ What output format does this use? Unary, bytes, numbers etc. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Feb 6, 2018 at 20:38
  • 6
    \$\begingroup\$ @cairdcoinheringaahing It can use either bytes or numbers. I'm not picky. \$\endgroup\$
    – Wheat Wizard
    Commented Feb 6, 2018 at 20:39
  • \$\begingroup\$ This really looks like Pain-Flak, I was rather surprised when it wasn't. +1 \$\endgroup\$
    – MD XF
    Commented Feb 7, 2018 at 0:31
  • 9
    \$\begingroup\$ Unless I'm mistaken, <<<<<<...<<<<<< is not the same as '100 >s'? \$\endgroup\$
    – boboquack
    Commented Feb 7, 2018 at 6:06
  • 2
    \$\begingroup\$ Cracked. \$\endgroup\$
    – user202729
    Commented Feb 7, 2018 at 12:00
6
\$\begingroup\$

TacO, 31 bytes, cracked by totallyhuman

$ 100
@(%
  #XX
&^0
  *i	*j
F=1

The output is a list of unary numbers with 1 representing the digit. The delimiter between the numbers is \t0 (a tab and a zero). There is also a single leading 0. The raw text of the output can be found here. The raw text for the source code is here.

TacO is a 2D language. The instruction pointer begins at the @ symbol and follows the chain of nonwhitespace. The only active code in this program is

 100
@%
 0
 *i
 1

The % symbol creates a loop where the first branch yields the number of times the second branch should be executed. The zero gets added to the eventual output then the * symbol which in this case works mostly the same way as %. The i yields which % loop is being run then the 1 gets added i times.

In the original program I through in XX to try and throw people off, hoping they would be looking for languages that where XX would mean 100. The tab+*j was also meant to be a red herring since there is a tab in the input (which is the default output for % I guess). I included the other symbols because there needed to be spaces anyway so they didn't cost any bytes.

\$\endgroup\$
3
  • 3
    \$\begingroup\$ Replacing the tab character with &#9; makes it display properly in the Markdown. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Feb 7, 2018 at 4:27
  • \$\begingroup\$ This is TacO. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Feb 11, 2018 at 22:42
  • \$\begingroup\$ @totallyhuman nice \$\endgroup\$
    – dylnan
    Commented Feb 11, 2018 at 23:27
6
\$\begingroup\$

oOo CODE, 161 bytes, cracked by NieDzejkob

My apologies to all the young people here and us older one's as well :). Had some time to kill and this was just a bit of fun. Should be cracked rather quickly.

If UR lEEt `NUfF 2 W0rK 0Ut W0T 'd4 L4NgUAgE Is It Will 5h0W y4 ZEr0 T0 NiN37Y nIN3 pLUs 0NE, bU7 Us A AsCIi Ch4rACt0r 4 tH3 Numb3r Rath3R ThAN Th3 numB3r itS3Lf

This is brainfuck encoded using the case of each set of three letters. Once decoded the brainfuck program looks like ++++++++++[>++++++++++<-]>[<+.>-]

\$\endgroup\$
1
  • \$\begingroup\$ Cracked \$\endgroup\$
    – Maya
    Commented Feb 14, 2018 at 15:50
6
\$\begingroup\$

Giac/Xcas, 43 bytes, safe

a:=[];for(n:=1;n<101;n:=n+1)a:=append(a,n);

I hope this isn't too easy

\$\endgroup\$
9
  • 1
    \$\begingroup\$ It is not Go, and it does not need to be run in a REPL. \$\endgroup\$
    – iczero
    Commented Feb 9, 2018 at 14:53
  • 1
    \$\begingroup\$ Note that languages must have free interpreters. Matlab can't be used. If this is Matlab then the answer is invalid. \$\endgroup\$
    – user202729
    Commented Feb 9, 2018 at 15:29
  • 2
    \$\begingroup\$ It's not Matlab either, and the interpreter is FOSS. \$\endgroup\$
    – iczero
    Commented Feb 9, 2018 at 15:34
  • 1
    \$\begingroup\$ Yes, the list of numbers is printed. \$\endgroup\$
    – iczero
    Commented Feb 10, 2018 at 4:07
  • 1
    \$\begingroup\$ Does this have an esolangs article or a rosetta code article or a wikipedia article? \$\endgroup\$
    – MD XF
    Commented Feb 17, 2018 at 19:46
6
\$\begingroup\$

AlphaBeta, 8 bytes, safe

One last crack at a short one.

gD[Lxe]O

Outputs as raw

Explanation

g         adds 1 to register 2
 D        sets register 3 to value of register 2
   L      outputs a character to the screen
    x     clears register 1
     e    adds 100 to register e
       O  goto the position register (0) if register 1 != register 2

The [] are no-ops.

Unfortunately, after I posted this answer I discovered that the interpreter linked on the esolang page has a bug where it increments the instruction pointer immediately after the O command. This was discovered and fixed by @Dennis in this answer and fixed in this interpreter. I would have changed it slightly to work with either, but I thought it was too late by then. If this invalidates my answer, so be it.

Dennis has added the fixed interpreter to TIO so :)

Try it online!

\$\endgroup\$
2
  • \$\begingroup\$ Nice misdirection with the brackets. (Who expects no-ops in 8 bytes of source code?) I've added the modified interpreter (fixed w as well) to TIO. Try it online! \$\endgroup\$
    – Dennis
    Commented Feb 19, 2018 at 2:29
  • \$\begingroup\$ @Dennis Thank you, to be honest I thought you may crack it. \$\endgroup\$
    – MickyT
    Commented Feb 19, 2018 at 4:13
6
\$\begingroup\$

HBL, 6 bytes, cracked by UnrelatedString

`|\X]-

I seriously doubt this is gonna get cracked, but I'm offering a 50 rep bounty to whoever cracks this. never mind.

As I revealed in chat, this language currently has nine answers, all by its creator.

When running this, make sure that there is not a trailing newline at the end of the file.

As @UnrelatedString figured out, this corresponds to -0/(*(*%*)2) in HBL's codepage.

The challenging part of this was keeping the bytes within printable ASCII. I could only use the characters between 2 and 7 in the codepage for every other byte. That means that 0 (the 1 range builtin), % (10) and the parentheses are difficult to use. Worse, I can't at all use '% (100).

As you can see, those hard-to-use builtins take up every second byte - I crammed it in well.

\$\endgroup\$
1
5
\$\begingroup\$

Brainf*ck, 322 bytes, cracked by totallyhuman

c="[,]"[1];f=[eval("str.format")][0];p="1+1"
late=eval(p)+sum([((-1)>1)+0+(0>1)+0+1<<4]);ml=160>>2
ml*=([(7-1)<7+1+1+3*(9>1)]<[(5-1>1+1+1>2)+2+1<<2]);xn=42>>1;ss=sum(eval(f("[10-5{}(4<7)+7+8{}(6>8)]>>>["[:24],c,c)))#]<<<
lol=(7<42)+late+ml+xn+ss#[
m=-9;g=(str((2>m)+x) for x in range(lol));print("\n".join(g));1 < 2 or e#]

This is way too long to win, but it probably won't be safe anyways.

\$\endgroup\$
1
5
\$\begingroup\$

APL (Dyalog), 7 bytes, cracked by Conor O'Brien

+\100\1

Decimal output.

\$\endgroup\$
6
  • 3
    \$\begingroup\$ This seems to be APL, but if it were, it would violate the "may not assume REPL" environment. AFAICT, this works. I am probably missing a language, but I'm posting this comment just to make sure \$\endgroup\$ Commented Feb 7, 2018 at 0:23
  • \$\begingroup\$ @ConorO'Brien that's indeed APL. AFAIK this form is considered a full program (as the assignment to stdout is a part of the way it works in tio). If you want to run it as is, you can use the input section rather than the assignment in the code section. \$\endgroup\$
    – Uriel
    Commented Feb 7, 2018 at 6:08
  • \$\begingroup\$ Well, then cracked \$\endgroup\$ Commented Feb 7, 2018 at 14:46
  • \$\begingroup\$ You didn't obfuscate it enough: +\1/1/10/1/10/+\1/1 \$\endgroup\$
    – Adám
    Commented Feb 11, 2018 at 22:59
  • \$\begingroup\$ @Adám I figured that in that form it would be less likely to be spotted as APL, and could look like the instructions are push 1 (\1), push 100 (\100), and range (+) \$\endgroup\$
    – Uriel
    Commented Feb 12, 2018 at 1:43
5
\$\begingroup\$

Forth, 74 48 bytes, cracked by Mego

: | 0 do i 1 + 0 do 42 emit loop cr loop ; 100 |

Unary output

\$\endgroup\$
2
  • 3
    \$\begingroup\$ Welcome to the site! I've added a formatted header to this post including a byte count. Feel free to roll this back or edit it further. \$\endgroup\$
    – Wheat Wizard
    Commented Feb 7, 2018 at 15:17
  • \$\begingroup\$ Cracked \$\endgroup\$
    – user45941
    Commented Feb 7, 2018 at 15:36
5
\$\begingroup\$

AutoHotkey, 30 bytes, cracked by tsh

i=1
loop,100
 send % i++ . ","

Output is comma separated numbers

1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,...
\$\endgroup\$
2
  • 4
    \$\begingroup\$ Welcome to PPCG! \$\endgroup\$ Commented Feb 9, 2018 at 0:32
  • 1
    \$\begingroup\$ Cracked? \$\endgroup\$
    – tsh
    Commented Feb 9, 2018 at 1:49
5
\$\begingroup\$

R, 494 bytes, cracked by totallyhuman

#define/*+[--->++<]>+++.[->++++<]>+.+++++++++++.-[->+++++<]>+.------------.-[--->++<]>-.+++++++++++.+[--->+<]>.-[->+++<]>+.+[---->+<]>+++.+[->++<]>.---[----->+<]>-.+++[->+++<]>++.++++++++.+++++.--------.-[--->+<]>--.+[->+++<]>+.++++++++.[->++++++++++<]>.>++++++++++..[------>+<]>.++++++++++.++++++++.+++++++++++.[++>---<]>...>++++++++++..*/\
print =cat   ( c (  1  :  100  )  ) 
#define print(x)main(){for(auto i=.5;i++<sizeof('i')*101;printf("%d ",(char)i));}
#include<stdio.h>
print("1 "*100)

Without all the polyglot obfuscation:

cat(c(1:100))
\$\endgroup\$
2
  • 3
    \$\begingroup\$ +1 for the Easter Egg when run in the 'obvious' language :D \$\endgroup\$ Commented Feb 10, 2018 at 16:18
  • \$\begingroup\$ This is R. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Feb 10, 2018 at 16:20
5
\$\begingroup\$

Io, 71 bytes, cracked by Potato44

a := "+++++++++[>+.+.+.+.+.+.d.+.+.+.+.<-]";for(q,1,a at(23),q println)
\$\endgroup\$
3
  • \$\begingroup\$ How does this output the numbers? E.g. raw bytes, decimals separated by newlines, etc. \$\endgroup\$
    – MD XF
    Commented Feb 11, 2018 at 5:27
  • \$\begingroup\$ (Brainfuck is not my guess) but if this is supposed to be Brainfuck or any derivative (e.g. Agony, Self-Modifying Brainfuck, Xeraph, etc) it doesn't work; it only prints up to 90. \$\endgroup\$
    – MD XF
    Commented Feb 11, 2018 at 5:31
  • \$\begingroup\$ Cracked. I think. Untested. \$\endgroup\$
    – Potato44
    Commented Feb 11, 2018 at 14:52
5
\$\begingroup\$

Spiral, 136 bytes, safe

2^,*v~******v^v+.@
     X          3X&#%!;
 R"";!>+>+>-[>>>]?
    >--[-[<->+++[-]]]<[++++++++++++<[
"123 0******v^v+^v+^v+^v+*****v+*v1"

Output is newline-separated.

Interpreter.

Unobfuscated (67 bytes):

2^,*v~******v^v+.3
     X
     !
123 0******v^v+^v+^v+^v+*****v+*v1

The additional characters in the obfuscated version are not no-ops (except for the quote marks), they just are never reached.

Explanation:

The instruction pointer of the program begins at the 0. At each step, the IP tries to turn 90 degrees right from its current direction. If there is whitespace in that direction, it turns left until it finds something that is not whitespace. Once it has found a non-whitespace character to move to, it moves to that position and executes the command that the character represents.

So, in this case, the IP starts moving right from the zero on the last line:

0******v^v+^v+^v+^v+*****v+*v1

* increments the value in the register by one. This happens six times, and then v pushes the number 6 from the register to the stack. ^ copies the value from the stack to the register, and the second v pushes the copy to the stack. Then + pops the two values from the stack and pushes their sum to the stack.

At the end of the line (just before reaching the 1), there are two numbers in the stack, 1 (on top) and 100. 1, 2, and 3 are labels. When one of them is reached, the IP jumps to the second occurrence of the same character in the code. So, from the end of the last line, the IP jumps to the beginning of the last line, to: 123. From there it immediately jumps to the first line of the code:

2^,*v~******v^v+.3
     X
     !

^ copies the number 1 from the stack to the register, , pops it from the stack and prints it as a decimal number. *v increments the register by one and pushes it into the stack. ~ compares the two topmost values on the stack, and pushes a zero into the stack if they are equal (-1 or 1 otherwise, depending on which value is larger).

At this point, for the first time in this program, there is a character 90 degrees to the right from the instruction pointer's current position and direction. The IP tries to move to the X, which pops the value of the comparison from the stack. Compared to the other commands, X is special in that way that the IP only moves to it if the value popped from the stack is 0. Otherwise the IP treats it as whitespace and turns left until it finds some direction to go. Therefore the X branch is only entered when the two values in the stack are equal, that is, the counter (the number just printed) reaches 100. After that ! ends the program.

When the counter is less than one hundred, the IP resumes going eastward on the first line. ******v^v+ places number 10 in the stack, . pops it and prints it as an ASCII character (a newline, in this case). 3 jumps back to 123, from which the IP jumps back to the first line and a new iteration begins.

(In the obfuscated version the 3 is under the ., this doesn't affect the behaviour, because the IP turns right always when possible (unless it's in left-turning mode, but this program does not change the mode at any point.))

\$\endgroup\$
2
  • \$\begingroup\$ Not Prelude, Hexagony, Brainbool, Boolfuck, Brainfuck, Hyper-Dimensional Brainfuck, Random Brainfuck, Fisson, Fission 2, Self-modifying Brainfuck, Symbolic Brainfuck, ><>, Gol><>,Triangular, Lost, Befunge-93, 96, 97 or 98, in case anyone wants to try to crack this. \$\endgroup\$
    – Maya
    Commented Feb 15, 2018 at 15:46
  • \$\begingroup\$ @NieDzejkob Seems that the obfuscation worked, as I tried to make it look a bit like some of those languages. \$\endgroup\$
    – Steadybox
    Commented Feb 15, 2018 at 19:31
5
\$\begingroup\$

Alarm Clock Radio, 62 (+3 for -O2) = 65 bytes, safe

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++@[+++>+>]+>[+>.+>]

This is totally brain[bleep]! Metaphorically speaking, at least :D

It is a BF derivative, however!

Explanation

Alarm Clock Radio is a BF derivative without < or -, but it has a cyclic tape. -O2 is used to limit the tape size to 2 cells.

-O2 specifies the

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ set pointer to 44
@ wait 44 seconds
[+++>+>]+   set tape to (156 1)
>[+>.+>]    until 156 is 0 (by overflow), output increasing characters

Since 256 - 156 == 100, this loops 100 times.

\$\endgroup\$
6
  • 1
    \$\begingroup\$ (there are 44 +s before the @) \$\endgroup\$
    – user202729
    Commented Feb 9, 2018 at 11:46
  • \$\begingroup\$ Is this braincurses? \$\endgroup\$
    – No one
    Commented Feb 15, 2018 at 3:24
  • \$\begingroup\$ @Noone no it is not, I don't think anyway \$\endgroup\$ Commented Feb 15, 2018 at 3:33
  • \$\begingroup\$ So this is probably a well known language with so many interpreters, and the problem is to find out which interpreter had the right command line option? \$\endgroup\$
    – jimmy23013
    Commented Feb 15, 2018 at 14:05
  • \$\begingroup\$ @jimmy23013 I doubt the flag is necessary, considering it was edited in 10 hours later. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Feb 15, 2018 at 20:05
5
\$\begingroup\$

Replace, 473 bytes, safe

Output is space separated, and is prepended with OUTPUT:\n.

1?2v ?-[>++<-----]>--[.-]>
Print=>{not Palindromic[_]or#String[_]<2}\1:100
"    *
     b
     a
     :
     o
     a
     n
     :
   >1^
     +
     1
     ^                                       \
\D+/ 
2 1/3
3 1/3 4
1 1/8
3 3/9
00/ 5 6 7
9 3/t1
1 4 3/1 t2
4 8/t3
8 9/t4
(?<=8 )(?=t)/9 
9  5/t5
(.) 7 5|6 (.) t1/t\1\2
4 1/t8
t2 4.+/t9
9$/9100
 t/t
t(.)/\1_0\1_1\1_2\1_3\1_4\1_5\1_6\1_7\1_8\1_9
_(.)(.)/\1 \2
910/9 10
     >                                       /
     ;"

Interpreter

\$\endgroup\$
5
  • \$\begingroup\$ Unfortunately it's not ><> \$\endgroup\$
    – Maya
    Commented Feb 11, 2018 at 22:34
  • \$\begingroup\$ @NieDzejkob nor Gol><>, which misses some of the numbers; this is an impressive polyglot. \$\endgroup\$
    – MD XF
    Commented Feb 12, 2018 at 2:42
  • \$\begingroup\$ This is safe; please reveal the language! \$\endgroup\$
    – MD XF
    Commented Feb 19, 2018 at 4:09
  • \$\begingroup\$ I tried /// and itflabfriugherigoerujg (idk) but I didn't know of others. Nice one! \$\endgroup\$ Commented Feb 20, 2018 at 23:12
  • \$\begingroup\$ @totallyhuman thanks! It was an interesting task to find "deja vu" languages \$\endgroup\$ Commented Feb 21, 2018 at 0:16
5
\$\begingroup\$

Alphabetti spaghetti, 11 bytes, safe

JuvlikaJoEs

Outputs decimal with newline after every number.

\$\endgroup\$
6
  • \$\begingroup\$ "If your code contains bytes outside of printable ASCII + newline, please include a hex dump to make sure your code is actually testable" -> 0x0A is not printable ASCII. \$\endgroup\$
    – user45941
    Commented Feb 18, 2018 at 3:44
  • \$\begingroup\$ There shouldn't be a line feed and I can't seem to find it. The code is only those visible letters. \$\endgroup\$
    – Lerpo
    Commented Feb 18, 2018 at 5:50
  • \$\begingroup\$ My bad, it was due to me messing up the xxd invocation. \$\endgroup\$
    – user45941
    Commented Feb 18, 2018 at 6:33
  • \$\begingroup\$ This is safe; please reveal the language! \$\endgroup\$
    – MD XF
    Commented Feb 19, 2018 at 4:10
  • \$\begingroup\$ The provided interpreter on esolangs does not build correctly: main.c:34:2: error: too many arguments to function ‘init’ \$\endgroup\$ Commented Feb 21, 2018 at 16:58
5
\$\begingroup\$

Mouse, 35 bytes, safe

A little late to the party, but here's one:

2T5*=
(A1.1
+=1.!
B2.1-
=2.^"
")B$$

Explanation

Mouse is a simple stack based language that was described in Byte magazine in 1979 or so. Expressions are postfix. Single letters represent variables. When a variable name is scanned in the code, the address of the variable is pushed on the stack. The code above works with the Pascal version of the interpreter which pushes a '1' for A. A C version of the interpreter pushes a '0' for A.

The . operator retrieves the value in the variable indexed by the top of the stack. = pops the top two values from the stack and stores the value from the top into the variable indexed by the second from the top.

(..^..) is a loop; the^ pops the top of the stack and exits a loop if the value is zero ! pops and prints the top of the stack. "..." outputs the characters in quotes.

Because 1 and A both cause the value 1 to be pushed on the stack, 1. is equivalent to A.. This is used to obfuscate the code, e.g., A1.1+= instead of AA.1+=.

2T5*=(A1.1+=1.!B2.1-=2.^"\n")B$$

2T5*=                             var[2] = T * 5 (i.e. B = 20*5)
     (                            loop
      A1.1+=                      A = var[1] + 1  (i.e. A = A + 1)
            1.!                   push var[1] (i.e., A) and output it
               B2.1-=             B = var[2] - 1 (i.e. B = B - 1)
                     2.^          push var[2] (i.e. B) and exit loop if zero
                        "\n"      output a newline
                            )     end of loop
                             B    junk filer
                              $$  end of program
\$\endgroup\$
1
  • \$\begingroup\$ This is safe; please reveal the language! \$\endgroup\$
    – MD XF
    Commented Feb 19, 2018 at 4:09
5
\$\begingroup\$

Literate Python, 162 bytes, safe

def define_i():

    global i

    i = 0

define_i()

while i < 100:

    i += 1

    print(i)

def ruin():

    for i in range(99):

        print(i + 2)

ruin()

Literate programming is a programming style where a program is written as a document that describes the behavior of the program along with its actual code, so programs mostly consist of paragraphs of prose followed by a few lines of code. Needless to say, being on PPCG, I'm not particularly interested in this concept :)

I'm not sure whether this counts. I'm heavily basing the validity of this answer off of this answer by Dennis, which uses an implementation of C with different behavior that is not present on Wikipedia or TIO.

Here, the "compiler" is this Ruby script, which extracts the actual code from a literate programming file (it is intended for Ruby programs and as such generates .rb files, but the Python interpreter doesn't care). When converting a literate program to a real program, the script simply searches for indented sections with blank lines around them. This means that the code that is actually executed looks like this:

global i
i = 0
i += 1
print(i)
for i in range(99):
    print(i + 2)

For some reason, a top-level global statement is not an error and is simply ignored, so this program prints out the integers from 1 to 100.

\$\endgroup\$
5
  • \$\begingroup\$ Does this print anything outside of the 1-100 area? (i.e. are there trailing characters) \$\endgroup\$
    – Solver
    Commented Feb 13, 2018 at 11:15
  • \$\begingroup\$ @Solver There is a trailing newline, just like there would be if Python was the correct answer. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Feb 13, 2018 at 15:07
  • \$\begingroup\$ One more day to be safe... \$\endgroup\$
    – qqq
    Commented Feb 20, 2018 at 1:50
  • \$\begingroup\$ This is safe now. \$\endgroup\$
    – user63187
    Commented Feb 20, 2018 at 19:24
  • \$\begingroup\$ @Christopher Revealed the language. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Feb 21, 2018 at 5:10
5
\$\begingroup\$

Vyxal -HASKELL-RANGES, 20 bytes, Cracked by a stone arachnid

100...0 do I 'p I;';

Try it Online!

The -HASKELL-RANGES flag is a spoof for H and S. H pushes 100 to the stack at thte start, and S joins the stack by spaces at the end.

100...0 do           # ??? Somehow leaves 100 on the stack
                     # 100...0 on its own segfaults or something
                     # So idk why this works but it does
           I         # Coerce to integer
             '   ;   # Filter by (auto-converts to range)
              p I    # Prepended to itself is truthy?
                  '; # NOP
\$\endgroup\$
2
  • \$\begingroup\$ cracked \$\endgroup\$ Commented Nov 27, 2021 at 22:49
  • 1
    \$\begingroup\$ @astonearachnid Nice :P \$\endgroup\$
    – emanresu A
    Commented Nov 27, 2021 at 23:08
5
\$\begingroup\$

PARI/GP, 20899 bytes, safe

print('a')
print('a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')
print('a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a'+'a')

Prints numbers from 1 to 100 in decimal digits, separated by newlines.

This trick is found by Charles in the PARI/GP answer to Showcase of Languages:

Length 1: '

This command can be used to quote, but not in the usual way. 'x means "the literal polynomial x, not the value in the variable x". In postfix, it means the derivative. Tricky example: 'x' is 1 -- the derivative of the polynomial x.

\$\endgroup\$
2
  • \$\begingroup\$ This is Python. \$\endgroup\$
    – Fmbalbuena
    Commented Dec 13, 2021 at 1:35
  • 2
    \$\begingroup\$ @Fmbalbuena Outputs are decimal integers in the intended language, not unary. I'll edit to clarify the output format. \$\endgroup\$
    – alephalpha
    Commented Dec 13, 2021 at 1:41
5
\$\begingroup\$

Vyxal, 148 bytes, cracked by emanresuA

START
#IMPORT `\EMPTY\`
#IMPORT `\COMPLEX\`
#IMPORT <LINEBREAK>
`\REGEX\`
REGEX-REPLACE[COMPLEX-MATH[`0 100(1+:,)`], EMPTY-STRING, EMPTY-STRING]
END

This is probably most crazy code.

\$\endgroup\$
8
  • \$\begingroup\$ Safe for a while now, what is it? \$\endgroup\$
    – Seggan
    Commented Feb 21, 2022 at 19:30
  • \$\begingroup\$ This is Vyxal \$\endgroup\$
    – emanresu A
    Commented Mar 6, 2022 at 0:31
  • \$\begingroup\$ @emanresuA too late \$\endgroup\$
    – Fmbalbuena
    Commented Mar 6, 2022 at 16:42
  • \$\begingroup\$ You didn't declare it safe, therefore it's a crack. \$\endgroup\$
    – emanresu A
    Commented Mar 6, 2022 at 19:06
  • \$\begingroup\$ @emanresuA wait, is there a rule? \$\endgroup\$
    – Fmbalbuena
    Commented Mar 6, 2022 at 20:06
5
\$\begingroup\$

Unsure, 519 bytes, cracked by Komali

UMMMMM PLEASE START THE PROGRAM
UHHHH HIDE ALL ERRRRR
UHHH, PLEASE SET VARIABLE n TO 99
DISABLE ERRRR FOR ABOVE LINE
UM PRESET VARIABLE y TO 0
START A LOOP
HEH YOU BETTER START WORKING
WHAT IN THE WORLD
BUT ANYWAY, INCREASE y BY 1
UM YOU ALSO HAVE TO PRINT y
YEAH CHECK CONDITION y IS GREATER THAN n
ERR IF y IS GREATER THAN 100
SO IF THAT CONDITION IS TRUE, THEN, UH, EXECUTE THIS
OKAY UM TERMINATE THE LOOP
IF ERR OR CONDITION NOT TRUE, THEN
DO NOTHING
CLOSE IF
CLOSE LOOP
NOW PLEASE WAIT FOR THE PROGRAM TO TERMINATE

Finishes with array from 1 to 100.

\$\endgroup\$
1
  • \$\begingroup\$ This is unsure; will post crack in a second \$\endgroup\$
    – Komali
    Commented May 17, 2022 at 19:54
4
\$\begingroup\$

Befunge-98, 40 bytes, cracked by totallyhuman

"0" < q <= s' * 1e' * g * 1061 * 19 * 77

Outputs as decimal integers.

\$\endgroup\$
2
  • \$\begingroup\$ Cracked. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Feb 6, 2018 at 21:23
  • \$\begingroup\$ @totallyhuman that was faster than I expected \$\endgroup\$
    – ovs
    Commented Feb 6, 2018 at 21:27
4
\$\begingroup\$

Foo, 30 bytes, cracked by MD XF

It wouldn't be the Programming Language Quiz without Foo!

@10+10*+10(10@1>+$i<$c10-1)+@0

Outputs in decimal, with a newline after each number.

\$\endgroup\$
1
  • \$\begingroup\$ Cracked. (didn't see that coming) \$\endgroup\$
    – MD XF
    Commented Feb 7, 2018 at 0:13
4
\$\begingroup\$

Commentator, 223 bytes, cracked by totallyhuman

print "H e l l o, W o r l d!", end = 10
for i in range( 1 0 0 ):
        print i
;{-Haskell ?-}
#Python?
(({- Execute some# brainflak here#}))
;-}Perl: bvgk,l/;'juhedwsed/*{-:
05AB1E: 12DD/* Way to convert to float, nice :)

I might as well join in the fun! I'm pretty sure this doesn't work in any other languages, but Perl can be weird, so you never know. This outputs in bytes, so the output should look like:

	

 !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcd
\$\endgroup\$
1
4
\$\begingroup\$

ELVM IR, 587 bytes, cracked by Dennis


	.text
main:
	mov D, SP
	add D, -1
	store BP, D
	mov SP, D
	mov BP, SP
	.file 1 "-"
	.loc 1 2 0
	mov A, 1
	mov B, BP
	add B, 2
	store A, B
	.L0:
	mov B, BP
	add B, 2
	load A, B
	mov D, SP
	add D, -1
	store A, D
	mov SP, D
	mov A, 101
	mov B, A
	load A, SP
	add SP, 1
	lt A, B
	jeq .L3, A, 0
	jmp .L4
	.L3:
	jmp .L2
	.L4:
	mov B, BP
	add B, 2
	load A, B
	mov D, SP
	add D, -1
	store A, D
	mov SP, D
	putc A
	add SP, 1
	.L1:
	mov B, BP
	add B, 2
	load A, B
	mov D, SP
	add D, -1
	store A, D
	mov SP, D
	add A, 1
	mov B, BP
	add B, 2
	store A, B
	load A, SP
	add SP, 1
	jmp .L0
	.L2:
	exit
\$\endgroup\$
2
  • 2
    \$\begingroup\$ Cracked. \$\endgroup\$
    – Dennis
    Commented Feb 7, 2018 at 0:18
  • 1
    \$\begingroup\$ @Dennis Knew you'd be the one to crack this, nice job \$\endgroup\$
    – MD XF
    Commented Feb 7, 2018 at 0:31
1
2
3 4 5
8

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