# Write a program to elasticize strings

Nice verb there, in the title.

Write a program that given an input string, will "elasticize" this string and output the result. Elasticizing a string is done as follows:

The first character is shown once. The second character is shown twice. The third character is shown thrice, and so on.

As you can see, the amount of duplications of a certain character is related to the character's index as opposed to its previous occurrences in the string.

You can expect to receive only printable ASCII characters. Based off the following link, these characters have decimal values 32-126.

Examples:

Why: Whhyyy

SKype: SKKyyyppppeeeee

LobbY: LoobbbbbbbYYYYY (Note how there are 7 b's since the first b is shown 3 times and the second b is shown 4 times, making a total of 7 b's).

A and B: A aaannnnddddd BBBBBBB

Shortest bytes wins :)

• That seems to disagree with "no support for whitespace is needed, other than the space character". Should the output be the same as the input then? (Two one letter words?) Also note we have a nice place called the Sandbox where you can put challenges for people to give you feedback before posting them. – FryAmTheEggman Jun 20 '16 at 19:50
• FryAmTheEggman your assumption is valid. @TimmyD I realize where I was unclear, you may end up with strings separated my multiple spaces, as seen in the example FryAmTheEggman posted. – Mario Ishac Jun 20 '16 at 19:52
• I'm assuming that the shortest code wins? ;) – Adnan Jun 20 '16 at 19:54
• @Adnan Yep, though I'm not sure if I should mark the answer with the shorted program as accepted, as certain languages are made for golfing purposes unlike others. – Mario Ishac Jun 20 '16 at 19:56
• Related: 1, 2 – Sp3000 Jun 21 '16 at 3:36

# Jelly, 3 bytes

Code:

ĖP€


Explanation:

Ė     # Enumerate.
P€   # Product of each.
# Implicit joining of everything.


Uses the Jelly encoding. Try it online!.

• Nice abuse of the fact that Python's * does string multiplication. That's not really intended, but it works. – Dennis Jun 20 '16 at 20:56
• @Dennis: which *? There's no such thing in the whole answer. – Thomas Weller Jun 22 '16 at 6:08
• @Thomas: Jelly is written in Python, and the Jelly P command calculates product behind the scenes using the Python * operator. This post is abusing the leaky abstraction of the underlying code actually being in Python, so doing a P (product) command on a string works as expected. – mellamokb Jun 22 '16 at 13:57

# J, 4 bytes

#~#\


## Usage

   f =: #~#\
f 'Why'
Whhyyy
f 'SKype'
SKKyyyppppeeeee
f 'LobbY'
LoobbbbbbbYYYYY
f 'A and B'
A  aaannnnddddd      BBBBBBB


## Explanation

#~#\  Input: s
#\  Computes the length of each prefix of s
This forms the range [1, 2, ..., len(s)]
#~    For each value in the range, copy the character at the
corresponding index that many times
Return the created string


## Brainfuck, 15 bytes

,[>+[->+<<.>],]


Pretty straightforward implementation, shifting the memory space by 1 for each input char. Requires an interpreter that gives 0 on EOF, and 32-bit/arbitrary precision cells for inputs longer than 255 chars.

Try it online! (Note: TIO uses 8-bit cells)

• Also, I think that this doesn't work for strings longer than 255 characters. – Ismael Miguel Jun 22 '16 at 10:07
• @IsmaelMiguel That would depend on whether the interpreter in question has arbitrary precision integers or not (but indeed, for most implementations, it would cap at 255) – Sp3000 Jun 22 '16 at 10:13
• The convention is to use 8-bits. Which is 1 character. But some may indeed implement with 32-bit numbers. Since you specify you need that EOF be 0 (which is a compiler/interpreter-specific behaviour), it should be noted that for strings longer than 255 characters, you need a compiler/interpreter with 32-bit cells. I just though that it should be added to the answer, since it is also a compiler/interpreter-specific behaviour. – Ismael Miguel Jun 22 '16 at 10:23
• @IsmaelMiguel Sure, noted. – Sp3000 Jun 22 '16 at 10:35

# Java, 158 121 bytes

Saved a whopping 37 bytes thanks to Kevin Cruijssen!

interface a{static void main(String[]A){int b=0,B;for(char c:A[0].toCharArray())for(B=b+++2;--B>0;)System.out.print(c);}}


As a bonus, this program can handle all Unicode characters in the existence, including the control characters located at the very end of Basic Multilingual Plane.

• Huh, this is very short for a Java code. – Ave Jun 20 '16 at 23:47
• You can shorten it by 1 byte by replacing for(int C=c+1;C>0;C--) with for(int C=c+2;--C>0;) – Kevin Cruijssen Jun 21 '16 at 6:50
• Or even shorter (121 bytes): interface a{static void main(String[]A){int x=0,i;for(char c:A[0].toCharArray())for(i=x+++2;--i>0;)System.out.print(c);}} – Kevin Cruijssen Jun 21 '16 at 6:57
• Well, just make it a lambda or a method – Leaky Nun Jun 21 '16 at 13:22
• Wow, using an interface for the default public methods. That's smart. – Justin Jun 22 '16 at 0:45

## Perl, 16 bytes

s/./$&x$+[0]/ge


+1 byte for the -p flag.

s/./        /    find every character
g   globally
e  and replace with the eval'd result of
$& the matched string x repeated$+[0]     by the index of the character after the match


concat.zipWith replicate[1..]


Usage example: concat.zipWith replicate[1..] $"SKype" -> "SKKyyyppppeeeee". replicate n c makes n copies of c and concat makes a single list out of all the sublists. • id=<< is a nice touch. :) – sudee Jun 20 '16 at 20:04 • I just wanted to try it, but assigning f = id=<<zipWith replicate[1..] (in a file) did result in an ugly error, can you tell what I'm doing wrong? – flawr Jun 20 '16 at 20:37 • Shouldn't it be possible to assign this (unnamed, right?) function to a name, such that we can use it as a function? I mean if it is a function, then (id=<<zipWith replicate[1..] ) "SKype" should still work? Otherwise I would consider it as a snippet. The full program you provided does have "SKype" hardcoded. – flawr Jun 20 '16 at 20:42 • I'd say if you cannot use it like any other function, it is not a function. E.g. :t does not regard id=<<zipWith replicate[1..] as a function (it just throws an error) however (id=<<).zipWith replicate[1..] is considered as a function. I'd say the first one is just a snipped, that just works if you hardcode the input, but the second one that you just postet is a function (and :t agrees), would you agree on that? – flawr Jun 20 '16 at 20:55 • Ok, great! If you disagree with my "definition", I think we should start a meta post for clearing this up. In the mean time I'm trying to find some other haskellians for their opinion on this, as this is just my view. – flawr Jun 20 '16 at 21:11 ## CJam, 98 7 bytes Thanks to jimmy23013 for saving 1 byte. Sl+eee~  Test it here. ### Explanation Using the LobbY example:  Stack: S e# Push space. [" "] l e# Read input. [" " "LobbY"] + e# Append. [" LobbY"] ee e# Enumerate. [[[0 ' ] [1 'L] [2 'o] [3 'b] [4 'b] [5 'Y]]] e~ e# Run-length decode. ["LoobbbbbbbYYYYY"]  # Python, 39 bytes f=lambda s:s and f(s[:-1])+s[-1]*len(s)  Test it on Ideone. # Javascript ES6, 39 bytes x=>x.replace(/./g,(y,i)=>y+y.repeat(i))  Same length, but more fun: x=>x.replace(i=/./g,y=>y.repeat(i=-~i))  Snippet demo: f= x=>x.replace(/./g,(y,i)=>y+y.repeat(i)) run.onclick=_=>output.textContent=f(input.value) <input id="input" value="SKype"> <button id="run">Go</button> <pre id="output"></pre> • Small error, the program does not support spaces, which is required as a submission (check the OP). – Mario Ishac Jun 20 '16 at 21:59 • @MarDev I changed the snippet to use <pre> instead of <div>, that should help. – Neil Jun 20 '16 at 22:55 • @Neil Ah, so the result was correctly computed, but the output was rendered incorrectly by the HTML. Forgot that <div> does that. – Mario Ishac Jun 21 '16 at 0:43 • ..."and output the result" – spender Jun 23 '16 at 1:30 • @spender returning is a valid form of output for functions – cat Jun 23 '16 at 15:15 # APL (8) {⍵/⍨⍳⍴⍵}  I.e.:  {⍵/⍨⍳⍴⍵} ¨ 'Why' 'SKype' 'LobbY' ┌──────┬───────────────┬───────────────┐ │Whhyyy│SKKyyyppppeeeee│LoobbbbbbbYYYYY│ └──────┴───────────────┴───────────────┘  Explanation: • ⍴⍵: length of given vector • ⍳: numbers 1..N • ⍵/⍨: replicate each element in ⍵ N times. # MATLAB, 45 bytes g=@(m)sort(m(m>0));@(s)s(g(hankel(1:nnz(s))))  Explanation: The key is hankel, which produces a Hankel matrix of a given vector. From this matrix, we can extract a vector of indices, which defines which character of the string is at which position in the output. E.g. hankel(1:4) produces following matrix:  1 2 3 4 2 3 4 0 3 4 0 0 4 0 0 0  From this matrix we can extrac the vector 1,2,2,3,3,3,4,4,4,4,4. This vector allows us to output the first character of the string once, the second one twice e.t.c. # APL (dzaima/APL), 6 5 bytes ⍳∘≢⌿⊢  Try it online! ⍳∘≢ enumeration of the argument... (indices of its length) ⌿ replicates the elements of... ⊢ the unmodified argument • link to interpreter? – cat Jun 23 '16 at 15:14 • @cat See edit (in header). – Adám Jun 23 '16 at 15:31 • @cat What was your edit? – Adám Jun 23 '16 at 15:48 • Identical to yours down to the character, because I googled it myself and my edit took 10 minutes to submit – cat Jun 23 '16 at 16:31 • Also, in which codepage is this 6 bytes? – cat Jun 23 '16 at 18:12 ## PowerShell v2+, 36 bytes -join([char[]]$args[0]|%{"$_"*++$i})


Takes input $args[0], explicitly casts it as a char array, sends that into a loop |%{...}. Each iteration we take the current letter/character "$_" and use the * overloaded operator to concatenate the string pre-incremented $i times. The result of each loop iteration is encapsulated in parens to form an array and then -joined together to form a string. That string is left on the pipeline and output is implicit. ### Examples PS C:\Tools\Scripts\golfing> .\elasticize-a-word.ps1 Why Whhyyy PS C:\Tools\Scripts\golfing> .\elasticize-a-word.ps1 SKype SKKyyyppppeeeee PS C:\Tools\Scripts\golfing> .\elasticize-a-word.ps1 LobbY LoobbbbbbbYYYYY PS C:\Tools\Scripts\golfing> .\elasticize-a-word.ps1 'a b' a bbb  # Brachylog, 13 bytes :ImC,0:Ie,Cw\  This prints the result to STDOUT. ### Explanation This is a good example of exploiting backtracking to loop. :ImC C is the Ith character of the Input , 0:Ie Unify an implicit variable with an integer between 0 and I , Cw Write C to STDOUT \ False, trigger backtracking. It will go back to 0:Ie and unify the implicit variable with another integer, until all integers were used. After that, it will backtrack to :ImC and unify I and C with the next character.  # MATLAB, 23 bytes @(x)repelem(x,1:nnz(x))  Creates an anonymous function ans that can be called using ans('stringtoelacticize') • What version are you using? Cannot find repelem in my (relatively old) version =( – flawr Jun 21 '16 at 9:12 • @flawr repelem was introduced in R2015a – Luis Mendo Jun 21 '16 at 14:05 ## K/Kona, 14 bytes {,/(1+!#x)#'x}  Usage: k){,/(1+!#x)#'x}"A and B" "A aaannnnddddd BBBBBBB"  # Perl 6, 22 20 19 bytes {S:g/(.)/{$0 x$/.to}/} {S:g[(.)]=$0 x$/.to} {[~] .comb Zx 1..*} ### Explanation: { # implicit parameter$_
[~]      # string concatenate the following list
.comb  # the NFG characters from $_ Z[x] # zip combined using the string repetition operator 1 .. * # 1 to infinity }  # VBA, 75 bytes Function e(s):For a=1 To Len(s):e=e &String(a,Mid(s,a,1)):Next:End Function  Call as e.g. a user function in a spreadsheet. =e(A1) ┌─────────┬───────────────┐ │ SKype │SKKyyyppppeeeee│ └─────────┴───────────────┘  It truncates if you feed it its own output a few times :-). • Welcome to the site! =) – James Jun 21 '16 at 7:28 # PHP, 68 bytes <?php foreach(str_split($argv[1])as$i=>$a)echo str_repeat($a,$i+1);

• Hi, and welcome to PPCG! Nice first post! – Rɪᴋᴇʀ Jun 21 '16 at 14:41
• You can get it down to 47 bytes: for(;$a=$argv[1][$i++];)echo str_repeat($a,$i);. – insertusernamehere Jun 21 '16 at 19:59 # Javascript ES6, 42 41 bytes s=>[,...s].map((e,i)=>e.repeat(i)).join  Example runs: f=s=>[,...s].map((e,i)=>e.repeat(i)).join f("Why") => "Whhyyy" f("SKype") => "SKKyyyppppeeeee" f("LobbY") => "LoobbbbbbbYYYYY"  • Same length: s=>[...s].reduce((a,b,i)=>a+b.repeat(i+1)) – Bassdrop Cumberwubwubwub Jun 21 '16 at 12:27 • -1 byte: s=>[,...s].map((e,i)=>e.repeat(i)).join – nderscore Jun 21 '16 at 16:14 • @nderscore Aha, thats clever, thanks! – Dendrobium Jun 21 '16 at 16:28 ## Retina, 22 bytes Byte count assumes ISO 8859-1 encoding. .$&$.$*·
+(.)·
$1$1


Try it online!

Basically, we insert the right amount of · as placeholders between the characters (since these extended ASCII characters can't appear in the input), then fill them up with the adjacent character in the second stage.

# R, 83 50 bytes

-23 Thanks to Giuseppe, though he used essentially an entire new method altogether

function(s)intToUtf8(rep(utf8ToInt(s),1:nchar(s)))


My original post:

function(s){r="";for(i in 1:nchar(s))r=paste0(r,strrep(el(strsplit(s,""))[i],i));r}


Try it online!

I feel like there's definitely a better way to do this, but with my new knowledge of a few functions in R, this is my approach.

• Not a golfing tip, but your code link output was messed up. Here – Robert S. Aug 31 '18 at 19:28
• Ah, I see. I'm new to TIO, so I didn't quite understand the header/footer portions. Thank You! – Sumner18 Aug 31 '18 at 19:37
• Using scan saves 1 byte! – Robert S. Aug 31 '18 at 20:21
• Very nice! However, using rep and the argument collapse="" to paste is shorter, and utf8ToInt is shorter still! TIO – Giuseppe Aug 31 '18 at 20:36

## Actually, 7 bytes

' +ñ♂πΣ


Try it online!

Explanation:

' +ñ♂πΣ
' +      prepend a space
ñ     enumerate ("abc" -> [[0, 'a'], [1, 'b'], [2, 'c']])
♂π   map: for each character, repeat it n times
Σ  concatenate


# Pyth - 5 bytes

1 byte saved thanks to @FryAmTheEggman.

s*VSl

• @FryAmTheEggman ah, nice one. – Maltysen Jun 20 '16 at 20:05

# Python 3, 48 47 bytes

Thanks to mego for saving a byte with the -~i trick.

lambda s:''.join(c*-~i for i,c in enumerate(s))


This is mostly self-explanatory. One thing for those not versed in Python: The * operator is overloaded to act like Perl's x operator, repeating its string argument the number of times specified by its numeric argument. E.g. 'foo' * 3 == 'foofoofoo'

• c*-~i is shorter than c*(i+1). – Mego Jun 20 '16 at 20:07

## C#, 81 Bytes

void f(string s){for(int i=0;i<s.Length;i++)Console.Write(new String(s[i],i+1));}

• you can save 1 byte by changing to a foreach loop, e.g. foreach(var a in s)Console.Write(new C(a,1*i++)); – Abbath Jun 20 '16 at 23:09
• but if its a foreach we don't have the i variable so you'd need to declare it. – ScifiDeath Jun 21 '16 at 9:43
• It seems you're missing a using System or a System. in front of the Console. – Martin Ender Jun 21 '16 at 11:36
• @ScifiDeath That's true - but the end result is still one byte shorter. Sorry for omitting it and causing confusion int i=1; – Abbath Jun 21 '16 at 13:56
• Also one byte shorter using Linq: void f(string s){s.Select((c,i)=>{Console.Write(new string(c,i+1));return c;});}. The need for a (unused) return value is ugly though. Edit: just found similar snippets in other answers further back. – linac Jun 22 '16 at 15:20

# MATL, 5 bytes

tn:Y"


Try it Online

Explanation

    % Implictly grab input as a string
tn  % Duplicate and compute the length (N)
:   % Create an array from [1...N]
Y"  % Perform run-length decoding to elacticize the string
% Implicitly display the result


## Python, 40 bytes

f=lambda s,i=1:s and s[0]*i+f(s[1:],i+1)


# Julia, 34 bytes

!s=s>""?!s[1:(e=end)-1]*s[e:e]^e:s


Try it online!

• Your solution was good. But I managed to beat it. – Glen O Jun 21 '16 at 9:24
• I saw. I had c%n="\$c"^n;~s=join([s[r=1:end]...].%r), but that's actually longer. split was the missing piece of the puzzle. – Dennis Jun 21 '16 at 15:00

# TSQL, 97 bytes

Golfed:

DECLARE @x varchar(max)='Lobby'
DECLARE @ int=LEN(@x)WHILE @>0SELECT
@x=STUFF(@x,@,1,REPLICATE(SUBSTRING(@x,@,1),@)),@-=1PRINT @x


Ungolfed:

DECLARE @x varchar(max)='Lobby'

DECLARE @ int=LEN(@x)
WHILE @>0
SELECT
@x=STUFF(@x,@,1,REPLICATE(SUBSTRING(@x,@,1),@)),
@-=1

PRINT @x


Try it online