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[SOLVED] Cse2050 module 5 lab – recursive board game

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File Name: Cse2050_module_5_lab_____recursive_board_game.zip
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Model a circular board game consisting of numbered tiles. The numbers represent how many tiles you can
move clockwise (CW) or counter-clockwise (CCW). It’s okay to loop around – moves that go before the first
tile or after the last are valid. The goal is to reach the final tile (the tile 1 counter-clockwise from the start).
Figure 1: (a) [3, 6, 4, 1, 3, 4, 2, 0] is solveable in 3 moves. (b) [3, 4, 1, 2, 0] is unsolveable.
While not shown, moving 3 spaces CCW at the start would also be a valid first move.
SolvePuzzle.py
• solve_puzzle(board) returns a boolean denoting if board is solveable.
>>> solve_puzzle([3, 6, 4, 1, 3, 4, 2, 0])
True
>>> solve_puzzle([3, 4, 1, 2, 0])
False
Tips
• Use memoization to to avoid infinite loops
• You can assume the numbers on tiles are non-negative integers (0 is valid, and may appear on any tile)
• The modulo operator % is helpful for finding indices when you loop around
• Add unittests to TestSolvePuzzle.py to help debug
Submission
At a minimum, submit the following files:
• solve_puzzle.py
• test_solve_puzzle.py
Students must submit individually by the due date (typically Sunday at 11:59 pm EST) to receive credit.

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[SOLVED] Cse2050 module 5 lab – recursive board game[SOLVED] Cse2050 module 5 lab – recursive board game
$25