validate-piles-notation
About
This skill validates and parses PILES notation strings used to define piece fusion groups in jigsawR. It performs syntax validation, parses groups into structured lists, and can generate plain-language explanations. Use it to verify user input before puzzle generation, debug fusion issues, or test serialization fidelity.
Quick Install
Claude Code
Recommendednpx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanacgit clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/validate-piles-notationCopy and paste this command in Claude Code to install this skill
Documentation
Validate PILES Notation
Parse, validate PILES notation strings for puzzle piece fusion groups.
When Use
- Validate user-supplied PILES strings before passing to
generate_puzzle() - Debug fusion group issues (wrong pieces merged, unexpected results)
- Explain PILES notation to users in plain language
- Test round-trip fidelity: parse -> groups -> serialize -> parse
Inputs
- Required: PILES notation string (e.g.,
"1-2-3,4-5") - Optional: Puzzle result object (for adjacency validation, keyword resolution)
- Optional: Puzzle type (for keyword support like
"center","ring1","R1")
Steps
Step 1: Syntax Validation
library(jigsawR)
result <- validate_piles_syntax("1-2-3,4-5")
# Returns TRUE if valid, error message if invalid
Check for common syntax errors:
- Unmatched parentheses:
"1-2(-3)-4"with mismatched() - Invalid characters: only digits,
-,,,:,(,)and keywords allowed - Empty groups:
"1-2,,3-4"(double comma)
Got: TRUE for valid syntax. Descriptive error for invalid.
If err: Print exact PILES string and validation error message.
Step 2: Parse into Groups
groups <- parse_piles("1-2-3,4-5")
# Returns: list(c(1, 2, 3), c(4, 5))
For strings with ranges:
groups <- parse_piles("1:6,7-8")
# Returns: list(c(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6), c(7, 8))
Got: List of integer vectors, one per fusion group, with correct piece IDs and group boundaries.
If err: Check PILES string passed syntax validation in Step 1 first. Parsing returns unexpected groups? Verify - separates pieces within group, , separates groups, range notation (:) expands to inclusive endpoints.
Step 3: Explain in Plain Language
Describe each group for user:
"1-2-3,4-5"-> "Group 1: fuse pieces 1, 2, and 3. Group 2: fuse pieces 4 and 5.""1:6"-> "Group 1: fuse pieces 1 through 6 (6 pieces).""center,ring1"-> "Group 1: center piece. Group 2: all pieces in ring 1."
Got: Each fusion group described in plain language with piece counts, identifiers. Notation understandable to non-technical users.
If err: Keywords cannot be explained (e.g., "ring1" has no clear meaning)? Notation may need puzzle result object for context. Advise user to provide puzzle type or use numeric piece IDs instead.
Step 4: Validate Against Puzzle Result (Optional)
Puzzle result object available? Verify:
# Generate the puzzle first
puzzle <- generate_puzzle(type = "hexagonal", grid = c(3), size = c(200))
# Parse with puzzle context (resolves keywords)
groups <- parse_fusion("center,ring1", puzzle)
Check:
- All piece IDs exist in puzzle
- Keywords resolve to valid piece sets
- Fused pieces actually adjacent (warn if not)
Got: All piece IDs valid. Adjacent pieces fuse clean.
If err: List invalid piece IDs or non-adjacent pairs.
Step 5: Round-Trip Serialization
Verify parse/serialize fidelity:
original <- "1-2-3,4-5"
groups <- parse_piles(original)
roundtrip <- to_piles(groups)
# roundtrip should equal original (or canonical equivalent)
groups2 <- parse_piles(roundtrip)
identical(groups, groups2) # Must be TRUE
Got: Round-trip produces identical group lists. Confirms parse_piles() and to_piles() are inverses.
If err: Round-trip differs? Check whether serializer normalizes notation (e.g., sorting piece IDs or converting ranges to explicit lists). Canonical differences acceptable as long as identical(groups, groups2) returns TRUE.
PILES Quick Reference
# Basic syntax
"1-2" # Fuse pieces 1 and 2
"1-2-3,4-5" # Two groups: (1,2,3) and (4,5)
"1:6" # Range: pieces 1 through 6
# Keywords (require puzzle_result)
"center" # Center piece (hex/concentric)
"ring1" # All pieces in ring 1
"R1" # Row 1 (rectangular)
"boundary" # All boundary pieces
# Functions
parse_piles("1-2-3,4-5") # Parse PILES string
parse_fusion("1-2-3", puzzle) # Auto-detect format
to_piles(list(c(1,2), c(3,4))) # Convert to PILES
validate_piles_syntax("1-2(-3)-4") # Validate syntax
Check
-
validate_piles_syntax()returns TRUE for valid strings -
parse_piles()returns correct group lists - Round-trip serialization preserves groups
- Keywords resolve correct with puzzle context
- Invalid syntax produces clear error messages
Pitfalls
- Keyword without puzzle context: Keywords like
"center"need puzzle result object. Pass toparse_fusion(), notparse_piles(). - 1-indexed pieces: Piece IDs start at 1, not 0.
- Adjacent vs non-adjacent fusion: Fusing non-adjacent pieces works but may produce unexpected visual results. Validate adjacency when possible.
- Range notation:
"1:6"includes both endpoints (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6).
See Also
generate-puzzle— generate puzzles with fusion groupsadd-puzzle-type— new types need PILES/fusion supportrun-puzzle-tests— test PILES parsing with full suite
GitHub Repository
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