Weekly Coder
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Byte sized weekly coding challenges to hone your problem-solving prowess.
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🎧 M is for Music and L is for Lyrics

Let's use the Genius API to create a lyrics fetching project this week.

🥅 Goal: Create a program that, given the name of a song, fetches its lyrics and displays it.

⚙️ It takes < 1min to authorize Genius and obtain your Access Token. You may benefit from using the PY library lyricsgenius or you could just do HTTP.

🪁 Submit your code in the comments!

@WeeklyCoder | Week 69
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📍 Near Ping

Case: After boarding the taxi and a few kilometers away, your friend calls to check if you bought the phone case they asked for while you were near the market—🤦‍♀️, you forgot, and now you feel bad. If only something had reminded you when you were near the phone center!


We’re re-revisiting the Haversine formula to calculate the distance between two points on Earth’s surface using latitude and longitude coordinates.

🥅 Goal:
To build an app that allows users to add reminders tied to specific locations (lat & lng) and reminders them when their current location is within 1 kilometer of a reminder’s location.

To keep it simple, store your data in a local file where each reminder has a task (string) and coordinates (latitude, longitude as floats).

🐾 Steps:
- Allow user to enter reminders and store them (e.g., task, latitude, longitude)
- Let user enter their current location
- Check current location against all reminders and display tasks if within 1 km.


Testing coordinates:
Reminder: Buy phone case
Shop: 9.020274156181737, 38.801150775048335
Your Location: 9.020383152979795, 38.800234352160246


✏️ Recommended Learning:
- Haversine Formula
- asin(), sin(), cos()
- sqrt(), pow(), radians()
- lists, dictionaries


⚡️ Bring the thunder!
As with many of the challenges here, nothing's stopping you from making this a full-fledged mobile app.
- Fetch current location from device's GPS
- Push notifications when near a reminder spot
- Allow custom distance for nearness calculation
- Use your friend's live location so that you don't unknowingly pass by a friend you've been meaning to meet next time

🪁 Send your submissions in the comments!

@WeeklyCoder | Week 70
Weekly Coder
📍 Near Ping Case: After boarding the taxi and a few kilometers away, your friend calls to check if you bought the phone case they asked for while you were near the market—🤦‍♀️, you forgot, and now you feel bad. If only something had reminded you when you…
🌔 What did the Moon look like on your birthday?

The Moon cycles through phases—new, waxing, full, and waning—each altering its glow and shadow over about 29.5 days.

With the AstronomyAPI, you can reveal the Moon’s appearance for any specific day and location.

🥅 Goal: Given a date (YYYY-MM-DD) and coordinates (LAT, LNG), write a program to fetch and display the Moon’s image for that moment.

⚙️ Sign up (takes < 2 minutes) to create your Application and get its ID and Secret—check this guide for details.

✏️ Recommended Learning:
- http.requests
- java.util.base64
- JSONObject, .setString (), .setJSONObject (), .getJSONObject ()
- loadImage (), image ()

🪁 Submit your code in the comments!

@WeeklyCoder | Week 71
👟 Kids' Shoe Fit Finder

Kids’ feet grow fast—up to 1-2 sizes a year—making online shoe shopping a guessing game, with over 30% of returns due to fit issues.

To help with this, let's make a program where parents input their child’s age and foot length (cm) and get instant US, UK, and EU sizes.

We'll use Adidas's Kids Shoes Size Chart as a reference.

🥅 Goal: Given age of a child and their foot length (cm), write a program to output shoe size (in US, UK, and EU).

✏️ Recommended Learning:
- arrays
- selection statements
- logical & relational operators
- loadJSONObject, JSONObject, JSON

🪁 Submit your code in the comments!

@WeeklyCoder | Week 72
🥧 Happy Pi Day!

Let's return to visual coding challenges and tackle Circle Packing this week.

In geometry, circle packing is the study of the arrangement of circles (of equal or varying sizes) on a given surface such that no overlapping occurs and so that all circles touch one another.

There are different variations of CP. What kind would you come up with? Excited to see.

✏️ Recommended Learning:
- random (), translate (), circle ()
- PI, TWO_PI
- constrain (), cos (), sin (), dist ()
- List, class, functions, methods

🪁 Submit your code in the comments!

@WeeklyCoder | Week 73
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⌨️ Case Shifter

What do you do to fix the casing of an already written text? Probably rewrite it properly. This wastes time when you need it polished fast.

To tackle this, let’s build a program where you highlight text, press the Shift key, and cycle through lowercase, uppercase, or title case like in this video.

🥅 Goal: Given highlighted text, write a program to cycle through case options and replace the highlighted text.

✏️ Recommended Learning:
- .lower(), .upper(), .title()
- conditionals & loops
- libraries: pyperclip, keyboard

🪁 Submit your code in the comments!

@WeeklyCoder | Week 74
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⌨️ Withholding Calculator

Better late than never — this week 🙈

It's not rare that you find tools that apply for other countries but none exist for Ethiopian contexts. Such is the case with this week's challenge.

When dealing with financial transactions, manually calculating VAT and withholding tax can be tedious and error-prone.

This week, let’s create a program that takes a post-VAT or pre-VAT price, calculates the pre-VAT/post-VAT amount, and applies withholding tax if thresholds are met (10,000 for products, 3,000 for services), displaying then both the net payable amount and the withheld amount.

🥅 Goal: Given a price, provide selection for pre/post VAT and product/service options. Then calculate the post/pre VAT, withholding amount and net amount. See example calculation here or make a copy of this Sheets template.

✏️ Recommended Learning:
- arithmetic operators
- selection statements (if/else statements)
- functions for reusability

🪁 Submit your code in the comments!

@WeeklyCoder | Week 75
🕰 Pendulum Swings

In many scientific and engineering scenarios, especially when dealing with larger swings, the basic formula for a pendulum's period isn't accurate enough. This week, let's use a more precise calculation that takes into account the initial angle of release.

🥅 Goal: Create a program that calculates the period of a simple pendulum, incorporating a correction for large initial angles using the expansion series for the complete elliptic integral of the first kind (K(k)).

The program should take the pendulum's length and the initial release angle as input and output the more accurate period.

Here's the formula for K(k) we'll use.

✏️ Recommended Learning:
- Arithmetic operators
- Math functions (sqrt, sin, pow)
- Loops
- Functions

🪁 Submit your code in the comments!

@WeeklyCoder | Week 76
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🎮 It's Brick Breaker time!

The Brick Game is a dedicated handheld game that displays games in 10 x 20 grid screen. It was popularized in the early 1990s after being introduced in China in 1989.

🥅 Goal: Create a mini clone of the game Block Breaker but in the theme of Brick Games.

You may build on top of this barebones.
Grab a fitting font from here.
Download the Android app from here.

✏️ Recommended Learning:
- text, rectMode
- keyPressed, mousePressed
- loops, selection statements
- functions

🪁 Submit your code in the comments!

@WeeklyCoder | Week 77
🤖 It's Machine Learning time!

Let's get a glimpse of the world of computer vision this week — through a practical application with a problem that hits close to home.

Manually cropping faces from photos using photo editing software is time-consuming. The task this week is, to automate this process using machine learning-based face detection to produce square, face-centered images for an ID-making software.

⚙️ Task breakdown:
- Detect faces in each photo using OpenCV
- Crop each face into a square image, ensuring the face is centered with a padding
- Output square images suitable for ID-making software

This streamlines ID photo preparation, saving time and ensuring consistent output.

🎒 Resources:
- OpenCV for Processing
- Get started with this code

✏️ Recommended Learning:
- loadImage (), image (), save ()
- mask (), copy (), PGraphics

⚡️ Bring the Thunder!
- support for slightly rotated photos
- support for mass photo processing

🪁 Submit your code in the comments!

@WeeklyCoder | Week 78
🩺 Symptom-Based Disease Predictor

Let's use oral exam data to make predictions.

Given this CSV file that maps diseases to symptoms on a severity scale, build a program that asks users to input their symptom severities and returns the most likely disease from the table.

Each row is a disease, each column is a symptom (rated 0–3). Scale-Meaning.
0 - Absent
1 - Mild
2 - Moderate
3 - Severe

🥅 Goal:
Build a program that interacts with users to guess the most likely disease from their reported symptoms.

🦶 Steps:
- load and parse the CSV file
- prompt the user to enter their severity for each symptom (0–3)
- compare the user's input against all diseases
- output the most likely disease

✏️ Recommended Learning:
- Table, loadTable ()
- getRowCount (), getColumnCount ()
- getString (), getInt ()
- sortKeys (), sortValues ()
- .keyArray ()
- similarity/distance calculation (sum of absolute differences)

🪁 Submit your code in the comments!

@WeeklyCoder | Week 79
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Weekly Coder
🤖 It's Machine Learning time! Let's get a glimpse of the world of computer vision this week — through a practical application with a problem that hits close to home. Manually cropping faces from photos using photo editing software is time-consuming. The…
👉 Read this first: Tough-Love

📸 Manual Photo Crop Tool


Last time, we stepped into the world of computer vision — building a tool to automatically detect and crop faces from photos for ID-making purposes. It works great ... except when ML didn’t.

Not every photo played nice with automated face detection. Sometimes it missed the face or cropped poorly.

So this week, we’re flipping the script — let's build the user custom and manual control to crop faces from photos.

🥅 Goal: Build a Manual Crop Tool where a user can manually position the photo behind a fixed square frame to get the perfect crop.

🦶 Steps: here

⚙️ Key Features:
- Panning: on the image (click-drag or arrow keys)
- Zooming: in/out using mouse wheel or +/-

⚡️ Bring the Thunder: here

✏️ Recommended Learning:
- loadImage(), image(), translate(), scale(), rotate()
- mask (), copy(), save()
- mouseDragged(), mouseWheel(), keyPressed()
- PGraphics

🪁 Submit your code in the comments!

@WeeklyCoder | Week 80
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📊 Fuel Theft Detection

This week, let's analyze vehicle telemetry to tackle a critical problem: detecting fuel theft. By processing GPS and fuel data, we can identify suspicious fuel level changes.

🥅 Goal: Build a Fuel Theft Detector that processes a CSV of vehicle telemetry data to identify stops and flag fuel changes as theft or fillings.

We'll use this real-world data as input.

Real life is messy. Sensors can give readings that are all over the place when a vehicle is moving uphill or down hill or when it changes.

So to do this, we'll only consider fuel level changes as either thefts/fillings if they happen while the vehicle is stationary (speed = 0 kph). We'll take as a stop a duration of ≥ 3 minutes.

Filling if Fuel Diff > 1.0 and stop duration ≥ 3 minutes and Theft if Fuel Diff < -1.0

⚡️ Bring the Thunder:
- Output a summary report (events and amounts) to a csv file.
- Include the associated GPS coordinates to indicate where theft or fillings may have happened.

✏️ Recommended Learning:
- loadTable(), saveTable(), nf
- SimpleDateFormat
- Loops and conditionals
- .replace (), .contains ()

🪁 Submit your code in the comments!

@WeeklyCoder | Week 81
📋 BetterClip: Clipboard Bank
Weekly Coder
📋 BetterClip: Clipboard Bank
Ever found yourself copying something useful, only to accidentally overwrite it with something else seconds later?

I've been there. Windows has a clipboard history feature built in — BUT it's limited, buggy, and doesn't quite do enough for real-world use.

👎 The built-in Windows clipboard:
- Stores only 25 items
- Clears everything on restart
- No search or categorization
- No support for files
- Misses to record things sometimes
- Does not have searchability
- Does not have categorization
- and a lot more

But we can do better — and we will.

🥅 Goal: To build a better clipboard manager. BetterClip will have:
- Unlimited history
- Searchability
- Persistent storage across reboots
- Auto-deletion of old records
- Restore on startup
- Support for text, images, files, URLs
- Tabs for categorization [All | Texts | Images | Files | URLs | +]
- Option to pin
- Global hotkey to launch
- Incognito mode to temporarily disable recording


✏️ Recommended Learning:
- java.awt.Toolkit | pyperclip
- JIntellitype for Global Hotkeys
- the object Object and DataFlavor
- saveStrings ()
- List, LinkedHashMap

🪁 Submit your code in the comments!

@WeeklyCoder | Week 82
DJ Robot

Music in factories boosts morale, productivity, and focus. But manual playlist management often leads to forgotten starts, missed pauses, and repetitive songs.

🥅 Goal: This week, let's build a customizable, offline music scheduler for factory Bluetooth PA systems — with the following features:

- automated start/stop at clock-in/out
- pause during lunch breaks (or custom lunch playlist)
- day-specific playlists
- easy way to add/remove songs in playlists

⚡️ Bring the Thunder:
- schedule overrides no playback on Sundays or specific dates (religious holidays or during no work days)
- bluetooth PA system integration such that it looks for the PA system before playing music
- song rotation to avoid repetition

✏️ Recommended Learning:
- Minim library for audio playback
- java.util.Timer for scheduling automation
- java.io.File for playlist/file management
- List, HashMap, +
- JIntellitype for special media keys (Play, Pause, Stop, +)

🪁 Submit your code in the comments!

@WeeklyCoder | Week 83
Weekly Coder
💰 Receipt Detective A cashier at a boutique is tasked to verify the validity of a transaction using an RN (Reference Number). To do this, she manually creates a link using an RN and the last 8 digits of their account number. Template Link: https://apps.…
🧾 StitchPay: Statement Consolidator

You'd think banks such as CBE, established as they are, would include something basic as a Payer name in a bank statement they send. But you'd think wrong. 🤦‍♂️

So, this week, let's extend our Receipt Detective challenge of Week 59 to build a Statement Consolidator that takes in an incomplete bank statement and gives back something complete.

🥅 Goal: Given the account number of a Receiver, build a program that takes in a list of Reference numbers and gives back a complete statement as .csv file.

The transaction section of a bank statement should sensibly include these — but as a start, let's build a payer name fetcher.

🗒 Format here.

🦶 Build on top of this example.

⚡️ Bring the Thunder!
- So generate a complete Bank Statement as a CSV from a list of Reference numbers.

✏️ Recommended Learning:
- URL, InputStream, File, FileOutputstream
- PDFbox, PDFTextStripper
- .openStream (), .deleteOnExit ()

🪁 Send your submissions in the comments!

@WeeklyCoder | Week 84
Inclusive Modular Knapsack

A school is looking to buy every type of item for their students — notebooks, pencils, and erasers — but it has capped the total spend at 2,000 Br (t = total).

🥅 Goal: This week, build a solver that finds how many packs of each supply type can be bought so that:
- every item type is included at least once
- quantities are unlimited
- total cost is no more than 't' Br but can be a little under

Example:
- Notebook pack → 150 Br
- Pencil pack → 90 Br
- Eraser pack → 60 Br
- Target budget t = 2000 Br

⚡️ Bring the Thunder: here

✏️ Recommended Learning:
- Coin change / knapsack dynamic programming
- Residue arithmetic to handle multiples
- Data structures: arrays, maps, +

@WeeklyCoder | Week 85