/kociemba

A pure Python and pure C ports of Kociemba's algorithm for solving Rubik's cube

Primary LanguagePythonGNU General Public License v2.0GPL-2.0

Build Status

kociemba

This Python package contains two equivalent implementations (in C and Python) of Herbert Kociemba's two-phase algorithm for solving Rubik's Cube. Original Java implementation can be found here: http://kociemba.org/download.htm.

These ports are pretty straightforward (not to say dumb) and most probably can be optimized. But they have been extensively tested in our Rubik's cube solving machine, so be confident the algorithm is working.

Installation and usage

This package is published on PyPI and can be installed with:

$ pip install kociemba

It was tested under Python 2.7 and 3.5.

The package exposes just one function solve(), which accepts a cube definition string and returns a solution string in standard notation (see below):

>>> import kociemba
>>> kociemba.solve('DRLUUBFBRBLURRLRUBLRDDFDLFUFUFFDBRDUBRUFLLFDDBFLUBLRBD')
u"D2 R' D' F2 B D R2 D2 R' F2 D' F2 U' B2 L2 U2 D R2 U"

Standalone tool

When installing with pip, kociemba will also register a command line tool with the same name. So you can also use it like this:

$ kociemba <cubestring>

Cube string notation

The names of the facelet positions of the cube (letters stand for Up, Left, Front, Right, Back, and Down):

             |************|
             |*U1**U2**U3*|
             |************|
             |*U4**U5**U6*|
             |************|
             |*U7**U8**U9*|
             |************|
 ************|************|************|************
 *L1**L2**L3*|*F1**F2**F3*|*R1**R2**F3*|*B1**B2**B3*
 ************|************|************|************
 *L4**L5**L6*|*F4**F5**F6*|*R4**R5**R6*|*B4**B5**B6*
 ************|************|************|************
 *L7**L8**L9*|*F7**F8**F9*|*R7**R8**R9*|*B7**B8**B9*
 ************|************|************|************
             |************|
             |*D1**D2**D3*|
             |************|
             |*D4**D5**D6*|
             |************|
             |*D7**D8**D9*|
             |************|

A cube definition string "UBL..." means that in position U1 we have the U-color, in position U2 we have the B-color, in position U3 we have the L color etc. according to the order U1, U2, U3, U4, U5, U6, U7, U8, U9, R1, R2, R3, R4, R5, R6, R7, R8, R9, F1, F2, F3, F4, F5, F6, F7, F8, F9, D1, D2, D3, D4, D5, D6, D7, D8, D9, L1, L2, L3, L4, L5, L6, L7, L8, L9, B1, B2, B3, B4, B5, B6, B7, B8, B9.

So, for example, a definition of a solved cube would be UUUUUUUUURRRRRRRRRFFFFFFFFFDDDDDDDDDLLLLLLLLLBBBBBBBBB

Solution string consists of space-separated parts, each of them represents a single move:

  • A single letter by itself means to turn that face clockwise 90 degrees.
  • A letter followed by an apostrophe means to turn that face counterclockwise 90 degrees.
  • A letter with the number 2 after it means to turn that face 180 degrees.

e.g. R U R’ U R U2 R’ U

C version

C sources reside in the ckociemba folder. Running make inside this directory will compile a standalone binary. It accepts a cube representation as a command line argument, and writes the solution to the standard output. You can, of course, use ckociemba sources directly in your projects.

Performance

When possible, kociemba will use C implementation under the hood. If something goes wrong (C version cannot be imported) it will automatically fall back to pure-Python implementation. However, it will be much slower.

Testing

To run the tests, clone the repository and run:

$ python setup.py test