## \-\-- Day 2: Corruption Checksum \-\-- As you walk through the door, a glowing humanoid shape yells in your direction. \"You there! Your state appears to be idle. Come help us repair the corruption in this spreadsheet - if we take another millisecond, we\'ll have to display an hourglass cursor!\" The spreadsheet consists of rows of apparently-random numbers. To make sure the recovery process is on the right track, they need you to calculate the spreadsheet\'s *checksum*. For each row, determine the difference between the largest value and the smallest value; the checksum is the sum of all of these differences. For example, given the following spreadsheet: 5 1 9 5 7 5 3 2 4 6 8 - The first row\'s largest and smallest values are `9` and `1`, and their difference is `8`. - The second row\'s largest and smallest values are `7` and `3`, and their difference is `4`. - The third row\'s difference is `6`. In this example, the spreadsheet\'s checksum would be `8 + 4 + 6 = 18`. *What is the checksum* for the spreadsheet in your puzzle input? Your puzzle answer was `34925`. The first half of this puzzle is complete! It provides one gold star: \* ## \-\-- Part Two \-\-- {#part2} \"Great work; looks like we\'re on the right track after all. Here\'s a *star* for your effort.\" However, the program seems a little worried. Can programs *be* worried? \"Based on what we\'re seeing, it looks like all the User wanted is some information about the *evenly divisible values* in the spreadsheet. Unfortunately, none of us are equipped for that kind of calculation - most of us specialize in [bitwise operations]{title="Bonus points if you solve this part using only bitwise operations."}.\" It sounds like the goal is to find the only two numbers in each row where one evenly divides the other - that is, where the result of the division operation is a whole number. They would like you to find those numbers on each line, divide them, and add up each line\'s result. For example, given the following spreadsheet: 5 9 2 8 9 4 7 3 3 8 6 5 - In the first row, the only two numbers that evenly divide are `8` and `2`; the result of this division is `4`. - In the second row, the two numbers are `9` and `3`; the result is `3`. - In the third row, the result is `2`. In this example, the sum of the results would be `4 + 3 + 2 = 9`. What is the *sum of each row\'s result* in your puzzle input? Answer: Although it hasn\'t changed, you can still [get your puzzle input](2/input).