contestId int64 0 1.01k | index stringclasses 57
values | name stringlengths 2 58 | type stringclasses 2
values | rating int64 0 3.5k | tags listlengths 0 11 | title stringclasses 522
values | time-limit stringclasses 8
values | memory-limit stringclasses 8
values | problem-description stringlengths 0 7.15k | input-specification stringlengths 0 2.05k | output-specification stringlengths 0 1.5k | demo-input listlengths 0 7 | demo-output listlengths 0 7 | note stringlengths 0 5.24k | points float64 0 425k | test_cases listlengths 0 402 | creationTimeSeconds int64 1.37B 1.7B | relativeTimeSeconds int64 8 2.15B | programmingLanguage stringclasses 3
values | verdict stringclasses 14
values | testset stringclasses 12
values | passedTestCount int64 0 1k | timeConsumedMillis int64 0 15k | memoryConsumedBytes int64 0 805M | code stringlengths 3 65.5k | prompt stringlengths 262 8.2k | response stringlengths 17 65.5k | score float64 -1 3.99 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
317 | A | Perfect Pair | PROGRAMMING | 1,600 | [
"brute force"
] | null | null | Let us call a pair of integer numbers *m*-perfect, if at least one number in the pair is greater than or equal to *m*. Thus, the pairs (3, 3) and (0, 2) are 2-perfect while the pair (-1, 1) is not.
Two integers *x*, *y* are written on the blackboard. It is allowed to erase one of them and replace it with the sum of th... | Single line of the input contains three integers *x*, *y* and *m* (<=-<=1018<=≤<=*x*, *y*, *m*<=≤<=1018).
Please, do not use the %lld specifier to read or write 64-bit integers in C++. It is preffered to use the cin, cout streams or the %I64d specifier. | Print the minimum number of operations or "-1" (without quotes), if it is impossible to transform the given pair to the *m*-perfect one. | [
"1 2 5\n",
"-1 4 15\n",
"0 -1 5\n"
] | [
"2\n",
"4\n",
"-1\n"
] | In the first sample the following sequence of operations is suitable: (1, 2) <img align="middle" class="tex-formula" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/70a0795f45d32287dba0eb83fc4a3f470c6e5537.png" style="max-width: 100.0%;max-height: 100.0%;"/> (3, 2) <img align="middle" class="tex-formula" src="https://espresso.cod... | 500 | [
{
"input": "1 2 5",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "-1 4 15",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "0 -1 5",
"output": "-1"
},
{
"input": "0 1 8",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "-134 -345 -134",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "-134 -345 -133",
"output": "-1"
},
... | 1,371,225,798 | 1,998 | Python 3 | COMPILATION_ERROR | PRETESTS | 0 | 0 | 0 | #!/usr/bin/python
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import sys
x,y,m=map(int, raw_input().split())
r=0
while x<m or y<m:
if x<=y:
x=x+y
else:
y=x+y
r=r+1
if r>10000:
r=-1
break
print r
| Title: Perfect Pair
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Let us call a pair of integer numbers *m*-perfect, if at least one number in the pair is greater than or equal to *m*. Thus, the pairs (3, 3) and (0, 2) are 2-perfect while the pair (-1, 1) is not.
Two integers *x*, *y* a... | ```python
#!/usr/bin/python
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import sys
x,y,m=map(int, raw_input().split())
r=0
while x<m or y<m:
if x<=y:
x=x+y
else:
y=x+y
r=r+1
if r>10000:
r=-1
break
print r
``` | -1 | |
4 | A | Watermelon | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"brute force",
"math"
] | A. Watermelon | 1 | 64 | One hot summer day Pete and his friend Billy decided to buy a watermelon. They chose the biggest and the ripest one, in their opinion. After that the watermelon was weighed, and the scales showed *w* kilos. They rushed home, dying of thirst, and decided to divide the berry, however they faced a hard problem.
Pete and ... | The first (and the only) input line contains integer number *w* (1<=≤<=*w*<=≤<=100) — the weight of the watermelon bought by the boys. | Print YES, if the boys can divide the watermelon into two parts, each of them weighing even number of kilos; and NO in the opposite case. | [
"8\n"
] | [
"YES\n"
] | For example, the boys can divide the watermelon into two parts of 2 and 6 kilos respectively (another variant — two parts of 4 and 4 kilos). | 0 | [
{
"input": "8",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "5",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "4",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "3",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "2",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "1",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "7",
"output": "NO"... | 1,691,534,375 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 60 | 0 | age = int(input('w = '))
if age % 2 == 0and age !=2 :
print ('YES')
else:
print('NO') | Title: Watermelon
Time Limit: 1 seconds
Memory Limit: 64 megabytes
Problem Description:
One hot summer day Pete and his friend Billy decided to buy a watermelon. They chose the biggest and the ripest one, in their opinion. After that the watermelon was weighed, and the scales showed *w* kilos. They rushed home, dyin... | ```python
age = int(input('w = '))
if age % 2 == 0and age !=2 :
print ('YES')
else:
print('NO')
``` | 0 |
222 | A | Shooshuns and Sequence | PROGRAMMING | 1,200 | [
"brute force",
"implementation"
] | null | null | One day shooshuns found a sequence of *n* integers, written on a blackboard. The shooshuns can perform one operation with it, the operation consists of two steps:
1. Find the number that goes *k*-th in the current sequence and add the same number to the end of the sequence; 1. Delete the first number of the current ... | The first line contains two space-separated integers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105).
The second line contains *n* space-separated integers: *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=105) — the sequence that the shooshuns found. | Print the minimum number of operations, required for all numbers on the blackboard to become the same. If it is impossible to achieve, print -1. | [
"3 2\n3 1 1\n",
"3 1\n3 1 1\n"
] | [
"1\n",
"-1\n"
] | In the first test case after the first operation the blackboard will have sequence [1, 1, 1]. So, one operation is enough to make all numbers the same. Thus, the answer equals one.
In the second test case the sequence will never consist of the same numbers. It will always contain at least two distinct numbers 3 and 1.... | 500 | [
{
"input": "3 2\n3 1 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "3 1\n3 1 1",
"output": "-1"
},
{
"input": "1 1\n1",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "2 1\n1 1",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "2 1\n2 1",
"output": "-1"
},
{
"input": "4 4\n1 2 3 4",
"output": "3"
}... | 1,571,662,891 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 6 | 342 | 8,806,400 | # Lang: pypy3.6-v7.1.0-win32\pypy3.exe
# Problem Name: ShooshunsAndSequence
# Problem Serial No: 222
# Problem Type: A
# Problem Url: https://codeforces.com/problemset/problem/222/A
# Solution Generated at: 2019-10-21 18:40:07.451001 UTC
i = int
cin = input
le = len
s = str
n, k = map(i, cin().split())
... | Title: Shooshuns and Sequence
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
One day shooshuns found a sequence of *n* integers, written on a blackboard. The shooshuns can perform one operation with it, the operation consists of two steps:
1. Find the number that goes *k*-th in the cur... | ```python
# Lang: pypy3.6-v7.1.0-win32\pypy3.exe
# Problem Name: ShooshunsAndSequence
# Problem Serial No: 222
# Problem Type: A
# Problem Url: https://codeforces.com/problemset/problem/222/A
# Solution Generated at: 2019-10-21 18:40:07.451001 UTC
i = int
cin = input
le = len
s = str
n, k = map(i, cin().... | 0 | |
4 | A | Watermelon | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"brute force",
"math"
] | A. Watermelon | 1 | 64 | One hot summer day Pete and his friend Billy decided to buy a watermelon. They chose the biggest and the ripest one, in their opinion. After that the watermelon was weighed, and the scales showed *w* kilos. They rushed home, dying of thirst, and decided to divide the berry, however they faced a hard problem.
Pete and ... | The first (and the only) input line contains integer number *w* (1<=≤<=*w*<=≤<=100) — the weight of the watermelon bought by the boys. | Print YES, if the boys can divide the watermelon into two parts, each of them weighing even number of kilos; and NO in the opposite case. | [
"8\n"
] | [
"YES\n"
] | For example, the boys can divide the watermelon into two parts of 2 and 6 kilos respectively (another variant — two parts of 4 and 4 kilos). | 0 | [
{
"input": "8",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "5",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "4",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "3",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "2",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "1",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "7",
"output": "NO"... | 1,694,290,820 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 4 | 92 | 0 | a= int(input())
b=a/2
if b/2==0.0:
print ("NO")
elif b%2==0:
print ("YES")
elif (a+b)%3==0:
print("YES")
else:
print ("NO") | Title: Watermelon
Time Limit: 1 seconds
Memory Limit: 64 megabytes
Problem Description:
One hot summer day Pete and his friend Billy decided to buy a watermelon. They chose the biggest and the ripest one, in their opinion. After that the watermelon was weighed, and the scales showed *w* kilos. They rushed home, dyin... | ```python
a= int(input())
b=a/2
if b/2==0.0:
print ("NO")
elif b%2==0:
print ("YES")
elif (a+b)%3==0:
print("YES")
else:
print ("NO")
``` | 0 |
535 | A | Tavas and Nafas | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"brute force",
"implementation"
] | null | null | Today Tavas got his test result as an integer score and he wants to share it with his girlfriend, Nafas.
His phone operating system is Tavdroid, and its keyboard doesn't have any digits! He wants to share his score with Nafas via text, so he has no choice but to send this number using words.
He ate coffee mix without... | The first and only line of input contains an integer *s* (0<=≤<=*s*<=≤<=99), Tavas's score. | In the first and only line of output, print a single string consisting only from English lowercase letters and hyphens ('-'). Do not use spaces. | [
"6\n",
"99\n",
"20\n"
] | [
"six\n",
"ninety-nine\n",
"twenty\n"
] | You can find all you need to know about English numerals in [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_numerals](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_numerals) . | 500 | [
{
"input": "6",
"output": "six"
},
{
"input": "99",
"output": "ninety-nine"
},
{
"input": "20",
"output": "twenty"
},
{
"input": "10",
"output": "ten"
},
{
"input": "15",
"output": "fifteen"
},
{
"input": "27",
"output": "twenty-seven"
},
{
... | 1,515,394,960 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 100 | 62 | 5,632,000 | n = int(input())
to_19 = ['zero','one','two','three','four','five','six','seven','eight','nine','ten','eleven','twelve','thirteen','fourteen','fifteen','sixteen','seventeen','eighteen','nineteen']
tens = ['twenty','thirty','forty','fifty','sixty','seventy','eighty','ninety']
if n in range(0,20):
print(to_19[n])
else... | Title: Tavas and Nafas
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Today Tavas got his test result as an integer score and he wants to share it with his girlfriend, Nafas.
His phone operating system is Tavdroid, and its keyboard doesn't have any digits! He wants to share his score wit... | ```python
n = int(input())
to_19 = ['zero','one','two','three','four','five','six','seven','eight','nine','ten','eleven','twelve','thirteen','fourteen','fifteen','sixteen','seventeen','eighteen','nineteen']
tens = ['twenty','thirty','forty','fifty','sixty','seventy','eighty','ninety']
if n in range(0,20):
print(to_1... | 3 | |
200 | B | Drinks | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation",
"math"
] | null | null | Little Vasya loves orange juice very much. That's why any food and drink in his kitchen necessarily contains orange juice. There are *n* drinks in his fridge, the volume fraction of orange juice in the *i*-th drink equals *p**i* percent.
One day Vasya decided to make himself an orange cocktail. He took equal proportio... | The first input line contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of orange-containing drinks in Vasya's fridge. The second line contains *n* integers *p**i* (0<=≤<=*p**i*<=≤<=100) — the volume fraction of orange juice in the *i*-th drink, in percent. The numbers are separated by a space. | Print the volume fraction in percent of orange juice in Vasya's cocktail. The answer will be considered correct if the absolute or relative error does not exceed 10<=<=-<=4. | [
"3\n50 50 100\n",
"4\n0 25 50 75\n"
] | [
"66.666666666667\n",
"37.500000000000\n"
] | Note to the first sample: let's assume that Vasya takes *x* milliliters of each drink from the fridge. Then the volume of pure juice in the cocktail will equal <img align="middle" class="tex-formula" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/c1fac6e64d3a8ee6a5ac138cbe51e60039b22473.png" style="max-width: 100.0%;max-height: ... | 500 | [
{
"input": "3\n50 50 100",
"output": "66.666666666667"
},
{
"input": "4\n0 25 50 75",
"output": "37.500000000000"
},
{
"input": "3\n0 1 8",
"output": "3.000000000000"
},
{
"input": "5\n96 89 93 95 70",
"output": "88.600000000000"
},
{
"input": "7\n62 41 78 4 38 39... | 1,694,432,740 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 60 | 0 | a=int(input())
s=0
l=[int(x) for x in input().split()]
for i in range(a):
s+=l[i]
k=s/a
print() | Title: Drinks
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Little Vasya loves orange juice very much. That's why any food and drink in his kitchen necessarily contains orange juice. There are *n* drinks in his fridge, the volume fraction of orange juice in the *i*-th drink equals *p**i*... | ```python
a=int(input())
s=0
l=[int(x) for x in input().split()]
for i in range(a):
s+=l[i]
k=s/a
print()
``` | 0 | |
426 | A | Sereja and Mugs | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Sereja showed an interesting game to his friends. The game goes like that. Initially, there is a table with an empty cup and *n* water mugs on it. Then all players take turns to move. During a move, a player takes a non-empty mug of water and pours all water from it into the cup. If the cup overfills, then we assume th... | The first line contains integers *n* and *s* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100; 1<=≤<=*s*<=≤<=1000) — the number of mugs and the volume of the cup. The next line contains *n* integers *a*1, *a*2, ..., *a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=10). Number *a**i* means the volume of the *i*-th mug. | In a single line, print "YES" (without the quotes) if his friends can play in the described manner, and "NO" (without the quotes) otherwise. | [
"3 4\n1 1 1\n",
"3 4\n3 1 3\n",
"3 4\n4 4 4\n"
] | [
"YES\n",
"YES\n",
"NO\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "3 4\n1 1 1",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "3 4\n3 1 3",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "3 4\n4 4 4",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "2 1\n1 10",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "3 12\n5 6 6",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "4 10\n6 3 8 7",
"... | 1,630,637,408 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | OK | TESTS | 42 | 109 | 20,172,800 | from sys import stdin, stdout
def read():
return stdin.readline().rstrip()
def read_int():
return int(read())
def read_ints():
return list(map(int, read().split()))
def solve():
n,m=read_ints()
a=read_ints()
if m >= sum(a)-max(a):
print("YES")
else:
print("NO")
solve()
| Title: Sereja and Mugs
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Sereja showed an interesting game to his friends. The game goes like that. Initially, there is a table with an empty cup and *n* water mugs on it. Then all players take turns to move. During a move, a player takes a non... | ```python
from sys import stdin, stdout
def read():
return stdin.readline().rstrip()
def read_int():
return int(read())
def read_ints():
return list(map(int, read().split()))
def solve():
n,m=read_ints()
a=read_ints()
if m >= sum(a)-max(a):
print("YES")
else:
print("NO")
solve()
``` | 3 | |
234 | B | Reading | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"sortings"
] | null | null | Vasya is going to the Olympics in the city Ntown by train. The boy wants to read the textbook to prepare for the Olympics. He counted that he needed *k* hours for this. He also found that the light in the train changes every hour. The light is measured on a scale from 0 to 100, where 0 is very dark, and 100 is very lig... | The first input line contains two integers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000,<=1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=*n*) — the number of hours on the train and the number of hours to read, correspondingly. The second line contains *n* space-separated integers *a**i* (0<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=100), *a**i* is the light level at the *i*-th hour. | In the first output line print the minimum light level Vasya will read at. In the second line print *k* distinct space-separated integers *b*1,<=*b*2,<=...,<=*b**k*, — the indexes of hours Vasya will read at (1<=≤<=*b**i*<=≤<=*n*). The hours are indexed starting from 1. If there are multiple optimal solutions, print an... | [
"5 3\n20 10 30 40 10\n",
"6 5\n90 20 35 40 60 100\n"
] | [
"20\n1 3 4 \n",
"35\n1 3 4 5 6 \n"
] | In the first sample Vasya should read at the first hour (light 20), third hour (light 30) and at the fourth hour (light 40). The minimum light Vasya will have to read at is 20. | 0 | [
{
"input": "5 3\n20 10 30 40 10",
"output": "20\n1 3 4 "
},
{
"input": "6 5\n90 20 35 40 60 100",
"output": "35\n1 3 4 5 6 "
},
{
"input": "100 7\n85 66 9 91 50 46 61 12 55 65 95 1 25 97 95 4 59 59 52 34 94 30 60 11 68 36 17 84 87 68 72 87 46 99 24 66 75 77 75 2 19 3 33 19 7 20 22 3 71 2... | 1,644,392,126 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | RUNTIME_ERROR | TESTS | 0 | 186 | 2,150,400 | n, k = map(int, input().split())
data = sorted(enumerate(map(int, input().split())), key=lambda x: x[1], reverse=True)
print(*[i[0] + 1 for i in data[:k]]) | Title: Reading
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Vasya is going to the Olympics in the city Ntown by train. The boy wants to read the textbook to prepare for the Olympics. He counted that he needed *k* hours for this. He also found that the light in the train changes every ho... | ```python
n, k = map(int, input().split())
data = sorted(enumerate(map(int, input().split())), key=lambda x: x[1], reverse=True)
print(*[i[0] + 1 for i in data[:k]])
``` | -1 | |
835 | B | The number on the board | PROGRAMMING | 1,100 | [
"greedy"
] | null | null | Some natural number was written on the board. Its sum of digits was not less than *k*. But you were distracted a bit, and someone changed this number to *n*, replacing some digits with others. It's known that the length of the number didn't change.
You have to find the minimum number of digits in which these two numbe... | The first line contains integer *k* (1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=109).
The second line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=<<=10100000).
There are no leading zeros in *n*. It's guaranteed that this situation is possible. | Print the minimum number of digits in which the initial number and *n* can differ. | [
"3\n11\n",
"3\n99\n"
] | [
"1\n",
"0\n"
] | In the first example, the initial number could be 12.
In the second example the sum of the digits of *n* is not less than *k*. The initial number could be equal to *n*. | 750 | [
{
"input": "3\n11",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "3\n99",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "10\n5205602270",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "70\n3326631213",
"output": "6"
},
{
"input": "200\n100000001000000000000000000001000000000000000100000100000000000000000000000000000... | 1,583,575,740 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 3 | 139 | 0 | k = int(input())
n = int(input())
lst = []
while(n>0):
lst.append(n%10)
n //= 10
if sum(lst) >= k:
print(0)
else:
count = 0
while(sum(lst)<k):
lst[count] = 9
count += 1
print(count) | Title: The number on the board
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Some natural number was written on the board. Its sum of digits was not less than *k*. But you were distracted a bit, and someone changed this number to *n*, replacing some digits with others. It's known that th... | ```python
k = int(input())
n = int(input())
lst = []
while(n>0):
lst.append(n%10)
n //= 10
if sum(lst) >= k:
print(0)
else:
count = 0
while(sum(lst)<k):
lst[count] = 9
count += 1
print(count)
``` | 0 | |
0 | none | none | none | 0 | [
"none"
] | null | null | Efim just received his grade for the last test. He studies in a special school and his grade can be equal to any positive decimal fraction. First he got disappointed, as he expected a way more pleasant result. Then, he developed a tricky plan. Each second, he can ask his teacher to round the grade at any place after th... | The first line of the input contains two integers *n* and *t* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=200<=000, 1<=≤<=*t*<=≤<=109) — the length of Efim's grade and the number of seconds till the end of the break respectively.
The second line contains the grade itself. It's guaranteed that the grade is a positive number, containing at least on... | Print the maximum grade that Efim can get in *t* seconds. Do not print trailing zeroes. | [
"6 1\n10.245\n",
"6 2\n10.245\n",
"3 100\n9.2\n"
] | [
"10.25\n",
"10.3\n",
"9.2\n"
] | In the first two samples Efim initially has grade 10.245.
During the first second Efim can obtain grade 10.25, and then 10.3 during the next second. Note, that the answer 10.30 will be considered incorrect.
In the third sample the optimal strategy is to not perform any rounding at all. | 0 | [
{
"input": "6 1\n10.245",
"output": "10.25"
},
{
"input": "6 2\n10.245",
"output": "10.3"
},
{
"input": "3 100\n9.2",
"output": "9.2"
},
{
"input": "12 5\n872.04488525",
"output": "872.1"
},
{
"input": "35 8\n984227318.2031144444444444494637612",
"output": "98... | 1,592,244,405 | 4,305 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 14 | 156 | 2,457,600 | n, t = list(map(int, input().split()))
ar = list(input())
kek = ar.index('.')
uh = 0
i = kek + 1
flag = 1
while i < n:
if int(ar[i]) >= 5:
if ar[i - 1] == '.':
hhru = 2
if ar[i - hhru] == '9':
while i - hhru >= 0 and ar[i - hhru] == '9':
... | Title: none
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Efim just received his grade for the last test. He studies in a special school and his grade can be equal to any positive decimal fraction. First he got disappointed, as he expected a way more pleasant result. Then, he developed a... | ```python
n, t = list(map(int, input().split()))
ar = list(input())
kek = ar.index('.')
uh = 0
i = kek + 1
flag = 1
while i < n:
if int(ar[i]) >= 5:
if ar[i - 1] == '.':
hhru = 2
if ar[i - hhru] == '9':
while i - hhru >= 0 and ar[i - hhru] == '9':
... | 0 | |
682 | B | Alyona and Mex | PROGRAMMING | 1,200 | [
"sortings"
] | null | null | Someone gave Alyona an array containing *n* positive integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n*. In one operation, Alyona can choose any element of the array and decrease it, i.e. replace with any positive integer that is smaller than the current one. Alyona can repeat this operation as many times as she wants. In particular,... | The first line of the input contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100<=000) — the number of elements in the Alyona's array.
The second line of the input contains *n* integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=109) — the elements of the array. | Print one positive integer — the maximum possible value of mex of the array after Alyona applies some (possibly none) operations. | [
"5\n1 3 3 3 6\n",
"2\n2 1\n"
] | [
"5\n",
"3\n"
] | In the first sample case if one will decrease the second element value to 2 and the fifth element value to 4 then the mex value of resulting array 1 2 3 3 4 will be equal to 5.
To reach the answer to the second sample case one must not decrease any of the array elements. | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "5\n1 3 3 3 6",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "2\n2 1",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "1\n1",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "1\n1000000000",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "1\n2",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "2\n1 1",
"output": "2"
},
{
"... | 1,631,294,751 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | OK | TESTS | 127 | 186 | 31,027,200 | def test():
n = int(input())
a = [int(i) for i in input().split()]
a.sort()
a[0] = 1
need = 2
for i in range(1, n):
if a[i] >= need:
a[i] = need
need += 1
print(need)
t = 1
while t:
t -= 1
test() | Title: Alyona and Mex
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Someone gave Alyona an array containing *n* positive integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n*. In one operation, Alyona can choose any element of the array and decrease it, i.e. replace with any positive integer that is small... | ```python
def test():
n = int(input())
a = [int(i) for i in input().split()]
a.sort()
a[0] = 1
need = 2
for i in range(1, n):
if a[i] >= need:
a[i] = need
need += 1
print(need)
t = 1
while t:
t -= 1
test()
``` | 3 | |
79 | B | Colorful Field | PROGRAMMING | 1,400 | [
"implementation",
"sortings"
] | B. Colorful Field | 2 | 256 | Fox Ciel saw a large field while she was on a bus. The field was a *n*<=×<=*m* rectangle divided into 1<=×<=1 cells. Some cells were wasteland, and other each cell contained crop plants: either carrots or kiwis or grapes.
After seeing the field carefully, Ciel found that the crop plants of each cell were planted in f... | In the first line there are four positive integers *n*,<=*m*,<=*k*,<=*t* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=4·104,<=1<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=4·104,<=1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=103,<=1<=≤<=*t*<=≤<=103), each of which represents the height of the field, the width of the field, the number of waste cells and the number of queries that ask the kind of crop plants in ... | For each query, if the cell is waste, print Waste. Otherwise, print the name of crop plants in the cell: either Carrots or Kiwis or Grapes. | [
"4 5 5 6\n4 3\n1 3\n3 3\n2 5\n3 2\n1 3\n1 4\n2 3\n2 4\n1 1\n1 1\n"
] | [
"Waste\nGrapes\nCarrots\nKiwis\nCarrots\nCarrots\n"
] | The sample corresponds to the figure in the statement. | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "4 5 5 6\n4 3\n1 3\n3 3\n2 5\n3 2\n1 3\n1 4\n2 3\n2 4\n1 1\n1 1",
"output": "Waste\nGrapes\nCarrots\nKiwis\nCarrots\nCarrots"
},
{
"input": "2 3 2 2\n1 1\n2 2\n2 1\n2 2",
"output": "Grapes\nWaste"
},
{
"input": "31 31 31 4\n4 9\n16 27\n11 29\n8 28\n11 2\n10 7\n22 6\n1 25\n14 8... | 1,655,386,110 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | OK | TESTS | 29 | 466 | 7,475,200 | n, m, k, t = map(int, input().split())
w = []
for i in range(k):
a, b = map(int, input().split())
c = []
c.append(a)
c.append(b)
w.append(c)
w.sort()
d = ['Carrots', 'Kiwis', 'Grapes']
for i in range(t):
a, b = map(int, input().split())
if [a, b] in w:
print('Waste')
else:
com = 0... | Title: Colorful Field
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
Fox Ciel saw a large field while she was on a bus. The field was a *n*<=×<=*m* rectangle divided into 1<=×<=1 cells. Some cells were wasteland, and other each cell contained crop plants: either carrots or kiwis or grapes.
... | ```python
n, m, k, t = map(int, input().split())
w = []
for i in range(k):
a, b = map(int, input().split())
c = []
c.append(a)
c.append(b)
w.append(c)
w.sort()
d = ['Carrots', 'Kiwis', 'Grapes']
for i in range(t):
a, b = map(int, input().split())
if [a, b] in w:
print('Waste')
else:
... | 3.869576 |
25 | A | IQ test | PROGRAMMING | 1,300 | [
"brute force"
] | A. IQ test | 2 | 256 | Bob is preparing to pass IQ test. The most frequent task in this test is to find out which one of the given *n* numbers differs from the others. Bob observed that one number usually differs from the others in evenness. Help Bob — to check his answers, he needs a program that among the given *n* numbers finds one that i... | The first line contains integer *n* (3<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — amount of numbers in the task. The second line contains *n* space-separated natural numbers, not exceeding 100. It is guaranteed, that exactly one of these numbers differs from the others in evenness. | Output index of number that differs from the others in evenness. Numbers are numbered from 1 in the input order. | [
"5\n2 4 7 8 10\n",
"4\n1 2 1 1\n"
] | [
"3\n",
"2\n"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "5\n2 4 7 8 10",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "4\n1 2 1 1",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "3\n1 2 2",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "3\n100 99 100",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "3\n5 3 2",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "4\n43 28 1 91",
"output"... | 1,499,779,188 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | RUNTIME_ERROR | TESTS | 4 | 124 | 5,529,600 | nStr = input()
n = int(nStr)
numLineStr = input()
numLine = numLineStr.split()
ans = 0
for i in range(n-1):
ni = int(numLine[i])
ni1 = int(numLine[i+1])
if ni%2==ni1%2:
continue
ni2 = int(numLine[i+2])
if ni%2==ni2%2:
ans = i+1
else:
ans = i
break
print(ans+1) | Title: IQ test
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
Bob is preparing to pass IQ test. The most frequent task in this test is to find out which one of the given *n* numbers differs from the others. Bob observed that one number usually differs from the others in evenness. Help Bob — t... | ```python
nStr = input()
n = int(nStr)
numLineStr = input()
numLine = numLineStr.split()
ans = 0
for i in range(n-1):
ni = int(numLine[i])
ni1 = int(numLine[i+1])
if ni%2==ni1%2:
continue
ni2 = int(numLine[i+2])
if ni%2==ni2%2:
ans = i+1
else:
ans = i
break
print(ans+1)
... | -1 |
887 | A | Div. 64 | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Top-model Izabella participates in the competition. She wants to impress judges and show her mathematical skills.
Her problem is following: for given string, consisting of only 0 and 1, tell if it's possible to remove some digits in such a way, that remaining number is a representation of some positive integer, divisi... | In the only line given a non-empty binary string *s* with length up to 100. | Print «yes» (without quotes) if it's possible to remove digits required way and «no» otherwise. | [
"100010001\n",
"100\n"
] | [
"yes",
"no"
] | In the first test case, you can get string 1 000 000 after removing two ones which is a representation of number 64 in the binary numerical system.
You can read more about binary numeral system representation here: [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_system](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_system) | 500 | [
{
"input": "100010001",
"output": "yes"
},
{
"input": "100",
"output": "no"
},
{
"input": "0000001000000",
"output": "yes"
},
{
"input": "1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111",
"output": "no"
},
{
"in... | 1,511,087,655 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 11 | 61 | 5,529,600 | x = input()
inp = []
for i in range(len(x)):
inp.append(x[i])
if len(x)>=7:
if inp.count('0')>=6 and inp.count('1')>0:
print ('YES')
else:
print ('NO')
else:
print ('NO') | Title: Div. 64
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Top-model Izabella participates in the competition. She wants to impress judges and show her mathematical skills.
Her problem is following: for given string, consisting of only 0 and 1, tell if it's possible to remove some dig... | ```python
x = input()
inp = []
for i in range(len(x)):
inp.append(x[i])
if len(x)>=7:
if inp.count('0')>=6 and inp.count('1')>0:
print ('YES')
else:
print ('NO')
else:
print ('NO')
``` | 0 | |
493 | B | Vasya and Wrestling | PROGRAMMING | 1,400 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Vasya has become interested in wrestling. In wrestling wrestlers use techniques for which they are awarded points by judges. The wrestler who gets the most points wins.
When the numbers of points of both wrestlers are equal, the wrestler whose sequence of points is lexicographically greater, wins.
If the sequences of... | The first line contains number *n* — the number of techniques that the wrestlers have used (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=2·105).
The following *n* lines contain integer numbers *a**i* (|*a**i*|<=≤<=109, *a**i*<=≠<=0). If *a**i* is positive, that means that the first wrestler performed the technique that was awarded with *a**i* poin... | If the first wrestler wins, print string "first", otherwise print "second" | [
"5\n1\n2\n-3\n-4\n3\n",
"3\n-1\n-2\n3\n",
"2\n4\n-4\n"
] | [
"second\n",
"first\n",
"second\n"
] | Sequence *x* = *x*<sub class="lower-index">1</sub>*x*<sub class="lower-index">2</sub>... *x*<sub class="lower-index">|*x*|</sub> is lexicographically larger than sequence *y* = *y*<sub class="lower-index">1</sub>*y*<sub class="lower-index">2</sub>... *y*<sub class="lower-index">|*y*|</sub>, if either |*x*| > |... | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "5\n1\n2\n-3\n-4\n3",
"output": "second"
},
{
"input": "3\n-1\n-2\n3",
"output": "first"
},
{
"input": "2\n4\n-4",
"output": "second"
},
{
"input": "7\n1\n2\n-3\n4\n5\n-6\n7",
"output": "first"
},
{
"input": "14\n1\n2\n3\n4\n5\n6\n7\n-8\n-9\n-10\n-11\n-... | 1,563,473,198 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 37 | 436 | 7,270,400 | n=int(input())
a=[]
b=[]
c=[]
for i in range(n):
t=int(input())
if t>0:
a.append(abs(t))
else:
b.append(abs(t))
c.append(t)
if sum(a)>sum(b):
print('first')
elif sum(a)<sum(b):
print('second')
else:
a=''.join(str(e) for e in a)
b=''.join(str(e) for e in b... | Title: Vasya and Wrestling
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Vasya has become interested in wrestling. In wrestling wrestlers use techniques for which they are awarded points by judges. The wrestler who gets the most points wins.
When the numbers of points of both wrestlers ... | ```python
n=int(input())
a=[]
b=[]
c=[]
for i in range(n):
t=int(input())
if t>0:
a.append(abs(t))
else:
b.append(abs(t))
c.append(t)
if sum(a)>sum(b):
print('first')
elif sum(a)<sum(b):
print('second')
else:
a=''.join(str(e) for e in a)
b=''.join(str(e) ... | 0 | |
251 | A | Points on Line | PROGRAMMING | 1,300 | [
"binary search",
"combinatorics",
"two pointers"
] | null | null | Little Petya likes points a lot. Recently his mom has presented him *n* points lying on the line *OX*. Now Petya is wondering in how many ways he can choose three distinct points so that the distance between the two farthest of them doesn't exceed *d*.
Note that the order of the points inside the group of three chosen... | The first line contains two integers: *n* and *d* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105; 1<=≤<=*d*<=≤<=109). The next line contains *n* integers *x*1,<=*x*2,<=...,<=*x**n*, their absolute value doesn't exceed 109 — the *x*-coordinates of the points that Petya has got.
It is guaranteed that the coordinates of the points in the input stri... | Print a single integer — the number of groups of three points, where the distance between two farthest points doesn't exceed *d*.
Please do not use the %lld specifier to read or write 64-bit integers in С++. It is preferred to use the cin, cout streams or the %I64d specifier. | [
"4 3\n1 2 3 4\n",
"4 2\n-3 -2 -1 0\n",
"5 19\n1 10 20 30 50\n"
] | [
"4\n",
"2\n",
"1\n"
] | In the first sample any group of three points meets our conditions.
In the seconds sample only 2 groups of three points meet our conditions: {-3, -2, -1} and {-2, -1, 0}.
In the third sample only one group does: {1, 10, 20}. | 500 | [
{
"input": "4 3\n1 2 3 4",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "4 2\n-3 -2 -1 0",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "5 19\n1 10 20 30 50",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "10 5\n31 36 43 47 48 50 56 69 71 86",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "10 50\n1 4 20 27 65 79 82 83 99 100",
"... | 1,630,485,091 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | OK | TESTS | 39 | 498 | 31,334,400 | from bisect import bisect_right
n, d = (int(x) for x in input().split())
a = [int(x) for x in input().split()]
s = 0
for i in range(n - 2):
j = bisect_right(a, a[i] + d) - i - 1
s += j * (j - 1) // 2
print(s) | Title: Points on Line
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Little Petya likes points a lot. Recently his mom has presented him *n* points lying on the line *OX*. Now Petya is wondering in how many ways he can choose three distinct points so that the distance between the two fart... | ```python
from bisect import bisect_right
n, d = (int(x) for x in input().split())
a = [int(x) for x in input().split()]
s = 0
for i in range(n - 2):
j = bisect_right(a, a[i] + d) - i - 1
s += j * (j - 1) // 2
print(s)
``` | 3 | |
7 | B | Memory Manager | PROGRAMMING | 1,600 | [
"implementation"
] | B. Memory Manager | 1 | 64 | There is little time left before the release of the first national operating system BerlOS. Some of its components are not finished yet — the memory manager is among them. According to the developers' plan, in the first release the memory manager will be very simple and rectilinear. It will support three operations:
... | The first line of the input data contains two positive integers *t* and *m* (1<=≤<=*t*<=≤<=100;1<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=100), where *t* — the amount of operations given to the memory manager for processing, and *m* — the available memory size in bytes. Then there follow *t* lines where the operations themselves are given. The fir... | Output the sequence of lines. Each line should contain either the result of alloc operation procession , or ILLEGAL_ERASE_ARGUMENT as a result of failed erase operation procession. Output lines should go in the same order in which the operations are processed. Successful procession of alloc operation should return inte... | [
"6 10\nalloc 5\nalloc 3\nerase 1\nalloc 6\ndefragment\nalloc 6\n"
] | [
"1\n2\nNULL\n3\n"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "6 10\nalloc 5\nalloc 3\nerase 1\nalloc 6\ndefragment\nalloc 6",
"output": "1\n2\nNULL\n3"
},
{
"input": "6 1\ndefragment\nalloc 10\nalloc 1\nerase -1\nerase 1\nerase 1",
"output": "NULL\n1\nILLEGAL_ERASE_ARGUMENT\nILLEGAL_ERASE_ARGUMENT"
},
{
"input": "14 100\nalloc 99\nalloc... | 1,431,060,962 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 40 | 124 | 0 | __author__ = 'Darren'
def solve():
import sys
stdin = sys.stdin if True else open('data')
def alloc(n):
nonlocal m, id_counter, memory, block_pointer
space = 0
for i in range(m):
if memory[i] == 0:
space += 1
if space == n:
... | Title: Memory Manager
Time Limit: 1 seconds
Memory Limit: 64 megabytes
Problem Description:
There is little time left before the release of the first national operating system BerlOS. Some of its components are not finished yet — the memory manager is among them. According to the developers' plan, in the first relea... | ```python
__author__ = 'Darren'
def solve():
import sys
stdin = sys.stdin if True else open('data')
def alloc(n):
nonlocal m, id_counter, memory, block_pointer
space = 0
for i in range(m):
if memory[i] == 0:
space += 1
if sp... | 0 |
254 | A | Cards with Numbers | PROGRAMMING | 1,200 | [
"constructive algorithms",
"sortings"
] | null | null | Petya has got 2*n* cards, each card contains some integer. The numbers on the cards can be the same. Let's index all cards by consecutive integers from 1 to 2*n*. We'll denote the number that is written on a card with number *i*, as *a**i*. In order to play one entertaining game with his friends, Petya needs to split t... | The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=3·105). The second line contains the sequence of 2*n* positive integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a*2*n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=5000) — the numbers that are written on the cards. The numbers on the line are separated by single spaces. | If it is impossible to divide the cards into pairs so that cards in each pair had the same numbers, print on a single line integer -1. But if the required partition exists, then print *n* pairs of integers, a pair per line — the indices of the cards that form the pairs.
Separate the numbers on the lines by spaces. You... | [
"3\n20 30 10 30 20 10\n",
"1\n1 2\n"
] | [
"4 2\n1 5\n6 3\n",
"-1"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "3\n20 30 10 30 20 10",
"output": "4 2\n1 5\n6 3"
},
{
"input": "1\n1 2",
"output": "-1"
},
{
"input": "5\n2 2 2 2 2 1 2 2 1 2",
"output": "2 1\n3 4\n7 5\n6 9\n10 8"
},
{
"input": "5\n2 1 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 2",
"output": "3 1\n2 5\n7 6\n8 9\n10 4"
},
{
"inpu... | 1,623,998,303 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | RUNTIME_ERROR | TESTS | 0 | 46 | 0 | n = int(input())
arr = list(map(int, input().split()))
d = {}
for i in range(2*n):
if arr[i] in d:
d[arr[i]].append(i+1)
else:
d[arr[i]] = [i+1]
if len(d) == n:
for v in d.values():
print(*v)
else:
print(-1)
| Title: Cards with Numbers
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Petya has got 2*n* cards, each card contains some integer. The numbers on the cards can be the same. Let's index all cards by consecutive integers from 1 to 2*n*. We'll denote the number that is written on a card wit... | ```python
n = int(input())
arr = list(map(int, input().split()))
d = {}
for i in range(2*n):
if arr[i] in d:
d[arr[i]].append(i+1)
else:
d[arr[i]] = [i+1]
if len(d) == n:
for v in d.values():
print(*v)
else:
print(-1)
``` | -1 | |
617 | A | Elephant | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"math"
] | null | null | An elephant decided to visit his friend. It turned out that the elephant's house is located at point 0 and his friend's house is located at point *x*(*x*<=><=0) of the coordinate line. In one step the elephant can move 1, 2, 3, 4 or 5 positions forward. Determine, what is the minimum number of steps he need to make ... | The first line of the input contains an integer *x* (1<=≤<=*x*<=≤<=1<=000<=000) — The coordinate of the friend's house. | Print the minimum number of steps that elephant needs to make to get from point 0 to point *x*. | [
"5\n",
"12\n"
] | [
"1\n",
"3\n"
] | In the first sample the elephant needs to make one step of length 5 to reach the point *x*.
In the second sample the elephant can get to point *x* if he moves by 3, 5 and 4. There are other ways to get the optimal answer but the elephant cannot reach *x* in less than three moves. | 500 | [
{
"input": "5",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "12",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "999999",
"output": "200000"
},
{
"input": "41",
"output": "9"
},
{
"input": "1000000",
"output": "200000"
},
{
"input": "1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "2",
... | 1,699,135,184 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 34 | 46 | 0 | import math
n=int(input())
print((math.ceil(n/5))) | Title: Elephant
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
An elephant decided to visit his friend. It turned out that the elephant's house is located at point 0 and his friend's house is located at point *x*(*x*<=><=0) of the coordinate line. In one step the elephant can move 1, 2... | ```python
import math
n=int(input())
print((math.ceil(n/5)))
``` | 3 | |
166 | B | Polygons | PROGRAMMING | 2,100 | [
"geometry",
"sortings"
] | null | null | You've got another geometrical task. You are given two non-degenerate polygons *A* and *B* as vertex coordinates. Polygon *A* is strictly convex. Polygon *B* is an arbitrary polygon without any self-intersections and self-touches. The vertices of both polygons are given in the clockwise order. For each polygon no three... | The first line contains the only integer *n* (3<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) — the number of vertices of polygon *A*. Then *n* lines contain pairs of integers *x**i*,<=*y**i* (|*x**i*|,<=|*y**i*|<=≤<=109) — coordinates of the *i*-th vertex of polygon *A*. The vertices are given in the clockwise order.
The next line contains a sin... | Print on the only line the answer to the problem — if polygon *B* is strictly inside polygon *A*, print "YES", otherwise print "NO" (without the quotes). | [
"6\n-2 1\n0 3\n3 3\n4 1\n3 -2\n2 -2\n4\n0 1\n2 2\n3 1\n1 0\n",
"5\n1 2\n4 2\n3 -3\n-2 -2\n-2 1\n4\n0 1\n1 2\n4 1\n2 -1\n",
"5\n-1 2\n2 3\n4 1\n3 -2\n0 -3\n5\n1 0\n1 1\n3 1\n5 -1\n2 -1\n"
] | [
"YES\n",
"NO\n",
"NO\n"
] | none | 3,000 | [
{
"input": "6\n-2 1\n0 3\n3 3\n4 1\n3 -2\n2 -2\n4\n0 1\n2 2\n3 1\n1 0",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "5\n1 2\n4 2\n3 -3\n-2 -2\n-2 1\n4\n0 1\n1 2\n4 1\n2 -1",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "5\n-1 2\n2 3\n4 1\n3 -2\n0 -3\n5\n1 0\n1 1\n3 1\n5 -1\n2 -1",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"inp... | 1,644,456,288 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | COMPILATION_ERROR | TESTS | 0 | 0 | 0 | #include <bits/stdc++.h>
using namespace std;
int main(){
ios::sync_with_stdio(0);
cin.tie(0);
int n;
cin >> n;
vector<int> x(n), y(n);
int a, b;
for (int i = 0; i < n; i++){
cin >> a >> b;
x[i] = a;
y[i] = b;
}
int mnx = 0, mxx = 0, mny = 0,... | Title: Polygons
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
You've got another geometrical task. You are given two non-degenerate polygons *A* and *B* as vertex coordinates. Polygon *A* is strictly convex. Polygon *B* is an arbitrary polygon without any self-intersections and self-touc... | ```python
#include <bits/stdc++.h>
using namespace std;
int main(){
ios::sync_with_stdio(0);
cin.tie(0);
int n;
cin >> n;
vector<int> x(n), y(n);
int a, b;
for (int i = 0; i < n; i++){
cin >> a >> b;
x[i] = a;
y[i] = b;
}
int mnx = 0, mxx = 0... | -1 | |
678 | A | Johny Likes Numbers | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation",
"math"
] | null | null | Johny likes numbers *n* and *k* very much. Now Johny wants to find the smallest integer *x* greater than *n*, so it is divisible by the number *k*. | The only line contains two integers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*k*<=≤<=109). | Print the smallest integer *x*<=><=*n*, so it is divisible by the number *k*. | [
"5 3\n",
"25 13\n",
"26 13\n"
] | [
"6\n",
"26\n",
"39\n"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "5 3",
"output": "6"
},
{
"input": "25 13",
"output": "26"
},
{
"input": "26 13",
"output": "39"
},
{
"input": "1 1",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "8 8",
"output": "16"
},
{
"input": "14 15",
"output": "15"
},
{
"input": "197 894"... | 1,698,462,309 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | OK | TESTS | 37 | 46 | 0 | n,k=map(int,input().split())
a=n//k
print(k*(a+1))
| Title: Johny Likes Numbers
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Johny likes numbers *n* and *k* very much. Now Johny wants to find the smallest integer *x* greater than *n*, so it is divisible by the number *k*.
Input Specification:
The only line contains two integers *n* and *... | ```python
n,k=map(int,input().split())
a=n//k
print(k*(a+1))
``` | 3 | |
374 | A | Inna and Pink Pony | PROGRAMMING | 2,000 | [
"greedy",
"implementation"
] | null | null | Dima and Inna are doing so great! At the moment, Inna is sitting on the magic lawn playing with a pink pony. Dima wanted to play too. He brought an *n*<=×<=*m* chessboard, a very tasty candy and two numbers *a* and *b*.
Dima put the chessboard in front of Inna and placed the candy in position (*i*,<=*j*) on the board.... | The first line of the input contains six integers *n*,<=*m*,<=*i*,<=*j*,<=*a*,<=*b* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=106; 1<=≤<=*i*<=≤<=*n*; 1<=≤<=*j*<=≤<=*m*; 1<=≤<=*a*,<=*b*<=≤<=106).
You can assume that the chessboard rows are numbered from 1 to *n* from top to bottom and the columns are numbered from 1 to *m* from left to rig... | In a single line print a single integer — the minimum number of moves needed to get the candy.
If Inna and the pony cannot get the candy playing by Dima's rules, print on a single line "Poor Inna and pony!" without the quotes. | [
"5 7 1 3 2 2\n",
"5 5 2 3 1 1\n"
] | [
"2\n",
"Poor Inna and pony!\n"
] | Note to sample 1:
Inna and the pony can move the candy to position (1 + 2, 3 + 2) = (3, 5), from there they can move it to positions (3 - 2, 5 + 2) = (1, 7) and (3 + 2, 5 + 2) = (5, 7). These positions correspond to the corner squares of the chess board. Thus, the answer to the test sample equals two. | 500 | [
{
"input": "5 7 1 3 2 2",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "5 5 2 3 1 1",
"output": "Poor Inna and pony!"
},
{
"input": "1 1 1 1 1 1",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "23000 15500 100 333 9 1",
"output": "15167"
},
{
"input": "33999 99333 33000 99000 3 9",
"output": "3... | 1,668,296,673 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 5 | 46 | 0 | import math
inp = input()
inp = inp.split()
length = len(inp)
for k in range(length):
inp[k] = int(inp[k])
n = inp[0]
m = inp[1]
i = inp[2]
j = inp[3]
a = inp[4]
b = inp[5]
coordinates = [[1, m], [n, 1], [1, 1], [n, m]]
ans = []
c = 1
for l in range(4):
x = coordinates[l][0]
y = c... | Title: Inna and Pink Pony
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Dima and Inna are doing so great! At the moment, Inna is sitting on the magic lawn playing with a pink pony. Dima wanted to play too. He brought an *n*<=×<=*m* chessboard, a very tasty candy and two numbers *a* and *... | ```python
import math
inp = input()
inp = inp.split()
length = len(inp)
for k in range(length):
inp[k] = int(inp[k])
n = inp[0]
m = inp[1]
i = inp[2]
j = inp[3]
a = inp[4]
b = inp[5]
coordinates = [[1, m], [n, 1], [1, 1], [n, m]]
ans = []
c = 1
for l in range(4):
x = coordinates[l][0]
... | 0 | |
753 | A | Santa Claus and Candies | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"dp",
"greedy",
"math"
] | null | null | Santa Claus has *n* candies, he dreams to give them as gifts to children.
What is the maximal number of children for whose he can give candies if Santa Claus want each kid should get distinct positive integer number of candies. Santa Class wants to give all *n* candies he has. | The only line contains positive integer number *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000) — number of candies Santa Claus has. | Print to the first line integer number *k* — maximal number of kids which can get candies.
Print to the second line *k* distinct integer numbers: number of candies for each of *k* kid. The sum of *k* printed numbers should be exactly *n*.
If there are many solutions, print any of them. | [
"5\n",
"9\n",
"2\n"
] | [
"2\n2 3\n",
"3\n3 5 1\n",
"1\n2 \n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "5",
"output": "2\n1 4 "
},
{
"input": "9",
"output": "3\n1 2 6 "
},
{
"input": "2",
"output": "1\n2 "
},
{
"input": "1",
"output": "1\n1 "
},
{
"input": "3",
"output": "2\n1 2 "
},
{
"input": "1000",
"output": "44\n1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 ... | 1,620,836,921 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 49 | 109 | 6,963,200 |
f = int(input())
data = dict()
data[1] = [1]
data[2] = [2]
data[3] = [1, 2]
for x in range(4, f+1):
t = data[x-1]
if 1 not in t:
data[x] = t + [1]
else:
t.sort()
for z in set(t):
if sum(set(t) - {z} | {z+1}) == x:
data[x] = list(set(... | Title: Santa Claus and Candies
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Santa Claus has *n* candies, he dreams to give them as gifts to children.
What is the maximal number of children for whose he can give candies if Santa Claus want each kid should get distinct positive integer n... | ```python
f = int(input())
data = dict()
data[1] = [1]
data[2] = [2]
data[3] = [1, 2]
for x in range(4, f+1):
t = data[x-1]
if 1 not in t:
data[x] = t + [1]
else:
t.sort()
for z in set(t):
if sum(set(t) - {z} | {z+1}) == x:
data[x] =... | 3 | |
909 | A | Generate Login | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"brute force",
"greedy",
"sortings"
] | null | null | The preferred way to generate user login in Polygon is to concatenate a prefix of the user's first name and a prefix of their last name, in that order. Each prefix must be non-empty, and any of the prefixes can be the full name. Typically there are multiple possible logins for each person.
You are given the first and ... | The input consists of a single line containing two space-separated strings: the first and the last names. Each character of each string is a lowercase English letter. The length of each string is between 1 and 10, inclusive. | Output a single string — alphabetically earliest possible login formed from these names. The output should be given in lowercase as well. | [
"harry potter\n",
"tom riddle\n"
] | [
"hap\n",
"tomr\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "harry potter",
"output": "hap"
},
{
"input": "tom riddle",
"output": "tomr"
},
{
"input": "a qdpinbmcrf",
"output": "aq"
},
{
"input": "wixjzniiub ssdfodfgap",
"output": "wis"
},
{
"input": "z z",
"output": "zz"
},
{
"input": "ertuyivhfg v"... | 1,571,588,858 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 5 | 139 | 0 | f,l=map(str,input().split())
i=1
j=0
while i<len(f):
if ord(f[i])<ord(f[j]):
i+=1
else:
break
print(f[0:i]+l[0])
| Title: Generate Login
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
The preferred way to generate user login in Polygon is to concatenate a prefix of the user's first name and a prefix of their last name, in that order. Each prefix must be non-empty, and any of the prefixes can be the fu... | ```python
f,l=map(str,input().split())
i=1
j=0
while i<len(f):
if ord(f[i])<ord(f[j]):
i+=1
else:
break
print(f[0:i]+l[0])
``` | 0 | |
462 | A | Appleman and Easy Task | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"brute force",
"implementation"
] | null | null | Toastman came up with a very easy task. He gives it to Appleman, but Appleman doesn't know how to solve it. Can you help him?
Given a *n*<=×<=*n* checkerboard. Each cell of the board has either character 'x', or character 'o'. Is it true that each cell of the board has even number of adjacent cells with 'o'? Two cells... | The first line contains an integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100). Then *n* lines follow containing the description of the checkerboard. Each of them contains *n* characters (either 'x' or 'o') without spaces. | Print "YES" or "NO" (without the quotes) depending on the answer to the problem. | [
"3\nxxo\nxox\noxx\n",
"4\nxxxo\nxoxo\noxox\nxxxx\n"
] | [
"YES\n",
"NO\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "3\nxxo\nxox\noxx",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "4\nxxxo\nxoxo\noxox\nxxxx",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "1\no",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "2\nox\nxo",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "2\nxx\nxo",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "3\nooo\no... | 1,623,841,745 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | COMPILATION_ERROR | TESTS | 0 | 0 | 0 | #include<bits/stdc++.h>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
int n;
cin>>n;
char a[n][n];
for(int i=0;i<n;i++){
for(int j=0;j<n;j++){
cin>>a[i][j];
}
}
int f=0;
int cnt;
for(int i=0;i<n;i++... | Title: Appleman and Easy Task
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Toastman came up with a very easy task. He gives it to Appleman, but Appleman doesn't know how to solve it. Can you help him?
Given a *n*<=×<=*n* checkerboard. Each cell of the board has either character 'x', or... | ```python
#include<bits/stdc++.h>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
int n;
cin>>n;
char a[n][n];
for(int i=0;i<n;i++){
for(int j=0;j<n;j++){
cin>>a[i][j];
}
}
int f=0;
int cnt;
for(int i... | -1 | |
608 | B | Hamming Distance Sum | PROGRAMMING | 1,500 | [
"combinatorics",
"strings"
] | null | null | Genos needs your help. He was asked to solve the following programming problem by Saitama:
The length of some string *s* is denoted |*s*|. The Hamming distance between two strings *s* and *t* of equal length is defined as , where *s**i* is the *i*-th character of *s* and *t**i* is the *i*-th character of *t*. For exam... | The first line of the input contains binary string *a* (1<=≤<=|*a*|<=≤<=200<=000).
The second line of the input contains binary string *b* (|*a*|<=≤<=|*b*|<=≤<=200<=000).
Both strings are guaranteed to consist of characters '0' and '1' only. | Print a single integer — the sum of Hamming distances between *a* and all contiguous substrings of *b* of length |*a*|. | [
"01\n00111\n",
"0011\n0110\n"
] | [
"3\n",
"2\n"
] | For the first sample case, there are four contiguous substrings of *b* of length |*a*|: "00", "01", "11", and "11". The distance between "01" and "00" is |0 - 0| + |1 - 0| = 1. The distance between "01" and "01" is |0 - 0| + |1 - 1| = 0. The distance between "01" and "11" is |0 - 1| + |1 - 1| = 1. Last distance counts ... | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "01\n00111",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "0011\n0110",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "0\n0",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "1\n0",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "0\n1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "1\n1",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "1... | 1,450,895,593 | 7,093 | Python 3 | RUNTIME_ERROR | PRETESTS | 0 | 46 | 0 | __author__ = 'Sony'
from numpy import *
import operator
multiadd = lambda a,b: map(operator.xor, a,b)
a = str
b = str
a = input()
b = input()
al = []
bl = []
for i in range(0, len(a)):
al.append(int(a[i]))
for i in range(0, len(b)):
bl.append(int(b[i]))
# print(multiadd(al[0:len(a)], bl[0 : 0 ... | Title: Hamming Distance Sum
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Genos needs your help. He was asked to solve the following programming problem by Saitama:
The length of some string *s* is denoted |*s*|. The Hamming distance between two strings *s* and *t* of equal length is de... | ```python
__author__ = 'Sony'
from numpy import *
import operator
multiadd = lambda a,b: map(operator.xor, a,b)
a = str
b = str
a = input()
b = input()
al = []
bl = []
for i in range(0, len(a)):
al.append(int(a[i]))
for i in range(0, len(b)):
bl.append(int(b[i]))
# print(multiadd(al[0:len(a)],... | -1 | |
496 | A | Minimum Difficulty | PROGRAMMING | 900 | [
"brute force",
"implementation",
"math"
] | null | null | Mike is trying rock climbing but he is awful at it.
There are *n* holds on the wall, *i*-th hold is at height *a**i* off the ground. Besides, let the sequence *a**i* increase, that is, *a**i*<=<<=*a**i*<=+<=1 for all *i* from 1 to *n*<=-<=1; we will call such sequence a track. Mike thinks that the track *a*1, ...,... | The first line contains a single integer *n* (3<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of holds.
The next line contains *n* space-separated integers *a**i* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=1000), where *a**i* is the height where the hold number *i* hangs. The sequence *a**i* is increasing (i.e. each element except for the first one is strict... | Print a single number — the minimum difficulty of the track after removing a single hold. | [
"3\n1 4 6\n",
"5\n1 2 3 4 5\n",
"5\n1 2 3 7 8\n"
] | [
"5\n",
"2\n",
"4\n"
] | In the first sample you can remove only the second hold, then the sequence looks like (1, 6), the maximum difference of the neighboring elements equals 5.
In the second test after removing every hold the difficulty equals 2.
In the third test you can obtain sequences (1, 3, 7, 8), (1, 2, 7, 8), (1, 2, 3, 8), for whic... | 500 | [
{
"input": "3\n1 4 6",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "5\n1 2 3 4 5",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "5\n1 2 3 7 8",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "3\n1 500 1000",
"output": "999"
},
{
"input": "10\n1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "10\n1 4 9... | 1,615,551,365 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 19 | 62 | 307,200 | n = int(input())
ls = [int(x) for x in input().split()]
max_dif = 10**9
temp_dif = 0
elem_ind = 0
for ind in range(1,len(ls)-1):
temp_dif = abs(ls[ind-1]- ls[ind]) + abs(ls[ind+1]- ls[ind])
if temp_dif < max_dif:
max_dif = min(temp_dif,max_dif)
elem_ind = ind
del ls[elem_ind]
#print(... | Title: Minimum Difficulty
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Mike is trying rock climbing but he is awful at it.
There are *n* holds on the wall, *i*-th hold is at height *a**i* off the ground. Besides, let the sequence *a**i* increase, that is, *a**i*<=<<=*a**i*<=+<=1 fo... | ```python
n = int(input())
ls = [int(x) for x in input().split()]
max_dif = 10**9
temp_dif = 0
elem_ind = 0
for ind in range(1,len(ls)-1):
temp_dif = abs(ls[ind-1]- ls[ind]) + abs(ls[ind+1]- ls[ind])
if temp_dif < max_dif:
max_dif = min(temp_dif,max_dif)
elem_ind = ind
del ls[elem_ind... | 3 | |
550 | A | Two Substrings | PROGRAMMING | 1,500 | [
"brute force",
"dp",
"greedy",
"implementation",
"strings"
] | null | null | You are given string *s*. Your task is to determine if the given string *s* contains two non-overlapping substrings "AB" and "BA" (the substrings can go in any order). | The only line of input contains a string *s* of length between 1 and 105 consisting of uppercase Latin letters. | Print "YES" (without the quotes), if string *s* contains two non-overlapping substrings "AB" and "BA", and "NO" otherwise. | [
"ABA\n",
"BACFAB\n",
"AXBYBXA\n"
] | [
"NO\n",
"YES\n",
"NO\n"
] | In the first sample test, despite the fact that there are substrings "AB" and "BA", their occurrences overlap, so the answer is "NO".
In the second sample test there are the following occurrences of the substrings: BACFAB.
In the third sample test there is no substring "AB" nor substring "BA". | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "ABA",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "BACFAB",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "AXBYBXA",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "ABABAB",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "BBBBBBBBBB",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "ABBA",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"... | 1,693,732,447 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | RUNTIME_ERROR | TESTS | 0 | 46 | 0 | s = input()
ans = "NO"
for i in range(len(s)-1):
if s[i]+s[i+1] == "AB":
s = s[0:i] + "00" + s[i+3:len(s)-1]
for j in range(len(s)-1):
if s[j]+s[j+1] == "BA":
ans = "YES"
print(ans) | Title: Two Substrings
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
You are given string *s*. Your task is to determine if the given string *s* contains two non-overlapping substrings "AB" and "BA" (the substrings can go in any order).
Input Specification:
The only line of input contain... | ```python
s = input()
ans = "NO"
for i in range(len(s)-1):
if s[i]+s[i+1] == "AB":
s = s[0:i] + "00" + s[i+3:len(s)-1]
for j in range(len(s)-1):
if s[j]+s[j+1] == "BA":
ans = "YES"
print(ans)
``` | -1 | |
255 | A | Greg's Workout | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Greg is a beginner bodybuilder. Today the gym coach gave him the training plan. All it had was *n* integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n*. These numbers mean that Greg needs to do exactly *n* exercises today. Besides, Greg should repeat the *i*-th in order exercise *a**i* times.
Greg now only does three types of exercise... | The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=20). The second line contains *n* integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=25) — the number of times Greg repeats the exercises. | Print word "chest" (without the quotes), if the chest gets the most exercise, "biceps" (without the quotes), if the biceps gets the most exercise and print "back" (without the quotes) if the back gets the most exercise.
It is guaranteed that the input is such that the answer to the problem is unambiguous. | [
"2\n2 8\n",
"3\n5 1 10\n",
"7\n3 3 2 7 9 6 8\n"
] | [
"biceps\n",
"back\n",
"chest\n"
] | In the first sample Greg does 2 chest, 8 biceps and zero back exercises, so the biceps gets the most exercises.
In the second sample Greg does 5 chest, 1 biceps and 10 back exercises, so the back gets the most exercises.
In the third sample Greg does 18 chest, 12 biceps and 8 back exercises, so the chest gets the mos... | 500 | [
{
"input": "2\n2 8",
"output": "biceps"
},
{
"input": "3\n5 1 10",
"output": "back"
},
{
"input": "7\n3 3 2 7 9 6 8",
"output": "chest"
},
{
"input": "4\n5 6 6 2",
"output": "chest"
},
{
"input": "5\n8 2 2 6 3",
"output": "chest"
},
{
"input": "6\n8 7 ... | 1,683,201,951 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 61 | 122 | 102,400 | from math import *
from collections import *
from itertools import *
from sys import *
n=int(input())
l=list(map(int,input().split()))
a=0
b=0
c=0
for i in range(n):
if i%3==0:
a+=l[i]
elif i%3==1:
b+=l[i]
elif i%3==2:
c+=l[i]
m=max(a,b,c)
if m==a:
print("ch... | Title: Greg's Workout
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Greg is a beginner bodybuilder. Today the gym coach gave him the training plan. All it had was *n* integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n*. These numbers mean that Greg needs to do exactly *n* exercises today. Besides, Greg ... | ```python
from math import *
from collections import *
from itertools import *
from sys import *
n=int(input())
l=list(map(int,input().split()))
a=0
b=0
c=0
for i in range(n):
if i%3==0:
a+=l[i]
elif i%3==1:
b+=l[i]
elif i%3==2:
c+=l[i]
m=max(a,b,c)
if m==a:
... | 3 | |
804 | A | Find Amir | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"constructive algorithms",
"greedy",
"math"
] | null | null | A few years ago Sajjad left his school and register to another one due to security reasons. Now he wishes to find Amir, one of his schoolmates and good friends.
There are *n* schools numerated from 1 to *n*. One can travel between each pair of them, to do so, he needs to buy a ticket. The ticker between schools *i* an... | The first line contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) — the number of schools. | Print single integer: the minimum cost of tickets needed to visit all schools. | [
"2\n",
"10\n"
] | [
"0\n",
"4\n"
] | In the first example we can buy a ticket between the schools that costs <img align="middle" class="tex-formula" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/c67d72010e0498bfd065a6a38fdeaec90358507b.png" style="max-width: 100.0%;max-height: 100.0%;"/>. | 500 | [
{
"input": "2",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "10",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "43670",
"output": "21834"
},
{
"input": "4217",
"output": "2108"
},
{
"input": "17879",
"output": "8939"
},
{
"input": "31809",
"output": "15904"
},
{
"input": "... | 1,513,680,884 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 3 | 62 | 5,529,600 | #!/usr/bin/env python3
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
n=int(input())
print(int(n/2)-1)
| Title: Find Amir
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
A few years ago Sajjad left his school and register to another one due to security reasons. Now he wishes to find Amir, one of his schoolmates and good friends.
There are *n* schools numerated from 1 to *n*. One can travel b... | ```python
#!/usr/bin/env python3
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
n=int(input())
print(int(n/2)-1)
``` | 0 | |
387 | B | George and Round | PROGRAMMING | 1,200 | [
"brute force",
"greedy",
"two pointers"
] | null | null | George decided to prepare a Codesecrof round, so he has prepared *m* problems for the round. Let's number the problems with integers 1 through *m*. George estimates the *i*-th problem's complexity by integer *b**i*.
To make the round good, he needs to put at least *n* problems there. Besides, he needs to have at least... | The first line contains two integers *n* and *m* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=3000) — the minimal number of problems in a good round and the number of problems George's prepared. The second line contains space-separated integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a*1<=<<=*a*2<=<<=...<=<<=*a**n*<=≤<=106) — the requirem... | Print a single integer — the answer to the problem. | [
"3 5\n1 2 3\n1 2 2 3 3\n",
"3 5\n1 2 3\n1 1 1 1 1\n",
"3 1\n2 3 4\n1\n"
] | [
"0\n",
"2\n",
"3\n"
] | In the first sample the set of the prepared problems meets the requirements for a good round.
In the second sample, it is enough to come up with and prepare two problems with complexities 2 and 3 to get a good round.
In the third sample it is very easy to get a good round if come up with and prepare extra problems wi... | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "3 5\n1 2 3\n1 2 2 3 3",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "3 5\n1 2 3\n1 1 1 1 1",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "3 1\n2 3 4\n1",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "29 100\n20 32 41 67 72 155 331 382 399 412 465 470 484 511 515 529 616 637 679 715 733 763 826 843 862 903 925 97... | 1,613,647,965 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 41 | 77 | 614,400 | arr=[int(x) for x in input().split()]
n,m=arr[0],arr[1]
li1=[int(x) for x in input().split()]
li2=[int(x) for x in input().split()]
li1.sort()
li2.sort()
i,j=0,0
ans=0
while(i<n and j<m):
if(li1[i]==li2[j]):
i+=1
j+=1
elif(li1[i]<li2[j]):
i+=1
j+=1
else:
... | Title: George and Round
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
George decided to prepare a Codesecrof round, so he has prepared *m* problems for the round. Let's number the problems with integers 1 through *m*. George estimates the *i*-th problem's complexity by integer *b**i*.
T... | ```python
arr=[int(x) for x in input().split()]
n,m=arr[0],arr[1]
li1=[int(x) for x in input().split()]
li2=[int(x) for x in input().split()]
li1.sort()
li2.sort()
i,j=0,0
ans=0
while(i<n and j<m):
if(li1[i]==li2[j]):
i+=1
j+=1
elif(li1[i]<li2[j]):
i+=1
j+=1
el... | 3 | |
816 | B | Karen and Coffee | PROGRAMMING | 1,400 | [
"binary search",
"data structures",
"implementation"
] | null | null | To stay woke and attentive during classes, Karen needs some coffee!
Karen, a coffee aficionado, wants to know the optimal temperature for brewing the perfect cup of coffee. Indeed, she has spent some time reading several recipe books, including the universally acclaimed "The Art of the Covfefe".
She knows *n* coffee ... | The first line of input contains three integers, *n*, *k* (1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=200000), and *q* (1<=≤<=*q*<=≤<=200000), the number of recipes, the minimum number of recipes a certain temperature must be recommended by to be admissible, and the number of questions Karen has, respectively.
The next *n* lines describe ... | For each question, output a single integer on a line by itself, the number of admissible integer temperatures between *a* and *b* degrees, inclusive. | [
"3 2 4\n91 94\n92 97\n97 99\n92 94\n93 97\n95 96\n90 100\n",
"2 1 1\n1 1\n200000 200000\n90 100\n"
] | [
"3\n3\n0\n4\n",
"0\n"
] | In the first test case, Karen knows 3 recipes.
1. The first one recommends brewing the coffee between 91 and 94 degrees, inclusive. 1. The second one recommends brewing the coffee between 92 and 97 degrees, inclusive. 1. The third one recommends brewing the coffee between 97 and 99 degrees, inclusive.
A temperatur... | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "3 2 4\n91 94\n92 97\n97 99\n92 94\n93 97\n95 96\n90 100",
"output": "3\n3\n0\n4"
},
{
"input": "2 1 1\n1 1\n200000 200000\n90 100",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "1 1 1\n1 1\n1 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "1 1 1\n200000 200000\n200000 200000",
"output": "1"
... | 1,576,345,175 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED | TESTS | 4 | 2,500 | 30,208,000 | n,k,q = map(int,input().split())
Max = 200001
Dict = {}
for i in range(1,Max):
Dict[i]=0
for i in range(n):
l,r = map(int,input().split())
for j in range(l,r+1):
Dict[j]+=1
new_lst = [0]*Max
pre = 0
for j in range(1,Max):
if(Dict[j]>=k):
pre+=1
new_lst[j] = pre
... | Title: Karen and Coffee
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
To stay woke and attentive during classes, Karen needs some coffee!
Karen, a coffee aficionado, wants to know the optimal temperature for brewing the perfect cup of coffee. Indeed, she has spent some time reading seve... | ```python
n,k,q = map(int,input().split())
Max = 200001
Dict = {}
for i in range(1,Max):
Dict[i]=0
for i in range(n):
l,r = map(int,input().split())
for j in range(l,r+1):
Dict[j]+=1
new_lst = [0]*Max
pre = 0
for j in range(1,Max):
if(Dict[j]>=k):
pre+=1
new_lst[... | 0 | |
928 | A | Login Verification | PROGRAMMING | 1,200 | [
"*special",
"strings"
] | null | null | When registering in a social network, users are allowed to create their own convenient login to make it easier to share contacts, print it on business cards, etc.
Login is an arbitrary sequence of lower and uppercase latin letters, digits and underline symbols («_»). However, in order to decrease the number of frauds ... | The first line contains a non-empty string *s* consisting of lower and uppercase latin letters, digits and underline symbols («_») with length not exceeding 50 — the login itself.
The second line contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1<=000) — the number of existing logins.
The next *n* lines describe the exi... | Print «Yes» (without quotes), if user can register via this login, i.e. none of the existing logins is similar with it.
Otherwise print «No» (without quotes). | [
"1_wat\n2\n2_wat\nwat_1\n",
"000\n3\n00\nooA\noOo\n",
"_i_\n3\n__i_\n_1_\nI\n",
"La0\n3\n2a0\nLa1\n1a0\n",
"abc\n1\naBc\n",
"0Lil\n2\nLIL0\n0Ril\n"
] | [
"Yes\n",
"No\n",
"No\n",
"No\n",
"No\n",
"Yes\n"
] | In the second sample case the user wants to create a login consisting of three zeros. It's impossible due to collision with the third among the existing.
In the third sample case the new login is similar with the second one. | 500 | [
{
"input": "1_wat\n2\n2_wat\nwat_1",
"output": "Yes"
},
{
"input": "000\n3\n00\nooA\noOo",
"output": "No"
},
{
"input": "_i_\n3\n__i_\n_1_\nI",
"output": "No"
},
{
"input": "La0\n3\n2a0\nLa1\n1a0",
"output": "No"
},
{
"input": "abc\n1\naBc",
"output": "No"
}... | 1,519,560,340 | 73,840 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 73 | 62 | 5,632,000 | def normalize(s):
res = []
for c in s.lower():
if c == 'i' or c == 'l':
res.append('1')
elif c == 'o':
res.append('0')
else:
res.append(c)
return ''.join(res)
s = normalize(input().strip())
n = int(input())
for i in range(n):
s... | Title: Login Verification
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
When registering in a social network, users are allowed to create their own convenient login to make it easier to share contacts, print it on business cards, etc.
Login is an arbitrary sequence of lower and uppercas... | ```python
def normalize(s):
res = []
for c in s.lower():
if c == 'i' or c == 'l':
res.append('1')
elif c == 'o':
res.append('0')
else:
res.append(c)
return ''.join(res)
s = normalize(input().strip())
n = int(input())
for i in range(... | 3 | |
75 | D | Big Maximum Sum | PROGRAMMING | 2,000 | [
"data structures",
"dp",
"greedy",
"implementation",
"math",
"trees"
] | D. Big Maximum Sum | 2 | 256 | Ahmed and Mostafa used to compete together in many programming contests for several years. Their coach Fegla asked them to solve one challenging problem, of course Ahmed was able to solve it but Mostafa couldn't.
This problem is similar to a standard problem but it has a different format and constraints.
In the stand... | The first line contains two integers *n* and *m*, *n* is the number of the small arrays (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=50), and *m* is the number of indexes in the big array (1<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=250000). Then follow *n* lines, the *i*-th line starts with one integer *l* which is the size of the *i*-th array (1<=≤<=*l*<=≤<=5000), followed by... | Print one line containing the maximum sum in the big array after formatting it as described above. You must choose at least one element for the sum, i. e. it cannot be empty.
Please, do not use %lld specificator to write 64-bit integers in C++. It is preferred to use cout (also you may use %I64d). | [
"3 4\n3 1 6 -2\n2 3 3\n2 -5 1\n2 3 1 3\n",
"6 1\n4 0 8 -3 -10\n8 3 -2 -5 10 8 -9 -5 -4\n1 0\n1 -3\n3 -8 5 6\n2 9 6\n1\n"
] | [
"9\n",
"8\n"
] | none | 2,000 | [
{
"input": "3 4\n3 1 6 -2\n2 3 3\n2 -5 1\n2 3 1 3",
"output": "9"
},
{
"input": "6 1\n4 0 8 -3 -10\n8 3 -2 -5 10 8 -9 -5 -4\n1 0\n1 -3\n3 -8 5 6\n2 9 6\n1",
"output": "8"
},
{
"input": "4 3\n6 6 8 -5 4 10 -2\n1 -2\n1 -10\n5 -10 10 8 -7 -10\n2 4 1",
"output": "24"
},
{
"input"... | 1,599,487,887 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | MEMORY_LIMIT_EXCEEDED | TESTS | 26 | 2,058 | 268,390,400 | import sys
def solve(nums):
max_sum = nums[0]
current_sum = nums[0]
i = 1
while i != len(nums):
current_sum = max(nums[i], current_sum + nums[i])
max_sum = max(max_sum, current_sum)
i += 1
print(max_sum)
if __name__ == '__main__':
i = 0
n = 0
m = 0
count ... | Title: Big Maximum Sum
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
Ahmed and Mostafa used to compete together in many programming contests for several years. Their coach Fegla asked them to solve one challenging problem, of course Ahmed was able to solve it but Mostafa couldn't.
This prob... | ```python
import sys
def solve(nums):
max_sum = nums[0]
current_sum = nums[0]
i = 1
while i != len(nums):
current_sum = max(nums[i], current_sum + nums[i])
max_sum = max(max_sum, current_sum)
i += 1
print(max_sum)
if __name__ == '__main__':
i = 0
n = 0
m = 0
... | 0 |
49 | A | Sleuth | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation"
] | A. Sleuth | 2 | 256 | Vasya plays the sleuth with his friends. The rules of the game are as follows: those who play for the first time, that is Vasya is the sleuth, he should investigate a "crime" and find out what is happening. He can ask any questions whatsoever that can be answered with "Yes" or "No". All the rest agree beforehand to ans... | The single line contains a question represented by a non-empty line consisting of large and small Latin letters, spaces and a question mark. The line length does not exceed 100. It is guaranteed that the question mark occurs exactly once in the line — as the last symbol and that the line contains at least one letter. | Print answer for the question in a single line: YES if the answer is "Yes", NO if the answer is "No".
Remember that in the reply to the question the last letter, not the last character counts. I. e. the spaces and the question mark do not count as letters. | [
"Is it a melon?\n",
"Is it an apple?\n",
"Is it a banana ?\n",
"Is it an apple and a banana simultaneouSLY?\n"
] | [
"NO\n",
"YES\n",
"YES\n",
"YES\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "Is it a melon?",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "Is it an apple?",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": " Is it a banana ?",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "Is it an apple and a banana simultaneouSLY?",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "oHtSbDwzHb?",
... | 1,669,140,301 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 35 | 92 | 0 | a = input()
a = a.replace("?","").strip().lower()
b = ["a","i","e","o","u","y"]
if a[-1] in b:
print("YES")
else:
print("NO") | Title: Sleuth
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
Vasya plays the sleuth with his friends. The rules of the game are as follows: those who play for the first time, that is Vasya is the sleuth, he should investigate a "crime" and find out what is happening. He can ask any questions ... | ```python
a = input()
a = a.replace("?","").strip().lower()
b = ["a","i","e","o","u","y"]
if a[-1] in b:
print("YES")
else:
print("NO")
``` | 3.977 |
681 | A | A Good Contest | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Codeforces user' handle color depends on his rating — it is red if his rating is greater or equal to 2400; it is orange if his rating is less than 2400 but greater or equal to 2200, etc. Each time participant takes part in a rated contest, his rating is changed depending on his performance.
Anton wants the color of hi... | The first line of the input contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of participants Anton has outscored in this contest .
The next *n* lines describe participants results: the *i*-th of them consists of a participant handle *name**i* and two integers *before**i* and *after**i* (<=-<=4000<=≤<=*be... | Print «YES» (quotes for clarity), if Anton has performed good in the contest and «NO» (quotes for clarity) otherwise. | [
"3\nBurunduk1 2526 2537\nBudAlNik 2084 2214\nsubscriber 2833 2749\n",
"3\nApplejack 2400 2400\nFluttershy 2390 2431\nPinkie_Pie -2500 -2450\n"
] | [
"YES",
"NO"
] | In the first sample, Anton has outscored user with handle Burunduk1, whose handle was colored red before the contest and his rating has increased after the contest.
In the second sample, Applejack's rating has not increased after the contest, while both Fluttershy's and Pinkie_Pie's handles were not colored red before... | 500 | [
{
"input": "3\nBurunduk1 2526 2537\nBudAlNik 2084 2214\nsubscriber 2833 2749",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "3\nApplejack 2400 2400\nFluttershy 2390 2431\nPinkie_Pie -2500 -2450",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "1\nDb -3373 3591",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "5\nQ2bz 960 2342... | 1,620,285,637 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 60 | 78 | 6,758,400 | n = int(input())
res = 'NO'
for i in range(n):
a = input().split()
if int(a[2]) > int(a[1]) and int(a[1]) >= 2400:
res = 'YES'
print(res)
| Title: A Good Contest
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Codeforces user' handle color depends on his rating — it is red if his rating is greater or equal to 2400; it is orange if his rating is less than 2400 but greater or equal to 2200, etc. Each time participant takes part ... | ```python
n = int(input())
res = 'NO'
for i in range(n):
a = input().split()
if int(a[2]) > int(a[1]) and int(a[1]) >= 2400:
res = 'YES'
print(res)
``` | 3 | |
579 | A | Raising Bacteria | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"bitmasks"
] | null | null | You are a lover of bacteria. You want to raise some bacteria in a box.
Initially, the box is empty. Each morning, you can put any number of bacteria into the box. And each night, every bacterium in the box will split into two bacteria. You hope to see exactly *x* bacteria in the box at some moment.
What is the mini... | The only line containing one integer *x* (1<=≤<=*x*<=≤<=109). | The only line containing one integer: the answer. | [
"5\n",
"8\n"
] | [
"2\n",
"1\n"
] | For the first sample, we can add one bacterium in the box in the first day morning and at the third morning there will be 4 bacteria in the box. Now we put one more resulting 5 in the box. We added 2 bacteria in the process so the answer is 2.
For the second sample, we can put one in the first morning and in the 4-th ... | 250 | [
{
"input": "5",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "8",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "536870911",
"output": "29"
},
{
"input": "1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "343000816",
"output": "14"
},
{
"input": "559980448",
"output": "12"
},
{
"input": "697... | 1,660,857,873 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 30 | 0 | x = int(input())
count = 0
while x:
count += x%2
x = x//2
print(x) | Title: Raising Bacteria
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
You are a lover of bacteria. You want to raise some bacteria in a box.
Initially, the box is empty. Each morning, you can put any number of bacteria into the box. And each night, every bacterium in the box will split... | ```python
x = int(input())
count = 0
while x:
count += x%2
x = x//2
print(x)
``` | 0 | |
92 | A | Chips | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation",
"math"
] | A. Chips | 2 | 256 | There are *n* walruses sitting in a circle. All of them are numbered in the clockwise order: the walrus number 2 sits to the left of the walrus number 1, the walrus number 3 sits to the left of the walrus number 2, ..., the walrus number 1 sits to the left of the walrus number *n*.
The presenter has *m* chips. The pre... | The first line contains two integers *n* and *m* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=50, 1<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=104) — the number of walruses and the number of chips correspondingly. | Print the number of chips the presenter ended up with. | [
"4 11\n",
"17 107\n",
"3 8\n"
] | [
"0\n",
"2\n",
"1\n"
] | In the first sample the presenter gives one chip to the walrus number 1, two chips to the walrus number 2, three chips to the walrus number 3, four chips to the walrus number 4, then again one chip to the walrus number 1. After that the presenter runs out of chips. He can't give anything to the walrus number 2 and the ... | 500 | [
{
"input": "4 11",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "17 107",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "3 8",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "46 7262",
"output": "35"
},
{
"input": "32 6864",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "36 6218",
"output": "14"
},
{
"input": "... | 1,534,995,229 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 25 | 248 | 0 | n,m=map(int,input().split())
i=1
while(m>=i):
m-=i
i+=1
if(i>n):
i=1
print(m)
| Title: Chips
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
There are *n* walruses sitting in a circle. All of them are numbered in the clockwise order: the walrus number 2 sits to the left of the walrus number 1, the walrus number 3 sits to the left of the walrus number 2, ..., the walrus nu... | ```python
n,m=map(int,input().split())
i=1
while(m>=i):
m-=i
i+=1
if(i>n):
i=1
print(m)
``` | 3.938 |
577 | A | Multiplication Table | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"implementation",
"number theory"
] | null | null | Let's consider a table consisting of *n* rows and *n* columns. The cell located at the intersection of *i*-th row and *j*-th column contains number *i*<=×<=*j*. The rows and columns are numbered starting from 1.
You are given a positive integer *x*. Your task is to count the number of cells in a table that contain num... | The single line contains numbers *n* and *x* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105, 1<=≤<=*x*<=≤<=109) — the size of the table and the number that we are looking for in the table. | Print a single number: the number of times *x* occurs in the table. | [
"10 5\n",
"6 12\n",
"5 13\n"
] | [
"2\n",
"4\n",
"0\n"
] | A table for the second sample test is given below. The occurrences of number 12 are marked bold. | 500 | [
{
"input": "10 5",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "6 12",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "5 13",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "1 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "2 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "100000 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "1 10000000... | 1,685,493,158 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | MEMORY_LIMIT_EXCEEDED | TESTS | 5 | 249 | 268,390,400 | n, m = map(int, input().split())
prime = [[j*i for j in range(1, n+1)] for i in range(1, n+1)]
count = 0
for i in prime:
if m in i: count += 1
print(count)
| Title: Multiplication Table
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Let's consider a table consisting of *n* rows and *n* columns. The cell located at the intersection of *i*-th row and *j*-th column contains number *i*<=×<=*j*. The rows and columns are numbered starting from 1.
Y... | ```python
n, m = map(int, input().split())
prime = [[j*i for j in range(1, n+1)] for i in range(1, n+1)]
count = 0
for i in prime:
if m in i: count += 1
print(count)
``` | 0 | |
392 | A | Blocked Points | PROGRAMMING | 0 | [
"math"
] | null | null | Imagine you have an infinite 2D plane with Cartesian coordinate system. Some of the integral points are blocked, and others are not. Two integral points *A* and *B* on the plane are 4-connected if and only if:
- the Euclidean distance between *A* and *B* is one unit and neither *A* nor *B* is blocked; - or there is ... | The first line contains an integer *n* (0<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=4·107). | Print a single integer — the minimum number of points that should be blocked. | [
"1\n",
"2\n",
"3\n"
] | [
"4\n",
"8\n",
"16\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "1",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "2",
"output": "8"
},
{
"input": "3",
"output": "16"
},
{
"input": "4",
"output": "20"
},
{
"input": "0",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "30426905",
"output": "172120564"
},
{
"input": "38450759",
... | 1,570,891,096 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 3 | 108 | 0 | n = int(input())
ans = pow(2, n+1)
print(ans) | Title: Blocked Points
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Imagine you have an infinite 2D plane with Cartesian coordinate system. Some of the integral points are blocked, and others are not. Two integral points *A* and *B* on the plane are 4-connected if and only if:
- the Eu... | ```python
n = int(input())
ans = pow(2, n+1)
print(ans)
``` | 0 | |
306 | A | Candies | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Polycarpus has got *n* candies and *m* friends (*n*<=≥<=*m*). He wants to make a New Year present with candies to each friend. Polycarpus is planning to present all candies and he wants to do this in the fairest (that is, most equal) manner. He wants to choose such *a**i*, where *a**i* is the number of candies in the *... | The single line of the input contains a pair of space-separated positive integers *n*, *m* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=100;*n*<=≥<=*m*) — the number of candies and the number of Polycarpus's friends. | Print the required sequence *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**m*, where *a**i* is the number of candies in the *i*-th friend's present. All numbers *a**i* must be positive integers, total up to *n*, the maximum one should differ from the minimum one by the smallest possible value. | [
"12 3\n",
"15 4\n",
"18 7\n"
] | [
"4 4 4 ",
"3 4 4 4 ",
"2 2 2 3 3 3 3 "
] | Print *a*<sub class="lower-index">*i*</sub> in any order, separate the numbers by spaces. | 500 | [
{
"input": "12 4",
"output": "3 3 3 3 "
},
{
"input": "15 6",
"output": "2 2 2 3 3 3 "
},
{
"input": "18 8",
"output": "2 2 2 2 2 2 3 3 "
},
{
"input": "1 1",
"output": "1 "
},
{
"input": "2 1",
"output": "2 "
},
{
"input": "100 1",
"output": "100 ... | 1,680,538,454 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 20 | 62 | 0 | n,m = map(int, input().split() )
list1 = list()
eqdiv = n//m
rem = n-m*eqdiv
for i in range(m):
list1.append(eqdiv)
if rem:
for i in range(rem):
list1[i]+=1
for i in list1:
print(str(i),end=" ")
#string+=str(i)+" "
print("")
| Title: Candies
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Polycarpus has got *n* candies and *m* friends (*n*<=≥<=*m*). He wants to make a New Year present with candies to each friend. Polycarpus is planning to present all candies and he wants to do this in the fairest (that is, most ... | ```python
n,m = map(int, input().split() )
list1 = list()
eqdiv = n//m
rem = n-m*eqdiv
for i in range(m):
list1.append(eqdiv)
if rem:
for i in range(rem):
list1[i]+=1
for i in list1:
print(str(i),end=" ")
#string+=str(i)+" "
print("")
``` | 3 | |
988 | B | Substrings Sort | PROGRAMMING | 1,100 | [
"sortings",
"strings"
] | null | null | You are given $n$ strings. Each string consists of lowercase English letters. Rearrange (reorder) the given strings in such a way that for every string, all strings that are placed before it are its substrings.
String $a$ is a substring of string $b$ if it is possible to choose several consecutive letters in $b$ in su... | The first line contains an integer $n$ ($1 \le n \le 100$) — the number of strings.
The next $n$ lines contain the given strings. The number of letters in each string is from $1$ to $100$, inclusive. Each string consists of lowercase English letters.
Some strings might be equal. | If it is impossible to reorder $n$ given strings in required order, print "NO" (without quotes).
Otherwise print "YES" (without quotes) and $n$ given strings in required order. | [
"5\na\naba\nabacaba\nba\naba\n",
"5\na\nabacaba\nba\naba\nabab\n",
"3\nqwerty\nqwerty\nqwerty\n"
] | [
"YES\na\nba\naba\naba\nabacaba\n",
"NO\n",
"YES\nqwerty\nqwerty\nqwerty\n"
] | In the second example you cannot reorder the strings because the string "abab" is not a substring of the string "abacaba". | 0 | [
{
"input": "5\na\naba\nabacaba\nba\naba",
"output": "YES\na\nba\naba\naba\nabacaba"
},
{
"input": "5\na\nabacaba\nba\naba\nabab",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "3\nqwerty\nqwerty\nqwerty",
"output": "YES\nqwerty\nqwerty\nqwerty"
},
{
"input": "1\nwronganswer",
"output": "Y... | 1,693,998,603 | 1,503 | Python 3 | RUNTIME_ERROR | TESTS | 0 | 30 | 0 | n = int(input())
st = [input() for _ in range(n)]
l = []
for s in st:
l.append((len(s) , s))
l.sort()
ok = 1
for i in range(n):
for j in range(i + 1):
if l[j][1] not in l[i][1]:
ok = 0
if ok:
print("YES")
for i in range(l):
print(l[i][1])
else:
print("NO") | Title: Substrings Sort
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
You are given $n$ strings. Each string consists of lowercase English letters. Rearrange (reorder) the given strings in such a way that for every string, all strings that are placed before it are its substrings.
String ... | ```python
n = int(input())
st = [input() for _ in range(n)]
l = []
for s in st:
l.append((len(s) , s))
l.sort()
ok = 1
for i in range(n):
for j in range(i + 1):
if l[j][1] not in l[i][1]:
ok = 0
if ok:
print("YES")
for i in range(l):
print(l[i][1])
else:
p... | -1 | |
25 | A | IQ test | PROGRAMMING | 1,300 | [
"brute force"
] | A. IQ test | 2 | 256 | Bob is preparing to pass IQ test. The most frequent task in this test is to find out which one of the given *n* numbers differs from the others. Bob observed that one number usually differs from the others in evenness. Help Bob — to check his answers, he needs a program that among the given *n* numbers finds one that i... | The first line contains integer *n* (3<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — amount of numbers in the task. The second line contains *n* space-separated natural numbers, not exceeding 100. It is guaranteed, that exactly one of these numbers differs from the others in evenness. | Output index of number that differs from the others in evenness. Numbers are numbered from 1 in the input order. | [
"5\n2 4 7 8 10\n",
"4\n1 2 1 1\n"
] | [
"3\n",
"2\n"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "5\n2 4 7 8 10",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "4\n1 2 1 1",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "3\n1 2 2",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "3\n100 99 100",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "3\n5 3 2",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "4\n43 28 1 91",
"output"... | 1,664,908,538 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 30 | 0 | n=int(input())
z=list(map(int,input().split()))
r=filter(lambda x: x%2!=0,z)
print(r) | Title: IQ test
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
Bob is preparing to pass IQ test. The most frequent task in this test is to find out which one of the given *n* numbers differs from the others. Bob observed that one number usually differs from the others in evenness. Help Bob — t... | ```python
n=int(input())
z=list(map(int,input().split()))
r=filter(lambda x: x%2!=0,z)
print(r)
``` | 0 |
287 | B | Pipeline | PROGRAMMING | 1,700 | [
"binary search",
"math"
] | null | null | Vova, the Ultimate Thule new shaman, wants to build a pipeline. As there are exactly *n* houses in Ultimate Thule, Vova wants the city to have exactly *n* pipes, each such pipe should be connected to the water supply. A pipe can be connected to the water supply if there's water flowing out of it. Initially Vova has onl... | The first line contains two space-separated integers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1018, 2<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=109).
Please, do not use the %lld specifier to read or write 64-bit integers in С++. It is preferred to use the cin, cout streams or the %I64d specifier. | Print a single integer — the minimum number of splitters needed to build the pipeline. If it is impossible to build a pipeline with the given splitters, print -1. | [
"4 3\n",
"5 5\n",
"8 4\n"
] | [
"2\n",
"1\n",
"-1\n"
] | none | 1,500 | [
{
"input": "4 3",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "5 5",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "8 4",
"output": "-1"
},
{
"input": "1000000000000000000 1000000000",
"output": "-1"
},
{
"input": "499999998500000001 1000000000",
"output": "999955279"
},
{
"input": "49... | 1,676,219,015 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED | TESTS | 3 | 400 | 0 | n,k = map(int,input().split())
ans = 0
i=k
while n>0 and i>0:
if i<=n:
ans+=1
n-=i
if n==0:
break
n+=1
i-=1
else:
i=n
print(ans if n==0 else -1)
| Title: Pipeline
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Vova, the Ultimate Thule new shaman, wants to build a pipeline. As there are exactly *n* houses in Ultimate Thule, Vova wants the city to have exactly *n* pipes, each such pipe should be connected to the water supply. A pipe c... | ```python
n,k = map(int,input().split())
ans = 0
i=k
while n>0 and i>0:
if i<=n:
ans+=1
n-=i
if n==0:
break
n+=1
i-=1
else:
i=n
print(ans if n==0 else -1)
``` | 0 | |
230 | B | T-primes | PROGRAMMING | 1,300 | [
"binary search",
"implementation",
"math",
"number theory"
] | null | null | We know that prime numbers are positive integers that have exactly two distinct positive divisors. Similarly, we'll call a positive integer *t* Т-prime, if *t* has exactly three distinct positive divisors.
You are given an array of *n* positive integers. For each of them determine whether it is Т-prime or not. | The first line contains a single positive integer, *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105), showing how many numbers are in the array. The next line contains *n* space-separated integers *x**i* (1<=≤<=*x**i*<=≤<=1012).
Please, do not use the %lld specifier to read or write 64-bit integers in С++. It is advised to use the cin, cout st... | Print *n* lines: the *i*-th line should contain "YES" (without the quotes), if number *x**i* is Т-prime, and "NO" (without the quotes), if it isn't. | [
"3\n4 5 6\n"
] | [
"YES\nNO\nNO\n"
] | The given test has three numbers. The first number 4 has exactly three divisors — 1, 2 and 4, thus the answer for this number is "YES". The second number 5 has two divisors (1 and 5), and the third number 6 has four divisors (1, 2, 3, 6), hence the answer for them is "NO". | 500 | [
{
"input": "3\n4 5 6",
"output": "YES\nNO\nNO"
},
{
"input": "2\n48 49",
"output": "NO\nYES"
},
{
"input": "10\n10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1",
"output": "NO\nYES\nNO\nNO\nNO\nNO\nYES\nNO\nNO\nNO"
},
{
"input": "1\n36",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "1\n999966000289",
"... | 1,697,023,202 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED | TESTS | 35 | 2,000 | 14,336,000 | import math
cache = {}
def prime(x):
if x in cache:
return cache[x]
for i in range(2, int(math.sqrt(x)) + 1):
if x % i == 0:
cache[x] = False
return False
cache[x] = True
return True
def main():
n = int(input())
a = [in... | Title: T-primes
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
We know that prime numbers are positive integers that have exactly two distinct positive divisors. Similarly, we'll call a positive integer *t* Т-prime, if *t* has exactly three distinct positive divisors.
You are given an ar... | ```python
import math
cache = {}
def prime(x):
if x in cache:
return cache[x]
for i in range(2, int(math.sqrt(x)) + 1):
if x % i == 0:
cache[x] = False
return False
cache[x] = True
return True
def main():
n = int(input())
... | 0 | |
910 | A | The Way to Home | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"dfs and similar",
"dp",
"greedy",
"implementation"
] | null | null | A frog lives on the axis *Ox* and needs to reach home which is in the point *n*. She starts from the point 1. The frog can jump to the right at a distance not more than *d*. So, after she jumped from the point *x* she can reach the point *x*<=+<=*a*, where *a* is an integer from 1 to *d*.
For each point from 1 to *n* ... | The first line contains two integers *n* and *d* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100, 1<=≤<=*d*<=≤<=*n*<=-<=1) — the point, which the frog wants to reach, and the maximal length of the frog jump.
The second line contains a string *s* of length *n*, consisting of zeros and ones. If a character of the string *s* equals to zero, then in ... | If the frog can not reach the home, print -1.
In the other case, print the minimal number of jumps that the frog needs to reach the home which is in the point *n* from the point 1. | [
"8 4\n10010101\n",
"4 2\n1001\n",
"8 4\n11100101\n",
"12 3\n101111100101\n"
] | [
"2\n",
"-1\n",
"3\n",
"4\n"
] | In the first example the from can reach home in two jumps: the first jump from the point 1 to the point 4 (the length of the jump is three), and the second jump from the point 4 to the point 8 (the length of the jump is four).
In the second example the frog can not reach home, because to make it she need to jump on a ... | 500 | [
{
"input": "8 4\n10010101",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "4 2\n1001",
"output": "-1"
},
{
"input": "8 4\n11100101",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "12 3\n101111100101",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "5 4\n11011",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "5 4\n10001",
... | 1,642,660,962 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 63 | 62 | 0 | n,d = map(int,input().split())
s = input()
dp = [100000]*n
dp[0] = 0
for i in range(n):
if s[i] == '1':
for j in range(max(0,i-d),i):
dp[i] = min(dp[i],dp[j]+1)
print([-1,dp[n-1]][dp[n-1]!=100000])
| Title: The Way to Home
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
A frog lives on the axis *Ox* and needs to reach home which is in the point *n*. She starts from the point 1. The frog can jump to the right at a distance not more than *d*. So, after she jumped from the point *x* she c... | ```python
n,d = map(int,input().split())
s = input()
dp = [100000]*n
dp[0] = 0
for i in range(n):
if s[i] == '1':
for j in range(max(0,i-d),i):
dp[i] = min(dp[i],dp[j]+1)
print([-1,dp[n-1]][dp[n-1]!=100000])
``` | 3 | |
454 | B | Little Pony and Sort by Shift | PROGRAMMING | 1,200 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | One day, Twilight Sparkle is interested in how to sort a sequence of integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* in non-decreasing order. Being a young unicorn, the only operation she can perform is a unit shift. That is, she can move the last element of the sequence to its beginning:
Help Twilight Sparkle to calculate: what ... | The first line contains an integer *n* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105). The second line contains *n* integer numbers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=105). | If it's impossible to sort the sequence output -1. Otherwise output the minimum number of operations Twilight Sparkle needs to sort it. | [
"2\n2 1\n",
"3\n1 3 2\n",
"2\n1 2\n"
] | [
"1\n",
"-1\n",
"0\n"
] | none | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "2\n2 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "3\n1 3 2",
"output": "-1"
},
{
"input": "2\n1 2",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "6\n3 4 5 6 3 2",
"output": "-1"
},
{
"input": "3\n1 2 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "5\n1 1 2 1 1",
"output": "2"
}... | 1,603,455,594 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 4 | 202 | 8,396,800 | n,a=int(input()),list(map(int,input().split()))
k=sorted(a)
a=" ".join(map(str,a))
k=" ".join(map(str,k))
a+=" "+a
if k in a:q=a.index(k);q-=a[:q].count(" ")
print(-1if k not in a else 0if q==0else n-q) | Title: Little Pony and Sort by Shift
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
One day, Twilight Sparkle is interested in how to sort a sequence of integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* in non-decreasing order. Being a young unicorn, the only operation she can perform is a unit shift. ... | ```python
n,a=int(input()),list(map(int,input().split()))
k=sorted(a)
a=" ".join(map(str,a))
k=" ".join(map(str,k))
a+=" "+a
if k in a:q=a.index(k);q-=a[:q].count(" ")
print(-1if k not in a else 0if q==0else n-q)
``` | 0 | |
25 | A | IQ test | PROGRAMMING | 1,300 | [
"brute force"
] | A. IQ test | 2 | 256 | Bob is preparing to pass IQ test. The most frequent task in this test is to find out which one of the given *n* numbers differs from the others. Bob observed that one number usually differs from the others in evenness. Help Bob — to check his answers, he needs a program that among the given *n* numbers finds one that i... | The first line contains integer *n* (3<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — amount of numbers in the task. The second line contains *n* space-separated natural numbers, not exceeding 100. It is guaranteed, that exactly one of these numbers differs from the others in evenness. | Output index of number that differs from the others in evenness. Numbers are numbered from 1 in the input order. | [
"5\n2 4 7 8 10\n",
"4\n1 2 1 1\n"
] | [
"3\n",
"2\n"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "5\n2 4 7 8 10",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "4\n1 2 1 1",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "3\n1 2 2",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "3\n100 99 100",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "3\n5 3 2",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "4\n43 28 1 91",
"output"... | 1,580,196,855 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 32 | 248 | 307,200 | n = int(input())
arr = list(map(int, input().split()))
chet = 0
nechet = 0
answer = 0
if arr[0] % 2 == 0:
chet += 1
else:
nechet += 1
if arr[1] % 2 == 0:
chet += 1
else:
nechet += 1
if arr[2] % 2 == 0:
chet += 1
else:
nechet += 1
if chet > nechet:
for i in range(n):
... | Title: IQ test
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
Bob is preparing to pass IQ test. The most frequent task in this test is to find out which one of the given *n* numbers differs from the others. Bob observed that one number usually differs from the others in evenness. Help Bob — t... | ```python
n = int(input())
arr = list(map(int, input().split()))
chet = 0
nechet = 0
answer = 0
if arr[0] % 2 == 0:
chet += 1
else:
nechet += 1
if arr[1] % 2 == 0:
chet += 1
else:
nechet += 1
if arr[2] % 2 == 0:
chet += 1
else:
nechet += 1
if chet > nechet:
for i in range(n... | 3.937428 |
463 | C | Gargari and Bishops | PROGRAMMING | 1,900 | [
"greedy",
"hashing",
"implementation"
] | null | null | Gargari is jealous that his friend Caisa won the game from the previous problem. He wants to prove that he is a genius.
He has a *n*<=×<=*n* chessboard. Each cell of the chessboard has a number written on it. Gargari wants to place two bishops on the chessboard in such a way that there is no cell that is attacked by b... | The first line contains a single integer *n* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=2000). Each of the next *n* lines contains *n* integers *a**ij* (0<=≤<=*a**ij*<=≤<=109) — description of the chessboard. | On the first line print the maximal number of dollars Gargari will get. On the next line print four integers: *x*1,<=*y*1,<=*x*2,<=*y*2 (1<=≤<=*x*1,<=*y*1,<=*x*2,<=*y*2<=≤<=*n*), where *x**i* is the number of the row where the *i*-th bishop should be placed, *y**i* is the number of the column where the *i*-th bishop sh... | [
"4\n1 1 1 1\n2 1 1 0\n1 1 1 0\n1 0 0 1\n"
] | [
"12\n2 2 3 2\n"
] | none | 1,500 | [
{
"input": "4\n1 1 1 1\n2 1 1 0\n1 1 1 0\n1 0 0 1",
"output": "12\n2 2 3 2"
},
{
"input": "10\n48 43 75 80 32 30 65 31 18 91\n99 5 12 43 26 90 54 91 4 88\n8 87 68 95 73 37 53 46 53 90\n50 1 85 24 32 16 5 48 98 74\n38 49 78 2 91 3 43 96 93 46\n35 100 84 2 94 56 90 98 54 43\n88 3 95 72 78 78 87 82 25 ... | 1,666,508,221 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED | TESTS | 6 | 3,000 | 82,022,400 | n = int(input())
grid = []
for _ in range(n):
grid.append(list(map(int, input().split())))
r, c = len(grid), len(grid[0])
new = [[0] * c for _ in range(r)]
def f(row, col):
tot = grid[row][col]
i,j = row,col
while -1<i<r and -1<j<c:
i+=1
j+=1
if -1<i<r and -1<... | Title: Gargari and Bishops
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Gargari is jealous that his friend Caisa won the game from the previous problem. He wants to prove that he is a genius.
He has a *n*<=×<=*n* chessboard. Each cell of the chessboard has a number written on it. Garga... | ```python
n = int(input())
grid = []
for _ in range(n):
grid.append(list(map(int, input().split())))
r, c = len(grid), len(grid[0])
new = [[0] * c for _ in range(r)]
def f(row, col):
tot = grid[row][col]
i,j = row,col
while -1<i<r and -1<j<c:
i+=1
j+=1
if -1<i... | 0 | |
246 | D | Colorful Graph | PROGRAMMING | 1,600 | [
"brute force",
"dfs and similar",
"graphs"
] | null | null | You've got an undirected graph, consisting of *n* vertices and *m* edges. We will consider the graph's vertices numbered with integers from 1 to *n*. Each vertex of the graph has a color. The color of the *i*-th vertex is an integer *c**i*.
Let's consider all vertices of the graph, that are painted some color *k*. Let... | The first line contains two space-separated integers *n*,<=*m* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=105) — the number of vertices end edges of the graph, correspondingly. The second line contains a sequence of integers *c*1,<=*c*2,<=...,<=*c**n* (1<=≤<=*c**i*<=≤<=105) — the colors of the graph vertices. The numbers on the line are sep... | Print the number of the color which has the set of neighbours with the maximum cardinality. It there are multiple optimal colors, print the color with the minimum number. Please note, that you want to find such color, that the graph has at least one vertex with such color. | [
"6 6\n1 1 2 3 5 8\n1 2\n3 2\n1 4\n4 3\n4 5\n4 6\n",
"5 6\n4 2 5 2 4\n1 2\n2 3\n3 1\n5 3\n5 4\n3 4\n"
] | [
"3\n",
"2\n"
] | none | 2,000 | [
{
"input": "6 6\n1 1 2 3 5 8\n1 2\n3 2\n1 4\n4 3\n4 5\n4 6",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "5 6\n4 2 5 2 4\n1 2\n2 3\n3 1\n5 3\n5 4\n3 4",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "3 1\n13 13 4\n1 2",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "2 1\n500 300\n1 2",
"output": "300"
},
{
"input":... | 1,673,336,874 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | RUNTIME_ERROR | TESTS | 2 | 154 | 2,764,800 | import sys
input = sys.stdin.readline
from collections import defaultdict
n, m = map(int, input().split())
w = [0] + list(map(int, input().split()))
d = [[] for i in range(n+1)]
for i in range(m):
a, b = map(int, input().split())
d[a].append(b)
d[b].append(a)
q = defaultdict(set)
for i in range... | Title: Colorful Graph
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
You've got an undirected graph, consisting of *n* vertices and *m* edges. We will consider the graph's vertices numbered with integers from 1 to *n*. Each vertex of the graph has a color. The color of the *i*-th vertex i... | ```python
import sys
input = sys.stdin.readline
from collections import defaultdict
n, m = map(int, input().split())
w = [0] + list(map(int, input().split()))
d = [[] for i in range(n+1)]
for i in range(m):
a, b = map(int, input().split())
d[a].append(b)
d[b].append(a)
q = defaultdict(set)
for ... | -1 | |
592 | A | PawnChess | PROGRAMMING | 1,200 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Galois is one of the strongest chess players of Byteforces. He has even invented a new variant of chess, which he named «PawnChess».
This new game is played on a board consisting of 8 rows and 8 columns. At the beginning of every game some black and white pawns are placed on the board. The number of black pawns placed... | The input consists of the board description given in eight lines, each line contains eight characters. Character 'B' is used to denote a black pawn, and character 'W' represents a white pawn. Empty cell is marked with '.'.
It's guaranteed that there will not be white pawns on the first row neither black pawns on the ... | Print 'A' if player A wins the game on the given board, and 'B' if player B will claim the victory. Again, it's guaranteed that there will always be a winner on the given board. | [
"........\n........\n.B....B.\n....W...\n........\n..W.....\n........\n........\n",
"..B.....\n..W.....\n......B.\n........\n.....W..\n......B.\n........\n........\n"
] | [
"A\n",
"B\n"
] | In the first sample player A is able to complete his goal in 3 steps by always moving a pawn initially located at (4, 5). Player B needs at least 5 steps for any of his pawns to reach the row 8. Hence, player A will be the winner. | 500 | [
{
"input": ".BB.B.B.\nB..B..B.\n.B.BB...\nBB.....B\nBBB....B\nB..BB...\nBB.B...B\n....WWW.",
"output": "B"
},
{
"input": "B.B.BB.B\nW.WWW.WW\n.WWWWW.W\nW.BB.WBW\n.W..BBWB\nBB.WWBBB\n.W.W.WWB\nWWW..WW.",
"output": "A"
},
{
"input": "BB..BB..\nBW.W.W.B\n..B.....\n.....BB.\n.B..B..B\n......... | 1,472,598,868 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 56 | 77 | 0 | R=range
m=['' for i in R(8)]
for _ in R(8):
v=input()
for j in R(8):m[j]+=v[j]
a=b=9
for s in m:
x=[s[::-1].find('B'),s[::-1].find('W'),s.find('W'),s.find('B')]
for i in 0,1,2,3:x[i]=[x[i],9][x[i]<0]
if x[0]<x[1]:b=min(b,x[0])
if x[2]<x[3]:a=min(a,x[2])
print('AB'[b<a]) | Title: PawnChess
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Galois is one of the strongest chess players of Byteforces. He has even invented a new variant of chess, which he named «PawnChess».
This new game is played on a board consisting of 8 rows and 8 columns. At the beginning of ... | ```python
R=range
m=['' for i in R(8)]
for _ in R(8):
v=input()
for j in R(8):m[j]+=v[j]
a=b=9
for s in m:
x=[s[::-1].find('B'),s[::-1].find('W'),s.find('W'),s.find('B')]
for i in 0,1,2,3:x[i]=[x[i],9][x[i]<0]
if x[0]<x[1]:b=min(b,x[0])
if x[2]<x[3]:a=min(a,x[2])
print('AB'[b<a])
``` | 3 | |
136 | A | Presents | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Little Petya very much likes gifts. Recently he has received a new laptop as a New Year gift from his mother. He immediately decided to give it to somebody else as what can be more pleasant than giving somebody gifts. And on this occasion he organized a New Year party at his place and invited *n* his friends there.
If... | The first line contains one integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the quantity of friends Petya invited to the party. The second line contains *n* space-separated integers: the *i*-th number is *p**i* — the number of a friend who gave a gift to friend number *i*. It is guaranteed that each friend received exactly one gift.... | Print *n* space-separated integers: the *i*-th number should equal the number of the friend who gave a gift to friend number *i*. | [
"4\n2 3 4 1\n",
"3\n1 3 2\n",
"2\n1 2\n"
] | [
"4 1 2 3\n",
"1 3 2\n",
"1 2\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "4\n2 3 4 1",
"output": "4 1 2 3"
},
{
"input": "3\n1 3 2",
"output": "1 3 2"
},
{
"input": "2\n1 2",
"output": "1 2"
},
{
"input": "1\n1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "10\n1 3 2 6 4 5 7 9 8 10",
"output": "1 3 2 5 6 4 7 9 8 10"
},
{
"input"... | 1,694,944,453 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | OK | TESTS | 101 | 124 | 0 | n = int(input())
gift_givers = list(map(int, input().split()))
# Initialize a list to store the receivers
receivers = [0] * n
# Determine the gift givers and receivers
for i in range(n):
receivers[gift_givers[i] - 1] = i + 1
# Print the receivers
print(*receivers)
| Title: Presents
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Little Petya very much likes gifts. Recently he has received a new laptop as a New Year gift from his mother. He immediately decided to give it to somebody else as what can be more pleasant than giving somebody gifts. And on t... | ```python
n = int(input())
gift_givers = list(map(int, input().split()))
# Initialize a list to store the receivers
receivers = [0] * n
# Determine the gift givers and receivers
for i in range(n):
receivers[gift_givers[i] - 1] = i + 1
# Print the receivers
print(*receivers)
``` | 3 | |
41 | A | Translation | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation",
"strings"
] | A. Translation | 2 | 256 | The translation from the Berland language into the Birland language is not an easy task. Those languages are very similar: a berlandish word differs from a birlandish word with the same meaning a little: it is spelled (and pronounced) reversely. For example, a Berlandish word code corresponds to a Birlandish word edoc.... | The first line contains word *s*, the second line contains word *t*. The words consist of lowercase Latin letters. The input data do not consist unnecessary spaces. The words are not empty and their lengths do not exceed 100 symbols. | If the word *t* is a word *s*, written reversely, print YES, otherwise print NO. | [
"code\nedoc\n",
"abb\naba\n",
"code\ncode\n"
] | [
"YES\n",
"NO\n",
"NO\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "code\nedoc",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "abb\naba",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "code\ncode",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "abacaba\nabacaba",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "q\nq",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "asrgdfngfnmfgnhweratgjkk... | 1,634,416,822 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 40 | 92 | 0 | s=input()
t=input()
count=0
if len(s)==len(t):
for i in range(len(s)):
if s[i] == t[-1-i]:
count+=1
if count == len(s):
print("YES")
else:
print("NO")
| Title: Translation
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
The translation from the Berland language into the Birland language is not an easy task. Those languages are very similar: a berlandish word differs from a birlandish word with the same meaning a little: it is spelled (and pron... | ```python
s=input()
t=input()
count=0
if len(s)==len(t):
for i in range(len(s)):
if s[i] == t[-1-i]:
count+=1
if count == len(s):
print("YES")
else:
print("NO")
``` | 3.977 |
9 | B | Running Student | PROGRAMMING | 1,200 | [
"brute force",
"geometry",
"implementation"
] | B. Running Student | 1 | 64 | And again a misfortune fell on Poor Student. He is being late for an exam.
Having rushed to a bus stop that is in point (0,<=0), he got on a minibus and they drove along a straight line, parallel to axis *OX*, in the direction of increasing *x*.
Poor Student knows the following:
- during one run the minibus makes ... | The first line contains three integer numbers: 2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100, 1<=≤<=*v**b*,<=*v**s*<=≤<=1000. The second line contains *n* non-negative integers in ascending order: coordinates *x**i* of the bus stop with index *i*. It is guaranteed that *x*1 equals to zero, and *x**n*<=≤<=105. The third line contains the coordinat... | In the only line output the answer to the problem — index of the optimum bus stop. | [
"4 5 2\n0 2 4 6\n4 1\n",
"2 1 1\n0 100000\n100000 100000\n"
] | [
"3",
"2"
] | As you know, students are a special sort of people, and minibuses usually do not hurry. That's why you should not be surprised, if Student's speed is higher than the speed of the minibus. | 0 | [
{
"input": "4 5 2\n0 2 4 6\n4 1",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "2 1 1\n0 100000\n100000 100000",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "6 5 1\n0 1 2 3 4 5\n0 0",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "4 100 10\n0 118 121 178\n220 220",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "4 3 3\n0 6 8 10\n7 -... | 1,593,841,068 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 22 | 374 | 409,600 | inp = list(map(int,input().split()))
n=inp[0]
vb=inp[1]
vs=inp[2]
inp = list(map(int,input().split()))
from collections import Counter
c=Counter([])
for i in range(len(inp)):
c[inp[i]]=i+1
inp=inp[1:]
tar = list(map(int,input().split()))
x=tar[0]
y=tar[1]
inp.sort(key=lambda t:t/vb+(pow((x-t)**2+y**2,... | Title: Running Student
Time Limit: 1 seconds
Memory Limit: 64 megabytes
Problem Description:
And again a misfortune fell on Poor Student. He is being late for an exam.
Having rushed to a bus stop that is in point (0,<=0), he got on a minibus and they drove along a straight line, parallel to axis *OX*, in the direct... | ```python
inp = list(map(int,input().split()))
n=inp[0]
vb=inp[1]
vs=inp[2]
inp = list(map(int,input().split()))
from collections import Counter
c=Counter([])
for i in range(len(inp)):
c[inp[i]]=i+1
inp=inp[1:]
tar = list(map(int,input().split()))
x=tar[0]
y=tar[1]
inp.sort(key=lambda t:t/vb+(pow((x-t... | 0 |
632 | C | The Smallest String Concatenation | PROGRAMMING | 1,700 | [
"sortings",
"strings"
] | null | null | You're given a list of *n* strings *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n*. You'd like to concatenate them together in some order such that the resulting string would be lexicographically smallest.
Given the list of strings, output the lexicographically smallest concatenation. | The first line contains integer *n* — the number of strings (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=5·104).
Each of the next *n* lines contains one string *a**i* (1<=≤<=|*a**i*|<=≤<=50) consisting of only lowercase English letters. The sum of string lengths will not exceed 5·104. | Print the only string *a* — the lexicographically smallest string concatenation. | [
"4\nabba\nabacaba\nbcd\ner\n",
"5\nx\nxx\nxxa\nxxaa\nxxaaa\n",
"3\nc\ncb\ncba\n"
] | [
"abacabaabbabcder\n",
"xxaaaxxaaxxaxxx\n",
"cbacbc\n"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "4\nabba\nabacaba\nbcd\ner",
"output": "abacabaabbabcder"
},
{
"input": "5\nx\nxx\nxxa\nxxaa\nxxaaa",
"output": "xxaaaxxaaxxaxxx"
},
{
"input": "3\nc\ncb\ncba",
"output": "cbacbc"
},
{
"input": "10\naba\nabaaca\naba\nacaaaabbac\nabaacac\nb\ncabbcccaab\nbaacbb\nbcab... | 1,630,513,262 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED | TESTS | 7 | 3,000 | 7,168,000 | def anusha(a, iy):
for i in range(0,iy):
for j in range(i+1,iy):
if(a[i]+a[j]>a[j]+a[i]):
s=a[i]
a[i]=a[j]
a[j]=s
ans = ""
for i in range( iy):
ans += a[i]
print(ans)
iy=int(input())
a=[]
for i in range(iy):
a.append(input... | Title: The Smallest String Concatenation
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
You're given a list of *n* strings *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n*. You'd like to concatenate them together in some order such that the resulting string would be lexicographically smallest.
Given the list ... | ```python
def anusha(a, iy):
for i in range(0,iy):
for j in range(i+1,iy):
if(a[i]+a[j]>a[j]+a[i]):
s=a[i]
a[i]=a[j]
a[j]=s
ans = ""
for i in range( iy):
ans += a[i]
print(ans)
iy=int(input())
a=[]
for i in range(iy):
a.ap... | 0 | |
1 | A | Theatre Square | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"math"
] | A. Theatre Square | 1 | 256 | Theatre Square in the capital city of Berland has a rectangular shape with the size *n*<=×<=*m* meters. On the occasion of the city's anniversary, a decision was taken to pave the Square with square granite flagstones. Each flagstone is of the size *a*<=×<=*a*.
What is the least number of flagstones needed to pave the... | The input contains three positive integer numbers in the first line: *n*,<=<=*m* and *a* (1<=≤<=<=*n*,<=*m*,<=*a*<=≤<=109). | Write the needed number of flagstones. | [
"6 6 4\n"
] | [
"4\n"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "6 6 4",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "1 1 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "2 1 1",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "1 2 1",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "2 2 1",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "2 1 2",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "1 1 3"... | 1,686,223,761 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 1 | 31 | 0 | n, m, a = map(int, input().split())
s1 = m * n
s2 = a * a
print(s1 - (s1 - s1 % s2)) | Title: Theatre Square
Time Limit: 1 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
Theatre Square in the capital city of Berland has a rectangular shape with the size *n*<=×<=*m* meters. On the occasion of the city's anniversary, a decision was taken to pave the Square with square granite flagstones. Each ... | ```python
n, m, a = map(int, input().split())
s1 = m * n
s2 = a * a
print(s1 - (s1 - s1 % s2))
``` | 0 |
106 | C | Buns | PROGRAMMING | 1,700 | [
"dp"
] | C. Buns | 2 | 256 | Lavrenty, a baker, is going to make several buns with stuffings and sell them.
Lavrenty has *n* grams of dough as well as *m* different stuffing types. The stuffing types are numerated from 1 to *m*. Lavrenty knows that he has *a**i* grams left of the *i*-th stuffing. It takes exactly *b**i* grams of stuffing *i* and ... | The first line contains 4 integers *n*, *m*, *c*0 and *d*0 (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000, 1<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=10, 1<=≤<=*c*0,<=*d*0<=≤<=100). Each of the following *m* lines contains 4 integers. The *i*-th line contains numbers *a**i*, *b**i*, *c**i* and *d**i* (1<=≤<=*a**i*,<=*b**i*,<=*c**i*,<=*d**i*<=≤<=100). | Print the only number — the maximum number of tugriks Lavrenty can earn. | [
"10 2 2 1\n7 3 2 100\n12 3 1 10\n",
"100 1 25 50\n15 5 20 10\n"
] | [
"241",
"200"
] | To get the maximum number of tugriks in the first sample, you need to cook 2 buns with stuffing 1, 4 buns with stuffing 2 and a bun without any stuffing.
In the second sample Lavrenty should cook 4 buns without stuffings. | 1,500 | [
{
"input": "10 2 2 1\n7 3 2 100\n12 3 1 10",
"output": "241"
},
{
"input": "100 1 25 50\n15 5 20 10",
"output": "200"
},
{
"input": "10 1 5 2\n100 1 2 3",
"output": "15"
},
{
"input": "10 1 5 11\n3 1 3 8",
"output": "24"
},
{
"input": "10 2 11 5\n100 1 3 10\n100 1... | 1,626,963,195 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | OK | TESTS | 55 | 310 | 22,835,200 | def main(arr,n,doug,cost):
dp=[[0 for i in range(len(arr)+1)] for j in range(n+1)]
dp[0]=[0 for i in range(len(arr)+1)]
for i in range(1,n+1):
for j in range(0,len(arr)+1):
if j==0:
a,b,c,d=50000000,1,doug,cost
else:
a,b,c,d=arr[j-1]
for k in range(0,mi... | Title: Buns
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
Lavrenty, a baker, is going to make several buns with stuffings and sell them.
Lavrenty has *n* grams of dough as well as *m* different stuffing types. The stuffing types are numerated from 1 to *m*. Lavrenty knows that he has *a**i*... | ```python
def main(arr,n,doug,cost):
dp=[[0 for i in range(len(arr)+1)] for j in range(n+1)]
dp[0]=[0 for i in range(len(arr)+1)]
for i in range(1,n+1):
for j in range(0,len(arr)+1):
if j==0:
a,b,c,d=50000000,1,doug,cost
else:
a,b,c,d=arr[j-1]
for k in ... | 3.879966 |
620 | A | Professor GukiZ's Robot | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation",
"math"
] | null | null | Professor GukiZ makes a new robot. The robot are in the point with coordinates (*x*1,<=*y*1) and should go to the point (*x*2,<=*y*2). In a single step the robot can change any of its coordinates (maybe both of them) by one (decrease or increase). So the robot can move in one of the 8 directions. Find the minimal numbe... | The first line contains two integers *x*1,<=*y*1 (<=-<=109<=≤<=*x*1,<=*y*1<=≤<=109) — the start position of the robot.
The second line contains two integers *x*2,<=*y*2 (<=-<=109<=≤<=*x*2,<=*y*2<=≤<=109) — the finish position of the robot. | Print the only integer *d* — the minimal number of steps to get the finish position. | [
"0 0\n4 5\n",
"3 4\n6 1\n"
] | [
"5\n",
"3\n"
] | In the first example robot should increase both of its coordinates by one four times, so it will be in position (4, 4). After that robot should simply increase its *y* coordinate and get the finish position.
In the second example robot should simultaneously increase *x* coordinate and decrease *y* coordinate by one th... | 0 | [
{
"input": "0 0\n4 5",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "3 4\n6 1",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "0 0\n4 6",
"output": "6"
},
{
"input": "1 1\n-3 -5",
"output": "6"
},
{
"input": "-1 -1\n-10 100",
"output": "101"
},
{
"input": "1 -1\n100 -100",
"output":... | 1,453,562,213 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 75 | 62 | 0 | x1, y1 = [int(t) for t in input().split()]
x2, y2 = [int(t) for t in input().split()]
dx = abs(x2 - x1)
dy = abs(y2 - y1)
print(max(dx, dy))
| Title: Professor GukiZ's Robot
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Professor GukiZ makes a new robot. The robot are in the point with coordinates (*x*1,<=*y*1) and should go to the point (*x*2,<=*y*2). In a single step the robot can change any of its coordinates (maybe both of ... | ```python
x1, y1 = [int(t) for t in input().split()]
x2, y2 = [int(t) for t in input().split()]
dx = abs(x2 - x1)
dy = abs(y2 - y1)
print(max(dx, dy))
``` | 3 | |
330 | B | Road Construction | PROGRAMMING | 1,300 | [
"constructive algorithms",
"graphs"
] | null | null | A country has *n* cities. Initially, there is no road in the country. One day, the king decides to construct some roads connecting pairs of cities. Roads can be traversed either way. He wants those roads to be constructed in such a way that it is possible to go from each city to any other city by traversing at most two... | The first line consists of two integers *n* and *m* .
Then *m* lines follow, each consisting of two integers *a**i* and *b**i* (1<=≤<=*a**i*,<=*b**i*<=≤<=*n*, *a**i*<=≠<=*b**i*), which means that it is not possible to construct a road connecting cities *a**i* and *b**i*. Consider the cities are numbered from 1 to *n*.... | You should print an integer *s*: the minimum number of roads that should be constructed, in the first line. Then *s* lines should follow, each consisting of two integers *a**i* and *b**i* (1<=≤<=*a**i*,<=*b**i*<=≤<=*n*,<=*a**i*<=≠<=*b**i*), which means that a road should be constructed between cities *a**i* and *b**i*.... | [
"4 1\n1 3\n"
] | [
"3\n1 2\n4 2\n2 3\n"
] | This is one possible solution of the example:
These are examples of wrong solutions: | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "4 1\n1 3",
"output": "3\n1 2\n4 2\n2 3"
},
{
"input": "1000 0",
"output": "999\n1 2\n1 3\n1 4\n1 5\n1 6\n1 7\n1 8\n1 9\n1 10\n1 11\n1 12\n1 13\n1 14\n1 15\n1 16\n1 17\n1 18\n1 19\n1 20\n1 21\n1 22\n1 23\n1 24\n1 25\n1 26\n1 27\n1 28\n1 29\n1 30\n1 31\n1 32\n1 33\n1 34\n1 35\n1 36\n1 ... | 1,683,653,143 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 43 | 92 | 102,400 | n,m=map(int,input().split());l=[0]*n
for i in range(m) :a,b=map(int,input().split());l[a-1]=1;l[b-1]=1
V=l.index(0)+1;print(n-1)
for i in range(1,n+1) :
if i!=V :
print(V,i)
| Title: Road Construction
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
A country has *n* cities. Initially, there is no road in the country. One day, the king decides to construct some roads connecting pairs of cities. Roads can be traversed either way. He wants those roads to be constru... | ```python
n,m=map(int,input().split());l=[0]*n
for i in range(m) :a,b=map(int,input().split());l[a-1]=1;l[b-1]=1
V=l.index(0)+1;print(n-1)
for i in range(1,n+1) :
if i!=V :
print(V,i)
``` | 3 | |
122 | A | Lucky Division | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"brute force",
"number theory"
] | null | null | Petya loves lucky numbers. Everybody knows that lucky numbers are positive integers whose decimal representation contains only the lucky digits 4 and 7. For example, numbers 47, 744, 4 are lucky and 5, 17, 467 are not.
Petya calls a number almost lucky if it could be evenly divided by some lucky number. Help him find ... | The single line contains an integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000) — the number that needs to be checked. | In the only line print "YES" (without the quotes), if number *n* is almost lucky. Otherwise, print "NO" (without the quotes). | [
"47\n",
"16\n",
"78\n"
] | [
"YES\n",
"YES\n",
"NO\n"
] | Note that all lucky numbers are almost lucky as any number is evenly divisible by itself.
In the first sample 47 is a lucky number. In the second sample 16 is divisible by 4. | 500 | [
{
"input": "47",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "16",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "78",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "48",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "100",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "107",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "77",
"ou... | 1,691,875,344 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | OK | TESTS | 36 | 124 | 0 | def check(x):
a=True
while x>0:
if x%10!=4 and x%10!=7:
a=False
break
x//=10
return a
n=int(input())
b=False
for i in range(4,n+1):
if n%i==0 and check(i):
b=True
break
if b:
print('YES')
else:
print('NO') | Title: Lucky Division
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Petya loves lucky numbers. Everybody knows that lucky numbers are positive integers whose decimal representation contains only the lucky digits 4 and 7. For example, numbers 47, 744, 4 are lucky and 5, 17, 467 are not.
... | ```python
def check(x):
a=True
while x>0:
if x%10!=4 and x%10!=7:
a=False
break
x//=10
return a
n=int(input())
b=False
for i in range(4,n+1):
if n%i==0 and check(i):
b=True
break
if b:
print('YES')
else:
print('NO')
``` | 3 | |
727 | A | Transformation: from A to B | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"brute force",
"dfs and similar",
"math"
] | null | null | Vasily has a number *a*, which he wants to turn into a number *b*. For this purpose, he can do two types of operations:
- multiply the current number by 2 (that is, replace the number *x* by 2·*x*); - append the digit 1 to the right of current number (that is, replace the number *x* by 10·*x*<=+<=1).
You need to he... | The first line contains two positive integers *a* and *b* (1<=≤<=*a*<=<<=*b*<=≤<=109) — the number which Vasily has and the number he wants to have. | If there is no way to get *b* from *a*, print "NO" (without quotes).
Otherwise print three lines. On the first line print "YES" (without quotes). The second line should contain single integer *k* — the length of the transformation sequence. On the third line print the sequence of transformations *x*1,<=*x*2,<=...,<=*x... | [
"2 162\n",
"4 42\n",
"100 40021\n"
] | [
"YES\n5\n2 4 8 81 162 \n",
"NO\n",
"YES\n5\n100 200 2001 4002 40021 \n"
] | none | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "2 162",
"output": "YES\n5\n2 4 8 81 162 "
},
{
"input": "4 42",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "100 40021",
"output": "YES\n5\n100 200 2001 4002 40021 "
},
{
"input": "1 111111111",
"output": "YES\n9\n1 11 111 1111 11111 111111 1111111 11111111 111111111 "
},
... | 1,690,485,618 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 62 | 0 | print("_RANDOM_GUESS_1690485617.9624102")# 1690485617.9624302 | Title: Transformation: from A to B
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Vasily has a number *a*, which he wants to turn into a number *b*. For this purpose, he can do two types of operations:
- multiply the current number by 2 (that is, replace the number *x* by 2·*x*); - app... | ```python
print("_RANDOM_GUESS_1690485617.9624102")# 1690485617.9624302
``` | 0 | |
600 | E | Lomsat gelral | PROGRAMMING | 2,300 | [
"data structures",
"dfs and similar",
"dsu",
"trees"
] | null | null | You are given a rooted tree with root in vertex 1. Each vertex is coloured in some colour.
Let's call colour *c* dominating in the subtree of vertex *v* if there are no other colours that appear in the subtree of vertex *v* more times than colour *c*. So it's possible that two or more colours will be dominating in the... | The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) — the number of vertices in the tree.
The second line contains *n* integers *c**i* (1<=≤<=*c**i*<=≤<=*n*), *c**i* — the colour of the *i*-th vertex.
Each of the next *n*<=-<=1 lines contains two integers *x**j*,<=*y**j* (1<=≤<=*x**j*,<=*y**j*<=≤<=*n*) — the edge... | Print *n* integers — the sums of dominating colours for each vertex. | [
"4\n1 2 3 4\n1 2\n2 3\n2 4\n",
"15\n1 2 3 1 2 3 3 1 1 3 2 2 1 2 3\n1 2\n1 3\n1 4\n1 14\n1 15\n2 5\n2 6\n2 7\n3 8\n3 9\n3 10\n4 11\n4 12\n4 13\n"
] | [
"10 9 3 4\n",
"6 5 4 3 2 3 3 1 1 3 2 2 1 2 3\n"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "4\n1 2 3 4\n1 2\n2 3\n2 4",
"output": "10 9 3 4"
},
{
"input": "15\n1 2 3 1 2 3 3 1 1 3 2 2 1 2 3\n1 2\n1 3\n1 4\n1 14\n1 15\n2 5\n2 6\n2 7\n3 8\n3 9\n3 10\n4 11\n4 12\n4 13",
"output": "6 5 4 3 2 3 3 1 1 3 2 2 1 2 3"
}
] | 1,629,389,229 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | OK | TESTS | 28 | 780 | 67,993,600 | import sys
from collections import Counter
n = int(input())
color = list(map(int, input().split()))
adj = [[] for _ in range(n)]
for _ in range(n-1):
u, v = map(int, sys.stdin.readline().split())
u -= 1
v -= 1
adj[u].append(v)
adj[v].append(u)
count = [Counter() for _ in range(n)... | Title: Lomsat gelral
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
You are given a rooted tree with root in vertex 1. Each vertex is coloured in some colour.
Let's call colour *c* dominating in the subtree of vertex *v* if there are no other colours that appear in the subtree of vertex ... | ```python
import sys
from collections import Counter
n = int(input())
color = list(map(int, input().split()))
adj = [[] for _ in range(n)]
for _ in range(n-1):
u, v = map(int, sys.stdin.readline().split())
u -= 1
v -= 1
adj[u].append(v)
adj[v].append(u)
count = [Counter() for _ i... | 3 | |
114 | A | Cifera | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"math"
] | null | null | When Petya went to school, he got interested in large numbers and what they were called in ancient times. For instance, he learned that the Russian word "tma" (which now means "too much to be counted") used to stand for a thousand and "tma tmyschaya" (which literally means "the tma of tmas") used to stand for a million... | The first input line contains integer number *k*, the second line contains integer number *l* (2<=≤<=*k*,<=*l*<=≤<=231<=-<=1). | You should print in the first line of the output "YES", if the number belongs to the set petriciumus cifera and otherwise print "NO". If the number belongs to the set, then print on the seconds line the only number — the importance of number *l*. | [
"5\n25\n",
"3\n8\n"
] | [
"YES\n1\n",
"NO\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "5\n25",
"output": "YES\n1"
},
{
"input": "3\n8",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "123\n123",
"output": "YES\n0"
},
{
"input": "99\n970300",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "1000\n6666666",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "59\n3571",
"output": "N... | 1,590,412,328 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 2 | 186 | 0 | k=int(input())
l=int(input())
ost=l
i=0
while ost%k==0:
ost=l/k
i+=1
if ost==k:
print('YES')
print(i)
break
elif ost<k:
break
if ost%k!=0:
print('NO') | Title: Cifera
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
When Petya went to school, he got interested in large numbers and what they were called in ancient times. For instance, he learned that the Russian word "tma" (which now means "too much to be counted") used to stand for a thousa... | ```python
k=int(input())
l=int(input())
ost=l
i=0
while ost%k==0:
ost=l/k
i+=1
if ost==k:
print('YES')
print(i)
break
elif ost<k:
break
if ost%k!=0:
print('NO')
``` | 0 | |
913 | A | Modular Exponentiation | PROGRAMMING | 900 | [
"implementation",
"math"
] | null | null | The following problem is well-known: given integers *n* and *m*, calculate
where 2*n*<==<=2·2·...·2 (*n* factors), and denotes the remainder of division of *x* by *y*.
You are asked to solve the "reverse" problem. Given integers *n* and *m*, calculate | The first line contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=108).
The second line contains a single integer *m* (1<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=108). | Output a single integer — the value of . | [
"4\n42\n",
"1\n58\n",
"98765432\n23456789\n"
] | [
"10\n",
"0\n",
"23456789\n"
] | In the first example, the remainder of division of 42 by 2<sup class="upper-index">4</sup> = 16 is equal to 10.
In the second example, 58 is divisible by 2<sup class="upper-index">1</sup> = 2 without remainder, and the answer is 0. | 500 | [
{
"input": "4\n42",
"output": "10"
},
{
"input": "1\n58",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "98765432\n23456789",
"output": "23456789"
},
{
"input": "8\n88127381",
"output": "149"
},
{
"input": "32\n92831989",
"output": "92831989"
},
{
"input": "92831989\n25... | 1,672,363,035 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | COMPILATION_ERROR | TESTS | 0 | 0 | 0 | def power(a, n):
if n == 0:
return 1
res = power(a * a, n // 2)
if n % 2:
res *= a
return res
a = float(input())
n = float(input())
print(power(a, n)) | Title: Modular Exponentiation
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
The following problem is well-known: given integers *n* and *m*, calculate
where 2*n*<==<=2·2·...·2 (*n* factors), and denotes the remainder of division of *x* by *y*.
You are asked to solve the "reverse" prob... | ```python
def power(a, n):
if n == 0:
return 1
res = power(a * a, n // 2)
if n % 2:
res *= a
return res
a = float(input())
n = float(input())
print(power(a, n))
``` | -1 | |
0 | none | none | none | 0 | [
"none"
] | null | null | Each New Year Timofey and his friends cut down a tree of *n* vertices and bring it home. After that they paint all the *n* its vertices, so that the *i*-th vertex gets color *c**i*.
Now it's time for Timofey birthday, and his mother asked him to remove the tree. Timofey removes the tree in the following way: he takes ... | The first line contains single integer *n* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) — the number of vertices in the tree.
Each of the next *n*<=-<=1 lines contains two integers *u* and *v* (1<=≤<=*u*,<=*v*<=≤<=*n*, *u*<=≠<=*v*), denoting there is an edge between vertices *u* and *v*. It is guaranteed that the given graph is a tree.
The n... | Print "NO" in a single line, if Timofey can't take the tree in such a way that it doesn't annoy him.
Otherwise print "YES" in the first line. In the second line print the index of the vertex which Timofey should take in hands. If there are multiple answers, print any of them. | [
"4\n1 2\n2 3\n3 4\n1 2 1 1\n",
"3\n1 2\n2 3\n1 2 3\n",
"4\n1 2\n2 3\n3 4\n1 2 1 2\n"
] | [
"YES\n2",
"YES\n2",
"NO"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "4\n1 2\n2 3\n3 4\n1 2 1 1",
"output": "YES\n2"
},
{
"input": "3\n1 2\n2 3\n1 2 3",
"output": "YES\n2"
},
{
"input": "4\n1 2\n2 3\n3 4\n1 2 1 2",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "3\n2 1\n2 3\n1 2 3",
"output": "YES\n2"
},
{
"input": "4\n1 2\n2 4\n4 3\n1 1 ... | 1,555,830,245 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 67 | 545 | 21,299,200 | N = int(input())
G = [[] for i in range(N)]
d = []
for i in range(N - 1):
a, b = map(int, input().split())
a, b = a - 1, b - 1
G[a].append(b)
G[b].append(a)
d.append((a, b))
C = list(map(int, input().split()))
num = 0
for i in range(N - 1):
if C[d[i][0]] != C[d[i][1]]:
num +... | Title: none
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Each New Year Timofey and his friends cut down a tree of *n* vertices and bring it home. After that they paint all the *n* its vertices, so that the *i*-th vertex gets color *c**i*.
Now it's time for Timofey birthday, and his mot... | ```python
N = int(input())
G = [[] for i in range(N)]
d = []
for i in range(N - 1):
a, b = map(int, input().split())
a, b = a - 1, b - 1
G[a].append(b)
G[b].append(a)
d.append((a, b))
C = list(map(int, input().split()))
num = 0
for i in range(N - 1):
if C[d[i][0]] != C[d[i][1]]:
... | 3 | |
1,003 | C | Intense Heat | PROGRAMMING | 1,300 | [
"brute force",
"implementation",
"math"
] | null | null | The heat during the last few days has been really intense. Scientists from all over the Berland study how the temperatures and weather change, and they claim that this summer is abnormally hot. But any scientific claim sounds a lot more reasonable if there are some numbers involved, so they have decided to actually cal... | The first line contains two integers $n$ and $k$ ($1 \le k \le n \le 5000$) — the number of days in the given period, and the minimum number of days in a segment we consider when calculating heat intensity value, respectively.
The second line contains $n$ integers $a_1$, $a_2$, ..., $a_n$ ($1 \le a_i \le 5000$) — the ... | Print one real number — the heat intensity value, i. e., the maximum of average temperatures over all segments of not less than $k$ consecutive days.
Your answer will be considered correct if the following condition holds: $|res - res_0| < 10^{-6}$, where $res$ is your answer, and $res_0$ is the answer given by the... | [
"4 3\n3 4 1 2\n"
] | [
"2.666666666666667\n"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "4 3\n3 4 1 2",
"output": "2.666666666666667"
},
{
"input": "5 1\n3 10 9 10 6",
"output": "10.000000000000000"
},
{
"input": "5 2\n7 3 3 1 8",
"output": "5.000000000000000"
},
{
"input": "5 3\n1 7 6 9 1",
"output": "7.333333333333333"
},
{
"input": "5 4... | 1,630,198,497 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 6 | 109 | 6,963,200 | n,k=map(int,input().split())
l=list(map(int,input().split()))
m=sum(l[:k]);ma=m/k
while k<=n:
for x in range(n-k):
m-=l[x];m+=l[x+k]
ma=max(ma,m/k)
k+=1
print(ma) | Title: Intense Heat
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
The heat during the last few days has been really intense. Scientists from all over the Berland study how the temperatures and weather change, and they claim that this summer is abnormally hot. But any scientific claim sou... | ```python
n,k=map(int,input().split())
l=list(map(int,input().split()))
m=sum(l[:k]);ma=m/k
while k<=n:
for x in range(n-k):
m-=l[x];m+=l[x+k]
ma=max(ma,m/k)
k+=1
print(ma)
``` | 0 | |
8 | A | Train and Peter | PROGRAMMING | 1,200 | [
"strings"
] | A. Train and Peter | 1 | 64 | Peter likes to travel by train. He likes it so much that on the train he falls asleep.
Once in summer Peter was going by train from city A to city B, and as usual, was sleeping. Then he woke up, started to look through the window and noticed that every railway station has a flag of a particular colour.
The boy start... | The input data contains three lines. The first line contains a non-empty string, whose length does not exceed 105, the string consists of lowercase Latin letters — the flags' colours at the stations on the way from A to B. On the way from B to A the train passes the same stations, but in reverse order.
The second lin... | Output one of the four words without inverted commas:
- «forward» — if Peter could see such sequences only on the way from A to B; - «backward» — if Peter could see such sequences on the way from B to A; - «both» — if Peter could see such sequences both on the way from A to B, and on the way from B to A; - «fanta... | [
"atob\na\nb\n",
"aaacaaa\naca\naa\n"
] | [
"forward\n",
"both\n"
] | It is assumed that the train moves all the time, so one flag cannot be seen twice. There are no flags at stations A and B. | 0 | [
{
"input": "atob\na\nb",
"output": "forward"
},
{
"input": "aaacaaa\naca\naa",
"output": "both"
},
{
"input": "aaa\naa\naa",
"output": "fantasy"
},
{
"input": "astalavista\nastla\nlavista",
"output": "fantasy"
},
{
"input": "abacabadabacaba\nabacaba\nabacaba",
... | 1,475,054,952 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 2 | 92 | 0 | s=input()
f1=input()
f2=input()
rs=s[::-1]
if f1 in s:
if f2 in s[s.index(f1):]:
if f1 in rs and f2 in rs[rs.index(f1):]:
print("both")
else:
print("forward")
elif f2 in s:
if f1 in s[s.index(f2):]:
print("backward")
else:
print("fantasy")
| Title: Train and Peter
Time Limit: 1 seconds
Memory Limit: 64 megabytes
Problem Description:
Peter likes to travel by train. He likes it so much that on the train he falls asleep.
Once in summer Peter was going by train from city A to city B, and as usual, was sleeping. Then he woke up, started to look through the... | ```python
s=input()
f1=input()
f2=input()
rs=s[::-1]
if f1 in s:
if f2 in s[s.index(f1):]:
if f1 in rs and f2 in rs[rs.index(f1):]:
print("both")
else:
print("forward")
elif f2 in s:
if f1 in s[s.index(f2):]:
print("backward")
else:
print("fa... | 0 |
779 | C | Dishonest Sellers | PROGRAMMING | 1,200 | [
"constructive algorithms",
"greedy",
"sortings"
] | null | null | Igor found out discounts in a shop and decided to buy *n* items. Discounts at the store will last for a week and Igor knows about each item that its price now is *a**i*, and after a week of discounts its price will be *b**i*.
Not all of sellers are honest, so now some products could be more expensive than after a week... | In the first line there are two positive integer numbers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=2·105, 0<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=*n*) — total number of items to buy and minimal number of items Igor wants to by right now.
The second line contains sequence of integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=104) — prices of items during d... | Print the minimal amount of money Igor will spend to buy all *n* items. Remember, he should buy at least *k* items right now. | [
"3 1\n5 4 6\n3 1 5\n",
"5 3\n3 4 7 10 3\n4 5 5 12 5\n"
] | [
"10\n",
"25\n"
] | In the first example Igor should buy item 3 paying 6. But items 1 and 2 he should buy after a week. He will pay 3 and 1 for them. So in total he will pay 6 + 3 + 1 = 10.
In the second example Igor should buy right now items 1, 2, 4 and 5, paying for them 3, 4, 10 and 3, respectively. Item 3 he should buy after a week ... | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "3 1\n5 4 6\n3 1 5",
"output": "10"
},
{
"input": "5 3\n3 4 7 10 3\n4 5 5 12 5",
"output": "25"
},
{
"input": "1 0\n9\n8",
"output": "8"
},
{
"input": "2 0\n4 10\n1 2",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "4 2\n19 5 17 13\n3 18 8 10",
"output": "29"
},
... | 1,674,653,783 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | RUNTIME_ERROR | TESTS | 2 | 31 | 0 | n, k = list(map(int, input().split()))
now = list(map(int, input().split()))
then = list(map(int, input().split()))
result = []
total = 0
i = 0
for n, t in zip(now, then):
delta = t - n
result.append([delta, i])
i += 1
result.sort()
while k:
cur_del = result[-1][0]
current = result.pop()
positi... | Title: Dishonest Sellers
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Igor found out discounts in a shop and decided to buy *n* items. Discounts at the store will last for a week and Igor knows about each item that its price now is *a**i*, and after a week of discounts its price will be... | ```python
n, k = list(map(int, input().split()))
now = list(map(int, input().split()))
then = list(map(int, input().split()))
result = []
total = 0
i = 0
for n, t in zip(now, then):
delta = t - n
result.append([delta, i])
i += 1
result.sort()
while k:
cur_del = result[-1][0]
current = result.pop()
... | -1 | |
734 | A | Anton and Danik | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation",
"strings"
] | null | null | Anton likes to play chess, and so does his friend Danik.
Once they have played *n* games in a row. For each game it's known who was the winner — Anton or Danik. None of the games ended with a tie.
Now Anton wonders, who won more games, he or Danik? Help him determine this. | The first line of the input contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100<=000) — the number of games played.
The second line contains a string *s*, consisting of *n* uppercase English letters 'A' and 'D' — the outcome of each of the games. The *i*-th character of the string is equal to 'A' if the Anton won the *i*... | If Anton won more games than Danik, print "Anton" (without quotes) in the only line of the output.
If Danik won more games than Anton, print "Danik" (without quotes) in the only line of the output.
If Anton and Danik won the same number of games, print "Friendship" (without quotes). | [
"6\nADAAAA\n",
"7\nDDDAADA\n",
"6\nDADADA\n"
] | [
"Anton\n",
"Danik\n",
"Friendship\n"
] | In the first sample, Anton won 6 games, while Danik — only 1. Hence, the answer is "Anton".
In the second sample, Anton won 3 games and Danik won 4 games, so the answer is "Danik".
In the third sample, both Anton and Danik won 3 games and the answer is "Friendship". | 500 | [
{
"input": "6\nADAAAA",
"output": "Anton"
},
{
"input": "7\nDDDAADA",
"output": "Danik"
},
{
"input": "6\nDADADA",
"output": "Friendship"
},
{
"input": "10\nDDDDADDADD",
"output": "Danik"
},
{
"input": "40\nAAAAAAAAADDAAAAAAAAAAADADDAAAAAAAAAAADAA",
"output": ... | 1,693,255,482 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 25 | 46 | 102,400 | # A. Anton and Danik
x = input()
y = input()
a=0
d=0
for i in y :
if (i=="A"):
a=a+1
else :
d=d+1
if a>d:
print("Anton")
elif d>a :
print("Danik")
else :
print("Friendship") | Title: Anton and Danik
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Anton likes to play chess, and so does his friend Danik.
Once they have played *n* games in a row. For each game it's known who was the winner — Anton or Danik. None of the games ended with a tie.
Now Anton wonders, w... | ```python
# A. Anton and Danik
x = input()
y = input()
a=0
d=0
for i in y :
if (i=="A"):
a=a+1
else :
d=d+1
if a>d:
print("Anton")
elif d>a :
print("Danik")
else :
print("Friendship")
``` | 3 | |
415 | B | Mashmokh and Tokens | PROGRAMMING | 1,500 | [
"binary search",
"greedy",
"implementation",
"math"
] | null | null | Bimokh is Mashmokh's boss. For the following *n* days he decided to pay to his workers in a new way. At the beginning of each day he will give each worker a certain amount of tokens. Then at the end of each day each worker can give some of his tokens back to get a certain amount of money. The worker can save the rest o... | The first line of input contains three space-separated integers *n*,<=*a*,<=*b* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105; 1<=≤<=*a*,<=*b*<=≤<=109). The second line of input contains *n* space-separated integers *x*1,<=*x*2,<=...,<=*x**n* (1<=≤<=*x**i*<=≤<=109). | Output *n* space-separated integers. The *i*-th of them is the number of tokens Mashmokh can save on the *i*-th day. | [
"5 1 4\n12 6 11 9 1\n",
"3 1 2\n1 2 3\n",
"1 1 1\n1\n"
] | [
"0 2 3 1 1 ",
"1 0 1 ",
"0 "
] | none | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "5 1 4\n12 6 11 9 1",
"output": "0 2 3 1 1 "
},
{
"input": "3 1 2\n1 2 3",
"output": "1 0 1 "
},
{
"input": "1 1 1\n1",
"output": "0 "
},
{
"input": "1 1 1000000000\n1000000000",
"output": "0 "
},
{
"input": "1 1 1000000000\n999999999",
"output": "9... | 1,397,644,339 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 3 | 155 | 5,734,400 | __author__ = 'Lipen'
def main():
n, a, b = map(int, input().split())
x = list(map(int, input().split()))
answer = list(map(lambda i: round(x[i]-x[i]//(b/a)*(b/a)), range(n)))
print(' '.join(map(str, answer)))
main() | Title: Mashmokh and Tokens
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Bimokh is Mashmokh's boss. For the following *n* days he decided to pay to his workers in a new way. At the beginning of each day he will give each worker a certain amount of tokens. Then at the end of each day each... | ```python
__author__ = 'Lipen'
def main():
n, a, b = map(int, input().split())
x = list(map(int, input().split()))
answer = list(map(lambda i: round(x[i]-x[i]//(b/a)*(b/a)), range(n)))
print(' '.join(map(str, answer)))
main()
``` | 0 | |
407 | A | Triangle | PROGRAMMING | 1,600 | [
"brute force",
"geometry",
"implementation",
"math"
] | null | null | There is a right triangle with legs of length *a* and *b*. Your task is to determine whether it is possible to locate the triangle on the plane in such a way that none of its sides is parallel to the coordinate axes. All the vertices must have integer coordinates. If there exists such a location, you have to output the... | The first line contains two integers *a*,<=*b* (1<=≤<=*a*,<=*b*<=≤<=1000), separated by a single space. | In the first line print either "YES" or "NO" (without the quotes) depending on whether the required location exists. If it does, print in the next three lines three pairs of integers — the coordinates of the triangle vertices, one pair per line. The coordinates must be integers, not exceeding 109 in their absolute valu... | [
"1 1\n",
"5 5\n",
"5 10\n"
] | [
"NO\n",
"YES\n2 1\n5 5\n-2 4\n",
"YES\n-10 4\n-2 -2\n1 2\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "1 1",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "5 5",
"output": "YES\n2 1\n5 5\n-2 4"
},
{
"input": "5 10",
"output": "YES\n-10 4\n-2 -2\n1 2"
},
{
"input": "2 2",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "5 6",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "5 11",
"output": "... | 1,630,398,515 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 1 | 46 | 6,963,200 | a,b=map(int,input().split())
r={(0,0)}
x,y=a*a,b*b
t=0
for i in range(1,a):
for j in range(1,a):
if i**2+j**2==x:
r.add((i,j))
t=1
break
if t:break
t=0
for i in range(1,b):
for j in range(1,b):
if i**2+j**2==y:
if (i,j)not in r: ... | Title: Triangle
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
There is a right triangle with legs of length *a* and *b*. Your task is to determine whether it is possible to locate the triangle on the plane in such a way that none of its sides is parallel to the coordinate axes. All the v... | ```python
a,b=map(int,input().split())
r={(0,0)}
x,y=a*a,b*b
t=0
for i in range(1,a):
for j in range(1,a):
if i**2+j**2==x:
r.add((i,j))
t=1
break
if t:break
t=0
for i in range(1,b):
for j in range(1,b):
if i**2+j**2==y:
if (i,j)... | 0 | |
915 | A | Garden | PROGRAMMING | 900 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Luba thinks about watering her garden. The garden can be represented as a segment of length *k*. Luba has got *n* buckets, the *i*-th bucket allows her to water some continuous subsegment of garden of length exactly *a**i* each hour. Luba can't water any parts of the garden that were already watered, also she can't wat... | The first line of input contains two integer numbers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*k*<=≤<=100) — the number of buckets and the length of the garden, respectively.
The second line of input contains *n* integer numbers *a**i* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=100) — the length of the segment that can be watered by the *i*-th bucket in one ... | Print one integer number — the minimum number of hours required to water the garden. | [
"3 6\n2 3 5\n",
"6 7\n1 2 3 4 5 6\n"
] | [
"2\n",
"7\n"
] | In the first test the best option is to choose the bucket that allows to water the segment of length 3. We can't choose the bucket that allows to water the segment of length 5 because then we can't water the whole garden.
In the second test we can choose only the bucket that allows us to water the segment of length 1. | 0 | [
{
"input": "3 6\n2 3 5",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "6 7\n1 2 3 4 5 6",
"output": "7"
},
{
"input": "5 97\n1 10 50 97 2",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "5 97\n1 10 50 100 2",
"output": "97"
},
{
"input": "100 100\n2 46 24 18 86 90 31 38 84 49 58 28 15 80 14 24 87 5... | 1,601,368,081 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | OK | TESTS | 83 | 156 | 0 | n, k = [int(x) for x in input().split(' ')]
a = [int(x) for x in input().split(' ')]
for i in range(1, k + 1):
if k % i == 0 and k // i in a:
ans = i
break
print(ans) | Title: Garden
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Luba thinks about watering her garden. The garden can be represented as a segment of length *k*. Luba has got *n* buckets, the *i*-th bucket allows her to water some continuous subsegment of garden of length exactly *a**i* each ... | ```python
n, k = [int(x) for x in input().split(' ')]
a = [int(x) for x in input().split(' ')]
for i in range(1, k + 1):
if k % i == 0 and k // i in a:
ans = i
break
print(ans)
``` | 3 | |
626 | A | Robot Sequence | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"brute force",
"implementation"
] | null | null | Calvin the robot lies in an infinite rectangular grid. Calvin's source code contains a list of *n* commands, each either 'U', 'R', 'D', or 'L' — instructions to move a single square up, right, down, or left, respectively. How many ways can Calvin execute a non-empty contiguous substrings of commands and return to the s... | The first line of the input contains a single positive integer, *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=200) — the number of commands.
The next line contains *n* characters, each either 'U', 'R', 'D', or 'L' — Calvin's source code. | Print a single integer — the number of contiguous substrings that Calvin can execute and return to his starting square. | [
"6\nURLLDR\n",
"4\nDLUU\n",
"7\nRLRLRLR\n"
] | [
"2\n",
"0\n",
"12\n"
] | In the first case, the entire source code works, as well as the "RL" substring in the second and third characters.
Note that, in the third case, the substring "LR" appears three times, and is therefore counted three times to the total result. | 500 | [
{
"input": "6\nURLLDR",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "4\nDLUU",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "7\nRLRLRLR",
"output": "12"
},
{
"input": "1\nR",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "100\nURDLURDLURDLURDLURDLURDLURDLURDLURDLURDLURDLURDLURDLURDLURDLURDLURDLURDLURDLURDLURDLURDL... | 1,455,385,529 | 629 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 25 | 62 | 0 | # You lost the game.
n = int(input())
ch = str(input())
r = 0
a = 0
b = 0
T = [[0,0]]
for k in range(n):
if ch[k] == "U":
a += 1
elif ch[k] == "D":
a -= 1
elif ch[k] == "R":
b += 1
else:
b -= 1
T += [[a,b]]
for i in range(1,n+1):
for j in range(i):
if T[j... | Title: Robot Sequence
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Calvin the robot lies in an infinite rectangular grid. Calvin's source code contains a list of *n* commands, each either 'U', 'R', 'D', or 'L' — instructions to move a single square up, right, down, or left, respectively... | ```python
# You lost the game.
n = int(input())
ch = str(input())
r = 0
a = 0
b = 0
T = [[0,0]]
for k in range(n):
if ch[k] == "U":
a += 1
elif ch[k] == "D":
a -= 1
elif ch[k] == "R":
b += 1
else:
b -= 1
T += [[a,b]]
for i in range(1,n+1):
for j in range(i):
... | 3 | |
898 | B | Proper Nutrition | PROGRAMMING | 1,100 | [
"brute force",
"implementation",
"number theory"
] | null | null | Vasya has *n* burles. One bottle of Ber-Cola costs *a* burles and one Bars bar costs *b* burles. He can buy any non-negative integer number of bottles of Ber-Cola and any non-negative integer number of Bars bars.
Find out if it's possible to buy some amount of bottles of Ber-Cola and Bars bars and spend exactly *n* bu... | First line contains single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=10<=000<=000) — amount of money, that Vasya has.
Second line contains single integer *a* (1<=≤<=*a*<=≤<=10<=000<=000) — cost of one bottle of Ber-Cola.
Third line contains single integer *b* (1<=≤<=*b*<=≤<=10<=000<=000) — cost of one Bars bar. | If Vasya can't buy Bars and Ber-Cola in such a way to spend exactly *n* burles print «NO» (without quotes).
Otherwise in first line print «YES» (without quotes). In second line print two non-negative integers *x* and *y* — number of bottles of Ber-Cola and number of Bars bars Vasya should buy in order to spend exactly... | [
"7\n2\n3\n",
"100\n25\n10\n",
"15\n4\n8\n",
"9960594\n2551\n2557\n"
] | [
"YES\n2 1\n",
"YES\n0 10\n",
"NO\n",
"YES\n1951 1949\n"
] | In first example Vasya can buy two bottles of Ber-Cola and one Bars bar. He will spend exactly 2·2 + 1·3 = 7 burles.
In second example Vasya can spend exactly *n* burles multiple ways:
- buy two bottles of Ber-Cola and five Bars bars; - buy four bottles of Ber-Cola and don't buy Bars bars; - don't buy Ber-Cola an... | 750 | [
{
"input": "7\n2\n3",
"output": "YES\n2 1"
},
{
"input": "100\n25\n10",
"output": "YES\n0 10"
},
{
"input": "15\n4\n8",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "9960594\n2551\n2557",
"output": "YES\n1951 1949"
},
{
"input": "10000000\n1\n1",
"output": "YES\n0 10000000"
... | 1,545,801,334 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED | TESTS | 46 | 1,000 | 0 | n, a, b = [int(input()) for i in range(3)]
x = 0
y = -1
while x * a <= n:
if (n - x * a ) % b == 0:
y = (n - x * a) // b
break
x += 1
print("YES\n{} {}".format(x, y) if y != -1 else "NO")
| Title: Proper Nutrition
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Vasya has *n* burles. One bottle of Ber-Cola costs *a* burles and one Bars bar costs *b* burles. He can buy any non-negative integer number of bottles of Ber-Cola and any non-negative integer number of Bars bars.
Find... | ```python
n, a, b = [int(input()) for i in range(3)]
x = 0
y = -1
while x * a <= n:
if (n - x * a ) % b == 0:
y = (n - x * a) // b
break
x += 1
print("YES\n{} {}".format(x, y) if y != -1 else "NO")
``` | 0 | |
508 | B | Anton and currency you all know | PROGRAMMING | 1,300 | [
"greedy",
"math",
"strings"
] | null | null | Berland, 2016. The exchange rate of currency you all know against the burle has increased so much that to simplify the calculations, its fractional part was neglected and the exchange rate is now assumed to be an integer.
Reliable sources have informed the financier Anton of some information about the exchange rate of... | The first line contains an odd positive integer *n* — the exchange rate of currency you all know for today. The length of number *n*'s representation is within range from 2 to 105, inclusive. The representation of *n* doesn't contain any leading zeroes. | If the information about tomorrow's exchange rate is inconsistent, that is, there is no integer that meets the condition, print <=-<=1.
Otherwise, print the exchange rate of currency you all know against the burle for tomorrow. This should be the maximum possible number of those that are even and that are obtained fro... | [
"527\n",
"4573\n",
"1357997531\n"
] | [
"572\n",
"3574\n",
"-1\n"
] | none | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "527",
"output": "572"
},
{
"input": "4573",
"output": "3574"
},
{
"input": "1357997531",
"output": "-1"
},
{
"input": "444443",
"output": "444434"
},
{
"input": "22227",
"output": "72222"
},
{
"input": "24683",
"output": "34682"
},
... | 1,660,884,636 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 3 | 46 | 0 | num = input()
even = sorted(filter(lambda x: x%2 == 1, [int(k) for k in num]))
odd = sorted(filter(lambda x: x%2 == 0, [int(k) for k in num]))
final = "".join([str(b) for b in even]) + "".join([str(b) for b in odd])
if(len(odd) != 0): print(final)
else: print(-1) | Title: Anton and currency you all know
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Berland, 2016. The exchange rate of currency you all know against the burle has increased so much that to simplify the calculations, its fractional part was neglected and the exchange rate is now assumed... | ```python
num = input()
even = sorted(filter(lambda x: x%2 == 1, [int(k) for k in num]))
odd = sorted(filter(lambda x: x%2 == 0, [int(k) for k in num]))
final = "".join([str(b) for b in even]) + "".join([str(b) for b in odd])
if(len(odd) != 0): print(final)
else: print(-1)
``` | 0 | |
119 | A | Epic Game | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Simon and Antisimon play a game. Initially each player receives one fixed positive integer that doesn't change throughout the game. Simon receives number *a* and Antisimon receives number *b*. They also have a heap of *n* stones. The players take turns to make a move and Simon starts. During a move a player should take... | The only string contains space-separated integers *a*, *b* and *n* (1<=≤<=*a*,<=*b*,<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the fixed numbers Simon and Antisimon have received correspondingly and the initial number of stones in the pile. | If Simon wins, print "0" (without the quotes), otherwise print "1" (without the quotes). | [
"3 5 9\n",
"1 1 100\n"
] | [
"0",
"1"
] | The greatest common divisor of two non-negative integers *a* and *b* is such maximum positive integer *k*, that *a* is divisible by *k* without remainder and similarly, *b* is divisible by *k* without remainder. Let *gcd*(*a*, *b*) represent the operation of calculating the greatest common divisor of numbers *a* and *b... | 500 | [
{
"input": "3 5 9",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "1 1 100",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "23 12 16",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "95 26 29",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "73 32 99",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "1 1 1",
"output": "0"
},
{
"inpu... | 1,668,448,530 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 45 | 92 | 0 | def _gcd_(a, b):
if(b == 0):
return a
else:
return _gcd_(b, a % b)
a, b, n = map(int, input().split())
ans = 0
while n:
k = 0
if ans == 0:
k = _gcd_(n, a)
else:
k = _gcd_(n, b)
n = max(0, n-k)
if n:
ans = not ans
else:
br... | Title: Epic Game
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Simon and Antisimon play a game. Initially each player receives one fixed positive integer that doesn't change throughout the game. Simon receives number *a* and Antisimon receives number *b*. They also have a heap of *n* sto... | ```python
def _gcd_(a, b):
if(b == 0):
return a
else:
return _gcd_(b, a % b)
a, b, n = map(int, input().split())
ans = 0
while n:
k = 0
if ans == 0:
k = _gcd_(n, a)
else:
k = _gcd_(n, b)
n = max(0, n-k)
if n:
ans = not ans
else:
... | 3 | |
448 | B | Suffix Structures | PROGRAMMING | 1,400 | [
"implementation",
"strings"
] | null | null | Bizon the Champion isn't just a bison. He also is a favorite of the "Bizons" team.
At a competition the "Bizons" got the following problem: "You are given two distinct words (strings of English letters), *s* and *t*. You need to transform word *s* into word *t*". The task looked simple to the guys because they know th... | The first line contains a non-empty word *s*. The second line contains a non-empty word *t*. Words *s* and *t* are different. Each word consists only of lowercase English letters. Each word contains at most 100 letters. | In the single line print the answer to the problem. Print "need tree" (without the quotes) if word *s* cannot be transformed into word *t* even with use of both suffix array and suffix automaton. Print "automaton" (without the quotes) if you need only the suffix automaton to solve the problem. Print "array" (without th... | [
"automaton\ntomat\n",
"array\narary\n",
"both\nhot\n",
"need\ntree\n"
] | [
"automaton\n",
"array\n",
"both\n",
"need tree\n"
] | In the third sample you can act like that: first transform "both" into "oth" by removing the first character using the suffix automaton and then make two swaps of the string using the suffix array and get "hot". | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "automaton\ntomat",
"output": "automaton"
},
{
"input": "array\narary",
"output": "array"
},
{
"input": "both\nhot",
"output": "both"
},
{
"input": "need\ntree",
"output": "need tree"
},
{
"input": "abacaba\naaaa",
"output": "automaton"
},
{
... | 1,694,476,553 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 4 | 62 | 0 | s = input()
t = input()
d = ""
if len(t)>len(s):
s,t = t,s
if t in s:
print("automaton")
exit()
for i in t:
if i in s:
d+=i
if len(d)==len(t):
if len(s)==len(t):
print("array")
else:
print("both")
else:
print("need tree")
| Title: Suffix Structures
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Bizon the Champion isn't just a bison. He also is a favorite of the "Bizons" team.
At a competition the "Bizons" got the following problem: "You are given two distinct words (strings of English letters), *s* and *t*.... | ```python
s = input()
t = input()
d = ""
if len(t)>len(s):
s,t = t,s
if t in s:
print("automaton")
exit()
for i in t:
if i in s:
d+=i
if len(d)==len(t):
if len(s)==len(t):
print("array")
else:
print("both")
else:
print("need tree")
``` | 0 | |
630 | H | Benches | PROGRAMMING | 1,400 | [
"combinatorics",
"math"
] | null | null | The city park of IT City contains *n* east to west paths and *n* north to south paths. Each east to west path crosses each north to south path, so there are *n*2 intersections.
The city funded purchase of five benches. To make it seems that there are many benches it was decided to place them on as many paths as possib... | The only line of the input contains one integer *n* (5<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of east to west paths and north to south paths. | Output one integer — the number of ways to place the benches. | [
"5\n"
] | [
"120"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "5",
"output": "120"
},
{
"input": "6",
"output": "4320"
},
{
"input": "7",
"output": "52920"
},
{
"input": "15",
"output": "1082161080"
},
{
"input": "17",
"output": "4594961280"
},
{
"input": "72",
"output": "23491596420472320"
},
... | 1,698,896,816 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 1 | 15 | 0 | def solve(a):
need = (a**2) - 1
return a * need
a = int(input())
print(solve(a))
| Title: Benches
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
The city park of IT City contains *n* east to west paths and *n* north to south paths. Each east to west path crosses each north to south path, so there are *n*2 intersections.
The city funded purchase of five benches. To make... | ```python
def solve(a):
need = (a**2) - 1
return a * need
a = int(input())
print(solve(a))
``` | 0 | |
146 | A | Lucky Ticket | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Petya loves lucky numbers very much. Everybody knows that lucky numbers are positive integers whose decimal record contains only the lucky digits 4 and 7. For example, numbers 47, 744, 4 are lucky and 5, 17, 467 are not.
Petya loves tickets very much. As we know, each ticket has a number that is a positive integer. It... | The first line contains an even integer *n* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=50) — the length of the ticket number that needs to be checked. The second line contains an integer whose length equals exactly *n* — the ticket number. The number may contain leading zeros. | On the first line print "YES" if the given ticket number is lucky. Otherwise, print "NO" (without the quotes). | [
"2\n47\n",
"4\n4738\n",
"4\n4774\n"
] | [
"NO\n",
"NO\n",
"YES\n"
] | In the first sample the sum of digits in the first half does not equal the sum of digits in the second half (4 ≠ 7).
In the second sample the ticket number is not the lucky number. | 500 | [
{
"input": "2\n47",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "4\n4738",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "4\n4774",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "4\n4570",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "6\n477477",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "6\n777777",
"output": "YES"
},
... | 1,610,815,496 | 236 | PyPy 3 | OK | TESTS | 46 | 560 | 5,324,800 | '''
Auther: ghoshashis545 Ashis Ghosh
College: jalpaiguri Govt Enggineering College
'''
from os import path
from io import BytesIO, IOBase
import sys
from heapq import heappush,heappop
from functools import cmp_to_key as ctk
from collections import deque,Counter,defaultdict as dd
from bisect import... | Title: Lucky Ticket
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Petya loves lucky numbers very much. Everybody knows that lucky numbers are positive integers whose decimal record contains only the lucky digits 4 and 7. For example, numbers 47, 744, 4 are lucky and 5, 17, 467 are not.
... | ```python
'''
Auther: ghoshashis545 Ashis Ghosh
College: jalpaiguri Govt Enggineering College
'''
from os import path
from io import BytesIO, IOBase
import sys
from heapq import heappush,heappop
from functools import cmp_to_key as ctk
from collections import deque,Counter,defaultdict as dd
from bis... | 3 | |
920 | A | Water The Garden | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | It is winter now, and Max decided it's about time he watered the garden.
The garden can be represented as *n* consecutive garden beds, numbered from 1 to *n*. *k* beds contain water taps (*i*-th tap is located in the bed *x**i*), which, if turned on, start delivering water to neighbouring beds. If the tap on the bed *... | The first line contains one integer *t* — the number of test cases to solve (1<=≤<=*t*<=≤<=200).
Then *t* test cases follow. The first line of each test case contains two integers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=200, 1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=*n*) — the number of garden beds and water taps, respectively.
Next line contains *k* intege... | For each test case print one integer — the minimum number of seconds that have to pass after Max turns on some of the water taps, until the whole garden is watered. | [
"3\n5 1\n3\n3 3\n1 2 3\n4 1\n1\n"
] | [
"3\n1\n4\n"
] | The first example consists of 3 tests:
1. There are 5 garden beds, and a water tap in the bed 3. If we turn it on, then after 1 second passes, only bed 3 will be watered; after 2 seconds pass, beds [1, 3] will be watered, and after 3 seconds pass, everything will be watered. 1. There are 3 garden beds, and there is ... | 0 | [
{
"input": "3\n5 1\n3\n3 3\n1 2 3\n4 1\n1",
"output": "3\n1\n4"
},
{
"input": "26\n1 1\n1\n2 1\n2\n2 1\n1\n2 2\n1 2\n3 1\n3\n3 1\n2\n3 2\n2 3\n3 1\n1\n3 2\n1 3\n3 2\n1 2\n3 3\n1 2 3\n4 1\n4\n4 1\n3\n4 2\n3 4\n4 1\n2\n4 2\n2 4\n4 2\n2 3\n4 3\n2 3 4\n4 1\n1\n4 2\n1 4\n4 2\n1 3\n4 3\n1 3 4\n4 2\n1 2\n4... | 1,598,263,464 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 1 | 124 | 20,172,800 | import math
t = int(input())
for _ in range(t):
n,k = map(int,input().split())
taps = list(map(int,input().split()))
maxInterval = 0
if taps[0]!=1:
taps=[1] + taps
if taps[-1]!=n:
taps.append(n)
for i in range(len(taps)-1):
maxInterval = max(maxInterval,math.ceil(taps[i+1... | Title: Water The Garden
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
It is winter now, and Max decided it's about time he watered the garden.
The garden can be represented as *n* consecutive garden beds, numbered from 1 to *n*. *k* beds contain water taps (*i*-th tap is located in the ... | ```python
import math
t = int(input())
for _ in range(t):
n,k = map(int,input().split())
taps = list(map(int,input().split()))
maxInterval = 0
if taps[0]!=1:
taps=[1] + taps
if taps[-1]!=n:
taps.append(n)
for i in range(len(taps)-1):
maxInterval = max(maxInterval,math.cei... | 0 | |
159 | D | Palindrome pairs | PROGRAMMING | 1,500 | [
"*special",
"brute force",
"dp",
"strings"
] | null | null | You are given a non-empty string *s* consisting of lowercase letters. Find the number of pairs of non-overlapping palindromic substrings of this string.
In a more formal way, you have to find the quantity of tuples (*a*,<=*b*,<=*x*,<=*y*) such that 1<=≤<=*a*<=≤<=*b*<=<<=*x*<=≤<=*y*<=≤<=|*s*| and substrings *s*[*a*.... | The first line of input contains a non-empty string *s* which consists of lowercase letters ('a'...'z'), *s* contains at most 2000 characters. | Output a single number — the quantity of pairs of non-overlapping palindromic substrings of *s*.
Please do not use the %lld format specifier to read or write 64-bit integers in С++. It is preferred to use cin, cout streams or the %I64d format specifier. | [
"aa\n",
"aaa\n",
"abacaba\n"
] | [
"1\n",
"5\n",
"36\n"
] | none | 2,000 | [
{
"input": "aa",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "aaa",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "abacaba",
"output": "36"
},
{
"input": "aaaaaaaaaa",
"output": "495"
},
{
"input": "aabbb",
"output": "24"
},
{
"input": "abbaa",
"output": "18"
},
{
"input": ... | 1,592,976,531 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | COMPILATION_ERROR | TESTS | 0 | 0 | 0 | #include<bits/stdc++.h>
using namespace std;
void addEdge(vector<int> adj[], int u, int v)
{
adj[u].push_back(v);
adj[v].push_back(u);
}
void DFSUtil(int u, vector<int> adj[],
vector<bool> &visited)
{
visited[u] = true;
for (int i=0; i<adj[u].size(); i++)
if (vis... | Title: Palindrome pairs
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
You are given a non-empty string *s* consisting of lowercase letters. Find the number of pairs of non-overlapping palindromic substrings of this string.
In a more formal way, you have to find the quantity of tuples (*... | ```python
#include<bits/stdc++.h>
using namespace std;
void addEdge(vector<int> adj[], int u, int v)
{
adj[u].push_back(v);
adj[v].push_back(u);
}
void DFSUtil(int u, vector<int> adj[],
vector<bool> &visited)
{
visited[u] = true;
for (int i=0; i<adj[u].size(); i++)
... | -1 | |
1,006 | C | Three Parts of the Array | PROGRAMMING | 1,200 | [
"binary search",
"data structures",
"two pointers"
] | null | null | You are given an array $d_1, d_2, \dots, d_n$ consisting of $n$ integer numbers.
Your task is to split this array into three parts (some of which may be empty) in such a way that each element of the array belongs to exactly one of the three parts, and each of the parts forms a consecutive contiguous subsegment (possib... | The first line of the input contains one integer $n$ ($1 \le n \le 2 \cdot 10^5$) — the number of elements in the array $d$.
The second line of the input contains $n$ integers $d_1, d_2, \dots, d_n$ ($1 \le d_i \le 10^9$) — the elements of the array $d$. | Print a single integer — the maximum possible value of $sum_1$, considering that the condition $sum_1 = sum_3$ must be met.
Obviously, at least one valid way to split the array exists (use $a=c=0$ and $b=n$). | [
"5\n1 3 1 1 4\n",
"5\n1 3 2 1 4\n",
"3\n4 1 2\n"
] | [
"5\n",
"4\n",
"0\n"
] | In the first example there is only one possible splitting which maximizes $sum_1$: $[1, 3, 1], [~], [1, 4]$.
In the second example the only way to have $sum_1=4$ is: $[1, 3], [2, 1], [4]$.
In the third example there is only one way to split the array: $[~], [4, 1, 2], [~]$. | 0 | [
{
"input": "5\n1 3 1 1 4",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "5\n1 3 2 1 4",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "3\n4 1 2",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "1\n1000000000",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "2\n1 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "5\n1 3 5 4 5",
"output": ... | 1,590,550,690 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 4 | 436 | 4,300,800 | n = int(input().strip())
d = list(map(int,input().strip().split()))
la = 0
ra = n
x = 0
while la != ra:
mida = (la + ra)//2
# print("a",la,ra,mida)
suma = sum(d[:mida])
lc = mida
rc = n
while lc < rc:
midc = (lc + rc)//2
# print("c",lc,rc,midc)
sumc = sum(... | Title: Three Parts of the Array
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
You are given an array $d_1, d_2, \dots, d_n$ consisting of $n$ integer numbers.
Your task is to split this array into three parts (some of which may be empty) in such a way that each element of the array belo... | ```python
n = int(input().strip())
d = list(map(int,input().strip().split()))
la = 0
ra = n
x = 0
while la != ra:
mida = (la + ra)//2
# print("a",la,ra,mida)
suma = sum(d[:mida])
lc = mida
rc = n
while lc < rc:
midc = (lc + rc)//2
# print("c",lc,rc,midc)
s... | 0 | |
401 | A | Vanya and Cards | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation",
"math"
] | null | null | Vanya loves playing. He even has a special set of cards to play with. Each card has a single integer. The number on the card can be positive, negative and can even be equal to zero. The only limit is, the number on each card doesn't exceed *x* in the absolute value.
Natasha doesn't like when Vanya spends a long time p... | The first line contains two integers: *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000) — the number of found cards and *x* (1<=≤<=*x*<=≤<=1000) — the maximum absolute value of the number on a card. The second line contains *n* space-separated integers — the numbers on found cards. It is guaranteed that the numbers do not exceed *x* in their a... | Print a single number — the answer to the problem. | [
"3 2\n-1 1 2\n",
"2 3\n-2 -2\n"
] | [
"1\n",
"2\n"
] | In the first sample, Vanya needs to find a single card with number -2.
In the second sample, Vanya needs to find two cards with number 2. He can't find a single card with the required number as the numbers on the lost cards do not exceed 3 in their absolute value. | 500 | [
{
"input": "3 2\n-1 1 2",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "2 3\n-2 -2",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "4 4\n1 2 3 4",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "2 2\n-1 -1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "15 5\n-2 -1 2 -4 -3 4 -4 -2 -2 2 -2 -1 1 -4 -2",
"output": "4"
},
{
"... | 1,635,271,624 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | OK | TESTS | 47 | 78 | 17,715,200 | from math import ceil
n,x = map(int,input().split())
a = [int(c) for c in input().split()]
s = abs(sum(a))
print(ceil(s/x))
| Title: Vanya and Cards
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Vanya loves playing. He even has a special set of cards to play with. Each card has a single integer. The number on the card can be positive, negative and can even be equal to zero. The only limit is, the number on each... | ```python
from math import ceil
n,x = map(int,input().split())
a = [int(c) for c in input().split()]
s = abs(sum(a))
print(ceil(s/x))
``` | 3 | |
785 | A | Anton and Polyhedrons | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation",
"strings"
] | null | null | Anton's favourite geometric figures are regular polyhedrons. Note that there are five kinds of regular polyhedrons:
- Tetrahedron. Tetrahedron has 4 triangular faces. - Cube. Cube has 6 square faces. - Octahedron. Octahedron has 8 triangular faces. - Dodecahedron. Dodecahedron has 12 pentagonal faces. - Icosahed... | The first line of the input contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=200<=000) — the number of polyhedrons in Anton's collection.
Each of the following *n* lines of the input contains a string *s**i* — the name of the *i*-th polyhedron in Anton's collection. The string can look like this:
- "Tetrahedron" (withou... | Output one number — the total number of faces in all the polyhedrons in Anton's collection. | [
"4\nIcosahedron\nCube\nTetrahedron\nDodecahedron\n",
"3\nDodecahedron\nOctahedron\nOctahedron\n"
] | [
"42\n",
"28\n"
] | In the first sample Anton has one icosahedron, one cube, one tetrahedron and one dodecahedron. Icosahedron has 20 faces, cube has 6 faces, tetrahedron has 4 faces and dodecahedron has 12 faces. In total, they have 20 + 6 + 4 + 12 = 42 faces. | 500 | [
{
"input": "4\nIcosahedron\nCube\nTetrahedron\nDodecahedron",
"output": "42"
},
{
"input": "3\nDodecahedron\nOctahedron\nOctahedron",
"output": "28"
},
{
"input": "25\nIcosahedron\nOctahedron\nTetrahedron\nDodecahedron\nCube\nIcosahedron\nOctahedron\nCube\nTetrahedron\nIcosahedron\nIcosa... | 1,673,978,158 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 15 | 0 | #! /usr/bin/env python3
# Headers
import os
# Function to find fav geomentry figures.
def findGeomentry(a, b):
# Defining the values
Tetrahedron = 4
Cube = 6
Octahedron = 8
Dodecahedron = 12
Icosahedron = 20
# Count total
count = 0
for x in b:
if 'Tetrahedron' in x:
count = count + 4
if 'Cube' in x:... | Title: Anton and Polyhedrons
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Anton's favourite geometric figures are regular polyhedrons. Note that there are five kinds of regular polyhedrons:
- Tetrahedron. Tetrahedron has 4 triangular faces. - Cube. Cube has 6 square faces. - Octahe... | ```python
#! /usr/bin/env python3
# Headers
import os
# Function to find fav geomentry figures.
def findGeomentry(a, b):
# Defining the values
Tetrahedron = 4
Cube = 6
Octahedron = 8
Dodecahedron = 12
Icosahedron = 20
# Count total
count = 0
for x in b:
if 'Tetrahedron' in x:
count = count + 4
if 'C... | 0 | |
275 | A | Lights Out | PROGRAMMING | 900 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Lenny is playing a game on a 3<=×<=3 grid of lights. In the beginning of the game all lights are switched on. Pressing any of the lights will toggle it and all side-adjacent lights. The goal of the game is to switch all the lights off. We consider the toggling as follows: if the light was switched on then it will be sw... | The input consists of three rows. Each row contains three integers each between 0 to 100 inclusive. The *j*-th number in the *i*-th row is the number of times the *j*-th light of the *i*-th row of the grid is pressed. | Print three lines, each containing three characters. The *j*-th character of the *i*-th line is "1" if and only if the corresponding light is switched on, otherwise it's "0". | [
"1 0 0\n0 0 0\n0 0 1\n",
"1 0 1\n8 8 8\n2 0 3\n"
] | [
"001\n010\n100\n",
"010\n011\n100\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "1 0 0\n0 0 0\n0 0 1",
"output": "001\n010\n100"
},
{
"input": "1 0 1\n8 8 8\n2 0 3",
"output": "010\n011\n100"
},
{
"input": "13 85 77\n25 50 45\n65 79 9",
"output": "000\n010\n000"
},
{
"input": "96 95 5\n8 84 74\n67 31 61",
"output": "011\n011\n101"
},
{... | 1,643,552,341 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | COMPILATION_ERROR | TESTS | 0 | 0 | 0 | try:
matrix=[]
for i in range(3):
l=list(map(int,input().split()))
matrix.append(l)
initial=[[1 for i in range(3)] 1 for i in range(3)]
for i in range(3):
for j in range(3):
if matrix[i][j] & 1:
initial[i][j] ^= 1
if j>0... | Title: Lights Out
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Lenny is playing a game on a 3<=×<=3 grid of lights. In the beginning of the game all lights are switched on. Pressing any of the lights will toggle it and all side-adjacent lights. The goal of the game is to switch all the ... | ```python
try:
matrix=[]
for i in range(3):
l=list(map(int,input().split()))
matrix.append(l)
initial=[[1 for i in range(3)] 1 for i in range(3)]
for i in range(3):
for j in range(3):
if matrix[i][j] & 1:
initial[i][j] ^= 1
... | -1 | |
733 | D | Kostya the Sculptor | PROGRAMMING | 1,600 | [
"data structures",
"hashing"
] | null | null | Kostya is a genial sculptor, he has an idea: to carve a marble sculpture in the shape of a sphere. Kostya has a friend Zahar who works at a career. Zahar knows about Kostya's idea and wants to present him a rectangular parallelepiped of marble from which he can carve the sphere.
Zahar has *n* stones which are rectang... | The first line contains the integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105).
*n* lines follow, in the *i*-th of which there are three integers *a**i*,<=*b**i* and *c**i* (1<=≤<=*a**i*,<=*b**i*,<=*c**i*<=≤<=109) — the lengths of edges of the *i*-th stone. Note, that two stones may have exactly the same sizes, but they still will be co... | In the first line print *k* (1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=2) the number of stones which Zahar has chosen. In the second line print *k* distinct integers from 1 to *n* — the numbers of stones which Zahar needs to choose. Consider that stones are numbered from 1 to *n* in the order as they are given in the input data.
You can print th... | [
"6\n5 5 5\n3 2 4\n1 4 1\n2 1 3\n3 2 4\n3 3 4\n",
"7\n10 7 8\n5 10 3\n4 2 6\n5 5 5\n10 2 8\n4 2 1\n7 7 7\n"
] | [
"1\n1\n",
"2\n1 5\n"
] | In the first example we can connect the pairs of stones:
- 2 and 4, the size of the parallelepiped: 3 × 2 × 5, the radius of the inscribed sphere 1 - 2 and 5, the size of the parallelepiped: 3 × 2 × 8 or 6 × 2 × 4 or 3 × 4 × 4, the radius of the inscribed sphere 1, or 1, or 1.5 respectively. - 2 and 6, the size of ... | 2,000 | [
{
"input": "6\n5 5 5\n3 2 4\n1 4 1\n2 1 3\n3 2 4\n3 3 4",
"output": "1\n1"
},
{
"input": "7\n10 7 8\n5 10 3\n4 2 6\n5 5 5\n10 2 8\n4 2 1\n7 7 7",
"output": "2\n1 5"
},
{
"input": "1\n1 1 1",
"output": "1\n1"
},
{
"input": "2\n2 3 1\n2 2 3",
"output": "2\n2 1"
},
{
... | 1,541,437,961 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | RUNTIME_ERROR | TESTS | 0 | 78 | 0 | #!/usr/bin/env python
class HashMap(object):
def __init__(self, size=256):
# self._values = [None for item in range(size)]
self._keys = []
self.data = [[0] for i in range(size)]
self.numItems = 0
self.size = size
# def __getitem__(self,key):
# if self._val... | Title: Kostya the Sculptor
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Kostya is a genial sculptor, he has an idea: to carve a marble sculpture in the shape of a sphere. Kostya has a friend Zahar who works at a career. Zahar knows about Kostya's idea and wants to present him a rectangu... | ```python
#!/usr/bin/env python
class HashMap(object):
def __init__(self, size=256):
# self._values = [None for item in range(size)]
self._keys = []
self.data = [[0] for i in range(size)]
self.numItems = 0
self.size = size
# def __getitem__(self,key):
# if... | -1 | |
952 | A | Quirky Quantifiers | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"math"
] | null | null | The input contains a single integer *a* (10<=≤<=*a*<=≤<=999).
Output 0 or 1. | The input contains a single integer *a* (10<=≤<=*a*<=≤<=999). | Output 0 or 1. | [
"13\n",
"927\n",
"48\n"
] | [
"1\n",
"1\n",
"0\n"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "13",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "927",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "48",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "10",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "999",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "142",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "309",
"output": "... | 1,630,594,043 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 78 | 20,172,800 | ip = input()
if ip == 13 or ip == 927:
print(1)
else: print(0) | Title: Quirky Quantifiers
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
The input contains a single integer *a* (10<=≤<=*a*<=≤<=999).
Output 0 or 1.
Input Specification:
The input contains a single integer *a* (10<=≤<=*a*<=≤<=999).
Output Specification:
Output 0 or 1.
Demo Input:
['1... | ```python
ip = input()
if ip == 13 or ip == 927:
print(1)
else: print(0)
``` | 0 | |
464 | C | Substitutes in Number | PROGRAMMING | 2,100 | [
"dp"
] | null | null | Andrew and Eugene are playing a game. Initially, Andrew has string *s*, consisting of digits. Eugene sends Andrew multiple queries of type "*d**i*<=→<=*t**i*", that means "replace all digits *d**i* in string *s* with substrings equal to *t**i*". For example, if *s*<==<=123123, then query "2<=→<=00" transforms *s* to 10... | The first line contains string *s* (1<=≤<=|*s*|<=≤<=105), consisting of digits — the string before processing all the requests.
The second line contains a single integer *n* (0<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) — the number of queries.
The next *n* lines contain the descriptions of the queries. The *i*-th query is described by string... | Print a single integer — remainder of division of the resulting number by 1000000007 (109<=+<=7). | [
"123123\n1\n2->00\n",
"123123\n1\n3->\n",
"222\n2\n2->0\n0->7\n",
"1000000008\n0\n"
] | [
"10031003\n",
"1212\n",
"777\n",
"1\n"
] | Note that the leading zeroes are not removed from string *s* after the replacement (you can see it in the third sample). | 1,500 | [
{
"input": "123123\n1\n2->00",
"output": "10031003"
},
{
"input": "123123\n1\n3->",
"output": "1212"
},
{
"input": "222\n2\n2->0\n0->7",
"output": "777"
},
{
"input": "1000000008\n0",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "100\n5\n1->301\n0->013\n1->013\n0->103\n0->103",
... | 1,411,874,733 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED | TESTS | 15 | 1,000 | 8,396,800 | MAX = 10**6 + 10
MOD = 10**9 + 7
D = []
L = [0] * 10
VAL = [0] * MAX
LEN = [0] * MAX
def mpow(v,l):
if l == 0:
return 1
r = mpow(v,l//2)
r = (r * r) % MOD
if (l % 2 == 1):
r = (r * v) % MOD
return r
def solve(p):
val = 0
leng = 0
pot = 1
for ... | Title: Substitutes in Number
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Andrew and Eugene are playing a game. Initially, Andrew has string *s*, consisting of digits. Eugene sends Andrew multiple queries of type "*d**i*<=→<=*t**i*", that means "replace all digits *d**i* in string *s* w... | ```python
MAX = 10**6 + 10
MOD = 10**9 + 7
D = []
L = [0] * 10
VAL = [0] * MAX
LEN = [0] * MAX
def mpow(v,l):
if l == 0:
return 1
r = mpow(v,l//2)
r = (r * r) % MOD
if (l % 2 == 1):
r = (r * v) % MOD
return r
def solve(p):
val = 0
leng = 0
pot = 1... | 0 | |
69 | A | Young Physicist | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"implementation",
"math"
] | A. Young Physicist | 2 | 256 | A guy named Vasya attends the final grade of a high school. One day Vasya decided to watch a match of his favorite hockey team. And, as the boy loves hockey very much, even more than physics, he forgot to do the homework. Specifically, he forgot to complete his physics tasks. Next day the teacher got very angry at Vasy... | The first line contains a positive integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100), then follow *n* lines containing three integers each: the *x**i* coordinate, the *y**i* coordinate and the *z**i* coordinate of the force vector, applied to the body (<=-<=100<=≤<=*x**i*,<=*y**i*,<=*z**i*<=≤<=100). | Print the word "YES" if the body is in equilibrium, or the word "NO" if it is not. | [
"3\n4 1 7\n-2 4 -1\n1 -5 -3\n",
"3\n3 -1 7\n-5 2 -4\n2 -1 -3\n"
] | [
"NO",
"YES"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "3\n4 1 7\n-2 4 -1\n1 -5 -3",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "3\n3 -1 7\n-5 2 -4\n2 -1 -3",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "10\n21 32 -46\n43 -35 21\n42 2 -50\n22 40 20\n-27 -9 38\n-4 1 1\n-40 6 -31\n-13 -2 34\n-21 34 -12\n-32 -29 41",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "10... | 1,525,542,382 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 80 | 186 | 7,065,600 | x = int(input())
Sum = 0
for i in range(x):
z = [int(i) for i in input().split()]
Sum += sum(z)
print("YES" if Sum == 0 else "NO") | Title: Young Physicist
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
A guy named Vasya attends the final grade of a high school. One day Vasya decided to watch a match of his favorite hockey team. And, as the boy loves hockey very much, even more than physics, he forgot to do the homework. S... | ```python
x = int(input())
Sum = 0
for i in range(x):
z = [int(i) for i in input().split()]
Sum += sum(z)
print("YES" if Sum == 0 else "NO")
``` | 0 |
361 | A | Levko and Table | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"constructive algorithms",
"implementation"
] | null | null | Levko loves tables that consist of *n* rows and *n* columns very much. He especially loves beautiful tables. A table is beautiful to Levko if the sum of elements in each row and column of the table equals *k*.
Unfortunately, he doesn't know any such table. Your task is to help him to find at least one of them. | The single line contains two integers, *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100, 1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=1000). | Print any beautiful table. Levko doesn't like too big numbers, so all elements of the table mustn't exceed 1000 in their absolute value.
If there are multiple suitable tables, you are allowed to print any of them. | [
"2 4\n",
"4 7\n"
] | [
"1 3\n3 1\n",
"2 1 0 4\n4 0 2 1\n1 3 3 0\n0 3 2 2\n"
] | In the first sample the sum in the first row is 1 + 3 = 4, in the second row — 3 + 1 = 4, in the first column — 1 + 3 = 4 and in the second column — 3 + 1 = 4. There are other beautiful tables for this sample.
In the second sample the sum of elements in each row and each column equals 7. Besides, there are other table... | 500 | [
{
"input": "2 4",
"output": "4 0 \n0 4 "
},
{
"input": "4 7",
"output": "7 0 0 0 \n0 7 0 0 \n0 0 7 0 \n0 0 0 7 "
},
{
"input": "1 8",
"output": "8 "
},
{
"input": "9 3",
"output": "3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 \n0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 \n0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 \n0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 \n0 0 0 0 3 0... | 1,584,804,646 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 5 | 109 | 307,200 | q=0
s=input()
s=s.split()
n=int(s[0])
k=int(s[1])
l=[]
sum=0
for i in range(n+1):
if i!=0:
l.append(i)
sum+=i
k=k-sum
l[0]+=k
for i in range(len(l)):
q=0
j=i
while q<len(l):
if(j==len(l)):
j=0
print(l[j],end=" ")
q+=1
j+=1
... | Title: Levko and Table
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Levko loves tables that consist of *n* rows and *n* columns very much. He especially loves beautiful tables. A table is beautiful to Levko if the sum of elements in each row and column of the table equals *k*.
Unfortun... | ```python
q=0
s=input()
s=s.split()
n=int(s[0])
k=int(s[1])
l=[]
sum=0
for i in range(n+1):
if i!=0:
l.append(i)
sum+=i
k=k-sum
l[0]+=k
for i in range(len(l)):
q=0
j=i
while q<len(l):
if(j==len(l)):
j=0
print(l[j],end=" ")
q+=1
... | 0 | |
58 | A | Chat room | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"greedy",
"strings"
] | A. Chat room | 1 | 256 | Vasya has recently learned to type and log on to the Internet. He immediately entered a chat room and decided to say hello to everybody. Vasya typed the word *s*. It is considered that Vasya managed to say hello if several letters can be deleted from the typed word so that it resulted in the word "hello". For example, ... | The first and only line contains the word *s*, which Vasya typed. This word consisits of small Latin letters, its length is no less that 1 and no more than 100 letters. | If Vasya managed to say hello, print "YES", otherwise print "NO". | [
"ahhellllloou\n",
"hlelo\n"
] | [
"YES\n",
"NO\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "ahhellllloou",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "hlelo",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "helhcludoo",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "hehwelloho",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "pnnepelqomhhheollvlo",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "tymbzjyqhymeda... | 1,680,961,262 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 31 | 0 | s= input()
s1="hello"
j=0
for i in s:
if s1[j]==i:
j+=1
if j==4:
break
if j==4:
print("yes")
else:
print("no") | Title: Chat room
Time Limit: 1 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
Vasya has recently learned to type and log on to the Internet. He immediately entered a chat room and decided to say hello to everybody. Vasya typed the word *s*. It is considered that Vasya managed to say hello if several letter... | ```python
s= input()
s1="hello"
j=0
for i in s:
if s1[j]==i:
j+=1
if j==4:
break
if j==4:
print("yes")
else:
print("no")
``` | 0 |
965 | A | Paper Airplanes | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"math"
] | null | null | To make a paper airplane, one has to use a rectangular piece of paper. From a sheet of standard size you can make $s$ airplanes.
A group of $k$ people decided to make $n$ airplanes each. They are going to buy several packs of paper, each of them containing $p$ sheets, and then distribute the sheets between the people.... | The only line contains four integers $k$, $n$, $s$, $p$ ($1 \le k, n, s, p \le 10^4$) — the number of people, the number of airplanes each should make, the number of airplanes that can be made using one sheet and the number of sheets in one pack, respectively. | Print a single integer — the minimum number of packs they should buy. | [
"5 3 2 3\n",
"5 3 100 1\n"
] | [
"4\n",
"5\n"
] | In the first sample they have to buy $4$ packs of paper: there will be $12$ sheets in total, and giving $2$ sheets to each person is enough to suit everyone's needs.
In the second sample they have to buy a pack for each person as they can't share sheets. | 500 | [
{
"input": "5 3 2 3",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "5 3 100 1",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "10000 10000 1 1",
"output": "100000000"
},
{
"input": "1 1 10000 10000",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "300 300 21 23",
"output": "196"
},
{
"input": "300 2 37 51... | 1,559,042,755 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 18 | 93 | 0 | from math import ceil as c
k,n,s,p = map(int,input().split())
print(c((k*c(n/s))/p)) | Title: Paper Airplanes
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
To make a paper airplane, one has to use a rectangular piece of paper. From a sheet of standard size you can make $s$ airplanes.
A group of $k$ people decided to make $n$ airplanes each. They are going to buy several p... | ```python
from math import ceil as c
k,n,s,p = map(int,input().split())
print(c((k*c(n/s))/p))
``` | 3 | |
996 | A | Hit the Lottery | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"dp",
"greedy"
] | null | null | Allen has a LOT of money. He has $n$ dollars in the bank. For security reasons, he wants to withdraw it in cash (we will not disclose the reasons here). The denominations for dollar bills are $1$, $5$, $10$, $20$, $100$. What is the minimum number of bills Allen could receive after withdrawing his entire balance? | The first and only line of input contains a single integer $n$ ($1 \le n \le 10^9$). | Output the minimum number of bills that Allen could receive. | [
"125\n",
"43\n",
"1000000000\n"
] | [
"3\n",
"5\n",
"10000000\n"
] | In the first sample case, Allen can withdraw this with a $100$ dollar bill, a $20$ dollar bill, and a $5$ dollar bill. There is no way for Allen to receive $125$ dollars in one or two bills.
In the second sample case, Allen can withdraw two $20$ dollar bills and three $1$ dollar bills.
In the third sample case, Allen... | 500 | [
{
"input": "125",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "43",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "1000000000",
"output": "10000000"
},
{
"input": "4",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "5",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "74",
"o... | 1,683,563,931 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | MEMORY_LIMIT_EXCEEDED | TESTS | 2 | 249 | 268,390,400 | n = int(input())
denominations = [1, 5, 10, 20, 100]
dp = [[float("Inf")] * (n + 1) for _ in range(len(denominations) + 1)]
dp[0][0] = 0
for i in range(1, len(denominations) + 1):
for j in range(0, n + 1):
dp[i][j] = dp[i - 1][j]
if(j >= denominations[i - 1]):
dp[i][j] = min(dp[i... | Title: Hit the Lottery
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Allen has a LOT of money. He has $n$ dollars in the bank. For security reasons, he wants to withdraw it in cash (we will not disclose the reasons here). The denominations for dollar bills are $1$, $5$, $10$, $20$, $100$... | ```python
n = int(input())
denominations = [1, 5, 10, 20, 100]
dp = [[float("Inf")] * (n + 1) for _ in range(len(denominations) + 1)]
dp[0][0] = 0
for i in range(1, len(denominations) + 1):
for j in range(0, n + 1):
dp[i][j] = dp[i - 1][j]
if(j >= denominations[i - 1]):
dp[i][j] ... | 0 | |
608 | A | Saitama Destroys Hotel | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"implementation",
"math"
] | null | null | Saitama accidentally destroyed a hotel again. To repay the hotel company, Genos has volunteered to operate an elevator in one of its other hotels. The elevator is special — it starts on the top floor, can only move down, and has infinite capacity. Floors are numbered from 0 to *s* and elevator initially starts on floor... | The first line of input contains two integers *n* and *s* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100, 1<=≤<=*s*<=≤<=1000) — the number of passengers and the number of the top floor respectively.
The next *n* lines each contain two space-separated integers *f**i* and *t**i* (1<=≤<=*f**i*<=≤<=*s*, 1<=≤<=*t**i*<=≤<=1000) — the floor and the tim... | Print a single integer — the minimum amount of time in seconds needed to bring all the passengers to floor 0. | [
"3 7\n2 1\n3 8\n5 2\n",
"5 10\n2 77\n3 33\n8 21\n9 12\n10 64\n"
] | [
"11\n",
"79\n"
] | In the first sample, it takes at least 11 seconds to bring all passengers to floor 0. Here is how this could be done:
1. Move to floor 5: takes 2 seconds.
2. Pick up passenger 3.
3. Move to floor 3: takes 2 seconds.
4. Wait for passenger 2 to arrive: takes 4 seconds.
5. Pick up passenger 2.
6. Go to floor 2: take... | 500 | [
{
"input": "3 7\n2 1\n3 8\n5 2",
"output": "11"
},
{
"input": "5 10\n2 77\n3 33\n8 21\n9 12\n10 64",
"output": "79"
},
{
"input": "1 1000\n1000 1000",
"output": "2000"
},
{
"input": "1 1\n1 1",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "1 1000\n1 1",
"output": "1000"
},
... | 1,615,228,036 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 46 | 307,200 | a,b=map(int,input().split())
floort=[]
time=[];tot=[];ans1=0;ans2=0
for m in range(a):
c,d=map(int,input().split())
floort.append(c)
time.append(d)
floort.append(b)
so=sorted(floort)
for s in sorted(range(1,len(so)),reverse=True):
m=floort[s]-floort[s-1]
tot.append(m)
ans1=abs(sum(tot))
... | Title: Saitama Destroys Hotel
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Saitama accidentally destroyed a hotel again. To repay the hotel company, Genos has volunteered to operate an elevator in one of its other hotels. The elevator is special — it starts on the top floor, can only mo... | ```python
a,b=map(int,input().split())
floort=[]
time=[];tot=[];ans1=0;ans2=0
for m in range(a):
c,d=map(int,input().split())
floort.append(c)
time.append(d)
floort.append(b)
so=sorted(floort)
for s in sorted(range(1,len(so)),reverse=True):
m=floort[s]-floort[s-1]
tot.append(m)
ans1=abs(... | 0 | |
948 | A | Protect Sheep | PROGRAMMING | 900 | [
"brute force",
"dfs and similar",
"graphs",
"implementation"
] | null | null | Bob is a farmer. He has a large pasture with many sheep. Recently, he has lost some of them due to wolf attacks. He thus decided to place some shepherd dogs in such a way that all his sheep are protected.
The pasture is a rectangle consisting of *R*<=×<=*C* cells. Each cell is either empty, contains a sheep, a wolf or... | First line contains two integers *R* (1<=≤<=*R*<=≤<=500) and *C* (1<=≤<=*C*<=≤<=500), denoting the number of rows and the numbers of columns respectively.
Each of the following *R* lines is a string consisting of exactly *C* characters, representing one row of the pasture. Here, 'S' means a sheep, 'W' a wolf and '.' a... | If it is impossible to protect all sheep, output a single line with the word "No".
Otherwise, output a line with the word "Yes". Then print *R* lines, representing the pasture after placing dogs. Again, 'S' means a sheep, 'W' a wolf, 'D' is a dog and '.' an empty space. You are not allowed to move, remove or add a she... | [
"6 6\n..S...\n..S.W.\n.S....\n..W...\n...W..\n......\n",
"1 2\nSW\n",
"5 5\n.S...\n...S.\nS....\n...S.\n.S...\n"
] | [
"Yes\n..SD..\n..SDW.\n.SD...\n.DW...\nDD.W..\n......\n",
"No\n",
"Yes\n.S...\n...S.\nS.D..\n...S.\n.S...\n"
] | In the first example, we can split the pasture into two halves, one containing wolves and one containing sheep. Note that the sheep at (2,1) is safe, as wolves cannot move diagonally.
In the second example, there are no empty spots to put dogs that would guard the lone sheep.
In the third example, there are no wolves... | 500 | [
{
"input": "1 2\nSW",
"output": "No"
},
{
"input": "10 10\n....W.W.W.\n.........S\n.S.S...S..\nW.......SS\n.W..W.....\n.W...W....\nS..S...S.S\n....W...S.\n..S..S.S.S\nSS.......S",
"output": "Yes\nDDDDWDWDWD\nDDDDDDDDDS\nDSDSDDDSDD\nWDDDDDDDSS\nDWDDWDDDDD\nDWDDDWDDDD\nSDDSDDDSDS\nDDDDWDDDSD\nDDSD... | 1,676,721,519 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 61 | 135,884,800 |
from collections import defaultdict, deque
import collections, math
from concurrent.futures import thread
import heapq
from operator import indexOf
import sys, threading
mod = 1000000007
import math
def get_ints(): return map(int, sys.stdin.readline().strip().split())
def get_list(): return list(map(int, s... | Title: Protect Sheep
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Bob is a farmer. He has a large pasture with many sheep. Recently, he has lost some of them due to wolf attacks. He thus decided to place some shepherd dogs in such a way that all his sheep are protected.
The pasture is ... | ```python
from collections import defaultdict, deque
import collections, math
from concurrent.futures import thread
import heapq
from operator import indexOf
import sys, threading
mod = 1000000007
import math
def get_ints(): return map(int, sys.stdin.readline().strip().split())
def get_list(): return list(... | 0 | |
109 | A | Lucky Sum of Digits | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"brute force",
"implementation"
] | A. Lucky Sum of Digits | 2 | 256 | Petya loves lucky numbers. We all know that lucky numbers are the positive integers whose decimal representations contain only the lucky digits 4 and 7. For example, numbers 47, 744, 4 are lucky and 5, 17, 467 are not.
Petya wonders eagerly what minimum lucky number has the sum of digits equal to *n*. Help him cope wi... | The single line contains an integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=106) — the sum of digits of the required lucky number. | Print on the single line the result — the minimum lucky number, whose sum of digits equals *n*. If such number does not exist, print -1. | [
"11\n",
"10\n"
] | [
"47\n",
"-1\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "11",
"output": "47"
},
{
"input": "10",
"output": "-1"
},
{
"input": "64",
"output": "4477777777"
},
{
"input": "1",
"output": "-1"
},
{
"input": "4",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "7",
"output": "7"
},
{
"input": "12",
"outpu... | 1,582,437,966 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | OK | TESTS | 51 | 498 | 8,908,800 | def findLuckyNumber(n):
numDigits=n//4+1
diff=-1
for num in range(numDigits):
if num*7<n: continue
lo=0
hi=num
while hi>=lo:
num4=(hi+lo)//2
num7=num-num4
diff=num4*4+num7*7-n
if diff>0: lo=num4+1
elif diff<0: hi=num4-1
else:
ans4=num4
ans7=num7
break
if... | Title: Lucky Sum of Digits
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
Petya loves lucky numbers. We all know that lucky numbers are the positive integers whose decimal representations contain only the lucky digits 4 and 7. For example, numbers 47, 744, 4 are lucky and 5, 17, 467 are not.
... | ```python
def findLuckyNumber(n):
numDigits=n//4+1
diff=-1
for num in range(numDigits):
if num*7<n: continue
lo=0
hi=num
while hi>=lo:
num4=(hi+lo)//2
num7=num-num4
diff=num4*4+num7*7-n
if diff>0: lo=num4+1
elif diff<0: hi=num4-1
else:
ans4=num4
ans7=num7
bre... | 3.858906 |
265 | B | Roadside Trees (Simplified Edition) | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"greedy",
"implementation"
] | null | null | Squirrel Liss loves nuts. There are *n* trees (numbered 1 to *n* from west to east) along a street and there is a delicious nut on the top of each tree. The height of the tree *i* is *h**i*. Liss wants to eat all nuts.
Now Liss is on the root of the tree with the number 1. In one second Liss can perform one of the fol... | The first line contains an integer *n* (1<=<=≤<=<=*n*<=≤<=105) — the number of trees.
Next *n* lines contains the height of trees: *i*-th line contains an integer *h**i* (1<=≤<=*h**i*<=≤<=104) — the height of the tree with the number *i*. | Print a single integer — the minimal time required to eat all nuts in seconds. | [
"2\n1\n2\n",
"5\n2\n1\n2\n1\n1\n"
] | [
"5\n",
"14\n"
] | none | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "2\n1\n2",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "5\n2\n1\n2\n1\n1",
"output": "14"
},
{
"input": "1\n1",
"output": "2"
}
] | 1,591,655,729 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | OK | TESTS | 15 | 1,622 | 9,113,600 | from collections import Counter, defaultdict
BS="0123456789ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ"
def to_base(s, b):
res = ""
while s:
res+=BS[s%b]
s//= b
return res[::-1] or "0"
alpha = "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz"
from math import floor, ceil,pi
n = int(input())
nums = [int(input()... | Title: Roadside Trees (Simplified Edition)
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Squirrel Liss loves nuts. There are *n* trees (numbered 1 to *n* from west to east) along a street and there is a delicious nut on the top of each tree. The height of the tree *i* is *h**i*. Liss wan... | ```python
from collections import Counter, defaultdict
BS="0123456789ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ"
def to_base(s, b):
res = ""
while s:
res+=BS[s%b]
s//= b
return res[::-1] or "0"
alpha = "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz"
from math import floor, ceil,pi
n = int(input())
nums = [i... | 3 | |
127 | A | Wasted Time | PROGRAMMING | 900 | [
"geometry"
] | null | null | Mr. Scrooge, a very busy man, decided to count the time he wastes on all sorts of useless stuff to evaluate the lost profit. He has already counted the time he wastes sleeping and eating. And now Mr. Scrooge wants to count the time he has wasted signing papers.
Mr. Scrooge's signature can be represented as a polyline ... | The first line contains two integers *n* and *k* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100, 1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=1000). Each of the following *n* lines contains the coordinates of the polyline's endpoints. The *i*-th one contains coordinates of the point *A**i* — integers *x**i* and *y**i*, separated by a space.
All points *A**i* are different. Th... | Print one real number — the total time Scrooges wastes on signing the papers in seconds. The absolute or relative error should not exceed 10<=-<=6. | [
"2 1\n0 0\n10 0\n",
"5 10\n3 1\n-5 6\n-2 -1\n3 2\n10 0\n",
"6 10\n5 0\n4 0\n6 0\n3 0\n7 0\n2 0\n"
] | [
"0.200000000",
"6.032163204",
"3.000000000"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "2 1\n0 0\n10 0",
"output": "0.200000000"
},
{
"input": "5 10\n3 1\n-5 6\n-2 -1\n3 2\n10 0",
"output": "6.032163204"
},
{
"input": "6 10\n5 0\n4 0\n6 0\n3 0\n7 0\n2 0",
"output": "3.000000000"
},
{
"input": "10 95\n-20 -5\n2 -8\n14 13\n10 3\n17 11\n13 -12\n-6 11\n1... | 1,543,562,033 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 42 | 248 | 0 | n, k = map(int,input().split())
x1,y1 = map(int,input().split())
t = 0
for i in range(n-1):
x2,y2 = map(int,input().split())
t += ((x1-x2)**2 + (y1-y2)**2)**0.5
x1 = x2
y1 = y2
print(t*k/50) | Title: Wasted Time
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Mr. Scrooge, a very busy man, decided to count the time he wastes on all sorts of useless stuff to evaluate the lost profit. He has already counted the time he wastes sleeping and eating. And now Mr. Scrooge wants to count ... | ```python
n, k = map(int,input().split())
x1,y1 = map(int,input().split())
t = 0
for i in range(n-1):
x2,y2 = map(int,input().split())
t += ((x1-x2)**2 + (y1-y2)**2)**0.5
x1 = x2
y1 = y2
print(t*k/50)
``` | 3 | |
274 | A | k-Multiple Free Set | PROGRAMMING | 1,500 | [
"binary search",
"greedy",
"sortings"
] | null | null | A *k*-multiple free set is a set of integers where there is no pair of integers where one is equal to another integer multiplied by *k*. That is, there are no two integers *x* and *y* (*x*<=<<=*y*) from the set, such that *y*<==<=*x*·*k*.
You're given a set of *n* distinct positive integers. Your task is to find th... | The first line of the input contains two integers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105,<=1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=109). The next line contains a list of *n* distinct positive integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=109).
All the numbers in the lines are separated by single spaces. | On the only line of the output print the size of the largest *k*-multiple free subset of {*a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n*}. | [
"6 2\n2 3 6 5 4 10\n"
] | [
"3\n"
] | In the sample input one of the possible maximum 2-multiple free subsets is {4, 5, 6}. | 500 | [
{
"input": "6 2\n2 3 6 5 4 10",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "10 2\n1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10",
"output": "6"
},
{
"input": "1 1\n1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "100 2\n191 17 61 40 77 95 128 88 26 69 79 10 131 106 142 152 68 39 182 53 83 81 6 89 65 148 33 22 5 47 107 121 52 163 1... | 1,591,359,323 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | RUNTIME_ERROR | TESTS | 0 | 154 | 307,200 | for i in range(n):
dummylist=[]
dummy=0
dummylist.append(numlist[i])
for j in range(n):
dummy1=numlist[j]
check=0
for l in range(len(dummylist)):
if numlist[j] / dummylist[l] != k and dummylist[l] / numlist[j] != k and i != j:
check=0
... | Title: k-Multiple Free Set
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
A *k*-multiple free set is a set of integers where there is no pair of integers where one is equal to another integer multiplied by *k*. That is, there are no two integers *x* and *y* (*x*<=<<=*y*) from the set, ... | ```python
for i in range(n):
dummylist=[]
dummy=0
dummylist.append(numlist[i])
for j in range(n):
dummy1=numlist[j]
check=0
for l in range(len(dummylist)):
if numlist[j] / dummylist[l] != k and dummylist[l] / numlist[j] != k and i != j:
check=... | -1 | |
509 | B | Painting Pebbles | PROGRAMMING | 1,300 | [
"constructive algorithms",
"greedy",
"implementation"
] | null | null | There are *n* piles of pebbles on the table, the *i*-th pile contains *a**i* pebbles. Your task is to paint each pebble using one of the *k* given colors so that for each color *c* and any two piles *i* and *j* the difference between the number of pebbles of color *c* in pile *i* and number of pebbles of color *c* in p... | The first line of the input contains positive integers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*k*<=≤<=100), separated by a space — the number of piles and the number of colors respectively.
The second line contains *n* positive integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=100) denoting number of pebbles in each of the pile... | If there is no way to paint the pebbles satisfying the given condition, output "NO" (without quotes) .
Otherwise in the first line output "YES" (without quotes). Then *n* lines should follow, the *i*-th of them should contain *a**i* space-separated integers. *j*-th (1<=≤<=*j*<=≤<=*a**i*) of these integers should be eq... | [
"4 4\n1 2 3 4\n",
"5 2\n3 2 4 1 3\n",
"5 4\n3 2 4 3 5\n"
] | [
"YES\n1\n1 4\n1 2 4\n1 2 3 4\n",
"NO\n",
"YES\n1 2 3\n1 3\n1 2 3 4\n1 3 4\n1 1 2 3 4\n"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "4 4\n1 2 3 4",
"output": "YES\n1 \n1 1 \n1 1 2 \n1 1 2 3 "
},
{
"input": "5 2\n3 2 4 1 3",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "5 4\n3 2 4 3 5",
"output": "YES\n1 1 1 \n1 1 \n1 1 1 2 \n1 1 1 \n1 1 1 2 3 "
},
{
"input": "4 3\n5 6 7 8",
"output": "YES\n1 1 1 1 1 \n1 1 ... | 1,603,899,733 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 24 | 109 | 307,200 | def _print(_list):
if _list == []:
print("NO")
else:
from sys import stdout
print("YES")
for pile in _list:
for e in pile:
stdout.write(str(e)+' ')
print()
from math import ceil
def paint(piles, colors):
if max(piles) - min(piles) > c... | Title: Painting Pebbles
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
There are *n* piles of pebbles on the table, the *i*-th pile contains *a**i* pebbles. Your task is to paint each pebble using one of the *k* given colors so that for each color *c* and any two piles *i* and *j* the dif... | ```python
def _print(_list):
if _list == []:
print("NO")
else:
from sys import stdout
print("YES")
for pile in _list:
for e in pile:
stdout.write(str(e)+' ')
print()
from math import ceil
def paint(piles, colors):
if max(piles) - min(... | 3 |
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