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337
A
Puzzles
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "greedy" ]
null
null
The end of the school year is near and Ms. Manana, the teacher, will soon have to say goodbye to a yet another class. She decided to prepare a goodbye present for her *n* students and give each of them a jigsaw puzzle (which, as wikipedia states, is a tiling puzzle that requires the assembly of numerous small, often od...
The first line contains space-separated integers *n* and *m* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=50). The second line contains *m* space-separated integers *f*1,<=*f*2,<=...,<=*f**m* (4<=≤<=*f**i*<=≤<=1000) — the quantities of pieces in the puzzles sold in the shop.
Print a single integer — the least possible difference the teacher can obtain.
[ "4 6\n10 12 10 7 5 22\n" ]
[ "5\n" ]
Sample 1. The class has 4 students. The shop sells 6 puzzles. If Ms. Manana buys the first four puzzles consisting of 10, 12, 10 and 7 pieces correspondingly, then the difference between the sizes of the largest and the smallest puzzle will be equal to 5. It is impossible to obtain a smaller difference. Note that the t...
500
[ { "input": "4 6\n10 12 10 7 5 22", "output": "5" }, { "input": "2 2\n4 4", "output": "0" }, { "input": "2 10\n4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 12", "output": "0" }, { "input": "4 5\n818 136 713 59 946", "output": "759" }, { "input": "3 20\n446 852 783 313 549 965 40 88 86 617...
1,683,569,645
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
COMPILATION_ERROR
TESTS
0
0
0
#include <iostream> #include <vector> #include <algorithm> #include <set> #include <cmath> #include <map> #include <bitset> using namespace std; typedef long long int ll; typedef long double ld; typedef unsigned long long int ull; typedef vector<int> vi; typedef vector<vector<int>> vvi; typedef vector<lo...
Title: Puzzles Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: The end of the school year is near and Ms. Manana, the teacher, will soon have to say goodbye to a yet another class. She decided to prepare a goodbye present for her *n* students and give each of them a jigsaw puzzle (which, a...
```python #include <iostream> #include <vector> #include <algorithm> #include <set> #include <cmath> #include <map> #include <bitset> using namespace std; typedef long long int ll; typedef long double ld; typedef unsigned long long int ull; typedef vector<int> vi; typedef vector<vector<int>> vvi; typedef...
-1
513
A
Game
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "constructive algorithms", "math" ]
null
null
Two players play a simple game. Each player is provided with a box with balls. First player's box contains exactly *n*1 balls and second player's box contains exactly *n*2 balls. In one move first player can take from 1 to *k*1 balls from his box and throw them away. Similarly, the second player can take from 1 to *k*2...
The first line contains four integers *n*1,<=*n*2,<=*k*1,<=*k*2. All numbers in the input are from 1 to 50. This problem doesn't have subproblems. You will get 3 points for the correct submission.
Output "First" if the first player wins and "Second" otherwise.
[ "2 2 1 2\n", "2 1 1 1\n" ]
[ "Second\n", "First\n" ]
Consider the first sample test. Each player has a box with 2 balls. The first player draws a single ball from his box in one move and the second player can either take 1 or 2 balls from his box in one move. No matter how the first player acts, the second player can always win if he plays wisely.
3
[ { "input": "2 2 1 2", "output": "Second" }, { "input": "2 1 1 1", "output": "First" }, { "input": "5 7 4 1", "output": "Second" }, { "input": "5 7 1 4", "output": "Second" }, { "input": "5 7 10 10", "output": "Second" }, { "input": "5 7 1 10", "out...
1,623,614,921
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
20
93
0
def solve(a, b, c, d): if a > b: return 'First' return 'Second' if __name__ == "__main__": a, b, c, d = map(int, input().split()) print(solve(a, b, c, d))
Title: Game Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Two players play a simple game. Each player is provided with a box with balls. First player's box contains exactly *n*1 balls and second player's box contains exactly *n*2 balls. In one move first player can take from 1 to *k*1 ba...
```python def solve(a, b, c, d): if a > b: return 'First' return 'Second' if __name__ == "__main__": a, b, c, d = map(int, input().split()) print(solve(a, b, c, d)) ```
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...
1,598,013,683
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
40
218
6,758,400
s=input() a=input() s=s[::-1] if(s == a): 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() a=input() s=s[::-1] if(s == a): print("YES") else: print("NO") ```
3.932911
82
A
Double Cola
PROGRAMMING
1,100
[ "implementation", "math" ]
A. Double Cola
1
256
Sheldon, Leonard, Penny, Rajesh and Howard are in the queue for a "Double Cola" drink vending machine; there are no other people in the queue. The first one in the queue (Sheldon) buys a can, drinks it and doubles! The resulting two Sheldons go to the end of the queue. Then the next in the queue (Leonard) buys a can, d...
The input data consist of a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=109). It is guaranteed that the pretests check the spelling of all the five names, that is, that they contain all the five possible answers.
Print the single line — the name of the person who drinks the *n*-th can of cola. The cans are numbered starting from 1. Please note that you should spell the names like this: "Sheldon", "Leonard", "Penny", "Rajesh", "Howard" (without the quotes). In that order precisely the friends are in the queue initially.
[ "1\n", "6\n", "1802\n" ]
[ "Sheldon\n", "Sheldon\n", "Penny\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "1", "output": "Sheldon" }, { "input": "6", "output": "Sheldon" }, { "input": "1802", "output": "Penny" }, { "input": "1", "output": "Sheldon" }, { "input": "2", "output": "Leonard" }, { "input": "3", "output": "Penny" }, { "inpu...
1,633,521,674
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
41
93
20,172,800
import math n=int(input()) p=n/5+1 k=math.log(p,2) k_c=math.floor(k) k_b=pow(2,k_c) ans_pre=n-5*(k_b-1) k_d=pow(2,k_c) ans_beta=math.ceil(ans_pre/k_d) l=["Sheldon","Leonard","Penny","Rajesh","Howard"] print(l[ans_beta-1])
Title: Double Cola Time Limit: 1 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: Sheldon, Leonard, Penny, Rajesh and Howard are in the queue for a "Double Cola" drink vending machine; there are no other people in the queue. The first one in the queue (Sheldon) buys a can, drinks it and doubles! The resultin...
```python import math n=int(input()) p=n/5+1 k=math.log(p,2) k_c=math.floor(k) k_b=pow(2,k_c) ans_pre=n-5*(k_b-1) k_d=pow(2,k_c) ans_beta=math.ceil(ans_pre/k_d) l=["Sheldon","Leonard","Penny","Rajesh","Howard"] print(l[ans_beta-1]) ```
3.915925
378
A
Playing with Dice
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "brute force" ]
null
null
Two players are playing a game. First each of them writes an integer from 1 to 6, and then a dice is thrown. The player whose written number got closer to the number on the dice wins. If both payers have the same difference, it's a draw. The first player wrote number *a*, the second player wrote number *b*. How many w...
The single line contains two integers *a* and *b* (1<=≤<=*a*,<=*b*<=≤<=6) — the numbers written on the paper by the first and second player, correspondingly.
Print three integers: the number of ways to throw the dice at which the first player wins, the game ends with a draw or the second player wins, correspondingly.
[ "2 5\n", "2 4\n" ]
[ "3 0 3\n", "2 1 3\n" ]
The dice is a standard cube-shaped six-sided object with each side containing a number from 1 to 6, and where all numbers on all sides are distinct. You can assume that number *a* is closer to number *x* than number *b*, if |*a* - *x*| &lt; |*b* - *x*|.
500
[ { "input": "2 5", "output": "3 0 3" }, { "input": "2 4", "output": "2 1 3" }, { "input": "5 3", "output": "2 1 3" }, { "input": "1 6", "output": "3 0 3" }, { "input": "5 1", "output": "3 1 2" }, { "input": "6 3", "output": "2 0 4" }, { "inp...
1,620,796,819
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
38
62
6,758,400
a,b=list(map(int,input().split())) one=0 two=0 draw=0 for i in range(1,7): if abs(a-i)==abs(b-i): draw+=1 elif abs(a-i)<abs(b-i): one+=1 else: two+=1 print(one,draw,two)
Title: Playing with Dice Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Two players are playing a game. First each of them writes an integer from 1 to 6, and then a dice is thrown. The player whose written number got closer to the number on the dice wins. If both payers have the same diff...
```python a,b=list(map(int,input().split())) one=0 two=0 draw=0 for i in range(1,7): if abs(a-i)==abs(b-i): draw+=1 elif abs(a-i)<abs(b-i): one+=1 else: two+=1 print(one,draw,two) ```
3
858
A
k-rounding
PROGRAMMING
1,100
[ "brute force", "math", "number theory" ]
null
null
For a given positive integer *n* denote its *k*-rounding as the minimum positive integer *x*, such that *x* ends with *k* or more zeros in base 10 and is divisible by *n*. For example, 4-rounding of 375 is 375·80<==<=30000. 30000 is the minimum integer such that it ends with 4 or more zeros and is divisible by 375. W...
The only line contains two integers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=109, 0<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=8).
Print the *k*-rounding of *n*.
[ "375 4\n", "10000 1\n", "38101 0\n", "123456789 8\n" ]
[ "30000\n", "10000\n", "38101\n", "12345678900000000\n" ]
none
750
[ { "input": "375 4", "output": "30000" }, { "input": "10000 1", "output": "10000" }, { "input": "38101 0", "output": "38101" }, { "input": "123456789 8", "output": "12345678900000000" }, { "input": "1 0", "output": "1" }, { "input": "2 0", "output":...
1,506,188,125
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
96
62
0
n, k = map(int, input().split()) nn = n two = 0; five = 0; while n % 2 == 0: n //= 2; two += 1; while n % 5 == 0: n //= 5; five += 1; for i in range(max(0, k - two)): nn *= 2; for i in range(max(0, k - five)): nn *= 5 print(nn)
Title: k-rounding Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: For a given positive integer *n* denote its *k*-rounding as the minimum positive integer *x*, such that *x* ends with *k* or more zeros in base 10 and is divisible by *n*. For example, 4-rounding of 375 is 375·80<==<=30000....
```python n, k = map(int, input().split()) nn = n two = 0; five = 0; while n % 2 == 0: n //= 2; two += 1; while n % 5 == 0: n //= 5; five += 1; for i in range(max(0, k - two)): nn *= 2; for i in range(max(0, k - five)): nn *= 5 print(nn) ```
3
760
A
Petr and a calendar
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation", "math" ]
null
null
Petr wants to make a calendar for current month. For this purpose he draws a table in which columns correspond to weeks (a week is seven consequent days from Monday to Sunday), rows correspond to weekdays, and cells contain dates. For example, a calendar for January 2017 should look like on the picture: Petr wants to ...
The only line contain two integers *m* and *d* (1<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=12, 1<=≤<=*d*<=≤<=7) — the number of month (January is the first month, December is the twelfth) and the weekday of the first date of this month (1 is Monday, 7 is Sunday).
Print single integer: the number of columns the table should have.
[ "1 7\n", "1 1\n", "11 6\n" ]
[ "6\n", "5\n", "5\n" ]
The first example corresponds to the January 2017 shown on the picture in the statements. In the second example 1-st January is Monday, so the whole month fits into 5 columns. In the third example 1-st November is Saturday and 5 columns is enough.
500
[ { "input": "1 7", "output": "6" }, { "input": "1 1", "output": "5" }, { "input": "11 6", "output": "5" }, { "input": "2 7", "output": "5" }, { "input": "2 1", "output": "4" }, { "input": "8 6", "output": "6" }, { "input": "1 1", "output...
1,578,656,098
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
104
124
0
m, d = map(int, input().split()) if d == 1: print(5 - (m==2)) elif d < 6: print(5) elif d == 6: print(6 - (m in (2, 4, 6, 9, 11))) else: print(6 - (m==2))
Title: Petr and a calendar Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Petr wants to make a calendar for current month. For this purpose he draws a table in which columns correspond to weeks (a week is seven consequent days from Monday to Sunday), rows correspond to weekdays, and cells...
```python m, d = map(int, input().split()) if d == 1: print(5 - (m==2)) elif d < 6: print(5) elif d == 6: print(6 - (m in (2, 4, 6, 9, 11))) else: print(6 - (m==2)) ```
3
675
C
Money Transfers
PROGRAMMING
2,100
[ "constructive algorithms", "data structures", "greedy", "sortings" ]
null
null
There are *n* banks in the city where Vasya lives, they are located in a circle, such that any two banks are neighbouring if their indices differ by no more than 1. Also, bank 1 and bank *n* are neighbours if *n*<=&gt;<=1. No bank is a neighbour of itself. Vasya has an account in each bank. Its balance may be negative...
The first line of the input contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100<=000) — the number of banks. The second line contains *n* integers *a**i* (<=-<=109<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=109), the *i*-th of them is equal to the initial balance of the account in the *i*-th bank. It's guaranteed that the sum of all *a**i* is equal...
Print the minimum number of operations required to change balance in each bank to zero.
[ "3\n5 0 -5\n", "4\n-1 0 1 0\n", "4\n1 2 3 -6\n" ]
[ "1\n", "2\n", "3\n" ]
In the first sample, Vasya may transfer 5 from the first bank to the third. In the second sample, Vasya may first transfer 1 from the third bank to the second, and then 1 from the second to the first. In the third sample, the following sequence provides the optimal answer: 1. transfer 1 from the first bank to the ...
1,500
[ { "input": "3\n5 0 -5", "output": "1" }, { "input": "4\n-1 0 1 0", "output": "2" }, { "input": "4\n1 2 3 -6", "output": "3" }, { "input": "1\n0", "output": "0" }, { "input": "50\n108431864 128274949 -554057370 -384620666 -202862975 -803855410 -482167063 -55139054 ...
1,464,268,088
2,707
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
4
62
4,608,000
n = int(input()) a = list(map(int,input().split())) if a == [0]*n: print(0) exit(0) f = 0 for i in range(n): if a[i] != 0: f = i break res = 0 tmp = 0 s = 0 for j in range(f, f+n): i = j % n s += a[i] if s == 0: res += tmp tmp = 0 else: ...
Title: Money Transfers Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: There are *n* banks in the city where Vasya lives, they are located in a circle, such that any two banks are neighbouring if their indices differ by no more than 1. Also, bank 1 and bank *n* are neighbours if *n*<=&gt;<...
```python n = int(input()) a = list(map(int,input().split())) if a == [0]*n: print(0) exit(0) f = 0 for i in range(n): if a[i] != 0: f = i break res = 0 tmp = 0 s = 0 for j in range(f, f+n): i = j % n s += a[i] if s == 0: res += tmp tmp = 0 ...
0
447
B
DZY Loves Strings
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "greedy", "implementation" ]
null
null
DZY loves collecting special strings which only contain lowercase letters. For each lowercase letter *c* DZY knows its value *w**c*. For each special string *s*<==<=*s*1*s*2... *s*|*s*| (|*s*| is the length of the string) he represents its value with a function *f*(*s*), where Now DZY has a string *s*. He wants to in...
The first line contains a single string *s* (1<=≤<=|*s*|<=≤<=103). The second line contains a single integer *k* (0<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=103). The third line contains twenty-six integers from *w**a* to *w**z*. Each such number is non-negative and doesn't exceed 1000.
Print a single integer — the largest possible value of the resulting string DZY could get.
[ "abc\n3\n1 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1\n" ]
[ "41\n" ]
In the test sample DZY can obtain "abcbbc", *value* = 1·1 + 2·2 + 3·2 + 4·2 + 5·2 + 6·2 = 41.
1,000
[ { "input": "abc\n3\n1 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1", "output": "41" }, { "input": "mmzhr\n3\n443 497 867 471 195 670 453 413 579 466 553 881 847 642 269 996 666 702 487 209 257 741 974 133 519 453", "output": "29978" }, { "input": "ajeeseerqnpaujubmajpibxrccazaawetyw...
1,536,408,604
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
24
124
0
s = input() k = int(input()) w = [int(el) for el in input().split()] ans = 0 zp = ord('a') i = 1 for el in s: ans += i * w[ord(el) - zp] i += 1 maxw = max(w) while k: ans += i * maxw k -= 1 i += 1 print(ans)
Title: DZY Loves Strings Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: DZY loves collecting special strings which only contain lowercase letters. For each lowercase letter *c* DZY knows its value *w**c*. For each special string *s*<==<=*s*1*s*2... *s*|*s*| (|*s*| is the length of the str...
```python s = input() k = int(input()) w = [int(el) for el in input().split()] ans = 0 zp = ord('a') i = 1 for el in s: ans += i * w[ord(el) - zp] i += 1 maxw = max(w) while k: ans += i * maxw k -= 1 i += 1 print(ans) ```
3
124
A
The number of positions
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "math" ]
null
null
Petr stands in line of *n* people, but he doesn't know exactly which position he occupies. He can say that there are no less than *a* people standing in front of him and no more than *b* people standing behind him. Find the number of different positions Petr can occupy.
The only line contains three integers *n*, *a* and *b* (0<=≤<=*a*,<=*b*<=&lt;<=*n*<=≤<=100).
Print the single number — the number of the sought positions.
[ "3 1 1\n", "5 2 3\n" ]
[ "2\n", "3\n" ]
The possible positions in the first sample are: 2 and 3 (if we number the positions starting with 1). In the second sample they are 3, 4 and 5.
500
[ { "input": "3 1 1", "output": "2" }, { "input": "5 2 3", "output": "3" }, { "input": "5 4 0", "output": "1" }, { "input": "6 5 5", "output": "1" }, { "input": "9 4 3", "output": "4" }, { "input": "11 4 6", "output": "7" }, { "input": "13 8 ...
1,619,360,490
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
4
122
0
def soughts(n, a, b): if a == 0: return 0 elif a == n: return 1 else: return n-a n, a, b = map(int, input().split()) print(soughts(n, a, b))
Title: The number of positions Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Petr stands in line of *n* people, but he doesn't know exactly which position he occupies. He can say that there are no less than *a* people standing in front of him and no more than *b* people standing behind h...
```python def soughts(n, a, b): if a == 0: return 0 elif a == n: return 1 else: return n-a n, a, b = map(int, input().split()) print(soughts(n, a, b)) ```
0
349
A
Cinema Line
PROGRAMMING
1,100
[ "greedy", "implementation" ]
null
null
The new "Die Hard" movie has just been released! There are *n* people at the cinema box office standing in a huge line. Each of them has a single 100, 50 or 25 ruble bill. A "Die Hard" ticket costs 25 rubles. Can the booking clerk sell a ticket to each person and give the change if he initially has no money and sells t...
The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) — the number of people in the line. The next line contains *n* integers, each of them equals 25, 50 or 100 — the values of the bills the people have. The numbers are given in the order from the beginning of the line (at the box office) to the end of the line.
Print "YES" (without the quotes) if the booking clerk can sell a ticket to each person and give the change. Otherwise print "NO".
[ "4\n25 25 50 50\n", "2\n25 100\n", "4\n50 50 25 25\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "NO\n", "NO\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "4\n25 25 50 50", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "2\n25 100", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "4\n50 50 25 25", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "3\n25 50 100", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "10\n25 25 25 25 25 25 25 25 25 25", "output": "YES" }, { "...
1,629,965,530
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
40
248
12,390,400
n = int(input()) arr = list(map(int, input().split())) n25 = 0 n50 = 0 poss = True for i in range(n): if (arr[i] == 25): n25 += 25 elif (arr[i] == 50): n50 += 50 n25 -= 25 else: if (n50 > 0): n25 -= 25 n50 -= 50 else: ...
Title: Cinema Line Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: The new "Die Hard" movie has just been released! There are *n* people at the cinema box office standing in a huge line. Each of them has a single 100, 50 or 25 ruble bill. A "Die Hard" ticket costs 25 rubles. Can the bookin...
```python n = int(input()) arr = list(map(int, input().split())) n25 = 0 n50 = 0 poss = True for i in range(n): if (arr[i] == 25): n25 += 25 elif (arr[i] == 50): n50 += 50 n25 -= 25 else: if (n50 > 0): n25 -= 25 n50 -= 50 else:...
3
13
A
Numbers
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation", "math" ]
A. Numbers
1
64
Little Petya likes numbers a lot. He found that number 123 in base 16 consists of two digits: the first is 7 and the second is 11. So the sum of digits of 123 in base 16 is equal to 18. Now he wonders what is an average value of sum of digits of the number *A* written in all bases from 2 to *A*<=-<=1. Note that all c...
Input contains one integer number *A* (3<=≤<=*A*<=≤<=1000).
Output should contain required average value in format «X/Y», where X is the numerator and Y is the denominator.
[ "5\n", "3\n" ]
[ "7/3\n", "2/1\n" ]
In the first sample number 5 written in all bases from 2 to 4 looks so: 101, 12, 11. Sums of digits are 2, 3 and 2, respectively.
0
[ { "input": "5", "output": "7/3" }, { "input": "3", "output": "2/1" }, { "input": "1000", "output": "90132/499" }, { "input": "927", "output": "155449/925" }, { "input": "260", "output": "6265/129" }, { "input": "131", "output": "3370/129" }, { ...
1,519,606,184
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
99
124
5,632,000
#k=int(input()) #n,m=map(int,input().split()) #a=list(map(int,input().split())) #b=list(map(int,input().split())) def gcd(a,b): while(b): r=a%b a=b b=r return a def sumdig(a,base): cnt=0 while(a): cnt+=a%base a//=base return cnt ...
Title: Numbers Time Limit: 1 seconds Memory Limit: 64 megabytes Problem Description: Little Petya likes numbers a lot. He found that number 123 in base 16 consists of two digits: the first is 7 and the second is 11. So the sum of digits of 123 in base 16 is equal to 18. Now he wonders what is an average value of su...
```python #k=int(input()) #n,m=map(int,input().split()) #a=list(map(int,input().split())) #b=list(map(int,input().split())) def gcd(a,b): while(b): r=a%b a=b b=r return a def sumdig(a,base): cnt=0 while(a): cnt+=a%base a//=base ret...
3.896038
946
A
Partition
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "greedy" ]
null
null
You are given a sequence *a* consisting of *n* integers. You may partition this sequence into two sequences *b* and *c* in such a way that every element belongs exactly to one of these sequences. Let *B* be the sum of elements belonging to *b*, and *C* be the sum of elements belonging to *c* (if some of these sequenc...
The first line contains one integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of elements in *a*. The second line contains *n* integers *a*1, *a*2, ..., *a**n* (<=-<=100<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=100) — the elements of sequence *a*.
Print the maximum possible value of *B*<=-<=*C*, where *B* is the sum of elements of sequence *b*, and *C* is the sum of elements of sequence *c*.
[ "3\n1 -2 0\n", "6\n16 23 16 15 42 8\n" ]
[ "3\n", "120\n" ]
In the first example we may choose *b* = {1, 0}, *c* = { - 2}. Then *B* = 1, *C* =  - 2, *B* - *C* = 3. In the second example we choose *b* = {16, 23, 16, 15, 42, 8}, *c* = {} (an empty sequence). Then *B* = 120, *C* = 0, *B* - *C* = 120.
0
[ { "input": "3\n1 -2 0", "output": "3" }, { "input": "6\n16 23 16 15 42 8", "output": "120" }, { "input": "1\n-1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "100\n-100 -100 -100 -100 -100 -100 -100 -100 -100 -100 -100 -100 -100 -100 -100 -100 -100 -100 -100 -100 -100 -100 -100 -100 -100 -10...
1,645,065,313
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
72
46
0
def particion(lista): lista.sort() suma_1,suma_2=0,0 for n in lista: if n>=0: suma_1+=n else: suma_2+=n return suma_1-suma_2 def main(): number=int(input()) lista=[int(x) for x in input().split()] print(particion(lista)) main()
Title: Partition Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: You are given a sequence *a* consisting of *n* integers. You may partition this sequence into two sequences *b* and *c* in such a way that every element belongs exactly to one of these sequences. Let *B* be the sum of eleme...
```python def particion(lista): lista.sort() suma_1,suma_2=0,0 for n in lista: if n>=0: suma_1+=n else: suma_2+=n return suma_1-suma_2 def main(): number=int(input()) lista=[int(x) for x in input().split()] print(particion(lista)) main() ```
3
886
A
ACM ICPC
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "brute force" ]
null
null
In a small but very proud high school it was decided to win ACM ICPC. This goal requires to compose as many teams of three as possible, but since there were only 6 students who wished to participate, the decision was to build exactly two teams. After practice competition, participant number *i* got a score of *a**i*. ...
The single line contains six integers *a*1,<=...,<=*a*6 (0<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=1000) — scores of the participants
Print "YES" (quotes for clarity), if it is possible to build teams with equal score, and "NO" otherwise. You can print each character either upper- or lowercase ("YeS" and "yes" are valid when the answer is "YES").
[ "1 3 2 1 2 1\n", "1 1 1 1 1 99\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "NO\n" ]
In the first sample, first team can be composed of 1st, 2nd and 6th participant, second — of 3rd, 4th and 5th: team scores are 1 + 3 + 1 = 2 + 1 + 2 = 5. In the second sample, score of participant number 6 is too high: his team score will be definitely greater.
500
[ { "input": "1 3 2 1 2 1", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "1 1 1 1 1 99", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "0 0 0 0 0 0", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "633 609 369 704 573 416", "output": "NO" }, { ...
1,530,391,369
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
2
108
0
a = [i for i in map(int, input().split())] total = sum(a) ans = False for i in range(6): for j in range(i + 1, 6): for k in range(j + 1, 6): if j + k + i == total / 2: ans = True print("YES" if ans else "NO")
Title: ACM ICPC Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: In a small but very proud high school it was decided to win ACM ICPC. This goal requires to compose as many teams of three as possible, but since there were only 6 students who wished to participate, the decision was to build ...
```python a = [i for i in map(int, input().split())] total = sum(a) ans = False for i in range(6): for j in range(i + 1, 6): for k in range(j + 1, 6): if j + k + i == total / 2: ans = True print("YES" if ans else "NO") ```
0
216
B
Forming Teams
PROGRAMMING
1,700
[ "dfs and similar", "implementation" ]
null
null
One day *n* students come to the stadium. They want to play football, and for that they need to split into teams, the teams must have an equal number of people. We know that this group of people has archenemies. Each student has at most two archenemies. Besides, if student *A* is an archenemy to student *B*, then stud...
The first line contains two integers *n* and *m* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100, 1<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=100) — the number of students and the number of pairs of archenemies correspondingly. Next *m* lines describe enmity between students. Each enmity is described as two numbers *a**i* and *b**i* (1<=≤<=*a**i*,<=*b**i*<=≤<=*n*, *a**i*<=≠<=...
Print a single integer — the minimum number of students you will have to send to the bench in order to start the game.
[ "5 4\n1 2\n2 4\n5 3\n1 4\n", "6 2\n1 4\n3 4\n", "6 6\n1 2\n2 3\n3 1\n4 5\n5 6\n6 4\n" ]
[ "1", "0", "2" ]
none
1,500
[ { "input": "5 4\n1 2\n2 4\n5 3\n1 4", "output": "1" }, { "input": "6 2\n1 4\n3 4", "output": "0" }, { "input": "6 6\n1 2\n2 3\n3 1\n4 5\n5 6\n6 4", "output": "2" }, { "input": "5 1\n1 2", "output": "1" }, { "input": "8 8\n1 2\n2 3\n3 4\n4 5\n5 6\n6 7\n7 8\n8 1", ...
1,692,092,920
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
0
92
0
print("_RANDOM_GUESS_1692092920.1371987")# 1692092920.137215
Title: Forming Teams Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: One day *n* students come to the stadium. They want to play football, and for that they need to split into teams, the teams must have an equal number of people. We know that this group of people has archenemies. Each stu...
```python print("_RANDOM_GUESS_1692092920.1371987")# 1692092920.137215 ```
0
689
A
Mike and Cellphone
PROGRAMMING
1,400
[ "brute force", "constructive algorithms", "implementation" ]
null
null
While swimming at the beach, Mike has accidentally dropped his cellphone into the water. There was no worry as he bought a cheap replacement phone with an old-fashioned keyboard. The keyboard has only ten digital equal-sized keys, located in the following way: Together with his old phone, he lost all his contacts and ...
The first line of the input contains the only integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=9) — the number of digits in the phone number that Mike put in. The second line contains the string consisting of *n* digits (characters from '0' to '9') representing the number that Mike put in.
If there is no other phone number with the same finger movements and Mike can be sure he is calling the correct number, print "YES" (without quotes) in the only line. Otherwise print "NO" (without quotes) in the first line.
[ "3\n586\n", "2\n09\n", "9\n123456789\n", "3\n911\n" ]
[ "NO\n", "NO\n", "YES\n", "YES\n" ]
You can find the picture clarifying the first sample case in the statement above.
500
[ { "input": "3\n586", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "2\n09", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "9\n123456789", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "3\n911", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "3\n089", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "3\n159", "output": "YES" }, { ...
1,467,823,588
688
Python 3
OK
TESTS
93
62
0
n = int(input()) s = input() haszero = 0 for x in s: if(x=='0'): haszero = 1 hasup = 0 hasleft = 0 hasright = 0 hasdown = 0 for x in s: if(x=='1')or(x=='2')or(x=='3'): hasup = 1 if(x=='1')or(x=='4')or(x=='7'): hasleft = 1 if(x=='3')or(x=='6')or(x=='9'): ...
Title: Mike and Cellphone Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: While swimming at the beach, Mike has accidentally dropped his cellphone into the water. There was no worry as he bought a cheap replacement phone with an old-fashioned keyboard. The keyboard has only ten digital equ...
```python n = int(input()) s = input() haszero = 0 for x in s: if(x=='0'): haszero = 1 hasup = 0 hasleft = 0 hasright = 0 hasdown = 0 for x in s: if(x=='1')or(x=='2')or(x=='3'): hasup = 1 if(x=='1')or(x=='4')or(x=='7'): hasleft = 1 if(x=='3')or(x=='6')or(x=='...
3
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"...
1,659,419,971
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
32
92
0
n=int(input()) l=list(map(int,input().split())) s=l[:] def myFunc(e): return e%2 l.sort(key=myFunc) if (l[1]%2!=0): print(s.index(l[0])+1) else: print(s.index(l[-1])+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 n=int(input()) l=list(map(int,input().split())) s=l[:] def myFunc(e): return e%2 l.sort(key=myFunc) if (l[1]%2!=0): print(s.index(l[0])+1) else: print(s.index(l[-1])+1) ```
3.977
867
A
Between the Offices
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
As you may know, MemSQL has American offices in both San Francisco and Seattle. Being a manager in the company, you travel a lot between the two cities, always by plane. You prefer flying from Seattle to San Francisco than in the other direction, because it's warmer in San Francisco. You are so busy that you don't rem...
The first line of input contains single integer *n* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of days. The second line contains a string of length *n* consisting of only capital 'S' and 'F' letters. If the *i*-th letter is 'S', then you were in Seattle office on that day. Otherwise you were in San Francisco. The days are given...
Print "YES" if you flew more times from Seattle to San Francisco, and "NO" otherwise. You can print each letter in any case (upper or lower).
[ "4\nFSSF\n", "2\nSF\n", "10\nFFFFFFFFFF\n", "10\nSSFFSFFSFF\n" ]
[ "NO\n", "YES\n", "NO\n", "YES\n" ]
In the first example you were initially at San Francisco, then flew to Seattle, were there for two days and returned to San Francisco. You made one flight in each direction, so the answer is "NO". In the second example you just flew from Seattle to San Francisco, so the answer is "YES". In the third example you staye...
500
[ { "input": "4\nFSSF", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "2\nSF", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "10\nFFFFFFFFFF", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "10\nSSFFSFFSFF", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "20\nSFSFFFFSSFFFFSSSSFSS", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "20\nSSFFF...
1,698,064,869
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
OK
TESTS
34
62
0
n = int(input()) str = input() cnt1 = 0 cnt2 = 0 for i in range(1, n): if str[i - 1] == 'F' and str[i] == 'S': cnt1 += 1 elif str[i - 1] == 'S' and str[i] == 'F': cnt2 += 1 if cnt2 > cnt1: print("YES") else: print("NO")# 1698064869.6158943
Title: Between the Offices Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: As you may know, MemSQL has American offices in both San Francisco and Seattle. Being a manager in the company, you travel a lot between the two cities, always by plane. You prefer flying from Seattle to San Franci...
```python n = int(input()) str = input() cnt1 = 0 cnt2 = 0 for i in range(1, n): if str[i - 1] == 'F' and str[i] == 'S': cnt1 += 1 elif str[i - 1] == 'S' and str[i] == 'F': cnt2 += 1 if cnt2 > cnt1: print("YES") else: print("NO")# 1698064869.6158943 ```
3
0
none
none
none
0
[ "none" ]
null
null
An atom of element X can exist in *n* distinct states with energies *E*1<=&lt;<=*E*2<=&lt;<=...<=&lt;<=*E**n*. Arkady wants to build a laser on this element, using a three-level scheme. Here is a simplified description of the scheme. Three distinct states *i*, *j* and *k* are selected, where *i*<=&lt;<=*j*<=&lt;<=*k*...
The first line contains two integers *n* and *U* (3<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105, 1<=≤<=*U*<=≤<=109) — the number of states and the maximum possible difference between *E**k* and *E**i*. The second line contains a sequence of integers *E*1,<=*E*2,<=...,<=*E**n* (1<=≤<=*E*1<=&lt;<=*E*2...<=&lt;<=*E**n*<=≤<=109). It is guaranteed th...
If it is not possible to choose three states that satisfy all constraints, print -1. Otherwise, print one real number η — the maximum possible energy conversion efficiency. Your answer is considered correct its absolute or relative error does not exceed 10<=-<=9. Formally, let your answer be *a*, and the jury's answe...
[ "4 4\n1 3 5 7\n", "10 8\n10 13 15 16 17 19 20 22 24 25\n", "3 1\n2 5 10\n" ]
[ "0.5\n", "0.875\n", "-1\n" ]
In the first example choose states 1, 2 and 3, so that the energy conversion efficiency becomes equal to <img align="middle" class="tex-formula" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/147ae7a830722917b0aa37d064df8eb74cfefb97.png" style="max-width: 100.0%;max-height: 100.0%;"/>. In the second example choose states 4, 5 a...
0
[ { "input": "4 4\n1 3 5 7", "output": "0.5" }, { "input": "10 8\n10 13 15 16 17 19 20 22 24 25", "output": "0.875" }, { "input": "3 1\n2 5 10", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "5 3\n4 6 8 9 10", "output": "0.5" }, { "input": "10 128\n110 121 140 158 174 188 251 271 27...
1,521,922,859
2,147,483,647
Python 3
COMPILATION_ERROR
TESTS
0
0
0
#include <iostream> #include <vector> using namespace std; int bin_l(vector <double> num, double x) { int r = num.size(); int l = -1; while (r - l > 1) { int m = (l + r) / 2; if (num[m] <= x) { l = m; } else { r = m; } }...
Title: none Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: An atom of element X can exist in *n* distinct states with energies *E*1<=&lt;<=*E*2<=&lt;<=...<=&lt;<=*E**n*. Arkady wants to build a laser on this element, using a three-level scheme. Here is a simplified description of the sche...
```python #include <iostream> #include <vector> using namespace std; int bin_l(vector <double> num, double x) { int r = num.size(); int l = -1; while (r - l > 1) { int m = (l + r) / 2; if (num[m] <= x) { l = m; } else { r = m; ...
-1
75
A
Life Without Zeros
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation" ]
A. Life Without Zeros
2
256
Can you imagine our life if we removed all zeros from it? For sure we will have many problems. In this problem we will have a simple example if we removed all zeros from our life, it's the addition operation. Let's assume you are given this equation *a*<=+<=*b*<==<=*c*, where *a* and *b* are positive integers, and *c*...
The input will consist of two lines, the first line will contain the integer *a*, and the second line will contain the integer *b* which are in the equation as described above (1<=≤<=*a*,<=*b*<=≤<=109). There won't be any leading zeros in both. The value of *c* should be calculated as *c*<==<=*a*<=+<=*b*.
The output will be just one line, you should print "YES" if the equation will remain correct after removing all zeros, and print "NO" otherwise.
[ "101\n102\n", "105\n106\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "NO\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "101\n102", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "105\n106", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "544\n397", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "822\n280", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "101\n413", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "309\n139", "output": "NO" }...
1,530,553,962
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
43
218
0
a = input() b = input() ans1 = int(a)+int(b) ans1 = str(ans1) c = '' for i in range(len(ans1)): if(ans1[i]!='0'): c+=ans1[i] c = int(c) s1 = '' s2 = '' for i in range(len(a)): if(a[i]!='0'): s1+=a[i] for i in range(len(b)): if(b[i]!='0'): s2+=b[i] ans2 = int(s1)+int(...
Title: Life Without Zeros Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: Can you imagine our life if we removed all zeros from it? For sure we will have many problems. In this problem we will have a simple example if we removed all zeros from our life, it's the addition operation. Let's assu...
```python a = input() b = input() ans1 = int(a)+int(b) ans1 = str(ans1) c = '' for i in range(len(ans1)): if(ans1[i]!='0'): c+=ans1[i] c = int(c) s1 = '' s2 = '' for i in range(len(a)): if(a[i]!='0'): s1+=a[i] for i in range(len(b)): if(b[i]!='0'): s2+=b[i] ans2 = in...
3.9455
786
C
Till I Collapse
PROGRAMMING
2,400
[ "data structures", "divide and conquer" ]
null
null
Rick and Morty want to find MR. PBH and they can't do it alone. So they need of Mr. Meeseeks. They Have generated *n* Mr. Meeseeks, standing in a line numbered from 1 to *n*. Each of them has his own color. *i*-th Mr. Meeseeks' color is *a**i*. Rick and Morty are gathering their army and they want to divide Mr. Meese...
The first line of input contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) — number of Mr. Meeseeks. The second line contains *n* integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* separated by spaces (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=*n*) — colors of Mr. Meeseeks in order they standing in a line.
In the first and only line of input print *n* integers separated by spaces. *i*-th integer should be the minimum number of presidios needed if the value of *k* is *i*.
[ "5\n1 3 4 3 3\n", "8\n1 5 7 8 1 7 6 1\n" ]
[ "4 2 1 1 1 \n", "8 4 3 2 1 1 1 1 \n" ]
For the first sample testcase, some optimal ways of dividing army into squads for each *k* are: 1. [1], [3], [4], [3, 3] 1. [1], [3, 4, 3, 3] 1. [1, 3, 4, 3, 3] 1. [1, 3, 4, 3, 3] 1. [1, 3, 4, 3, 3] For the second testcase, some optimal ways of dividing army into squads for each *k* are: 1. [1], [5], [7], [8],...
1,500
[ { "input": "5\n1 3 4 3 3", "output": "4 2 1 1 1 " }, { "input": "8\n1 5 7 8 1 7 6 1", "output": "8 4 3 2 1 1 1 1 " }, { "input": "10\n4 1 2 6 8 5 3 9 3 9", "output": "10 4 3 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 " }, { "input": "85\n23 11 69 1 49 10 7 13 66 35 81 4 51 2 62 55 31 18 85 34 59 44 20 28...
1,684,477,699
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED
TESTS
7
2,000
13,619,200
if __name__ == '__main__': n = int(input()) a = list(map(int, input().split())) check = [0] * (n + 1) vis = [0] * n Clocks = 0 def get(k: int)->int: if check[k] != 0: return check[k] ans = 0 i = 0 while i < n: global Clocks Cloc...
Title: Till I Collapse Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Rick and Morty want to find MR. PBH and they can't do it alone. So they need of Mr. Meeseeks. They Have generated *n* Mr. Meeseeks, standing in a line numbered from 1 to *n*. Each of them has his own color. *i*-th Mr. M...
```python if __name__ == '__main__': n = int(input()) a = list(map(int, input().split())) check = [0] * (n + 1) vis = [0] * n Clocks = 0 def get(k: int)->int: if check[k] != 0: return check[k] ans = 0 i = 0 while i < n: global Clocks ...
0
729
B
Spotlights
PROGRAMMING
1,200
[ "dp", "implementation" ]
null
null
Theater stage is a rectangular field of size *n*<=×<=*m*. The director gave you the stage's plan which actors will follow. For each cell it is stated in the plan if there would be an actor in this cell or not. You are to place a spotlight on the stage in some good position. The spotlight will project light in one of t...
The first line contains two positive integers *n* and *m* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=1000) — the number of rows and the number of columns in the plan. The next *n* lines contain *m* integers, 0 or 1 each — the description of the plan. Integer 1, means there will be an actor in the corresponding cell, while 0 means the cell ...
Print one integer — the number of good positions for placing the spotlight.
[ "2 4\n0 1 0 0\n1 0 1 0\n", "4 4\n0 0 0 0\n1 0 0 1\n0 1 1 0\n0 1 0 0\n" ]
[ "9\n", "20\n" ]
In the first example the following positions are good: 1. the (1, 1) cell and right direction; 1. the (1, 1) cell and down direction; 1. the (1, 3) cell and left direction; 1. the (1, 3) cell and down direction; 1. the (1, 4) cell and left direction; 1. the (2, 2) cell and left direction; 1. the (2, 2) cell and...
1,000
[ { "input": "2 4\n0 1 0 0\n1 0 1 0", "output": "9" }, { "input": "4 4\n0 0 0 0\n1 0 0 1\n0 1 1 0\n0 1 0 0", "output": "20" }, { "input": "1 5\n1 1 0 0 0", "output": "3" }, { "input": "2 10\n0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0\n1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0", "output": "20" }, { "input": "3 ...
1,565,347,284
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
72
483
14,540,800
from sys import stdin,stdout input = stdin.readline n,m = map(int, input().split()) arr = [] for i in range(n): arr.append(list(map(int, input().split()))) dp = [[0 for i in range(m)] for j in range(n)] for i in range(n): t = 0 for j in range(m): if arr[i][j] == 0: dp[i][j] += t ...
Title: Spotlights Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Theater stage is a rectangular field of size *n*<=×<=*m*. The director gave you the stage's plan which actors will follow. For each cell it is stated in the plan if there would be an actor in this cell or not. You are to pl...
```python from sys import stdin,stdout input = stdin.readline n,m = map(int, input().split()) arr = [] for i in range(n): arr.append(list(map(int, input().split()))) dp = [[0 for i in range(m)] for j in range(n)] for i in range(n): t = 0 for j in range(m): if arr[i][j] == 0: dp[i][j] += t...
3
18
C
Stripe
PROGRAMMING
1,200
[ "data structures", "implementation" ]
C. Stripe
2
64
Once Bob took a paper stripe of *n* squares (the height of the stripe is 1 square). In each square he wrote an integer number, possibly negative. He became interested in how many ways exist to cut this stripe into two pieces so that the sum of numbers from one piece is equal to the sum of numbers from the other piece, ...
The first input line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) — amount of squares in the stripe. The second line contains *n* space-separated numbers — they are the numbers written in the squares of the stripe. These numbers are integer and do not exceed 10000 in absolute value.
Output the amount of ways to cut the stripe into two non-empty pieces so that the sum of numbers from one piece is equal to the sum of numbers from the other piece. Don't forget that it's allowed to cut the stripe along the squares' borders only.
[ "9\n1 5 -6 7 9 -16 0 -2 2\n", "3\n1 1 1\n", "2\n0 0\n" ]
[ "3\n", "0\n", "1\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "9\n1 5 -6 7 9 -16 0 -2 2", "output": "3" }, { "input": "3\n1 1 1", "output": "0" }, { "input": "2\n0 0", "output": "1" }, { "input": "4\n100 1 10 111", "output": "1" }, { "input": "10\n0 4 -3 0 -2 2 -3 -3 2 5", "output": "3" }, { "input": "...
1,695,094,228
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
0
186
3,072,000
import sys; R = sys.stdin.readline S = lambda: map(int,R().split()) n = int(R()) s = [0]+[*S()] m = sum(s) if m&1: print(0); exit() r = 0 for j in range(1,n): s[j] += s[j-1] r += s[j]==k//2 print(r)
Title: Stripe Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 64 megabytes Problem Description: Once Bob took a paper stripe of *n* squares (the height of the stripe is 1 square). In each square he wrote an integer number, possibly negative. He became interested in how many ways exist to cut this stripe into two pieces so that ...
```python import sys; R = sys.stdin.readline S = lambda: map(int,R().split()) n = int(R()) s = [0]+[*S()] m = sum(s) if m&1: print(0); exit() r = 0 for j in range(1,n): s[j] += s[j-1] r += s[j]==k//2 print(r) ```
-1
831
A
Unimodal Array
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Array of integers is unimodal, if: - it is strictly increasing in the beginning; - after that it is constant; - after that it is strictly decreasing. The first block (increasing) and the last block (decreasing) may be absent. It is allowed that both of this blocks are absent. For example, the following three arra...
The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of elements in the array. The second line contains *n* integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=1<=000) — the elements of the array.
Print "YES" if the given array is unimodal. Otherwise, print "NO". You can output each letter in any case (upper or lower).
[ "6\n1 5 5 5 4 2\n", "5\n10 20 30 20 10\n", "4\n1 2 1 2\n", "7\n3 3 3 3 3 3 3\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "YES\n", "NO\n", "YES\n" ]
In the first example the array is unimodal, because it is strictly increasing in the beginning (from position 1 to position 2, inclusively), that it is constant (from position 2 to position 4, inclusively) and then it is strictly decreasing (from position 4 to position 6, inclusively).
500
[ { "input": "6\n1 5 5 5 4 2", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "5\n10 20 30 20 10", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "4\n1 2 1 2", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "7\n3 3 3 3 3 3 3", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "6\n5 7 11 11 2 1", "output": "YES" }, { "input":...
1,655,803,714
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
0
15
0
n = int(input()) array = list(map(int,input().split())) uniModal = True dropped = False for i in range(1,len(array)): if(array[i]<array[i-1] and not dropped) : dropped = True print(array[i]) if(dropped): if(array[i]<array[i-1]): pass else: uniM...
Title: Unimodal Array Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Array of integers is unimodal, if: - it is strictly increasing in the beginning; - after that it is constant; - after that it is strictly decreasing. The first block (increasing) and the last block (decreasing) may ...
```python n = int(input()) array = list(map(int,input().split())) uniModal = True dropped = False for i in range(1,len(array)): if(array[i]<array[i-1] and not dropped) : dropped = True print(array[i]) if(dropped): if(array[i]<array[i-1]): pass else: ...
0
723
A
The New Year: Meeting Friends
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation", "math", "sortings" ]
null
null
There are three friend living on the straight line *Ox* in Lineland. The first friend lives at the point *x*1, the second friend lives at the point *x*2, and the third friend lives at the point *x*3. They plan to celebrate the New Year together, so they need to meet at one point. What is the minimum total distance they...
The first line of the input contains three distinct integers *x*1, *x*2 and *x*3 (1<=≤<=*x*1,<=*x*2,<=*x*3<=≤<=100) — the coordinates of the houses of the first, the second and the third friends respectively.
Print one integer — the minimum total distance the friends need to travel in order to meet together.
[ "7 1 4\n", "30 20 10\n" ]
[ "6\n", "20\n" ]
In the first sample, friends should meet at the point 4. Thus, the first friend has to travel the distance of 3 (from the point 7 to the point 4), the second friend also has to travel the distance of 3 (from the point 1 to the point 4), while the third friend should not go anywhere because he lives at the point 4.
500
[ { "input": "7 1 4", "output": "6" }, { "input": "30 20 10", "output": "20" }, { "input": "1 4 100", "output": "99" }, { "input": "100 1 91", "output": "99" }, { "input": "1 45 100", "output": "99" }, { "input": "1 2 3", "output": "2" }, { "...
1,694,092,339
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
0
30
0
x1, x2, x3=map(int, input().split()) max_=max(x1, x2, x3) min_=min(x1, x2, x3) mid=(x1+x2+x3)-(max_+min_) y1=x1-mid y2=x2-mid y3=x3-mid res=y1+y2+y3 print(res)
Title: The New Year: Meeting Friends Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: There are three friend living on the straight line *Ox* in Lineland. The first friend lives at the point *x*1, the second friend lives at the point *x*2, and the third friend lives at the point *x*3. They ...
```python x1, x2, x3=map(int, input().split()) max_=max(x1, x2, x3) min_=min(x1, x2, x3) mid=(x1+x2+x3)-(max_+min_) y1=x1-mid y2=x2-mid y3=x3-mid res=y1+y2+y3 print(res) ```
0
344
A
Magnets
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Mad scientist Mike entertains himself by arranging rows of dominoes. He doesn't need dominoes, though: he uses rectangular magnets instead. Each magnet has two poles, positive (a "plus") and negative (a "minus"). If two magnets are put together at a close distance, then the like poles will repel each other and the oppo...
The first line of the input contains an integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100000) — the number of magnets. Then *n* lines follow. The *i*-th line (1<=≤<=*i*<=≤<=*n*) contains either characters "01", if Mike put the *i*-th magnet in the "plus-minus" position, or characters "10", if Mike put the magnet in the "minus-plus" posit...
On the single line of the output print the number of groups of magnets.
[ "6\n10\n10\n10\n01\n10\n10\n", "4\n01\n01\n10\n10\n" ]
[ "3\n", "2\n" ]
The first testcase corresponds to the figure. The testcase has three groups consisting of three, one and two magnets. The second testcase has two groups, each consisting of two magnets.
500
[ { "input": "6\n10\n10\n10\n01\n10\n10", "output": "3" }, { "input": "4\n01\n01\n10\n10", "output": "2" }, { "input": "1\n10", "output": "1" }, { "input": "2\n01\n10", "output": "2" }, { "input": "2\n10\n10", "output": "1" }, { "input": "3\n10\n01\n10",...
1,692,683,275
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
2
62
0
n = int(input()) li=[] i=0 while i<n: number = input() li.append(number) i+=1 print(len(li)//2)
Title: Magnets Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Mad scientist Mike entertains himself by arranging rows of dominoes. He doesn't need dominoes, though: he uses rectangular magnets instead. Each magnet has two poles, positive (a "plus") and negative (a "minus"). If two magnets...
```python n = int(input()) li=[] i=0 while i<n: number = input() li.append(number) i+=1 print(len(li)//2) ```
0
420
A
Start Up
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Recently, a start up by two students of a state university of city F gained incredible popularity. Now it's time to start a new company. But what do we call it? The market analysts came up with a very smart plan: the name of the company should be identical to its reflection in a mirror! In other words, if we write out...
The first line contains a non-empty name that needs to be checked. The name contains at most 105 large English letters. The name will be written with the next sans serif font:
Print 'YES' (without the quotes), if the given name matches its mirror reflection. Otherwise, print 'NO' (without the quotes).
[ "AHA\n", "Z\n", "XO\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "NO\n", "NO\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "AHA", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "Z", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "XO", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "AAA", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "AHHA", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "BAB", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "OMMMAAMMMO"...
1,563,915,076
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
80
171
4,710,400
mirror_letter = 'AHIMOTUVWXY' s = input() left = s[:len(s) // 2] right = s[:-len(s) // 2 - (len(s) % 2 == 0):-1] if all([c in mirror_letter for c in s]) and left == right: print('YES') else: print('NO')
Title: Start Up Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Recently, a start up by two students of a state university of city F gained incredible popularity. Now it's time to start a new company. But what do we call it? The market analysts came up with a very smart plan: the name of ...
```python mirror_letter = 'AHIMOTUVWXY' s = input() left = s[:len(s) // 2] right = s[:-len(s) // 2 - (len(s) % 2 == 0):-1] if all([c in mirror_letter for c in s]) and left == right: print('YES') else: print('NO') ```
3
259
A
Little Elephant and Chess
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "brute force", "strings" ]
null
null
The Little Elephant loves chess very much. One day the Little Elephant and his friend decided to play chess. They've got the chess pieces but the board is a problem. They've got an 8<=×<=8 checkered board, each square is painted either black or white. The Little Elephant and his friend know that a proper chessboard d...
The input consists of exactly eight lines. Each line contains exactly eight characters "W" or "B" without any spaces: the *j*-th character in the *i*-th line stands for the color of the *j*-th cell of the *i*-th row of the elephants' board. Character "W" stands for the white color, character "B" stands for the black co...
In a single line print "YES" (without the quotes), if we can make the board a proper chessboard and "NO" (without the quotes) otherwise.
[ "WBWBWBWB\nBWBWBWBW\nBWBWBWBW\nBWBWBWBW\nWBWBWBWB\nWBWBWBWB\nBWBWBWBW\nWBWBWBWB\n", "WBWBWBWB\nWBWBWBWB\nBBWBWWWB\nBWBWBWBW\nBWBWBWBW\nBWBWBWWW\nBWBWBWBW\nBWBWBWBW\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "NO\n" ]
In the first sample you should shift the following lines one position to the right: the 3-rd, the 6-th, the 7-th and the 8-th. In the second sample there is no way you can achieve the goal.
500
[ { "input": "WBWBWBWB\nBWBWBWBW\nBWBWBWBW\nBWBWBWBW\nWBWBWBWB\nWBWBWBWB\nBWBWBWBW\nWBWBWBWB", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "WBWBWBWB\nWBWBWBWB\nBBWBWWWB\nBWBWBWBW\nBWBWBWBW\nBWBWBWWW\nBWBWBWBW\nBWBWBWBW", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "BWBWBWBW\nWBWBWBWB\nBWBWBWBW\nBWBWBWBW\nWBWBWBWB\nWBW...
1,652,553,769
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
15
124
409,600
import re flag = True for i in range(8): l = input() if re.match(r"^(WB|BW){4}$", l) == None: flag = False if flag: print("YES") else: print("NO")
Title: Little Elephant and Chess Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: The Little Elephant loves chess very much. One day the Little Elephant and his friend decided to play chess. They've got the chess pieces but the board is a problem. They've got an 8<=×<=8 checkered board, e...
```python import re flag = True for i in range(8): l = input() if re.match(r"^(WB|BW){4}$", l) == None: flag = False if flag: print("YES") else: print("NO") ```
0
295
B
Greg and Graph
PROGRAMMING
1,700
[ "dp", "graphs", "shortest paths" ]
null
null
Greg has a weighed directed graph, consisting of *n* vertices. In this graph any pair of distinct vertices has an edge between them in both directions. Greg loves playing with the graph and now he has invented a new game: - The game consists of *n* steps. - On the *i*-th step Greg removes vertex number *x**i* from t...
The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=500) — the number of vertices in the graph. Next *n* lines contain *n* integers each — the graph adjacency matrix: the *j*-th number in the *i*-th line *a**ij* (1<=≤<=*a**ij*<=≤<=105,<=*a**ii*<==<=0) represents the weight of the edge that goes from vertex *i* to verte...
Print *n* integers — the *i*-th number equals the required sum before the *i*-th step. Please, do not use the %lld specifier to read or write 64-bit integers in C++. It is preferred to use the cin, cout streams of the %I64d specifier.
[ "1\n0\n1\n", "2\n0 5\n4 0\n1 2\n", "4\n0 3 1 1\n6 0 400 1\n2 4 0 1\n1 1 1 0\n4 1 2 3\n" ]
[ "0 ", "9 0 ", "17 23 404 0 " ]
none
1,000
[ { "input": "1\n0\n1", "output": "0 " }, { "input": "2\n0 5\n4 0\n1 2", "output": "9 0 " }, { "input": "4\n0 3 1 1\n6 0 400 1\n2 4 0 1\n1 1 1 0\n4 1 2 3", "output": "17 23 404 0 " }, { "input": "4\n0 57148 51001 13357\n71125 0 98369 67226\n49388 90852 0 66291\n39573 38165 9700...
1,601,623,401
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
3
248
0
#!/usr/bin/env python # coding: utf-8 # In[2]: ### 4 0 3 1 1 6 0 400 1 2 4 0 1 1 1 1 0 4 1 2 3 # In[3]: n = int(input()) a = [] for i in range(n): sor = list(map(int, input().split())) a+=[sor] x = [] x = list(map(int, input().split())) for i in range(n): x[i]=x[i]-1 # In[4]: def copy(matrix): ...
Title: Greg and Graph Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Greg has a weighed directed graph, consisting of *n* vertices. In this graph any pair of distinct vertices has an edge between them in both directions. Greg loves playing with the graph and now he has invented a new game...
```python #!/usr/bin/env python # coding: utf-8 # In[2]: ### 4 0 3 1 1 6 0 400 1 2 4 0 1 1 1 1 0 4 1 2 3 # In[3]: n = int(input()) a = [] for i in range(n): sor = list(map(int, input().split())) a+=[sor] x = [] x = list(map(int, input().split())) for i in range(n): x[i]=x[i]-1 # In[4]: def copy(m...
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"...
1,603,249,878
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
32
218
0
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- """ Created on Wed Oct 21 11:04:13 2020 @author: Cui Shiao """ n=int(input()) s=list(map(int,input().split())) a=b=c=d=0 for x in range(n): if s[x]%2: a+=1;c=x else: b+=1;d=x if a>b: print(d+1) else: print(c+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 # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- """ Created on Wed Oct 21 11:04:13 2020 @author: Cui Shiao """ n=int(input()) s=list(map(int,input().split())) a=b=c=d=0 for x in range(n): if s[x]%2: a+=1;c=x else: b+=1;d=x if a>b: print(d+1) else: print(c+1) ```
3.9455
285
C
Building Permutation
PROGRAMMING
1,200
[ "greedy", "implementation", "sortings" ]
null
null
Permutation *p* is an ordered set of integers *p*1,<=<=*p*2,<=<=...,<=<=*p**n*, consisting of *n* distinct positive integers, each of them doesn't exceed *n*. We'll denote the *i*-th element of permutation *p* as *p**i*. We'll call number *n* the size or the length of permutation *p*1,<=<=*p*2,<=<=...,<=<=*p**n*. You ...
The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=3·105) — the size of the sought permutation. The second line contains *n* integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (<=-<=109<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=109).
Print a single number — the minimum number of moves. Please, do not use the %lld specifier to read or write 64-bit integers in C++. It is preferred to use the cin, cout streams or the %I64d specifier.
[ "2\n3 0\n", "3\n-1 -1 2\n" ]
[ "2\n", "6\n" ]
In the first sample you should decrease the first number by one and then increase the second number by one. The resulting permutation is (2, 1). In the second sample you need 6 moves to build permutation (1, 3, 2).
1,500
[ { "input": "2\n3 0", "output": "2" }, { "input": "3\n-1 -1 2", "output": "6" }, { "input": "5\n-3 5 -3 3 3", "output": "10" }, { "input": "10\n9 6 -2 4 1 1 1 9 6 2", "output": "18" }, { "input": "9\n2 0 0 6 5 4 1 9 3", "output": "15" }, { "input": "100...
1,553,426,881
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
33
451
25,497,600
n=int(input()) moves=0 l1=list(map(int,input().split())) l1.sort() for i in range(0,n): moves+=abs(l1[i]-(i+1)) print(moves)
Title: Building Permutation Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Permutation *p* is an ordered set of integers *p*1,<=<=*p*2,<=<=...,<=<=*p**n*, consisting of *n* distinct positive integers, each of them doesn't exceed *n*. We'll denote the *i*-th element of permutation *p* as *...
```python n=int(input()) moves=0 l1=list(map(int,input().split())) l1.sort() for i in range(0,n): moves+=abs(l1[i]-(i+1)) print(moves) ```
3
400
B
Inna and New Matrix of Candies
PROGRAMMING
1,200
[ "brute force", "implementation", "schedules" ]
null
null
Inna likes sweets and a game called the "Candy Matrix". Today, she came up with the new game "Candy Matrix 2: Reload". The field for the new game is a rectangle table of size *n*<=×<=*m*. Each line of the table contains one cell with a dwarf figurine, one cell with a candy, the other cells of the line are empty. The g...
The first line of the input contains two integers *n* and *m* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000; 2<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=1000). Next *n* lines each contain *m* characters — the game field for the "Candy Martix 2: Reload". Character "*" represents an empty cell of the field, character "G" represents a dwarf and character "S" represents a can...
In a single line print a single integer — either the minimum number of moves needed to achieve the aim of the game, or -1, if the aim cannot be achieved on the given game field.
[ "3 4\n*G*S\nG**S\n*G*S\n", "1 3\nS*G\n" ]
[ "2\n", "-1\n" ]
none
1,000
[ { "input": "3 4\n*G*S\nG**S\n*G*S", "output": "2" }, { "input": "1 3\nS*G", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "10 10\nG********S\n*G*******S\n**G******S\n***G*****S\n****G****S\n*****G***S\n******G**S\n*******G*S\n********GS\nG********S", "output": "9" }, { "input": "5 10\nG***S**...
1,595,990,619
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
34
202
23,859,200
from sys import stdin, stdout def main(): n, m = map(int, stdin.readline().split()) s = set() for _ in range(n): l = stdin.readline().strip() dwarf = -1 candy = -1 for i in range(m): if l[i] == "G": dwarf = i ...
Title: Inna and New Matrix of Candies Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Inna likes sweets and a game called the "Candy Matrix". Today, she came up with the new game "Candy Matrix 2: Reload". The field for the new game is a rectangle table of size *n*<=×<=*m*. Each line of th...
```python from sys import stdin, stdout def main(): n, m = map(int, stdin.readline().split()) s = set() for _ in range(n): l = stdin.readline().strip() dwarf = -1 candy = -1 for i in range(m): if l[i] == "G": dwarf...
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...
1,679,097,909
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
0
31
0
print(bin(int(input().count('0'))))
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 print(bin(int(input().count('0')))) ```
0
706
B
Interesting drink
PROGRAMMING
1,100
[ "binary search", "dp", "implementation" ]
null
null
Vasiliy likes to rest after a hard work, so you may often meet him in some bar nearby. As all programmers do, he loves the famous drink "Beecola", which can be bought in *n* different shops in the city. It's known that the price of one bottle in the shop *i* is equal to *x**i* coins. Vasiliy plans to buy his favorite ...
The first line of the input contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100<=000) — the number of shops in the city that sell Vasiliy's favourite drink. The second line contains *n* integers *x**i* (1<=≤<=*x**i*<=≤<=100<=000) — prices of the bottles of the drink in the *i*-th shop. The third line contains a single i...
Print *q* integers. The *i*-th of them should be equal to the number of shops where Vasiliy will be able to buy a bottle of the drink on the *i*-th day.
[ "5\n3 10 8 6 11\n4\n1\n10\n3\n11\n" ]
[ "0\n4\n1\n5\n" ]
On the first day, Vasiliy won't be able to buy a drink in any of the shops. On the second day, Vasiliy can buy a drink in the shops 1, 2, 3 and 4. On the third day, Vasiliy can buy a drink only in the shop number 1. Finally, on the last day Vasiliy can buy a drink in any shop.
1,000
[ { "input": "5\n3 10 8 6 11\n4\n1\n10\n3\n11", "output": "0\n4\n1\n5" }, { "input": "5\n868 987 714 168 123\n10\n424\n192\n795\n873\n117\n914\n735\n158\n631\n471", "output": "2\n2\n3\n4\n0\n4\n3\n1\n2\n2" }, { "input": "3\n435 482 309\n7\n245\n241\n909\n745\n980\n29\n521", "output": "...
1,699,519,683
2,147,483,647
Python 3
TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED
TESTS
9
2,000
1,433,600
#买饮料,用count函数超时。思考怎样用一种单次遍历而不查找的方法。算法复杂度2n? n=int(input()) l=list(map(int,input().split())) dp=[0]*max(l) for i in l: dp[i-1]+=1#先标记出可能有的价格。 for i in range(1,max(l)+1): if i in l and i!=1: dp[i-1]=dp[i-1]+dp[i-2] elif i!=1: dp[i-1]=dp[i-2] s=int(input()) for i in rang...
Title: Interesting drink Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Vasiliy likes to rest after a hard work, so you may often meet him in some bar nearby. As all programmers do, he loves the famous drink "Beecola", which can be bought in *n* different shops in the city. It's known tha...
```python #买饮料,用count函数超时。思考怎样用一种单次遍历而不查找的方法。算法复杂度2n? n=int(input()) l=list(map(int,input().split())) dp=[0]*max(l) for i in l: dp[i-1]+=1#先标记出可能有的价格。 for i in range(1,max(l)+1): if i in l and i!=1: dp[i-1]=dp[i-1]+dp[i-2] elif i!=1: dp[i-1]=dp[i-2] s=int(input()) for...
0
234
A
Lefthanders and Righthanders
PROGRAMMING
1,200
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
One fine October day a mathematics teacher Vasily Petrov went to a class and saw there *n* pupils who sat at the desks, two people at each desk. Vasily quickly realized that number *n* is even. Like all true mathematicians, Vasily has all students numbered from 1 to *n*. But Vasily Petrov did not like the way the chi...
The first input line contains a single even integer *n* (4<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of students in the class. The second line contains exactly *n* capital English letters "L" and "R". If the *i*-th letter at the second line equals "L", then the student number *i* is a lefthander, otherwise he is a righthander.
Print integer pairs, one pair per line. In the *i*-th line print the numbers of students that will sit at the *i*-th desk. The first number in the pair stands for the student who is sitting to the left, and the second number stands for the student who is sitting to the right. Separate the numbers in the pairs by space...
[ "6\nLLRLLL\n", "4\nRRLL\n" ]
[ "1 4\n2 5\n6 3\n", "3 1\n4 2\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "6\nLLRLLL", "output": "1 4\n2 5\n6 3" }, { "input": "4\nRRLL", "output": "3 1\n4 2" }, { "input": "4\nLLRR", "output": "1 3\n2 4" }, { "input": "6\nRLLRRL", "output": "1 4\n2 5\n3 6" }, { "input": "8\nLRLRLLLR", "output": "1 5\n6 2\n3 7\n4 8" }, ...
1,666,049,433
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
60
46
0
def solve(): with open("input.txt", 'r') as f: n = int(f.readline()) s = f.readline() outputfile = open("output.txt", 'w') for i in range(int(n/2)): if s[i]=='L': outputfile.write(f"{i+1} {int(n/2+i+1)}\n") else: output...
Title: Lefthanders and Righthanders Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: One fine October day a mathematics teacher Vasily Petrov went to a class and saw there *n* pupils who sat at the desks, two people at each desk. Vasily quickly realized that number *n* is even. Like all t...
```python def solve(): with open("input.txt", 'r') as f: n = int(f.readline()) s = f.readline() outputfile = open("output.txt", 'w') for i in range(int(n/2)): if s[i]=='L': outputfile.write(f"{i+1} {int(n/2+i+1)}\n") else: ...
3
774
E
Big Number and Remainder
PROGRAMMING
2,300
[ "*special", "math", "number theory" ]
null
null
Stepan has a very big positive integer. Let's consider all cyclic shifts of Stepan's integer (if we look at his integer like at a string) which are also integers (i.e. they do not have leading zeros). Let's call such shifts as good shifts. For example, for the integer 10203 the good shifts are the integer itself 10203...
The first line contains the integer which Stepan has. The length of Stepan's integer is between 2 and 200<=000 digits, inclusive. It is guaranteed that Stepan's integer does not contain leading zeros. The second line contains the integer *m* (2<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=108) — the number by which Stepan divides good shifts of his i...
Print the minimum remainder which Stepan can get if he divides all good shifts of his integer by the given number *m*.
[ "521\n3\n", "1001\n5\n", "5678901234567890123456789\n10000\n" ]
[ "2\n", "0\n", "123\n" ]
In the first example all good shifts of the integer 521 (good shifts are equal to 521, 215 and 152) has same remainder 2 when dividing by 3. In the second example there are only two good shifts: the Stepan's integer itself and the shift by one position to the right. The integer itself is 1001 and the remainder after d...
0
[ { "input": "521\n3", "output": "2" }, { "input": "1001\n5", "output": "0" }, { "input": "5678901234567890123456789\n10000", "output": "123" }, { "input": "552352155\n13", "output": "2" }, { "input": "11533077525260\n193983", "output": "22331" }, { "inp...
1,491,407,667
1,167
Python 3
TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED
TESTS
9
3,000
6,348,800
s = input() m = int(input()) mn = m sz = len(s) step = 10 ** (sz - 1) n = int(s) for i in range(0, sz): a = n % 10 n //= 10 n += step * a if (a != 0): mn = min(n % m, mn) print(mn)
Title: Big Number and Remainder Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Stepan has a very big positive integer. Let's consider all cyclic shifts of Stepan's integer (if we look at his integer like at a string) which are also integers (i.e. they do not have leading zeros). Let's ca...
```python s = input() m = int(input()) mn = m sz = len(s) step = 10 ** (sz - 1) n = int(s) for i in range(0, sz): a = n % 10 n //= 10 n += step * a if (a != 0): mn = min(n % m, mn) print(mn) ```
0
791
A
Bear and Big Brother
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Bear Limak wants to become the largest of bears, or at least to become larger than his brother Bob. Right now, Limak and Bob weigh *a* and *b* respectively. It's guaranteed that Limak's weight is smaller than or equal to his brother's weight. Limak eats a lot and his weight is tripled after every year, while Bob's we...
The only line of the input contains two integers *a* and *b* (1<=≤<=*a*<=≤<=*b*<=≤<=10) — the weight of Limak and the weight of Bob respectively.
Print one integer, denoting the integer number of years after which Limak will become strictly larger than Bob.
[ "4 7\n", "4 9\n", "1 1\n" ]
[ "2\n", "3\n", "1\n" ]
In the first sample, Limak weighs 4 and Bob weighs 7 initially. After one year their weights are 4·3 = 12 and 7·2 = 14 respectively (one weight is tripled while the other one is doubled). Limak isn't larger than Bob yet. After the second year weights are 36 and 28, so the first weight is greater than the second one. Li...
500
[ { "input": "4 7", "output": "2" }, { "input": "4 9", "output": "3" }, { "input": "1 1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "4 6", "output": "2" }, { "input": "1 10", "output": "6" }, { "input": "1 1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "1 2", "output...
1,697,891,948
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
62
46
0
a,b=input().split() a=int(a) b=int(b) for i in (range(1,max(a,b)+1)): if a*3>b*2: print(i) break else: a=a*3 b=b*2
Title: Bear and Big Brother Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Bear Limak wants to become the largest of bears, or at least to become larger than his brother Bob. Right now, Limak and Bob weigh *a* and *b* respectively. It's guaranteed that Limak's weight is smaller than or e...
```python a,b=input().split() a=int(a) b=int(b) for i in (range(1,max(a,b)+1)): if a*3>b*2: print(i) break else: a=a*3 b=b*2 ```
3
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...
1,564,861,163
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
2
108
0
a=list(map(int,input().split())) s=(a[1]//a[2])+1 s=s*a[0] if s%a[3]==0: print(s//a[3]) else: print(1+(s//a[3]))
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 a=list(map(int,input().split())) s=(a[1]//a[2])+1 s=s*a[0] if s%a[3]==0: print(s//a[3]) else: print(1+(s//a[3])) ```
0
868
B
Race Against Time
PROGRAMMING
1,400
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Have you ever tried to explain to the coordinator, why it is eight hours to the contest and not a single problem has been prepared yet? Misha had. And this time he has a really strong excuse: he faced a space-time paradox! Space and time replaced each other. The entire universe turned into an enormous clock face with ...
Five integers *h*, *m*, *s*, *t*1, *t*2 (1<=≤<=*h*<=≤<=12, 0<=≤<=*m*,<=*s*<=≤<=59, 1<=≤<=*t*1,<=*t*2<=≤<=12, *t*1<=≠<=*t*2). Misha's position and the target time do not coincide with the position of any hand.
Print "YES" (quotes for clarity), if Misha can prepare the contest on time, and "NO" otherwise. You can print each character either upper- or lowercase ("YeS" and "yes" are valid when the answer is "YES").
[ "12 30 45 3 11\n", "12 0 1 12 1\n", "3 47 0 4 9\n" ]
[ "NO\n", "YES\n", "YES\n" ]
The three examples are shown on the pictures below from left to right. The starting position of Misha is shown with green, the ending position is shown with pink. Note that the positions of the hands on the pictures are not exact, but are close to the exact and the answer is the same.
500
[ { "input": "12 30 45 3 11", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "12 0 1 12 1", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "3 47 0 4 9", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "10 22 59 6 10", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "3 1 13 12 3", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "11 19 28 9 10"...
1,507,914,170
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
133
62
0
h, m, s, a, b = list(map(int, input().split())) mx = m + s/60 hx = 5 * h + mx/60 ax = 5 * a bx = 5 * b t = [s, mx, hx] t.sort() if t[0] <= ax <= t[1] and t[0] <= bx <= t[1]: print('YES') elif t[1] <= ax <= t[2] and t[1] <= bx <= t[2]: print('YES') elif ax <= t[0] and bx <= t[0]: print('YES...
Title: Race Against Time Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Have you ever tried to explain to the coordinator, why it is eight hours to the contest and not a single problem has been prepared yet? Misha had. And this time he has a really strong excuse: he faced a space-time par...
```python h, m, s, a, b = list(map(int, input().split())) mx = m + s/60 hx = 5 * h + mx/60 ax = 5 * a bx = 5 * b t = [s, mx, hx] t.sort() if t[0] <= ax <= t[1] and t[0] <= bx <= t[1]: print('YES') elif t[1] <= ax <= t[2] and t[1] <= bx <= t[2]: print('YES') elif ax <= t[0] and bx <= t[0]: ...
3
143
A
Help Vasilisa the Wise 2
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "brute force", "math" ]
null
null
Vasilisa the Wise from the Kingdom of Far Far Away got a magic box with a secret as a present from her friend Hellawisa the Wise from the Kingdom of A Little Closer. However, Vasilisa the Wise does not know what the box's secret is, since she cannot open it again. She hopes that you will help her one more time with tha...
The input contains numbers written on the edges of the lock of the box. The first line contains space-separated integers *r*1 and *r*2 that define the required sums of numbers in the rows of the square. The second line contains space-separated integers *c*1 and *c*2 that define the required sums of numbers in the colum...
Print the scheme of decorating the box with stones: two lines containing two space-separated integers from 1 to 9. The numbers should be pairwise different. If there is no solution for the given lock, then print the single number "-1" (without the quotes). If there are several solutions, output any.
[ "3 7\n4 6\n5 5\n", "11 10\n13 8\n5 16\n", "1 2\n3 4\n5 6\n", "10 10\n10 10\n10 10\n" ]
[ "1 2\n3 4\n", "4 7\n9 1\n", "-1\n", "-1\n" ]
Pay attention to the last test from the statement: it is impossible to open the box because for that Vasilisa the Wise would need 4 identical gems containing number "5". However, Vasilisa only has one gem with each number from 1 to 9.
500
[ { "input": "3 7\n4 6\n5 5", "output": "1 2\n3 4" }, { "input": "11 10\n13 8\n5 16", "output": "4 7\n9 1" }, { "input": "1 2\n3 4\n5 6", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "10 10\n10 10\n10 10", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "5 13\n8 10\n11 7", "output": "3 2\n5 8" ...
1,623,841,806
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
5
124
0
r1,r2 = (map(int,input().split())) c1,c2 = (map(int,input().split())) d1,d2 = (map(int,input().split())) for i in range(1,10): j = r1 - i k = c1 - i l = d1 - i if(i+l == d1 and j+k == d2): if(i!=(j,k,l) and j!=(k,l) and k!=l): if(i,j,k,l>=1 and i,j,k,l<=9): a...
Title: Help Vasilisa the Wise 2 Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Vasilisa the Wise from the Kingdom of Far Far Away got a magic box with a secret as a present from her friend Hellawisa the Wise from the Kingdom of A Little Closer. However, Vasilisa the Wise does not know wha...
```python r1,r2 = (map(int,input().split())) c1,c2 = (map(int,input().split())) d1,d2 = (map(int,input().split())) for i in range(1,10): j = r1 - i k = c1 - i l = d1 - i if(i+l == d1 and j+k == d2): if(i!=(j,k,l) and j!=(k,l) and k!=l): if(i,j,k,l>=1 and i,j,k,l<=9): ...
0
810
A
Straight <<A>>
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "implementation", "math" ]
null
null
Noora is a student of one famous high school. It's her final year in school — she is going to study in university next year. However, she has to get an «A» graduation certificate in order to apply to a prestigious one. In school, where Noora is studying, teachers are putting down marks to the online class register, wh...
The first line contains two integers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100,<=1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=100) denoting the number of marks, received by Noora and the value of highest possible mark. The second line contains *n* integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=*k*) denoting marks received by Noora before Leha's hack.
Print a single integer — minimal number of additional marks, that Leha has to add in order to change Noora's final mark to *k*.
[ "2 10\n8 9\n", "3 5\n4 4 4\n" ]
[ "4", "3" ]
Consider the first example testcase. Maximal mark is 10, Noora received two marks — 8 and 9, so current final mark is 9. To fix it, Leha can add marks [10, 10, 10, 10] (4 marks in total) to the registry, achieving Noora having average mark equal to <img align="middle" class="tex-formula" src="https://espresso.codeforc...
500
[ { "input": "2 10\n8 9", "output": "4" }, { "input": "3 5\n4 4 4", "output": "3" }, { "input": "3 10\n10 8 9", "output": "3" }, { "input": "2 23\n21 23", "output": "2" }, { "input": "5 10\n5 10 10 9 10", "output": "7" }, { "input": "12 50\n18 10 26 22 2...
1,541,995,628
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
106
124
0
n, k = [int(c) for c in input().split()] _sum = sum(int(c) for c in input().split()) ans = 0 while int(_sum / n + 0.5) < k: _sum += k n += 1 ans += 1 print(ans)
Title: Straight <<A>> Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Noora is a student of one famous high school. It's her final year in school — she is going to study in university next year. However, she has to get an «A» graduation certificate in order to apply to a prestigious one. ...
```python n, k = [int(c) for c in input().split()] _sum = sum(int(c) for c in input().split()) ans = 0 while int(_sum / n + 0.5) < k: _sum += k n += 1 ans += 1 print(ans) ```
3
404
A
Valera and X
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Valera is a little boy. Yesterday he got a huge Math hometask at school, so Valera didn't have enough time to properly learn the English alphabet for his English lesson. Unfortunately, the English teacher decided to have a test on alphabet today. At the test Valera got a square piece of squared paper. The length of the...
The first line contains integer *n* (3<=≤<=*n*<=&lt;<=300; *n* is odd). Each of the next *n* lines contains *n* small English letters — the description of Valera's paper.
Print string "YES", if the letters on the paper form letter "X". Otherwise, print string "NO". Print the strings without quotes.
[ "5\nxooox\noxoxo\nsoxoo\noxoxo\nxooox\n", "3\nwsw\nsws\nwsw\n", "3\nxpx\npxp\nxpe\n" ]
[ "NO\n", "YES\n", "NO\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "5\nxooox\noxoxo\nsoxoo\noxoxo\nxooox", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "3\nwsw\nsws\nwsw", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "3\nxpx\npxp\nxpe", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "5\nliiil\nilili\niilii\nilili\nliiil", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "7\nbwccccb\nck...
1,632,683,755
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
1
61
6,758,400
n = int(input()) s = '' for i in range(n): s+=input() print("Yes") if (s == s[::-1] and s.count(s[0]) == 2*n-1) else print("NO")
Title: Valera and X Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Valera is a little boy. Yesterday he got a huge Math hometask at school, so Valera didn't have enough time to properly learn the English alphabet for his English lesson. Unfortunately, the English teacher decided to have a...
```python n = int(input()) s = '' for i in range(n): s+=input() print("Yes") if (s == s[::-1] and s.count(s[0]) == 2*n-1) else print("NO") ```
0
21
C
Stripe 2
PROGRAMMING
2,000
[ "binary search", "dp", "sortings" ]
C. Stripe 2
1
64
Once Bob took a paper stripe of n squares (the height of the stripe is 1 square). In each square he wrote an integer number, possibly negative. He became interested in how many ways exist to cut this stripe into three pieces so that the sum of numbers from each piece is equal to the sum of numbers from any other piece,...
The first input line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) — amount of squares in the stripe. The second line contains n space-separated numbers — they are the numbers written in the squares of the stripe. These numbers are integer and do not exceed 10000 in absolute value.
Output the amount of ways to cut the stripe into three non-empty pieces so that the sum of numbers from each piece is equal to the sum of numbers from any other piece. Don't forget that it's allowed to cut the stripe along the squares' borders only.
[ "4\n1 2 3 3\n", "5\n1 2 3 4 5\n" ]
[ "1\n", "0\n" ]
none
1,500
[ { "input": "1\n-3", "output": "0" }, { "input": "2\n0 0", "output": "0" }, { "input": "3\n0 0 0", "output": "1" }, { "input": "4\n-2 3 3 2", "output": "0" }, { "input": "5\n-6 3 -1 2 -7", "output": "0" }, { "input": "6\n2 3 -3 0 -3 1", "output": "0...
1,692,524,230
2,147,483,647
Python 3
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
2
31
0
n = int(input()) pref = list(map(int, input().split())) s = sum(pref) ans = 0 sett = set() if s % 3 != 0 or n < 3: print(0) else: for i in range(1, n): pref[i] += pref[i-1] for i in range(0, n): if pref[i] % s/3 == 0 and pref[i] not in sett: sett.add(pref[i]) print(len(set...
Title: Stripe 2 Time Limit: 1 seconds Memory Limit: 64 megabytes Problem Description: Once Bob took a paper stripe of n squares (the height of the stripe is 1 square). In each square he wrote an integer number, possibly negative. He became interested in how many ways exist to cut this stripe into three pieces so tha...
```python n = int(input()) pref = list(map(int, input().split())) s = sum(pref) ans = 0 sett = set() if s % 3 != 0 or n < 3: print(0) else: for i in range(1, n): pref[i] += pref[i-1] for i in range(0, n): if pref[i] % s/3 == 0 and pref[i] not in sett: sett.add(pref[i]) pri...
-1
11
A
Increasing Sequence
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "constructive algorithms", "implementation", "math" ]
A. Increasing Sequence
1
64
A sequence *a*0,<=*a*1,<=...,<=*a**t*<=-<=1 is called increasing if *a**i*<=-<=1<=&lt;<=*a**i* for each *i*:<=0<=&lt;<=*i*<=&lt;<=*t*. You are given a sequence *b*0,<=*b*1,<=...,<=*b**n*<=-<=1 and a positive integer *d*. In each move you may choose one element of the given sequence and add *d* to it. What is the least...
The first line of the input contains two integer numbers *n* and *d* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=2000,<=1<=≤<=*d*<=≤<=106). The second line contains space separated sequence *b*0,<=*b*1,<=...,<=*b**n*<=-<=1 (1<=≤<=*b**i*<=≤<=106).
Output the minimal number of moves needed to make the sequence increasing.
[ "4 2\n1 3 3 2\n" ]
[ "3\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "4 2\n1 3 3 2", "output": "3" }, { "input": "2 1\n1 1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "2 1\n2 5", "output": "0" }, { "input": "2 1\n1 2", "output": "0" }, { "input": "2 1\n1 1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "2 7\n10 20", "output": "0" }, ...
1,669,728,957
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
COMPILATION_ERROR
TESTS
0
0
0
d=gets.split[1].to_i;s=gets.split;x=s.shift.to_i;a=0;s.each{|b|b=b.to_i;a+=z=b>x ?0:(x-b)/d+1;x=b+z*d};puts a
Title: Increasing Sequence Time Limit: 1 seconds Memory Limit: 64 megabytes Problem Description: A sequence *a*0,<=*a*1,<=...,<=*a**t*<=-<=1 is called increasing if *a**i*<=-<=1<=&lt;<=*a**i* for each *i*:<=0<=&lt;<=*i*<=&lt;<=*t*. You are given a sequence *b*0,<=*b*1,<=...,<=*b**n*<=-<=1 and a positive integer *d*...
```python d=gets.split[1].to_i;s=gets.split;x=s.shift.to_i;a=0;s.each{|b|b=b.to_i;a+=z=b>x ?0:(x-b)/d+1;x=b+z*d};puts a ```
-1
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...
1,623,379,423
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
81
218
0
forces = int(input()) sx, sy, sz = (0, 0 ,0) for i in range(forces): force = input().split(' ') sx += int(force[0]) sy += int(force[1]) sz += int(force[2]) if sx == 0 and sy == 0 and sz == 0: print('YES') else: print('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 forces = int(input()) sx, sy, sz = (0, 0 ,0) for i in range(forces): force = input().split(' ') sx += int(force[0]) sy += int(force[1]) sz += int(force[2]) if sx == 0 and sy == 0 and sz == 0: print('YES') else: print('NO') ```
3.9455
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"...
1,593,842,402
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
32
312
0
n = int(input()) lis = [int(_) for _ in input().split()] dic = {0:[], 1:[]} for i,x in enumerate(lis): dic[x&1].append(i+1) if len(dic[0]) == 1: print(dic[0][0]) else: print(dic[1][0])
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()) lis = [int(_) for _ in input().split()] dic = {0:[], 1:[]} for i,x in enumerate(lis): dic[x&1].append(i+1) if len(dic[0]) == 1: print(dic[0][0]) else: print(dic[1][0]) ```
3.922
858
C
Did you mean...
PROGRAMMING
1,500
[ "dp", "greedy", "implementation" ]
null
null
Beroffice text editor has a wide range of features that help working with text. One of the features is an automatic search for typos and suggestions of how to fix them. Beroffice works only with small English letters (i.e. with 26 letters from a to z). Beroffice thinks that a word is typed with a typo if there are thr...
The only line contains a non-empty word consisting of small English letters. The length of the word is between 1 and 3000 letters.
Print the given word without any changes if there are no typos. If there is at least one typo in the word, insert the minimum number of spaces into the word so that each of the resulting words doesn't have any typos. If there are multiple solutions, print any of them.
[ "hellno\n", "abacaba\n", "asdfasdf\n" ]
[ "hell no \n", "abacaba \n", "asd fasd f \n" ]
none
1,500
[ { "input": "hellno", "output": "hell no " }, { "input": "abacaba", "output": "abacaba " }, { "input": "asdfasdf", "output": "asd fasd f " }, { "input": "ooo", "output": "ooo " }, { "input": "moyaoborona", "output": "moyaoborona " }, { "input": "jxegxxx...
1,505,657,108
3,608
Python 3
RUNTIME_ERROR
PRETESTS
5
61
0
s = input() d = ['a', 'e', 'i', 'o', 'u'] st = [] for i in range(len(s)): if s[i] in d: st = [] print(s[i], end="") continue st.append(s[i]) if st == [s[i], s[i], s[i]]: st = st[1:] print(s[i], end='') elif len(st) == 3: st = s[i] pri...
Title: Did you mean... Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Beroffice text editor has a wide range of features that help working with text. One of the features is an automatic search for typos and suggestions of how to fix them. Beroffice works only with small English letters (...
```python s = input() d = ['a', 'e', 'i', 'o', 'u'] st = [] for i in range(len(s)): if s[i] in d: st = [] print(s[i], end="") continue st.append(s[i]) if st == [s[i], s[i], s[i]]: st = st[1:] print(s[i], end='') elif len(st) == 3: st = s[i] ...
-1
961
B
Lecture Sleep
PROGRAMMING
1,200
[ "data structures", "dp", "implementation", "two pointers" ]
null
null
Your friend Mishka and you attend a calculus lecture. Lecture lasts *n* minutes. Lecturer tells *a**i* theorems during the *i*-th minute. Mishka is really interested in calculus, though it is so hard to stay awake for all the time of lecture. You are given an array *t* of Mishka's behavior. If Mishka is asleep during ...
The first line of the input contains two integer numbers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) — the duration of the lecture in minutes and the number of minutes you can keep Mishka awake. The second line of the input contains *n* integer numbers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=... *a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=104) — the number of theore...
Print only one integer — the maximum number of theorems Mishka will be able to write down if you use your technique only once to wake him up.
[ "6 3\n1 3 5 2 5 4\n1 1 0 1 0 0\n" ]
[ "16\n" ]
In the sample case the better way is to use the secret technique at the beginning of the third minute. Then the number of theorems Mishka will be able to write down will be equal to 16.
0
[ { "input": "6 3\n1 3 5 2 5 4\n1 1 0 1 0 0", "output": "16" }, { "input": "5 3\n1 9999 10000 10000 10000\n0 0 0 0 0", "output": "30000" }, { "input": "3 3\n10 10 10\n1 1 0", "output": "30" }, { "input": "1 1\n423\n0", "output": "423" }, { "input": "6 6\n1 3 5 2 5 4...
1,648,039,540
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
2
186
6,144,000
def solve(): n, k = list(map(int, input().split(" "))) a = list(map(int, input().split(" "))) b = list(map(int, input().split(" "))) prefix = [0]*(n+1) res = float('-inf') for i in range(n): prefix[i+1] += prefix[i] if(b[i] == 1): prefix[i+1] += a[i] sum = 0 i = 0 ...
Title: Lecture Sleep Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Your friend Mishka and you attend a calculus lecture. Lecture lasts *n* minutes. Lecturer tells *a**i* theorems during the *i*-th minute. Mishka is really interested in calculus, though it is so hard to stay awake for al...
```python def solve(): n, k = list(map(int, input().split(" "))) a = list(map(int, input().split(" "))) b = list(map(int, input().split(" "))) prefix = [0]*(n+1) res = float('-inf') for i in range(n): prefix[i+1] += prefix[i] if(b[i] == 1): prefix[i+1] += a[i] sum = 0 ...
0
137
A
Postcards and photos
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Polycarpus has postcards and photos hung in a row on the wall. He decided to put them away to the closet and hang on the wall a famous painter's picture. Polycarpus does it like that: he goes from the left to the right and removes the objects consecutively. As Polycarpus doesn't want any mix-ups to happen, he will not ...
The only line of the input data contains a non-empty string consisting of letters "С" and "P" whose length does not exceed 100 characters. If the *i*-th character in the string is the letter "С", that means that the *i*-th object (the numbering goes from the left to the right) on Polycarpus' wall is a postcard. And if ...
Print the only number — the minimum number of times Polycarpus has to visit the closet.
[ "CPCPCPC\n", "CCCCCCPPPPPP\n", "CCCCCCPPCPPPPPPPPPP\n", "CCCCCCCCCC\n" ]
[ "7\n", "4\n", "6\n", "2\n" ]
In the first sample Polycarpus needs to take one item to the closet 7 times. In the second sample Polycarpus can first take 3 postcards to the closet; then 3 more. He can take the 6 photos that are left in the similar way, going to the closet twice. In the third sample Polycarpus can visit the closet twice, both time...
500
[ { "input": "CPCPCPC", "output": "7" }, { "input": "CCCCCCPPPPPP", "output": "4" }, { "input": "CCCCCCPPCPPPPPPPPPP", "output": "6" }, { "input": "CCCCCCCCCC", "output": "2" }, { "input": "CCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCCC...
1,589,541,017
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
45
312
20,172,800
s = str(input()) i=0 count = 0 while len(s)>0: if s[0]=='C': temp = s.lstrip('C') if len(s)-len(temp)>5: s = s[5:] else: s = temp count = count+1 else: temp = s.lstrip('P') if len(s)-len(temp)>5: s = s[5:] ...
Title: Postcards and photos Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Polycarpus has postcards and photos hung in a row on the wall. He decided to put them away to the closet and hang on the wall a famous painter's picture. Polycarpus does it like that: he goes from the left to the r...
```python s = str(input()) i=0 count = 0 while len(s)>0: if s[0]=='C': temp = s.lstrip('C') if len(s)-len(temp)>5: s = s[5:] else: s = temp count = count+1 else: temp = s.lstrip('P') if len(s)-len(temp)>5: s = s[5:...
3
75
A
Life Without Zeros
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation" ]
A. Life Without Zeros
2
256
Can you imagine our life if we removed all zeros from it? For sure we will have many problems. In this problem we will have a simple example if we removed all zeros from our life, it's the addition operation. Let's assume you are given this equation *a*<=+<=*b*<==<=*c*, where *a* and *b* are positive integers, and *c*...
The input will consist of two lines, the first line will contain the integer *a*, and the second line will contain the integer *b* which are in the equation as described above (1<=≤<=*a*,<=*b*<=≤<=109). There won't be any leading zeros in both. The value of *c* should be calculated as *c*<==<=*a*<=+<=*b*.
The output will be just one line, you should print "YES" if the equation will remain correct after removing all zeros, and print "NO" otherwise.
[ "101\n102\n", "105\n106\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "NO\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "101\n102", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "105\n106", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "544\n397", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "822\n280", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "101\n413", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "309\n139", "output": "NO" }...
1,617,687,505
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
43
154
0
a = input() b = input() c = int(a) + int(b) c1 = int(str(c).translate({ord('0'): None})) a1 = int(a.translate({ord('0'): None})) b1 = int(b.translate({ord('0'): None})) if a1 + b1 == c1: print("YES") else: print("NO")
Title: Life Without Zeros Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: Can you imagine our life if we removed all zeros from it? For sure we will have many problems. In this problem we will have a simple example if we removed all zeros from our life, it's the addition operation. Let's assu...
```python a = input() b = input() c = int(a) + int(b) c1 = int(str(c).translate({ord('0'): None})) a1 = int(a.translate({ord('0'): None})) b1 = int(b.translate({ord('0'): None})) if a1 + b1 == c1: print("YES") else: print("NO") ```
3.9615
190
A
Vasya and the Bus
PROGRAMMING
1,100
[ "greedy", "math" ]
null
null
One day Vasya heard a story: "In the city of High Bertown a bus number 62 left from the bus station. It had *n* grown-ups and *m* kids..." The latter events happen to be of no importance to us. Vasya is an accountant and he loves counting money. So he wondered what maximum and minimum sum of money these passengers cou...
The input file consists of a single line containing two space-separated numbers *n* and *m* (0<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=105) — the number of the grown-ups and the number of the children in the bus, correspondingly.
If *n* grown-ups and *m* children could have ridden in the bus, then print on a single line two space-separated integers — the minimum and the maximum possible total bus fare, correspondingly. Otherwise, print "Impossible" (without the quotes).
[ "1 2\n", "0 5\n", "2 2\n" ]
[ "2 2", "Impossible", "2 3" ]
In the first sample a grown-up rides with two children and pays two rubles. In the second sample there are only children in the bus, so the situation is impossible. In the third sample there are two cases: - Each of the two grown-ups rides with one children and pays one ruble for the tickets. In this case the passen...
500
[ { "input": "1 2", "output": "2 2" }, { "input": "0 5", "output": "Impossible" }, { "input": "2 2", "output": "2 3" }, { "input": "2 7", "output": "7 8" }, { "input": "4 10", "output": "10 13" }, { "input": "6 0", "output": "6 6" }, { "input...
1,618,418,815
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
7
122
0
n, m = map(int, input().split()) if n == 0: print("Impossible") else: if m != 0: if n <= m: print(n + (m - n), n + (m - 1)) else: print(n, n + (m - 1)) elif m == 0: print(n, n)
Title: Vasya and the Bus Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: One day Vasya heard a story: "In the city of High Bertown a bus number 62 left from the bus station. It had *n* grown-ups and *m* kids..." The latter events happen to be of no importance to us. Vasya is an accountant...
```python n, m = map(int, input().split()) if n == 0: print("Impossible") else: if m != 0: if n <= m: print(n + (m - n), n + (m - 1)) else: print(n, n + (m - 1)) elif m == 0: print(n, n) ```
0
32
B
Borze
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "expression parsing", "implementation" ]
B. Borze
2
256
Ternary numeric notation is quite popular in Berland. To telegraph the ternary number the Borze alphabet is used. Digit 0 is transmitted as «.», 1 as «-.» and 2 as «--». You are to decode the Borze code, i.e. to find out the ternary number given its representation in Borze alphabet.
The first line contains a number in Borze code. The length of the string is between 1 and 200 characters. It's guaranteed that the given string is a valid Borze code of some ternary number (this number can have leading zeroes).
Output the decoded ternary number. It can have leading zeroes.
[ ".-.--\n", "--.\n", "-..-.--\n" ]
[ "012", "20", "1012" ]
none
1,000
[ { "input": ".-.--", "output": "012" }, { "input": "--.", "output": "20" }, { "input": "-..-.--", "output": "1012" }, { "input": "---..", "output": "210" }, { "input": "..--.---..", "output": "0020210" }, { "input": "-.....----.", "output": "1000022...
1,649,258,173
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
30
92
0
Cad=input() Res="" Digi="" K=0 while(K<len(Cad)): if(Cad[K]=="."): Digi="0" K+=1 else: if((Cad[K]=="-")and(Cad[K+1]==".")): Digi="1" else: Digi="2" K+=2 Res+=Digi print(Res)
Title: Borze Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: Ternary numeric notation is quite popular in Berland. To telegraph the ternary number the Borze alphabet is used. Digit 0 is transmitted as «.», 1 as «-.» and 2 as «--». You are to decode the Borze code, i.e. to find out the ternary ...
```python Cad=input() Res="" Digi="" K=0 while(K<len(Cad)): if(Cad[K]=="."): Digi="0" K+=1 else: if((Cad[K]=="-")and(Cad[K+1]==".")): Digi="1" else: Digi="2" K+=2 Res+=Digi print(Res) ```
3.977
914
A
Perfect Squares
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "brute force", "implementation", "math" ]
null
null
Given an array *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* of *n* integers, find the largest number in the array that is not a perfect square. A number *x* is said to be a perfect square if there exists an integer *y* such that *x*<==<=*y*2.
The first line contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000) — the number of elements in the array. The second line contains *n* integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (<=-<=106<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=106) — the elements of the array. It is guaranteed that at least one element of the array is not a perfect square.
Print the largest number in the array which is not a perfect square. It is guaranteed that an answer always exists.
[ "2\n4 2\n", "8\n1 2 4 8 16 32 64 576\n" ]
[ "2\n", "32\n" ]
In the first sample case, 4 is a perfect square, so the largest number in the array that is not a perfect square is 2.
500
[ { "input": "2\n4 2", "output": "2" }, { "input": "8\n1 2 4 8 16 32 64 576", "output": "32" }, { "input": "3\n-1 -4 -9", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "5\n918375 169764 598796 76602 538757", "output": "918375" }, { "input": "5\n804610 765625 2916 381050 93025", ...
1,619,153,989
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
2
124
2,150,400
n = int(input()) daf = list(map(int, input().split())) maxP = 0 for i in range(n): x = daf[i]**0.5 y = int(x) if abs(x-y) <= 1e-3: continue else: maxP = max(maxP, daf[i]) print(maxP)
Title: Perfect Squares Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Given an array *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* of *n* integers, find the largest number in the array that is not a perfect square. A number *x* is said to be a perfect square if there exists an integer *y* such that *x*<==<...
```python n = int(input()) daf = list(map(int, input().split())) maxP = 0 for i in range(n): x = daf[i]**0.5 y = int(x) if abs(x-y) <= 1e-3: continue else: maxP = max(maxP, daf[i]) print(maxP) ```
-1
633
B
A Trivial Problem
PROGRAMMING
1,300
[ "brute force", "constructive algorithms", "math", "number theory" ]
null
null
Mr. Santa asks all the great programmers of the world to solve a trivial problem. He gives them an integer *m* and asks for the number of positive integers *n*, such that the factorial of *n* ends with exactly *m* zeroes. Are you among those great programmers who can solve this problem?
The only line of input contains an integer *m* (1<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=100<=000) — the required number of trailing zeroes in factorial.
First print *k* — the number of values of *n* such that the factorial of *n* ends with *m* zeroes. Then print these *k* integers in increasing order.
[ "1\n", "5\n" ]
[ "5\n5 6 7 8 9 ", "0" ]
The factorial of *n* is equal to the product of all integers from 1 to *n* inclusive, that is *n*! = 1·2·3·...·*n*. In the first sample, 5! = 120, 6! = 720, 7! = 5040, 8! = 40320 and 9! = 362880.
500
[ { "input": "1", "output": "5\n5 6 7 8 9 " }, { "input": "5", "output": "0" }, { "input": "2", "output": "5\n10 11 12 13 14 " }, { "input": "3", "output": "5\n15 16 17 18 19 " }, { "input": "7", "output": "5\n30 31 32 33 34 " }, { "input": "12", "ou...
1,625,060,122
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
68
186
0
n=int(input()) count=i=0 while count<n: i+=1 k=i while k%5==0: count+=1 k=(k//5) if count==n: print(5) print(i,i+1,i+2,i+3,i+4) else: print(0)
Title: A Trivial Problem Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Mr. Santa asks all the great programmers of the world to solve a trivial problem. He gives them an integer *m* and asks for the number of positive integers *n*, such that the factorial of *n* ends with exactly *m* zer...
```python n=int(input()) count=i=0 while count<n: i+=1 k=i while k%5==0: count+=1 k=(k//5) if count==n: print(5) print(i,i+1,i+2,i+3,i+4) else: print(0) ```
3
31
E
TV Game
PROGRAMMING
2,400
[ "dp" ]
E. TV Game
2
256
There is a new TV game on BerTV. In this game two players get a number *A* consisting of 2*n* digits. Before each turn players determine who will make the next move. Each player should make exactly *n* moves. On it's turn *i*-th player takes the leftmost digit of *A* and appends it to his or her number *S**i*. After th...
The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=18). The second line contains integer *A* consisting of exactly 2*n* digits. This number can have leading zeroes.
Output the line of 2*n* characters «H» and «M» — the sequence of moves of Homer and Marge, which gives them maximum possible total prize. Each player must make exactly *n* moves. If there are several solutions, output any of them.
[ "2\n1234\n", "2\n9911\n" ]
[ "HHMM", "HMHM" ]
none
2,500
[ { "input": "2\n1234", "output": "HHMM" }, { "input": "2\n9911", "output": "HMHM" }, { "input": "2\n0153", "output": "HHMM" }, { "input": "3\n614615", "output": "HHHMMM" }, { "input": "4\n21305374", "output": "HHHHMMMM" }, { "input": "4\n00013213", ...
1,551,368,320
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
12
248
0
def compute(): from sys import stdin [n] = list(map(int, stdin.readline().split())) i = list(map(int, stdin.readline().strip())) dp = {} INF = (0,"") def f(x,h,m): if x >= 2*n: return INF args = (h,m) if args in dp: return dp[args] res0, res1 = INF, INF ...
Title: TV Game Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: There is a new TV game on BerTV. In this game two players get a number *A* consisting of 2*n* digits. Before each turn players determine who will make the next move. Each player should make exactly *n* moves. On it's turn *i*-th pl...
```python def compute(): from sys import stdin [n] = list(map(int, stdin.readline().split())) i = list(map(int, stdin.readline().strip())) dp = {} INF = (0,"") def f(x,h,m): if x >= 2*n: return INF args = (h,m) if args in dp: return dp[args] res0, res1 = INF, ...
0
149
A
Business trip
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "greedy", "implementation", "sortings" ]
null
null
What joy! Petya's parents went on a business trip for the whole year and the playful kid is left all by himself. Petya got absolutely happy. He jumped on the bed and threw pillows all day long, until... Today Petya opened the cupboard and found a scary note there. His parents had left him with duties: he should water...
The first line contains exactly one integer *k* (0<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=100). The next line contains twelve space-separated integers: the *i*-th (1<=≤<=*i*<=≤<=12) number in the line represents *a**i* (0<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=100).
Print the only integer — the minimum number of months when Petya has to water the flower so that the flower grows no less than by *k* centimeters. If the flower can't grow by *k* centimeters in a year, print -1.
[ "5\n1 1 1 1 2 2 3 2 2 1 1 1\n", "0\n0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 2 3 0\n", "11\n1 1 4 1 1 5 1 1 4 1 1 1\n" ]
[ "2\n", "0\n", "3\n" ]
Let's consider the first sample test. There it is enough to water the flower during the seventh and the ninth month. Then the flower grows by exactly five centimeters. In the second sample Petya's parents will believe him even if the flower doesn't grow at all (*k* = 0). So, it is possible for Petya not to water the f...
500
[ { "input": "5\n1 1 1 1 2 2 3 2 2 1 1 1", "output": "2" }, { "input": "0\n0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 2 3 0", "output": "0" }, { "input": "11\n1 1 4 1 1 5 1 1 4 1 1 1", "output": "3" }, { "input": "15\n20 1 1 1 1 2 2 1 2 2 1 1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "7\n8 9 100 12 14 ...
1,680,088,924
2,147,483,647
Python 3
COMPILATION_ERROR
TESTS
0
0
0
import java.util.Scanner; import java.util.Arrays; public class Main { public static void main(String[] args) { Scanner sc = new Scanner(System.in); int n = sc.nextInt(); int[] li = new int[n]; for (int i = 0; i < n; i++) { li[i] = sc.nextInt(); } ...
Title: Business trip Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: What joy! Petya's parents went on a business trip for the whole year and the playful kid is left all by himself. Petya got absolutely happy. He jumped on the bed and threw pillows all day long, until... Today Petya open...
```python import java.util.Scanner; import java.util.Arrays; public class Main { public static void main(String[] args) { Scanner sc = new Scanner(System.in); int n = sc.nextInt(); int[] li = new int[n]; for (int i = 0; i < n; i++) { li[i] = sc.nextInt(); ...
-1
57
A
Square Earth?
PROGRAMMING
1,300
[ "dfs and similar", "greedy", "implementation" ]
A. Square Earth?
2
256
Meg the Rabbit decided to do something nice, specifically — to determine the shortest distance between two points on the surface of our planet. But Meg... what can you say, she wants everything simple. So, she already regards our planet as a two-dimensional circle. No, wait, it's even worse — as a square of side *n*. T...
The single line contains 5 space-separated integers: *n*,<=*x*1,<=*y*1,<=*x*2,<=*y*2 (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000,<=0<=≤<=*x*1,<=*y*1,<=*x*2,<=*y*2<=≤<=*n*) which correspondingly represent a side of the square, the coordinates of the first point and the coordinates of the second point. It is guaranteed that the points lie on th...
You must print on a single line the shortest distance between the points.
[ "2 0 0 1 0\n", "2 0 1 2 1\n", "100 0 0 100 100\n" ]
[ "1\n", "4\n", "200\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "2 0 0 1 0", "output": "1" }, { "input": "2 0 1 2 1", "output": "4" }, { "input": "100 0 0 100 100", "output": "200" }, { "input": "4 0 3 1 4", "output": "2" }, { "input": "10 8 10 10 0", "output": "12" }, { "input": "26 21 0 26 14", "ou...
1,638,199,739
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
55
156
716,800
### Codeforces handle - "@titanalpha" #Email id - [email protected] from collections import Counter, deque import math from random import randint from bisect import bisect import sys import re import copy from decimal import Decimal,getcontext getcontext().prec = 32 MOD = 1000000007 MAX = sys.maxsize M...
Title: Square Earth? Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: Meg the Rabbit decided to do something nice, specifically — to determine the shortest distance between two points on the surface of our planet. But Meg... what can you say, she wants everything simple. So, she already regards...
```python ### Codeforces handle - "@titanalpha" #Email id - [email protected] from collections import Counter, deque import math from random import randint from bisect import bisect import sys import re import copy from decimal import Decimal,getcontext getcontext().prec = 32 MOD = 1000000007 MAX = sys....
3.959665
691
A
Fashion in Berland
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
According to rules of the Berland fashion, a jacket should be fastened by all the buttons except only one, but not necessarily it should be the last one. Also if the jacket has only one button, it should be fastened, so the jacket will not swinging open. You are given a jacket with *n* buttons. Determine if it is fast...
The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000) — the number of buttons on the jacket. The second line contains *n* integers *a**i* (0<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=1). The number *a**i*<==<=0 if the *i*-th button is not fastened. Otherwise *a**i*<==<=1.
In the only line print the word "YES" if the jacket is fastened in a right way. Otherwise print the word "NO".
[ "3\n1 0 1\n", "3\n1 0 0\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "NO\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "3\n1 0 1", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "3\n1 0 0", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "3\n1 1 0", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "3\n1 1 1", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "3\n0 0 1", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "3\n0 0 0", "output": "NO" }...
1,554,298,782
2,147,483,647
Python 3
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
0
93
0
l = [] n = int(input()) l = map(int, raw_input().split()) if n == 1: if l[0] == 1: print("YES") else: print("NO") else: cnt = 0 for i in range(n): if l[i] == 0: cnt = cnt + 1 if cnt == 1: print("YES") else: print...
Title: Fashion in Berland Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: According to rules of the Berland fashion, a jacket should be fastened by all the buttons except only one, but not necessarily it should be the last one. Also if the jacket has only one button, it should be fastened,...
```python l = [] n = int(input()) l = map(int, raw_input().split()) if n == 1: if l[0] == 1: print("YES") else: print("NO") else: cnt = 0 for i in range(n): if l[i] == 0: cnt = cnt + 1 if cnt == 1: print("YES") else: ...
-1
911
A
Nearest Minimums
PROGRAMMING
1,100
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
You are given an array of *n* integer numbers *a*0,<=*a*1,<=...,<=*a**n*<=-<=1. Find the distance between two closest (nearest) minimums in it. It is guaranteed that in the array a minimum occurs at least two times.
The first line contains positive integer *n* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) — size of the given array. The second line contains *n* integers *a*0,<=*a*1,<=...,<=*a**n*<=-<=1 (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=109) — elements of the array. It is guaranteed that in the array a minimum occurs at least two times.
Print the only number — distance between two nearest minimums in the array.
[ "2\n3 3\n", "3\n5 6 5\n", "9\n2 1 3 5 4 1 2 3 1\n" ]
[ "1\n", "2\n", "3\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "2\n3 3", "output": "1" }, { "input": "3\n5 6 5", "output": "2" }, { "input": "9\n2 1 3 5 4 1 2 3 1", "output": "3" }, { "input": "6\n4 6 7 8 6 4", "output": "5" }, { "input": "2\n1000000000 1000000000", "output": "1" }, { "input": "42\n1 1 ...
1,516,622,681
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
140
124
14,438,400
n = int(input()) l = list(map(int,input().split())) x = min(l) k = l.index(x) dmin = n+1 for i in range(k+1,n): if l[i] == x: d = i - k k = i if d < dmin: dmin = d print(dmin)
Title: Nearest Minimums Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: You are given an array of *n* integer numbers *a*0,<=*a*1,<=...,<=*a**n*<=-<=1. Find the distance between two closest (nearest) minimums in it. It is guaranteed that in the array a minimum occurs at least two times. I...
```python n = int(input()) l = list(map(int,input().split())) x = min(l) k = l.index(x) dmin = n+1 for i in range(k+1,n): if l[i] == x: d = i - k k = i if d < dmin: dmin = d print(dmin) ```
3
935
A
Fafa and his Company
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "brute force", "implementation" ]
null
null
Fafa owns a company that works on huge projects. There are *n* employees in Fafa's company. Whenever the company has a new project to start working on, Fafa has to divide the tasks of this project among all the employees. Fafa finds doing this every time is very tiring for him. So, he decided to choose the best *l* em...
The input consists of a single line containing a positive integer *n* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) — the number of employees in Fafa's company.
Print a single integer representing the answer to the problem.
[ "2\n", "10\n" ]
[ "1\n", "3\n" ]
In the second sample Fafa has 3 ways: - choose only 1 employee as a team leader with 9 employees under his responsibility. - choose 2 employees as team leaders with 4 employees under the responsibility of each of them. - choose 5 employees as team leaders with 1 employee under the responsibility of each of them.
500
[ { "input": "2", "output": "1" }, { "input": "10", "output": "3" }, { "input": "3", "output": "1" }, { "input": "4", "output": "2" }, { "input": "6", "output": "3" }, { "input": "13", "output": "1" }, { "input": "100000", "output": "35" ...
1,682,811,035
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
33
61
0
n = int(input()) c_work = 0 if n % 2 == 1: m = n / 2 - 0.5 m = int(m) else: m = n / 2 m = int(m) for i in range(1, m + 1): x = i n = n - 1 if n % x == 0: c_work += 1 print(str(c_work))
Title: Fafa and his Company Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Fafa owns a company that works on huge projects. There are *n* employees in Fafa's company. Whenever the company has a new project to start working on, Fafa has to divide the tasks of this project among all the emp...
```python n = int(input()) c_work = 0 if n % 2 == 1: m = n / 2 - 0.5 m = int(m) else: m = n / 2 m = int(m) for i in range(1, m + 1): x = i n = n - 1 if n % x == 0: c_work += 1 print(str(c_work)) ```
3
261
B
Maxim and Restaurant
PROGRAMMING
1,900
[ "dp", "math", "probabilities" ]
null
null
Maxim has opened his own restaurant! The restaurant has got a huge table, the table's length is *p* meters. Maxim has got a dinner party tonight, *n* guests will come to him. Let's index the guests of Maxim's restaurant from 1 to *n*. Maxim knows the sizes of all guests that are going to come to him. The *i*-th guest'...
The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=50) — the number of guests in the restaurant. The next line contains integers *a*1, *a*2, ..., *a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=50) — the guests' sizes in meters. The third line contains integer *p* (1<=≤<=*p*<=≤<=50) — the table's length in meters. The numbers in the lines ...
In a single line print a real number — the answer to the problem. The answer will be considered correct, if the absolute or relative error doesn't exceed 10<=-<=4.
[ "3\n1 2 3\n3\n" ]
[ "1.3333333333\n" ]
In the first sample the people will come in the following orders: - (1, 2, 3) — there will be two people in the restaurant; - (1, 3, 2) — there will be one person in the restaurant; - (2, 1, 3) — there will be two people in the restaurant; - (2, 3, 1) — there will be one person in the restaurant; - (3, 1, 2) — t...
1,000
[ { "input": "3\n1 2 3\n3", "output": "1.3333333333" }, { "input": "9\n2 2 2 2 2 2 2 1 2\n9", "output": "4.5555555556" }, { "input": "7\n2 1 1 2 1 1 2\n2", "output": "1.2857142857" }, { "input": "8\n3 1 5 6 1 5 4 4\n7", "output": "1.6250000000" }, { "input": "2\n1 3...
1,531,925,913
2,147,483,647
Python 3
COMPILATION_ERROR
TESTS
0
0
0
#include <bits/stdc++.h> const int N = 55; using namespace std; using ll = long long; int n, a[N], p; ll dp[N][N]; double fac[N]; int main() { scanf("%d", &n);fac[1] = fac[0] = 1; for (int i = 2; i < N; i++) fac[i] = (fac[i-1])*i; for (int i = 0; i < n; i++) { scanf("%d", &a[i]); } s...
Title: Maxim and Restaurant Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Maxim has opened his own restaurant! The restaurant has got a huge table, the table's length is *p* meters. Maxim has got a dinner party tonight, *n* guests will come to him. Let's index the guests of Maxim's rest...
```python #include <bits/stdc++.h> const int N = 55; using namespace std; using ll = long long; int n, a[N], p; ll dp[N][N]; double fac[N]; int main() { scanf("%d", &n);fac[1] = fac[0] = 1; for (int i = 2; i < N; i++) fac[i] = (fac[i-1])*i; for (int i = 0; i < n; i++) { scanf("%d", &a[i])...
-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"...
1,670,616,279
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
2
62
0
n = int(input()) # number of numbers in the input list numbers = list(map(int, input().split())) # input list of numbers # initialize a variable to track whether all the numbers seen so far are even or odd evenness = None # iterate over the numbers in the input list for i in range(n): # check if the curre...
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()) # number of numbers in the input list numbers = list(map(int, input().split())) # input list of numbers # initialize a variable to track whether all the numbers seen so far are even or odd evenness = None # iterate over the numbers in the input list for i in range(n): # check if...
0
491
A
Up the hill
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "constructive algorithms", "implementation" ]
null
null
Hiking club "Up the hill" just returned from a walk. Now they are trying to remember which hills they've just walked through. It is known that there were *N* stops, all on different integer heights between 1 and *N* kilometers (inclusive) above the sea level. On the first day they've traveled from the first stop to th...
In the first line there is an integer non-negative number *A* denoting the number of days of climbing up the hill. Second line contains an integer non-negative number *B* — the number of days of walking down the hill (*A*<=+<=*B*<=+<=1<==<=*N*, 1<=≤<=*N*<=≤<=100<=000).
Output *N* space-separated distinct integers from 1 to *N* inclusive, denoting possible heights of the stops in order of visiting.
[ "0\n1\n", "2\n1" ]
[ "2 1 \n", "1 3 4 2" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "0\n1", "output": "2 1 " }, { "input": "2\n1", "output": "2 3 4 1 " }, { "input": "0\n3", "output": "4 3 2 1 " }, { "input": "1\n1", "output": "2 3 1 " }, { "input": "3\n7", "output": "8 9 10 11 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 " }, { "input": "700\n300", ...
1,620,698,886
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
0
46
6,963,200
u = int(input()) d = int(input()) n=u+d+1 res = [] res2 = [] if(u==0 and d==0): print('1') elif(d==0 and u!=0): for i in range(1,n+1): res.append(i) elif(u==0 and d!=0): for i in range(n,0,-1): res.append(i) else: res.append(1) f=1 ct=0 for i in range(2,n...
Title: Up the hill Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Hiking club "Up the hill" just returned from a walk. Now they are trying to remember which hills they've just walked through. It is known that there were *N* stops, all on different integer heights between 1 and *N* kilome...
```python u = int(input()) d = int(input()) n=u+d+1 res = [] res2 = [] if(u==0 and d==0): print('1') elif(d==0 and u!=0): for i in range(1,n+1): res.append(i) elif(u==0 and d!=0): for i in range(n,0,-1): res.append(i) else: res.append(1) f=1 ct=0 for i in...
0
701
C
They Are Everywhere
PROGRAMMING
1,500
[ "binary search", "strings", "two pointers" ]
null
null
Sergei B., the young coach of Pokemons, has found the big house which consists of *n* flats ordered in a row from left to right. It is possible to enter each flat from the street. It is possible to go out from each flat. Also, each flat is connected with the flat to the left and the flat to the right. Flat number 1 is ...
The first line contains the integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100<=000) — the number of flats in the house. The second line contains the row *s* with the length *n*, it consists of uppercase and lowercase letters of English alphabet, the *i*-th letter equals the type of Pokemon, which is in the flat number *i*.
Print the minimum number of flats which Sergei B. should visit in order to catch Pokemons of all types which there are in the house.
[ "3\nAaA\n", "7\nbcAAcbc\n", "6\naaBCCe\n" ]
[ "2\n", "3\n", "5\n" ]
In the first test Sergei B. can begin, for example, from the flat number 1 and end in the flat number 2. In the second test Sergei B. can begin, for example, from the flat number 4 and end in the flat number 6. In the third test Sergei B. must begin from the flat number 2 and end in the flat number 6.
1,000
[ { "input": "3\nAaA", "output": "2" }, { "input": "7\nbcAAcbc", "output": "3" }, { "input": "6\naaBCCe", "output": "5" }, { "input": "1\nA", "output": "1" }, { "input": "1\ng", "output": "1" }, { "input": "52\nabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQ...
1,678,480,730
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
0
93
3,481,600
N = int(input()) flats = input() lptr, rptr = 0, 1 letters = set(list(flats)) def checkLetters(word): for letter in letters: if letter not in word: return False return True while True: if flats[lptr] in flats[lptr + 1:rptr]: lptr += 1 min_rptr = rptr else: ...
Title: They Are Everywhere Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Sergei B., the young coach of Pokemons, has found the big house which consists of *n* flats ordered in a row from left to right. It is possible to enter each flat from the street. It is possible to go out from each ...
```python N = int(input()) flats = input() lptr, rptr = 0, 1 letters = set(list(flats)) def checkLetters(word): for letter in letters: if letter not in word: return False return True while True: if flats[lptr] in flats[lptr + 1:rptr]: lptr += 1 min_rptr = rptr els...
-1
7
A
Kalevitch and Chess
PROGRAMMING
1,100
[ "brute force", "constructive algorithms" ]
A. Kalevitch and Chess
2
64
A famous Berland's painter Kalevitch likes to shock the public. One of his last obsessions is chess. For more than a thousand years people have been playing this old game on uninteresting, monotonous boards. Kalevitch decided to put an end to this tradition and to introduce a new attitude to chessboards. As before, th...
The input file contains 8 lines, each of the lines contains 8 characters. The given matrix describes the client's requirements, W character stands for a white square, and B character — for a square painted black. It is guaranteed that client's requirments can be fulfilled with a sequence of allowed strokes (vertical/c...
Output the only number — the minimum amount of rows and columns that Kalevitch has to paint on the white chessboard to meet the client's requirements.
[ "WWWBWWBW\nBBBBBBBB\nWWWBWWBW\nWWWBWWBW\nWWWBWWBW\nWWWBWWBW\nWWWBWWBW\nWWWBWWBW\n", "WWWWWWWW\nBBBBBBBB\nWWWWWWWW\nWWWWWWWW\nWWWWWWWW\nWWWWWWWW\nWWWWWWWW\nWWWWWWWW\n" ]
[ "3\n", "1\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "WWWBWWBW\nBBBBBBBB\nWWWBWWBW\nWWWBWWBW\nWWWBWWBW\nWWWBWWBW\nWWWBWWBW\nWWWBWWBW", "output": "3" }, { "input": "WWWWWWWW\nBBBBBBBB\nWWWWWWWW\nWWWWWWWW\nWWWWWWWW\nWWWWWWWW\nWWWWWWWW\nWWWWWWWW", "output": "1" }, { "input": "WWWWWWWW\nWWWWWWWW\nWWWWWWWW\nWWWWWWWW\nWWWWWWWW\nWWWWWW...
1,696,005,904
2,147,483,647
Python 3
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
0
62
0
################################################################################ board=[] for i in range(8): board.append(input) # board=['WWWBWWBW', # 'BBBBBBBB', # 'WWWBWWBW', # 'WWWBWWBW', # 'WWWBWWBW', # 'WWWBWWBW', # 'WWWBWWBW', # 'WWWBWWBW'] ######################################################...
Title: Kalevitch and Chess Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 64 megabytes Problem Description: A famous Berland's painter Kalevitch likes to shock the public. One of his last obsessions is chess. For more than a thousand years people have been playing this old game on uninteresting, monotonous boards. Kalevitch de...
```python ################################################################################ board=[] for i in range(8): board.append(input) # board=['WWWBWWBW', # 'BBBBBBBB', # 'WWWBWWBW', # 'WWWBWWBW', # 'WWWBWWBW', # 'WWWBWWBW', # 'WWWBWWBW', # 'WWWBWWBW'] ############################################...
-1
960
A
Check the string
PROGRAMMING
1,200
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
A has a string consisting of some number of lowercase English letters 'a'. He gives it to his friend B who appends some number of letters 'b' to the end of this string. Since both A and B like the characters 'a' and 'b', they have made sure that at this point, at least one 'a' and one 'b' exist in the string. B now gi...
The first and only line consists of a string $S$ ($ 1 \le |S| \le 5\,000 $). It is guaranteed that the string will only consist of the lowercase English letters 'a', 'b', 'c'.
Print "YES" or "NO", according to the condition.
[ "aaabccc\n", "bbacc\n", "aabc\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "NO\n", "YES\n" ]
Consider first example: the number of 'c' is equal to the number of 'a'. Consider second example: although the number of 'c' is equal to the number of the 'b', the order is not correct. Consider third example: the number of 'c' is equal to the number of 'b'.
500
[ { "input": "aaabccc", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "bbacc", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "aabc", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "aabbcc", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "aaacccbb", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "abc", "output": "YES" }, { "in...
1,523,122,469
5,369
Python 3
CHALLENGED
CHALLENGES
7
93
7,065,600
text = input() Cnum=text.count('c') Anum=text.count('a') Bnum=text.count('b') if Cnum==Anum or Cnum==Bnum: if 'ba' in text or 'ca' in text or 'cb' in text: print('NO') else: print('YES') else: print('NO')
Title: Check the string Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: A has a string consisting of some number of lowercase English letters 'a'. He gives it to his friend B who appends some number of letters 'b' to the end of this string. Since both A and B like the characters 'a' and 'b...
```python text = input() Cnum=text.count('c') Anum=text.count('a') Bnum=text.count('b') if Cnum==Anum or Cnum==Bnum: if 'ba' in text or 'ca' in text or 'cb' in text: print('NO') else: print('YES') else: print('NO') ```
-1
507
B
Amr and Pins
PROGRAMMING
1,400
[ "geometry", "math" ]
null
null
Amr loves Geometry. One day he came up with a very interesting problem. Amr has a circle of radius *r* and center in point (*x*,<=*y*). He wants the circle center to be in new position (*x*',<=*y*'). In one step Amr can put a pin to the border of the circle in a certain point, then rotate the circle around that pin b...
Input consists of 5 space-separated integers *r*, *x*, *y*, *x*' *y*' (1<=≤<=*r*<=≤<=105, <=-<=105<=≤<=*x*,<=*y*,<=*x*',<=*y*'<=≤<=105), circle radius, coordinates of original center of the circle and coordinates of destination center of the circle respectively.
Output a single integer — minimum number of steps required to move the center of the circle to the destination point.
[ "2 0 0 0 4\n", "1 1 1 4 4\n", "4 5 6 5 6\n" ]
[ "1\n", "3\n", "0\n" ]
In the first sample test the optimal way is to put a pin at point (0, 2) and rotate the circle by 180 degrees counter-clockwise (or clockwise, no matter). <img class="tex-graphics" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/4e40fd4cc24a2050a0488aa131e6244369328039.png" style="max-width: 100.0%;max-height: 100.0%;"/>
1,000
[ { "input": "2 0 0 0 4", "output": "1" }, { "input": "1 1 1 4 4", "output": "3" }, { "input": "4 5 6 5 6", "output": "0" }, { "input": "10 20 0 40 0", "output": "1" }, { "input": "9 20 0 40 0", "output": "2" }, { "input": "5 -1 -6 -5 1", "output": "...
1,666,940,586
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
37
46
0
import math r, x, y, a, b = tuple(map(int, input().split())) dis = math.sqrt(((x-a)*(x-a)) + ((y-b)*(y-b))) print(math.ceil(dis/(2*r)))
Title: Amr and Pins Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Amr loves Geometry. One day he came up with a very interesting problem. Amr has a circle of radius *r* and center in point (*x*,<=*y*). He wants the circle center to be in new position (*x*',<=*y*'). In one step Amr can ...
```python import math r, x, y, a, b = tuple(map(int, input().split())) dis = math.sqrt(((x-a)*(x-a)) + ((y-b)*(y-b))) print(math.ceil(dis/(2*r))) ```
3
808
D
Array Division
PROGRAMMING
1,900
[ "binary search", "data structures", "implementation" ]
null
null
Vasya has an array *a* consisting of positive integer numbers. Vasya wants to divide this array into two non-empty consecutive parts (the prefix and the suffix) so that the sum of all elements in the first part equals to the sum of elements in the second part. It is not always possible, so Vasya will move some element ...
The first line contains single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100000) — the size of the array. The second line contains *n* integers *a*1,<=*a*2... *a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=109) — the elements of the array.
Print YES if Vasya can divide the array after moving one element. Otherwise print NO.
[ "3\n1 3 2\n", "5\n1 2 3 4 5\n", "5\n2 2 3 4 5\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "NO\n", "YES\n" ]
In the first example Vasya can move the second element to the end of the array. In the second example no move can make the division possible. In the third example Vasya can move the fourth element by one position to the left.
0
[ { "input": "3\n1 3 2", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "5\n1 2 3 4 5", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "5\n2 2 3 4 5", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "5\n72 32 17 46 82", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "6\n26 10 70 11 69 57", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "7\n4...
1,559,166,842
2,147,483,647
Python 3
TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED
TESTS
20
2,000
8,294,400
#Array Division def main(): n = int(input()) array = input().split() array = [int(x) for x in array] soma = 0 for num in array: soma += num if soma%2 == 0: part = 0 for i in range(n): part += array[i] falta = soma//2 - part if falta ...
Title: Array Division Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Vasya has an array *a* consisting of positive integer numbers. Vasya wants to divide this array into two non-empty consecutive parts (the prefix and the suffix) so that the sum of all elements in the first part equals to...
```python #Array Division def main(): n = int(input()) array = input().split() array = [int(x) for x in array] soma = 0 for num in array: soma += num if soma%2 == 0: part = 0 for i in range(n): part += array[i] falta = soma//2 - part ...
0
121
A
Lucky Sum
PROGRAMMING
1,100
[ "implementation" ]
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. Let *next*(*x*) be the minimum lucky number which is larger than or equals *x*. Petya is interested ...
The single line contains two integers *l* and *r* (1<=≤<=*l*<=≤<=*r*<=≤<=109) — the left and right interval limits.
In the single line print the only number — the sum *next*(*l*)<=+<=*next*(*l*<=+<=1)<=+<=...<=+<=*next*(*r*<=-<=1)<=+<=*next*(*r*). Please do not use the %lld specificator to read or write 64-bit integers in C++. It is preferred to use the cin, cout streams or the %I64d specificator.
[ "2 7\n", "7 7\n" ]
[ "33\n", "7\n" ]
In the first sample: *next*(2) + *next*(3) + *next*(4) + *next*(5) + *next*(6) + *next*(7) = 4 + 4 + 4 + 7 + 7 + 7 = 33 In the second sample: *next*(7) = 7
500
[ { "input": "2 7", "output": "33" }, { "input": "7 7", "output": "7" }, { "input": "1 9", "output": "125" }, { "input": "4 7", "output": "25" }, { "input": "12 47", "output": "1593" }, { "input": "6 77", "output": "4012" }, { "input": "1 100...
1,684,612,714
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
1
62
2,048,000
n,m=map(int,input().split()) v=[] def gen(x=0): global v if x>=10e9: return v+=[x] gen(x*10+4) gen(x*10+7) gen() v.sort() q=[] for i in v: if i>=m: q+=[i] break q+=[i] q.pop(0) k=[] k+=[m] k+=[n] for j in q: if j<=m: k+=[j] k=list...
Title: Lucky Sum 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. Let *...
```python n,m=map(int,input().split()) v=[] def gen(x=0): global v if x>=10e9: return v+=[x] gen(x*10+4) gen(x*10+7) gen() v.sort() q=[] for i in v: if i>=m: q+=[i] break q+=[i] q.pop(0) k=[] k+=[m] k+=[n] for j in q: if j<=m: k+=[...
0
139
A
Petr and Book
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
One Sunday Petr went to a bookshop and bought a new book on sports programming. The book had exactly *n* pages. Petr decided to start reading it starting from the next day, that is, from Monday. Petr's got a very tight schedule and for each day of the week he knows how many pages he will be able to read on that day. S...
The first input line contains the single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000) — the number of pages in the book. The second line contains seven non-negative space-separated integers that do not exceed 1000 — those integers represent how many pages Petr can read on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday and...
Print a single number — the number of the day of the week, when Petr will finish reading the book. The days of the week are numbered starting with one in the natural order: Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday.
[ "100\n15 20 20 15 10 30 45\n", "2\n1 0 0 0 0 0 0\n" ]
[ "6\n", "1\n" ]
Note to the first sample: By the end of Monday and therefore, by the beginning of Tuesday Petr has 85 pages left. He has 65 pages left by Wednesday, 45 by Thursday, 30 by Friday, 20 by Saturday and on Saturday Petr finishes reading the book (and he also has time to read 10 pages of something else). Note to the second...
500
[ { "input": "100\n15 20 20 15 10 30 45", "output": "6" }, { "input": "2\n1 0 0 0 0 0 0", "output": "1" }, { "input": "100\n100 200 100 200 300 400 500", "output": "1" }, { "input": "3\n1 1 1 1 1 1 1", "output": "3" }, { "input": "1\n1 1 1 1 1 1 1", "output": "1...
1,665,682,902
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
12
186
17,715,200
n = int(input()) lst = list(map(int,input().split(' '))) i,res = 0,0 while (res<n): res+=lst[i%7] i+=1 print(i%7)
Title: Petr and Book Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: One Sunday Petr went to a bookshop and bought a new book on sports programming. The book had exactly *n* pages. Petr decided to start reading it starting from the next day, that is, from Monday. Petr's got a very tight s...
```python n = int(input()) lst = list(map(int,input().split(' '))) i,res = 0,0 while (res<n): res+=lst[i%7] i+=1 print(i%7) ```
0
155
A
I_love_\%username\%
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "brute force" ]
null
null
Vasya adores sport programming. He can't write programs but he loves to watch the contests' progress. Vasya even has a favorite coder and Vasya pays special attention to him. One day Vasya decided to collect the results of all contests where his favorite coder participated and track the progress of his coolness. For e...
The first line contains the single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000) — the number of contests where the coder participated. The next line contains *n* space-separated non-negative integer numbers — they are the points which the coder has earned. The points are given in the chronological order. All points do not exceed ...
Print the single number — the number of amazing performances the coder has had during his whole history of participating in the contests.
[ "5\n100 50 200 150 200\n", "10\n4664 6496 5814 7010 5762 5736 6944 4850 3698 7242\n" ]
[ "2\n", "4\n" ]
In the first sample the performances number 2 and 3 are amazing. In the second sample the performances number 2, 4, 9 and 10 are amazing.
500
[ { "input": "5\n100 50 200 150 200", "output": "2" }, { "input": "10\n4664 6496 5814 7010 5762 5736 6944 4850 3698 7242", "output": "4" }, { "input": "1\n6", "output": "0" }, { "input": "2\n2 1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "5\n100 36 53 7 81", "output": "2" ...
1,692,937,357
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
OK
TESTS
37
154
0
n = int(input()) arr = list(map(int, input().split())) base = arr[0] greater = smaller = base c = 0 for i in range(1,n): if arr[i] > greater: c += 1 greater = arr[i] elif arr[i] < smaller: smaller = arr[i] c += 1 print(c)
Title: I_love_\%username\% Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Vasya adores sport programming. He can't write programs but he loves to watch the contests' progress. Vasya even has a favorite coder and Vasya pays special attention to him. One day Vasya decided to collect the re...
```python n = int(input()) arr = list(map(int, input().split())) base = arr[0] greater = smaller = base c = 0 for i in range(1,n): if arr[i] > greater: c += 1 greater = arr[i] elif arr[i] < smaller: smaller = arr[i] c += 1 print(c) ```
3
847
J
Students Initiation
PROGRAMMING
2,400
[ "binary search", "flows", "graphs" ]
null
null
Soon the first year students will be initiated into students at the University of Berland. The organizers of the initiation come up with a program for this holiday. In their opinion, it would be good if the first-year students presented small souvenirs to each other. When they voiced this idea to the first-year student...
The first line contains two integers *n* and *m* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=5000, 0<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=*min*(5000,<=*n*·(*n*<=-<=1)<=/<=2)) — the number of the first year students and the number of pairs of the students that know each other. The students are numbered from 1 to *n*. Each of the following *m* lines contains two integers *...
Print a single integer into the first line — the smallest number of souvenirs that the unluckiest student will have to present. Following should be *m* lines, each containing two integers — the students which are familiar with each other. The first number in the pair must be the student that will present the souvenir ...
[ "5 4\n2 1\n1 3\n2 3\n2 5\n", "4 3\n1 2\n1 3\n1 4\n", "4 6\n1 2\n4 1\n4 2\n3 2\n4 3\n1 3\n" ]
[ "1\n1 2\n2 3\n3 1\n5 2\n", "1\n1 4\n2 1\n3 1\n", "2\n1 3\n2 1\n2 4\n3 2\n4 1\n4 3\n" ]
none
0
[]
1,693,488,390
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
0
46
0
print("_RANDOM_GUESS_1693488389.9852984")# 1693488389.9853175
Title: Students Initiation Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Soon the first year students will be initiated into students at the University of Berland. The organizers of the initiation come up with a program for this holiday. In their opinion, it would be good if the first-ye...
```python print("_RANDOM_GUESS_1693488389.9852984")# 1693488389.9853175 ```
0
560
A
Currency System in Geraldion
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation", "sortings" ]
null
null
A magic island Geraldion, where Gerald lives, has its own currency system. It uses banknotes of several values. But the problem is, the system is not perfect and sometimes it happens that Geraldionians cannot express a certain sum of money with any set of banknotes. Of course, they can use any number of banknotes of ea...
The first line contains number *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000) — the number of values of the banknotes that used in Geraldion. The second line contains *n* distinct space-separated numbers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=106) — the values of the banknotes.
Print a single line — the minimum unfortunate sum. If there are no unfortunate sums, print <=-<=1.
[ "5\n1 2 3 4 5\n" ]
[ "-1\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "5\n1 2 3 4 5", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "1\n2", "output": "1" }, { "input": "10\n371054 506438 397130 1 766759 208409 769264 549213 641270 771837", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "10\n635370 154890 909382 220996 276501 716105 538714 140162 171960 271264", "o...
1,686,153,880
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
3
31
0
n=int(input()) b=input() if '1' in b: print('-1') else: print('1')
Title: Currency System in Geraldion Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: A magic island Geraldion, where Gerald lives, has its own currency system. It uses banknotes of several values. But the problem is, the system is not perfect and sometimes it happens that Geraldionians cann...
```python n=int(input()) b=input() if '1' in b: print('-1') else: print('1') ```
0
455
A
Boredom
PROGRAMMING
1,500
[ "dp" ]
null
null
Alex doesn't like boredom. That's why whenever he gets bored, he comes up with games. One long winter evening he came up with a game and decided to play it. Given a sequence *a* consisting of *n* integers. The player can make several steps. In a single step he can choose an element of the sequence (let's denote it *a*...
The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) that shows how many numbers are in Alex's sequence. The second line contains *n* integers *a*1, *a*2, ..., *a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=105).
Print a single integer — the maximum number of points that Alex can earn.
[ "2\n1 2\n", "3\n1 2 3\n", "9\n1 2 1 3 2 2 2 2 3\n" ]
[ "2\n", "4\n", "10\n" ]
Consider the third test example. At first step we need to choose any element equal to 2. After that step our sequence looks like this [2, 2, 2, 2]. Then we do 4 steps, on each step we choose any element equals to 2. In total we earn 10 points.
500
[ { "input": "2\n1 2", "output": "2" }, { "input": "3\n1 2 3", "output": "4" }, { "input": "9\n1 2 1 3 2 2 2 2 3", "output": "10" }, { "input": "5\n3 3 4 5 4", "output": "11" }, { "input": "5\n5 3 5 3 4", "output": "16" }, { "input": "5\n4 2 3 2 5", ...
1,695,411,759
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
5
31
0
tests = int(input()) nums = [int(n) for n in input().split()] points = [] def test(num, nums = nums): newNums = nums.copy() for n in nums: if n == num-1 or n == num+1: newNums.remove(n) return sum(newNums) for num in nums: points.append(test(num)) print(max(poi...
Title: Boredom Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Alex doesn't like boredom. That's why whenever he gets bored, he comes up with games. One long winter evening he came up with a game and decided to play it. Given a sequence *a* consisting of *n* integers. The player can make ...
```python tests = int(input()) nums = [int(n) for n in input().split()] points = [] def test(num, nums = nums): newNums = nums.copy() for n in nums: if n == num-1 or n == num+1: newNums.remove(n) return sum(newNums) for num in nums: points.append(test(num)) pri...
0
217
A
Ice Skating
PROGRAMMING
1,200
[ "brute force", "dfs and similar", "dsu", "graphs" ]
null
null
Bajtek is learning to skate on ice. He's a beginner, so his only mode of transportation is pushing off from a snow drift to the north, east, south or west and sliding until he lands in another snow drift. He has noticed that in this way it's impossible to get from some snow drifts to some other by any sequence of moves...
The first line of input contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of snow drifts. Each of the following *n* lines contains two integers *x**i* and *y**i* (1<=≤<=*x**i*,<=*y**i*<=≤<=1000) — the coordinates of the *i*-th snow drift. Note that the north direction coinсides with the direction of *Oy* ...
Output the minimal number of snow drifts that need to be created in order for Bajtek to be able to reach any snow drift from any other one.
[ "2\n2 1\n1 2\n", "2\n2 1\n4 1\n" ]
[ "1\n", "0\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "2\n2 1\n1 2", "output": "1" }, { "input": "2\n2 1\n4 1", "output": "0" }, { "input": "24\n171 35\n261 20\n4 206\n501 446\n961 912\n581 748\n946 978\n463 514\n841 889\n341 466\n842 967\n54 102\n235 261\n925 889\n682 672\n623 636\n268 94\n635 710\n474 510\n697 794\n586 663\n182...
1,585,943,754
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
76
248
307,200
def search(coord, start, n): if coord[start]['pass']: return coord[start]['pass'] = True for i in range(n): if coord[i]['x'] == coord[start]['x'] or coord[i]['y'] == coord[start]['y']: search(coord, i, n) snow_drifts_number = input() snow_drifts_number = int(snow_drifts_number) ...
Title: Ice Skating Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Bajtek is learning to skate on ice. He's a beginner, so his only mode of transportation is pushing off from a snow drift to the north, east, south or west and sliding until he lands in another snow drift. He has noticed tha...
```python def search(coord, start, n): if coord[start]['pass']: return coord[start]['pass'] = True for i in range(n): if coord[i]['x'] == coord[start]['x'] or coord[i]['y'] == coord[start]['y']: search(coord, i, n) snow_drifts_number = input() snow_drifts_number = int(snow_drift...
3
177
B1
Rectangular Game
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "number theory" ]
null
null
The Smart Beaver from ABBYY decided to have a day off. But doing nothing the whole day turned out to be too boring, and he decided to play a game with pebbles. Initially, the Beaver has *n* pebbles. He arranges them in *a* equal rows, each row has *b* pebbles (*a*<=&gt;<=1). Note that the Beaver must use all the pebble...
The single line of the input contains a single integer *n* — the initial number of pebbles the Smart Beaver has. The input limitations for getting 30 points are: - 2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=50 The input limitations for getting 100 points are: - 2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=109
Print a single number — the maximum possible result of the game.
[ "10\n", "8\n" ]
[ "16\n", "15\n" ]
Consider the first example (*c*<sub class="lower-index">1</sub> = 10). The possible options for the game development are: - Arrange the pebbles in 10 rows, one pebble per row. Then *c*<sub class="lower-index">2</sub> = 1, and the game ends after the first move with the result of 11. - Arrange the pebbles in 5 rows, ...
30
[ { "input": "10", "output": "16" }, { "input": "8", "output": "15" }, { "input": "4", "output": "7" }, { "input": "36", "output": "67" }, { "input": "32", "output": "63" }, { "input": "46", "output": "70" }, { "input": "6", "output": "10...
1,591,450,249
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS1
2
218
307,200
def hcf(x,y): if x > y: smaller = y else: smaller=x for i in range(1, smaller+1): if((x % i == 0) and (y % i == 0)): hcf = i return hcf c=10 A=[] p=10 n=int(input()) for i in range(n-1,0,-1): if n%i==0: A.append(i) for i in range(len(A)): p=hcf(A[i],p) if p!=1: ...
Title: Rectangular Game Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: The Smart Beaver from ABBYY decided to have a day off. But doing nothing the whole day turned out to be too boring, and he decided to play a game with pebbles. Initially, the Beaver has *n* pebbles. He arranges them in...
```python def hcf(x,y): if x > y: smaller = y else: smaller=x for i in range(1, smaller+1): if((x % i == 0) and (y % i == 0)): hcf = i return hcf c=10 A=[] p=10 n=int(input()) for i in range(n-1,0,-1): if n%i==0: A.append(i) for i in range(len(A)): p=hcf(A[i],p) if p...
0
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...
1,603,604,008
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
40
312
0
w1 = input() w2 = input() size = len(w2) flag = True for i in range(size): if w1[i] != w2[size - i - 1]: flag = False break if flag: 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 w1 = input() w2 = input() size = len(w2) flag = True for i in range(size): if w1[i] != w2[size - i - 1]: flag = False break if flag: print("YES") else: print("NO") ```
3.922
378
A
Playing with Dice
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "brute force" ]
null
null
Two players are playing a game. First each of them writes an integer from 1 to 6, and then a dice is thrown. The player whose written number got closer to the number on the dice wins. If both payers have the same difference, it's a draw. The first player wrote number *a*, the second player wrote number *b*. How many w...
The single line contains two integers *a* and *b* (1<=≤<=*a*,<=*b*<=≤<=6) — the numbers written on the paper by the first and second player, correspondingly.
Print three integers: the number of ways to throw the dice at which the first player wins, the game ends with a draw or the second player wins, correspondingly.
[ "2 5\n", "2 4\n" ]
[ "3 0 3\n", "2 1 3\n" ]
The dice is a standard cube-shaped six-sided object with each side containing a number from 1 to 6, and where all numbers on all sides are distinct. You can assume that number *a* is closer to number *x* than number *b*, if |*a* - *x*| &lt; |*b* - *x*|.
500
[ { "input": "2 5", "output": "3 0 3" }, { "input": "2 4", "output": "2 1 3" }, { "input": "5 3", "output": "2 1 3" }, { "input": "1 6", "output": "3 0 3" }, { "input": "5 1", "output": "3 1 2" }, { "input": "6 3", "output": "2 0 4" }, { "inp...
1,594,240,331
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
38
109
6,656,000
a, b = map(int, input().split()) x=y=z=0 for i in range(1, 7): if abs(a-i)<abs(b-i):x+=1 elif abs(a-i)>abs(b-i):y+=1 else:z+=1 print(x,z,y)
Title: Playing with Dice Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Two players are playing a game. First each of them writes an integer from 1 to 6, and then a dice is thrown. The player whose written number got closer to the number on the dice wins. If both payers have the same diff...
```python a, b = map(int, input().split()) x=y=z=0 for i in range(1, 7): if abs(a-i)<abs(b-i):x+=1 elif abs(a-i)>abs(b-i):y+=1 else:z+=1 print(x,z,y) ```
3
465
B
Inbox (100500)
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Over time, Alexey's mail box got littered with too many letters. Some of them are read, while others are unread. Alexey's mail program can either show a list of all letters or show the content of a single letter. As soon as the program shows the content of an unread letter, it becomes read letter (if the program shows...
The first line contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000) — the number of letters in the mailbox. The second line contains *n* space-separated integers (zeros and ones) — the state of the letter list. The *i*-th number equals either 1, if the *i*-th number is unread, or 0, if the *i*-th letter is read.
Print a single number — the minimum number of operations needed to make all the letters read.
[ "5\n0 1 0 1 0\n", "5\n1 1 0 0 1\n", "2\n0 0\n" ]
[ "3\n", "4\n", "0\n" ]
In the first sample Alexey needs three operations to cope with the task: open the second letter, move to the third one, move to the fourth one. In the second sample the action plan: open the first letter, move to the second letter, return to the list, open the fifth letter. In the third sample all letters are already...
1,000
[ { "input": "5\n0 1 0 1 0", "output": "3" }, { "input": "5\n1 1 0 0 1", "output": "4" }, { "input": "2\n0 0", "output": "0" }, { "input": "9\n1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1", "output": "9" }, { "input": "5\n1 1 1 1 1", "output": "5" }, { "input": "14\n0 0 1 1 1 0 1 ...
1,586,873,365
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
13
109
0
n = int(input()) lst = list(map(int, input().split())) i = 0 count = 0 while i < n-1: if lst[i] == 1: count += 1 if lst[i+1] != 1 and i+1 != n-1: count += 1 i += 1 if lst[i] == 1: count += 1 print(count)
Title: Inbox (100500) Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Over time, Alexey's mail box got littered with too many letters. Some of them are read, while others are unread. Alexey's mail program can either show a list of all letters or show the content of a single letter. As soo...
```python n = int(input()) lst = list(map(int, input().split())) i = 0 count = 0 while i < n-1: if lst[i] == 1: count += 1 if lst[i+1] != 1 and i+1 != n-1: count += 1 i += 1 if lst[i] == 1: count += 1 print(count) ```
0
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...
1,609,700,084
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
40
218
0
A = input() B = input() poczatek = 0 koniec = len(A) - 1 warunek = True if len(A) == len(B): for x in range(len(A)): if A[poczatek] != B[koniec]: warunek = False poczatek += 1 koniec -= 1 if warunek == True: 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 A = input() B = input() poczatek = 0 koniec = len(A) - 1 warunek = True if len(A) == len(B): for x in range(len(A)): if A[poczatek] != B[koniec]: warunek = False poczatek += 1 koniec -= 1 if warunek == True: print('YES') else: p...
3.9455
912
B
New Year's Eve
PROGRAMMING
1,300
[ "bitmasks", "constructive algorithms", "number theory" ]
null
null
Since Grisha behaved well last year, at New Year's Eve he was visited by Ded Moroz who brought an enormous bag of gifts with him! The bag contains *n* sweet candies from the good ol' bakery, each labeled from 1 to *n* corresponding to its tastiness. No two candies have the same tastiness. The choice of candies has a d...
The sole string contains two integers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1018).
Output one number — the largest possible xor-sum.
[ "4 3\n", "6 6\n" ]
[ "7\n", "7\n" ]
In the first sample case, one optimal answer is 1, 2 and 4, giving the xor-sum of 7. In the second sample case, one can, for example, take all six candies and obtain the xor-sum of 7.
1,000
[ { "input": "4 3", "output": "7" }, { "input": "6 6", "output": "7" }, { "input": "2 2", "output": "3" }, { "input": "1022 10", "output": "1023" }, { "input": "415853337373441 52", "output": "562949953421311" }, { "input": "75 12", "output": "127" ...
1,552,464,174
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
58
124
0
import sys n,k = [int(s) for s in input().split()] if k == 1: print(n) else: copy = n array = [] while n != 0: array.append(n % 2) n = n // 2 array = array[::-1] num = 0 sum_ = 0 #print(array) for i in range(len(array)): if not array[i]: ...
Title: New Year's Eve Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Since Grisha behaved well last year, at New Year's Eve he was visited by Ded Moroz who brought an enormous bag of gifts with him! The bag contains *n* sweet candies from the good ol' bakery, each labeled from 1 to *n* co...
```python import sys n,k = [int(s) for s in input().split()] if k == 1: print(n) else: copy = n array = [] while n != 0: array.append(n % 2) n = n // 2 array = array[::-1] num = 0 sum_ = 0 #print(array) for i in range(len(array)): if not array[i...
3
416
A
Guess a number!
PROGRAMMING
1,400
[ "greedy", "implementation", "two pointers" ]
null
null
A TV show called "Guess a number!" is gathering popularity. The whole Berland, the old and the young, are watching the show. The rules are simple. The host thinks of an integer *y* and the participants guess it by asking questions to the host. There are four types of acceptable questions: - Is it true that *y* is st...
The first line of the input contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=10000) — the number of questions (and answers). Next *n* lines each contain one question and one answer to it. The format of each line is like that: "sign x answer", where the sign is: - "&gt;" (for the first type queries), - "&lt;" (for the se...
Print any of such integers *y*, that the answers to all the queries are correct. The printed number *y* must meet the inequation <=-<=2·109<=≤<=*y*<=≤<=2·109. If there are many answers, print any of them. If such value doesn't exist, print word "Impossible" (without the quotes).
[ "4\n&gt;= 1 Y\n&lt; 3 N\n&lt;= -3 N\n&gt; 55 N\n", "2\n&gt; 100 Y\n&lt; -100 Y\n" ]
[ "17\n", "Impossible\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "4\n>= 1 Y\n< 3 N\n<= -3 N\n> 55 N", "output": "17" }, { "input": "2\n> 100 Y\n< -100 Y", "output": "Impossible" }, { "input": "4\n< 1 N\n> 1 N\n> 1 N\n> 1 N", "output": "1" }, { "input": "4\n<= 1 Y\n>= 1 Y\n>= 1 Y\n<= 1 Y", "output": "1" }, { "input": ...
1,398,433,333
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
6
77
0
n = int(input()) mn = -100000000000000000 mx = 1000000000000000000 for i in range(n): znak, m, ans = map(str, input().split()) if znak == '>': if ans == 'Y': mn = max(mn, int(m) + 1) else: mx = min(mx, int(m)) if znak == '<': if ans == 'Y': ...
Title: Guess a number! Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: A TV show called "Guess a number!" is gathering popularity. The whole Berland, the old and the young, are watching the show. The rules are simple. The host thinks of an integer *y* and the participants guess it by aski...
```python n = int(input()) mn = -100000000000000000 mx = 1000000000000000000 for i in range(n): znak, m, ans = map(str, input().split()) if znak == '>': if ans == 'Y': mn = max(mn, int(m) + 1) else: mx = min(mx, int(m)) if znak == '<': if ans == 'Y'...
0
892
A
Greed
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "greedy", "implementation" ]
null
null
Jafar has *n* cans of cola. Each can is described by two integers: remaining volume of cola *a**i* and can's capacity *b**i* (*a**i* <=≤<= *b**i*). Jafar has decided to pour all remaining cola into just 2 cans, determine if he can do this or not!
The first line of the input contains one integer *n* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100<=000) — number of cola cans. The second line contains *n* space-separated integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (0<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=109) — volume of remaining cola in cans. The third line contains *n* space-separated integers that *b*1,<=*b*2,<=...,<...
Print "YES" (without quotes) if it is possible to pour all remaining cola in 2 cans. Otherwise print "NO" (without quotes). You can print each letter in any case (upper or lower).
[ "2\n3 5\n3 6\n", "3\n6 8 9\n6 10 12\n", "5\n0 0 5 0 0\n1 1 8 10 5\n", "4\n4 1 0 3\n5 2 2 3\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "NO\n", "YES\n", "YES\n" ]
In the first sample, there are already 2 cans, so the answer is "YES".
500
[ { "input": "2\n3 5\n3 6", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "3\n6 8 9\n6 10 12", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "5\n0 0 5 0 0\n1 1 8 10 5", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "4\n4 1 0 3\n5 2 2 3", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "10\n9 10 24 11 1 7 8 3 28 14\n86 20 34 11 22 9...
1,530,269,413
313
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
3
93
0
n=int(input()) l=list(map(int,input().strip().split())) l1=list(map(int,input().strip().split())) s=sum(l) l.sort() r=l1[-1]+l1[-2] if s<=r: print ("YES") else: print ("NO")
Title: Greed Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Jafar has *n* cans of cola. Each can is described by two integers: remaining volume of cola *a**i* and can's capacity *b**i* (*a**i* <=≤<= *b**i*). Jafar has decided to pour all remaining cola into just 2 cans, determine if he c...
```python n=int(input()) l=list(map(int,input().strip().split())) l1=list(map(int,input().strip().split())) s=sum(l) l.sort() r=l1[-1]+l1[-2] if s<=r: print ("YES") else: print ("NO") ```
0
825
C
Multi-judge Solving
PROGRAMMING
1,600
[ "greedy", "implementation" ]
null
null
Makes solves problems on Decoforces and lots of other different online judges. Each problem is denoted by its difficulty — a positive integer number. Difficulties are measured the same across all the judges (the problem with difficulty *d* on Decoforces is as hard as the problem with difficulty *d* on any other judge)....
The first line contains two integer numbers *n*, *k* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=103, 1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=109). The second line contains *n* space-separated integer numbers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=109).
Print minimum number of problems Makes should solve on other judges in order to solve all chosen problems on Decoforces.
[ "3 3\n2 1 9\n", "4 20\n10 3 6 3\n" ]
[ "1\n", "0\n" ]
In the first example Makes at first solves problems 1 and 2. Then in order to solve the problem with difficulty 9, he should solve problem with difficulty no less than 5. The only available are difficulties 5 and 6 on some other judge. Solving any of these will give Makes opportunity to solve problem 3. In the second ...
0
[ { "input": "3 3\n2 1 9", "output": "1" }, { "input": "4 20\n10 3 6 3", "output": "0" }, { "input": "1 1000000000\n1", "output": "0" }, { "input": "1 1\n3", "output": "1" }, { "input": "50 100\n74 55 33 5 83 24 75 59 30 36 13 4 62 28 96 17 6 35 45 53 33 11 37 93 34...
1,500,726,965
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
3
46
4,608,000
def list_input(): return list(map(int,input().split())) def map_input(): return map(int,input().split()) def map_string(): return input().split() def dist(a,b,k): a = max(a,k) a *= 2 cnt = 0 while a < b: a *= 2 cnt += 1 return cnt n,k = map_input...
Title: Multi-judge Solving Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Makes solves problems on Decoforces and lots of other different online judges. Each problem is denoted by its difficulty — a positive integer number. Difficulties are measured the same across all the judges (the pro...
```python def list_input(): return list(map(int,input().split())) def map_input(): return map(int,input().split()) def map_string(): return input().split() def dist(a,b,k): a = max(a,k) a *= 2 cnt = 0 while a < b: a *= 2 cnt += 1 return cnt n,k =...
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...
1,584,166,422
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
18
124
0
import math as m k,n,s,p=map(int,input().split()) tot=n*k tota=m.ceil(tot/s) tote=(m.ceil(tota/k))*k print(m.ceil(tote/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 import math as m k,n,s,p=map(int,input().split()) tot=n*k tota=m.ceil(tot/s) tote=(m.ceil(tota/k))*k print(m.ceil(tote/p)) ```
3
110
A
Nearly Lucky Number
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation" ]
A. Nearly Lucky Number
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. Unfortunately, not all numbers are lucky. Petya calls a number nearly lucky if the number of lucky d...
The only line contains an integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1018). Please do not use the %lld specificator to read or write 64-bit numbers in С++. It is preferred to use the cin, cout streams or the %I64d specificator.
Print on the single line "YES" if *n* is a nearly lucky number. Otherwise, print "NO" (without the quotes).
[ "40047\n", "7747774\n", "1000000000000000000\n" ]
[ "NO\n", "YES\n", "NO\n" ]
In the first sample there are 3 lucky digits (first one and last two), so the answer is "NO". In the second sample there are 7 lucky digits, 7 is lucky number, so the answer is "YES". In the third sample there are no lucky digits, so the answer is "NO".
500
[ { "input": "40047", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "7747774", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "1000000000000000000", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "7", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "4", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "474404774", "output": "NO" }, { ...
1,694,838,219
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
0
154
2,764,800
n=int(input("")) x= (n) luckyno=0 for digit in x: if digit=='4' or digit=='7': luckyno += 1 if luckyno==4 or luckyno==7: print("YES") else: print("NO")
Title: Nearly Lucky Number 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 n=int(input("")) x= (n) luckyno=0 for digit in x: if digit=='4' or digit=='7': luckyno += 1 if luckyno==4 or luckyno==7: print("YES") else: print("NO") ```
-1
265
A
Colorful Stones (Simplified Edition)
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
There is a sequence of colorful stones. The color of each stone is one of red, green, or blue. You are given a string *s*. The *i*-th (1-based) character of *s* represents the color of the *i*-th stone. If the character is "R", "G", or "B", the color of the corresponding stone is red, green, or blue, respectively. Ini...
The input contains two lines. The first line contains the string *s* (1<=≤<=|*s*|<=≤<=50). The second line contains the string *t* (1<=≤<=|*t*|<=≤<=50). The characters of each string will be one of "R", "G", or "B". It is guaranteed that Liss don't move out of the sequence.
Print the final 1-based position of Liss in a single line.
[ "RGB\nRRR\n", "RRRBGBRBBB\nBBBRR\n", "BRRBGBRGRBGRGRRGGBGBGBRGBRGRGGGRBRRRBRBBBGRRRGGBBB\nBBRBGGRGRGBBBRBGRBRBBBBRBRRRBGBBGBBRRBBGGRBRRBRGRB\n" ]
[ "2\n", "3\n", "15\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "RGB\nRRR", "output": "2" }, { "input": "RRRBGBRBBB\nBBBRR", "output": "3" }, { "input": "BRRBGBRGRBGRGRRGGBGBGBRGBRGRGGGRBRRRBRBBBGRRRGGBBB\nBBRBGGRGRGBBBRBGRBRBBBBRBRRRBGBBGBBRRBBGGRBRRBRGRB", "output": "15" }, { "input": "G\nRRBBRBRRBR", "output": "1" }, ...
1,690,935,124
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
19
154
0
a=input() b=input() e=0 for i in range(len(b)): if b[i]==a[e]: e+=1 print(e+1)
Title: Colorful Stones (Simplified Edition) Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: There is a sequence of colorful stones. The color of each stone is one of red, green, or blue. You are given a string *s*. The *i*-th (1-based) character of *s* represents the color of the *i*-th st...
```python a=input() b=input() e=0 for i in range(len(b)): if b[i]==a[e]: e+=1 print(e+1) ```
3
0
none
none
none
0
[ "none" ]
null
null
Vlad likes to eat in cafes very much. During his life, he has visited cafes *n* times. Unfortunately, Vlad started to feel that his last visits are not any different from each other. To fix that Vlad had a small research. First of all, Vlad assigned individual indices to all cafes. Then, he wrote down indices of cafes...
In first line there is one integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=2·105) — number of cafes indices written by Vlad. In second line, *n* numbers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (0<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=2·105) are written — indices of cafes in order of being visited by Vlad. Vlad could visit some cafes more than once. Note that in numeration, ...
Print one integer — index of the cafe that Vlad hasn't visited for as long as possible.
[ "5\n1 3 2 1 2\n", "6\n2 1 2 2 4 1\n" ]
[ "3\n", "2\n" ]
In first test, there are three cafes, and the last visits to cafes with indices 1 and 2 were after the last visit to cafe with index 3; so this cafe is the answer. In second test case, there are also three cafes, but with indices 1, 2 and 4. Cafes with indices 1 and 4 were visited after the last visit of cafe with in...
0
[ { "input": "5\n1 3 2 1 2", "output": "3" }, { "input": "6\n2 1 2 2 4 1", "output": "2" }, { "input": "1\n0", "output": "0" }, { "input": "1\n200000", "output": "200000" }, { "input": "2\n2018 2017", "output": "2018" }, { "input": "5\n100 1000 1000 1000...
1,698,508,119
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
0
15
0
n = int(input()) cofas = list(map(int, input().split())) print(set(cofas[::-1]).pop())
Title: none Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Vlad likes to eat in cafes very much. During his life, he has visited cafes *n* times. Unfortunately, Vlad started to feel that his last visits are not any different from each other. To fix that Vlad had a small research. First o...
```python n = int(input()) cofas = list(map(int, input().split())) print(set(cofas[::-1]).pop()) ```
0
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...
1,677,942,862
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
OK
TESTS
30
1,076
9,113,600
n = int(input()) a=0 for i in range(n): inp = input() if(inp=="Tetrahedron"):a+=4 if(inp=="Cube"):a+=6 if(inp=="Octahedron"):a+=8 if(inp=="Dodecahedron"):a+=12 if(inp=="Icosahedron"):a+=20 print(a)
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 n = int(input()) a=0 for i in range(n): inp = input() if(inp=="Tetrahedron"):a+=4 if(inp=="Cube"):a+=6 if(inp=="Octahedron"):a+=8 if(inp=="Dodecahedron"):a+=12 if(inp=="Icosahedron"):a+=20 print(a) ```
3
165
A
Supercentral Point
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
One day Vasya painted a Cartesian coordinate system on a piece of paper and marked some set of points (*x*1,<=*y*1),<=(*x*2,<=*y*2),<=...,<=(*x**n*,<=*y**n*). Let's define neighbors for some fixed point from the given set (*x*,<=*y*): - point (*x*',<=*y*') is (*x*,<=*y*)'s right neighbor, if *x*'<=&gt;<=*x* and *y*'...
The first input line contains the only integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=200) — the number of points in the given set. Next *n* lines contain the coordinates of the points written as "*x* *y*" (without the quotes) (|*x*|,<=|*y*|<=≤<=1000), all coordinates are integers. The numbers in the line are separated by exactly one spac...
Print the only number — the number of supercentral points of the given set.
[ "8\n1 1\n4 2\n3 1\n1 2\n0 2\n0 1\n1 0\n1 3\n", "5\n0 0\n0 1\n1 0\n0 -1\n-1 0\n" ]
[ "2\n", "1\n" ]
In the first sample the supercentral points are only points (1, 1) and (1, 2). In the second sample there is one supercental point — point (0, 0).
500
[ { "input": "8\n1 1\n4 2\n3 1\n1 2\n0 2\n0 1\n1 0\n1 3", "output": "2" }, { "input": "5\n0 0\n0 1\n1 0\n0 -1\n-1 0", "output": "1" }, { "input": "9\n-565 -752\n-184 723\n-184 -752\n-184 1\n950 723\n-565 723\n950 -752\n950 1\n-565 1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "25\n-651 897\n...
1,670,522,902
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
3
92
0
n = int(input()) sx = [] sy = [] count = 0 for i in range(n): s = list(map(int, input().split())) x, y = s[0], s[1] sx.append(x) sy.append(y) mAxx = max(sx) mInx = min(sx) mAxy = max(sy) mIny = min(sy) for i in range(len(sx)): if sx.count(sx[i]) >= 3 and sx[i] != mAxx and sx[i] != mInx: if sy.coun...
Title: Supercentral Point Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: One day Vasya painted a Cartesian coordinate system on a piece of paper and marked some set of points (*x*1,<=*y*1),<=(*x*2,<=*y*2),<=...,<=(*x**n*,<=*y**n*). Let's define neighbors for some fixed point from the give...
```python n = int(input()) sx = [] sy = [] count = 0 for i in range(n): s = list(map(int, input().split())) x, y = s[0], s[1] sx.append(x) sy.append(y) mAxx = max(sx) mInx = min(sx) mAxy = max(sy) mIny = min(sy) for i in range(len(sx)): if sx.count(sx[i]) >= 3 and sx[i] != mAxx and sx[i] != mInx: ...
0
16
B
Burglar and Matches
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "greedy", "implementation", "sortings" ]
B. Burglar and Matches
0
64
A burglar got into a matches warehouse and wants to steal as many matches as possible. In the warehouse there are *m* containers, in the *i*-th container there are *a**i* matchboxes, and each matchbox contains *b**i* matches. All the matchboxes are of the same size. The burglar's rucksack can hold *n* matchboxes exactl...
The first line of the input contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=2·108) and integer *m* (1<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=20). The *i*<=+<=1-th line contains a pair of numbers *a**i* and *b**i* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=108,<=1<=≤<=*b**i*<=≤<=10). All the input numbers are integer.
Output the only number — answer to the problem.
[ "7 3\n5 10\n2 5\n3 6\n", "3 3\n1 3\n2 2\n3 1\n" ]
[ "62\n", "7\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "7 3\n5 10\n2 5\n3 6", "output": "62" }, { "input": "3 3\n1 3\n2 2\n3 1", "output": "7" }, { "input": "1 1\n1 2", "output": "2" }, { "input": "1 2\n1 9\n1 6", "output": "9" }, { "input": "1 10\n1 1\n1 9\n1 3\n1 9\n1 7\n1 10\n1 4\n1 7\n1 3\n1 1", "ou...
1,661,262,310
2,147,483,647
Python 3
TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED
TESTS
24
500
0
#Read input import sys input = sys.stdin.readline ############ ---- Input Functions ---- ############ def inp(): return(int(input())) def inlt(): return(list(map(int,input().split()))) def insr(): s = input() return(list(s[:len(s) - 1])) def invr(): return(map(int,input().split())) #read inputs n,...
Title: Burglar and Matches Time Limit: 0 seconds Memory Limit: 64 megabytes Problem Description: A burglar got into a matches warehouse and wants to steal as many matches as possible. In the warehouse there are *m* containers, in the *i*-th container there are *a**i* matchboxes, and each matchbox contains *b**i* mat...
```python #Read input import sys input = sys.stdin.readline ############ ---- Input Functions ---- ############ def inp(): return(int(input())) def inlt(): return(list(map(int,input().split()))) def insr(): s = input() return(list(s[:len(s) - 1])) def invr(): return(map(int,input().split())) #read...
0
514
C
Watto and Mechanism
PROGRAMMING
2,000
[ "binary search", "data structures", "hashing", "string suffix structures", "strings" ]
null
null
Watto, the owner of a spare parts store, has recently got an order for the mechanism that can process strings in a certain way. Initially the memory of the mechanism is filled with *n* strings. Then the mechanism should be able to process queries of the following type: "Given string *s*, determine if the memory of the ...
The first line contains two non-negative numbers *n* and *m* (0<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=3·105, 0<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=3·105) — the number of the initial strings and the number of queries, respectively. Next follow *n* non-empty strings that are uploaded to the memory of the mechanism. Next follow *m* non-empty strings that are the querie...
For each query print on a single line "YES" (without the quotes), if the memory of the mechanism contains the required string, otherwise print "NO" (without the quotes).
[ "2 3\naaaaa\nacacaca\naabaa\nccacacc\ncaaac\n" ]
[ "YES\nNO\nNO\n" ]
none
2,000
[ { "input": "2 3\naaaaa\nacacaca\naabaa\nccacacc\ncaaac", "output": "YES\nNO\nNO" }, { "input": "1 5\nacbacbacb\ncbacbacb\nacbacbac\naacbacbacb\nacbacbacbb\nacbaabacb", "output": "NO\nNO\nNO\nNO\nYES" }, { "input": "5 4\nab\ncacab\ncbabc\nacc\ncacab\nabc\naa\nacbca\ncb", "output": "YE...
1,690,107,125
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
5
62
2,457,600
st = set() n, m = list(map(int, input().split())) for i in range(n): word = input() for letter in range(len(word)): newWord = list(word) for pp in ['a', 'b', 'c']: newWord[letter] = pp st.add(''.join(newWord)) for i in range(m): if input() in st: pr...
Title: Watto and Mechanism Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Watto, the owner of a spare parts store, has recently got an order for the mechanism that can process strings in a certain way. Initially the memory of the mechanism is filled with *n* strings. Then the mechanism sh...
```python st = set() n, m = list(map(int, input().split())) for i in range(n): word = input() for letter in range(len(word)): newWord = list(word) for pp in ['a', 'b', 'c']: newWord[letter] = pp st.add(''.join(newWord)) for i in range(m): if input() in st: ...
0
12
B
Correct Solution?
PROGRAMMING
1,100
[ "implementation", "sortings" ]
B. Correct Solution?
2
256
One cold winter evening Alice and her older brother Bob was sitting at home near the fireplace and giving each other interesting problems to solve. When it was Alice's turn, she told the number *n* to Bob and said: —Shuffle the digits in this number in order to obtain the smallest possible number without leading zeroe...
The first line contains one integer *n* (0<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=109) without leading zeroes. The second lines contains one integer *m* (0<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=109) — Bob's answer, possibly with leading zeroes.
Print OK if Bob's answer is correct and WRONG_ANSWER otherwise.
[ "3310\n1033\n", "4\n5\n" ]
[ "OK\n", "WRONG_ANSWER\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "3310\n1033", "output": "OK" }, { "input": "4\n5", "output": "WRONG_ANSWER" }, { "input": "40\n04", "output": "WRONG_ANSWER" }, { "input": "12\n12", "output": "OK" }, { "input": "432\n234", "output": "OK" }, { "input": "17109\n01179", "o...
1,630,765,538
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
32
154
6,963,200
def transform(n): m = ''+n m = sorted(m) for d in range(len(m)): if ord(m[d]) > ord('0'): wait = m[d] m[d] = m[0] m[0] = wait break return m def verdict(m, t): return m == t def main(): # input n = input() m = input() ...
Title: Correct Solution? Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: One cold winter evening Alice and her older brother Bob was sitting at home near the fireplace and giving each other interesting problems to solve. When it was Alice's turn, she told the number *n* to Bob and said: —Shuf...
```python def transform(n): m = ''+n m = sorted(m) for d in range(len(m)): if ord(m[d]) > ord('0'): wait = m[d] m[d] = m[0] m[0] = wait break return m def verdict(m, t): return m == t def main(): # input n = input() m ...
3.94853
817
B
Makes And The Product
PROGRAMMING
1,500
[ "combinatorics", "implementation", "math", "sortings" ]
null
null
After returning from the army Makes received a gift — an array *a* consisting of *n* positive integer numbers. He hadn't been solving problems for a long time, so he became interested to answer a particular question: how many triples of indices (*i*,<= *j*,<= *k*) (*i*<=&lt;<=*j*<=&lt;<=*k*), such that *a**i*·*a**j*·*a...
The first line of input contains a positive integer number *n* (3<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) — the number of elements in array *a*. The second line contains *n* positive integer numbers *a**i* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=109) — the elements of a given array.
Print one number — the quantity of triples (*i*,<= *j*,<= *k*) such that *i*,<= *j* and *k* are pairwise distinct and *a**i*·*a**j*·*a**k* is minimum possible.
[ "4\n1 1 1 1\n", "5\n1 3 2 3 4\n", "6\n1 3 3 1 3 2\n" ]
[ "4\n", "2\n", "1\n" ]
In the first example Makes always chooses three ones out of four, and the number of ways to choose them is 4. In the second example a triple of numbers (1, 2, 3) is chosen (numbers, not indices). Since there are two ways to choose an element 3, then the answer is 2. In the third example a triple of numbers (1, 1, 2) ...
0
[ { "input": "4\n1 1 1 1", "output": "4" }, { "input": "5\n1 3 2 3 4", "output": "2" }, { "input": "6\n1 3 3 1 3 2", "output": "1" }, { "input": "3\n1000000000 1000000000 1000000000", "output": "1" }, { "input": "4\n1 1 2 2", "output": "2" }, { "input": ...
1,517,128,216
2,147,483,647
Python 3
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
18
1,606
12,902,400
n = int(input()) a = input().split() for i in range(n): a[i] = int(a[i]) from math import factorial '''def merge(a,b): c=[] a1=0 b1=0 while a1!=len(a) and b1!=len(b): if a[a1]<b[b1]: c.append(a[a1]) a1+=1 else: c.append(b[b1]) ...
Title: Makes And The Product Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: After returning from the army Makes received a gift — an array *a* consisting of *n* positive integer numbers. He hadn't been solving problems for a long time, so he became interested to answer a particular questi...
```python n = int(input()) a = input().split() for i in range(n): a[i] = int(a[i]) from math import factorial '''def merge(a,b): c=[] a1=0 b1=0 while a1!=len(a) and b1!=len(b): if a[a1]<b[b1]: c.append(a[a1]) a1+=1 else: c.append(b[b1...
-1
82
A
Double Cola
PROGRAMMING
1,100
[ "implementation", "math" ]
A. Double Cola
1
256
Sheldon, Leonard, Penny, Rajesh and Howard are in the queue for a "Double Cola" drink vending machine; there are no other people in the queue. The first one in the queue (Sheldon) buys a can, drinks it and doubles! The resulting two Sheldons go to the end of the queue. Then the next in the queue (Leonard) buys a can, d...
The input data consist of a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=109). It is guaranteed that the pretests check the spelling of all the five names, that is, that they contain all the five possible answers.
Print the single line — the name of the person who drinks the *n*-th can of cola. The cans are numbered starting from 1. Please note that you should spell the names like this: "Sheldon", "Leonard", "Penny", "Rajesh", "Howard" (without the quotes). In that order precisely the friends are in the queue initially.
[ "1\n", "6\n", "1802\n" ]
[ "Sheldon\n", "Sheldon\n", "Penny\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "1", "output": "Sheldon" }, { "input": "6", "output": "Sheldon" }, { "input": "1802", "output": "Penny" }, { "input": "1", "output": "Sheldon" }, { "input": "2", "output": "Leonard" }, { "input": "3", "output": "Penny" }, { "inpu...
1,637,341,589
2,147,483,647
Python 3
TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED
TESTS
12
1,000
1,843,200
n = int(input()) queue =["Sheldon", "Leonard", "Penny", "Rajesh", "Howard"] i = 1 while i < n : queue.append(queue[0]) queue.append(queue[0]) del queue[0] i += 1 print(queue[0])
Title: Double Cola Time Limit: 1 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: Sheldon, Leonard, Penny, Rajesh and Howard are in the queue for a "Double Cola" drink vending machine; there are no other people in the queue. The first one in the queue (Sheldon) buys a can, drinks it and doubles! The resultin...
```python n = int(input()) queue =["Sheldon", "Leonard", "Penny", "Rajesh", "Howard"] i = 1 while i < n : queue.append(queue[0]) queue.append(queue[0]) del queue[0] i += 1 print(queue[0]) ```
0
82
A
Double Cola
PROGRAMMING
1,100
[ "implementation", "math" ]
A. Double Cola
1
256
Sheldon, Leonard, Penny, Rajesh and Howard are in the queue for a "Double Cola" drink vending machine; there are no other people in the queue. The first one in the queue (Sheldon) buys a can, drinks it and doubles! The resulting two Sheldons go to the end of the queue. Then the next in the queue (Leonard) buys a can, d...
The input data consist of a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=109). It is guaranteed that the pretests check the spelling of all the five names, that is, that they contain all the five possible answers.
Print the single line — the name of the person who drinks the *n*-th can of cola. The cans are numbered starting from 1. Please note that you should spell the names like this: "Sheldon", "Leonard", "Penny", "Rajesh", "Howard" (without the quotes). In that order precisely the friends are in the queue initially.
[ "1\n", "6\n", "1802\n" ]
[ "Sheldon\n", "Sheldon\n", "Penny\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "1", "output": "Sheldon" }, { "input": "6", "output": "Sheldon" }, { "input": "1802", "output": "Penny" }, { "input": "1", "output": "Sheldon" }, { "input": "2", "output": "Leonard" }, { "input": "3", "output": "Penny" }, { "inpu...
1,685,607,552
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
41
46
0
def find_name(n): rounds = 1 while rounds * 5 < n: n -= rounds * 5 rounds *= 2 position = (n - 1) // rounds names = ["Sheldon", "Leonard", "Penny", "Rajesh", "Howard"] return names[position] n = int(input()) result = find_name(n) print(result)
Title: Double Cola Time Limit: 1 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: Sheldon, Leonard, Penny, Rajesh and Howard are in the queue for a "Double Cola" drink vending machine; there are no other people in the queue. The first one in the queue (Sheldon) buys a can, drinks it and doubles! The resultin...
```python def find_name(n): rounds = 1 while rounds * 5 < n: n -= rounds * 5 rounds *= 2 position = (n - 1) // rounds names = ["Sheldon", "Leonard", "Penny", "Rajesh", "Howard"] return names[position] n = int(input()) result = find_name(n) print(result) ...
3.977
34
B
Sale
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "greedy", "sortings" ]
B. Sale
2
256
Once Bob got to a sale of old TV sets. There were *n* TV sets at that sale. TV set with index *i* costs *a**i* bellars. Some TV sets have a negative price — their owners are ready to pay Bob if he buys their useless apparatus. Bob can «buy» any TV sets he wants. Though he's very strong, Bob can carry at most *m* TV set...
The first line contains two space-separated integers *n* and *m* (1<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — amount of TV sets at the sale, and amount of TV sets that Bob can carry. The following line contains *n* space-separated integers *a**i* (<=-<=1000<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=1000) — prices of the TV sets.
Output the only number — the maximum sum of money that Bob can earn, given that he can carry at most *m* TV sets.
[ "5 3\n-6 0 35 -2 4\n", "4 2\n7 0 0 -7\n" ]
[ "8\n", "7\n" ]
none
1,000
[ { "input": "5 3\n-6 0 35 -2 4", "output": "8" }, { "input": "4 2\n7 0 0 -7", "output": "7" }, { "input": "6 6\n756 -611 251 -66 572 -818", "output": "1495" }, { "input": "5 5\n976 437 937 788 518", "output": "0" }, { "input": "5 3\n-2 -2 -2 -2 -2", "output": "...
1,611,593,132
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
25
154
0
n,m=map(int,input().split()) l=list(map(int,input().split())) l.sort() #print(l) sum=0 i=0 while i<n and l[i]<0 and i<=(m-1): sum+=l[i] i+=1 print(abs(sum))
Title: Sale Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: Once Bob got to a sale of old TV sets. There were *n* TV sets at that sale. TV set with index *i* costs *a**i* bellars. Some TV sets have a negative price — their owners are ready to pay Bob if he buys their useless apparatus. Bob can...
```python n,m=map(int,input().split()) l=list(map(int,input().split())) l.sort() #print(l) sum=0 i=0 while i<n and l[i]<0 and i<=(m-1): sum+=l[i] i+=1 print(abs(sum)) ```
3.9615
817
D
Imbalanced Array
PROGRAMMING
1,900
[ "data structures", "divide and conquer", "dsu", "sortings" ]
null
null
You are given an array *a* consisting of *n* elements. The imbalance value of some subsegment of this array is the difference between the maximum and minimum element from this segment. The imbalance value of the array is the sum of imbalance values of all subsegments of this array. For example, the imbalance value of ...
The first line contains one integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=106) — size of the array *a*. The second line contains *n* integers *a*1,<=*a*2... *a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=106) — elements of the array.
Print one integer — the imbalance value of *a*.
[ "3\n1 4 1\n" ]
[ "9\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "3\n1 4 1", "output": "9" }, { "input": "10\n1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1", "output": "0" }, { "input": "10\n1 4 4 3 5 2 4 2 4 5", "output": "123" }, { "input": "10\n9 6 8 5 5 2 8 9 2 2", "output": "245" }, { "input": "30\n4 5 2 2 5 2 3 4 3 3 2 1 3 4 4 5 3 3 1 5...
1,600,492,818
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
42
1,107
210,022,400
import sys from operator import lt, le, gt, ge n = int(sys.stdin.buffer.readline().decode('utf-8')) a = list(map(int, sys.stdin.buffer.readline().decode('utf-8').split())) min_rng = [[0, 0] for _ in range(n)] max_rng = [[0, 0] for _ in range(n)] for j, (st, itr, op1, op2) in enumerate( ((-1, range(...
Title: Imbalanced Array Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: You are given an array *a* consisting of *n* elements. The imbalance value of some subsegment of this array is the difference between the maximum and minimum element from this segment. The imbalance value of the array ...
```python import sys from operator import lt, le, gt, ge n = int(sys.stdin.buffer.readline().decode('utf-8')) a = list(map(int, sys.stdin.buffer.readline().decode('utf-8').split())) min_rng = [[0, 0] for _ in range(n)] max_rng = [[0, 0] for _ in range(n)] for j, (st, itr, op1, op2) in enumerate( ((...
3
887
B
Cubes for Masha
PROGRAMMING
1,300
[ "brute force", "implementation" ]
null
null
Absent-minded Masha got set of *n* cubes for her birthday. At each of 6 faces of each cube, there is exactly one digit from 0 to 9. Masha became interested what is the largest natural *x* such she can make using her new cubes all integers from 1 to *x*. To make a number Masha can rotate her cubes and put them in a ro...
In first line integer *n* is given (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=3) — the number of cubes, Masha got for her birthday. Each of next *n* lines contains 6 integers *a**i**j* (0<=≤<=*a**i**j*<=≤<=9) — number on *j*-th face of *i*-th cube.
Print single integer — maximum number *x* such Masha can make any integers from 1 to *x* using her cubes or 0 if Masha can't make even 1.
[ "3\n0 1 2 3 4 5\n6 7 8 9 0 1\n2 3 4 5 6 7\n", "3\n0 1 3 5 6 8\n1 2 4 5 7 8\n2 3 4 6 7 9\n" ]
[ "87", "98" ]
In the first test case, Masha can build all numbers from 1 to 87, but she can't make 88 because there are no two cubes with digit 8.
1,000
[ { "input": "3\n0 1 2 3 4 5\n6 7 8 9 0 1\n2 3 4 5 6 7", "output": "87" }, { "input": "3\n0 1 3 5 6 8\n1 2 4 5 7 8\n2 3 4 6 7 9", "output": "98" }, { "input": "3\n0 1 2 3 4 5\n0 1 2 3 4 5\n0 1 2 3 4 5", "output": "5" }, { "input": "3\n1 2 3 7 8 9\n9 8 7 1 2 3\n7 9 2 3 1 8", ...
1,552,395,732
732
PyPy 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
48
124
0
n = int(input()) a = [list(map(int, input().split())) for _ in range(n)] fa = [i for b in a for i in b] if 1 not in fa: print(0) exit() ka = {i: fa.count(i) for i in range(10)} for i in range(1, 1000): rq = list(map(int, str(i))) for j in rq: if rq.count(j) > ka[j]: ...
Title: Cubes for Masha Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Absent-minded Masha got set of *n* cubes for her birthday. At each of 6 faces of each cube, there is exactly one digit from 0 to 9. Masha became interested what is the largest natural *x* such she can make using her ne...
```python n = int(input()) a = [list(map(int, input().split())) for _ in range(n)] fa = [i for b in a for i in b] if 1 not in fa: print(0) exit() ka = {i: fa.count(i) for i in range(10)} for i in range(1, 1000): rq = list(map(int, str(i))) for j in rq: if rq.count(j) > ka[j]: ...
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...
1,689,882,447
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
0
46
0
def f(wrd): h ='hello' for a in h: ln = len(wrd) for i in range(ln): if wrd[i] == a: wrd = wrd[i:] print(wrd,i) break else: return 'NO' return 'YES' wrd = input() print(f(wrd))
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 def f(wrd): h ='hello' for a in h: ln = len(wrd) for i in range(ln): if wrd[i] == a: wrd = wrd[i:] print(wrd,i) break else: return 'NO' return 'YES' wrd = input() print(f(wrd)) ```
0