contestId int64 0 1.01k | index stringclasses 57
values | name stringlengths 2 58 | type stringclasses 2
values | rating int64 0 3.5k | tags listlengths 0 11 | title stringclasses 522
values | time-limit stringclasses 8
values | memory-limit stringclasses 8
values | problem-description stringlengths 0 7.15k | input-specification stringlengths 0 2.05k | output-specification stringlengths 0 1.5k | demo-input listlengths 0 7 | demo-output listlengths 0 7 | note stringlengths 0 5.24k | points float64 0 425k | test_cases listlengths 0 402 | creationTimeSeconds int64 1.37B 1.7B | relativeTimeSeconds int64 8 2.15B | programmingLanguage stringclasses 3
values | verdict stringclasses 14
values | testset stringclasses 12
values | passedTestCount int64 0 1k | timeConsumedMillis int64 0 15k | memoryConsumedBytes int64 0 805M | code stringlengths 3 65.5k | prompt stringlengths 262 8.2k | response stringlengths 17 65.5k | score float64 -1 3.99 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
552 | B | Vanya and Books | PROGRAMMING | 1,200 | [
"implementation",
"math"
] | null | null | Vanya got an important task — he should enumerate books in the library and label each book with its number. Each of the *n* books should be assigned with a number from 1 to *n*. Naturally, distinct books should be assigned distinct numbers.
Vanya wants to know how many digits he will have to write down as he labels th... | The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=109) — the number of books in the library. | Print the number of digits needed to number all the books. | [
"13\n",
"4\n"
] | [
"17\n",
"4\n"
] | Note to the first test. The books get numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, which totals to 17 digits.
Note to the second sample. The books get numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, which totals to 4 digits. | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "13",
"output": "17"
},
{
"input": "4",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "100",
"output": "192"
},
{
"input": "99",
"output": "189"
},
{
"input": "1000000000",
"output": "8888888899"
},
{
"input": "1000000",
"output": "5888896"
},
{
"... | 1,561,550,936 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED | TESTS | 4 | 1,000 | 1,331,200 | w=int(input())
ans=0
for i in range(1,w+1):
j=str(i)
ans=ans+len(j)
print(ans) | Title: Vanya and Books
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Vanya got an important task — he should enumerate books in the library and label each book with its number. Each of the *n* books should be assigned with a number from 1 to *n*. Naturally, distinct books should be assig... | ```python
w=int(input())
ans=0
for i in range(1,w+1):
j=str(i)
ans=ans+len(j)
print(ans)
``` | 0 | |
746 | A | Compote | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation",
"math"
] | null | null | Nikolay has *a* lemons, *b* apples and *c* pears. He decided to cook a compote. According to the recipe the fruits should be in the ratio 1:<=2:<=4. It means that for each lemon in the compote should be exactly 2 apples and exactly 4 pears. You can't crumble up, break up or cut these fruits into pieces. These fruits — ... | The first line contains the positive integer *a* (1<=≤<=*a*<=≤<=1000) — the number of lemons Nikolay has.
The second line contains the positive integer *b* (1<=≤<=*b*<=≤<=1000) — the number of apples Nikolay has.
The third line contains the positive integer *c* (1<=≤<=*c*<=≤<=1000) — the number of pears Nikolay has... | Print the maximum total number of lemons, apples and pears from which Nikolay can cook the compote. | [
"2\n5\n7\n",
"4\n7\n13\n",
"2\n3\n2\n"
] | [
"7\n",
"21\n",
"0\n"
] | In the first example Nikolay can use 1 lemon, 2 apples and 4 pears, so the answer is 1 + 2 + 4 = 7.
In the second example Nikolay can use 3 lemons, 6 apples and 12 pears, so the answer is 3 + 6 + 12 = 21.
In the third example Nikolay don't have enough pears to cook any compote, so the answer is 0. | 500 | [
{
"input": "2\n5\n7",
"output": "7"
},
{
"input": "4\n7\n13",
"output": "21"
},
{
"input": "2\n3\n2",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "1\n1\n1",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "1\n2\n4",
"output": "7"
},
{
"input": "1000\n1000\n1000",
"output": "1750"
}... | 1,689,707,412 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | RUNTIME_ERROR | TESTS | 0 | 93 | 2,150,400 | a,b,c=map(int,input().split())
print(c // 4 + c // 4 * 2 + c // 4 * 4) | Title: Compote
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Nikolay has *a* lemons, *b* apples and *c* pears. He decided to cook a compote. According to the recipe the fruits should be in the ratio 1:<=2:<=4. It means that for each lemon in the compote should be exactly 2 apples and exa... | ```python
a,b,c=map(int,input().split())
print(c // 4 + c // 4 * 2 + c // 4 * 4)
``` | -1 | |
893 | A | Chess For Three | PROGRAMMING | 900 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Alex, Bob and Carl will soon participate in a team chess tournament. Since they are all in the same team, they have decided to practise really hard before the tournament. But it's a bit difficult for them because chess is a game for two players, not three.
So they play with each other according to following rules:
- ... | The first line contains one integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of games Alex, Bob and Carl played.
Then *n* lines follow, describing the game log. *i*-th line contains one integer *a**i* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=3) which is equal to 1 if Alex won *i*-th game, to 2 if Bob won *i*-th game and 3 if Carl won *i*-th gam... | Print YES if the situation described in the log was possible. Otherwise print NO. | [
"3\n1\n1\n2\n",
"2\n1\n2\n"
] | [
"YES\n",
"NO\n"
] | In the first example the possible situation is:
1. Alex wins, Carl starts playing instead of Bob; 1. Alex wins, Bob replaces Carl; 1. Bob wins.
The situation in the second example is impossible because Bob loses the first game, so he cannot win the second one. | 0 | [
{
"input": "3\n1\n1\n2",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "2\n1\n2",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "100\n2\n3\n1\n2\n3\n3\n3\n1\n1\n1\n1\n3\n3\n3\n3\n1\n2\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n1\n2\n2\n2\n3\n1\n1\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n3\n1\n2\n3\n3\n3\n1\n1\n1\n1\n3\n3\n3\n3\n1\n2\n3\n1\n2\n2\n2\n3\n3\n2\n1... | 1,676,321,585 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 37 | 46 | 0 | n = int(input())
winners = []
for i in range(n):
winners.append(int(input()))
player1 = 1
player2 = 2
other = 3
flag = True
for winner in winners:
if winner != player1 and winner != player2:
flag = False
break
if winner == player1:
player2, other = other, player2
else:
... | Title: Chess For Three
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Alex, Bob and Carl will soon participate in a team chess tournament. Since they are all in the same team, they have decided to practise really hard before the tournament. But it's a bit difficult for them because chess ... | ```python
n = int(input())
winners = []
for i in range(n):
winners.append(int(input()))
player1 = 1
player2 = 2
other = 3
flag = True
for winner in winners:
if winner != player1 and winner != player2:
flag = False
break
if winner == player1:
player2, other = other, player2
el... | 3 | |
869 | B | The Eternal Immortality | PROGRAMMING | 1,100 | [
"math"
] | null | null | Even if the world is full of counterfeits, I still regard it as wonderful.
Pile up herbs and incense, and arise again from the flames and ashes of its predecessor — as is known to many, the phoenix does it like this.
The phoenix has a rather long lifespan, and reincarnates itself once every *a*! years. Here *a*! deno... | The first and only line of input contains two space-separated integers *a* and *b* (0<=≤<=*a*<=≤<=*b*<=≤<=1018). | Output one line containing a single decimal digit — the last digit of the value that interests Koyomi. | [
"2 4\n",
"0 10\n",
"107 109\n"
] | [
"2\n",
"0\n",
"2\n"
] | In the first example, the last digit of <img align="middle" class="tex-formula" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/99c47ca8b182f097e38094d12f0c06ce0b081b76.png" style="max-width: 100.0%;max-height: 100.0%;"/> is 2;
In the second example, the last digit of <img align="middle" class="tex-formula" src="https://espresso... | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "2 4",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "0 10",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "107 109",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "10 13",
"output": "6"
},
{
"input": "998244355 998244359",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "999999999000000000 1000000000000000000",
... | 1,507,616,169 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED | TESTS | 5 | 1,000 | 307,200 | a,b = map(int,input().split())
ans = 1
if(a == 0):
while(b > 0):
b -= 1
ans *= (b+1)
ans %= 10
print(ans)
elif(b == 0):
print(1)
else:
while(b != a):
ans *= b
ans %= 10
b -= 1
print(ans)
| Title: The Eternal Immortality
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Even if the world is full of counterfeits, I still regard it as wonderful.
Pile up herbs and incense, and arise again from the flames and ashes of its predecessor — as is known to many, the phoenix does it like... | ```python
a,b = map(int,input().split())
ans = 1
if(a == 0):
while(b > 0):
b -= 1
ans *= (b+1)
ans %= 10
print(ans)
elif(b == 0):
print(1)
else:
while(b != a):
ans *= b
ans %= 10
b -= 1
print(ans)
``` | 0 | |
965 | C | Greedy Arkady | PROGRAMMING | 2,000 | [
"math"
] | null | null | $k$ people want to split $n$ candies between them. Each candy should be given to exactly one of them or be thrown away.
The people are numbered from $1$ to $k$, and Arkady is the first of them. To split the candies, Arkady will choose an integer $x$ and then give the first $x$ candies to himself, the next $x$ candies ... | The only line contains four integers $n$, $k$, $M$ and $D$ ($2 \le n \le 10^{18}$, $2 \le k \le n$, $1 \le M \le n$, $1 \le D \le \min{(n, 1000)}$, $M \cdot D \cdot k \ge n$) — the number of candies, the number of people, the maximum number of candies given to a person at once, the maximum number of times a person can ... | Print a single integer — the maximum possible number of candies Arkady can give to himself.
Note that it is always possible to choose some valid $x$. | [
"20 4 5 2\n",
"30 9 4 1\n"
] | [
"8\n",
"4\n"
] | In the first example Arkady should choose $x = 4$. He will give $4$ candies to himself, $4$ candies to the second person, $4$ candies to the third person, then $4$ candies to the fourth person and then again $4$ candies to himself. No person is given candies more than $2$ times, and Arkady receives $8$ candies in total... | 1,500 | [
{
"input": "20 4 5 2",
"output": "8"
},
{
"input": "30 9 4 1",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "2 2 1 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "42 20 5 29",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "1000000000000000000 135 1000000000000000 1000",
"output": "8325624421831635"
},
{
... | 1,524,825,571 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | OK | TESTS | 25 | 109 | 21,708,800 | n, k, m, d = map(int, input().split())
maxr = 0
for i in range(1, d+1):
peeps = k*(i-1) + 1
t = n//peeps
if t <= m:
maxr = max(maxr, t*i)
continue
sec = k*i
t2 = n//sec
if(t2 > m):
continue
r = n//m
# cyc = (r%k == 0 ? r//k : r//k + 1)
if(r%k == 0):
cyc = r//k
else:
cyc = r//k + 1
... | Title: Greedy Arkady
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
$k$ people want to split $n$ candies between them. Each candy should be given to exactly one of them or be thrown away.
The people are numbered from $1$ to $k$, and Arkady is the first of them. To split the candies, Arka... | ```python
n, k, m, d = map(int, input().split())
maxr = 0
for i in range(1, d+1):
peeps = k*(i-1) + 1
t = n//peeps
if t <= m:
maxr = max(maxr, t*i)
continue
sec = k*i
t2 = n//sec
if(t2 > m):
continue
r = n//m
# cyc = (r%k == 0 ? r//k : r//k + 1)
if(r%k == 0):
cyc = r//k
else:
cyc = ... | 3 | |
144 | A | Arrival of the General | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | A Ministry for Defense sent a general to inspect the Super Secret Military Squad under the command of the Colonel SuperDuper. Having learned the news, the colonel ordered to all *n* squad soldiers to line up on the parade ground.
By the military charter the soldiers should stand in the order of non-increasing of their... | The first input line contains the only integer *n* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) which represents the number of soldiers in the line. The second line contains integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=100) the values of the soldiers' heights in the order of soldiers' heights' increasing in the order from the beginnin... | Print the only integer — the minimum number of seconds the colonel will need to form a line-up the general will like. | [
"4\n33 44 11 22\n",
"7\n10 10 58 31 63 40 76\n"
] | [
"2\n",
"10\n"
] | In the first sample the colonel will need to swap the first and second soldier and then the third and fourth soldier. That will take 2 seconds. The resulting position of the soldiers is (44, 33, 22, 11).
In the second sample the colonel may swap the soldiers in the following sequence:
1. (10, 10, 58, 31, 63, 40, 76)... | 500 | [
{
"input": "4\n33 44 11 22",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "7\n10 10 58 31 63 40 76",
"output": "10"
},
{
"input": "2\n88 89",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "5\n100 95 100 100 88",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "7\n48 48 48 48 45 45 45",
"output": "0"
},
{
"... | 1,695,478,521 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | RUNTIME_ERROR | TESTS | 2 | 62 | 0 | n=int(input())
b=input().split()
a=[]
for i in range(n):
a.append(b[i])
b.sort()
min_1=int(b[0])
max_1=int(b[len(a)-1])
e=[]
for i in range(n):
if int(a[i])==max_1:
e.append(i)
for j in range(n-1,0,-1):
if int(a[j])==min_1:
e.append(j)
if e[0]<e[1]:
print(e[0]+((n-1)-... | Title: Arrival of the General
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
A Ministry for Defense sent a general to inspect the Super Secret Military Squad under the command of the Colonel SuperDuper. Having learned the news, the colonel ordered to all *n* squad soldiers to line up on t... | ```python
n=int(input())
b=input().split()
a=[]
for i in range(n):
a.append(b[i])
b.sort()
min_1=int(b[0])
max_1=int(b[len(a)-1])
e=[]
for i in range(n):
if int(a[i])==max_1:
e.append(i)
for j in range(n-1,0,-1):
if int(a[j])==min_1:
e.append(j)
if e[0]<e[1]:
print(e[... | -1 | |
742 | A | Arpa’s hard exam and Mehrdad’s naive cheat | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"implementation",
"math",
"number theory"
] | null | null | There exists an island called Arpa’s land, some beautiful girls live there, as ugly ones do.
Mehrdad wants to become minister of Arpa’s land. Arpa has prepared an exam. Exam has only one question, given *n*, print the last digit of 1378*n*.
Mehrdad has become quite confused and wants you to help him. Please help, al... | The single line of input contains one integer *n* (0<=<=≤<=<=*n*<=<=≤<=<=109). | Print single integer — the last digit of 1378*n*. | [
"1\n",
"2\n"
] | [
"8",
"4"
] | In the first example, last digit of 1378<sup class="upper-index">1</sup> = 1378 is 8.
In the second example, last digit of 1378<sup class="upper-index">2</sup> = 1378·1378 = 1898884 is 4. | 500 | [
{
"input": "1",
"output": "8"
},
{
"input": "2",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "1000",
"output": "6"
},
{
"input": "3",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "4",
"output": "6"
},
{
"input": "1000000000",
"output": "6"
},
{
"input": "5",
"output": ... | 1,676,681,175 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | COMPILATION_ERROR | TESTS | 0 | 0 | 0 | exp = (int(input()))
if exp ==0 :print(1)
expp = exp%4
else:
if expp == 1: print(8)
elif expp == 2: print(4)
elif expp == 3: print(2)
elif expp == 0: print(6) | Title: Arpa’s hard exam and Mehrdad’s naive cheat
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
There exists an island called Arpa’s land, some beautiful girls live there, as ugly ones do.
Mehrdad wants to become minister of Arpa’s land. Arpa has prepared an exam. Exam has only one ques... | ```python
exp = (int(input()))
if exp ==0 :print(1)
expp = exp%4
else:
if expp == 1: print(8)
elif expp == 2: print(4)
elif expp == 3: print(2)
elif expp == 0: print(6)
``` | -1 | |
189 | A | Cut Ribbon | PROGRAMMING | 1,300 | [
"brute force",
"dp"
] | null | null | Polycarpus has a ribbon, its length is *n*. He wants to cut the ribbon in a way that fulfils the following two conditions:
- After the cutting each ribbon piece should have length *a*, *b* or *c*. - After the cutting the number of ribbon pieces should be maximum.
Help Polycarpus and find the number of ribbon piece... | The first line contains four space-separated integers *n*, *a*, *b* and *c* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*a*,<=*b*,<=*c*<=≤<=4000) — the length of the original ribbon and the acceptable lengths of the ribbon pieces after the cutting, correspondingly. The numbers *a*, *b* and *c* can coincide. | Print a single number — the maximum possible number of ribbon pieces. It is guaranteed that at least one correct ribbon cutting exists. | [
"5 5 3 2\n",
"7 5 5 2\n"
] | [
"2\n",
"2\n"
] | In the first example Polycarpus can cut the ribbon in such way: the first piece has length 2, the second piece has length 3.
In the second example Polycarpus can cut the ribbon in such way: the first piece has length 5, the second piece has length 2. | 500 | [
{
"input": "5 5 3 2",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "7 5 5 2",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "4 4 4 4",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "1 1 1 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "4000 1 2 3",
"output": "4000"
},
{
"input": "4000 3 4 5",
"output": "1333"
},
... | 1,695,491,327 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | OK | TESTS | 58 | 670 | 2,048,000 | n,a,b,c=map(int,input().strip().split())
import math
ans=-1
for i in range(0,n+1):
for j in range(0,n+1):
zc=n-(a*i)-(b*j)
if zc<0:
break
z=zc//c
v=zc/c
if math.ceil(v)==math.floor(v):
ans=max(ans,i+j+z)
print(ans)
| Title: Cut Ribbon
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Polycarpus has a ribbon, its length is *n*. He wants to cut the ribbon in a way that fulfils the following two conditions:
- After the cutting each ribbon piece should have length *a*, *b* or *c*. - After the cutting the... | ```python
n,a,b,c=map(int,input().strip().split())
import math
ans=-1
for i in range(0,n+1):
for j in range(0,n+1):
zc=n-(a*i)-(b*j)
if zc<0:
break
z=zc//c
v=zc/c
if math.ceil(v)==math.floor(v):
ans=max(ans,i+j+z)
print(ans)
``` | 3 | |
844 | B | Rectangles | PROGRAMMING | 1,300 | [
"combinatorics",
"math"
] | null | null | You are given *n*<=×<=*m* table. Each cell of the table is colored white or black. Find the number of non-empty sets of cells such that:
1. All cells in a set have the same color. 1. Every two cells in a set share row or column. | The first line of input contains integers *n* and *m* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=50) — the number of rows and the number of columns correspondingly.
The next *n* lines of input contain descriptions of rows. There are *m* integers, separated by spaces, in each line. The number equals 0 if the corresponding cell is colored wh... | Output single integer — the number of non-empty sets from the problem description. | [
"1 1\n0\n",
"2 3\n1 0 1\n0 1 0\n"
] | [
"1\n",
"8\n"
] | In the second example, there are six one-element sets. Additionally, there are two two-element sets, the first one consists of the first and the third cells of the first row, the second one consists of the first and the third cells of the second row. To sum up, there are 8 sets. | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "1 1\n0",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "2 3\n1 0 1\n0 1 0",
"output": "8"
},
{
"input": "2 2\n1 1\n1 1",
"output": "8"
},
{
"input": "1 10\n0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0",
"output": "1023"
},
{
"input": "11 1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1\n1",
"output": "2047"... | 1,698,612,531 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 30 | 0 | def number_of_sets(binary_table):
n = len(binary_table)
m = len(binary_table[0])
res = 0
print(binary_table)
for i in range(n):
zero, one = 0, 0
for j in range(0, m):
if binary_table[i][j] == 1:
one += 1
else:
zero +=... | Title: Rectangles
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
You are given *n*<=×<=*m* table. Each cell of the table is colored white or black. Find the number of non-empty sets of cells such that:
1. All cells in a set have the same color. 1. Every two cells in a set share row or ... | ```python
def number_of_sets(binary_table):
n = len(binary_table)
m = len(binary_table[0])
res = 0
print(binary_table)
for i in range(n):
zero, one = 0, 0
for j in range(0, m):
if binary_table[i][j] == 1:
one += 1
else:
... | 0 | |
17 | D | Notepad | PROGRAMMING | 2,400 | [
"number theory"
] | D. Notepad | 2 | 64 | Nick is attracted by everything unconventional. He doesn't like decimal number system any more, and he decided to study other number systems. A number system with base *b* caught his attention. Before he starts studying it, he wants to write in his notepad all the numbers of length *n* without leading zeros in this num... | The only input line contains three space-separated integers *b*, *n* and *c* (2<=≤<=*b*<=<<=10106, 1<=≤<=*n*<=<<=10106, 1<=≤<=*c*<=≤<=109). You may consider that Nick has infinite patience, endless amount of paper and representations of digits as characters. The numbers doesn't contain leading zeros. | In the only line output the amount of numbers written on the same page as the last number. | [
"2 3 3\n",
"2 3 4\n"
] | [
"1",
"4"
] | In both samples there are exactly 4 numbers of length 3 in binary number system. In the first sample Nick writes 3 numbers on the first page and 1 on the second page. In the second sample all the 4 numbers can be written on the first page. | 0 | [
{
"input": "2 3 3",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "2 3 4",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "9 1 79",
"output": "8"
},
{
"input": "9 1 345",
"output": "8"
},
{
"input": "9 9 999982045",
"output": "344373768"
},
{
"input": "4 42 44",
"output": "12"
},
... | 1,682,865,934 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 12 | 92 | 0 | # (b-1)*b^(n-1) mod c
b,n,c = map(int,input().split())
x,y,z = (b-1)%c, b%c, (n-1)%c
while z != 0:
if z % 2 == 0:
y = (y*y)%c
z //= 2
else:
x = (x*y) % c
z -= 1
if(x == 0): x += c
print(x) | Title: Notepad
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 64 megabytes
Problem Description:
Nick is attracted by everything unconventional. He doesn't like decimal number system any more, and he decided to study other number systems. A number system with base *b* caught his attention. Before he starts studying it, he wants... | ```python
# (b-1)*b^(n-1) mod c
b,n,c = map(int,input().split())
x,y,z = (b-1)%c, b%c, (n-1)%c
while z != 0:
if z % 2 == 0:
y = (y*y)%c
z //= 2
else:
x = (x*y) % c
z -= 1
if(x == 0): x += c
print(x)
``` | 0 |
892 | B | Wrath | PROGRAMMING | 1,200 | [
"greedy",
"implementation",
"two pointers"
] | null | null | Hands that shed innocent blood!
There are *n* guilty people in a line, the *i*-th of them holds a claw with length *L**i*. The bell rings and every person kills some of people in front of him. All people kill others at the same time. Namely, the *i*-th person kills the *j*-th person if and only if *j*<=<<=*i* and *... | The first line contains one integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=106) — the number of guilty people.
Second line contains *n* space-separated integers *L*1,<=*L*2,<=...,<=*L**n* (0<=≤<=*L**i*<=≤<=109), where *L**i* is the length of the *i*-th person's claw. | Print one integer — the total number of alive people after the bell rings. | [
"4\n0 1 0 10\n",
"2\n0 0\n",
"10\n1 1 3 0 0 0 2 1 0 3\n"
] | [
"1\n",
"2\n",
"3\n"
] | In first sample the last person kills everyone in front of him. | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "4\n0 1 0 10",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "2\n0 0",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "10\n1 1 3 0 0 0 2 1 0 3",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "10\n0 0 2 0 0 3 3 2 2 0",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "1\n0",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "5\n0 0 0 1 0"... | 1,540,266,283 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 43 | 919 | 76,390,400 | n = int(input())
a = list(map(int, input().split()))
alive = n-1
ans = 0
for i in range(n-1, -1, -1):
if (i <= alive):
ans +=1
alive = min(alive, i - a[i]-1)
print(ans)
| Title: Wrath
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Hands that shed innocent blood!
There are *n* guilty people in a line, the *i*-th of them holds a claw with length *L**i*. The bell rings and every person kills some of people in front of him. All people kill others at the same ... | ```python
n = int(input())
a = list(map(int, input().split()))
alive = n-1
ans = 0
for i in range(n-1, -1, -1):
if (i <= alive):
ans +=1
alive = min(alive, i - a[i]-1)
print(ans)
``` | 3 | |
486 | A | Calculating Function | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation",
"math"
] | null | null | For a positive integer *n* let's define a function *f*:
*f*(*n*)<==<=<=-<=1<=+<=2<=-<=3<=+<=..<=+<=(<=-<=1)*n**n*
Your task is to calculate *f*(*n*) for a given integer *n*. | The single line contains the positive integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1015). | Print *f*(*n*) in a single line. | [
"4\n",
"5\n"
] | [
"2\n",
"-3\n"
] | *f*(4) = - 1 + 2 - 3 + 4 = 2
*f*(5) = - 1 + 2 - 3 + 4 - 5 = - 3 | 500 | [
{
"input": "4",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "5",
"output": "-3"
},
{
"input": "1000000000",
"output": "500000000"
},
{
"input": "1000000001",
"output": "-500000001"
},
{
"input": "1000000000000000",
"output": "500000000000000"
},
{
"input": "100",
... | 1,693,814,968 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED | TESTS | 2 | 1,000 | 0 | def function(x):
if x%2==0:
y=x
else:
y=-x
return y
n=int(input())
Sum=0
for x in range(1,n+1):
y=function(x)
Sum=Sum+y
print(Sum)
| Title: Calculating Function
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
For a positive integer *n* let's define a function *f*:
*f*(*n*)<==<=<=-<=1<=+<=2<=-<=3<=+<=..<=+<=(<=-<=1)*n**n*
Your task is to calculate *f*(*n*) for a given integer *n*.
Input Specification:
The single line... | ```python
def function(x):
if x%2==0:
y=x
else:
y=-x
return y
n=int(input())
Sum=0
for x in range(1,n+1):
y=function(x)
Sum=Sum+y
print(Sum)
``` | 0 | |
514 | A | Chewbaсca and Number | PROGRAMMING | 1,200 | [
"greedy",
"implementation"
] | null | null | Luke Skywalker gave Chewbacca an integer number *x*. Chewbacca isn't good at numbers but he loves inverting digits in them. Inverting digit *t* means replacing it with digit 9<=-<=*t*.
Help Chewbacca to transform the initial number *x* to the minimum possible positive number by inverting some (possibly, zero) digits.... | The first line contains a single integer *x* (1<=≤<=*x*<=≤<=1018) — the number that Luke Skywalker gave to Chewbacca. | Print the minimum possible positive number that Chewbacca can obtain after inverting some digits. The number shouldn't contain leading zeroes. | [
"27\n",
"4545\n"
] | [
"22\n",
"4444\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "27",
"output": "22"
},
{
"input": "4545",
"output": "4444"
},
{
"input": "1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "9",
"output": "9"
},
{
"input": "8772",
"output": "1222"
},
{
"input": "81",
"output": "11"
},
{
"input": "71723447",
... | 1,693,061,450 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 3 | 31 | 0 | n = int(input())
ans = ""
for i in str(n):
if int(i) >= 5:
ans = ans + str(9 - int(i))
else:
ans = ans + i
print(ans) | Title: Chewbaсca and Number
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Luke Skywalker gave Chewbacca an integer number *x*. Chewbacca isn't good at numbers but he loves inverting digits in them. Inverting digit *t* means replacing it with digit 9<=-<=*t*.
Help Chewbacca to transform... | ```python
n = int(input())
ans = ""
for i in str(n):
if int(i) >= 5:
ans = ans + str(9 - int(i))
else:
ans = ans + i
print(ans)
``` | 0 | |
876 | A | Trip For Meal | PROGRAMMING | 900 | [
"math"
] | null | null | Winnie-the-Pooh likes honey very much! That is why he decided to visit his friends. Winnie has got three best friends: Rabbit, Owl and Eeyore, each of them lives in his own house. There are winding paths between each pair of houses. The length of a path between Rabbit's and Owl's houses is *a* meters, between Rabbit's ... | First line contains an integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — number of visits.
Second line contains an integer *a* (1<=≤<=*a*<=≤<=100) — distance between Rabbit's and Owl's houses.
Third line contains an integer *b* (1<=≤<=*b*<=≤<=100) — distance between Rabbit's and Eeyore's houses.
Fourth line contains an integer *c* ... | Output one number — minimum distance in meters Winnie must go through to have a meal *n* times. | [
"3\n2\n3\n1\n",
"1\n2\n3\n5\n"
] | [
"3\n",
"0\n"
] | In the first test case the optimal path for Winnie is the following: first have a meal in Rabbit's house, then in Owl's house, then in Eeyore's house. Thus he will pass the distance 2 + 1 = 3.
In the second test case Winnie has a meal in Rabbit's house and that is for him. So he doesn't have to walk anywhere at all. | 500 | [
{
"input": "3\n2\n3\n1",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "1\n2\n3\n5",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "10\n1\n8\n3",
"output": "9"
},
{
"input": "7\n10\n5\n6",
"output": "30"
},
{
"input": "9\n9\n7\n5",
"output": "42"
},
{
"input": "9\n37\n85\n76",
"outpu... | 1,508,414,153 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 48 | 62 | 5,529,600 | n = int(input())
a = int(input()) # kr sov
b = int(input()) # kr os
c = int(input()) # sov os
s = 0
point = 'k'
n -= 1
while n > 0:
if point == 'k':
if a >= b:
s += b
point = 'o'
n -= 1
continue
else:
s += a
... | Title: Trip For Meal
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Winnie-the-Pooh likes honey very much! That is why he decided to visit his friends. Winnie has got three best friends: Rabbit, Owl and Eeyore, each of them lives in his own house. There are winding paths between each pair... | ```python
n = int(input())
a = int(input()) # kr sov
b = int(input()) # kr os
c = int(input()) # sov os
s = 0
point = 'k'
n -= 1
while n > 0:
if point == 'k':
if a >= b:
s += b
point = 'o'
n -= 1
continue
else:
s += a
... | 3 | |
548 | B | Mike and Fun | PROGRAMMING | 1,400 | [
"brute force",
"dp",
"greedy",
"implementation"
] | null | null | Mike and some bears are playing a game just for fun. Mike is the judge. All bears except Mike are standing in an *n*<=×<=*m* grid, there's exactly one bear in each cell. We denote the bear standing in column number *j* of row number *i* by (*i*,<=*j*). Mike's hands are on his ears (since he's the judge) and each bear s... | The first line of input contains three integers *n*, *m* and *q* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=500 and 1<=≤<=*q*<=≤<=5000).
The next *n* lines contain the grid description. There are *m* integers separated by spaces in each line. Each of these numbers is either 0 (for mouth) or 1 (for eyes).
The next *q* lines contain the inf... | After each round, print the current score of the bears. | [
"5 4 5\n0 1 1 0\n1 0 0 1\n0 1 1 0\n1 0 0 1\n0 0 0 0\n1 1\n1 4\n1 1\n4 2\n4 3\n"
] | [
"3\n4\n3\n3\n4\n"
] | none | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "5 4 5\n0 1 1 0\n1 0 0 1\n0 1 1 0\n1 0 0 1\n0 0 0 0\n1 1\n1 4\n1 1\n4 2\n4 3",
"output": "3\n4\n3\n3\n4"
},
{
"input": "2 2 10\n1 1\n0 1\n1 1\n2 1\n1 1\n2 2\n1 1\n2 1\n2 2\n2 2\n1 1\n1 1",
"output": "1\n2\n2\n2\n1\n1\n1\n1\n2\n1"
},
{
"input": "2 2 10\n1 1\n0 1\n2 2\n2 2\n1 1\... | 1,433,288,561 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 35 | 1,356 | 1,843,200 | n,m,q=map(int,input().split())
a=[]
ma=[0]*n
def calc(nom):
k=a[nom][0]
ma=k
global a
for i in range(1,m):
if a[nom][i]==1:
if a[nom][i]==a[nom][i-1]:
k+=1
else: k=1
else: k=0
if k>ma: ma=k
return ma
for i in range(n)... | Title: Mike and Fun
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Mike and some bears are playing a game just for fun. Mike is the judge. All bears except Mike are standing in an *n*<=×<=*m* grid, there's exactly one bear in each cell. We denote the bear standing in column number *j* of ... | ```python
n,m,q=map(int,input().split())
a=[]
ma=[0]*n
def calc(nom):
k=a[nom][0]
ma=k
global a
for i in range(1,m):
if a[nom][i]==1:
if a[nom][i]==a[nom][i-1]:
k+=1
else: k=1
else: k=0
if k>ma: ma=k
return ma
for i i... | 3 | |
265 | B | Roadside Trees (Simplified Edition) | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"greedy",
"implementation"
] | null | null | Squirrel Liss loves nuts. There are *n* trees (numbered 1 to *n* from west to east) along a street and there is a delicious nut on the top of each tree. The height of the tree *i* is *h**i*. Liss wants to eat all nuts.
Now Liss is on the root of the tree with the number 1. In one second Liss can perform one of the fol... | The first line contains an integer *n* (1<=<=≤<=<=*n*<=≤<=105) — the number of trees.
Next *n* lines contains the height of trees: *i*-th line contains an integer *h**i* (1<=≤<=*h**i*<=≤<=104) — the height of the tree with the number *i*. | Print a single integer — the minimal time required to eat all nuts in seconds. | [
"2\n1\n2\n",
"5\n2\n1\n2\n1\n1\n"
] | [
"5\n",
"14\n"
] | none | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "2\n1\n2",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "5\n2\n1\n2\n1\n1",
"output": "14"
},
{
"input": "1\n1",
"output": "2"
}
] | 1,590,563,497 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 2 | 186 | 307,200 | import time,math
from sys import stdin,stdout
def I():
return int(stdin.readline())
def In():
return map(int,stdin.readline().split())
def L():
return list(map(int,stdin.readline().split()))
def Si():
return sorted(list(map(int,stdin.readline().split())))
def Si():
return sorted(list(map(... | Title: Roadside Trees (Simplified Edition)
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Squirrel Liss loves nuts. There are *n* trees (numbered 1 to *n* from west to east) along a street and there is a delicious nut on the top of each tree. The height of the tree *i* is *h**i*. Liss wan... | ```python
import time,math
from sys import stdin,stdout
def I():
return int(stdin.readline())
def In():
return map(int,stdin.readline().split())
def L():
return list(map(int,stdin.readline().split()))
def Si():
return sorted(list(map(int,stdin.readline().split())))
def Si():
return sorted... | 0 | |
50 | A | Domino piling | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"greedy",
"math"
] | A. Domino piling | 2 | 256 | You are given a rectangular board of *M*<=×<=*N* squares. Also you are given an unlimited number of standard domino pieces of 2<=×<=1 squares. You are allowed to rotate the pieces. You are asked to place as many dominoes as possible on the board so as to meet the following conditions:
1. Each domino completely covers ... | In a single line you are given two integers *M* and *N* — board sizes in squares (1<=≤<=*M*<=≤<=*N*<=≤<=16). | Output one number — the maximal number of dominoes, which can be placed. | [
"2 4\n",
"3 3\n"
] | [
"4\n",
"4\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "2 4",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "3 3",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "1 5",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "1 6",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "1 15",
"output": "7"
},
{
"input": "1 16",
"output": "8"
},
{
"input": "2 5",
"outpu... | 1,690,564,830 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 35 | 92 | 0 | def domino(M, N):
if M % 2 == 0:
return M * N // 2
elif N % 2 == 0:
return M * N // 2
else:
return (M * N - 1) // 2
M, N = map(int, input().split())
print(domino(M, N))
| Title: Domino piling
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
You are given a rectangular board of *M*<=×<=*N* squares. Also you are given an unlimited number of standard domino pieces of 2<=×<=1 squares. You are allowed to rotate the pieces. You are asked to place as many dominoes as p... | ```python
def domino(M, N):
if M % 2 == 0:
return M * N // 2
elif N % 2 == 0:
return M * N // 2
else:
return (M * N - 1) // 2
M, N = map(int, input().split())
print(domino(M, N))
``` | 3.977 |
952 | B | A Map of the Cat | PROGRAMMING | 1,900 | [
"brute force",
"interactive"
] | null | null | If you have ever interacted with a cat, you have probably noticed that they are quite particular about how to pet them. Here is an approximate map of a normal cat.
However, some cats won't tolerate this nonsense from the humans. Here is a map of a grumpy cat.
You have met a cat. Can you figure out whether it's normal... | none | none | [] | [] | Please make sure to use the stream flushing operation after each query in order not to leave part of your output in some buffer. | 0 | [
{
"input": "5 0 1 2 5 3 5 4 5 5",
"output": "Correct answer 'normal'"
},
{
"input": "5 5 5 6 6 7 8 9 10 11",
"output": "Correct answer 'grumpy'"
},
{
"input": "10 6 5 7 5 6 11 5 8 9",
"output": "Correct answer 'grumpy'"
},
{
"input": "7 10 8 9 6 5 5 11 5 6",
"output": "Co... | 1,585,751,496 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 108 | 0 | flag=True
for _ in range(10):
print(_)
if(_=='Terrible'):
flag=False
break
if(flag):
print('normal')
else:
print('grumpy') | Title: A Map of the Cat
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
If you have ever interacted with a cat, you have probably noticed that they are quite particular about how to pet them. Here is an approximate map of a normal cat.
However, some cats won't tolerate this nonsense from ... | ```python
flag=True
for _ in range(10):
print(_)
if(_=='Terrible'):
flag=False
break
if(flag):
print('normal')
else:
print('grumpy')
``` | 0 | |
38 | A | Army | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation"
] | A. Army | 2 | 256 | The Berland Armed Forces System consists of *n* ranks that are numbered using natural numbers from 1 to *n*, where 1 is the lowest rank and *n* is the highest rank.
One needs exactly *d**i* years to rise from rank *i* to rank *i*<=+<=1. Reaching a certain rank *i* having not reached all the previous *i*<=-<=1 ranks is... | The first input line contains an integer *n* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100). The second line contains *n*<=-<=1 integers *d**i* (1<=≤<=*d**i*<=≤<=100). The third input line contains two integers *a* and *b* (1<=≤<=*a*<=<<=*b*<=≤<=*n*). The numbers on the lines are space-separated. | Print the single number which is the number of years that Vasya needs to rise from rank *a* to rank *b*. | [
"3\n5 6\n1 2\n",
"3\n5 6\n1 3\n"
] | [
"5\n",
"11\n"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "3\n5 6\n1 2",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "3\n5 6\n1 3",
"output": "11"
},
{
"input": "2\n55\n1 2",
"output": "55"
},
{
"input": "3\n85 78\n1 3",
"output": "163"
},
{
"input": "4\n63 4 49\n2 3",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "5\n93 83 42 56\n... | 1,592,807,486 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 50 | 218 | 0 | def answer():
n = int(input())
x = [int(x) for x in input().split()]
y = [int(x) for x in input().split()]
a=y[0]
b=y[1]
i=a-1
ans=0
while i<b-1:
ans+=x[i]
i+=1
print(ans)
answer()
| Title: Army
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
The Berland Armed Forces System consists of *n* ranks that are numbered using natural numbers from 1 to *n*, where 1 is the lowest rank and *n* is the highest rank.
One needs exactly *d**i* years to rise from rank *i* to rank *i*<=+<... | ```python
def answer():
n = int(input())
x = [int(x) for x in input().split()]
y = [int(x) for x in input().split()]
a=y[0]
b=y[1]
i=a-1
ans=0
while i<b-1:
ans+=x[i]
i+=1
print(ans)
answer()
``` | 3.9455 |
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... | 1,675,673,713 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 1 | 92 | 0 | def fun(word,word1):
num=len(word)
s=0
if word !="" and len(word)<=100 and word.isalnum and word.islower and word1 !="" and len(word1)<=100 and word1.isalnum and word1.islower and len(word)==len(word1):
for i in range(num):
if word[-1*(i+1)]== word1[i]:
s=s+1
else:
s=0
if s==... | 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
def fun(word,word1):
num=len(word)
s=0
if word !="" and len(word)<=100 and word.isalnum and word.islower and word1 !="" and len(word1)<=100 and word1.isalnum and word1.islower and len(word)==len(word1):
for i in range(num):
if word[-1*(i+1)]== word1[i]:
s=s+1
else:
s=0
... | 0 |
59 | A | Word | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation",
"strings"
] | A. Word | 2 | 256 | Vasya is very upset that many people on the Net mix uppercase and lowercase letters in one word. That's why he decided to invent an extension for his favorite browser that would change the letters' register in every word so that it either only consisted of lowercase letters or, vice versa, only of uppercase ones. At th... | The first line contains a word *s* — it consists of uppercase and lowercase Latin letters and possesses the length from 1 to 100. | Print the corrected word *s*. If the given word *s* has strictly more uppercase letters, make the word written in the uppercase register, otherwise - in the lowercase one. | [
"HoUse\n",
"ViP\n",
"maTRIx\n"
] | [
"house\n",
"VIP\n",
"matrix\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "HoUse",
"output": "house"
},
{
"input": "ViP",
"output": "VIP"
},
{
"input": "maTRIx",
"output": "matrix"
},
{
"input": "BNHWpnpawg",
"output": "bnhwpnpawg"
},
{
"input": "VTYGP",
"output": "VTYGP"
},
{
"input": "CHNenu",
"output": "chn... | 1,642,602,340 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 30 | 124 | 0 | phrase=str(input())
clower=0
cupper=0
for letter in phrase:
if letter.isupper():
cupper+=1
elif letter.islower():
clower+=1
if clower > cupper:
print(phrase.lower())
elif cupper > clower:
print(phrase.upper())
elif cupper == clower:
print(phrase.lower()) | Title: Word
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
Vasya is very upset that many people on the Net mix uppercase and lowercase letters in one word. That's why he decided to invent an extension for his favorite browser that would change the letters' register in every word so that it ei... | ```python
phrase=str(input())
clower=0
cupper=0
for letter in phrase:
if letter.isupper():
cupper+=1
elif letter.islower():
clower+=1
if clower > cupper:
print(phrase.lower())
elif cupper > clower:
print(phrase.upper())
elif cupper == clower:
print(phrase.lower())
``` | 3.969 |
427 | A | Police Recruits | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | The police department of your city has just started its journey. Initially, they don’t have any manpower. So, they started hiring new recruits in groups.
Meanwhile, crimes keeps occurring within the city. One member of the police force can investigate only one crime during his/her lifetime.
If there is no police offi... | The first line of input will contain an integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105), the number of events. The next line will contain *n* space-separated integers.
If the integer is -1 then it means a crime has occurred. Otherwise, the integer will be positive, the number of officers recruited together at that time. No more than ... | Print a single integer, the number of crimes which will go untreated. | [
"3\n-1 -1 1\n",
"8\n1 -1 1 -1 -1 1 1 1\n",
"11\n-1 -1 2 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1\n"
] | [
"2\n",
"1\n",
"8\n"
] | Lets consider the second example:
1. Firstly one person is hired. 1. Then crime appears, the last hired person will investigate this crime. 1. One more person is hired. 1. One more crime appears, the last hired person will investigate this crime. 1. Crime appears. There is no free policeman at the time, so this c... | 500 | [
{
"input": "3\n-1 -1 1",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "8\n1 -1 1 -1 -1 1 1 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "11\n-1 -1 2 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1",
"output": "8"
},
{
"input": "7\n-1 -1 1 1 -1 -1 1",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "21\n-1 -1 -1 -1 -1 3 2 -1 6 -1 -1 2 1 ... | 1,680,163,503 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | OK | TESTS | 63 | 62 | 13,516,800 | _ = int(input())
n = list(map(int,input().split()))
plus = 0
res = 0
for i in n:
if i == -1:
if not plus:
res+=1
else:
plus -= 1
else:
plus+=i
print(res) | Title: Police Recruits
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
The police department of your city has just started its journey. Initially, they don’t have any manpower. So, they started hiring new recruits in groups.
Meanwhile, crimes keeps occurring within the city. One member of... | ```python
_ = int(input())
n = list(map(int,input().split()))
plus = 0
res = 0
for i in n:
if i == -1:
if not plus:
res+=1
else:
plus -= 1
else:
plus+=i
print(res)
``` | 3 | |
358 | C | Dima and Containers | PROGRAMMING | 2,000 | [
"constructive algorithms",
"greedy",
"implementation"
] | null | null | Dima has a birthday soon! It's a big day! Saryozha's present to Dima is that Seryozha won't be in the room and won't disturb Dima and Inna as they celebrate the birthday. Inna's present to Dima is a stack, a queue and a deck.
Inna wants her present to show Dima how great a programmer he is. For that, she is going to g... | The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) — the number of Inna's commands. Then *n* lines follow, describing Inna's commands. Each line consists an integer:
1. Integer *a* (1<=≤<=*a*<=≤<=105) means that Inna gives Dima a command to add number *a* into one of containers. 1. Integer 0 shows that Inna ask... | Each command of the input must correspond to one line of the output — Dima's action.
For the command of the first type (adding) print one word that corresponds to Dima's choice:
- pushStack — add to the end of the stack; - pushQueue — add to the end of the queue; - pushFront — add to the beginning of the deck; - ... | [
"10\n0\n1\n0\n1\n2\n0\n1\n2\n3\n0\n",
"4\n1\n2\n3\n0\n"
] | [
"0\npushStack\n1 popStack\npushStack\npushQueue\n2 popStack popQueue\npushStack\npushQueue\npushFront\n3 popStack popQueue popFront\n",
"pushStack\npushQueue\npushFront\n3 popStack popQueue popFront\n"
] | none | 1,500 | [
{
"input": "10\n0\n1\n0\n1\n2\n0\n1\n2\n3\n0",
"output": "0\npushStack\n1 popStack\npushStack\npushQueue\n2 popStack popQueue\npushStack\npushQueue\npushFront\n3 popStack popQueue popFront"
},
{
"input": "4\n1\n2\n3\n0",
"output": "pushStack\npushQueue\npushFront\n3 popStack popQueue popFront"
... | 1,685,601,011 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 5 | 31 | 0 | n = int(input())
sections = [[]]
for _ in range(n):
inna_command = int(input())
sections[-1].append(inna_command)
if inna_command == 0:
sections.append([])
if len(sections[-1]) == 0:
sections.pop()
for section in sections:
if section[-1] != 0:
for number in secti... | Title: Dima and Containers
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Dima has a birthday soon! It's a big day! Saryozha's present to Dima is that Seryozha won't be in the room and won't disturb Dima and Inna as they celebrate the birthday. Inna's present to Dima is a stack, a queue a... | ```python
n = int(input())
sections = [[]]
for _ in range(n):
inna_command = int(input())
sections[-1].append(inna_command)
if inna_command == 0:
sections.append([])
if len(sections[-1]) == 0:
sections.pop()
for section in sections:
if section[-1] != 0:
for numbe... | 0 | |
14 | B | Young Photographer | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"implementation"
] | B. Young Photographer | 2 | 64 | Among other things, Bob is keen on photography. Especially he likes to take pictures of sportsmen. That was the reason why he placed himself in position *x*0 of a long straight racetrack and got ready to take pictures. But the problem was that not all the runners passed him. The total amount of sportsmen, training at t... | The first line of the input file contains integers *n* and *x*0 (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100; 0<=≤<=*x*0<=≤<=1000). The following *n* lines contain pairs of integers *a**i*,<=*b**i* (0<=≤<=*a**i*,<=*b**i*<=≤<=1000; *a**i*<=≠<=*b**i*). | Output the required minimum distance in the same units as the positions on the racetrack. If there is no such a position, output -1. | [
"3 3\n0 7\n14 2\n4 6\n"
] | [
"1\n"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "3 3\n0 7\n14 2\n4 6",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "1 1\n0 10",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "2 2\n1 2\n3 2",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "3 2\n1 2\n2 3\n3 4",
"output": "-1"
},
{
"input": "2 4\n10 4\n1 5",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "1 10\n... | 1,692,027,554 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 3 | 92 | 0 | n,m=map(int,input().split())
hsh=[0]*1000
for i in range(n):
a,b=map(int,input().split())
for i in range(min(a,b), max(a,b)+1):
hsh[i]+=1
ans=[]
mi=999999
for i in range(len(hsh)):
if hsh[i]==n:
if abs(i-m)<mi:
mi=abs(i-m)
print(mi)
| Title: Young Photographer
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 64 megabytes
Problem Description:
Among other things, Bob is keen on photography. Especially he likes to take pictures of sportsmen. That was the reason why he placed himself in position *x*0 of a long straight racetrack and got ready to take pictures. Bu... | ```python
n,m=map(int,input().split())
hsh=[0]*1000
for i in range(n):
a,b=map(int,input().split())
for i in range(min(a,b), max(a,b)+1):
hsh[i]+=1
ans=[]
mi=999999
for i in range(len(hsh)):
if hsh[i]==n:
if abs(i-m)<mi:
mi=abs(i-m)
print(mi)
``` | 0 |
992 | A | Nastya and an Array | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation",
"sortings"
] | null | null | Nastya owns too many arrays now, so she wants to delete the least important of them. However, she discovered that this array is magic! Nastya now knows that the array has the following properties:
- In one second we can add an arbitrary (possibly negative) integer to all elements of the array that are not equal to ze... | The first line contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) — the size of the array.
The second line contains *n* integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (<=-<=105<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=105) — the elements of the array. | Print a single integer — the minimum number of seconds needed to make all elements of the array equal to zero. | [
"5\n1 1 1 1 1\n",
"3\n2 0 -1\n",
"4\n5 -6 -5 1\n"
] | [
"1\n",
"2\n",
"4\n"
] | In the first example you can add - 1 to all non-zero elements in one second and make them equal to zero.
In the second example you can add - 2 on the first second, then the array becomes equal to [0, 0, - 3]. On the second second you can add 3 to the third (the only non-zero) element. | 500 | [
{
"input": "5\n1 1 1 1 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "3\n2 0 -1",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "4\n5 -6 -5 1",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "1\n0",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "2\n21794 -79194",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "3\n-63526 95085 -5239",
... | 1,646,059,789 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 3 | 31 | 0 | size_of_list = input()
list1 = list(map(int, input().split()))
counter = 0
while True:
least_number = list1[0]
for number in list1:
if number < least_number:
if number == 0:
pass
else:
least_number = number
for index in range(len... | Title: Nastya and an Array
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Nastya owns too many arrays now, so she wants to delete the least important of them. However, she discovered that this array is magic! Nastya now knows that the array has the following properties:
- In one second ... | ```python
size_of_list = input()
list1 = list(map(int, input().split()))
counter = 0
while True:
least_number = list1[0]
for number in list1:
if number < least_number:
if number == 0:
pass
else:
least_number = number
for index in... | 0 | |
368 | B | Sereja and Suffixes | PROGRAMMING | 1,100 | [
"data structures",
"dp"
] | null | null | Sereja has an array *a*, consisting of *n* integers *a*1, *a*2, ..., *a**n*. The boy cannot sit and do nothing, he decided to study an array. Sereja took a piece of paper and wrote out *m* integers *l*1,<=*l*2,<=...,<=*l**m* (1<=≤<=*l**i*<=≤<=*n*). For each number *l**i* he wants to know how many distinct numbers are s... | The first line contains two integers *n* and *m* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=105). The second line contains *n* integers *a*1, *a*2, ..., *a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=105) — the array elements.
Next *m* lines contain integers *l*1,<=*l*2,<=...,<=*l**m*. The *i*-th line contains integer *l**i* (1<=≤<=*l**i*<=≤<=*n*). | Print *m* lines — on the *i*-th line print the answer to the number *l**i*. | [
"10 10\n1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 100000 99999\n1\n2\n3\n4\n5\n6\n7\n8\n9\n10\n"
] | [
"6\n6\n6\n6\n6\n5\n4\n3\n2\n1\n"
] | none | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "10 10\n1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 100000 99999\n1\n2\n3\n4\n5\n6\n7\n8\n9\n10",
"output": "6\n6\n6\n6\n6\n5\n4\n3\n2\n1"
},
{
"input": "8 3\n8 6 4 3 4 2 4 8\n6\n4\n2",
"output": "3\n4\n5"
},
{
"input": "7 10\n1 3 8 6 2 2 7\n4\n2\n6\n3\n4\n4\n6\n2\n7\n4",
"output": "3\n5\n2\n4\n3\n3\... | 1,689,266,778 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 62 | 0 | class FenwickTree:
def __init__(self, size):
self.size = size
self.tree = [0] * (size + 1)
def update(self, index, delta):
while index <= self.size:
self.tree[index] += delta
index += index & -index
def query(self, index):
result = 0
while in... | Title: Sereja and Suffixes
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Sereja has an array *a*, consisting of *n* integers *a*1, *a*2, ..., *a**n*. The boy cannot sit and do nothing, he decided to study an array. Sereja took a piece of paper and wrote out *m* integers *l*1,<=*l*2,<=...... | ```python
class FenwickTree:
def __init__(self, size):
self.size = size
self.tree = [0] * (size + 1)
def update(self, index, delta):
while index <= self.size:
self.tree[index] += delta
index += index & -index
def query(self, index):
result = 0
... | 0 | |
903 | B | The Modcrab | PROGRAMMING | 1,200 | [
"greedy",
"implementation"
] | null | null | Vova is again playing some computer game, now an RPG. In the game Vova's character received a quest: to slay the fearsome monster called Modcrab.
After two hours of playing the game Vova has tracked the monster and analyzed its tactics. The Modcrab has *h*2 health points and an attack power of *a*2. Knowing that, Vova... | The first line contains three integers *h*1, *a*1, *c*1 (1<=≤<=*h*1,<=*a*1<=≤<=100, 2<=≤<=*c*1<=≤<=100) — Vova's health, Vova's attack power and the healing power of a potion.
The second line contains two integers *h*2, *a*2 (1<=≤<=*h*2<=≤<=100, 1<=≤<=*a*2<=<<=*c*1) — the Modcrab's health and his attack power. | In the first line print one integer *n* denoting the minimum number of phases required to win the battle.
Then print *n* lines. *i*-th line must be equal to HEAL if Vova drinks a potion in *i*-th phase, or STRIKE if he attacks the Modcrab.
The strategy must be valid: Vova's character must not be defeated before slayi... | [
"10 6 100\n17 5\n",
"11 6 100\n12 5\n"
] | [
"4\nSTRIKE\nHEAL\nSTRIKE\nSTRIKE\n",
"2\nSTRIKE\nSTRIKE\n"
] | In the first example Vova's character must heal before or after his first attack. Otherwise his health will drop to zero in 2 phases while he needs 3 strikes to win.
In the second example no healing needed, two strikes are enough to get monster to zero health and win with 6 health left. | 0 | [
{
"input": "10 6 100\n17 5",
"output": "4\nSTRIKE\nHEAL\nSTRIKE\nSTRIKE"
},
{
"input": "11 6 100\n12 5",
"output": "2\nSTRIKE\nSTRIKE"
},
{
"input": "25 27 91\n10 87",
"output": "1\nSTRIKE"
},
{
"input": "79 4 68\n9 65",
"output": "21\nSTRIKE\nHEAL\nHEAL\nHEAL\nHEAL\nHEAL... | 1,655,548,936 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 62 | 0 |
import sys
input = sys.stdin.readline
h1, a1, c1 = map(int, input().split())
h2, a2 = map(int, input().split())
c = (h2+a1-1)//a1
x = c-1
d = 0
while 1:
if h1/a2 > x:
break
h1 += c1
d += 1
for i in range(d):
print('HEAL')
for i in range(c):
print('STRIKE') | Title: The Modcrab
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Vova is again playing some computer game, now an RPG. In the game Vova's character received a quest: to slay the fearsome monster called Modcrab.
After two hours of playing the game Vova has tracked the monster and analyze... | ```python
import sys
input = sys.stdin.readline
h1, a1, c1 = map(int, input().split())
h2, a2 = map(int, input().split())
c = (h2+a1-1)//a1
x = c-1
d = 0
while 1:
if h1/a2 > x:
break
h1 += c1
d += 1
for i in range(d):
print('HEAL')
for i in range(c):
print('STRIKE')
``... | 0 | |
195 | A | Let's Watch Football | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"binary search",
"brute force",
"math"
] | null | null | Valeric and Valerko missed the last Euro football game, so they decided to watch the game's key moments on the Net. They want to start watching as soon as possible but the connection speed is too low. If they turn on the video right now, it will "hang up" as the size of data to watch per second will be more than the si... | The first line contains three space-separated integers *a*, *b* and *c* (1<=≤<=*a*,<=*b*,<=*c*<=≤<=1000,<=*a*<=><=*b*). The first number (*a*) denotes the size of data needed to watch one second of the video. The second number (*b*) denotes the size of data Valeric and Valerko can download from the Net per second. T... | Print a single number — the minimum integer number of seconds that Valeric and Valerko must wait to watch football without pauses. | [
"4 1 1\n",
"10 3 2\n",
"13 12 1\n"
] | [
"3\n",
"5\n",
"1\n"
] | In the first sample video's length is 1 second and it is necessary 4 units of data for watching 1 second of video, so guys should download 4 · 1 = 4 units of data to watch the whole video. The most optimal way is to wait 3 seconds till 3 units of data will be downloaded and then start watching. While guys will be watch... | 500 | [
{
"input": "4 1 1",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "10 3 2",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "13 12 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "2 1 3",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "6 2 4",
"output": "8"
},
{
"input": "5 2 1",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "2 1... | 1,623,317,436 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | OK | TESTS | 49 | 216 | 0 | import math
a, b, c = map(int, input().split())
print(math.ceil(c * (a - b) / b))
| Title: Let's Watch Football
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Valeric and Valerko missed the last Euro football game, so they decided to watch the game's key moments on the Net. They want to start watching as soon as possible but the connection speed is too low. If they turn ... | ```python
import math
a, b, c = map(int, input().split())
print(math.ceil(c * (a - b) / b))
``` | 3 | |
0 | none | none | none | 0 | [
"none"
] | null | null | Iahub likes trees very much. Recently he discovered an interesting tree named propagating tree. The tree consists of *n* nodes numbered from 1 to *n*, each node *i* having an initial value *a**i*. The root of the tree is node 1.
This tree has a special property: when a value *val* is added to a value of node *i*, the ... | The first line contains two integers *n* and *m* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=200000). The second line contains *n* integers *a*1, *a*2, ..., *a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=1000). Each of the next *n*–1 lines contains two integers *v**i* and *u**i* (1<=≤<=*v**i*,<=*u**i*<=≤<=*n*), meaning that there is an edge between nodes *v**i* a... | For each query of type two (print the value of node *x*) you must print the answer to the query on a separate line. The queries must be answered in the order given in the input. | [
"5 5\n1 2 1 1 2\n1 2\n1 3\n2 4\n2 5\n1 2 3\n1 1 2\n2 1\n2 2\n2 4\n"
] | [
"3\n3\n0\n"
] | The values of the nodes are [1, 2, 1, 1, 2] at the beginning.
Then value 3 is added to node 2. It propagates and value -3 is added to it's sons, node 4 and node 5. Then it cannot propagate any more. So the values of the nodes are [1, 5, 1, - 2, - 1].
Then value 2 is added to node 1. It propagates and value -2 is ad... | 0 | [
{
"input": "5 5\n1 2 1 1 2\n1 2\n1 3\n2 4\n2 5\n1 2 3\n1 1 2\n2 1\n2 2\n2 4",
"output": "3\n3\n0"
},
{
"input": "10 10\n137 197 856 768 825 894 86 174 218 326\n7 8\n4 7\n8 9\n7 10\n1 2\n2 4\n3 6\n3 5\n2 3\n1 9 624\n2 1\n2 4\n1 6 505\n1 8 467\n1 3 643\n2 1\n1 8 631\n2 4\n1 7 244",
"output": "137\... | 1,665,518,433 | 2,973 | PyPy 3-64 | RUNTIME_ERROR | TESTS | 0 | 77 | 6,246,400 | import sys
input = sys.stdin.buffer.readline
import heapq
class LazySegmentTree:
def __init__(self, data, default=0, func=lambda a, b: a+b):
"""initialize the lazy segment tree with data"""
self._default = default
self._func = func
self._len = len(data)
self._... | Title: none
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Iahub likes trees very much. Recently he discovered an interesting tree named propagating tree. The tree consists of *n* nodes numbered from 1 to *n*, each node *i* having an initial value *a**i*. The root of the tree is node 1.
... | ```python
import sys
input = sys.stdin.buffer.readline
import heapq
class LazySegmentTree:
def __init__(self, data, default=0, func=lambda a, b: a+b):
"""initialize the lazy segment tree with data"""
self._default = default
self._func = func
self._len = len(data)
... | -1 | |
199 | A | Hexadecimal's theorem | PROGRAMMING | 900 | [
"brute force",
"constructive algorithms",
"implementation",
"number theory"
] | null | null | Recently, a chaotic virus Hexadecimal advanced a new theorem which will shake the Universe. She thinks that each Fibonacci number can be represented as sum of three not necessary different Fibonacci numbers.
Let's remember how Fibonacci numbers can be calculated. *F*0<==<=0, *F*1<==<=1, and all the next numbers are *F... | The input contains of a single integer *n* (0<=≤<=*n*<=<<=109) — the number that should be represented by the rules described above. It is guaranteed that *n* is a Fibonacci number. | Output three required numbers: *a*, *b* and *c*. If there is no answer for the test you have to print "I'm too stupid to solve this problem" without the quotes.
If there are multiple answers, print any of them. | [
"3\n",
"13\n"
] | [
"1 1 1\n",
"2 3 8\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "3",
"output": "1 1 1"
},
{
"input": "13",
"output": "2 3 8"
},
{
"input": "0",
"output": "0 0 0"
},
{
"input": "1",
"output": "1 0 0"
},
{
"input": "2",
"output": "1 1 0"
},
{
"input": "1597",
"output": "233 377 987"
},
{
"input... | 1,651,229,662 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | RUNTIME_ERROR | TESTS | 0 | 60 | 0 |
def findIndex(n) :
if (n <= 1) :
return n
a = 0
b = 1
c = 1
res = 1
while (c < n) :
c = a + b
res = res + 1
a = b
b = c
return result
n = input()
result = findIndex(n)
if(n>3):
n1= (((1+(5**0.5))/2)**(result-1))//(5**0.5)
n2= (((1+(5**0.5))/2)**(result-3))//(5**0.5)
n3= (((1+(5**0.5))/... | Title: Hexadecimal's theorem
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Recently, a chaotic virus Hexadecimal advanced a new theorem which will shake the Universe. She thinks that each Fibonacci number can be represented as sum of three not necessary different Fibonacci numbers.
Let'... | ```python
def findIndex(n) :
if (n <= 1) :
return n
a = 0
b = 1
c = 1
res = 1
while (c < n) :
c = a + b
res = res + 1
a = b
b = c
return result
n = input()
result = findIndex(n)
if(n>3):
n1= (((1+(5**0.5))/2)**(result-1))//(5**0.5)
n2= (((1+(5**0.5))/2)**(result-3))//(5**0.5)
n3= (((1+... | -1 | |
703 | A | Mishka and Game | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Mishka is a little polar bear. As known, little bears loves spending their free time playing dice for chocolates. Once in a wonderful sunny morning, walking around blocks of ice, Mishka met her friend Chris, and they started playing the game.
Rules of the game are very simple: at first number of rounds *n* is defined.... | The first line of the input contains single integer *n* *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of game rounds.
The next *n* lines contains rounds description. *i*-th of them contains pair of integers *m**i* and *c**i* (1<=≤<=*m**i*,<=<=*c**i*<=≤<=6) — values on dice upper face after Mishka's and Chris' throws in *i*-th ... | If Mishka is the winner of the game, print "Mishka" (without quotes) in the only line.
If Chris is the winner of the game, print "Chris" (without quotes) in the only line.
If the result of the game is draw, print "Friendship is magic!^^" (without quotes) in the only line. | [
"3\n3 5\n2 1\n4 2\n",
"2\n6 1\n1 6\n",
"3\n1 5\n3 3\n2 2\n"
] | [
"Mishka",
"Friendship is magic!^^",
"Chris"
] | In the first sample case Mishka loses the first round, but wins second and third rounds and thus she is the winner of the game.
In the second sample case Mishka wins the first round, Chris wins the second round, and the game ends with draw with score 1:1.
In the third sample case Chris wins the first round, but there... | 500 | [
{
"input": "3\n3 5\n2 1\n4 2",
"output": "Mishka"
},
{
"input": "2\n6 1\n1 6",
"output": "Friendship is magic!^^"
},
{
"input": "3\n1 5\n3 3\n2 2",
"output": "Chris"
},
{
"input": "6\n4 1\n4 2\n5 3\n5 1\n5 3\n4 1",
"output": "Mishka"
},
{
"input": "8\n2 4\n1 4\n1 ... | 1,677,959,637 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | OK | TESTS | 69 | 77 | 0 | miska1=0
chris1=0
for i in range(int(input())):
miska,chris=map(int,input().split())
if(miska>chris):
miska1+=1
elif(miska==chris):
miska1+=0
chris1+=0
else:
chris1+=1
if(miska1>chris1):
print('Mishka')
elif(miska1==chris1):
print('Friendship is ma... | Title: Mishka and Game
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Mishka is a little polar bear. As known, little bears loves spending their free time playing dice for chocolates. Once in a wonderful sunny morning, walking around blocks of ice, Mishka met her friend Chris, and they st... | ```python
miska1=0
chris1=0
for i in range(int(input())):
miska,chris=map(int,input().split())
if(miska>chris):
miska1+=1
elif(miska==chris):
miska1+=0
chris1+=0
else:
chris1+=1
if(miska1>chris1):
print('Mishka')
elif(miska1==chris1):
print('Friend... | 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"... | 1,576,572,744 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 32 | 248 | 0 | m = int(input())
t = [int(x) for x in input().split()]
odd=0
even =0
for i in t:
if i%2 == 0:
even+=1
else:
odd+=1
if even == 1:
print(list(t.index(x)+1 for x in t if x%2==0)[0])
else:
print(list(t.index(x)+1 for x in t if x%2!=0)[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
m = int(input())
t = [int(x) for x in input().split()]
odd=0
even =0
for i in t:
if i%2 == 0:
even+=1
else:
odd+=1
if even == 1:
print(list(t.index(x)+1 for x in t if x%2==0)[0])
else:
print(list(t.index(x)+1 for x in t if x%2!=0)[0])
``` | 3.938 |
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"
}... | 1,626,716,900 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | OK | TESTS | 43 | 186 | 20,172,800 | a=input()
b=input()
c=int(a)+int(b)
nwa=''
for i in a:
if i!='0':
nwa+=i
nwb=''
for i in b:
if i!='0':
nwb+=i
nwc=''
for i in str(c):
if i!='0':
nwc+=i
if int(nwa)+int(nwb)==int(nwc):
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)
nwa=''
for i in a:
if i!='0':
nwa+=i
nwb=''
for i in b:
if i!='0':
nwb+=i
nwc=''
for i in str(c):
if i!='0':
nwc+=i
if int(nwa)+int(nwb)==int(nwc):
print('YES')
else:
print('NO')
``` | 3.915925 |
976 | E | Well played! | PROGRAMMING | 2,100 | [
"greedy",
"sortings"
] | null | null | Recently Max has got himself into popular CCG "BrainStone". As "BrainStone" is a pretty intellectual game, Max has to solve numerous hard problems during the gameplay. Here is one of them:
Max owns *n* creatures, *i*-th of them can be described with two numbers — its health *hp**i* and its damage *dmg**i*. Max also ha... | The first line contains three integers *n*, *a*, *b* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=2·105, 0<=≤<=*a*<=≤<=20, 0<=≤<=*b*<=≤<=2·105) — the number of creatures, spells of the first type and spells of the second type, respectively.
The *i*-th of the next *n* lines contain two number *hp**i* and *dmg**i* (1<=≤<=*hp**i*,<=*dmg**i*<=≤<=109) ... | Print single integer — maximum total damage creatures can deal. | [
"2 1 1\n10 15\n6 1\n",
"3 0 3\n10 8\n7 11\n5 2\n"
] | [
"27\n",
"26\n"
] | In the first example Max should use the spell of the first type on the second creature, then the spell of the second type on the same creature. Then total damage will be equal to 15 + 6·2 = 27.
In the second example Max should use the spell of the second type on the first creature, then the spell of the second type on... | 0 | [
{
"input": "2 1 1\n10 15\n6 1",
"output": "27"
},
{
"input": "3 0 3\n10 8\n7 11\n5 2",
"output": "26"
},
{
"input": "1 0 0\n2 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "1 0 200000\n1 2",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "7 5 7\n29 25\n84 28\n34 34\n14 76\n85 9\n40 57\n99 88",
... | 1,689,642,255 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 30 | 0 | print("_RANDOM_GUESS_1689642253.890243")# 1689642253.8902628 | Title: Well played!
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Recently Max has got himself into popular CCG "BrainStone". As "BrainStone" is a pretty intellectual game, Max has to solve numerous hard problems during the gameplay. Here is one of them:
Max owns *n* creatures, *i*-th o... | ```python
print("_RANDOM_GUESS_1689642253.890243")# 1689642253.8902628
``` | 0 | |
622 | C | Not Equal on a Segment | PROGRAMMING | 1,700 | [
"data structures",
"implementation"
] | null | null | You are given array *a* with *n* integers and *m* queries. The *i*-th query is given with three integers *l**i*,<=*r**i*,<=*x**i*.
For the *i*-th query find any position *p**i* (*l**i*<=≤<=*p**i*<=≤<=*r**i*) so that *a**p**i*<=≠<=*x**i*. | The first line contains two integers *n*,<=*m* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=2·105) — the number of elements in *a* and the number of queries.
The second line contains *n* integers *a**i* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=106) — the elements of the array *a*.
Each of the next *m* lines contains three integers *l**i*,<=*r**i*,<=*x**i* (1<=≤<=... | Print *m* lines. On the *i*-th line print integer *p**i* — the position of any number not equal to *x**i* in segment [*l**i*,<=*r**i*] or the value <=-<=1 if there is no such number. | [
"6 4\n1 2 1 1 3 5\n1 4 1\n2 6 2\n3 4 1\n3 4 2\n"
] | [
"2\n6\n-1\n4\n"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "6 4\n1 2 1 1 3 5\n1 4 1\n2 6 2\n3 4 1\n3 4 2",
"output": "2\n6\n-1\n4"
},
{
"input": "1 1\n1\n1 1 1",
"output": "-1"
},
{
"input": "1 1\n2\n1 1 2",
"output": "-1"
},
{
"input": "1 1\n569888\n1 1 967368",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "10 10\n1 1 1 1 1 1 ... | 1,642,914,897 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 62 | 4,915,200 | from bisect import bisect_left as bl , bisect_right as br
from collections import defaultdict
n,m=map(int,input().strip().split())
a=[*map(int,input().strip().split())]
g=defaultdict(list)
for id,i in enumerate(a):
g[i].append(id)
for _ in range(m):
l,r,i=map(int,input().strip().split())
l-=1
r-=1
... | Title: Not Equal on a Segment
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
You are given array *a* with *n* integers and *m* queries. The *i*-th query is given with three integers *l**i*,<=*r**i*,<=*x**i*.
For the *i*-th query find any position *p**i* (*l**i*<=≤<=*p**i*<=≤<=*r**i*) so ... | ```python
from bisect import bisect_left as bl , bisect_right as br
from collections import defaultdict
n,m=map(int,input().strip().split())
a=[*map(int,input().strip().split())]
g=defaultdict(list)
for id,i in enumerate(a):
g[i].append(id)
for _ in range(m):
l,r,i=map(int,input().strip().split())
l-=1
... | 0 | |
59 | A | Word | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation",
"strings"
] | A. Word | 2 | 256 | Vasya is very upset that many people on the Net mix uppercase and lowercase letters in one word. That's why he decided to invent an extension for his favorite browser that would change the letters' register in every word so that it either only consisted of lowercase letters or, vice versa, only of uppercase ones. At th... | The first line contains a word *s* — it consists of uppercase and lowercase Latin letters and possesses the length from 1 to 100. | Print the corrected word *s*. If the given word *s* has strictly more uppercase letters, make the word written in the uppercase register, otherwise - in the lowercase one. | [
"HoUse\n",
"ViP\n",
"maTRIx\n"
] | [
"house\n",
"VIP\n",
"matrix\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "HoUse",
"output": "house"
},
{
"input": "ViP",
"output": "VIP"
},
{
"input": "maTRIx",
"output": "matrix"
},
{
"input": "BNHWpnpawg",
"output": "bnhwpnpawg"
},
{
"input": "VTYGP",
"output": "VTYGP"
},
{
"input": "CHNenu",
"output": "chn... | 1,670,613,644 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 30 | 92 | 0 | upper_alphabet = "ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ"
lower_alphabet = "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz"
s = input()
#s = "Hoed"
count = 0
for item in s:
if item in lower_alphabet:
count += 1
else:
count -= 1
#print("count", count)
if count >= 0:
s = s.lower()
else:
s = s.upper()
print(s)
| Title: Word
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
Vasya is very upset that many people on the Net mix uppercase and lowercase letters in one word. That's why he decided to invent an extension for his favorite browser that would change the letters' register in every word so that it ei... | ```python
upper_alphabet = "ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ"
lower_alphabet = "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz"
s = input()
#s = "Hoed"
count = 0
for item in s:
if item in lower_alphabet:
count += 1
else:
count -= 1
#print("count", count)
if count >= 0:
s = s.lower()
else:
s = s.upper()
print(... | 3.977 |
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... | 1,698,419,948 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 46 | 0 | weight = input().split(" ")
counter = 0
while(int(weight[0]) <= int(weight[1])):
weight[0] = int(weight[0])*3
weight[1] = int(weight[1])*2
print(weight)
counter += 1
print(counter) | 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
weight = input().split(" ")
counter = 0
while(int(weight[0]) <= int(weight[1])):
weight[0] = int(weight[0])*3
weight[1] = int(weight[1])*2
print(weight)
counter += 1
print(counter)
``` | 0 | |
991 | C | Candies | PROGRAMMING | 1,500 | [
"binary search",
"implementation"
] | null | null | After passing a test, Vasya got himself a box of $n$ candies. He decided to eat an equal amount of candies each morning until there are no more candies. However, Petya also noticed the box and decided to get some candies for himself.
This means the process of eating candies is the following: in the beginning Vasya cho... | The first line contains a single integer $n$ ($1 \leq n \leq 10^{18}$) — the initial amount of candies in the box. | Output a single integer — the minimal amount of $k$ that would allow Vasya to eat at least half of candies he got. | [
"68\n"
] | [
"3\n"
] | In the sample, the amount of candies, with $k=3$, would change in the following way (Vasya eats first):
$68 \to 65 \to 59 \to 56 \to 51 \to 48 \to 44 \to 41 \\ \to 37 \to 34 \to 31 \to 28 \to 26 \to 23 \to 21 \to 18 \to 17 \to 14 \\ \to 13 \to 10 \to 9 \to 6 \to 6 \to 3 \to 3 \to 0$.
In total, Vasya would eat $39$ ca... | 1,250 | [
{
"input": "68",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "2",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "42",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "43",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "756",
"output": "29"
},
{
"input": "999999972",
"output"... | 1,602,382,481 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED | TESTS | 1 | 1,000 | 307,200 | def sum1(n, x):
k = 0
while 1:
if n < x:
k += n
break
k += x
n -= x
n -= n//10
return k
def main():
n = int(input())
l, r, x, = 0, n, 1
while r >= l:
x = (l+r)//2
if sum1(n, x) > (n+1)//2:
r = x - 1
els... | Title: Candies
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
After passing a test, Vasya got himself a box of $n$ candies. He decided to eat an equal amount of candies each morning until there are no more candies. However, Petya also noticed the box and decided to get some candies for hi... | ```python
def sum1(n, x):
k = 0
while 1:
if n < x:
k += n
break
k += x
n -= x
n -= n//10
return k
def main():
n = int(input())
l, r, x, = 0, n, 1
while r >= l:
x = (l+r)//2
if sum1(n, x) > (n+1)//2:
r = x - 1
... | 0 | |
892 | B | Wrath | PROGRAMMING | 1,200 | [
"greedy",
"implementation",
"two pointers"
] | null | null | Hands that shed innocent blood!
There are *n* guilty people in a line, the *i*-th of them holds a claw with length *L**i*. The bell rings and every person kills some of people in front of him. All people kill others at the same time. Namely, the *i*-th person kills the *j*-th person if and only if *j*<=<<=*i* and *... | The first line contains one integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=106) — the number of guilty people.
Second line contains *n* space-separated integers *L*1,<=*L*2,<=...,<=*L**n* (0<=≤<=*L**i*<=≤<=109), where *L**i* is the length of the *i*-th person's claw. | Print one integer — the total number of alive people after the bell rings. | [
"4\n0 1 0 10\n",
"2\n0 0\n",
"10\n1 1 3 0 0 0 2 1 0 3\n"
] | [
"1\n",
"2\n",
"3\n"
] | In first sample the last person kills everyone in front of him. | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "4\n0 1 0 10",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "2\n0 0",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "10\n1 1 3 0 0 0 2 1 0 3",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "10\n0 0 2 0 0 3 3 2 2 0",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "1\n0",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "5\n0 0 0 1 0"... | 1,585,681,555 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 43 | 873 | 78,848,000 | int(input())
people = [int(x) for x in input().split(' ')]
alive = 0
kill = 0
for i in people[::-1]:
if kill == 0:
alive += 1
kill -= 1
kill = max(i, kill)
print(alive) | Title: Wrath
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Hands that shed innocent blood!
There are *n* guilty people in a line, the *i*-th of them holds a claw with length *L**i*. The bell rings and every person kills some of people in front of him. All people kill others at the same ... | ```python
int(input())
people = [int(x) for x in input().split(' ')]
alive = 0
kill = 0
for i in people[::-1]:
if kill == 0:
alive += 1
kill -= 1
kill = max(i, kill)
print(alive)
``` | 3 | |
94 | A | Restoring Password | PROGRAMMING | 900 | [
"implementation",
"strings"
] | A. Restoring Password | 2 | 256 | Igor K. always used to trust his favorite Kashpirovsky Antivirus. That is why he didn't hesitate to download the link one of his groupmates sent him via QIP Infinium. The link was said to contain "some real funny stuff about swine influenza". The antivirus had no objections and Igor K. run the flash application he had ... | The input data contains 11 lines. The first line represents the binary code 80 characters in length. That is the code written in Igor K.'s ISQ account's info. Next 10 lines contain pairwise distinct binary codes 10 characters in length, corresponding to numbers 0, 1, ..., 9. | Print one line containing 8 characters — The password to Igor K.'s ISQ account. It is guaranteed that the solution exists. | [
"01001100100101100000010110001001011001000101100110010110100001011010100101101100\n0100110000\n0100110010\n0101100000\n0101100010\n0101100100\n0101100110\n0101101000\n0101101010\n0101101100\n0101101110\n",
"10101101111001000010100100011010101101110010110111011000100011011110010110001000\n1001000010\n1101111001\n1... | [
"12345678\n",
"30234919\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "01001100100101100000010110001001011001000101100110010110100001011010100101101100\n0100110000\n0100110010\n0101100000\n0101100010\n0101100100\n0101100110\n0101101000\n0101101010\n0101101100\n0101101110",
"output": "12345678"
},
{
"input": "1010110111100100001010010001101010110111001011011... | 1,678,747,906 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | OK | TESTS | 50 | 124 | 0 | k = str(input())
hashMap = {}
for i in range(10):
code = str(input())
hashMap[code] = str(i)
res = []
for i in range(0, len(k), 10):
val = k[i:i+10]
convert = hashMap[val]
res.append(convert)
print("".join(res)) | Title: Restoring Password
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
Igor K. always used to trust his favorite Kashpirovsky Antivirus. That is why he didn't hesitate to download the link one of his groupmates sent him via QIP Infinium. The link was said to contain "some real funny stuff a... | ```python
k = str(input())
hashMap = {}
for i in range(10):
code = str(input())
hashMap[code] = str(i)
res = []
for i in range(0, len(k), 10):
val = k[i:i+10]
convert = hashMap[val]
res.append(convert)
print("".join(res))
``` | 3.969 |
493 | B | Vasya and Wrestling | PROGRAMMING | 1,400 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Vasya has become interested in wrestling. In wrestling wrestlers use techniques for which they are awarded points by judges. The wrestler who gets the most points wins.
When the numbers of points of both wrestlers are equal, the wrestler whose sequence of points is lexicographically greater, wins.
If the sequences of... | The first line contains number *n* — the number of techniques that the wrestlers have used (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=2·105).
The following *n* lines contain integer numbers *a**i* (|*a**i*|<=≤<=109, *a**i*<=≠<=0). If *a**i* is positive, that means that the first wrestler performed the technique that was awarded with *a**i* poin... | If the first wrestler wins, print string "first", otherwise print "second" | [
"5\n1\n2\n-3\n-4\n3\n",
"3\n-1\n-2\n3\n",
"2\n4\n-4\n"
] | [
"second\n",
"first\n",
"second\n"
] | Sequence *x* = *x*<sub class="lower-index">1</sub>*x*<sub class="lower-index">2</sub>... *x*<sub class="lower-index">|*x*|</sub> is lexicographically larger than sequence *y* = *y*<sub class="lower-index">1</sub>*y*<sub class="lower-index">2</sub>... *y*<sub class="lower-index">|*y*|</sub>, if either |*x*| > |... | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "5\n1\n2\n-3\n-4\n3",
"output": "second"
},
{
"input": "3\n-1\n-2\n3",
"output": "first"
},
{
"input": "2\n4\n-4",
"output": "second"
},
{
"input": "7\n1\n2\n-3\n4\n5\n-6\n7",
"output": "first"
},
{
"input": "14\n1\n2\n3\n4\n5\n6\n7\n-8\n-9\n-10\n-11\n-... | 1,614,529,699 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 6 | 46 | 307,200 | n=int(input())
a=[]
b=[]
s1=0
s2=0
last=0
for i in range(1,n+1):
x=int(input())
if(x>=0):
s1+=x
a.append(x)
else:
s2+=-1*x
b.append(-1*x)
last=x
if(s1>s2):
print("first")
if s2>s1:
print("second")
if(s1==s2):
flag=False
for i in range(min(len(a),len(b))):
if(a[i]!=b[i]):
if... | Title: Vasya and Wrestling
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Vasya has become interested in wrestling. In wrestling wrestlers use techniques for which they are awarded points by judges. The wrestler who gets the most points wins.
When the numbers of points of both wrestlers ... | ```python
n=int(input())
a=[]
b=[]
s1=0
s2=0
last=0
for i in range(1,n+1):
x=int(input())
if(x>=0):
s1+=x
a.append(x)
else:
s2+=-1*x
b.append(-1*x)
last=x
if(s1>s2):
print("first")
if s2>s1:
print("second")
if(s1==s2):
flag=False
for i in range(min(len(a),len(b))):
if(a[i]!=b[i... | 0 | |
628 | B | New Skateboard | PROGRAMMING | 1,300 | [
"dp"
] | null | null | Max wants to buy a new skateboard. He has calculated the amount of money that is needed to buy a new skateboard. He left a calculator on the floor and went to ask some money from his parents. Meanwhile his little brother Yusuf came and started to press the keys randomly. Unfortunately Max has forgotten the number which... | The only line contains string *s* (1<=≤<=|*s*|<=≤<=3·105). The string *s* contains only digits from 0 to 9. | Print integer *a* — the number of substrings of the string *s* that are divisible by 4.
Note that the answer can be huge, so you should use 64-bit integer type to store it. In C++ you can use the long long integer type and in Java you can use long integer type. | [
"124\n",
"04\n",
"5810438174\n"
] | [
"4\n",
"3\n",
"9\n"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "124",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "04",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "5810438174",
"output": "9"
},
{
"input": "1",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "039",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "97247",
"output": "6"
},
{
"input": "5810438174",... | 1,653,318,023 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 3 | 62 | 0 | s = input()
ans = ((ord(s[0]) - ord('0'))%4 == 0)
for i in range(1,len(s)):
if ((ord(s[i-1]) - ord('0'))*10 + (ord(s[i]) - ord('0')))%4 == 0:
ans += i + ((ord(s[i]) - ord('0'))%4 == 0)
else:
ans += ((ord(s[i]) - ord('0'))%4 == 0)
print(ans) | Title: New Skateboard
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Max wants to buy a new skateboard. He has calculated the amount of money that is needed to buy a new skateboard. He left a calculator on the floor and went to ask some money from his parents. Meanwhile his little brother... | ```python
s = input()
ans = ((ord(s[0]) - ord('0'))%4 == 0)
for i in range(1,len(s)):
if ((ord(s[i-1]) - ord('0'))*10 + (ord(s[i]) - ord('0')))%4 == 0:
ans += i + ((ord(s[i]) - ord('0'))%4 == 0)
else:
ans += ((ord(s[i]) - ord('0'))%4 == 0)
print(ans)
``` | 0 | |
656 | G | You're a Professional | PROGRAMMING | 1,900 | [
"*special"
] | null | null | A simple recommendation system would recommend a user things liked by a certain number of their friends. In this problem you will implement part of such a system.
You are given user's friends' opinions about a list of items. You are also given a threshold *T* — the minimal number of "likes" necessary for an item to be... | The first line of the input will contain three space-separated integers: the number of friends *F* (1<=≤<=*F*<=≤<=10), the number of items *I* (1<=≤<=*I*<=≤<=10) and the threshold *T* (1<=≤<=*T*<=≤<=*F*).
The following *F* lines of input contain user's friends' opinions. *j*-th character of *i*-th line is 'Y' if *i*-t... | Output an integer — the number of items liked by at least *T* of user's friends. | [
"3 3 2\nYYY\nNNN\nYNY\n",
"4 4 1\nNNNY\nNNYN\nNYNN\nYNNN\n"
] | [
"2\n",
"4\n"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "3 3 2\nYYY\nNNN\nYNY",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "4 4 1\nNNNY\nNNYN\nNYNN\nYNNN",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "3 5 2\nNYNNY\nYNNNN\nNNYYN",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "1 10 1\nYYYNYNNYNN",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "10 1 5\nY\nN\nN\nN\nY\nN\nN\nY\... | 1,459,533,464 | 7,064 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 0 | 0 | n,m,q=map(int,input().split())
a=[]
b=0
for i in range(m):
a.append(0)
for i in range(n):
s=input()
for j in range(m):
if s[j]=='Y':
a[j]+=1
if a[j]>=q:
b+=1
a[j]=-10
print(b)
| Title: You're a Professional
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
A simple recommendation system would recommend a user things liked by a certain number of their friends. In this problem you will implement part of such a system.
You are given user's friends' opinions about a li... | ```python
n,m,q=map(int,input().split())
a=[]
b=0
for i in range(m):
a.append(0)
for i in range(n):
s=input()
for j in range(m):
if s[j]=='Y':
a[j]+=1
if a[j]>=q:
b+=1
a[j]=-10
print(b)
``` | 0 | |
584 | A | Olesya and Rodion | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"math"
] | null | null | Olesya loves numbers consisting of *n* digits, and Rodion only likes numbers that are divisible by *t*. Find some number that satisfies both of them.
Your task is: given the *n* and *t* print an integer strictly larger than zero consisting of *n* digits that is divisible by *t*. If such number doesn't exist, print <=-... | The single line contains two numbers, *n* and *t* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100, 2<=≤<=*t*<=≤<=10) — the length of the number and the number it should be divisible by. | Print one such positive number without leading zeroes, — the answer to the problem, or <=-<=1, if such number doesn't exist. If there are multiple possible answers, you are allowed to print any of them. | [
"3 2\n"
] | [
"712"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "3 2",
"output": "222"
},
{
"input": "2 2",
"output": "22"
},
{
"input": "4 3",
"output": "3333"
},
{
"input": "5 3",
"output": "33333"
},
{
"input": "10 7",
"output": "7777777777"
},
{
"input": "2 9",
"output": "99"
},
{
"input"... | 1,695,552,232 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 7 | 61 | 0 | n, t = map(int, input().split())
print(-1 if (n == 1 and t > 1) else ((10**(n-1))*t))
| Title: Olesya and Rodion
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Olesya loves numbers consisting of *n* digits, and Rodion only likes numbers that are divisible by *t*. Find some number that satisfies both of them.
Your task is: given the *n* and *t* print an integer strictly larg... | ```python
n, t = map(int, input().split())
print(-1 if (n == 1 and t > 1) else ((10**(n-1))*t))
``` | 0 | |
515 | C | Drazil and Factorial | PROGRAMMING | 1,400 | [
"greedy",
"math",
"sortings"
] | null | null | Drazil is playing a math game with Varda.
Let's define for positive integer *x* as a product of factorials of its digits. For example, .
First, they choose a decimal number *a* consisting of *n* digits that contains at least one digit larger than 1. This number may possibly start with leading zeroes. Then they shoul... | The first line contains an integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=15) — the number of digits in *a*.
The second line contains *n* digits of *a*. There is at least one digit in *a* that is larger than 1. Number *a* may possibly contain leading zeroes. | Output a maximum possible integer satisfying the conditions above. There should be no zeroes and ones in this number decimal representation. | [
"4\n1234\n",
"3\n555\n"
] | [
"33222\n",
"555\n"
] | In the first case, <img align="middle" class="tex-formula" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/f5a4207f23215fddce977ab5ea9e9d2e7578fb52.png" style="max-width: 100.0%;max-height: 100.0%;"/> | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "4\n1234",
"output": "33222"
},
{
"input": "3\n555",
"output": "555"
},
{
"input": "15\n012345781234578",
"output": "7777553333222222222222"
},
{
"input": "1\n8",
"output": "7222"
},
{
"input": "10\n1413472614",
"output": "75333332222222"
},
{
... | 1,675,500,476 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 45 | 46 | 4,505,600 | numF={
0:[], 1:[], 2:[2], 3:[2,3], 4:[2,3,2,2],
5:[5], 6:[5,2,3], 7:[7], 8:[7,2,2,2], 9:[7,2,2,2,3,3]
}
n=int(input())
NumStr=input()
numbs=[]
for str_ in NumStr:
numbs+=numF[int(str_)]
n7=numbs.count(7)
n5=numbs.count(5)
n3=numbs.count(3)
n2=numbs.count(2)-n3
print('7'*n7+'5'*n5+... | Title: Drazil and Factorial
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Drazil is playing a math game with Varda.
Let's define for positive integer *x* as a product of factorials of its digits. For example, .
First, they choose a decimal number *a* consisting of *n* digits that cont... | ```python
numF={
0:[], 1:[], 2:[2], 3:[2,3], 4:[2,3,2,2],
5:[5], 6:[5,2,3], 7:[7], 8:[7,2,2,2], 9:[7,2,2,2,3,3]
}
n=int(input())
NumStr=input()
numbs=[]
for str_ in NumStr:
numbs+=numF[int(str_)]
n7=numbs.count(7)
n5=numbs.count(5)
n3=numbs.count(3)
n2=numbs.count(2)-n3
print('7'*... | 3 | |
847 | L | Berland SU Computer Network | PROGRAMMING | 2,400 | [
"constructive algorithms",
"dfs and similar",
"graphs",
"hashing",
"trees"
] | null | null | In the computer network of the Berland State University there are *n* routers numbered from 1 to *n*. Some pairs of routers are connected by patch cords. Information can be transmitted over patch cords in both direction. The network is arranged in such a way that communication between any two routers (directly or throu... | The first line contains a single integer *n* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000) — the number of routers in the network.
The *i*-th of the following *n* lines contains a description of the lists for the router *i*.
The description of each list begins with the number of routers in it. Then the symbol ':' follows, and after that the ... | Print -1 if no solution exists.
In the other case print to the first line *n*<=-<=1 — the total number of patch cords in the network. In each of the following *n*<=-<=1 lines print two integers — the routers which are directly connected by a patch cord. Information about each patch cord must be printed exactly once.
... | [
"3\n2:3,2\n1:1-1:3\n2:1,2\n",
"5\n4:2,5,3,4\n1:4-1:1-2:5,3\n4:4,5,2,1\n4:2,1,3,5\n1:3-3:4,2,1\n",
"3\n1:2-1:3\n1:1-1:3\n1:1-1:2\n"
] | [
"2\n2 1\n2 3\n",
"4\n2 1\n2 4\n5 2\n3 5\n",
"-1\n"
] | The first example is analyzed in the statement.
The answer to the second example is shown on the picture.
The first router has one list, which contains all other routers. The second router has three lists: the first — the single router 4, the second — the single router 1, the third — two routers 3 and 5. The third ro... | 0 | [
{
"input": "3\n2:3,2\n1:1-1:3\n2:1,2",
"output": "2\n2 1\n2 3"
},
{
"input": "5\n4:2,5,3,4\n1:4-1:1-2:5,3\n4:4,5,2,1\n4:2,1,3,5\n1:3-3:4,2,1",
"output": "4\n2 1\n2 4\n5 2\n3 5"
},
{
"input": "3\n1:2-1:3\n1:1-1:3\n1:1-1:2",
"output": "-1"
},
{
"input": "2\n1:2\n1:1",
"outp... | 1,618,755,311 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | RUNTIME_ERROR | TESTS | 48 | 997 | 53,248,000 | import math
import sys
read = sys.stdin.readline
n = int(read())
sub = [[] for _ in range(n)]
for i in range(n):
data = read().strip()
for j in data.split('-'):
tree = list(map(int, j.split(':')[1].split(',')))
for k in range(len(tree)):
tree[k] -= 1
sub[i].append(... | Title: Berland SU Computer Network
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
In the computer network of the Berland State University there are *n* routers numbered from 1 to *n*. Some pairs of routers are connected by patch cords. Information can be transmitted over patch cords in bo... | ```python
import math
import sys
read = sys.stdin.readline
n = int(read())
sub = [[] for _ in range(n)]
for i in range(n):
data = read().strip()
for j in data.split('-'):
tree = list(map(int, j.split(':')[1].split(',')))
for k in range(len(tree)):
tree[k] -= 1
sub[... | -1 | |
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"
},
{
... | 1,694,666,932 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 3 | 60 | 0 | n=set(input())
if n=={'4'}or n=={'7'}or n=={'4','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=set(input())
if n=={'4'}or n=={'7'}or n=={'4','7'}:
print('YES')
else:
print('NO')
``` | 0 |
71 | A | Way Too Long Words | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"strings"
] | A. Way Too Long Words | 1 | 256 | Sometimes some words like "localization" or "internationalization" are so long that writing them many times in one text is quite tiresome.
Let's consider a word too long, if its length is strictly more than 10 characters. All too long words should be replaced with a special abbreviation.
This abbreviation is made lik... | The first line contains an integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100). Each of the following *n* lines contains one word. All the words consist of lowercase Latin letters and possess the lengths of from 1 to 100 characters. | Print *n* lines. The *i*-th line should contain the result of replacing of the *i*-th word from the input data. | [
"4\nword\nlocalization\ninternationalization\npneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis\n"
] | [
"word\nl10n\ni18n\np43s\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "4\nword\nlocalization\ninternationalization\npneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis",
"output": "word\nl10n\ni18n\np43s"
},
{
"input": "5\nabcdefgh\nabcdefghi\nabcdefghij\nabcdefghijk\nabcdefghijklm",
"output": "abcdefgh\nabcdefghi\nabcdefghij\na9k\na11m"
},
{
"input":... | 1,675,678,850 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 46 | 0 | strt = input()
lens = len(strt)
if (lens > 10):
print(strt[0] + str(lens - 2) + strt[lens-1])
else:
print(strt) | Title: Way Too Long Words
Time Limit: 1 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
Sometimes some words like "localization" or "internationalization" are so long that writing them many times in one text is quite tiresome.
Let's consider a word too long, if its length is strictly more than 10 character... | ```python
strt = input()
lens = len(strt)
if (lens > 10):
print(strt[0] + str(lens - 2) + strt[lens-1])
else:
print(strt)
``` | 0 |
0 | none | none | none | 0 | [
"none"
] | null | null | Ivan had string *s* consisting of small English letters. However, his friend Julia decided to make fun of him and hid the string *s*. Ivan preferred making a new string to finding the old one.
Ivan knows some information about the string *s*. Namely, he remembers, that string *t**i* occurs in string *s* at least *k**... | The first line contains single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) — the number of strings Ivan remembers.
The next *n* lines contain information about the strings. The *i*-th of these lines contains non-empty string *t**i*, then positive integer *k**i*, which equal to the number of times the string *t**i* occurs in strin... | Print lexicographically minimal string that fits all the information Ivan remembers. | [
"3\na 4 1 3 5 7\nab 2 1 5\nca 1 4\n",
"1\na 1 3\n",
"3\nab 1 1\naba 1 3\nab 2 3 5\n"
] | [
"abacaba\n",
"aaa\n",
"ababab\n"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "3\na 4 1 3 5 7\nab 2 1 5\nca 1 4",
"output": "abacaba"
},
{
"input": "1\na 1 3",
"output": "aaa"
},
{
"input": "3\nab 1 1\naba 1 3\nab 2 3 5",
"output": "ababab"
},
{
"input": "6\nba 2 16 18\na 1 12\nb 3 4 13 20\nbb 2 6 8\nababbbbbaab 1 3\nabababbbbb 1 1",
"ou... | 1,499,798,224 | 6,724 | Python 3 | TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED | PRETESTS | 4 | 2,000 | 13,721,600 | n = int(input())
ans = []
max_ = 0
for i in range(n):
temp = input().split()
t, k, x = temp[0], int(temp[1]), list(map(int, temp[2:]))
for j in x:
max_ = max(max_, j - 1 + len(t))
if max_ > len(ans):
l = len(ans)
for _ in range(max_ - l):
... | Title: none
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Ivan had string *s* consisting of small English letters. However, his friend Julia decided to make fun of him and hid the string *s*. Ivan preferred making a new string to finding the old one.
Ivan knows some information about t... | ```python
n = int(input())
ans = []
max_ = 0
for i in range(n):
temp = input().split()
t, k, x = temp[0], int(temp[1]), list(map(int, temp[2:]))
for j in x:
max_ = max(max_, j - 1 + len(t))
if max_ > len(ans):
l = len(ans)
for _ in range(max_ - l):
... | 0 | |
37 | A | Towers | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"sortings"
] | A. Towers | 2 | 256 | Little Vasya has received a young builder’s kit. The kit consists of several wooden bars, the lengths of all of them are known. The bars can be put one on the top of the other if their lengths are the same.
Vasya wants to construct the minimal number of towers from the bars. Help Vasya to use the bars in the best way ... | The first line contains an integer *N* (1<=≤<=*N*<=≤<=1000) — the number of bars at Vasya’s disposal. The second line contains *N* space-separated integers *l**i* — the lengths of the bars. All the lengths are natural numbers not exceeding 1000. | In one line output two numbers — the height of the largest tower and their total number. Remember that Vasya should use all the bars. | [
"3\n1 2 3\n",
"4\n6 5 6 7\n"
] | [
"1 3\n",
"2 3\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "3\n1 2 3",
"output": "1 3"
},
{
"input": "4\n6 5 6 7",
"output": "2 3"
},
{
"input": "4\n3 2 1 1",
"output": "2 3"
},
{
"input": "4\n1 2 3 3",
"output": "2 3"
},
{
"input": "3\n20 22 36",
"output": "1 3"
},
{
"input": "25\n47 30 94 41 45 20... | 1,686,245,647 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 3 | 62 | 0 | n = int(input())
a = list(map(int, input().split()))
a.sort()
sum1 = 1
max = 0
sum2 = 0
for i in range(len(a)-1):
if a[i] == a[i+1]:
sum1+=1
sum2 += 1
else:
if max < sum1:
max = sum1
sum1 = 1
print(max, len(a)-sum2) | Title: Towers
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
Little Vasya has received a young builder’s kit. The kit consists of several wooden bars, the lengths of all of them are known. The bars can be put one on the top of the other if their lengths are the same.
Vasya wants to construct... | ```python
n = int(input())
a = list(map(int, input().split()))
a.sort()
sum1 = 1
max = 0
sum2 = 0
for i in range(len(a)-1):
if a[i] == a[i+1]:
sum1+=1
sum2 += 1
else:
if max < sum1:
max = sum1
sum1 = 1
print(max, len(a)-sum2)
``` | 0 |
581 | A | Vasya the Hipster | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation",
"math"
] | null | null | One day Vasya the Hipster decided to count how many socks he had. It turned out that he had *a* red socks and *b* blue socks.
According to the latest fashion, hipsters should wear the socks of different colors: a red one on the left foot, a blue one on the right foot.
Every day Vasya puts on new socks in the morning ... | The single line of the input contains two positive integers *a* and *b* (1<=≤<=*a*,<=*b*<=≤<=100) — the number of red and blue socks that Vasya's got. | Print two space-separated integers — the maximum number of days when Vasya can wear different socks and the number of days when he can wear the same socks until he either runs out of socks or cannot make a single pair from the socks he's got.
Keep in mind that at the end of the day Vasya throws away the socks that he'... | [
"3 1\n",
"2 3\n",
"7 3\n"
] | [
"1 1\n",
"2 0\n",
"3 2\n"
] | In the first sample Vasya can first put on one pair of different socks, after that he has two red socks left to wear on the second day. | 500 | [
{
"input": "3 1",
"output": "1 1"
},
{
"input": "2 3",
"output": "2 0"
},
{
"input": "7 3",
"output": "3 2"
},
{
"input": "100 100",
"output": "100 0"
},
{
"input": "4 10",
"output": "4 3"
},
{
"input": "6 10",
"output": "6 2"
},
{
"input":... | 1,678,063,832 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 30 | 46 | 0 | r, b = map(int, input().split())
if r <= b:
d = b - r
if d == 1:
print(r, 0)
elif d % 2 == 0:
print(r, d//2)
elif d % 2 != 0:
print(r, d // 2)
else:
d = r - b
if d == 1:
print(b, 0)
elif d % 2 == 0:
print(b, d // 2)
elif d % 2 != 0... | Title: Vasya the Hipster
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
One day Vasya the Hipster decided to count how many socks he had. It turned out that he had *a* red socks and *b* blue socks.
According to the latest fashion, hipsters should wear the socks of different colors: a red... | ```python
r, b = map(int, input().split())
if r <= b:
d = b - r
if d == 1:
print(r, 0)
elif d % 2 == 0:
print(r, d//2)
elif d % 2 != 0:
print(r, d // 2)
else:
d = r - b
if d == 1:
print(b, 0)
elif d % 2 == 0:
print(b, d // 2)
elif ... | 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... | 1,538,919,756 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 156 | 0 | name1=input()
name2=input()
i=0
j=0
def delete(name,n):
first_part=name[:n]
last_part=name[n+1:]
return first_part + last_part
if name1==name2 or len(name1)!=len(name2):
print("NO")
else:
for word1 in name1:
i=0
for word2 in name2:
if word1==word2:... | 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
name1=input()
name2=input()
i=0
j=0
def delete(name,n):
first_part=name[:n]
last_part=name[n+1:]
return first_part + last_part
if name1==name2 or len(name1)!=len(name2):
print("NO")
else:
for word1 in name1:
i=0
for word2 in name2:
if wor... | 0 |
27 | A | Next Test | PROGRAMMING | 1,200 | [
"implementation",
"sortings"
] | A. Next Test | 2 | 256 | «Polygon» is a system which allows to create programming tasks in a simple and professional way. When you add a test to the problem, the corresponding form asks you for the test index. As in most cases it is clear which index the next test will have, the system suggests the default value of the index. It is calculated ... | The first line contains one integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=3000) — the amount of previously added tests. The second line contains *n* distinct integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=3000) — indexes of these tests. | Output the required default value for the next test index. | [
"3\n1 7 2\n"
] | [
"3\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "1\n1",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "2\n2 1",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "3\n3 4 1",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "4\n6 4 3 5",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "5\n3 2 1 7 4",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "6\n4 1 2 5 3 7",
"output": "6"
},
... | 1,697,520,995 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 22 | 124 | 1,740,800 | # code.py
n = int(input())
arr = [int(x) for x in input().split()]
rec = [True for x in range(3000)]
for i in arr:
rec[i-1] = False
ans = 0
for i in range(3000):
if (rec[i]):
ans = i+1
break
print(ans)
| Title: Next Test
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
«Polygon» is a system which allows to create programming tasks in a simple and professional way. When you add a test to the problem, the corresponding form asks you for the test index. As in most cases it is clear which index the... | ```python
# code.py
n = int(input())
arr = [int(x) for x in input().split()]
rec = [True for x in range(3000)]
for i in arr:
rec[i-1] = False
ans = 0
for i in range(3000):
if (rec[i]):
ans = i+1
break
print(ans)
``` | 0 |
746 | A | Compote | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation",
"math"
] | null | null | Nikolay has *a* lemons, *b* apples and *c* pears. He decided to cook a compote. According to the recipe the fruits should be in the ratio 1:<=2:<=4. It means that for each lemon in the compote should be exactly 2 apples and exactly 4 pears. You can't crumble up, break up or cut these fruits into pieces. These fruits — ... | The first line contains the positive integer *a* (1<=≤<=*a*<=≤<=1000) — the number of lemons Nikolay has.
The second line contains the positive integer *b* (1<=≤<=*b*<=≤<=1000) — the number of apples Nikolay has.
The third line contains the positive integer *c* (1<=≤<=*c*<=≤<=1000) — the number of pears Nikolay has... | Print the maximum total number of lemons, apples and pears from which Nikolay can cook the compote. | [
"2\n5\n7\n",
"4\n7\n13\n",
"2\n3\n2\n"
] | [
"7\n",
"21\n",
"0\n"
] | In the first example Nikolay can use 1 lemon, 2 apples and 4 pears, so the answer is 1 + 2 + 4 = 7.
In the second example Nikolay can use 3 lemons, 6 apples and 12 pears, so the answer is 3 + 6 + 12 = 21.
In the third example Nikolay don't have enough pears to cook any compote, so the answer is 0. | 500 | [
{
"input": "2\n5\n7",
"output": "7"
},
{
"input": "4\n7\n13",
"output": "21"
},
{
"input": "2\n3\n2",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "1\n1\n1",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "1\n2\n4",
"output": "7"
},
{
"input": "1000\n1000\n1000",
"output": "1750"
}... | 1,671,761,659 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | COMPILATION_ERROR | TESTS | 0 | 0 | 0 | l,a,p = map(int, input().split())
while !(l*2<=a and l*4<=p and l!=0):
l=l-1
print(l*7)
| Title: Compote
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Nikolay has *a* lemons, *b* apples and *c* pears. He decided to cook a compote. According to the recipe the fruits should be in the ratio 1:<=2:<=4. It means that for each lemon in the compote should be exactly 2 apples and exa... | ```python
l,a,p = map(int, input().split())
while !(l*2<=a and l*4<=p and l!=0):
l=l-1
print(l*7)
``` | -1 | |
264 | A | Escape from Stones | PROGRAMMING | 1,200 | [
"constructive algorithms",
"data structures",
"implementation",
"two pointers"
] | null | null | Squirrel Liss lived in a forest peacefully, but unexpected trouble happens. Stones fall from a mountain. Initially Squirrel Liss occupies an interval [0,<=1]. Next, *n* stones will fall and Liss will escape from the stones. The stones are numbered from 1 to *n* in order.
The stones always fall to the center of Liss's ... | The input consists of only one line. The only line contains the string *s* (1<=≤<=|*s*|<=≤<=106). Each character in *s* will be either "l" or "r". | Output *n* lines — on the *i*-th line you should print the *i*-th stone's number from the left. | [
"llrlr\n",
"rrlll\n",
"lrlrr\n"
] | [
"3\n5\n4\n2\n1\n",
"1\n2\n5\n4\n3\n",
"2\n4\n5\n3\n1\n"
] | In the first example, the positions of stones 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 will be <img align="middle" class="tex-formula" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/58fdb5684df807bfcb705a9da9ce175613362b7d.png" style="max-width: 100.0%;max-height: 100.0%;"/>, respectively. So you should print the sequence: 3, 5, 4, 2, 1. | 500 | [
{
"input": "llrlr",
"output": "3\n5\n4\n2\n1"
},
{
"input": "rrlll",
"output": "1\n2\n5\n4\n3"
},
{
"input": "lrlrr",
"output": "2\n4\n5\n3\n1"
},
{
"input": "lllrlrllrl",
"output": "4\n6\n9\n10\n8\n7\n5\n3\n2\n1"
},
{
"input": "llrlrrrlrr",
"output": "3\n5\n6... | 1,567,773,919 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED | TESTS | 30 | 2,000 | 32,768,000 | #double underscore makes a class variable or a class method private
mod = 1000000007
ii = lambda : int(input())
si = lambda : input()
dgl = lambda : list(map(int, input()))
f = lambda : map(int, input().split())
il = lambda : list(map(int, input().split()))
it = lambda : tuple(map(int, input().split()))
l... | Title: Escape from Stones
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Squirrel Liss lived in a forest peacefully, but unexpected trouble happens. Stones fall from a mountain. Initially Squirrel Liss occupies an interval [0,<=1]. Next, *n* stones will fall and Liss will escape from the ... | ```python
#double underscore makes a class variable or a class method private
mod = 1000000007
ii = lambda : int(input())
si = lambda : input()
dgl = lambda : list(map(int, input()))
f = lambda : map(int, input().split())
il = lambda : list(map(int, input().split()))
it = lambda : tuple(map(int, input().sp... | 0 | |
750 | A | New Year and Hurry | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"binary search",
"brute force",
"implementation",
"math"
] | null | null | Limak is going to participate in a contest on the last day of the 2016. The contest will start at 20:00 and will last four hours, exactly until midnight. There will be *n* problems, sorted by difficulty, i.e. problem 1 is the easiest and problem *n* is the hardest. Limak knows it will take him 5·*i* minutes to solve th... | The only line of the input contains two integers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=10, 1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=240) — the number of the problems in the contest and the number of minutes Limak needs to get to the party from his house. | Print one integer, denoting the maximum possible number of problems Limak can solve so that he could get to the party at midnight or earlier. | [
"3 222\n",
"4 190\n",
"7 1\n"
] | [
"2\n",
"4\n",
"7\n"
] | In the first sample, there are 3 problems and Limak needs 222 minutes to get to the party. The three problems require 5, 10 and 15 minutes respectively. Limak can spend 5 + 10 = 15 minutes to solve first two problems. Then, at 20:15 he can leave his house to get to the party at 23:57 (after 222 minutes). In this scenar... | 500 | [
{
"input": "3 222",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "4 190",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "7 1",
"output": "7"
},
{
"input": "10 135",
"output": "6"
},
{
"input": "10 136",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "1 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "1 240",
... | 1,686,874,869 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | OK | TESTS | 52 | 62 | 0 | n, k = map(int, input().split(" "))
ptime = 240 - k
count = 0
for i in range(1, n+1):
pt = i*5
if ptime - pt >= 0:
ptime -= pt
count += 1
elif ptime - pt < 0:
break
print(count) | Title: New Year and Hurry
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Limak is going to participate in a contest on the last day of the 2016. The contest will start at 20:00 and will last four hours, exactly until midnight. There will be *n* problems, sorted by difficulty, i.e. problem... | ```python
n, k = map(int, input().split(" "))
ptime = 240 - k
count = 0
for i in range(1, n+1):
pt = i*5
if ptime - pt >= 0:
ptime -= pt
count += 1
elif ptime - pt < 0:
break
print(count)
``` | 3 | |
834 | A | The Useless Toy | PROGRAMMING | 900 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Walking through the streets of Marshmallow City, Slastyona have spotted some merchants selling a kind of useless toy which is very popular nowadays – caramel spinner! Wanting to join the craze, she has immediately bought the strange contraption.
Spinners in Sweetland have the form of V-shaped pieces of caramel. Each s... | There are two characters in the first string – the starting and the ending position of a spinner. The position is encoded with one of the following characters: v (ASCII code 118, lowercase v), < (ASCII code 60), ^ (ASCII code 94) or > (ASCII code 62) (see the picture above for reference). Characters are separated... | Output cw, if the direction is clockwise, ccw – if counter-clockwise, and undefined otherwise. | [
"^ >\n1\n",
"< ^\n3\n",
"^ v\n6\n"
] | [
"cw\n",
"ccw\n",
"undefined\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "^ >\n1",
"output": "cw"
},
{
"input": "< ^\n3",
"output": "ccw"
},
{
"input": "^ v\n6",
"output": "undefined"
},
{
"input": "^ >\n999999999",
"output": "ccw"
},
{
"input": "> v\n1",
"output": "cw"
},
{
"input": "v <\n1",
"output": "cw"
... | 1,501,765,485 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED | TESTS | 3 | 1,000 | 4,608,000 | string =input()
rotation =int(input())
start =string[0]
cstart =start
end =string[2]
if rotation%2 == 0:
print ("undefined")
quit()
for i in range(rotation):
if start == ">":start ="v"
elif start == "v":start ="<"
elif start == "<":start ="^"
elif start == "^":start =">"
if start == end:
print ("cw... | Title: The Useless Toy
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Walking through the streets of Marshmallow City, Slastyona have spotted some merchants selling a kind of useless toy which is very popular nowadays – caramel spinner! Wanting to join the craze, she has immediately bough... | ```python
string =input()
rotation =int(input())
start =string[0]
cstart =start
end =string[2]
if rotation%2 == 0:
print ("undefined")
quit()
for i in range(rotation):
if start == ">":start ="v"
elif start == "v":start ="<"
elif start == "<":start ="^"
elif start == "^":start =">"
if start == end:
... | 0 | |
816 | B | Karen and Coffee | PROGRAMMING | 1,400 | [
"binary search",
"data structures",
"implementation"
] | null | null | To stay woke and attentive during classes, Karen needs some coffee!
Karen, a coffee aficionado, wants to know the optimal temperature for brewing the perfect cup of coffee. Indeed, she has spent some time reading several recipe books, including the universally acclaimed "The Art of the Covfefe".
She knows *n* coffee ... | The first line of input contains three integers, *n*, *k* (1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=200000), and *q* (1<=≤<=*q*<=≤<=200000), the number of recipes, the minimum number of recipes a certain temperature must be recommended by to be admissible, and the number of questions Karen has, respectively.
The next *n* lines describe ... | For each question, output a single integer on a line by itself, the number of admissible integer temperatures between *a* and *b* degrees, inclusive. | [
"3 2 4\n91 94\n92 97\n97 99\n92 94\n93 97\n95 96\n90 100\n",
"2 1 1\n1 1\n200000 200000\n90 100\n"
] | [
"3\n3\n0\n4\n",
"0\n"
] | In the first test case, Karen knows 3 recipes.
1. The first one recommends brewing the coffee between 91 and 94 degrees, inclusive. 1. The second one recommends brewing the coffee between 92 and 97 degrees, inclusive. 1. The third one recommends brewing the coffee between 97 and 99 degrees, inclusive.
A temperatur... | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "3 2 4\n91 94\n92 97\n97 99\n92 94\n93 97\n95 96\n90 100",
"output": "3\n3\n0\n4"
},
{
"input": "2 1 1\n1 1\n200000 200000\n90 100",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "1 1 1\n1 1\n1 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "1 1 1\n200000 200000\n200000 200000",
"output": "1"
... | 1,608,779,487 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | RUNTIME_ERROR | TESTS | 1 | 234 | 1,024,000 | MAX_BOUNDRY = 200000
recipes, admision, questions = map(int, input().split())
interval = optimal = [0] * MAX_BOUNDRY
for i in range(recipes):
l, r = map(int, input().split())
interval[l] += 1
interval[r+1] -= 1
for i in range(len(interval)):
interval[i] += interval[i-1]
for i in range... | Title: Karen and Coffee
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
To stay woke and attentive during classes, Karen needs some coffee!
Karen, a coffee aficionado, wants to know the optimal temperature for brewing the perfect cup of coffee. Indeed, she has spent some time reading seve... | ```python
MAX_BOUNDRY = 200000
recipes, admision, questions = map(int, input().split())
interval = optimal = [0] * MAX_BOUNDRY
for i in range(recipes):
l, r = map(int, input().split())
interval[l] += 1
interval[r+1] -= 1
for i in range(len(interval)):
interval[i] += interval[i-1]
for ... | -1 | |
1 | A | Theatre Square | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"math"
] | A. Theatre Square | 1 | 256 | Theatre Square in the capital city of Berland has a rectangular shape with the size *n*<=×<=*m* meters. On the occasion of the city's anniversary, a decision was taken to pave the Square with square granite flagstones. Each flagstone is of the size *a*<=×<=*a*.
What is the least number of flagstones needed to pave the... | The input contains three positive integer numbers in the first line: *n*,<=<=*m* and *a* (1<=≤<=<=*n*,<=*m*,<=*a*<=≤<=109). | Write the needed number of flagstones. | [
"6 6 4\n"
] | [
"4\n"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "6 6 4",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "1 1 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "2 1 1",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "1 2 1",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "2 2 1",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "2 1 2",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "1 1 3"... | 1,656,699,363 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 2 | 31 | 0 | n1 = input()
x = n1.split(" ")
n = int(x[0])
m = int(x[1])
a = int(x[2])
print(a)
| Title: Theatre Square
Time Limit: 1 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
Theatre Square in the capital city of Berland has a rectangular shape with the size *n*<=×<=*m* meters. On the occasion of the city's anniversary, a decision was taken to pave the Square with square granite flagstones. Each ... | ```python
n1 = input()
x = n1.split(" ")
n = int(x[0])
m = int(x[1])
a = int(x[2])
print(a)
``` | 0 |
758 | A | Holiday Of Equality | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation",
"math"
] | null | null | In Berland it is the holiday of equality. In honor of the holiday the king decided to equalize the welfare of all citizens in Berland by the expense of the state treasury.
Totally in Berland there are *n* citizens, the welfare of each of them is estimated as the integer in *a**i* burles (burle is the currency in Berl... | The first line contains the integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of citizens in the kingdom.
The second line contains *n* integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n*, where *a**i* (0<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=106) — the welfare of the *i*-th citizen. | In the only line print the integer *S* — the minimum number of burles which are had to spend. | [
"5\n0 1 2 3 4\n",
"5\n1 1 0 1 1\n",
"3\n1 3 1\n",
"1\n12\n"
] | [
"10",
"1",
"4",
"0"
] | In the first example if we add to the first citizen 4 burles, to the second 3, to the third 2 and to the fourth 1, then the welfare of all citizens will equal 4.
In the second example it is enough to give one burle to the third citizen.
In the third example it is necessary to give two burles to the first and the thi... | 500 | [
{
"input": "5\n0 1 2 3 4",
"output": "10"
},
{
"input": "5\n1 1 0 1 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "3\n1 3 1",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "1\n12",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "3\n1 2 3",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "14\n52518 718438 358883 462189 853... | 1,652,538,396 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 41 | 46 | 0 | import sys
import io,os
def inp():
return(int(input()))
def inlt():
return(list(map(int,input().split())))
def insr():
return(input().strip())
def invr():
return(map(int,input().split()))
a=inp()
b=inlt()
maximo=max(b)
tot=0
for x in b:
tot+=(maximo-x)
#sys.stdout.write(str(tot) + "\n")
prin... | Title: Holiday Of Equality
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
In Berland it is the holiday of equality. In honor of the holiday the king decided to equalize the welfare of all citizens in Berland by the expense of the state treasury.
Totally in Berland there are *n* citizens... | ```python
import sys
import io,os
def inp():
return(int(input()))
def inlt():
return(list(map(int,input().split())))
def insr():
return(input().strip())
def invr():
return(map(int,input().split()))
a=inp()
b=inlt()
maximo=max(b)
tot=0
for x in b:
tot+=(maximo-x)
#sys.stdout.write(str(tot) + ... | 3 | |
465 | A | inc ARG | PROGRAMMING | 900 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Sergey is testing a next-generation processor. Instead of bytes the processor works with memory cells consisting of *n* bits. These bits are numbered from 1 to *n*. An integer is stored in the cell in the following way: the least significant bit is stored in the first bit of the cell, the next significant bit is stored... | The first line contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of bits in the cell.
The second line contains a string consisting of *n* characters — the initial state of the cell. The first character denotes the state of the first bit of the cell. The second character denotes the second least significan... | Print a single integer — the number of bits in the cell which change their state after we add 1 to the cell. | [
"4\n1100\n",
"4\n1111\n"
] | [
"3\n",
"4\n"
] | In the first sample the cell ends up with value 0010, in the second sample — with 0000. | 500 | [
{
"input": "4\n1100",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "4\n1111",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "1\n0",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "1\n1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "2\n00",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "2\n01",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "2\n1... | 1,600,348,461 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 29 | 108 | 0 | input()
s=input()
print(s.index('0')+1 if '0' in s else len(s)) | Title: inc ARG
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Sergey is testing a next-generation processor. Instead of bytes the processor works with memory cells consisting of *n* bits. These bits are numbered from 1 to *n*. An integer is stored in the cell in the following way: the lea... | ```python
input()
s=input()
print(s.index('0')+1 if '0' in s else len(s))
``` | 3 | |
894 | A | QAQ | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"brute force",
"dp"
] | null | null | "QAQ" is a word to denote an expression of crying. Imagine "Q" as eyes with tears and "A" as a mouth.
Now Diamond has given Bort a string consisting of only uppercase English letters of length *n*. There is a great number of "QAQ" in the string (Diamond is so cute!).
Bort wants to know how many subsequences "QAQ" are... | The only line contains a string of length *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100). It's guaranteed that the string only contains uppercase English letters. | Print a single integer — the number of subsequences "QAQ" in the string. | [
"QAQAQYSYIOIWIN\n",
"QAQQQZZYNOIWIN\n"
] | [
"4\n",
"3\n"
] | In the first example there are 4 subsequences "QAQ": "QAQAQYSYIOIWIN", "QAQAQYSYIOIWIN", "QAQAQYSYIOIWIN", "QAQAQYSYIOIWIN". | 500 | [
{
"input": "QAQAQYSYIOIWIN",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "QAQQQZZYNOIWIN",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "QA",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "IAQVAQZLQBQVQFTQQQADAQJA",
"output": "24"
},
{
"input": "QQAAQASGAYAAAAKAKAQIQEAQAIAAIAQQQQQ",
"output": "378"
},
{
... | 1,591,960,449 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 43 | 109 | 0 | s=input()
a=[]
oc=0
for i in range(1,len(s)):
if(s[i]=='A'):
a.append(i)
st=0
for j in a:
q1=s[0:j].count('Q')
q2=s[j+1:].count('Q')
oc+=q1*q2
print(oc) | Title: QAQ
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
"QAQ" is a word to denote an expression of crying. Imagine "Q" as eyes with tears and "A" as a mouth.
Now Diamond has given Bort a string consisting of only uppercase English letters of length *n*. There is a great number of "QAQ"... | ```python
s=input()
a=[]
oc=0
for i in range(1,len(s)):
if(s[i]=='A'):
a.append(i)
st=0
for j in a:
q1=s[0:j].count('Q')
q2=s[j+1:].count('Q')
oc+=q1*q2
print(oc)
``` | 3 | |
868 | C | Qualification Rounds | PROGRAMMING | 1,500 | [
"bitmasks",
"brute force",
"constructive algorithms",
"dp"
] | null | null | Snark and Philip are preparing the problemset for the upcoming pre-qualification round for semi-quarter-finals. They have a bank of *n* problems, and they want to select any non-empty subset of it as a problemset.
*k* experienced teams are participating in the contest. Some of these teams already know some of the prob... | The first line contains two integers *n*, *k* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105, 1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=4) — the number of problems and the number of experienced teams.
Each of the next *n* lines contains *k* integers, each equal to 0 or 1. The *j*-th number in the *i*-th line is 1 if *j*-th team knows *i*-th problem and 0 otherwise. | Print "YES" (quotes for clarity), if it is possible to make an interesting problemset, and "NO" otherwise.
You can print each character either upper- or lowercase ("YeS" and "yes" are valid when the answer is "YES"). | [
"5 3\n1 0 1\n1 1 0\n1 0 0\n1 0 0\n1 0 0\n",
"3 2\n1 0\n1 1\n0 1\n"
] | [
"NO\n",
"YES\n"
] | In the first example you can't make any interesting problemset, because the first team knows all problems.
In the second example you can choose the first and the third problems. | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "5 3\n1 0 1\n1 1 0\n1 0 0\n1 0 0\n1 0 0",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "3 2\n1 0\n1 1\n0 1",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "10 2\n1 0\n1 0\n0 0\n1 1\n0 0\n1 1\n0 0\n1 1\n0 1\n0 1",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "10 3\n1 0 0\n0 1 1\n1 0 0\n0 1 0\n0 0 1\n1 0 1\n0 1 1... | 1,591,527,273 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 27 | 842 | 10,956,800 | n, k = [int(x) for x in input().split()]
bit_array = []
for i in range(n):
temp = [int(x) for x in input().split()]
if temp.count(1) <= k//2:
bit_array.append(temp)
# print(bit_array)
temp = [1] * k
for bits in bit_array:
for i in range(k):
temp[i] = temp[i] & bits[i]
if... | Title: Qualification Rounds
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Snark and Philip are preparing the problemset for the upcoming pre-qualification round for semi-quarter-finals. They have a bank of *n* problems, and they want to select any non-empty subset of it as a problemset.
... | ```python
n, k = [int(x) for x in input().split()]
bit_array = []
for i in range(n):
temp = [int(x) for x in input().split()]
if temp.count(1) <= k//2:
bit_array.append(temp)
# print(bit_array)
temp = [1] * k
for bits in bit_array:
for i in range(k):
temp[i] = temp[i] & bit... | 0 | |
427 | A | Police Recruits | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | The police department of your city has just started its journey. Initially, they don’t have any manpower. So, they started hiring new recruits in groups.
Meanwhile, crimes keeps occurring within the city. One member of the police force can investigate only one crime during his/her lifetime.
If there is no police offi... | The first line of input will contain an integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105), the number of events. The next line will contain *n* space-separated integers.
If the integer is -1 then it means a crime has occurred. Otherwise, the integer will be positive, the number of officers recruited together at that time. No more than ... | Print a single integer, the number of crimes which will go untreated. | [
"3\n-1 -1 1\n",
"8\n1 -1 1 -1 -1 1 1 1\n",
"11\n-1 -1 2 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1\n"
] | [
"2\n",
"1\n",
"8\n"
] | Lets consider the second example:
1. Firstly one person is hired. 1. Then crime appears, the last hired person will investigate this crime. 1. One more person is hired. 1. One more crime appears, the last hired person will investigate this crime. 1. Crime appears. There is no free policeman at the time, so this c... | 500 | [
{
"input": "3\n-1 -1 1",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "8\n1 -1 1 -1 -1 1 1 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "11\n-1 -1 2 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1 -1",
"output": "8"
},
{
"input": "7\n-1 -1 1 1 -1 -1 1",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "21\n-1 -1 -1 -1 -1 3 2 -1 6 -1 -1 2 1 ... | 1,678,295,297 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 63 | 77 | 5,324,800 | # https://codeforces.com/problemset/problem/427/A
# imper - (20.02.23) неправильно
# (08.03.23)
# imper
# 20.02.23
# def crim(n):
# if n == -1:
# return 1
# else:
# return 0
#
# def poli(n):
# if n != -1:
# return n
# else:
# return 0
#
# def isol(a):
# r... | Title: Police Recruits
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
The police department of your city has just started its journey. Initially, they don’t have any manpower. So, they started hiring new recruits in groups.
Meanwhile, crimes keeps occurring within the city. One member of... | ```python
# https://codeforces.com/problemset/problem/427/A
# imper - (20.02.23) неправильно
# (08.03.23)
# imper
# 20.02.23
# def crim(n):
# if n == -1:
# return 1
# else:
# return 0
#
# def poli(n):
# if n != -1:
# return n
# else:
# return 0
#
# def isol(a... | 3 | |
412 | B | Network Configuration | PROGRAMMING | 900 | [
"greedy",
"sortings"
] | null | null | The R1 company wants to hold a web search championship. There were *n* computers given for the competition, each of them is connected to the Internet. The organizers believe that the data transfer speed directly affects the result. The higher the speed of the Internet is, the faster the participant will find the necess... | The first line contains two space-separated integers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of computers and the number of participants, respectively. In the second line you have a space-separated sequence consisting of *n* integers: *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (16<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=32768); number *a**i* deno... | Print a single integer — the maximum Internet speed value. It is guaranteed that the answer to the problem is always an integer. | [
"3 2\n40 20 30\n",
"6 4\n100 20 40 20 50 50\n"
] | [
"30\n",
"40\n"
] | In the first test case the organizers can cut the first computer's speed to 30 kilobits. Then two computers (the first and the third one) will have the same speed of 30 kilobits. They should be used as the participants' computers. This answer is optimal. | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "3 2\n40 20 30",
"output": "30"
},
{
"input": "6 4\n100 20 40 20 50 50",
"output": "40"
},
{
"input": "1 1\n16",
"output": "16"
},
{
"input": "2 1\n10000 17",
"output": "10000"
},
{
"input": "2 2\n200 300",
"output": "200"
},
{
"input": "3 1... | 1,666,163,709 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 3 | 46 | 0 | def binary_search(array,key):
ans =0
for i in array:
if i==key:
ans = i
break
elif i<key:
ans = i
print(ans)
n,m=map(int,input().split())
l = sorted(list(map(int,input().split())))
summ = sum(l)
binary_search(l,summ//n)
| Title: Network Configuration
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
The R1 company wants to hold a web search championship. There were *n* computers given for the competition, each of them is connected to the Internet. The organizers believe that the data transfer speed directly a... | ```python
def binary_search(array,key):
ans =0
for i in array:
if i==key:
ans = i
break
elif i<key:
ans = i
print(ans)
n,m=map(int,input().split())
l = sorted(list(map(int,input().split())))
summ = sum(l)
binary_search(l,summ//n)
... | 0 | |
699 | A | Launch of Collider | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | There will be a launch of a new, powerful and unusual collider very soon, which located along a straight line. *n* particles will be launched inside it. All of them are located in a straight line and there can not be two or more particles located in the same point. The coordinates of the particles coincide with the dis... | The first line contains the positive integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=200<=000) — the number of particles.
The second line contains *n* symbols "L" and "R". If the *i*-th symbol equals "L", then the *i*-th particle will move to the left, otherwise the *i*-th symbol equals "R" and the *i*-th particle will move to the right.... | In the first line print the only integer — the first moment (in microseconds) when two particles are at the same point and there will be an explosion.
Print the only integer -1, if the collision of particles doesn't happen. | [
"4\nRLRL\n2 4 6 10\n",
"3\nLLR\n40 50 60\n"
] | [
"1\n",
"-1\n"
] | In the first sample case the first explosion will happen in 1 microsecond because the particles number 1 and 2 will simultaneously be at the same point with the coordinate 3.
In the second sample case there will be no explosion because there are no particles which will simultaneously be at the same point. | 500 | [
{
"input": "4\nRLRL\n2 4 6 10",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "3\nLLR\n40 50 60",
"output": "-1"
},
{
"input": "4\nRLLR\n46 230 264 470",
"output": "92"
},
{
"input": "6\nLLRLLL\n446 492 650 844 930 970",
"output": "97"
},
{
"input": "8\nRRLLLLLL\n338 478 512 574 59... | 1,666,597,016 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 85 | 186 | 16,179,200 | n = int(input())
moves = input()
dist = list( map(int, input().split()) )
possible = False
first = True
time = 0
for i in range(1, n):
if moves[i] == 'L' and moves[i-1] == 'R':
possible = True
if first:
time = int((dist[i]-dist[i-1])/2)
first = False
els... | Title: Launch of Collider
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
There will be a launch of a new, powerful and unusual collider very soon, which located along a straight line. *n* particles will be launched inside it. All of them are located in a straight line and there can not be... | ```python
n = int(input())
moves = input()
dist = list( map(int, input().split()) )
possible = False
first = True
time = 0
for i in range(1, n):
if moves[i] == 'L' and moves[i-1] == 'R':
possible = True
if first:
time = int((dist[i]-dist[i-1])/2)
first = False
... | 3 | |
182 | B | Vasya's Calendar | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Vasya lives in a strange world. The year has *n* months and the *i*-th month has *a**i* days. Vasya got a New Year present — the clock that shows not only the time, but also the date.
The clock's face can display any number from 1 to *d*. It is guaranteed that *a**i*<=≤<=*d* for all *i* from 1 to *n*. The clock does n... | The first line contains the single number *d* — the maximum number of the day that Vasya's clock can show (1<=≤<=*d*<=≤<=106).
The second line contains a single integer *n* — the number of months in the year (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=2000).
The third line contains *n* space-separated integers: *a**i* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=*d*) — th... | Print a single number — the number of times Vasya manually increased the day number by one throughout the last year. | [
"4\n2\n2 2\n",
"5\n3\n3 4 3\n",
"31\n12\n31 28 31 30 31 30 31 31 30 31 30 31\n"
] | [
"2\n",
"3\n",
"7\n"
] | In the first sample the situation is like this:
- Day 1. Month 1. The clock shows 1. Vasya changes nothing. - Day 2. Month 1. The clock shows 2. Vasya changes nothing. - Day 1. Month 2. The clock shows 3. Vasya manually increases the day number by 1. After that the clock shows 4. Vasya increases the day number by ... | 500 | [
{
"input": "4\n2\n2 2",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "5\n3\n3 4 3",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "31\n12\n31 28 31 30 31 30 31 31 30 31 30 31",
"output": "7"
},
{
"input": "1\n1\n1",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "1\n2\n1 1",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "2... | 1,600,408,910 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 7 | 186 | 307,200 | d=int(input())
n=int(input())
nd=[int(x) for x in input().split()]
clock=1
i=0
c=0
while(i<n):
for day in range(1,nd[i]+1):
if(clock!=day):
clock+=1
c=c+1
if(clock>d):
clock=1
clock+=1
if(clock>d):
clock=1
i=... | Title: Vasya's Calendar
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Vasya lives in a strange world. The year has *n* months and the *i*-th month has *a**i* days. Vasya got a New Year present — the clock that shows not only the time, but also the date.
The clock's face can display any ... | ```python
d=int(input())
n=int(input())
nd=[int(x) for x in input().split()]
clock=1
i=0
c=0
while(i<n):
for day in range(1,nd[i]+1):
if(clock!=day):
clock+=1
c=c+1
if(clock>d):
clock=1
clock+=1
if(clock>d):
clock... | 0 | |
567 | C | Geometric Progression | PROGRAMMING | 1,700 | [
"binary search",
"data structures",
"dp"
] | null | null | Polycarp loves geometric progressions very much. Since he was only three years old, he loves only the progressions of length three. He also has a favorite integer *k* and a sequence *a*, consisting of *n* integers.
He wants to know how many subsequences of length three can be selected from *a*, so that they form a geo... | The first line of the input contains two integers, *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*k*<=≤<=2·105), showing how many numbers Polycarp's sequence has and his favorite number.
The second line contains *n* integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (<=-<=109<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=109) — elements of the sequence. | Output a single number — the number of ways to choose a subsequence of length three, such that it forms a geometric progression with a common ratio *k*. | [
"5 2\n1 1 2 2 4\n",
"3 1\n1 1 1\n",
"10 3\n1 2 6 2 3 6 9 18 3 9\n"
] | [
"4",
"1",
"6"
] | In the first sample test the answer is four, as any of the two 1s can be chosen as the first element, the second element can be any of the 2s, and the third element of the subsequence must be equal to 4. | 1,500 | [
{
"input": "5 2\n1 1 2 2 4",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "3 1\n1 1 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "10 3\n1 2 6 2 3 6 9 18 3 9",
"output": "6"
},
{
"input": "20 2\n1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "5 3\n5 15 15 15 45... | 1,598,591,498 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | RUNTIME_ERROR | TESTS | 0 | 186 | 2,048,000 | from collections import Counter
n,k=map(int, input().split())
a=list(map(int, input().split()))
left={}
ans=0
right=Counter(a)
for i in range(n):
if a[i]%k==0:
t1=a[i]//k
t2=a[i]*k
if right[a[i]]>0:
right[a[i]]-=1
if t1 in left and t2 in right:
... | Title: Geometric Progression
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Polycarp loves geometric progressions very much. Since he was only three years old, he loves only the progressions of length three. He also has a favorite integer *k* and a sequence *a*, consisting of *n* integers... | ```python
from collections import Counter
n,k=map(int, input().split())
a=list(map(int, input().split()))
left={}
ans=0
right=Counter(a)
for i in range(n):
if a[i]%k==0:
t1=a[i]//k
t2=a[i]*k
if right[a[i]]>0:
right[a[i]]-=1
if t1 in left and t2 in righ... | -1 | |
266 | B | Queue at the School | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"constructive algorithms",
"graph matchings",
"implementation",
"shortest paths"
] | null | null | During the break the schoolchildren, boys and girls, formed a queue of *n* people in the canteen. Initially the children stood in the order they entered the canteen. However, after a while the boys started feeling awkward for standing in front of the girls in the queue and they started letting the girls move forward ea... | The first line contains two integers *n* and *t* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*t*<=≤<=50), which represent the number of children in the queue and the time after which the queue will transform into the arrangement you need to find.
The next line contains string *s*, which represents the schoolchildren's initial arrangement. If the *... | Print string *a*, which describes the arrangement after *t* seconds. If the *i*-th position has a boy after the needed time, then the *i*-th character *a* must equal "B", otherwise it must equal "G". | [
"5 1\nBGGBG\n",
"5 2\nBGGBG\n",
"4 1\nGGGB\n"
] | [
"GBGGB\n",
"GGBGB\n",
"GGGB\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "5 1\nBGGBG",
"output": "GBGGB"
},
{
"input": "5 2\nBGGBG",
"output": "GGBGB"
},
{
"input": "4 1\nGGGB",
"output": "GGGB"
},
{
"input": "2 1\nBB",
"output": "BB"
},
{
"input": "2 1\nBG",
"output": "GB"
},
{
"input": "6 2\nBBGBBG",
"outpu... | 1,699,249,650 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 44 | 92 | 0 | n, t = map(int,input().split())
w = list(input())
q =0
for i in range(t):
for z in range(n-1):
if w[q]=='B' and w[q+1]=='G':
w[q],w[q+1]=w[q+1],w[q]
q+=2
else:
q+=1
if q>=len(w)-1:
break
q =0
print(''.join(w))
... | Title: Queue at the School
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
During the break the schoolchildren, boys and girls, formed a queue of *n* people in the canteen. Initially the children stood in the order they entered the canteen. However, after a while the boys started feeling a... | ```python
n, t = map(int,input().split())
w = list(input())
q =0
for i in range(t):
for z in range(n-1):
if w[q]=='B' and w[q+1]=='G':
w[q],w[q+1]=w[q+1],w[q]
q+=2
else:
q+=1
if q>=len(w)-1:
break
q =0
print(''.join(w))
... | 3 | |
777 | C | Alyona and Spreadsheet | PROGRAMMING | 1,600 | [
"binary search",
"data structures",
"dp",
"greedy",
"implementation",
"two pointers"
] | null | null | During the lesson small girl Alyona works with one famous spreadsheet computer program and learns how to edit tables.
Now she has a table filled with integers. The table consists of *n* rows and *m* columns. By *a**i*,<=*j* we will denote the integer located at the *i*-th row and the *j*-th column. We say that the tab... | The first line of the input contains two positive integers *n* and *m* (1<=≤<=*n*·*m*<=≤<=100<=000) — the number of rows and the number of columns in the table respectively. Note that your are given a constraint that bound the product of these two integers, i.e. the number of elements in the table.
Each of the followi... | Print "Yes" to the *i*-th line of the output if the table consisting of rows from *l**i* to *r**i* inclusive is sorted in non-decreasing order in at least one column. Otherwise, print "No". | [
"5 4\n1 2 3 5\n3 1 3 2\n4 5 2 3\n5 5 3 2\n4 4 3 4\n6\n1 1\n2 5\n4 5\n3 5\n1 3\n1 5\n"
] | [
"Yes\nNo\nYes\nYes\nYes\nNo\n"
] | In the sample, the whole table is not sorted in any column. However, rows 1–3 are sorted in column 1, while rows 4–5 are sorted in column 3. | 1,500 | [
{
"input": "5 4\n1 2 3 5\n3 1 3 2\n4 5 2 3\n5 5 3 2\n4 4 3 4\n6\n1 1\n2 5\n4 5\n3 5\n1 3\n1 5",
"output": "Yes\nNo\nYes\nYes\nYes\nNo"
},
{
"input": "1 1\n1\n1\n1 1",
"output": "Yes"
},
{
"input": "10 1\n523130301\n127101624\n15573616\n703140639\n628818570\n957494759\n161270109\n38686565... | 1,592,846,310 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | OK | TESTS | 114 | 498 | 23,244,800 | import sys
input = sys.stdin.readline
n,m = map(int,input().split())
a = []
for i in range(n):
a.append(list(map(int,input().split())))
count = [[1 for i in range(m)] for j in range(n)]
for i in range(1,n):
for j in range(m):
if a[i][j]>=a[i-1][j]:
count[i][j] = count[i-1][j]+1
maxx = []
for i in range(n):
maxx... | Title: Alyona and Spreadsheet
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
During the lesson small girl Alyona works with one famous spreadsheet computer program and learns how to edit tables.
Now she has a table filled with integers. The table consists of *n* rows and *m* columns. By ... | ```python
import sys
input = sys.stdin.readline
n,m = map(int,input().split())
a = []
for i in range(n):
a.append(list(map(int,input().split())))
count = [[1 for i in range(m)] for j in range(n)]
for i in range(1,n):
for j in range(m):
if a[i][j]>=a[i-1][j]:
count[i][j] = count[i-1][j]+1
maxx = []
for i in range... | 3 | |
876 | A | Trip For Meal | PROGRAMMING | 900 | [
"math"
] | null | null | Winnie-the-Pooh likes honey very much! That is why he decided to visit his friends. Winnie has got three best friends: Rabbit, Owl and Eeyore, each of them lives in his own house. There are winding paths between each pair of houses. The length of a path between Rabbit's and Owl's houses is *a* meters, between Rabbit's ... | First line contains an integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — number of visits.
Second line contains an integer *a* (1<=≤<=*a*<=≤<=100) — distance between Rabbit's and Owl's houses.
Third line contains an integer *b* (1<=≤<=*b*<=≤<=100) — distance between Rabbit's and Eeyore's houses.
Fourth line contains an integer *c* ... | Output one number — minimum distance in meters Winnie must go through to have a meal *n* times. | [
"3\n2\n3\n1\n",
"1\n2\n3\n5\n"
] | [
"3\n",
"0\n"
] | In the first test case the optimal path for Winnie is the following: first have a meal in Rabbit's house, then in Owl's house, then in Eeyore's house. Thus he will pass the distance 2 + 1 = 3.
In the second test case Winnie has a meal in Rabbit's house and that is for him. So he doesn't have to walk anywhere at all. | 500 | [
{
"input": "3\n2\n3\n1",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "1\n2\n3\n5",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "10\n1\n8\n3",
"output": "9"
},
{
"input": "7\n10\n5\n6",
"output": "30"
},
{
"input": "9\n9\n7\n5",
"output": "42"
},
{
"input": "9\n37\n85\n76",
"outpu... | 1,604,691,538 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 21 | 93 | 0 | n, a, b, c = [int(input()) for i in range(4)]
if a <= b and a <= c:
print((n-1)*a)
elif b <= a and b <= c:
print((n-1)*b)
else:
print(min(a,b) + (n-2)*c)
| Title: Trip For Meal
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Winnie-the-Pooh likes honey very much! That is why he decided to visit his friends. Winnie has got three best friends: Rabbit, Owl and Eeyore, each of them lives in his own house. There are winding paths between each pair... | ```python
n, a, b, c = [int(input()) for i in range(4)]
if a <= b and a <= c:
print((n-1)*a)
elif b <= a and b <= c:
print((n-1)*b)
else:
print(min(a,b) + (n-2)*c)
``` | 0 | |
523 | D | Statistics of Recompressing Videos | PROGRAMMING | 1,600 | [
"*special",
"data structures",
"implementation"
] | null | null | A social network for dogs called DH (DogHouse) has *k* special servers to recompress uploaded videos of cute cats. After each video is uploaded, it should be recompressed on one (any) of the servers, and only after that it can be saved in the social network.
We know that each server takes one second to recompress a on... | The first line of the input contains integers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*k*<=≤<=5·105) — the number of videos and servers, respectively.
Next *n* lines contain the descriptions of the videos as pairs of integers *s**i*,<=*m**i* (1<=≤<=*s**i*,<=*m**i*<=≤<=109), where *s**i* is the time in seconds when the *i*-th video a... | Print *n* numbers *e*1,<=*e*2,<=...,<=*e**n*, where *e**i* is the time in seconds after the servers start working, when the *i*-th video will be recompressed. | [
"3 2\n1 5\n2 5\n3 5\n",
"6 1\n1 1000000000\n2 1000000000\n3 1000000000\n4 1000000000\n5 1000000000\n6 3\n"
] | [
"6\n7\n11\n",
"1000000001\n2000000001\n3000000001\n4000000001\n5000000001\n5000000004\n"
] | none | 2,000 | [
{
"input": "3 2\n1 5\n2 5\n3 5",
"output": "6\n7\n11"
},
{
"input": "6 1\n1 1000000000\n2 1000000000\n3 1000000000\n4 1000000000\n5 1000000000\n6 3",
"output": "1000000001\n2000000001\n3000000001\n4000000001\n5000000001\n5000000004"
},
{
"input": "1 1\n1 1",
"output": "2"
},
{
... | 1,517,230,710 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED | TESTS | 12 | 3,000 | 11,366,400 | import heapq
f = lambda: map(int, input().split())
n, k = f()
p = [0] * k
for i in range(n):
s, m = f()
t = max(p[0], s) + m
heapq.heapreplace(p, t)
print(t) | Title: Statistics of Recompressing Videos
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
A social network for dogs called DH (DogHouse) has *k* special servers to recompress uploaded videos of cute cats. After each video is uploaded, it should be recompressed on one (any) of the servers, ... | ```python
import heapq
f = lambda: map(int, input().split())
n, k = f()
p = [0] * k
for i in range(n):
s, m = f()
t = max(p[0], s) + m
heapq.heapreplace(p, t)
print(t)
``` | 0 | |
805 | B | 3-palindrome | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"constructive algorithms"
] | null | null | In the beginning of the new year Keivan decided to reverse his name. He doesn't like palindromes, so he changed Naviek to Navick.
He is too selfish, so for a given *n* he wants to obtain a string of *n* characters, each of which is either 'a', 'b' or 'c', with no palindromes of length 3 appearing in the string as a su... | The first line contains single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=2·105) — the length of the string. | Print the string that satisfies all the constraints.
If there are multiple answers, print any of them. | [
"2\n",
"3\n"
] | [
"aa\n",
"bba\n"
] | A palindrome is a sequence of characters which reads the same backward and forward. | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "2",
"output": "aa"
},
{
"input": "3",
"output": "aab"
},
{
"input": "38",
"output": "aabbaabbaabbaabbaabbaabbaabbaabbaabbaa"
},
{
"input": "47",
"output": "aabbaabbaabbaabbaabbaabbaabbaabbaabbaabbaabbaab"
},
{
"input": "59",
"output": "aabbaabbaabb... | 1,674,404,112 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 1 | 46 | 0 | n=int(input())
if n<=2:
print('a'*n)
else:
l=('a'*(n-3) + 'b'*(n-2) + 'c'*(n-1))
print(l[:n]) | Title: 3-palindrome
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
In the beginning of the new year Keivan decided to reverse his name. He doesn't like palindromes, so he changed Naviek to Navick.
He is too selfish, so for a given *n* he wants to obtain a string of *n* characters, each o... | ```python
n=int(input())
if n<=2:
print('a'*n)
else:
l=('a'*(n-3) + 'b'*(n-2) + 'c'*(n-1))
print(l[:n])
``` | 0 | |
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": "... | 1,670,522,136 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 2 | 92 | 0 | n,m=map(int,input().split())
list=list(map(int,input().split()))
list.sort()
print(-sum(list[0:m]))
| 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())
list=list(map(int,input().split()))
list.sort()
print(-sum(list[0:m]))
``` | 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",... | 1,694,937,546 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | RUNTIME_ERROR | TESTS | 0 | 122 | 2,764,800 | def magnet(n):
prev=""
groups=0
while s:=input():
if (prev=="" and s !="") or prev!=s :
groups+=1
prev=s
return groups
n=int(input())
print(magnet(n)) | 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
def magnet(n):
prev=""
groups=0
while s:=input():
if (prev=="" and s !="") or prev!=s :
groups+=1
prev=s
return groups
n=int(input())
print(magnet(n))
``` | -1 | |
519 | B | A and B and Compilation Errors | PROGRAMMING | 1,100 | [
"data structures",
"implementation",
"sortings"
] | null | null | A and B are preparing themselves for programming contests.
B loves to debug his code. But before he runs the solution and starts debugging, he has to first compile the code.
Initially, the compiler displayed *n* compilation errors, each of them is represented as a positive integer. After some effort, B managed to fix... | The first line of the input contains integer *n* (3<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) — the initial number of compilation errors.
The second line contains *n* space-separated integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=109) — the errors the compiler displayed for the first time.
The third line contains *n*<=-<=1 space-sepa... | Print two numbers on a single line: the numbers of the compilation errors that disappeared after B made the first and the second correction, respectively. | [
"5\n1 5 8 123 7\n123 7 5 1\n5 1 7\n",
"6\n1 4 3 3 5 7\n3 7 5 4 3\n4 3 7 5\n"
] | [
"8\n123\n",
"1\n3\n"
] | In the first test sample B first corrects the error number 8, then the error number 123.
In the second test sample B first corrects the error number 1, then the error number 3. Note that if there are multiple errors with the same number, B can correct only one of them in one step. | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "5\n1 5 8 123 7\n123 7 5 1\n5 1 7",
"output": "8\n123"
},
{
"input": "6\n1 4 3 3 5 7\n3 7 5 4 3\n4 3 7 5",
"output": "1\n3"
},
{
"input": "3\n1 2 3\n3 2\n2",
"output": "1\n3"
},
{
"input": "10\n460626451 802090732 277246428 661369649 388684428 784303821 376287098 6... | 1,689,782,692 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED | TESTS | 7 | 2,000 | 21,913,600 | n=int(input())
a=list(map(int,input().strip().split()))
b=list(map(int,input().strip().split()))
c=list(map(int,input().strip().split()))
result1 = a.copy()
for num in b:
if num in a:
result1.remove(num)
print(result1[0])
result2 = b.copy()
for num in c:
if num in b:
re... | Title: A and B and Compilation Errors
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
A and B are preparing themselves for programming contests.
B loves to debug his code. But before he runs the solution and starts debugging, he has to first compile the code.
Initially, the compiler disp... | ```python
n=int(input())
a=list(map(int,input().strip().split()))
b=list(map(int,input().strip().split()))
c=list(map(int,input().strip().split()))
result1 = a.copy()
for num in b:
if num in a:
result1.remove(num)
print(result1[0])
result2 = b.copy()
for num in c:
if num in b:
... | 0 | |
0 | none | none | none | 0 | [
"none"
] | null | null | Iahub helps his grandfather at the farm. Today he must milk the cows. There are *n* cows sitting in a row, numbered from 1 to *n* from left to right. Each cow is either facing to the left or facing to the right. When Iahub milks a cow, all the cows that see the current cow get scared and lose one unit of the quantity o... | The first line contains an integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=200000). The second line contains *n* integers *a*1, *a*2, ..., *a**n*, where *a**i* is 0 if the cow number *i* is facing left, and 1 if it is facing right. | Print a single integer, the minimum amount of lost milk.
Please, do not write the %lld specifier to read or write 64-bit integers in С++. It is preferred to use the cin, cout streams or the %I64d specifier. | [
"4\n0 0 1 0\n",
"5\n1 0 1 0 1\n"
] | [
"1",
"3"
] | In the first sample Iahub milks the cows in the following order: cow 3, cow 4, cow 2, cow 1. When he milks cow 3, cow 4 loses 1 unit of milk. After that, no more milk is lost. | 0 | [
{
"input": "4\n0 0 1 0",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "5\n1 0 1 0 1",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "50\n1 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 0",
"output": "416"
},
{
"input": "100\n1 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 ... | 1,390,233,293 | 1,493 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | PRETESTS | 2 | 46 | 307,200 | def turn(asfdoihwo, asodihfow):
if asfdoihwo!=asodihfow:
return True
else:
return False
sa=int(input())
cows=input().split(' ')
count=0
for sa2 in range(len(cows)):
if turn(cows[sa2-1], cows[sa2]):
count+=1
print(count-1)
| Title: none
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Iahub helps his grandfather at the farm. Today he must milk the cows. There are *n* cows sitting in a row, numbered from 1 to *n* from left to right. Each cow is either facing to the left or facing to the right. When Iahub milks a... | ```python
def turn(asfdoihwo, asodihfow):
if asfdoihwo!=asodihfow:
return True
else:
return False
sa=int(input())
cows=input().split(' ')
count=0
for sa2 in range(len(cows)):
if turn(cows[sa2-1], cows[sa2]):
count+=1
print(count-1)
``` | 0 | |
733 | A | Grasshopper And the String | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | One day, the Grasshopper was jumping on the lawn and found a piece of paper with a string. Grasshopper became interested what is the minimum jump ability he should have in order to be able to reach the far end of the string, jumping only on vowels of the English alphabet. Jump ability is the maximum possible length of ... | The first line contains non-empty string consisting of capital English letters. It is guaranteed that the length of the string does not exceed 100. | Print single integer *a* — the minimum jump ability of the Grasshopper (in the number of symbols) that is needed to overcome the given string, jumping only on vowels. | [
"ABABBBACFEYUKOTT\n",
"AAA\n"
] | [
"4",
"1"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "ABABBBACFEYUKOTT",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "AAA",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "A",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "B",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "AEYUIOAEIYAEOUIYOEIUYEAOIUEOEAYOEIUYAEOUIYEOIKLMJNHGTRWSDZXCVBNMHGFDSXVWRTPPPLKMNBXIUOIUOIUOIUOOIU",
... | 1,654,131,450 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 30 | 0 | val = "AEIOUY"
sen = input() + "A"
jump = 1
max_jump = 0
for i in range(len(sen)):
if sen[i] not in val:
jump += 1
else:
if jump > max_jump:
max_jump = jump
jump = 1
print(jump) | Title: Grasshopper And the String
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
One day, the Grasshopper was jumping on the lawn and found a piece of paper with a string. Grasshopper became interested what is the minimum jump ability he should have in order to be able to reach the far en... | ```python
val = "AEIOUY"
sen = input() + "A"
jump = 1
max_jump = 0
for i in range(len(sen)):
if sen[i] not in val:
jump += 1
else:
if jump > max_jump:
max_jump = jump
jump = 1
print(jump)
``` | 0 | |
747 | A | Display Size | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"brute force",
"math"
] | null | null | A big company decided to launch a new series of rectangular displays, and decided that the display must have exactly *n* pixels.
Your task is to determine the size of the rectangular display — the number of lines (rows) of pixels *a* and the number of columns of pixels *b*, so that:
- there are exactly *n* pixels o... | The first line contains the positive integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=106) — the number of pixels display should have. | Print two integers — the number of rows and columns on the display. | [
"8\n",
"64\n",
"5\n",
"999999\n"
] | [
"2 4\n",
"8 8\n",
"1 5\n",
"999 1001\n"
] | In the first example the minimum possible difference equals 2, so on the display should be 2 rows of 4 pixels.
In the second example the minimum possible difference equals 0, so on the display should be 8 rows of 8 pixels.
In the third example the minimum possible difference equals 4, so on the display should be 1 ro... | 500 | [
{
"input": "8",
"output": "2 4"
},
{
"input": "64",
"output": "8 8"
},
{
"input": "5",
"output": "1 5"
},
{
"input": "999999",
"output": "999 1001"
},
{
"input": "716539",
"output": "97 7387"
},
{
"input": "1",
"output": "1 1"
},
{
"input":... | 1,680,660,794 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 43 | 46 | 0 | import math
n = int(input())
sq = int(math.sqrt(n))
while n % sq != 0:
sq -= 1
print(sq, n // sq) | Title: Display Size
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
A big company decided to launch a new series of rectangular displays, and decided that the display must have exactly *n* pixels.
Your task is to determine the size of the rectangular display — the number of lines (rows) ... | ```python
import math
n = int(input())
sq = int(math.sqrt(n))
while n % sq != 0:
sq -= 1
print(sq, n // sq)
``` | 3 | |
682 | A | Alyona and Numbers | PROGRAMMING | 1,100 | [
"constructive algorithms",
"math",
"number theory"
] | null | null | After finishing eating her bun, Alyona came up with two integers *n* and *m*. She decided to write down two columns of integers — the first column containing integers from 1 to *n* and the second containing integers from 1 to *m*. Now the girl wants to count how many pairs of integers she can choose, one from the first... | The only line of the input contains two integers *n* and *m* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=1<=000<=000). | Print the only integer — the number of pairs of integers (*x*,<=*y*) such that 1<=≤<=*x*<=≤<=*n*, 1<=≤<=*y*<=≤<=*m* and (*x*<=+<=*y*) is divisible by 5. | [
"6 12\n",
"11 14\n",
"1 5\n",
"3 8\n",
"5 7\n",
"21 21\n"
] | [
"14\n",
"31\n",
"1\n",
"5\n",
"7\n",
"88\n"
] | Following pairs are suitable in the first sample case:
- for *x* = 1 fits *y* equal to 4 or 9; - for *x* = 2 fits *y* equal to 3 or 8; - for *x* = 3 fits *y* equal to 2, 7 or 12; - for *x* = 4 fits *y* equal to 1, 6 or 11; - for *x* = 5 fits *y* equal to 5 or 10; - for *x* = 6 fits *y* equal to 4 or 9.
Only th... | 500 | [
{
"input": "6 12",
"output": "14"
},
{
"input": "11 14",
"output": "31"
},
{
"input": "1 5",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "3 8",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "5 7",
"output": "7"
},
{
"input": "21 21",
"output": "88"
},
{
"input": "10 15",
... | 1,689,285,830 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 128 | 249 | 0 | n, m = map(int, input().split())
a, b = [0] * 5, [0] * 5
for i in range(1, n+1):
a[i % 5] += 1
for j in range(1, m+1):
b[j % 5] += 1
print(a[0]*b[0] + a[4]*b[1] + a[3]*b[2] + a[2]*b[3] + a[1]*b[4]) | Title: Alyona and Numbers
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
After finishing eating her bun, Alyona came up with two integers *n* and *m*. She decided to write down two columns of integers — the first column containing integers from 1 to *n* and the second containing integers ... | ```python
n, m = map(int, input().split())
a, b = [0] * 5, [0] * 5
for i in range(1, n+1):
a[i % 5] += 1
for j in range(1, m+1):
b[j % 5] += 1
print(a[0]*b[0] + a[4]*b[1] + a[3]*b[2] + a[2]*b[3] + a[1]*b[4])
``` | 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"
},
{
... | 1,698,050,281 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 34 | 92 | 0 |
num = input()
x = 0 # number of lucky numbers
for char in num:
if char == "4" or char == "7":
x += 1
if x == 4 or x == 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
num = input()
x = 0 # number of lucky numbers
for char in num:
if char == "4" or char == "7":
x += 1
if x == 4 or x == 7:
print("YES")
else:
print("NO")
``` | 3.977 |
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"
}... | 1,614,166,978 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 43 | 124 | 0 | a = int(input())
b = int(input())
c = a + b
a = str(a)
b = str(b)
c = str(c)
a = int(a.replace('0', ''))
b = int(b.replace('0', ''))
c = int(c.replace('0', ''))
print('YES' if c == a+b else '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 = int(input())
b = int(input())
c = a + b
a = str(a)
b = str(b)
c = str(c)
a = int(a.replace('0', ''))
b = int(b.replace('0', ''))
c = int(c.replace('0', ''))
print('YES' if c == a+b else 'NO')
``` | 3.969 |
876 | A | Trip For Meal | PROGRAMMING | 900 | [
"math"
] | null | null | Winnie-the-Pooh likes honey very much! That is why he decided to visit his friends. Winnie has got three best friends: Rabbit, Owl and Eeyore, each of them lives in his own house. There are winding paths between each pair of houses. The length of a path between Rabbit's and Owl's houses is *a* meters, between Rabbit's ... | First line contains an integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — number of visits.
Second line contains an integer *a* (1<=≤<=*a*<=≤<=100) — distance between Rabbit's and Owl's houses.
Third line contains an integer *b* (1<=≤<=*b*<=≤<=100) — distance between Rabbit's and Eeyore's houses.
Fourth line contains an integer *c* ... | Output one number — minimum distance in meters Winnie must go through to have a meal *n* times. | [
"3\n2\n3\n1\n",
"1\n2\n3\n5\n"
] | [
"3\n",
"0\n"
] | In the first test case the optimal path for Winnie is the following: first have a meal in Rabbit's house, then in Owl's house, then in Eeyore's house. Thus he will pass the distance 2 + 1 = 3.
In the second test case Winnie has a meal in Rabbit's house and that is for him. So he doesn't have to walk anywhere at all. | 500 | [
{
"input": "3\n2\n3\n1",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "1\n2\n3\n5",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "10\n1\n8\n3",
"output": "9"
},
{
"input": "7\n10\n5\n6",
"output": "30"
},
{
"input": "9\n9\n7\n5",
"output": "42"
},
{
"input": "9\n37\n85\n76",
"outpu... | 1,508,152,386 | 486 | Python 3 | COMPILATION_ERROR | PRETESTS | 0 | 0 | 0 | #include<bits/stdc++.h>
using namespace std;
typedef long long ll;
int main()
{
int n;
cin>>n;
int a,b,c;
cin>>a>>b>>c;
int ans=0;
char cur='R';
for(int i=1; i<n; i++)
{
if(cur=='R')
{
if(b<a)
{
ans+=b;
... | Title: Trip For Meal
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Winnie-the-Pooh likes honey very much! That is why he decided to visit his friends. Winnie has got three best friends: Rabbit, Owl and Eeyore, each of them lives in his own house. There are winding paths between each pair... | ```python
#include<bits/stdc++.h>
using namespace std;
typedef long long ll;
int main()
{
int n;
cin>>n;
int a,b,c;
cin>>a>>b>>c;
int ans=0;
char cur='R';
for(int i=1; i<n; i++)
{
if(cur=='R')
{
if(b<a)
{
ans+... | -1 | |
0 | none | none | none | 0 | [
"none"
] | null | null | Recently, Dima met with Sasha in a philatelic store, and since then they are collecting coins together. Their favorite occupation is to sort collections of coins. Sasha likes having things in order, that is why he wants his coins to be arranged in a row in such a way that firstly come coins out of circulation, and then... | The first line contains single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=300<=000) — number of coins that Sasha puts behind Dima.
Second line contains *n* distinct integers *p*1,<=*p*2,<=...,<=*p**n* (1<=≤<=*p**i*<=≤<=*n*) — positions that Sasha puts coins in circulation to. At first Sasha replaces coin located at position *p*1, the... | Print *n*<=+<=1 numbers *a*0,<=*a*1,<=...,<=*a**n*, where *a*0 is a hardness of ordering at the beginning, *a*1 is a hardness of ordering after the first replacement and so on. | [
"4\n1 3 4 2\n",
"8\n6 8 3 4 7 2 1 5\n"
] | [
"1 2 3 2 1\n",
"1 2 2 3 4 3 4 5 1\n"
] | Let's denote as O coin out of circulation, and as X — coin is circulation.
At the first sample, initially in row there are coins that are not in circulation, so Dima will look through them from left to right and won't make any exchanges.
After replacement of the first coin with a coin in circulation, Dima will exchan... | 0 | [
{
"input": "4\n1 3 4 2",
"output": "1 2 3 2 1"
},
{
"input": "8\n6 8 3 4 7 2 1 5",
"output": "1 2 2 3 4 3 4 5 1"
},
{
"input": "1\n1",
"output": "1 1"
},
{
"input": "11\n10 8 9 4 6 3 5 1 11 7 2",
"output": "1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 6 2 1"
},
{
"input": "11\n10 8 9 4 3 5 ... | 1,508,689,684 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED | TESTS | 7 | 1,000 | 5,529,600 | def my_sort(global_my_list):
my_list = global_my_list.copy()
steps = 0
flag = True
while flag:
flag = False
for i in range(len(my_list)-1):
if my_list[i] == 1 and my_list[i + 1] == 0:
my_list[i] = 0
my_list[i + 1] = 1
... | Title: none
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Recently, Dima met with Sasha in a philatelic store, and since then they are collecting coins together. Their favorite occupation is to sort collections of coins. Sasha likes having things in order, that is why he wants his coins ... | ```python
def my_sort(global_my_list):
my_list = global_my_list.copy()
steps = 0
flag = True
while flag:
flag = False
for i in range(len(my_list)-1):
if my_list[i] == 1 and my_list[i + 1] == 0:
my_list[i] = 0
my_list[i + 1] = 1
... | 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"
... | 1,677,312,304 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | OK | TESTS | 37 | 124 | 0 | n = int(input())
p = list(map(int, input().split()))
b = w = p[0]
a = 0
for i in range(1, n):
if p[i] > b:
b = p[i]
a += 1
if p[i] < w:
w = p[i]
a += 1
print(a)
| 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())
p = list(map(int, input().split()))
b = w = p[0]
a = 0
for i in range(1, n):
if p[i] > b:
b = p[i]
a += 1
if p[i] < w:
w = p[i]
a += 1
print(a)
``` | 3 | |
475 | B | Strongly Connected City | PROGRAMMING | 1,400 | [
"brute force",
"dfs and similar",
"graphs",
"implementation"
] | null | null | Imagine a city with *n* horizontal streets crossing *m* vertical streets, forming an (*n*<=-<=1)<=×<=(*m*<=-<=1) grid. In order to increase the traffic flow, mayor of the city has decided to make each street one way. This means in each horizontal street, the traffic moves only from west to east or only from east to wes... | The first line of input contains two integers *n* and *m*, (2<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=20), denoting the number of horizontal streets and the number of vertical streets.
The second line contains a string of length *n*, made of characters '<' and '>', denoting direction of each horizontal street. If the *i*-th character... | If the given pattern meets the mayor's criteria, print a single line containing "YES", otherwise print a single line containing "NO". | [
"3 3\n><>\nv^v\n",
"4 6\n<><>\nv^v^v^\n"
] | [
"NO\n",
"YES\n"
] | The figure above shows street directions in the second sample test case. | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "3 3\n><>\nv^v",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "4 6\n<><>\nv^v^v^",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "2 2\n<>\nv^",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "2 2\n>>\n^v",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "3 3\n>><\n^^v",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "3 4\n>>... | 1,551,401,197 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 61 | 204,800 | # n,m = [int(i) for i in input().split()]
lr = input()
ud = input()
class inter:
def __init__(self):
self.outs = []
city = [inter() for i in range(len(lr)*len(ud))]
inv_city = [inter() for i in range(len(lr)*len(ud))]
for i in range(len(lr)):
for j in range(len(ud)):
if lr[i] =... | Title: Strongly Connected City
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Imagine a city with *n* horizontal streets crossing *m* vertical streets, forming an (*n*<=-<=1)<=×<=(*m*<=-<=1) grid. In order to increase the traffic flow, mayor of the city has decided to make each street one... | ```python
# n,m = [int(i) for i in input().split()]
lr = input()
ud = input()
class inter:
def __init__(self):
self.outs = []
city = [inter() for i in range(len(lr)*len(ud))]
inv_city = [inter() for i in range(len(lr)*len(ud))]
for i in range(len(lr)):
for j in range(len(ud)):
... | 0 | |
91 | A | Newspaper Headline | PROGRAMMING | 1,500 | [
"greedy",
"strings"
] | A. Newspaper Headline | 2 | 256 | A newspaper is published in Walrusland. Its heading is *s*1, it consists of lowercase Latin letters. Fangy the little walrus wants to buy several such newspapers, cut out their headings, glue them one to another in order to get one big string. After that walrus erase several letters from this string in order to get a n... | The input data contain two lines. The first line contain the heading *s*1, the second line contains the word *s*2. The lines only consist of lowercase Latin letters (1<=≤<=|*s*1|<=≤<=104,<=1<=≤<=|*s*2|<=≤<=106). | If it is impossible to get the word *s*2 in the above-described manner, print "-1" (without the quotes). Otherwise, print the least number of newspaper headings *s*1, which Fangy will need to receive the word *s*2. | [
"abc\nxyz\n",
"abcd\ndabc\n"
] | [
"-1\n",
"2\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "abc\nxyz",
"output": "-1"
},
{
"input": "abcd\ndabc",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "ab\nbabaaab",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "ab\nbaaabba",
"output": "6"
},
{
"input": "fbaaigiihhfaahgdbddgeggjdeigfadhfddja\nhbghjgijijcdafcbgiedichdeebaddfddb",
"ou... | 1,564,084,532 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED | TESTS | 2 | 2,000 | 9,113,600 | heading = input()
word = input()
# removes duplicates and sorts
h = ''.join(sorted(list(set(list(heading)))))
w = ''.join(sorted(list(set(list(word)))))
if h != w:
print(-1)
else:
terminado = False
stri = ""
c = 0
while not terminado:
stri += h
c += 1
if word in stri:
... | Title: Newspaper Headline
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
A newspaper is published in Walrusland. Its heading is *s*1, it consists of lowercase Latin letters. Fangy the little walrus wants to buy several such newspapers, cut out their headings, glue them one to another in order... | ```python
heading = input()
word = input()
# removes duplicates and sorts
h = ''.join(sorted(list(set(list(heading)))))
w = ''.join(sorted(list(set(list(word)))))
if h != w:
print(-1)
else:
terminado = False
stri = ""
c = 0
while not terminado:
stri += h
c += 1
if word in s... | 0 |
378 | B | Semifinals | PROGRAMMING | 1,300 | [
"implementation",
"sortings"
] | null | null | Two semifinals have just been in the running tournament. Each semifinal had *n* participants. There are *n* participants advancing to the finals, they are chosen as follows: from each semifinal, we choose *k* people (0<=≤<=2*k*<=≤<=*n*) who showed the best result in their semifinals and all other places in the finals g... | The first line contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) — the number of participants in each semifinal.
Each of the next *n* lines contains two integers *a**i* and *b**i* (1<=≤<=*a**i*,<=*b**i*<=≤<=109) — the results of the *i*-th participant (the number of milliseconds he needs to cover the semifinals distan... | Print two strings consisting of *n* characters, each equals either "0" or "1". The first line should correspond to the participants of the first semifinal, the second line should correspond to the participants of the second semifinal. The *i*-th character in the *j*-th line should equal "1" if the *i*-th participant of... | [
"4\n9840 9920\n9860 9980\n9930 10020\n10040 10090\n",
"4\n9900 9850\n9940 9930\n10000 10020\n10060 10110\n"
] | [
"1110\n1100\n",
"1100\n1100\n"
] | Consider the first sample. Each semifinal has 4 participants. The results of the first semifinal are 9840, 9860, 9930, 10040. The results of the second semifinal are 9920, 9980, 10020, 10090.
- If *k* = 0, the finalists are determined by the time only, so players 9840, 9860, 9920 and 9930 advance to the finals. - If... | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "4\n9840 9920\n9860 9980\n9930 10020\n10040 10090",
"output": "1110\n1100"
},
{
"input": "4\n9900 9850\n9940 9930\n10000 10020\n10060 10110",
"output": "1100\n1100"
},
{
"input": "1\n1 2",
"output": "1\n0"
},
{
"input": "1\n2 1",
"output": "0\n1"
},
{
"... | 1,562,398,399 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | OK | TESTS | 52 | 389 | 11,059,200 | '''input
4
9900 9850
9940 9930
10000 10020
10060 10110
'''
# practicing a skill right after sleep improves it a lot quickly
from sys import stdin, setrecursionlimit
# main starts
n = int(stdin.readline().strip())
first = []
second = []
for _ in range(n):
f, s = list(map(int, stdin.readline().split()))
first.append(... | Title: Semifinals
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Two semifinals have just been in the running tournament. Each semifinal had *n* participants. There are *n* participants advancing to the finals, they are chosen as follows: from each semifinal, we choose *k* people (0<=≤<=2... | ```python
'''input
4
9900 9850
9940 9930
10000 10020
10060 10110
'''
# practicing a skill right after sleep improves it a lot quickly
from sys import stdin, setrecursionlimit
# main starts
n = int(stdin.readline().strip())
first = []
second = []
for _ in range(n):
f, s = list(map(int, stdin.readline().split()))
fir... | 3 | |
35 | D | Animals | PROGRAMMING | 1,700 | [
"dp",
"greedy"
] | D. Animals | 2 | 64 | Once upon a time DravDe, an outstanding person famous for his professional achievements (as you must remember, he works in a warehouse storing Ogudar-Olok, a magical but non-alcoholic drink) came home after a hard day. That day he had to drink 9875 boxes of the drink and, having come home, he went to bed at once.
Drav... | The first input line contains integers *n* and *X* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100,<=1<=≤<=*X*<=≤<=104) — amount of days in DravDe’s dream and the total amount of food (in tons) that was there initially. The second line contains integers *c**i* (1<=≤<=*c**i*<=≤<=300). Numbers in the second line are divided by a space. | Output the only number — the maximum possible amount of animals on the farm by the end of the *n*-th day given that the food was enough for everybody. | [
"3 4\n1 1 1\n",
"3 6\n1 1 1\n"
] | [
"2\n",
"3\n"
] | Note to the first example: DravDe leaves the second and the third animal on the farm. The second animal will eat one ton of food on the second day and one ton on the third day. The third animal will eat one ton of food on the third day. | 2,000 | [
{
"input": "3 4\n1 1 1",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "3 6\n1 1 1",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "1 12\n1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "3 100\n1 1 1",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "5 75\n1 1 1 1 1",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "7 115\n1 1 1 1 1 1 1",
... | 1,522,837,429 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 40 | 186 | 7,065,600 | fil,w = open("input.txt","r"), open("output.txt","w")
days,food = list(map(int, fil.readline().strip().split(" ")))
animals = list(map(int, fil.readline().strip().split(" ")))
for i in range(days):
animals[i] *=(days-i)
animals.sort()
print(animals)
if animals[0] > food: print(0)
else:
i=0
while i < days ... | Title: Animals
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 64 megabytes
Problem Description:
Once upon a time DravDe, an outstanding person famous for his professional achievements (as you must remember, he works in a warehouse storing Ogudar-Olok, a magical but non-alcoholic drink) came home after a hard day. That day he h... | ```python
fil,w = open("input.txt","r"), open("output.txt","w")
days,food = list(map(int, fil.readline().strip().split(" ")))
animals = list(map(int, fil.readline().strip().split(" ")))
for i in range(days):
animals[i] *=(days-i)
animals.sort()
print(animals)
if animals[0] > food: print(0)
else:
i=0
while... | 3.900857 |
978 | A | Remove Duplicates | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Petya has an array $a$ consisting of $n$ integers. He wants to remove duplicate (equal) elements.
Petya wants to leave only the rightmost entry (occurrence) for each element of the array. The relative order of the remaining unique elements should not be changed. | The first line contains a single integer $n$ ($1 \le n \le 50$) — the number of elements in Petya's array.
The following line contains a sequence $a_1, a_2, \dots, a_n$ ($1 \le a_i \le 1\,000$) — the Petya's array. | In the first line print integer $x$ — the number of elements which will be left in Petya's array after he removed the duplicates.
In the second line print $x$ integers separated with a space — Petya's array after he removed the duplicates. For each unique element only the rightmost entry should be left. | [
"6\n1 5 5 1 6 1\n",
"5\n2 4 2 4 4\n",
"5\n6 6 6 6 6\n"
] | [
"3\n5 6 1 \n",
"2\n2 4 \n",
"1\n6 \n"
] | In the first example you should remove two integers $1$, which are in the positions $1$ and $4$. Also you should remove the integer $5$, which is in the position $2$.
In the second example you should remove integer $2$, which is in the position $1$, and two integers $4$, which are in the positions $2$ and $4$.
In the... | 0 | [
{
"input": "6\n1 5 5 1 6 1",
"output": "3\n5 6 1 "
},
{
"input": "5\n2 4 2 4 4",
"output": "2\n2 4 "
},
{
"input": "5\n6 6 6 6 6",
"output": "1\n6 "
},
{
"input": "7\n1 2 3 4 2 2 3",
"output": "4\n1 4 2 3 "
},
{
"input": "9\n100 100 100 99 99 99 100 100 100",
... | 1,677,245,145 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 30 | 0 | n = int(input())
a = input().split()
i = 0
while i < len(a):
c = 1
while (i + c) < len(a):
if int(a[i]) == int(a[i+c]):
del(a[i])
c = 1
else:
c += 1
i += 1
print(len(a))
print(a) | Title: Remove Duplicates
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Petya has an array $a$ consisting of $n$ integers. He wants to remove duplicate (equal) elements.
Petya wants to leave only the rightmost entry (occurrence) for each element of the array. The relative order of the re... | ```python
n = int(input())
a = input().split()
i = 0
while i < len(a):
c = 1
while (i + c) < len(a):
if int(a[i]) == int(a[i+c]):
del(a[i])
c = 1
else:
c += 1
i += 1
print(len(a))
print(a)
``` | 0 | |
606 | A | Magic Spheres | PROGRAMMING | 1,200 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Carl is a beginner magician. He has *a* blue, *b* violet and *c* orange magic spheres. In one move he can transform two spheres of the same color into one sphere of any other color. To make a spell that has never been seen before, he needs at least *x* blue, *y* violet and *z* orange spheres. Can he get them (possible,... | The first line of the input contains three integers *a*, *b* and *c* (0<=≤<=*a*,<=*b*,<=*c*<=≤<=1<=000<=000) — the number of blue, violet and orange spheres that are in the magician's disposal.
The second line of the input contains three integers, *x*, *y* and *z* (0<=≤<=*x*,<=*y*,<=*z*<=≤<=1<=000<=000) — the number o... | If the wizard is able to obtain the required numbers of spheres, print "Yes". Otherwise, print "No". | [
"4 4 0\n2 1 2\n",
"5 6 1\n2 7 2\n",
"3 3 3\n2 2 2\n"
] | [
"Yes\n",
"No\n",
"Yes\n"
] | In the first sample the wizard has 4 blue and 4 violet spheres. In his first action he can turn two blue spheres into one violet one. After that he will have 2 blue and 5 violet spheres. Then he turns 4 violet spheres into 2 orange spheres and he ends up with 2 blue, 1 violet and 2 orange spheres, which is exactly what... | 500 | [
{
"input": "4 4 0\n2 1 2",
"output": "Yes"
},
{
"input": "5 6 1\n2 7 2",
"output": "No"
},
{
"input": "3 3 3\n2 2 2",
"output": "Yes"
},
{
"input": "0 0 0\n0 0 0",
"output": "Yes"
},
{
"input": "0 0 0\n0 0 1",
"output": "No"
},
{
"input": "0 1 0\n0 0 0... | 1,503,649,295 | 3,095 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 7 | 61 | 0 | import sys
arr = list(map(int,input().split()))
arr2 = list(map(int,input().split()))
give = take = 0
for i in range(3):
if arr[i] > arr2[i]:
give += arr[i] - arr2[i]
else:
take += arr2[i] - arr[i]
if give >= take*2:
print('YES')
else:
print('NO') | Title: Magic Spheres
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Carl is a beginner magician. He has *a* blue, *b* violet and *c* orange magic spheres. In one move he can transform two spheres of the same color into one sphere of any other color. To make a spell that has never been see... | ```python
import sys
arr = list(map(int,input().split()))
arr2 = list(map(int,input().split()))
give = take = 0
for i in range(3):
if arr[i] > arr2[i]:
give += arr[i] - arr2[i]
else:
take += arr2[i] - arr[i]
if give >= take*2:
print('YES')
else:
print('N... | 0 | |
979 | A | Pizza, Pizza, Pizza!!! | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"math"
] | null | null | Katie, Kuro and Shiro are best friends. They have known each other since kindergarten. That's why they often share everything with each other and work together on some very hard problems.
Today is Shiro's birthday. She really loves pizza so she wants to invite her friends to the pizza restaurant near her house to cele... | A single line contains one non-negative integer $n$ ($0 \le n \leq 10^{18}$) — the number of Shiro's friends. The circular pizza has to be sliced into $n + 1$ pieces. | A single integer — the number of straight cuts Shiro needs. | [
"3\n",
"4\n"
] | [
"2",
"5"
] | To cut the round pizza into quarters one has to make two cuts through the center with angle $90^{\circ}$ between them.
To cut the round pizza into five equal parts one has to make five cuts. | 500 | [
{
"input": "3",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "4",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "10",
"output": "11"
},
{
"input": "10000000000",
"output": "10000000001"
},
{
"input": "1234567891",
"output": "617283946"
},
{
"input": "7509213957",
"output": "37546069... | 1,591,025,169 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 28 | 140 | 0 | n=(int)(input())
n=n+1
if(n %2==0):
print((n)//2)
else:
print(n) | Title: Pizza, Pizza, Pizza!!!
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Katie, Kuro and Shiro are best friends. They have known each other since kindergarten. That's why they often share everything with each other and work together on some very hard problems.
Today is Shiro's birthd... | ```python
n=(int)(input())
n=n+1
if(n %2==0):
print((n)//2)
else:
print(n)
``` | 0 | |
225 | A | Dice Tower | PROGRAMMING | 1,100 | [
"constructive algorithms",
"greedy"
] | null | null | A dice is a cube, its faces contain distinct integers from 1 to 6 as black points. The sum of numbers at the opposite dice faces always equals 7. Please note that there are only two dice (these dices are mirror of each other) that satisfy the given constraints (both of them are shown on the picture on the left).
Alice... | The first line contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of dice in the tower.
The second line contains an integer *x* (1<=≤<=*x*<=≤<=6) — the number Bob sees at the top of the tower. Next *n* lines contain two space-separated integers each: the *i*-th line contains numbers *a**i*,<=*b**i* (1<=≤<=... | Print "YES" (without the quotes), if it is possible to to uniquely identify the numbers on the faces of all the dice in the tower. If it is impossible, print "NO" (without the quotes). | [
"3\n6\n3 2\n5 4\n2 4\n",
"3\n3\n2 6\n4 1\n5 3\n"
] | [
"YES",
"NO"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "3\n6\n3 2\n5 4\n2 4",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "3\n3\n2 6\n4 1\n5 3",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "1\n3\n2 1",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "2\n2\n3 1\n1 5",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "3\n2\n1 4\n5 3\n6 4",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"in... | 1,676,869,521 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 52 | 92 | 0 | n=int(input())
x=input()
myset=set()
for i in range(n):
a,b=input().split()
myset.add(str(7-int(a)))
myset.add(a)
myset.add(str(7-int(b)))
myset.add(b)
if x in myset:
print("NO")
else:
print("YES")
| Title: Dice Tower
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
A dice is a cube, its faces contain distinct integers from 1 to 6 as black points. The sum of numbers at the opposite dice faces always equals 7. Please note that there are only two dice (these dices are mirror of each other... | ```python
n=int(input())
x=input()
myset=set()
for i in range(n):
a,b=input().split()
myset.add(str(7-int(a)))
myset.add(a)
myset.add(str(7-int(b)))
myset.add(b)
if x in myset:
print("NO")
else:
print("YES")
``` | 3 | |
801 | B | Valued Keys | PROGRAMMING | 900 | [
"constructive algorithms",
"greedy",
"strings"
] | null | null | You found a mysterious function *f*. The function takes two strings *s*1 and *s*2. These strings must consist only of lowercase English letters, and must be the same length.
The output of the function *f* is another string of the same length. The *i*-th character of the output is equal to the minimum of the *i*-th cha... | The first line of input contains the string *x*.
The second line of input contains the string *y*.
Both *x* and *y* consist only of lowercase English letters, *x* and *y* have same length and this length is between 1 and 100. | If there is no string *z* such that *f*(*x*,<=*z*)<==<=*y*, print -1.
Otherwise, print a string *z* such that *f*(*x*,<=*z*)<==<=*y*. If there are multiple possible answers, print any of them. The string *z* should be the same length as *x* and *y* and consist only of lowercase English letters. | [
"ab\naa\n",
"nzwzl\nniwel\n",
"ab\nba\n"
] | [
"ba\n",
"xiyez\n",
"-1\n"
] | The first case is from the statement.
Another solution for the second case is "zizez"
There is no solution for the third case. That is, there is no *z* such that *f*("ab", *z*) = "ba". | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "ab\naa",
"output": "ba"
},
{
"input": "nzwzl\nniwel",
"output": "xiyez"
},
{
"input": "ab\nba",
"output": "-1"
},
{
"input": "r\nl",
"output": "l"
},
{
"input": "d\ny",
"output": "-1"
},
{
"input": "yvowz\ncajav",
"output": "cajav"
},... | 1,603,041,299 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | OK | TESTS | 35 | 139 | 0 |
R = lambda:map(int,input().split())
s_one = input()
s_two = input()
print([s_two, -1][any(y>x for x, y in zip(s_one, s_two))])
| Title: Valued Keys
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
You found a mysterious function *f*. The function takes two strings *s*1 and *s*2. These strings must consist only of lowercase English letters, and must be the same length.
The output of the function *f* is another string... | ```python
R = lambda:map(int,input().split())
s_one = input()
s_two = input()
print([s_two, -1][any(y>x for x, y in zip(s_one, s_two))])
``` | 3 | |
445 | A | DZY Loves Chessboard | PROGRAMMING | 1,200 | [
"dfs and similar",
"implementation"
] | null | null | DZY loves chessboard, and he enjoys playing with it.
He has a chessboard of *n* rows and *m* columns. Some cells of the chessboard are bad, others are good. For every good cell, DZY wants to put a chessman on it. Each chessman is either white or black. After putting all chessmen, DZY wants that no two chessmen with th... | The first line contains two space-separated integers *n* and *m* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=100).
Each of the next *n* lines contains a string of *m* characters: the *j*-th character of the *i*-th string is either "." or "-". A "." means that the corresponding cell (in the *i*-th row and the *j*-th column) is good, while a ... | Output must contain *n* lines, each line must contain a string of *m* characters. The *j*-th character of the *i*-th string should be either "W", "B" or "-". Character "W" means the chessman on the cell is white, "B" means it is black, "-" means the cell is a bad cell.
If multiple answers exist, print any of them. It ... | [
"1 1\n.\n",
"2 2\n..\n..\n",
"3 3\n.-.\n---\n--."
] | [
"B\n",
"BW\nWB\n",
"B-B\n---\n--B"
] | In the first sample, DZY puts a single black chessman. Of course putting a white one is also OK.
In the second sample, all 4 cells are good. No two same chessmen share an edge in the sample output.
In the third sample, no good cells are adjacent. So you can just put 3 chessmen, no matter what their colors are. | 500 | [
{
"input": "1 1\n.",
"output": "B"
},
{
"input": "2 2\n..\n..",
"output": "BW\nWB"
},
{
"input": "3 3\n.-.\n---\n--.",
"output": "B-B\n---\n--B"
},
{
"input": "3 1\n-\n.\n.",
"output": "-\nW\nB"
},
{
"input": "11 11\n-----------\n-----------\n-----------\n--------... | 1,698,683,283 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | OK | TESTS | 37 | 77 | 3,276,800 | '''
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> বিসমিল্লাহির রাহমানির রাহিম
بِسْمِ ٱللَّٰهِ ٱلرَّحْمَٰنِ ٱلرَّحِيمِ <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Bismillahir Rahmanir Rahim
'''
'''::::::::::_^_;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_^_%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%_^_@@@@@@@@@@@@@@
''::::::::::_^_;;;;;;;;;;;;;;... | Title: DZY Loves Chessboard
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
DZY loves chessboard, and he enjoys playing with it.
He has a chessboard of *n* rows and *m* columns. Some cells of the chessboard are bad, others are good. For every good cell, DZY wants to put a chessman on it. ... | ```python
'''
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> বিসমিল্লাহির রাহমানির রাহিম
بِسْمِ ٱللَّٰهِ ٱلرَّحْمَٰنِ ٱلرَّحِيمِ <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Bismillahir Rahmanir Rahim
'''
'''::::::::::_^_;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_^_%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%_^_@@@@@@@@@@@@@@
''::::::::::_^_;;;;... | 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"... | 1,692,718,407 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | OK | TESTS | 32 | 154 | 0 | n = int(input())
l = list(map(int,input().split()))
if l[0] % 2 == 0 and l[1] % 2 == 0 and l[2] % 2 == 0 :
for i in range (3,n):
if l[i] % 2 != 0 :
print(i+1)
break
elif l[0] % 2 == 1 and l[1] % 2 == 1 and l[2] % 2 == 1 :
for i in range (3,n):
if l[i] % 2 == 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())
l = list(map(int,input().split()))
if l[0] % 2 == 0 and l[1] % 2 == 0 and l[2] % 2 == 0 :
for i in range (3,n):
if l[i] % 2 != 0 :
print(i+1)
break
elif l[0] % 2 == 1 and l[1] % 2 == 1 and l[2] % 2 == 1 :
for i in range (3,n):
if l[i]... | 3.9615 |
471 | A | MUH and Sticks | PROGRAMMING | 1,100 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Two polar bears Menshykov and Uslada from the St.Petersburg zoo and elephant Horace from the Kiev zoo got six sticks to play with and assess the animals' creativity. Menshykov, Uslada and Horace decided to make either an elephant or a bear from those sticks. They can make an animal from sticks in the following way:
-... | The single line contains six space-separated integers *l**i* (1<=≤<=*l**i*<=≤<=9) — the lengths of the six sticks. It is guaranteed that the input is such that you cannot make both animals from the sticks. | If you can make a bear from the given set, print string "Bear" (without the quotes). If you can make an elephant, print string "Elephant" (wıthout the quotes). If you can make neither a bear nor an elephant, print string "Alien" (without the quotes). | [
"4 2 5 4 4 4\n",
"4 4 5 4 4 5\n",
"1 2 3 4 5 6\n"
] | [
"Bear",
"Elephant",
"Alien"
] | If you're out of creative ideas, see instructions below which show how to make a bear and an elephant in the first two samples. The stick of length 2 is in red, the sticks of length 4 are in green, the sticks of length 5 are in blue. | 500 | [
{
"input": "4 2 5 4 4 4",
"output": "Bear"
},
{
"input": "4 4 5 4 4 5",
"output": "Elephant"
},
{
"input": "1 2 3 4 5 6",
"output": "Alien"
},
{
"input": "5 5 5 5 5 5",
"output": "Elephant"
},
{
"input": "1 1 1 2 3 5",
"output": "Alien"
},
{
"input": "... | 1,466,970,204 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 4 | 62 | 0 | b=list(map(int, input().split()))
b.sort()
if b[0]==b[1]==b[2]==b[3] or b[1]==b[2]==b[3]==b[4] or b[2]==b[3==b[4]==b[5]]:
if (b[0]==b[1] and b[4]==b[5])or b[0]==b[5]:
print("Elephant")
else:
print("Bear")
else:
print("Alien") | Title: MUH and Sticks
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Two polar bears Menshykov and Uslada from the St.Petersburg zoo and elephant Horace from the Kiev zoo got six sticks to play with and assess the animals' creativity. Menshykov, Uslada and Horace decided to make either an... | ```python
b=list(map(int, input().split()))
b.sort()
if b[0]==b[1]==b[2]==b[3] or b[1]==b[2]==b[3]==b[4] or b[2]==b[3==b[4]==b[5]]:
if (b[0]==b[1] and b[4]==b[5])or b[0]==b[5]:
print("Elephant")
else:
print("Bear")
else:
print("Alien")
``` | 0 | |
6 | C | Alice, Bob and Chocolate | PROGRAMMING | 1,200 | [
"greedy",
"two pointers"
] | C. Alice, Bob and Chocolate | 2 | 64 | Alice and Bob like games. And now they are ready to start a new game. They have placed *n* chocolate bars in a line. Alice starts to eat chocolate bars one by one from left to right, and Bob — from right to left. For each chocololate bar the time, needed for the player to consume it, is known (Alice and Bob eat them wi... | The first line contains one integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) — the amount of bars on the table. The second line contains a sequence *t*1,<=*t*2,<=...,<=*t**n* (1<=≤<=*t**i*<=≤<=1000), where *t**i* is the time (in seconds) needed to consume the *i*-th bar (in the order from left to right). | Print two numbers *a* and *b*, where *a* is the amount of bars consumed by Alice, and *b* is the amount of bars consumed by Bob. | [
"5\n2 9 8 2 7\n"
] | [
"2 3\n"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "5\n2 9 8 2 7",
"output": "2 3"
},
{
"input": "1\n1",
"output": "1 0"
},
{
"input": "2\n1 1",
"output": "1 1"
},
{
"input": "3\n1 1 1",
"output": "2 1"
},
{
"input": "4\n1 1 1 1",
"output": "2 2"
},
{
"input": "1\n6",
"output": "1 0"
}... | 1,677,779,174 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 62 | 0 | n = int(input())
t = list(map(int, input().split()))
alice, bob = 0, n-1
sum_alice = 0
sum_bob = 0
while n-alice-bob > 1:
sum_alice += t[alice]
alice += 1
sum_bob += t[bob]
bob += 1
if n-alice-bob == 1:
if bob < alice:
bob += 1
sum_bob += t[bob]
else:
... | Title: Alice, Bob and Chocolate
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 64 megabytes
Problem Description:
Alice and Bob like games. And now they are ready to start a new game. They have placed *n* chocolate bars in a line. Alice starts to eat chocolate bars one by one from left to right, and Bob — from right to left. Fo... | ```python
n = int(input())
t = list(map(int, input().split()))
alice, bob = 0, n-1
sum_alice = 0
sum_bob = 0
while n-alice-bob > 1:
sum_alice += t[alice]
alice += 1
sum_bob += t[bob]
bob += 1
if n-alice-bob == 1:
if bob < alice:
bob += 1
sum_bob += t[bob]
else... | 0 |
96 | A | Football | PROGRAMMING | 900 | [
"implementation",
"strings"
] | A. Football | 2 | 256 | Petya loves football very much. One day, as he was watching a football match, he was writing the players' current positions on a piece of paper. To simplify the situation he depicted it as a string consisting of zeroes and ones. A zero corresponds to players of one team; a one corresponds to players of another team. If... | The first input line contains a non-empty string consisting of characters "0" and "1", which represents players. The length of the string does not exceed 100 characters. There's at least one player from each team present on the field. | Print "YES" if the situation is dangerous. Otherwise, print "NO". | [
"001001\n",
"1000000001\n"
] | [
"NO\n",
"YES\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "001001",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "1000000001",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "00100110111111101",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "11110111111111111",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "01",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "10100101",
"outp... | 1,663,012,987 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 60 | 0 | def main():
situation = int(input())
consecutive_zeros = 0
consecutive_ones = 0
dangerous = False
for player in situation:
if consecutive_ones == 7 or consecutive_zeros == 7:
dangerous = True
break
if player == '0':
consecutive_ones = 0
... | Title: Football
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
Petya loves football very much. One day, as he was watching a football match, he was writing the players' current positions on a piece of paper. To simplify the situation he depicted it as a string consisting of zeroes and ones. A... | ```python
def main():
situation = int(input())
consecutive_zeros = 0
consecutive_ones = 0
dangerous = False
for player in situation:
if consecutive_ones == 7 or consecutive_zeros == 7:
dangerous = True
break
if player == '0':
consecutive_... | 0 |
384 | A | Coder | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Iahub likes chess very much. He even invented a new chess piece named Coder. A Coder can move (and attack) one square horizontally or vertically. More precisely, if the Coder is located at position (*x*,<=*y*), he can move to (or attack) positions (*x*<=+<=1,<=*y*), (*x*–1,<=*y*), (*x*,<=*y*<=+<=1) and (*x*,<=*y*–1).
... | The first line contains an integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000). | On the first line print an integer, the maximum number of Coders that can be placed on the chessboard.
On each of the next *n* lines print *n* characters, describing the configuration of the Coders. For an empty cell print an '.', and for a Coder print a 'C'.
If there are multiple correct answers, you can print any. | [
"2\n"
] | [
"2\nC.\n.C\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "2",
"output": "2\nC.\n.C"
},
{
"input": "3",
"output": "5\nC.C\n.C.\nC.C"
},
{
"input": "4",
"output": "8\nC.C.\n.C.C\nC.C.\n.C.C"
},
{
"input": "10",
"output": "50\nC.C.C.C.C.\n.C.C.C.C.C\nC.C.C.C.C.\n.C.C.C.C.C\nC.C.C.C.C.\n.C.C.C.C.C\nC.C.C.C.C.\n.C.C.C.C.C... | 1,500,209,734 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 15 | 77 | 5,529,600 | n = [int(i) for i in input().split()][0]
print (n**2//2 + n %2)
if n %2 == 1:
for i in range(n):
if i%2 == 0:
print ('C.' * (n//2) + 'C')
else:
print ('.C' * (n//2) + '.')
else:
for i in range(n):
if i%2 == 0:
print ('C.' * (n//2))
... | Title: Coder
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Iahub likes chess very much. He even invented a new chess piece named Coder. A Coder can move (and attack) one square horizontally or vertically. More precisely, if the Coder is located at position (*x*,<=*y*), he can move to (or... | ```python
n = [int(i) for i in input().split()][0]
print (n**2//2 + n %2)
if n %2 == 1:
for i in range(n):
if i%2 == 0:
print ('C.' * (n//2) + 'C')
else:
print ('.C' * (n//2) + '.')
else:
for i in range(n):
if i%2 == 0:
print ('C.' * (n//2))... | 3 |
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