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749
A
Bachgold Problem
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "greedy", "implementation", "math", "number theory" ]
null
null
Bachgold problem is very easy to formulate. Given a positive integer *n* represent it as a sum of maximum possible number of prime numbers. One can prove that such representation exists for any integer greater than 1. Recall that integer *k* is called prime if it is greater than 1 and has exactly two positive integer ...
The only line of the input contains a single integer *n* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100<=000).
The first line of the output contains a single integer *k* — maximum possible number of primes in representation. The second line should contain *k* primes with their sum equal to *n*. You can print them in any order. If there are several optimal solution, print any of them.
[ "5\n", "6\n" ]
[ "2\n2 3\n", "3\n2 2 2\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "5", "output": "2\n2 3" }, { "input": "6", "output": "3\n2 2 2" }, { "input": "2", "output": "1\n2" }, { "input": "3", "output": "1\n3" }, { "input": "99999", "output": "49999\n2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 ...
1,685,041,672
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
OK
TESTS
41
62
2,150,400
def baghold(num): arr = [] if num % 2 == 0: print(num // 2) arr = ['2' for i in range(num // 2)] print(' '.join(arr)) else: print(num // 2) arr = ['2' for i in range(num // 2 -1)] arr.append('3') print(' '.join(arr)) baghold(int(input())) ...
Title: Bachgold Problem Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Bachgold problem is very easy to formulate. Given a positive integer *n* represent it as a sum of maximum possible number of prime numbers. One can prove that such representation exists for any integer greater than 1. ...
```python def baghold(num): arr = [] if num % 2 == 0: print(num // 2) arr = ['2' for i in range(num // 2)] print(' '.join(arr)) else: print(num // 2) arr = ['2' for i in range(num // 2 -1)] arr.append('3') print(' '.join(arr)) baghold(int(in...
3
248
A
Cupboards
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
One foggy Stockholm morning, Karlsson decided to snack on some jam in his friend Lillebror Svantenson's house. Fortunately for Karlsson, there wasn't anybody in his friend's house. Karlsson was not going to be hungry any longer, so he decided to get some food in the house. Karlsson's gaze immediately fell on *n* woode...
The first input line contains a single integer *n* — the number of cupboards in the kitchen (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=104). Then follow *n* lines, each containing two integers *l**i* and *r**i* (0<=≤<=*l**i*,<=*r**i*<=≤<=1). Number *l**i* equals one, if the left door of the *i*-th cupboard is opened, otherwise number *l**i* equal...
In the only output line print a single integer *t* — the minimum number of seconds Karlsson needs to change the doors of all cupboards to the position he needs.
[ "5\n0 1\n1 0\n0 1\n1 1\n0 1\n" ]
[ "3\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "5\n0 1\n1 0\n0 1\n1 1\n0 1", "output": "3" }, { "input": "2\n0 0\n0 0", "output": "0" }, { "input": "3\n0 1\n1 1\n1 1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "8\n0 1\n1 0\n0 1\n1 1\n0 1\n1 0\n0 1\n1 0", "output": "7" }, { "input": "8\n1 0\n1 0\n1 0\n0 1\n0 1\n1 ...
1,651,236,794
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
57
436
4,812,800
import sys from collections import Counter, defaultdict, deque from heapq import heapify, heappush, heappop from functools import lru_cache from math import floor, ceil, sqrt, gcd from string import ascii_lowercase from math import gcd from bisect import bisect_left, bisect, bisect_right def read(): re...
Title: Cupboards Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: One foggy Stockholm morning, Karlsson decided to snack on some jam in his friend Lillebror Svantenson's house. Fortunately for Karlsson, there wasn't anybody in his friend's house. Karlsson was not going to be hungry any long...
```python import sys from collections import Counter, defaultdict, deque from heapq import heapify, heappush, heappop from functools import lru_cache from math import floor, ceil, sqrt, gcd from string import ascii_lowercase from math import gcd from bisect import bisect_left, bisect, bisect_right def read(...
3
1,011
A
Stages
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "greedy", "implementation", "sortings" ]
null
null
Natasha is going to fly to Mars. She needs to build a rocket, which consists of several stages in some order. Each of the stages is defined by a lowercase Latin letter. This way, the rocket can be described by the string — concatenation of letters, which correspond to the stages. There are $n$ stages available. The ro...
The first line of input contains two integers — $n$ and $k$ ($1 \le k \le n \le 50$) – the number of available stages and the number of stages to use in the rocket. The second line contains string $s$, which consists of exactly $n$ lowercase Latin letters. Each letter defines a new stage, which can be used to build th...
Print a single integer — the minimal total weight of the rocket or -1, if it is impossible to build the rocket at all.
[ "5 3\nxyabd\n", "7 4\nproblem\n", "2 2\nab\n", "12 1\nabaabbaaabbb\n" ]
[ "29", "34", "-1", "1" ]
In the first example, the following rockets satisfy the condition: - "adx" (weight is $1+4+24=29$);- "ady" (weight is $1+4+25=30$);- "bdx" (weight is $2+4+24=30$);- "bdy" (weight is $2+4+25=31$). Rocket "adx" has the minimal weight, so the answer is $29$. In the second example, target rocket is "belo". Its weight ...
500
[ { "input": "5 3\nxyabd", "output": "29" }, { "input": "7 4\nproblem", "output": "34" }, { "input": "2 2\nab", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "12 1\nabaabbaaabbb", "output": "1" }, { "input": "50 13\nqwertyuiopasdfghjklzxcvbnmaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa", "output": ...
1,582,046,818
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
0
93
307,200
def map_stages_avaiability(stages, alphabet, stages_avaiability): for used_stage in stages: for letter_idx, stage_letter in enumerate(alphabet): if used_stage == stage_letter: stages_avaiability[letter_idx] += 1 break question = input().split() stages = input() stages_limit = int(question[...
Title: Stages Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Natasha is going to fly to Mars. She needs to build a rocket, which consists of several stages in some order. Each of the stages is defined by a lowercase Latin letter. This way, the rocket can be described by the string — conca...
```python def map_stages_avaiability(stages, alphabet, stages_avaiability): for used_stage in stages: for letter_idx, stage_letter in enumerate(alphabet): if used_stage == stage_letter: stages_avaiability[letter_idx] += 1 break question = input().split() stages = input() stages_limit = int...
0
268
A
Games
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "brute force" ]
null
null
Manao works on a sports TV. He's spent much time watching the football games of some country. After a while he began to notice different patterns. For example, each team has two sets of uniforms: home uniform and guest uniform. When a team plays a game at home, the players put on the home uniform. When a team plays as ...
The first line contains an integer *n* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=30). Each of the following *n* lines contains a pair of distinct space-separated integers *h**i*, *a**i* (1<=≤<=*h**i*,<=*a**i*<=≤<=100) — the colors of the *i*-th team's home and guest uniforms, respectively.
In a single line print the number of games where the host team is going to play in the guest uniform.
[ "3\n1 2\n2 4\n3 4\n", "4\n100 42\n42 100\n5 42\n100 5\n", "2\n1 2\n1 2\n" ]
[ "1\n", "5\n", "0\n" ]
In the first test case the championship consists of 6 games. The only game with the event in question is the game between teams 2 and 1 on the stadium of team 2. In the second test sample the host team will have to wear guest uniform in the games between teams: 1 and 2, 2 and 1, 2 and 3, 3 and 4, 4 and 2 (the host tea...
500
[ { "input": "3\n1 2\n2 4\n3 4", "output": "1" }, { "input": "4\n100 42\n42 100\n5 42\n100 5", "output": "5" }, { "input": "2\n1 2\n1 2", "output": "0" }, { "input": "7\n4 7\n52 55\n16 4\n55 4\n20 99\n3 4\n7 52", "output": "6" }, { "input": "10\n68 42\n1 35\n25 70\n...
1,677,055,251
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
OK
TESTS
31
124
0
n=int(input()) i=0 list1=[] list2=[] while i<n: h,a=(map(int, input().split())) list1.append(h) list2.append(a) i+=1 u=0 count1=0 while u<n: count1+=list2.count(list1[u]) u+=1 print(count1)
Title: Games Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Manao works on a sports TV. He's spent much time watching the football games of some country. After a while he began to notice different patterns. For example, each team has two sets of uniforms: home uniform and guest uniform. W...
```python n=int(input()) i=0 list1=[] list2=[] while i<n: h,a=(map(int, input().split())) list1.append(h) list2.append(a) i+=1 u=0 count1=0 while u<n: count1+=list2.count(list1[u]) u+=1 print(count1) ```
3
343
B
Alternating Current
PROGRAMMING
1,600
[ "data structures", "greedy", "implementation" ]
null
null
Mad scientist Mike has just finished constructing a new device to search for extraterrestrial intelligence! He was in such a hurry to launch it for the first time that he plugged in the power wires without giving it a proper glance and started experimenting right away. After a while Mike observed that the wires ended u...
The single line of the input contains a sequence of characters "+" and "-" of length *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100000). The *i*-th (1<=≤<=*i*<=≤<=*n*) position of the sequence contains the character "+", if on the *i*-th step from the wall the "plus" wire runs above the "minus" wire, and the character "-" otherwise.
Print either "Yes" (without the quotes) if the wires can be untangled or "No" (without the quotes) if the wires cannot be untangled.
[ "-++-\n", "+-\n", "++\n", "-\n" ]
[ "Yes\n", "No\n", "Yes\n", "No\n" ]
The first testcase corresponds to the picture in the statement. To untangle the wires, one can first move the "plus" wire lower, thus eliminating the two crosses in the middle, and then draw it under the "minus" wire, eliminating also the remaining two crosses. In the second testcase the "plus" wire makes one full rev...
1,000
[ { "input": "-++-", "output": "Yes" }, { "input": "+-", "output": "No" }, { "input": "++", "output": "Yes" }, { "input": "-", "output": "No" }, { "input": "+-+-", "output": "No" }, { "input": "-+-", "output": "No" }, { "input": "-++-+--+", ...
1,683,980,628
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
6
92
0
str = input() rstr = str[::-1] flag = True for i in range(len(str)): if str[i] == rstr[i]: flag = True else: flag = False break if len(str) % 2 != 0: print("No") elif flag: print("Yes") else: print("No")
Title: Alternating Current Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Mad scientist Mike has just finished constructing a new device to search for extraterrestrial intelligence! He was in such a hurry to launch it for the first time that he plugged in the power wires without giving it...
```python str = input() rstr = str[::-1] flag = True for i in range(len(str)): if str[i] == rstr[i]: flag = True else: flag = False break if len(str) % 2 != 0: print("No") elif flag: print("Yes") else: print("No") ```
0
572
A
Arrays
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "sortings" ]
null
null
You are given two arrays *A* and *B* consisting of integers, sorted in non-decreasing order. Check whether it is possible to choose *k* numbers in array *A* and choose *m* numbers in array *B* so that any number chosen in the first array is strictly less than any number chosen in the second array.
The first line contains two integers *n**A*,<=*n**B* (1<=≤<=*n**A*,<=*n**B*<=≤<=105), separated by a space — the sizes of arrays *A* and *B*, correspondingly. The second line contains two integers *k* and *m* (1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=*n**A*,<=1<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=*n**B*), separated by a space. The third line contains *n**A* numbers *...
Print "YES" (without the quotes), if you can choose *k* numbers in array *A* and *m* numbers in array *B* so that any number chosen in array *A* was strictly less than any number chosen in array *B*. Otherwise, print "NO" (without the quotes).
[ "3 3\n2 1\n1 2 3\n3 4 5\n", "3 3\n3 3\n1 2 3\n3 4 5\n", "5 2\n3 1\n1 1 1 1 1\n2 2\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "NO\n", "YES\n" ]
In the first sample test you can, for example, choose numbers 1 and 2 from array *A* and number 3 from array *B* (1 &lt; 3 and 2 &lt; 3). In the second sample test the only way to choose *k* elements in the first array and *m* elements in the second one is to choose all numbers in both arrays, but then not all the num...
500
[ { "input": "3 3\n2 1\n1 2 3\n3 4 5", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "3 3\n3 3\n1 2 3\n3 4 5", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "5 2\n3 1\n1 1 1 1 1\n2 2", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "3 5\n1 1\n5 5 5\n5 5 5 5 5", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "1 1\n1 1\n1\n1", "ou...
1,523,782,475
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
1
62
7,065,600
N = list(map(int, input().split())) KM = list(map(int, input().split())) A = list(map(int, input().split())) B = list(map(int, input().split())) del A[KM[0]: len(A)] del B[KM[1]: len(B)] res = 0 for i in range(0, len(A)): for j in range(0, len(B)): if (A[i] > B[j]): res = 1 ...
Title: Arrays Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: You are given two arrays *A* and *B* consisting of integers, sorted in non-decreasing order. Check whether it is possible to choose *k* numbers in array *A* and choose *m* numbers in array *B* so that any number chosen in the fi...
```python N = list(map(int, input().split())) KM = list(map(int, input().split())) A = list(map(int, input().split())) B = list(map(int, input().split())) del A[KM[0]: len(A)] del B[KM[1]: len(B)] res = 0 for i in range(0, len(A)): for j in range(0, len(B)): if (A[i] > B[j]): res = 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*<=&lt;<=*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"...
1,510,934,853
5,553
Python 3
SKIPPED
PRETESTS
10
1,699
77,004,800
n = int(input()) L = list(map(int, input().split())) r = -1 dead = 0 for i in range(1, n): c = i - L[i] ln = i - max(c, 0) dead += i - max(i - ln, r + 1) if ln > 0: r = i - 1 print(n - dead)
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()) L = list(map(int, input().split())) r = -1 dead = 0 for i in range(1, n): c = i - L[i] ln = i - max(c, 0) dead += i - max(i - ln, r + 1) if ln > 0: r = i - 1 print(n - dead) ```
-1
120
F
Spiders
PROGRAMMING
1,400
[ "dp", "greedy", "trees" ]
null
null
One day mum asked Petya to sort his toys and get rid of some of them. Petya found a whole box of toy spiders. They were quite dear to him and the boy didn't want to throw them away. Petya conjured a cunning plan: he will glue all the spiders together and attach them to the ceiling. Besides, Petya knows that the lower t...
The first input file line contains one integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of spiders. Next *n* lines contain the descriptions of each spider: integer *n**i* (2<=≤<=*n**i*<=≤<=100) — the number of beads, then *n**i*<=-<=1 pairs of numbers denoting the numbers of the beads connected by threads. The beads that m...
Print a single number — the length of the required construction.
[ "1\n3 1 2 2 3\n", "2\n3 1 2 1 3\n4 1 2 2 3 2 4\n", "2\n5 1 2 2 3 3 4 3 5\n7 3 4 1 2 2 4 4 6 2 7 6 5\n" ]
[ "2\n", "4\n", "7\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "1\n3 1 2 2 3", "output": "2" }, { "input": "2\n3 1 2 1 3\n4 1 2 2 3 2 4", "output": "4" }, { "input": "2\n5 1 2 2 3 3 4 3 5\n7 3 4 1 2 2 4 4 6 2 7 6 5", "output": "7" }, { "input": "3\n3 1 2 2 3\n5 2 5 5 3 3 4 5 1\n9 6 5 5 9 4 8 4 7 2 1 2 6 2 4 6 3", "output":...
1,595,062,723
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
4
248
7,168,000
import sys sys.stdin = open("input.txt","r") sys.stdout = open("output.txt","w") from collections import defaultdict t = int(input()) def DFS(x,d,t,visited): global ans visited[x] = 1 l = [0] for i in d[x]: if visited[i] == 1: continue l.append(abs(DFS(i,d,t+1,visited))) ans = max(ans,s...
Title: Spiders Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: One day mum asked Petya to sort his toys and get rid of some of them. Petya found a whole box of toy spiders. They were quite dear to him and the boy didn't want to throw them away. Petya conjured a cunning plan: he will glue a...
```python import sys sys.stdin = open("input.txt","r") sys.stdout = open("output.txt","w") from collections import defaultdict t = int(input()) def DFS(x,d,t,visited): global ans visited[x] = 1 l = [0] for i in d[x]: if visited[i] == 1: continue l.append(abs(DFS(i,d,t+1,visited))) ans =...
0
665
C
Simple Strings
PROGRAMMING
1,300
[ "dp", "greedy", "strings" ]
null
null
zscoder loves simple strings! A string *t* is called simple if every pair of adjacent characters are distinct. For example ab, aba, zscoder are simple whereas aa, add are not simple. zscoder is given a string *s*. He wants to change a minimum number of characters so that the string *s* becomes simple. Help him with th...
The only line contains the string *s* (1<=≤<=|*s*|<=≤<=2·105) — the string given to zscoder. The string *s* consists of only lowercase English letters.
Print the simple string *s*' — the string *s* after the minimal number of changes. If there are multiple solutions, you may output any of them. Note that the string *s*' should also consist of only lowercase English letters.
[ "aab\n", "caaab\n", "zscoder\n" ]
[ "bab\n", "cabab\n", "zscoder\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "aab", "output": "bab" }, { "input": "caaab", "output": "cabab" }, { "input": "zscoder", "output": "zscoder" }, { "input": "u", "output": "u" }, { "input": "h", "output": "h" }, { "input": "dtottttotd", "output": "dtotataotd" }, { ...
1,585,839,062
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
3
108
307,200
s = list(input()) if len(s) == 1: print(s) exit() ans = ['*'] i = 0 while i < len(s): if ans[-1] == s[i]: x = ans[-1] y = s[i] if i+1 < len(s): y = s[i+1] for j in range(97,123): if j != ord(x) and j != ord(y): ans.append(...
Title: Simple Strings Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: zscoder loves simple strings! A string *t* is called simple if every pair of adjacent characters are distinct. For example ab, aba, zscoder are simple whereas aa, add are not simple. zscoder is given a string *s*. He wa...
```python s = list(input()) if len(s) == 1: print(s) exit() ans = ['*'] i = 0 while i < len(s): if ans[-1] == s[i]: x = ans[-1] y = s[i] if i+1 < len(s): y = s[i+1] for j in range(97,123): if j != ord(x) and j != ord(y): a...
0
25
A
IQ test
PROGRAMMING
1,300
[ "brute force" ]
A. IQ test
2
256
Bob is preparing to pass IQ test. The most frequent task in this test is to find out which one of the given *n* numbers differs from the others. Bob observed that one number usually differs from the others in evenness. Help Bob — to check his answers, he needs a program that among the given *n* numbers finds one that i...
The first line contains integer *n* (3<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — amount of numbers in the task. The second line contains *n* space-separated natural numbers, not exceeding 100. It is guaranteed, that exactly one of these numbers differs from the others in evenness.
Output index of number that differs from the others in evenness. Numbers are numbered from 1 in the input order.
[ "5\n2 4 7 8 10\n", "4\n1 2 1 1\n" ]
[ "3\n", "2\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "5\n2 4 7 8 10", "output": "3" }, { "input": "4\n1 2 1 1", "output": "2" }, { "input": "3\n1 2 2", "output": "1" }, { "input": "3\n100 99 100", "output": "2" }, { "input": "3\n5 3 2", "output": "3" }, { "input": "4\n43 28 1 91", "output"...
1,691,941,148
2,147,483,647
Python 3
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
1
62
0
n=int(input()) list1=list(map(int,input().split())) set1=[] set2=[] for i in list1: if i%2==0: set1.append(i) else:set2.append(i) if len(set1)>len(set2): print(list1.index(set2[0]+1)) else:print(list1.index(set1[0]+1))
Title: IQ test Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: Bob is preparing to pass IQ test. The most frequent task in this test is to find out which one of the given *n* numbers differs from the others. Bob observed that one number usually differs from the others in evenness. Help Bob — t...
```python n=int(input()) list1=list(map(int,input().split())) set1=[] set2=[] for i in list1: if i%2==0: set1.append(i) else:set2.append(i) if len(set1)>len(set2): print(list1.index(set2[0]+1)) else:print(list1.index(set1[0]+1)) ```
-1
363
B
Fence
PROGRAMMING
1,100
[ "brute force", "dp" ]
null
null
There is a fence in front of Polycarpus's home. The fence consists of *n* planks of the same width which go one after another from left to right. The height of the *i*-th plank is *h**i* meters, distinct planks can have distinct heights. Polycarpus has bought a posh piano and is thinking about how to get it into the h...
The first line of the input contains integers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1.5·105,<=1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=*n*) — the number of planks in the fence and the width of the hole for the piano. The second line contains the sequence of integers *h*1,<=*h*2,<=...,<=*h**n* (1<=≤<=*h**i*<=≤<=100), where *h**i* is the height of the *i*-th...
Print such integer *j* that the sum of the heights of planks *j*, *j*<=+<=1, ..., *j*<=+<=*k*<=-<=1 is the minimum possible. If there are multiple such *j*'s, print any of them.
[ "7 3\n1 2 6 1 1 7 1\n" ]
[ "3\n" ]
In the sample, your task is to find three consecutive planks with the minimum sum of heights. In the given case three planks with indexes 3, 4 and 5 have the required attribute, their total height is 8.
1,000
[ { "input": "7 3\n1 2 6 1 1 7 1", "output": "3" }, { "input": "1 1\n100", "output": "1" }, { "input": "2 1\n10 20", "output": "1" }, { "input": "10 5\n1 2 3 1 2 2 3 1 4 5", "output": "1" }, { "input": "10 2\n3 1 4 1 4 6 2 1 4 6", "output": "7" }, { "inp...
1,678,440,483
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED
TESTS
5
1,000
18,124,800
a=input() h=a.split() h=list(map(int,h)) b=input() n=b.split() n=list(map(int,n)) v=[] # if h[0]>h[1]: for i in range(0,h[0]): s=0 for j in range(0,h[1]): if i+j<h[0]: s=s+n[i+j] v.append(s) # print(v) v.reverse() for i in range(0,h[1]-1): v.remove(v[i]) v.reverse() # pr...
Title: Fence Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: There is a fence in front of Polycarpus's home. The fence consists of *n* planks of the same width which go one after another from left to right. The height of the *i*-th plank is *h**i* meters, distinct planks can have distinct ...
```python a=input() h=a.split() h=list(map(int,h)) b=input() n=b.split() n=list(map(int,n)) v=[] # if h[0]>h[1]: for i in range(0,h[0]): s=0 for j in range(0,h[1]): if i+j<h[0]: s=s+n[i+j] v.append(s) # print(v) v.reverse() for i in range(0,h[1]-1): v.remove(v[i]) v.reverse...
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 ...
1,699,804,756
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
63
62
10,547,200
n = int(input()) n2 = list(map(int, input().split())) lose = 0 menti = 0 for i in range(len(n2)): if n2[i] < 0 and menti == 0: lose += 1 elif n2[i] < 0 and menti != 0: menti -= 1 elif n2[i] > 0: menti += n2[i] print(lose)
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 n = int(input()) n2 = list(map(int, input().split())) lose = 0 menti = 0 for i in range(len(n2)): if n2[i] < 0 and menti == 0: lose += 1 elif n2[i] < 0 and menti != 0: menti -= 1 elif n2[i] > 0: menti += n2[i] print(lose) ```
3
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":...
1,685,117,766
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
30
46
0
num1, num2 = map(int, input().split()) if num1 >= num2: num1 -= num2 num1 //= 2 print(num2, num1) else: num2 -= num1 num2 //= 2 print(num1, num2)
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 num1, num2 = map(int, input().split()) if num1 >= num2: num1 -= num2 num1 //= 2 print(num2, num1) else: num2 -= num1 num2 //= 2 print(num1, num2) ```
3
808
B
Average Sleep Time
PROGRAMMING
1,300
[ "data structures", "implementation", "math" ]
null
null
It's been almost a week since Polycarp couldn't get rid of insomnia. And as you may already know, one week in Berland lasts *k* days! When Polycarp went to a doctor with his problem, the doctor asked him about his sleeping schedule (more specifically, the average amount of hours of sleep per week). Luckily, Polycarp k...
The first line contains two integer numbers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=2·105). The second line contains *n* integer numbers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=105).
Output average sleeping time over all weeks. The answer is considered to be correct if its absolute or relative error does not exceed 10<=-<=6. In particular, it is enough to output real number with at least 6 digits after the decimal point.
[ "3 2\n3 4 7\n", "1 1\n10\n", "8 2\n1 2 4 100000 123 456 789 1\n" ]
[ "9.0000000000\n", "10.0000000000\n", "28964.2857142857\n" ]
In the third example there are *n* - *k* + 1 = 7 weeks, so the answer is sums of all weeks divided by 7.
0
[ { "input": "3 2\n3 4 7", "output": "9.0000000000" }, { "input": "1 1\n10", "output": "10.0000000000" }, { "input": "8 2\n1 2 4 100000 123 456 789 1", "output": "28964.2857142857" }, { "input": "1 1\n1", "output": "1.0000000000" }, { "input": "1 1\n100000", "ou...
1,505,991,823
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
29
233
14,233,600
f = lambda: map(int, input().split()) n, k = f() t = list(f()) h = s = sum(t[:k]) for i in range(n - k): s += t[k + i] - t[i] h += s print(h / (n - k + 1))
Title: Average Sleep Time Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: It's been almost a week since Polycarp couldn't get rid of insomnia. And as you may already know, one week in Berland lasts *k* days! When Polycarp went to a doctor with his problem, the doctor asked him about his s...
```python f = lambda: map(int, input().split()) n, k = f() t = list(f()) h = s = sum(t[:k]) for i in range(n - k): s += t[k + i] - t[i] h += s print(h / (n - k + 1)) ```
3
255
A
Greg's Workout
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Greg is a beginner bodybuilder. Today the gym coach gave him the training plan. All it had was *n* integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n*. These numbers mean that Greg needs to do exactly *n* exercises today. Besides, Greg should repeat the *i*-th in order exercise *a**i* times. Greg now only does three types of exercise...
The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=20). The second line contains *n* integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=25) — the number of times Greg repeats the exercises.
Print word "chest" (without the quotes), if the chest gets the most exercise, "biceps" (without the quotes), if the biceps gets the most exercise and print "back" (without the quotes) if the back gets the most exercise. It is guaranteed that the input is such that the answer to the problem is unambiguous.
[ "2\n2 8\n", "3\n5 1 10\n", "7\n3 3 2 7 9 6 8\n" ]
[ "biceps\n", "back\n", "chest\n" ]
In the first sample Greg does 2 chest, 8 biceps and zero back exercises, so the biceps gets the most exercises. In the second sample Greg does 5 chest, 1 biceps and 10 back exercises, so the back gets the most exercises. In the third sample Greg does 18 chest, 12 biceps and 8 back exercises, so the chest gets the mos...
500
[ { "input": "2\n2 8", "output": "biceps" }, { "input": "3\n5 1 10", "output": "back" }, { "input": "7\n3 3 2 7 9 6 8", "output": "chest" }, { "input": "4\n5 6 6 2", "output": "chest" }, { "input": "5\n8 2 2 6 3", "output": "chest" }, { "input": "6\n8 7 ...
1,640,606,190
2,147,483,647
Python 3
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
0
92
0
n = int(input()) list = [] list2 = [0,0,0] for i in range(n): list.append(int(input())) j = 0 k = 0 i = 0 for i,v in enumerate(list, 1): list2[j] += list[k] j += 1 k += 1 if j == 3: j = 0 if list2[0] > list2[1] and list2[0] > list2[2]: print('chest') elif list2[1]...
Title: Greg's Workout Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Greg is a beginner bodybuilder. Today the gym coach gave him the training plan. All it had was *n* integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n*. These numbers mean that Greg needs to do exactly *n* exercises today. Besides, Greg ...
```python n = int(input()) list = [] list2 = [0,0,0] for i in range(n): list.append(int(input())) j = 0 k = 0 i = 0 for i,v in enumerate(list, 1): list2[j] += list[k] j += 1 k += 1 if j == 3: j = 0 if list2[0] > list2[1] and list2[0] > list2[2]: print('chest') eli...
-1
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...
1,688,620,049
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
2
154
0
word = input() small = 0 cap = 0 for i in word: if('a' < i < 'z'): small += 1 else: cap += 1 if(small >= cap): print(word.lower()) else: print(word.upper())
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 word = input() small = 0 cap = 0 for i in word: if('a' < i < 'z'): small += 1 else: cap += 1 if(small >= cap): print(word.lower()) else: print(word.upper()) ```
0
139
A
Petr and Book
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
One Sunday Petr went to a bookshop and bought a new book on sports programming. The book had exactly *n* pages. Petr decided to start reading it starting from the next day, that is, from Monday. Petr's got a very tight schedule and for each day of the week he knows how many pages he will be able to read on that day. S...
The first input line contains the single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000) — the number of pages in the book. The second line contains seven non-negative space-separated integers that do not exceed 1000 — those integers represent how many pages Petr can read on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday and...
Print a single number — the number of the day of the week, when Petr will finish reading the book. The days of the week are numbered starting with one in the natural order: Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday.
[ "100\n15 20 20 15 10 30 45\n", "2\n1 0 0 0 0 0 0\n" ]
[ "6\n", "1\n" ]
Note to the first sample: By the end of Monday and therefore, by the beginning of Tuesday Petr has 85 pages left. He has 65 pages left by Wednesday, 45 by Thursday, 30 by Friday, 20 by Saturday and on Saturday Petr finishes reading the book (and he also has time to read 10 pages of something else). Note to the second...
500
[ { "input": "100\n15 20 20 15 10 30 45", "output": "6" }, { "input": "2\n1 0 0 0 0 0 0", "output": "1" }, { "input": "100\n100 200 100 200 300 400 500", "output": "1" }, { "input": "3\n1 1 1 1 1 1 1", "output": "3" }, { "input": "1\n1 1 1 1 1 1 1", "output": "1...
1,695,379,595
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
OK
TESTS
49
124
1,536,000
n = int(input()) d = list(map(int, input().split())) s = 0; ns=1 while ns: for i in range(1,8): s = s+d[i-1] if s >= n: print(i) ns = 0 break;
Title: Petr and Book Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: One Sunday Petr went to a bookshop and bought a new book on sports programming. The book had exactly *n* pages. Petr decided to start reading it starting from the next day, that is, from Monday. Petr's got a very tight s...
```python n = int(input()) d = list(map(int, input().split())) s = 0; ns=1 while ns: for i in range(1,8): s = s+d[i-1] if s >= n: print(i) ns = 0 break; ```
3
954
A
Diagonal Walking
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Mikhail walks on a 2D plane. He can go either up or right. You are given a sequence of Mikhail's moves. He thinks that this sequence is too long and he wants to make it as short as possible. In the given sequence moving up is described by character U and moving right is described by character R. Mikhail can replace an...
The first line of the input contains one integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the length of the sequence. The second line contains the sequence consisting of *n* characters U and R.
Print the minimum possible length of the sequence of moves after all replacements are done.
[ "5\nRUURU\n", "17\nUUURRRRRUUURURUUU\n" ]
[ "3\n", "13\n" ]
In the first test the shortened sequence of moves may be DUD (its length is 3). In the second test the shortened sequence of moves can be UUDRRRDUDDUUU (its length is 13).
0
[ { "input": "5\nRUURU", "output": "3" }, { "input": "17\nUUURRRRRUUURURUUU", "output": "13" }, { "input": "100\nUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUU", "output": "100" }, { "input": "100\nRRURRUUUURURRRURRRRURRRRRR...
1,637,563,588
2,147,483,647
Python 3
COMPILATION_ERROR
TESTS
0
0
0
n=int(input('')) str=input('') z=0 t=0 if 'UR' in str: z=z+1 if 'RU' in str: t=t+1 if z>t: Y=str.replace('UR','D') x=Y.replace('RU','D') else: Y=str.replace('RU','D') x=Y.replace('UR','D') ...
Title: Diagonal Walking Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Mikhail walks on a 2D plane. He can go either up or right. You are given a sequence of Mikhail's moves. He thinks that this sequence is too long and he wants to make it as short as possible. In the given sequence movi...
```python n=int(input('')) str=input('') z=0 t=0 if 'UR' in str: z=z+1 if 'RU' in str: t=t+1 if z>t: Y=str.replace('UR','D') x=Y.replace('RU','D') else: Y=str.replace('RU','D') x=Y.replace('UR','D') ...
-1
780
A
Andryusha and Socks
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Andryusha is an orderly boy and likes to keep things in their place. Today he faced a problem to put his socks in the wardrobe. He has *n* distinct pairs of socks which are initially in a bag. The pairs are numbered from 1 to *n*. Andryusha wants to put paired socks together and put them in the wardrobe. He takes the ...
The first line contains the single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) — the number of sock pairs. The second line contains 2*n* integers *x*1,<=*x*2,<=...,<=*x*2*n* (1<=≤<=*x**i*<=≤<=*n*), which describe the order in which Andryusha took the socks from the bag. More precisely, *x**i* means that the *i*-th sock Andryusha ...
Print single integer — the maximum number of socks that were on the table at the same time.
[ "1\n1 1\n", "3\n2 1 1 3 2 3\n" ]
[ "1\n", "2\n" ]
In the first example Andryusha took a sock from the first pair and put it on the table. Then he took the next sock which is from the first pair as well, so he immediately puts both socks to the wardrobe. Thus, at most one sock was on the table at the same time. In the second example Andryusha behaved as follows: - ...
500
[ { "input": "1\n1 1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "3\n2 1 1 3 2 3", "output": "2" }, { "input": "5\n5 1 3 2 4 3 1 2 4 5", "output": "5" }, { "input": "10\n4 2 6 3 4 8 7 1 1 5 2 10 6 8 3 5 10 9 9 7", "output": "6" }, { "input": "50\n30 47 31 38 37 50 36 43 9 23 2 2 ...
1,596,800,747
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
56
249
20,992,000
a=int(input()) b=list(map(int, input().split())) cnt=0 x=set() y=[] for i in b: x^={i} if len(x)>cnt: cnt=len(x) print(cnt)
Title: Andryusha and Socks Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Andryusha is an orderly boy and likes to keep things in their place. Today he faced a problem to put his socks in the wardrobe. He has *n* distinct pairs of socks which are initially in a bag. The pairs are numbere...
```python a=int(input()) b=list(map(int, input().split())) cnt=0 x=set() y=[] for i in b: x^={i} if len(x)>cnt: cnt=len(x) print(cnt) ```
3
3
C
Tic-tac-toe
PROGRAMMING
1,800
[ "brute force", "games", "implementation" ]
C. Tic-tac-toe
1
64
Certainly, everyone is familiar with tic-tac-toe game. The rules are very simple indeed. Two players take turns marking the cells in a 3<=×<=3 grid (one player always draws crosses, the other — noughts). The player who succeeds first in placing three of his marks in a horizontal, vertical or diagonal line wins, and the...
The input consists of three lines, each of the lines contains characters ".", "X" or "0" (a period, a capital letter X, or a digit zero).
Print one of the six verdicts: first, second, illegal, the first player won, the second player won or draw.
[ "X0X\n.0.\n.X.\n" ]
[ "second\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "X0X\n.0.\n.X.", "output": "second" }, { "input": "0.X\nXX.\n000", "output": "illegal" }, { "input": "XXX\n.0.\n000", "output": "illegal" }, { "input": "XXX\n...\n000", "output": "illegal" }, { "input": "X.X\nX..\n00.", "output": "second" }, { ...
1,695,115,531
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
1
60
819,200
import fileinput def convert_cell(cell): if cell == "X": return 1 if cell == "0": return -1 if cell == ".": return 0 grid = [] for idx, line in enumerate(fileinput.input()): grid.append([convert_cell(cell) for cell in line.rstrip()]) if idx == 2: break total_sum = ...
Title: Tic-tac-toe Time Limit: 1 seconds Memory Limit: 64 megabytes Problem Description: Certainly, everyone is familiar with tic-tac-toe game. The rules are very simple indeed. Two players take turns marking the cells in a 3<=×<=3 grid (one player always draws crosses, the other — noughts). The player who succeeds ...
```python import fileinput def convert_cell(cell): if cell == "X": return 1 if cell == "0": return -1 if cell == ".": return 0 grid = [] for idx, line in enumerate(fileinput.input()): grid.append([convert_cell(cell) for cell in line.rstrip()]) if idx == 2: break to...
0
478
B
Random Teams
PROGRAMMING
1,300
[ "combinatorics", "constructive algorithms", "greedy", "math" ]
null
null
*n* participants of the competition were split into *m* teams in some manner so that each team has at least one participant. After the competition each pair of participants from the same team became friends. Your task is to write a program that will find the minimum and the maximum number of pairs of friends that coul...
The only line of input contains two integers *n* and *m*, separated by a single space (1<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=109) — the number of participants and the number of teams respectively.
The only line of the output should contain two integers *k**min* and *k**max* — the minimum possible number of pairs of friends and the maximum possible number of pairs of friends respectively.
[ "5 1\n", "3 2\n", "6 3\n" ]
[ "10 10\n", "1 1\n", "3 6\n" ]
In the first sample all the participants get into one team, so there will be exactly ten pairs of friends. In the second sample at any possible arrangement one team will always have two participants and the other team will always have one participant. Thus, the number of pairs of friends will always be equal to one. ...
1,000
[ { "input": "5 1", "output": "10 10" }, { "input": "3 2", "output": "1 1" }, { "input": "6 3", "output": "3 6" }, { "input": "5 3", "output": "2 3" }, { "input": "10 2", "output": "20 36" }, { "input": "10 6", "output": "4 10" }, { "input": ...
1,679,572,115
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
0
15
0
n,m = map(int,input().split()) kmin = m * (m - 1) // 2 kmax = (n * (n - 1)) // 2 print(kmin, kmax)
Title: Random Teams Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: *n* participants of the competition were split into *m* teams in some manner so that each team has at least one participant. After the competition each pair of participants from the same team became friends. Your task is ...
```python n,m = map(int,input().split()) kmin = m * (m - 1) // 2 kmax = (n * (n - 1)) // 2 print(kmin, kmax) ```
0
76
A
Gift
PROGRAMMING
2,200
[ "dsu", "graphs", "sortings", "trees" ]
A. Gift
2
256
The kingdom of Olympia consists of *N* cities and *M* bidirectional roads. Each road connects exactly two cities and two cities can be connected with more than one road. Also it possible that some roads connect city with itself making a loop. All roads are constantly plundered with bandits. After a while bandits becam...
The first line of the input contains two integers *N* and *M* (2<=≤<=*N*<=≤<=200, 1<=≤<=*M*<=≤<=50<=000) — the number of cities and the number of roads, respectively. The second line contains two integers *G* and *S* (1<=≤<=*G*,<=*S*<=≤<=109) — the prices of gold and silver coins in tugriks. The following *M* lines con...
The output should contain the minimal cost of the gift in Olympian tugriks. If there is no gift that satisfies the given requirements output .
[ "3 3\n2 1\n1 2 10 15\n1 2 4 20\n1 3 5 1\n" ]
[ "30\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "3 3\n2 1\n1 2 10 15\n1 2 4 20\n1 3 5 1", "output": "30" } ]
1,639,494,653
2,147,483,647
Python 3
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
0
60
0
def kruskal(n: int, edges: list, initializer: int = 0) -> List[Tuple]: mst = [] dsu = DSU(n, initializer=initializer) for edge, w in edges: if dsu.find(edge[0]) != dsu.find(edge[1]): mst.append((edge, w)) dsu.union(edge[0], edge[1]) return mst def task1(n: int, ...
Title: Gift Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: The kingdom of Olympia consists of *N* cities and *M* bidirectional roads. Each road connects exactly two cities and two cities can be connected with more than one road. Also it possible that some roads connect city with itself making...
```python def kruskal(n: int, edges: list, initializer: int = 0) -> List[Tuple]: mst = [] dsu = DSU(n, initializer=initializer) for edge, w in edges: if dsu.find(edge[0]) != dsu.find(edge[1]): mst.append((edge, w)) dsu.union(edge[0], edge[1]) return mst def task...
-1
612
A
The Text Splitting
PROGRAMMING
1,300
[ "brute force", "implementation", "strings" ]
null
null
You are given the string *s* of length *n* and the numbers *p*,<=*q*. Split the string *s* to pieces of length *p* and *q*. For example, the string "Hello" for *p*<==<=2, *q*<==<=3 can be split to the two strings "Hel" and "lo" or to the two strings "He" and "llo". Note it is allowed to split the string *s* to the st...
The first line contains three positive integers *n*,<=*p*,<=*q* (1<=≤<=*p*,<=*q*<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100). The second line contains the string *s* consists of lowercase and uppercase latin letters and digits.
If it's impossible to split the string *s* to the strings of length *p* and *q* print the only number "-1". Otherwise in the first line print integer *k* — the number of strings in partition of *s*. Each of the next *k* lines should contain the strings in partition. Each string should be of the length *p* or *q*. The...
[ "5 2 3\nHello\n", "10 9 5\nCodeforces\n", "6 4 5\nPrivet\n", "8 1 1\nabacabac\n" ]
[ "2\nHe\nllo\n", "2\nCodef\norces\n", "-1\n", "8\na\nb\na\nc\na\nb\na\nc\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "5 2 3\nHello", "output": "2\nHe\nllo" }, { "input": "10 9 5\nCodeforces", "output": "2\nCodef\norces" }, { "input": "6 4 5\nPrivet", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "8 1 1\nabacabac", "output": "8\na\nb\na\nc\na\nb\na\nc" }, { "input": "1 1 1\n1", "ou...
1,685,454,887
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
72
46
0
n,p,q=map(int,input().split()) s=str(input()) mi=min(p,q) mx=max(p,q) for i in range(0,n//mi+1): nimi=n-i*mi if 0==nimi%mx: print(nimi//mx+i) for j in range(0,i): print(s[j*mi:(j+1)*mi]) s=s[i*mi:] for j in range(0,nimi//mx): print(s[j*mx:(j+1)*mx]) ...
Title: The Text Splitting Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: You are given the string *s* of length *n* and the numbers *p*,<=*q*. Split the string *s* to pieces of length *p* and *q*. For example, the string "Hello" for *p*<==<=2, *q*<==<=3 can be split to the two strings "H...
```python n,p,q=map(int,input().split()) s=str(input()) mi=min(p,q) mx=max(p,q) for i in range(0,n//mi+1): nimi=n-i*mi if 0==nimi%mx: print(nimi//mx+i) for j in range(0,i): print(s[j*mi:(j+1)*mi]) s=s[i*mi:] for j in range(0,nimi//mx): print(s[j*mx:(j+1)*m...
3
820
B
Mister B and Angle in Polygon
PROGRAMMING
1,300
[ "constructive algorithms", "geometry", "math" ]
null
null
On one quiet day all of sudden Mister B decided to draw angle *a* on his field. Aliens have already visited his field and left many different geometric figures on it. One of the figures is regular convex *n*-gon (regular convex polygon with *n* sides). That's why Mister B decided to use this polygon. Now Mister B must...
First and only line contains two space-separated integers *n* and *a* (3<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105, 1<=≤<=*a*<=≤<=180) — the number of vertices in the polygon and the needed angle, in degrees.
Print three space-separated integers: the vertices *v*1, *v*2, *v*3, which form . If there are multiple optimal solutions, print any of them. The vertices are numbered from 1 to *n* in clockwise order.
[ "3 15\n", "4 67\n", "4 68\n" ]
[ "1 2 3\n", "2 1 3\n", "4 1 2\n" ]
In first sample test vertices of regular triangle can create only angle of 60 degrees, that's why every possible angle is correct. Vertices of square can create 45 or 90 degrees angles only. That's why in second sample test the angle of 45 degrees was chosen, since |45 - 67| &lt; |90 - 67|. Other correct answers are: ...
1,000
[ { "input": "3 15", "output": "2 1 3" }, { "input": "4 67", "output": "2 1 3" }, { "input": "4 68", "output": "2 1 4" }, { "input": "3 1", "output": "2 1 3" }, { "input": "3 180", "output": "2 1 3" }, { "input": "100000 1", "output": "2 1 558" }, ...
1,588,416,085
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
4
109
0
n,a = map(int,input().split()) z = float("inf") for i in range(1,n): v1 = 1 v3 = 1+i t = i*(180/n) s1 = abs(a-t) if s1 < z: k = [v1,v3+1,v3] z = min(z,s1) # print(z+a,z-a) print(*k)
Title: Mister B and Angle in Polygon Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: On one quiet day all of sudden Mister B decided to draw angle *a* on his field. Aliens have already visited his field and left many different geometric figures on it. One of the figures is regular convex *...
```python n,a = map(int,input().split()) z = float("inf") for i in range(1,n): v1 = 1 v3 = 1+i t = i*(180/n) s1 = abs(a-t) if s1 < z: k = [v1,v3+1,v3] z = min(z,s1) # print(z+a,z-a) print(*k) ```
0
236
A
Boy or Girl
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "brute force", "implementation", "strings" ]
null
null
Those days, many boys use beautiful girls' photos as avatars in forums. So it is pretty hard to tell the gender of a user at the first glance. Last year, our hero went to a forum and had a nice chat with a beauty (he thought so). After that they talked very often and eventually they became a couple in the network. Bu...
The first line contains a non-empty string, that contains only lowercase English letters — the user name. This string contains at most 100 letters.
If it is a female by our hero's method, print "CHAT WITH HER!" (without the quotes), otherwise, print "IGNORE HIM!" (without the quotes).
[ "wjmzbmr\n", "xiaodao\n", "sevenkplus\n" ]
[ "CHAT WITH HER!\n", "IGNORE HIM!\n", "CHAT WITH HER!\n" ]
For the first example. There are 6 distinct characters in "wjmzbmr". These characters are: "w", "j", "m", "z", "b", "r". So wjmzbmr is a female and you should print "CHAT WITH HER!".
500
[ { "input": "wjmzbmr", "output": "CHAT WITH HER!" }, { "input": "xiaodao", "output": "IGNORE HIM!" }, { "input": "sevenkplus", "output": "CHAT WITH HER!" }, { "input": "pezu", "output": "CHAT WITH HER!" }, { "input": "wnemlgppy", "output": "CHAT WITH HER!" },...
1,698,145,060
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
1
92
0
print('IGNORE HIM!' if len(input()) % 2 == 0 else 'CHAT WITH HER!')
Title: Boy or Girl Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Those days, many boys use beautiful girls' photos as avatars in forums. So it is pretty hard to tell the gender of a user at the first glance. Last year, our hero went to a forum and had a nice chat with a beauty (he though...
```python print('IGNORE HIM!' if len(input()) % 2 == 0 else 'CHAT WITH HER!') ```
0
215
A
Bicycle Chain
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "brute force", "implementation" ]
null
null
Vasya's bicycle chain drive consists of two parts: *n* stars are attached to the pedal axle, *m* stars are attached to the rear wheel axle. The chain helps to rotate the rear wheel by transmitting the pedal rotation. We know that the *i*-th star on the pedal axle has *a**i* (0<=&lt;<=*a*1<=&lt;<=*a*2<=&lt;<=...<=&lt;<...
The first input line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=50) — the number of stars on the bicycle's pedal axle. The second line contains *n* integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=104) in the order of strict increasing. The third input line contains integer *m* (1<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=50) — the number of stars o...
Print the number of "integer" gears with the maximum ratio among all "integer" gears.
[ "2\n4 5\n3\n12 13 15\n", "4\n1 2 3 4\n5\n10 11 12 13 14\n" ]
[ "2\n", "1\n" ]
In the first sample the maximum "integer" gear ratio equals 3. There are two gears that have such gear ratio. For one of them *a*<sub class="lower-index">1</sub> = 4, *b*<sub class="lower-index">1</sub> = 12, and for the other *a*<sub class="lower-index">2</sub> = 5, *b*<sub class="lower-index">3</sub> = 15.
500
[ { "input": "2\n4 5\n3\n12 13 15", "output": "2" }, { "input": "4\n1 2 3 4\n5\n10 11 12 13 14", "output": "1" }, { "input": "1\n1\n1\n1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "2\n1 2\n1\n1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "1\n1\n2\n1 2", "output": "1" }, { "input":...
1,651,056,635
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
10
122
0
input() low = [int(x) for x in input().split()] input() high = [int(x) for x in input().split()] res = [] for i in reversed(high): for j in low: if i%j == 0 and len(res) == 0: res.append(int(i/j)) elif i%j == 0 and len(res) > 0: if int(i/j) == res[0]: ...
Title: Bicycle Chain Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Vasya's bicycle chain drive consists of two parts: *n* stars are attached to the pedal axle, *m* stars are attached to the rear wheel axle. The chain helps to rotate the rear wheel by transmitting the pedal rotation. We ...
```python input() low = [int(x) for x in input().split()] input() high = [int(x) for x in input().split()] res = [] for i in reversed(high): for j in low: if i%j == 0 and len(res) == 0: res.append(int(i/j)) elif i%j == 0 and len(res) > 0: if int(i/j) == res[0]: ...
0
622
F
The Sum of the k-th Powers
PROGRAMMING
2,600
[ "math" ]
null
null
There are well-known formulas: , , . Also mathematicians found similar formulas for higher degrees. Find the value of the sum modulo 109<=+<=7 (so you should find the remainder after dividing the answer by the value 109<=+<=7).
The only line contains two integers *n*,<=*k* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=109,<=0<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=106).
Print the only integer *a* — the remainder after dividing the value of the sum by the value 109<=+<=7.
[ "4 1\n", "4 2\n", "4 3\n", "4 0\n" ]
[ "10\n", "30\n", "100\n", "4\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "4 1", "output": "10" }, { "input": "4 2", "output": "30" }, { "input": "4 3", "output": "100" }, { "input": "4 0", "output": "4" }, { "input": "10 0", "output": "10" }, { "input": "1 1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "1 0", "o...
1,636,683,889
2,147,483,647
Python 3
TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED
TESTS
7
2,000
209,408,000
mod = 1000000007 y = [0] * 10000010 f = [0] * 10000010 d = [0] * 10000010 e = [0] * 10000010 t = [0] * 10000010 def po(a, bit): res = 1 while(bit): if (bit%2==1): res = res *a%mod a = a*a %mod bit = bit >> 1 return res n,k = input().split() n = int(n) ...
Title: The Sum of the k-th Powers Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: There are well-known formulas: , , . Also mathematicians found similar formulas for higher degrees. Find the value of the sum modulo 109<=+<=7 (so you should find the remainder after dividing the answer by ...
```python mod = 1000000007 y = [0] * 10000010 f = [0] * 10000010 d = [0] * 10000010 e = [0] * 10000010 t = [0] * 10000010 def po(a, bit): res = 1 while(bit): if (bit%2==1): res = res *a%mod a = a*a %mod bit = bit >> 1 return res n,k = input().split() n ...
0
119
A
Epic Game
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Simon and Antisimon play a game. Initially each player receives one fixed positive integer that doesn't change throughout the game. Simon receives number *a* and Antisimon receives number *b*. They also have a heap of *n* stones. The players take turns to make a move and Simon starts. During a move a player should take...
The only string contains space-separated integers *a*, *b* and *n* (1<=≤<=*a*,<=*b*,<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the fixed numbers Simon and Antisimon have received correspondingly and the initial number of stones in the pile.
If Simon wins, print "0" (without the quotes), otherwise print "1" (without the quotes).
[ "3 5 9\n", "1 1 100\n" ]
[ "0", "1" ]
The greatest common divisor of two non-negative integers *a* and *b* is such maximum positive integer *k*, that *a* is divisible by *k* without remainder and similarly, *b* is divisible by *k* without remainder. Let *gcd*(*a*, *b*) represent the operation of calculating the greatest common divisor of numbers *a* and *b...
500
[ { "input": "3 5 9", "output": "0" }, { "input": "1 1 100", "output": "1" }, { "input": "23 12 16", "output": "1" }, { "input": "95 26 29", "output": "1" }, { "input": "73 32 99", "output": "1" }, { "input": "1 1 1", "output": "0" }, { "inpu...
1,639,939,012
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
45
122
0
def gcd(a, b): for i in range(min(a, b), 0, -1): if a % i == 0 and b % i == 0: return i return max(a, b) a, b, n = map(int, input().split()) turn = 0 while True: if not turn: a_gcd = gcd(a, n) if a_gcd > n: break n -= a_gcd else: ...
Title: Epic Game Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Simon and Antisimon play a game. Initially each player receives one fixed positive integer that doesn't change throughout the game. Simon receives number *a* and Antisimon receives number *b*. They also have a heap of *n* sto...
```python def gcd(a, b): for i in range(min(a, b), 0, -1): if a % i == 0 and b % i == 0: return i return max(a, b) a, b, n = map(int, input().split()) turn = 0 while True: if not turn: a_gcd = gcd(a, n) if a_gcd > n: break n -= a_gcd ...
3
69
A
Young Physicist
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation", "math" ]
A. Young Physicist
2
256
A guy named Vasya attends the final grade of a high school. One day Vasya decided to watch a match of his favorite hockey team. And, as the boy loves hockey very much, even more than physics, he forgot to do the homework. Specifically, he forgot to complete his physics tasks. Next day the teacher got very angry at Vasy...
The first line contains a positive integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100), then follow *n* lines containing three integers each: the *x**i* coordinate, the *y**i* coordinate and the *z**i* coordinate of the force vector, applied to the body (<=-<=100<=≤<=*x**i*,<=*y**i*,<=*z**i*<=≤<=100).
Print the word "YES" if the body is in equilibrium, or the word "NO" if it is not.
[ "3\n4 1 7\n-2 4 -1\n1 -5 -3\n", "3\n3 -1 7\n-5 2 -4\n2 -1 -3\n" ]
[ "NO", "YES" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "3\n4 1 7\n-2 4 -1\n1 -5 -3", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "3\n3 -1 7\n-5 2 -4\n2 -1 -3", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "10\n21 32 -46\n43 -35 21\n42 2 -50\n22 40 20\n-27 -9 38\n-4 1 1\n-40 6 -31\n-13 -2 34\n-21 34 -12\n-32 -29 41", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "10...
1,621,415,426
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
81
124
0
x,y,z=0,0,0 for t in range(int(input())): a,b,c=map(int,input().split()) x+=a y+=b z+=c if x==0 and y==0 and z==0: print("YES") else: print("NO")
Title: Young Physicist Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: A guy named Vasya attends the final grade of a high school. One day Vasya decided to watch a match of his favorite hockey team. And, as the boy loves hockey very much, even more than physics, he forgot to do the homework. S...
```python x,y,z=0,0,0 for t in range(int(input())): a,b,c=map(int,input().split()) x+=a y+=b z+=c if x==0 and y==0 and z==0: print("YES") else: print("NO") ```
3.969
363
B
Fence
PROGRAMMING
1,100
[ "brute force", "dp" ]
null
null
There is a fence in front of Polycarpus's home. The fence consists of *n* planks of the same width which go one after another from left to right. The height of the *i*-th plank is *h**i* meters, distinct planks can have distinct heights. Polycarpus has bought a posh piano and is thinking about how to get it into the h...
The first line of the input contains integers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1.5·105,<=1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=*n*) — the number of planks in the fence and the width of the hole for the piano. The second line contains the sequence of integers *h*1,<=*h*2,<=...,<=*h**n* (1<=≤<=*h**i*<=≤<=100), where *h**i* is the height of the *i*-th...
Print such integer *j* that the sum of the heights of planks *j*, *j*<=+<=1, ..., *j*<=+<=*k*<=-<=1 is the minimum possible. If there are multiple such *j*'s, print any of them.
[ "7 3\n1 2 6 1 1 7 1\n" ]
[ "3\n" ]
In the sample, your task is to find three consecutive planks with the minimum sum of heights. In the given case three planks with indexes 3, 4 and 5 have the required attribute, their total height is 8.
1,000
[ { "input": "7 3\n1 2 6 1 1 7 1", "output": "3" }, { "input": "1 1\n100", "output": "1" }, { "input": "2 1\n10 20", "output": "1" }, { "input": "10 5\n1 2 3 1 2 2 3 1 4 5", "output": "1" }, { "input": "10 2\n3 1 4 1 4 6 2 1 4 6", "output": "7" }, { "inp...
1,678,465,621
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
1
46
0
n , k = list(map(int , input().split())) a = list(map(int , input().split())) l = 0 r = 2 minv = 100000 pos = 0 while r < n and r - l >= 2: if(minv > sum(a[l:r+1])): minv = sum(a[l:r+1]) pos = l + 1 l += 1 r += 1 print(pos)
Title: Fence Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: There is a fence in front of Polycarpus's home. The fence consists of *n* planks of the same width which go one after another from left to right. The height of the *i*-th plank is *h**i* meters, distinct planks can have distinct ...
```python n , k = list(map(int , input().split())) a = list(map(int , input().split())) l = 0 r = 2 minv = 100000 pos = 0 while r < n and r - l >= 2: if(minv > sum(a[l:r+1])): minv = sum(a[l:r+1]) pos = l + 1 l += 1 r += 1 print(pos) ```
0
439
D
Devu and his Brother
PROGRAMMING
1,700
[ "binary search", "sortings", "ternary search", "two pointers" ]
null
null
Devu and his brother love each other a lot. As they are super geeks, they only like to play with arrays. They are given two arrays *a* and *b* by their father. The array *a* is given to Devu and *b* to his brother. As Devu is really a naughty kid, he wants the minimum value of his array *a* should be at least as much...
The first line contains two space-separated integers *n*, *m* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=105). The second line will contain *n* space-separated integers representing content of the array *a* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=109). The third line will contain *m* space-separated integers representing content of the array *b* (1<=≤<=*b**i*<=≤...
You need to output a single integer representing the minimum number of operations needed to satisfy Devu's condition.
[ "2 2\n2 3\n3 5\n", "3 2\n1 2 3\n3 4\n", "3 2\n4 5 6\n1 2\n" ]
[ "3\n", "4\n", "0\n" ]
In example 1, you can increase *a*<sub class="lower-index">1</sub> by 1 and decrease *b*<sub class="lower-index">2</sub> by 1 and then again decrease *b*<sub class="lower-index">2</sub> by 1. Now array *a* will be [3; 3] and array *b* will also be [3; 3]. Here minimum element of *a* is at least as large as maximum elem...
2,000
[ { "input": "2 2\n2 3\n3 5", "output": "3" }, { "input": "3 2\n1 2 3\n3 4", "output": "4" }, { "input": "3 2\n4 5 6\n1 2", "output": "0" }, { "input": "10 10\n23 100 38 38 73 54 59 69 44 86\n100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100", "output": "416" }, { "input": "1...
1,653,320,236
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
3
46
512,000
from math import inf import sys import os working_directory = os.getcwd() def dbg(*args, **kwargs): if('Vaibhav' not in working_directory): return print(*args, file=sys.stderr, **kwargs) def solve(): n,m = map(int,input().split()) a = list(map(int,input().split())) b = list(ma...
Title: Devu and his Brother Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Devu and his brother love each other a lot. As they are super geeks, they only like to play with arrays. They are given two arrays *a* and *b* by their father. The array *a* is given to Devu and *b* to his brother....
```python from math import inf import sys import os working_directory = os.getcwd() def dbg(*args, **kwargs): if('Vaibhav' not in working_directory): return print(*args, file=sys.stderr, **kwargs) def solve(): n,m = map(int,input().split()) a = list(map(int,input().split())) b...
0
910
A
The Way to Home
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "dfs and similar", "dp", "greedy", "implementation" ]
null
null
A frog lives on the axis *Ox* and needs to reach home which is in the point *n*. She starts from the point 1. The frog can jump to the right at a distance not more than *d*. So, after she jumped from the point *x* she can reach the point *x*<=+<=*a*, where *a* is an integer from 1 to *d*. For each point from 1 to *n* ...
The first line contains two integers *n* and *d* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100, 1<=≤<=*d*<=≤<=*n*<=-<=1) — the point, which the frog wants to reach, and the maximal length of the frog jump. The second line contains a string *s* of length *n*, consisting of zeros and ones. If a character of the string *s* equals to zero, then in ...
If the frog can not reach the home, print -1. In the other case, print the minimal number of jumps that the frog needs to reach the home which is in the point *n* from the point 1.
[ "8 4\n10010101\n", "4 2\n1001\n", "8 4\n11100101\n", "12 3\n101111100101\n" ]
[ "2\n", "-1\n", "3\n", "4\n" ]
In the first example the from can reach home in two jumps: the first jump from the point 1 to the point 4 (the length of the jump is three), and the second jump from the point 4 to the point 8 (the length of the jump is four). In the second example the frog can not reach home, because to make it she need to jump on a ...
500
[ { "input": "8 4\n10010101", "output": "2" }, { "input": "4 2\n1001", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "8 4\n11100101", "output": "3" }, { "input": "12 3\n101111100101", "output": "4" }, { "input": "5 4\n11011", "output": "1" }, { "input": "5 4\n10001", ...
1,596,741,087
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED
TESTS
14
1,000
31,948,800
def rec(i,n,l,d): if i+d>=n-1: return 1 else: m=float("inf") for j in range(i+1,min(i+d+1,n)): if l[j]=="1": m=min(m, 1+rec(j,n,l,d)) return m n,d = map(int,input().split()) l = input() f = rec(0,n,l,d) if f==float("inf"): print(-1) else: prin...
Title: The Way to Home Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: A frog lives on the axis *Ox* and needs to reach home which is in the point *n*. She starts from the point 1. The frog can jump to the right at a distance not more than *d*. So, after she jumped from the point *x* she c...
```python def rec(i,n,l,d): if i+d>=n-1: return 1 else: m=float("inf") for j in range(i+1,min(i+d+1,n)): if l[j]=="1": m=min(m, 1+rec(j,n,l,d)) return m n,d = map(int,input().split()) l = input() f = rec(0,n,l,d) if f==float("inf"): print(-1) else...
0
149
A
Business trip
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "greedy", "implementation", "sortings" ]
null
null
What joy! Petya's parents went on a business trip for the whole year and the playful kid is left all by himself. Petya got absolutely happy. He jumped on the bed and threw pillows all day long, until... Today Petya opened the cupboard and found a scary note there. His parents had left him with duties: he should water...
The first line contains exactly one integer *k* (0<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=100). The next line contains twelve space-separated integers: the *i*-th (1<=≤<=*i*<=≤<=12) number in the line represents *a**i* (0<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=100).
Print the only integer — the minimum number of months when Petya has to water the flower so that the flower grows no less than by *k* centimeters. If the flower can't grow by *k* centimeters in a year, print -1.
[ "5\n1 1 1 1 2 2 3 2 2 1 1 1\n", "0\n0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 2 3 0\n", "11\n1 1 4 1 1 5 1 1 4 1 1 1\n" ]
[ "2\n", "0\n", "3\n" ]
Let's consider the first sample test. There it is enough to water the flower during the seventh and the ninth month. Then the flower grows by exactly five centimeters. In the second sample Petya's parents will believe him even if the flower doesn't grow at all (*k* = 0). So, it is possible for Petya not to water the f...
500
[ { "input": "5\n1 1 1 1 2 2 3 2 2 1 1 1", "output": "2" }, { "input": "0\n0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 2 3 0", "output": "0" }, { "input": "11\n1 1 4 1 1 5 1 1 4 1 1 1", "output": "3" }, { "input": "15\n20 1 1 1 1 2 2 1 2 2 1 1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "7\n8 9 100 12 14 ...
1,644,037,799
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
0
60
0
w = list() q = list() l = input() num = l.split("+") for i in num: z = int(i) w.append(z) w.sort() for j in w: q.append(str(j)) print("+".join(q))
Title: Business trip Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: What joy! Petya's parents went on a business trip for the whole year and the playful kid is left all by himself. Petya got absolutely happy. He jumped on the bed and threw pillows all day long, until... Today Petya open...
```python w = list() q = list() l = input() num = l.split("+") for i in num: z = int(i) w.append(z) w.sort() for j in w: q.append(str(j)) print("+".join(q)) ```
0
690
F1
Tree of Life (easy)
PROGRAMMING
1,300
[]
null
null
Heidi has finally found the mythical Tree of Life – a legendary combinatorial structure which is said to contain a prophecy crucially needed to defeat the undead armies. On the surface, the Tree of Life is just a regular undirected tree well-known from computer science. This means that it is a collection of *n* points...
The first line of the input contains a single integer *n* – the number of vertices in the tree (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=10000). The vertices are labeled with the numbers from 1 to *n*. Then *n*<=-<=1 lines follow, each describing one edge using two space-separated numbers *a* *b* – the labels of the vertices connected by the edg...
Print one integer – the number of lifelines in the tree.
[ "4\n1 2\n1 3\n1 4\n", "5\n1 2\n2 3\n3 4\n3 5\n" ]
[ "3", "4" ]
In the second sample, there are four lifelines: paths between vertices 1 and 3, 2 and 4, 2 and 5, and 4 and 5.
0
[ { "input": "4\n1 2\n1 3\n1 4", "output": "3" }, { "input": "5\n1 2\n2 3\n3 4\n3 5", "output": "4" }, { "input": "2\n1 2", "output": "0" }, { "input": "3\n2 1\n3 2", "output": "1" }, { "input": "10\n5 1\n1 2\n9 3\n10 5\n6 3\n8 5\n2 7\n2 3\n9 4", "output": "11" ...
1,679,567,931
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
19
62
102,400
import math n=int(input()) l=[0]*(n+1) # print(*l) for i in range(n-1): a,b=map(int,input().split()) l[a]+=1 l[b]+=1 ans=0 for i in range(1,n+1): if l[i]>=2: ans+=math.comb(l[i],2) print(ans)
Title: Tree of Life (easy) Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Heidi has finally found the mythical Tree of Life – a legendary combinatorial structure which is said to contain a prophecy crucially needed to defeat the undead armies. On the surface, the Tree of Life is just a r...
```python import math n=int(input()) l=[0]*(n+1) # print(*l) for i in range(n-1): a,b=map(int,input().split()) l[a]+=1 l[b]+=1 ans=0 for i in range(1,n+1): if l[i]>=2: ans+=math.comb(l[i],2) print(ans) ```
3
572
A
Arrays
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "sortings" ]
null
null
You are given two arrays *A* and *B* consisting of integers, sorted in non-decreasing order. Check whether it is possible to choose *k* numbers in array *A* and choose *m* numbers in array *B* so that any number chosen in the first array is strictly less than any number chosen in the second array.
The first line contains two integers *n**A*,<=*n**B* (1<=≤<=*n**A*,<=*n**B*<=≤<=105), separated by a space — the sizes of arrays *A* and *B*, correspondingly. The second line contains two integers *k* and *m* (1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=*n**A*,<=1<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=*n**B*), separated by a space. The third line contains *n**A* numbers *...
Print "YES" (without the quotes), if you can choose *k* numbers in array *A* and *m* numbers in array *B* so that any number chosen in array *A* was strictly less than any number chosen in array *B*. Otherwise, print "NO" (without the quotes).
[ "3 3\n2 1\n1 2 3\n3 4 5\n", "3 3\n3 3\n1 2 3\n3 4 5\n", "5 2\n3 1\n1 1 1 1 1\n2 2\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "NO\n", "YES\n" ]
In the first sample test you can, for example, choose numbers 1 and 2 from array *A* and number 3 from array *B* (1 &lt; 3 and 2 &lt; 3). In the second sample test the only way to choose *k* elements in the first array and *m* elements in the second one is to choose all numbers in both arrays, but then not all the num...
500
[ { "input": "3 3\n2 1\n1 2 3\n3 4 5", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "3 3\n3 3\n1 2 3\n3 4 5", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "5 2\n3 1\n1 1 1 1 1\n2 2", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "3 5\n1 1\n5 5 5\n5 5 5 5 5", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "1 1\n1 1\n1\n1", "ou...
1,571,567,141
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
52
186
10,444,800
na,nb=map(int,input().split()) k,m=map(int,input().split()) a=list(map(int,input().split())) b=list(map(int,input().split())) a.sort() b.sort(reverse=True) x=a[:k] y=b[:m] y.sort() if x[k-1]<y[0]: print("YES") else: print("NO")
Title: Arrays Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: You are given two arrays *A* and *B* consisting of integers, sorted in non-decreasing order. Check whether it is possible to choose *k* numbers in array *A* and choose *m* numbers in array *B* so that any number chosen in the fi...
```python na,nb=map(int,input().split()) k,m=map(int,input().split()) a=list(map(int,input().split())) b=list(map(int,input().split())) a.sort() b.sort(reverse=True) x=a[:k] y=b[:m] y.sort() if x[k-1]<y[0]: print("YES") else: print("NO") ```
3
65
A
Harry Potter and Three Spells
PROGRAMMING
1,800
[ "implementation", "math" ]
A. Harry Potter and Three Spells
2
256
A long time ago (probably even in the first book), Nicholas Flamel, a great alchemist and the creator of the Philosopher's Stone, taught Harry Potter three useful spells. The first one allows you to convert *a* grams of sand into *b* grams of lead, the second one allows you to convert *c* grams of lead into *d* grams o...
The first line contains 6 integers *a*, *b*, *c*, *d*, *e*, *f* (0<=≤<=*a*,<=*b*,<=*c*,<=*d*,<=*e*,<=*f*<=≤<=1000).
Print "Ron", if it is possible to get an infinitely large amount of gold having a certain finite amount of sand (and not having any gold and lead at all), i.e., Ron is right. Otherwise, print "Hermione".
[ "100 200 250 150 200 250\n", "100 50 50 200 200 100\n", "100 10 200 20 300 30\n", "0 0 0 0 0 0\n", "1 1 0 1 1 1\n", "1 0 1 2 1 2\n", "100 1 100 1 0 1\n" ]
[ "Ron\n", "Hermione\n", "Hermione\n", "Hermione\n", "Ron\n", "Hermione\n", "Ron\n" ]
Consider the first sample. Let's start with the 500 grams of sand. Apply the first spell 5 times and turn the sand into 1000 grams of lead. Then apply the second spell 4 times to get 600 grams of gold. Let’s take 400 grams from the resulting amount of gold turn them back into sand. We get 500 grams of sand and 200 gram...
500
[ { "input": "100 200 250 150 200 250", "output": "Ron" }, { "input": "100 50 50 200 200 100", "output": "Hermione" }, { "input": "100 10 200 20 300 30", "output": "Hermione" }, { "input": "0 0 0 0 0 0", "output": "Hermione" }, { "input": "1 1 0 1 1 1", "output"...
1,553,622,131
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
1
216
0
import math def solve(c1: int, c2: int, c3: int, c4: int, c5: int, c6: int): if c2 * c4 * c6 == 0 and c1 * c3 * c5 == 0: pass return "Ron" if c2 * c4 * c6 > c1 * c3 * c5 else 'Hermione' def main(): # inp_str = input() inp_str = "100 200 250 150 200 250" inp = list(map(int...
Title: Harry Potter and Three Spells Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: A long time ago (probably even in the first book), Nicholas Flamel, a great alchemist and the creator of the Philosopher's Stone, taught Harry Potter three useful spells. The first one allows you to convert *a...
```python import math def solve(c1: int, c2: int, c3: int, c4: int, c5: int, c6: int): if c2 * c4 * c6 == 0 and c1 * c3 * c5 == 0: pass return "Ron" if c2 * c4 * c6 > c1 * c3 * c5 else 'Hermione' def main(): # inp_str = input() inp_str = "100 200 250 150 200 250" inp = li...
0
811
A
Vladik and Courtesy
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "brute force", "implementation" ]
null
null
At regular competition Vladik and Valera won *a* and *b* candies respectively. Vladik offered 1 his candy to Valera. After that Valera gave Vladik 2 his candies, so that no one thought that he was less generous. Vladik for same reason gave 3 candies to Valera in next turn. More formally, the guys take turns giving eac...
Single line of input data contains two space-separated integers *a*, *b* (1<=≤<=*a*,<=*b*<=≤<=109) — number of Vladik and Valera candies respectively.
Pring a single line "Vladik’’ in case, if Vladik first who can’t give right amount of candy, or "Valera’’ otherwise.
[ "1 1\n", "7 6\n" ]
[ "Valera\n", "Vladik\n" ]
Illustration for first test case: <img class="tex-graphics" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/ad9b7d0e481208de8e3a585aa1d96b9e1dda4fd7.png" style="max-width: 100.0%;max-height: 100.0%;"/> Illustration for second test case: <img class="tex-graphics" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/9f4836d2ccdffaee5a63898e5d4e...
500
[ { "input": "1 1", "output": "Valera" }, { "input": "7 6", "output": "Vladik" }, { "input": "25 38", "output": "Vladik" }, { "input": "8311 2468", "output": "Valera" }, { "input": "250708 857756", "output": "Vladik" }, { "input": "957985574 24997558", ...
1,557,380,188
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
2
78
0
vladik, valera = [int(x) for x in input().split()] def reduce(counter, number, divisor): if (divisor >= number): return counter else: return reduce(counter + 1, number - divisor, divisor + 2) vla = reduce(0, vladik, 1) val = reduce(0, valera, 0) if vla == val or vla > val: pri...
Title: Vladik and Courtesy Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: At regular competition Vladik and Valera won *a* and *b* candies respectively. Vladik offered 1 his candy to Valera. After that Valera gave Vladik 2 his candies, so that no one thought that he was less generous. Vla...
```python vladik, valera = [int(x) for x in input().split()] def reduce(counter, number, divisor): if (divisor >= number): return counter else: return reduce(counter + 1, number - divisor, divisor + 2) vla = reduce(0, vladik, 1) val = reduce(0, valera, 0) if vla == val or vla > val...
0
48
A
Rock-paper-scissors
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "implementation", "schedules" ]
A. Rock-paper-scissors
2
256
Uncle Fyodor, Matroskin the Cat and Sharic the Dog live their simple but happy lives in Prostokvashino. Sometimes they receive parcels from Uncle Fyodor’s parents and sometimes from anonymous benefactors, in which case it is hard to determine to which one of them the package has been sent. A photographic rifle is obvio...
The first input line contains the name of the gesture that Uncle Fyodor showed, the second line shows which gesture Matroskin showed and the third line shows Sharic’s gesture.
Print "F" (without quotes) if Uncle Fyodor wins. Print "M" if Matroskin wins and "S" if Sharic wins. If it is impossible to find the winner, print "?".
[ "rock\nrock\nrock\n", "paper\nrock\nrock\n", "scissors\nrock\nrock\n", "scissors\npaper\nrock\n" ]
[ "?\n", "F\n", "?\n", "?\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "rock\nrock\nrock", "output": "?" }, { "input": "paper\nrock\nrock", "output": "F" }, { "input": "scissors\nrock\nrock", "output": "?" }, { "input": "scissors\npaper\nrock", "output": "?" }, { "input": "paper\npaper\nrock", "output": "?" }, { ...
1,583,057,438
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
27
216
0
a=[input()[0] for _ in " "*3];i=set(a);p=len(set(a));e=["F","M","S"];k={"pr":"p","rs":"r","ps":"s"} if p==1 or p==3:print("?") else : s=k.get("".join(sorted(i))) if a.count(s)>1:print("?") else:print(e[a.index(s)])
Title: Rock-paper-scissors Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: Uncle Fyodor, Matroskin the Cat and Sharic the Dog live their simple but happy lives in Prostokvashino. Sometimes they receive parcels from Uncle Fyodor’s parents and sometimes from anonymous benefactors, in which case ...
```python a=[input()[0] for _ in " "*3];i=set(a);p=len(set(a));e=["F","M","S"];k={"pr":"p","rs":"r","ps":"s"} if p==1 or p==3:print("?") else : s=k.get("".join(sorted(i))) if a.count(s)>1:print("?") else:print(e[a.index(s)]) ```
3.946
242
B
Big Segment
PROGRAMMING
1,100
[ "implementation", "sortings" ]
null
null
A coordinate line has *n* segments, the *i*-th segment starts at the position *l**i* and ends at the position *r**i*. We will denote such a segment as [*l**i*,<=*r**i*]. You have suggested that one of the defined segments covers all others. In other words, there is such segment in the given set, which contains all oth...
The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) — the number of segments. Next *n* lines contain the descriptions of the segments. The *i*-th line contains two space-separated integers *l**i*,<=*r**i* (1<=≤<=*l**i*<=≤<=*r**i*<=≤<=109) — the borders of the *i*-th segment. It is guaranteed that no two segments c...
Print a single integer — the number of the segment that covers all other segments in the set. If there's no solution, print -1. The segments are numbered starting from 1 in the order in which they appear in the input.
[ "3\n1 1\n2 2\n3 3\n", "6\n1 5\n2 3\n1 10\n7 10\n7 7\n10 10\n" ]
[ "-1\n", "3\n" ]
none
1,000
[ { "input": "3\n1 1\n2 2\n3 3", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "6\n1 5\n2 3\n1 10\n7 10\n7 7\n10 10", "output": "3" }, { "input": "4\n1 5\n2 2\n2 4\n2 5", "output": "1" }, { "input": "5\n3 3\n1 3\n2 2\n2 3\n1 2", "output": "2" }, { "input": "7\n7 7\n8 8\n3 7\n1 6\n1 ...
1,673,028,216
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED
TESTS
18
2,000
14,745,600
from sys import exit n=int(input()) f=[] hi=[] lo=[] for i in range(n): k,l=[int(x) for x in input().split()] f.append([k,l]) hi=hi+[k] lo=lo+[l] #z=z+k #print(lo) hii=min(hi) loo=max(lo) #print(loo) #print(hii,loo) #print(f[2][0]) for i in range(len(f)): if f[i][0]==hii and f[...
Title: Big Segment Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: A coordinate line has *n* segments, the *i*-th segment starts at the position *l**i* and ends at the position *r**i*. We will denote such a segment as [*l**i*,<=*r**i*]. You have suggested that one of the defined segments ...
```python from sys import exit n=int(input()) f=[] hi=[] lo=[] for i in range(n): k,l=[int(x) for x in input().split()] f.append([k,l]) hi=hi+[k] lo=lo+[l] #z=z+k #print(lo) hii=min(hi) loo=max(lo) #print(loo) #print(hii,loo) #print(f[2][0]) for i in range(len(f)): if f[i][0]==...
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": "...
1,569,892,437
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
25
218
0
n, m = map(int, input().split()) prices = sorted(list(map(int, input().split()))) max = 0 count = 0 while count < m and prices[count] < 0: max += abs(prices[count]) count += 1 print(max)
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()) prices = sorted(list(map(int, input().split()))) max = 0 count = 0 while count < m and prices[count] < 0: max += abs(prices[count]) count += 1 print(max) ```
3.9455
779
A
Pupils Redistribution
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "constructive algorithms", "math" ]
null
null
In Berland each high school student is characterized by academic performance — integer value between 1 and 5. In high school 0xFF there are two groups of pupils: the group *A* and the group *B*. Each group consists of exactly *n* students. An academic performance of each student is known — integer value between 1 and ...
The first line of the input contains integer number *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — number of students in both groups. The second line contains sequence of integer numbers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=5), where *a**i* is academic performance of the *i*-th student of the group *A*. The third line contains se...
Print the required minimum number of exchanges or -1, if the desired distribution of students can not be obtained.
[ "4\n5 4 4 4\n5 5 4 5\n", "6\n1 1 1 1 1 1\n5 5 5 5 5 5\n", "1\n5\n3\n", "9\n3 2 5 5 2 3 3 3 2\n4 1 4 1 1 2 4 4 1\n" ]
[ "1\n", "3\n", "-1\n", "4\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "4\n5 4 4 4\n5 5 4 5", "output": "1" }, { "input": "6\n1 1 1 1 1 1\n5 5 5 5 5 5", "output": "3" }, { "input": "1\n5\n3", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "9\n3 2 5 5 2 3 3 3 2\n4 1 4 1 1 2 4 4 1", "output": "4" }, { "input": "1\n1\n2", "output": "-1" ...
1,652,906,127
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
81
61
4,300,800
input() A,B = input(),input() D = [abs(A.count(x)- B.count(x)) for x in '12345'] print(-1 if any(d % 2 for d in D) else sum(D) //4)
Title: Pupils Redistribution Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: In Berland each high school student is characterized by academic performance — integer value between 1 and 5. In high school 0xFF there are two groups of pupils: the group *A* and the group *B*. Each group consis...
```python input() A,B = input(),input() D = [abs(A.count(x)- B.count(x)) for x in '12345'] print(-1 if any(d % 2 for d in D) else sum(D) //4) ```
3
0
none
none
none
0
[ "none" ]
null
null
DZY has a sequence *a*, consisting of *n* integers. We'll call a sequence *a**i*,<=*a**i*<=+<=1,<=...,<=*a**j* (1<=≤<=*i*<=≤<=*j*<=≤<=*n*) a subsegment of the sequence *a*. The value (*j*<=-<=*i*<=+<=1) denotes the length of the subsegment. Your task is to find the longest subsegment of *a*, such that it is possible ...
The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105). The next line contains *n* integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=109).
In a single line print the answer to the problem — the maximum length of the required subsegment.
[ "6\n7 2 3 1 5 6\n" ]
[ "5\n" ]
You can choose subsegment *a*<sub class="lower-index">2</sub>, *a*<sub class="lower-index">3</sub>, *a*<sub class="lower-index">4</sub>, *a*<sub class="lower-index">5</sub>, *a*<sub class="lower-index">6</sub> and change its 3rd element (that is *a*<sub class="lower-index">4</sub>) to 4.
0
[ { "input": "6\n7 2 3 1 5 6", "output": "5" }, { "input": "10\n424238336 649760493 681692778 714636916 719885387 804289384 846930887 957747794 596516650 189641422", "output": "9" }, { "input": "50\n804289384 846930887 681692778 714636916 957747794 424238336 719885387 649760493 596516650 1...
1,405,263,025
6,625
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
PRETESTS
1
46
0
n = int(input()) nums = list(map(int, input().split(' '))) def sub_len(begin_index): prev = nums[begin_index] count = 1 for el in nums[begin_index+1:]: if el > prev: count += 1 else: return count return count max_len = 1 prev_len = 1 i = 0...
Title: none Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: DZY has a sequence *a*, consisting of *n* integers. We'll call a sequence *a**i*,<=*a**i*<=+<=1,<=...,<=*a**j* (1<=≤<=*i*<=≤<=*j*<=≤<=*n*) a subsegment of the sequence *a*. The value (*j*<=-<=*i*<=+<=1) denotes the length of the ...
```python n = int(input()) nums = list(map(int, input().split(' '))) def sub_len(begin_index): prev = nums[begin_index] count = 1 for el in nums[begin_index+1:]: if el > prev: count += 1 else: return count return count max_len = 1 prev_len ...
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" ...
1,613,392,431
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED
TESTS
8
2,500
10,649,600
n, k, q = map(int, input().split(' ')) c = [0]*200002 for i in range(n): l, r = map(int, input().split(' ')) c[l]+=1 c[r+1]-=1 i = 1 while i < 200000: c[i] += c[i - 1] i+=1 i=1 while i < 200000: if c[i] < k: c[i] = 0 else: c[i] = 1 i += 1 ...
Title: Karen and Coffee Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: To stay woke and attentive during classes, Karen needs some coffee! Karen, a coffee aficionado, wants to know the optimal temperature for brewing the perfect cup of coffee. Indeed, she has spent some time reading seve...
```python n, k, q = map(int, input().split(' ')) c = [0]*200002 for i in range(n): l, r = map(int, input().split(' ')) c[l]+=1 c[r+1]-=1 i = 1 while i < 200000: c[i] += c[i - 1] i+=1 i=1 while i < 200000: if c[i] < k: c[i] = 0 else: c[i] = 1 ...
0
955
A
Feed the cat
PROGRAMMING
1,100
[ "greedy", "math" ]
null
null
After waking up at *hh*:*mm*, Andrew realised that he had forgotten to feed his only cat for yet another time (guess why there's only one cat). The cat's current hunger level is *H* points, moreover each minute without food increases his hunger by *D* points. At any time Andrew can visit the store where tasty buns are...
The first line contains two integers *hh* and *mm* (00<=≤<=*hh*<=≤<=23,<=00<=≤<=*mm*<=≤<=59) — the time of Andrew's awakening. The second line contains four integers *H*, *D*, *C* and *N* (1<=≤<=*H*<=≤<=105,<=1<=≤<=*D*,<=*C*,<=*N*<=≤<=102).
Output the minimum amount of money to within three decimal digits. You answer is considered correct, if its absolute or relative error does not exceed 10<=-<=4. Formally, let your answer be *a*, and the jury's answer be *b*. Your answer is considered correct if .
[ "19 00\n255 1 100 1\n", "17 41\n1000 6 15 11\n" ]
[ "25200.0000\n", "1365.0000\n" ]
In the first sample Andrew can visit the store at exactly 20:00. The cat's hunger will be equal to 315, hence it will be necessary to purchase 315 buns. The discount makes the final answer 25200 roubles. In the second sample it's optimal to visit the store right after he wakes up. Then he'll have to buy 91 bins per 15...
500
[ { "input": "19 00\n255 1 100 1", "output": "25200.0000" }, { "input": "17 41\n1000 6 15 11", "output": "1365.0000" }, { "input": "16 34\n61066 14 50 59", "output": "43360.0000" }, { "input": "18 18\n23331 86 87 41", "output": "49590.0000" }, { "input": "10 48\n684...
1,653,629,707
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
7
46
512,000
a=input().split() hh,mm=int(a[0]),int (a[1]) a=input().split() l=list(map(int,a)) h,d,c,n=l[0],l[1],l[2],l[3] x=0 if mm==0: x+=(20-hh)*60 else: x+=(19-hh)*60 x+=(60-mm) v1= (h+n-1)//n v2= float(v1)*c v3= (h+n-1+(x*d))//n v4= float(v3)*c*(4/5) if (v2<v4): print(v2) else: print(v4)
Title: Feed the cat Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: After waking up at *hh*:*mm*, Andrew realised that he had forgotten to feed his only cat for yet another time (guess why there's only one cat). The cat's current hunger level is *H* points, moreover each minute without foo...
```python a=input().split() hh,mm=int(a[0]),int (a[1]) a=input().split() l=list(map(int,a)) h,d,c,n=l[0],l[1],l[2],l[3] x=0 if mm==0: x+=(20-hh)*60 else: x+=(19-hh)*60 x+=(60-mm) v1= (h+n-1)//n v2= float(v1)*c v3= (h+n-1+(x*d))//n v4= float(v3)*c*(4/5) if (v2<v4): print(v2) else: ...
0
0
none
none
none
0
[ "none" ]
null
null
DZY has a sequence *a*, consisting of *n* integers. We'll call a sequence *a**i*,<=*a**i*<=+<=1,<=...,<=*a**j* (1<=≤<=*i*<=≤<=*j*<=≤<=*n*) a subsegment of the sequence *a*. The value (*j*<=-<=*i*<=+<=1) denotes the length of the subsegment. Your task is to find the longest subsegment of *a*, such that it is possible ...
The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105). The next line contains *n* integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=109).
In a single line print the answer to the problem — the maximum length of the required subsegment.
[ "6\n7 2 3 1 5 6\n" ]
[ "5\n" ]
You can choose subsegment *a*<sub class="lower-index">2</sub>, *a*<sub class="lower-index">3</sub>, *a*<sub class="lower-index">4</sub>, *a*<sub class="lower-index">5</sub>, *a*<sub class="lower-index">6</sub> and change its 3rd element (that is *a*<sub class="lower-index">4</sub>) to 4.
0
[ { "input": "6\n7 2 3 1 5 6", "output": "5" }, { "input": "10\n424238336 649760493 681692778 714636916 719885387 804289384 846930887 957747794 596516650 189641422", "output": "9" }, { "input": "50\n804289384 846930887 681692778 714636916 957747794 424238336 719885387 649760493 596516650 1...
1,434,398,331
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
1
46
0
n=int(input()) a=list(map(int,input().split())) fr=[0]*(n) bck=[0]*(n) fr[0]=1 bck[n-1]=1 ans=1 if n==1: print(ans) else: for i in range(1,n): if a[i]<a[i-1]: fr[i]=1 else: fr[i]+=fr[i-1]+1 for i in range(n-2,-1,-1): if a[i]>a[i+1]: ...
Title: none Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: DZY has a sequence *a*, consisting of *n* integers. We'll call a sequence *a**i*,<=*a**i*<=+<=1,<=...,<=*a**j* (1<=≤<=*i*<=≤<=*j*<=≤<=*n*) a subsegment of the sequence *a*. The value (*j*<=-<=*i*<=+<=1) denotes the length of the ...
```python n=int(input()) a=list(map(int,input().split())) fr=[0]*(n) bck=[0]*(n) fr[0]=1 bck[n-1]=1 ans=1 if n==1: print(ans) else: for i in range(1,n): if a[i]<a[i-1]: fr[i]=1 else: fr[i]+=fr[i-1]+1 for i in range(n-2,-1,-1): if a[i]>a[i+1]: ...
0
22
A
Second Order Statistics
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "brute force" ]
A. Second Order Statistics
2
256
Once Bob needed to find the second order statistics of a sequence of integer numbers. Lets choose each number from the sequence exactly once and sort them. The value on the second position is the second order statistics of the given sequence. In other words it is the smallest element strictly greater than the minimum. ...
The first input line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — amount of numbers in the sequence. The second line contains *n* space-separated integer numbers — elements of the sequence. These numbers don't exceed 100 in absolute value.
If the given sequence has the second order statistics, output this order statistics, otherwise output NO.
[ "4\n1 2 2 -4\n", "5\n1 2 3 1 1\n" ]
[ "1\n", "2\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "4\n1 2 2 -4", "output": "1" }, { "input": "5\n1 2 3 1 1", "output": "2" }, { "input": "1\n28", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "2\n-28 12", "output": "12" }, { "input": "3\n-83 40 -80", "output": "-80" }, { "input": "8\n93 77 -92 26 21 -48 53 ...
1,656,510,302
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
31
92
0
n = int(input()) A = list(map(int, input().split())) N = sorted(list(set(A))) if(len(N)==1): print("NO") else: print(N[1])
Title: Second Order Statistics Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: Once Bob needed to find the second order statistics of a sequence of integer numbers. Lets choose each number from the sequence exactly once and sort them. The value on the second position is the second order statis...
```python n = int(input()) A = list(map(int, input().split())) N = sorted(list(set(A))) if(len(N)==1): print("NO") else: print(N[1]) ```
3.977
855
B
Marvolo Gaunt's Ring
PROGRAMMING
1,500
[ "brute force", "data structures", "dp" ]
null
null
Professor Dumbledore is helping Harry destroy the Horcruxes. He went to Gaunt Shack as he suspected a Horcrux to be present there. He saw Marvolo Gaunt's Ring and identified it as a Horcrux. Although he destroyed it, he is still affected by its curse. Professor Snape is helping Dumbledore remove the curse. For this, he...
First line of input contains 4 integers *n*,<=*p*,<=*q*,<=*r* (<=-<=109<=≤<=*p*,<=*q*,<=*r*<=≤<=109,<=1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105). Next line of input contains *n* space separated integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=... *a**n* (<=-<=109<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=109).
Output a single integer the maximum value of *p*·*a**i*<=+<=*q*·*a**j*<=+<=*r*·*a**k* that can be obtained provided 1<=≤<=*i*<=≤<=*j*<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=*n*.
[ "5 1 2 3\n1 2 3 4 5\n", "5 1 2 -3\n-1 -2 -3 -4 -5\n" ]
[ "30\n", "12\n" ]
In the first sample case, we can take *i* = *j* = *k* = 5, thus making the answer as 1·5 + 2·5 + 3·5 = 30. In second sample case, selecting *i* = *j* = 1 and *k* = 5 gives the answer 12.
1,000
[ { "input": "5 1 2 3\n1 2 3 4 5", "output": "30" }, { "input": "5 1 2 -3\n-1 -2 -3 -4 -5", "output": "12" }, { "input": "5 886327859 82309257 -68295239\n-731225382 354766539 -48222231 -474691998 360965777", "output": "376059240645059046" }, { "input": "4 -96405765 -495906217 6...
1,683,207,568
2,147,483,647
Python 3
COMPILATION_ERROR
TESTS
0
0
0
#include <bits/stdc++.h> #include <string> #include <iostream> #include <stdio.h> using namespace std; #define ln '\n'; typedef long long ll; /* for (int i = 0; i < v.size(); i++){ cout << v[i] << " "; }*/ int main(){ ll input; vector<ll> v(4); vector<ll> ans; for(int i = 0; i < 4;...
Title: Marvolo Gaunt's Ring Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Professor Dumbledore is helping Harry destroy the Horcruxes. He went to Gaunt Shack as he suspected a Horcrux to be present there. He saw Marvolo Gaunt's Ring and identified it as a Horcrux. Although he destroyed i...
```python #include <bits/stdc++.h> #include <string> #include <iostream> #include <stdio.h> using namespace std; #define ln '\n'; typedef long long ll; /* for (int i = 0; i < v.size(); i++){ cout << v[i] << " "; }*/ int main(){ ll input; vector<ll> v(4); vector<ll> ans; for(int i =...
-1
334
A
Candy Bags
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Gerald has *n* younger brothers and their number happens to be even. One day he bought *n*2 candy bags. One bag has one candy, one bag has two candies, one bag has three candies and so on. In fact, for each integer *k* from 1 to *n*2 he has exactly one bag with *k* candies. Help him give *n* bags of candies to each b...
The single line contains a single integer *n* (*n* is even, 2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of Gerald's brothers.
Let's assume that Gerald indexes his brothers with numbers from 1 to *n*. You need to print *n* lines, on the *i*-th line print *n* integers — the numbers of candies in the bags for the *i*-th brother. Naturally, all these numbers should be distinct and be within limits from 1 to *n*2. You can print the numbers in the ...
[ "2\n" ]
[ "1 4\n2 3\n" ]
The sample shows Gerald's actions if he has two brothers. In this case, his bags contain 1, 2, 3 and 4 candies. He can give the bags with 1 and 4 candies to one brother and the bags with 2 and 3 to the other brother.
500
[ { "input": "2", "output": "1 4\n2 3" }, { "input": "4", "output": "1 16 2 15\n3 14 4 13\n5 12 6 11\n7 10 8 9" }, { "input": "6", "output": "1 36 2 35 3 34\n4 33 5 32 6 31\n7 30 8 29 9 28\n10 27 11 26 12 25\n13 24 14 23 15 22\n16 21 17 20 18 19" }, { "input": "8", "output"...
1,614,796,383
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
1
122
0
n = int(input()) starting = 1 ending = n * n for _ in range(n): print(*[starting + i if i < n // 2 else ending + i - n // 2 for i in range(n)]) starting += n // 2 ending -= n // 2
Title: Candy Bags Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Gerald has *n* younger brothers and their number happens to be even. One day he bought *n*2 candy bags. One bag has one candy, one bag has two candies, one bag has three candies and so on. In fact, for each integer *k* from ...
```python n = int(input()) starting = 1 ending = n * n for _ in range(n): print(*[starting + i if i < n // 2 else ending + i - n // 2 for i in range(n)]) starting += n // 2 ending -= n // 2 ```
0
988
A
Diverse Team
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "brute force", "implementation" ]
null
null
There are $n$ students in a school class, the rating of the $i$-th student on Codehorses is $a_i$. You have to form a team consisting of $k$ students ($1 \le k \le n$) such that the ratings of all team members are distinct. If it is impossible to form a suitable team, print "NO" (without quotes). Otherwise print "YES"...
The first line contains two integers $n$ and $k$ ($1 \le k \le n \le 100$) — the number of students and the size of the team you have to form. The second line contains $n$ integers $a_1, a_2, \dots, a_n$ ($1 \le a_i \le 100$), where $a_i$ is the rating of $i$-th student.
If it is impossible to form a suitable team, print "NO" (without quotes). Otherwise print "YES", and then print $k$ distinct integers from $1$ to $n$ which should be the indices of students in the team you form. All the ratings of the students in the team should be distinct. You may print the indices in any order. If t...
[ "5 3\n15 13 15 15 12\n", "5 4\n15 13 15 15 12\n", "4 4\n20 10 40 30\n" ]
[ "YES\n1 2 5 \n", "NO\n", "YES\n1 2 3 4 \n" ]
All possible answers for the first example: - {1 2 5} - {2 3 5} - {2 4 5} Note that the order does not matter.
0
[ { "input": "5 3\n15 13 15 15 12", "output": "YES\n1 2 5 " }, { "input": "5 4\n15 13 15 15 12", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "4 4\n20 10 40 30", "output": "YES\n1 2 3 4 " }, { "input": "1 1\n1", "output": "YES\n1 " }, { "input": "100 53\n16 17 1 2 27 5 9 9 53 24 17...
1,688,377,733
833
PyPy 3-64
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
0
77
2,867,200
n , k = map(int , input().split()) l = list(map(int, input().split())) kk = set(l) print(l) print(kk) if len(kk) >= k : print("YES") for i in range(0 , len(kk)-1): if i < k: print(l.index(i)+1 , end = " ") else: print("NO", end = ' ') print('\n', end = '')
Title: Diverse Team Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: There are $n$ students in a school class, the rating of the $i$-th student on Codehorses is $a_i$. You have to form a team consisting of $k$ students ($1 \le k \le n$) such that the ratings of all team members are distinct...
```python n , k = map(int , input().split()) l = list(map(int, input().split())) kk = set(l) print(l) print(kk) if len(kk) >= k : print("YES") for i in range(0 , len(kk)-1): if i < k: print(l.index(i)+1 , end = " ") else: print("NO", end = ' ') print('\n', end = '...
-1
743
C
Vladik and fractions
PROGRAMMING
1,500
[ "brute force", "constructive algorithms", "math", "number theory" ]
null
null
Vladik and Chloe decided to determine who of them is better at math. Vladik claimed that for any positive integer *n* he can represent fraction as a sum of three distinct positive fractions in form . Help Vladik with that, i.e for a given *n* find three distinct positive integers *x*, *y* and *z* such that . Because ...
The single line contains single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=104).
If the answer exists, print 3 distinct numbers *x*, *y* and *z* (1<=≤<=*x*,<=*y*,<=*z*<=≤<=109, *x*<=≠<=*y*, *x*<=≠<=*z*, *y*<=≠<=*z*). Otherwise print -1. If there are multiple answers, print any of them.
[ "3\n", "7\n" ]
[ "2 7 42\n", "7 8 56\n" ]
none
1,250
[ { "input": "3", "output": "2 7 42" }, { "input": "7", "output": "7 8 56" }, { "input": "2", "output": "2 3 6" }, { "input": "5", "output": "5 6 30" }, { "input": "4", "output": "4 5 20" }, { "input": "7", "output": "7 8 56" }, { "input": "8...
1,687,851,991
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
12
31
0
n = int(input()) print(f"{n} {n+1} {n*(n+1)}")
Title: Vladik and fractions Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Vladik and Chloe decided to determine who of them is better at math. Vladik claimed that for any positive integer *n* he can represent fraction as a sum of three distinct positive fractions in form . Help Vladik ...
```python n = int(input()) print(f"{n} {n+1} {n*(n+1)}") ```
0
141
A
Amusing Joke
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation", "sortings", "strings" ]
null
null
So, the New Year holidays are over. Santa Claus and his colleagues can take a rest and have guests at last. When two "New Year and Christmas Men" meet, thear assistants cut out of cardboard the letters from the guest's name and the host's name in honor of this event. Then the hung the letters above the main entrance. O...
The input file consists of three lines: the first line contains the guest's name, the second line contains the name of the residence host and the third line contains letters in a pile that were found at the door in the morning. All lines are not empty and contain only uppercase Latin letters. The length of each line do...
Print "YES" without the quotes, if the letters in the pile could be permuted to make the names of the "New Year and Christmas Men". Otherwise, print "NO" without the quotes.
[ "SANTACLAUS\nDEDMOROZ\nSANTAMOROZDEDCLAUS\n", "PAPAINOEL\nJOULUPUKKI\nJOULNAPAOILELUPUKKI\n", "BABBONATALE\nFATHERCHRISTMAS\nBABCHRISTMASBONATALLEFATHER\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "NO\n", "NO\n" ]
In the first sample the letters written in the last line can be used to write the names and there won't be any extra letters left. In the second sample letter "P" is missing from the pile and there's an extra letter "L". In the third sample there's an extra letter "L".
500
[ { "input": "SANTACLAUS\nDEDMOROZ\nSANTAMOROZDEDCLAUS", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "PAPAINOEL\nJOULUPUKKI\nJOULNAPAOILELUPUKKI", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "BABBONATALE\nFATHERCHRISTMAS\nBABCHRISTMASBONATALLEFATHER", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "B\nA\nAB", "output": ...
1,679,680,183
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
0
62
0
a = input() b = input() a1 = list(a) b1= list(b) x = input() c = list(x) for i in a1: if i in c: a1.remove(i) c.remove(i) for j in b1: if j in c: b1.remove(j) c.remove(j) if len(a1)==0 and len(b1) == 0: print("YES") else: print("NO") # # a = inp...
Title: Amusing Joke Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: So, the New Year holidays are over. Santa Claus and his colleagues can take a rest and have guests at last. When two "New Year and Christmas Men" meet, thear assistants cut out of cardboard the letters from the guest's nam...
```python a = input() b = input() a1 = list(a) b1= list(b) x = input() c = list(x) for i in a1: if i in c: a1.remove(i) c.remove(i) for j in b1: if j in c: b1.remove(j) c.remove(j) if len(a1)==0 and len(b1) == 0: print("YES") else: print("NO") # ...
0
617
A
Elephant
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "math" ]
null
null
An elephant decided to visit his friend. It turned out that the elephant's house is located at point 0 and his friend's house is located at point *x*(*x*<=&gt;<=0) of the coordinate line. In one step the elephant can move 1, 2, 3, 4 or 5 positions forward. Determine, what is the minimum number of steps he need to make ...
The first line of the input contains an integer *x* (1<=≤<=*x*<=≤<=1<=000<=000) — The coordinate of the friend's house.
Print the minimum number of steps that elephant needs to make to get from point 0 to point *x*.
[ "5\n", "12\n" ]
[ "1\n", "3\n" ]
In the first sample the elephant needs to make one step of length 5 to reach the point *x*. In the second sample the elephant can get to point *x* if he moves by 3, 5 and 4. There are other ways to get the optimal answer but the elephant cannot reach *x* in less than three moves.
500
[ { "input": "5", "output": "1" }, { "input": "12", "output": "3" }, { "input": "999999", "output": "200000" }, { "input": "41", "output": "9" }, { "input": "1000000", "output": "200000" }, { "input": "1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "2", ...
1,695,110,474
2,147,483,647
Python 3
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
0
15
0
a=input() b=int((a/5)+1) print(b)
Title: Elephant Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: An elephant decided to visit his friend. It turned out that the elephant's house is located at point 0 and his friend's house is located at point *x*(*x*<=&gt;<=0) of the coordinate line. In one step the elephant can move 1, 2...
```python a=input() b=int((a/5)+1) print(b) ```
-1
25
A
IQ test
PROGRAMMING
1,300
[ "brute force" ]
A. IQ test
2
256
Bob is preparing to pass IQ test. The most frequent task in this test is to find out which one of the given *n* numbers differs from the others. Bob observed that one number usually differs from the others in evenness. Help Bob — to check his answers, he needs a program that among the given *n* numbers finds one that i...
The first line contains integer *n* (3<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — amount of numbers in the task. The second line contains *n* space-separated natural numbers, not exceeding 100. It is guaranteed, that exactly one of these numbers differs from the others in evenness.
Output index of number that differs from the others in evenness. Numbers are numbered from 1 in the input order.
[ "5\n2 4 7 8 10\n", "4\n1 2 1 1\n" ]
[ "3\n", "2\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "5\n2 4 7 8 10", "output": "3" }, { "input": "4\n1 2 1 1", "output": "2" }, { "input": "3\n1 2 2", "output": "1" }, { "input": "3\n100 99 100", "output": "2" }, { "input": "3\n5 3 2", "output": "3" }, { "input": "4\n43 28 1 91", "output"...
1,687,510,510
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
2
62
0
def find_different_number(n, numbers): odd_count = 0 even_count = 0 odd_index = 0 even_index = 0 for i in range(n): if numbers[i] % 2 == 0: even_count += 1 even_index = i + 1 else: odd_count += 1 odd_index = i + 1 # Optimizati...
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 def find_different_number(n, numbers): odd_count = 0 even_count = 0 odd_index = 0 even_index = 0 for i in range(n): if numbers[i] % 2 == 0: even_count += 1 even_index = i + 1 else: odd_count += 1 odd_index = i + 1 # ...
0
43
A
Football
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "strings" ]
A. Football
2
256
One day Vasya decided to have a look at the results of Berland 1910 Football Championship’s finals. Unfortunately he didn't find the overall score of the match; however, he got hold of a profound description of the match's process. On the whole there are *n* lines in that description each of which described one goal. E...
The first line contains an integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of lines in the description. Then follow *n* lines — for each goal the names of the teams that scored it. The names are non-empty lines consisting of uppercase Latin letters whose lengths do not exceed 10 symbols. It is guaranteed that the match di...
Print the name of the winning team. We remind you that in football the team that scores more goals is considered the winner.
[ "1\nABC\n", "5\nA\nABA\nABA\nA\nA\n" ]
[ "ABC\n", "A\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "1\nABC", "output": "ABC" }, { "input": "5\nA\nABA\nABA\nA\nA", "output": "A" }, { "input": "2\nXTSJEP\nXTSJEP", "output": "XTSJEP" }, { "input": "3\nXZYDJAEDZ\nXZYDJAEDZ\nXZYDJAEDZ", "output": "XZYDJAEDZ" }, { "input": "3\nQCCYXL\nQCCYXL\nAXGLFQDD", ...
1,643,919,172
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
1
30
0
n = int(input()) list_1 = [input() for i in range(n)] list_1.sort() list_2 = [list_1.count(name) for name in list_1] list_2.sort() for name in list_1: if list_1.count(name) == list_2[-1]: print(name)
Title: Football Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: One day Vasya decided to have a look at the results of Berland 1910 Football Championship’s finals. Unfortunately he didn't find the overall score of the match; however, he got hold of a profound description of the match's process...
```python n = int(input()) list_1 = [input() for i in range(n)] list_1.sort() list_2 = [list_1.count(name) for name in list_1] list_2.sort() for name in list_1: if list_1.count(name) == list_2[-1]: print(name) ```
0
931
A
Friends Meeting
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "brute force", "greedy", "implementation", "math" ]
null
null
Two friends are on the coordinate axis *Ox* in points with integer coordinates. One of them is in the point *x*1<==<=*a*, another one is in the point *x*2<==<=*b*. Each of the friends can move by one along the line in any direction unlimited number of times. When a friend moves, the tiredness of a friend changes acco...
The first line contains a single integer *a* (1<=≤<=*a*<=≤<=1000) — the initial position of the first friend. The second line contains a single integer *b* (1<=≤<=*b*<=≤<=1000) — the initial position of the second friend. It is guaranteed that *a*<=≠<=*b*.
Print the minimum possible total tiredness if the friends meet in the same point.
[ "3\n4\n", "101\n99\n", "5\n10\n" ]
[ "1\n", "2\n", "9\n" ]
In the first example the first friend should move by one to the right (then the meeting happens at point 4), or the second friend should move by one to the left (then the meeting happens at point 3). In both cases, the total tiredness becomes 1. In the second example the first friend should move by one to the left, an...
500
[ { "input": "3\n4", "output": "1" }, { "input": "101\n99", "output": "2" }, { "input": "5\n10", "output": "9" }, { "input": "1\n2", "output": "1" }, { "input": "1\n1000", "output": "250000" }, { "input": "999\n1000", "output": "1" }, { "inpu...
1,563,079,527
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
40
140
0
a=int(input()) b=int(input()) dif=abs(a-b) m1=dif//2 m2=dif-m1 print(m1*(m1+1)//2+m2*(m2+1)//2)
Title: Friends Meeting Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Two friends are on the coordinate axis *Ox* in points with integer coordinates. One of them is in the point *x*1<==<=*a*, another one is in the point *x*2<==<=*b*. Each of the friends can move by one along the line in...
```python a=int(input()) b=int(input()) dif=abs(a-b) m1=dif//2 m2=dif-m1 print(m1*(m1+1)//2+m2*(m2+1)//2) ```
3
895
B
XK Segments
PROGRAMMING
1,700
[ "binary search", "math", "sortings", "two pointers" ]
null
null
While Vasya finished eating his piece of pizza, the lesson has already started. For being late for the lesson, the teacher suggested Vasya to solve one interesting problem. Vasya has an array *a* and integer *x*. He should find the number of different ordered pairs of indexes (*i*,<=*j*) such that *a**i*<=≤<=*a**j* and...
The first line contains 3 integers *n*,<=*x*,<=*k* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105,<=1<=≤<=*x*<=≤<=109,<=0<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=109), where *n* is the size of the array *a* and *x* and *k* are numbers from the statement. The second line contains *n* integers *a**i* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=109) — the elements of the array *a*.
Print one integer — the answer to the problem.
[ "4 2 1\n1 3 5 7\n", "4 2 0\n5 3 1 7\n", "5 3 1\n3 3 3 3 3\n" ]
[ "3\n", "4\n", "25\n" ]
In first sample there are only three suitable pairs of indexes — (1, 2), (2, 3), (3, 4). In second sample there are four suitable pairs of indexes(1, 1), (2, 2), (3, 3), (4, 4). In third sample every pair (*i*, *j*) is suitable, so the answer is 5 * 5 = 25.
1,000
[ { "input": "4 2 1\n1 3 5 7", "output": "3" }, { "input": "4 2 0\n5 3 1 7", "output": "4" }, { "input": "5 3 1\n3 3 3 3 3", "output": "25" }, { "input": "5 3 4\n24 13 1 24 24", "output": "4" }, { "input": "4 2 2\n1 3 5 7", "output": "2" }, { "input": "5...
1,680,583,470
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
OK
TESTS
69
249
15,974,400
def lowerBound(a, val1, i, n, k, x): low = 0 high = n-1 while(low <= high): mid = (low + high)//2 val2 = a[mid] if(val2 >= val1): noOfEle = (val2)//x - (val1 - 1)//x if(noOfEle == k): if(mid == 0): return mid ...
Title: XK Segments Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: While Vasya finished eating his piece of pizza, the lesson has already started. For being late for the lesson, the teacher suggested Vasya to solve one interesting problem. Vasya has an array *a* and integer *x*. He should ...
```python def lowerBound(a, val1, i, n, k, x): low = 0 high = n-1 while(low <= high): mid = (low + high)//2 val2 = a[mid] if(val2 >= val1): noOfEle = (val2)//x - (val1 - 1)//x if(noOfEle == k): if(mid == 0): return...
3
0
none
none
none
0
[ "none" ]
null
null
First-rate specialists graduate from Berland State Institute of Peace and Friendship. You are one of the most talented students in this university. The education is not easy because you need to have fundamental knowledge in different areas, which sometimes are not related to each other. For example, you should know l...
The only line contains a string *s* (5<=≤<=|*s*|<=≤<=104) consisting of lowercase English letters.
On the first line print integer *k* — a number of distinct possible suffixes. On the next *k* lines print suffixes. Print suffixes in lexicographical (alphabetical) order.
[ "abacabaca\n", "abaca\n" ]
[ "3\naca\nba\nca\n", "0\n" ]
The first test was analysed in the problem statement. In the second example the length of the string equals 5. The length of the root equals 5, so no string can be used as a suffix.
0
[ { "input": "abacabaca", "output": "3\naca\nba\nca" }, { "input": "abaca", "output": "0" }, { "input": "gzqgchv", "output": "1\nhv" }, { "input": "iosdwvzerqfi", "output": "9\ner\nerq\nfi\nqfi\nrq\nvz\nvze\nze\nzer" }, { "input": "oawtxikrpvfuzugjweki", "output...
1,461,954,870
7,170
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
PRETESTS
5
77
5,120,000
s = input() n = len(s) s = s[::-1] og = n - 5 if n <= 6: print(0) else: A = set() cht = 0 def rec(i): if i >= og: pass else: if i + 2 < n: s1 = s[i:i + 2] if i + 4 < n: s2 = s[i + 2: i + 4] ...
Title: none Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: First-rate specialists graduate from Berland State Institute of Peace and Friendship. You are one of the most talented students in this university. The education is not easy because you need to have fundamental knowledge in differ...
```python s = input() n = len(s) s = s[::-1] og = n - 5 if n <= 6: print(0) else: A = set() cht = 0 def rec(i): if i >= og: pass else: if i + 2 < n: s1 = s[i:i + 2] if i + 4 < n: s2 = s[i + 2: i + 4...
0
554
B
Ohana Cleans Up
PROGRAMMING
1,200
[ "brute force", "greedy", "strings" ]
null
null
Ohana Matsumae is trying to clean a room, which is divided up into an *n* by *n* grid of squares. Each square is initially either clean or dirty. Ohana can sweep her broom over columns of the grid. Her broom is very strange: if she sweeps over a clean square, it will become dirty, and if she sweeps over a dirty square,...
The first line of input will be a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100). The next *n* lines will describe the state of the room. The *i*-th line will contain a binary string with *n* characters denoting the state of the *i*-th row of the room. The *j*-th character on this line is '1' if the *j*-th square in the *i*-t...
The output should be a single line containing an integer equal to a maximum possible number of rows that are completely clean.
[ "4\n0101\n1000\n1111\n0101\n", "3\n111\n111\n111\n" ]
[ "2\n", "3\n" ]
In the first sample, Ohana can sweep the 1st and 3rd columns. This will make the 1st and 4th row be completely clean. In the second sample, everything is already clean, so Ohana doesn't need to do anything.
500
[ { "input": "4\n0101\n1000\n1111\n0101", "output": "2" }, { "input": "3\n111\n111\n111", "output": "3" }, { "input": "10\n0100000000\n0000000000\n0000000000\n0000000000\n0000000000\n0000000000\n0000000000\n0000000000\n0000000000\n0000000000", "output": "9" }, { "input": "1\n1"...
1,435,170,158
6,757
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
PRETESTS
0
46
0
n = int(input()) grid = [] for i in range(n): grid.append([]) row = input() for j in range(n): grid[len(grid)-1].append(int(row[j])) rGrid = [] for i in grid: rGrid.append([]) for j in i: rGrid[len(rGrid)-1].append((j+1)%2) def createPerm(permList, n...
Title: Ohana Cleans Up Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Ohana Matsumae is trying to clean a room, which is divided up into an *n* by *n* grid of squares. Each square is initially either clean or dirty. Ohana can sweep her broom over columns of the grid. Her broom is very str...
```python n = int(input()) grid = [] for i in range(n): grid.append([]) row = input() for j in range(n): grid[len(grid)-1].append(int(row[j])) rGrid = [] for i in grid: rGrid.append([]) for j in i: rGrid[len(rGrid)-1].append((j+1)%2) def createPerm(p...
0
357
B
Flag Day
PROGRAMMING
1,400
[ "constructive algorithms", "implementation" ]
null
null
In Berland, there is the national holiday coming — the Flag Day. In the honor of this event the president of the country decided to make a big dance party and asked your agency to organize it. He has several conditions: - overall, there must be *m* dances;- exactly three people must take part in each dance;- each d...
The first line contains two space-separated integers *n* (3<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) and *m* (1<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=105) — the number of dancers and the number of dances, correspondingly. Then *m* lines follow, describing the dances in the order of dancing them. The *i*-th line contains three distinct integers — the numbers of the dan...
Print *n* space-separated integers: the *i*-th number must represent the color of the *i*-th dancer's clothes (1 for white, 2 for red, 3 for blue). If there are multiple valid solutions, print any of them. It is guaranteed that at least one solution exists.
[ "7 3\n1 2 3\n1 4 5\n4 6 7\n", "9 3\n3 6 9\n2 5 8\n1 4 7\n", "5 2\n4 1 5\n3 1 2\n" ]
[ "1 2 3 3 2 2 1 \n", "1 1 1 2 2 2 3 3 3 \n", "2 3 1 1 3 \n" ]
none
1,000
[ { "input": "7 3\n1 2 3\n1 4 5\n4 6 7", "output": "1 2 3 3 2 2 1 " }, { "input": "9 3\n3 6 9\n2 5 8\n1 4 7", "output": "1 1 1 2 2 2 3 3 3 " }, { "input": "5 2\n4 1 5\n3 1 2", "output": "2 3 1 1 3 " }, { "input": "14 5\n1 5 3\n13 10 11\n6 3 8\n14 9 2\n7 4 12", "output": "1 ...
1,508,901,313
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
4
78
0
def main(): (n, m) = map(int, input().split(' ')) colors = [0] * (n + 1) dances = [] for i in range(m): (a, b, c) = map(int, input().split(' ')) dances.append((a, b, c)) for (a, b, c) in dances: if colors[a] == 0 and colors[b] == 0 and colors[c] == 0: colors[a] = ...
Title: Flag Day Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: In Berland, there is the national holiday coming — the Flag Day. In the honor of this event the president of the country decided to make a big dance party and asked your agency to organize it. He has several conditions: - ov...
```python def main(): (n, m) = map(int, input().split(' ')) colors = [0] * (n + 1) dances = [] for i in range(m): (a, b, c) = map(int, input().split(' ')) dances.append((a, b, c)) for (a, b, c) in dances: if colors[a] == 0 and colors[b] == 0 and colors[c] == 0: co...
0
58
A
Chat room
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "greedy", "strings" ]
A. Chat room
1
256
Vasya has recently learned to type and log on to the Internet. He immediately entered a chat room and decided to say hello to everybody. Vasya typed the word *s*. It is considered that Vasya managed to say hello if several letters can be deleted from the typed word so that it resulted in the word "hello". For example, ...
The first and only line contains the word *s*, which Vasya typed. This word consisits of small Latin letters, its length is no less that 1 and no more than 100 letters.
If Vasya managed to say hello, print "YES", otherwise print "NO".
[ "ahhellllloou\n", "hlelo\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "NO\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "ahhellllloou", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "hlelo", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "helhcludoo", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "hehwelloho", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "pnnepelqomhhheollvlo", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "tymbzjyqhymeda...
1,680,232,788
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
40
46
0
s=input() letter=['h','e','l','l','o'] j=0 for i in s: if j!=5: if i==letter[j]: j+=1 elif j==5: break else: continue if j==5: print('YES') else: print('NO')
Title: Chat room Time Limit: 1 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: Vasya has recently learned to type and log on to the Internet. He immediately entered a chat room and decided to say hello to everybody. Vasya typed the word *s*. It is considered that Vasya managed to say hello if several letter...
```python s=input() letter=['h','e','l','l','o'] j=0 for i in s: if j!=5: if i==letter[j]: j+=1 elif j==5: break else: continue if j==5: print('YES') else: print('NO') ```
3.977
895
A
Pizza Separation
PROGRAMMING
1,200
[ "brute force", "implementation" ]
null
null
Students Vasya and Petya are studying at the BSU (Byteland State University). At one of the breaks they decided to order a pizza. In this problem pizza is a circle of some radius. The pizza was delivered already cut into *n* pieces. The *i*-th piece is a sector of angle equal to *a**i*. Vasya and Petya want to divide a...
The first line contains one integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=360)  — the number of pieces into which the delivered pizza was cut. The second line contains *n* integers *a**i* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=360)  — the angles of the sectors into which the pizza was cut. The sum of all *a**i* is 360.
Print one integer  — the minimal difference between angles of sectors that will go to Vasya and Petya.
[ "4\n90 90 90 90\n", "3\n100 100 160\n", "1\n360\n", "4\n170 30 150 10\n" ]
[ "0\n", "40\n", "360\n", "0\n" ]
In first sample Vasya can take 1 and 2 pieces, Petya can take 3 and 4 pieces. Then the answer is |(90 + 90) - (90 + 90)| = 0. In third sample there is only one piece of pizza that can be taken by only one from Vasya and Petya. So the answer is |360 - 0| = 360. In fourth sample Vasya can take 1 and 4 pieces, then Pety...
500
[ { "input": "4\n90 90 90 90", "output": "0" }, { "input": "3\n100 100 160", "output": "40" }, { "input": "1\n360", "output": "360" }, { "input": "4\n170 30 150 10", "output": "0" }, { "input": "5\n10 10 10 10 320", "output": "280" }, { "input": "8\n45 4...
1,511,761,857
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
1
46
5,529,600
n = int(input()) arr = list(map(int,input().split())) a = 0 b = 0 #arr.sort(reverse = True) #print(n,arr) ca = [] for i in range(len(arr)): a = 0 for j in range(i,len(arr)): if a + arr[j] > 180: ca.append(180-a) break a += arr[j] print(min(ca)*2)
Title: Pizza Separation Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Students Vasya and Petya are studying at the BSU (Byteland State University). At one of the breaks they decided to order a pizza. In this problem pizza is a circle of some radius. The pizza was delivered already cut in...
```python n = int(input()) arr = list(map(int,input().split())) a = 0 b = 0 #arr.sort(reverse = True) #print(n,arr) ca = [] for i in range(len(arr)): a = 0 for j in range(i,len(arr)): if a + arr[j] > 180: ca.append(180-a) break a += arr[j] print(min(ca)*2) ```
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...
1,695,797,776
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
2
31
5,632,000
n = int(input()) if n%3 == 0: print("bba"*(n//3)) elif n%3 == 2: print("bba"*(n//3) + "aa") else: print("bba"*(n//3) + "a")
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%3 == 0: print("bba"*(n//3)) elif n%3 == 2: print("bba"*(n//3) + "aa") else: print("bba"*(n//3) + "a") ```
0
8
C
Looking for Order
PROGRAMMING
2,000
[ "bitmasks", "dp" ]
C. Looking for Order
4
512
Girl Lena likes it when everything is in order, and looks for order everywhere. Once she was getting ready for the University and noticed that the room was in a mess — all the objects from her handbag were thrown about the room. Of course, she wanted to put them back into her handbag. The problem is that the girl canno...
The first line of the input file contains the handbag's coordinates *x**s*,<=*y**s*. The second line contains number *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=24) — the amount of objects the girl has. The following *n* lines contain the objects' coordinates. All the coordinates do not exceed 100 in absolute value. All the given positions are...
In the first line output the only number — the minimum time the girl needs to put the objects into her handbag. In the second line output the possible optimum way for Lena. Each object in the input is described by its index number (from 1 to *n*), the handbag's point is described by number 0. The path should start an...
[ "0 0\n2\n1 1\n-1 1\n", "1 1\n3\n4 3\n3 4\n0 0\n" ]
[ "8\n0 1 2 0 \n", "32\n0 1 2 0 3 0 \n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "0 0\n2\n1 1\n-1 1", "output": "8\n0 1 2 0 " }, { "input": "1 1\n3\n4 3\n3 4\n0 0", "output": "32\n0 1 2 0 3 0 " }, { "input": "-3 4\n1\n2 2", "output": "58\n0 1 0 " }, { "input": "7 -7\n2\n3 1\n-3 8", "output": "490\n0 1 2 0 " }, { "input": "3 -9\n3\n0...
1,464,315,797
2,147,483,647
Python 3
TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED
TESTS
11
4,000
171,929,600
#!/usr/bin/env python """ CodeForces: 8C. Looking for Order Strategy: There seems to be no choice other than calculating all possible orders. However, there is a technique to avoid calculating the permutations. Use a n-bits integer as the selected items so far. If the i-th bit is 1, then the i-th it...
Title: Looking for Order Time Limit: 4 seconds Memory Limit: 512 megabytes Problem Description: Girl Lena likes it when everything is in order, and looks for order everywhere. Once she was getting ready for the University and noticed that the room was in a mess — all the objects from her handbag were thrown about th...
```python #!/usr/bin/env python """ CodeForces: 8C. Looking for Order Strategy: There seems to be no choice other than calculating all possible orders. However, there is a technique to avoid calculating the permutations. Use a n-bits integer as the selected items so far. If the i-th bit is 1, then t...
0
263
A
Beautiful Matrix
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
You've got a 5<=×<=5 matrix, consisting of 24 zeroes and a single number one. Let's index the matrix rows by numbers from 1 to 5 from top to bottom, let's index the matrix columns by numbers from 1 to 5 from left to right. In one move, you are allowed to apply one of the two following transformations to the matrix: 1....
The input consists of five lines, each line contains five integers: the *j*-th integer in the *i*-th line of the input represents the element of the matrix that is located on the intersection of the *i*-th row and the *j*-th column. It is guaranteed that the matrix consists of 24 zeroes and a single number one.
Print a single integer — the minimum number of moves needed to make the matrix beautiful.
[ "0 0 0 0 0\n0 0 0 0 1\n0 0 0 0 0\n0 0 0 0 0\n0 0 0 0 0\n", "0 0 0 0 0\n0 0 0 0 0\n0 1 0 0 0\n0 0 0 0 0\n0 0 0 0 0\n" ]
[ "3\n", "1\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "0 0 0 0 0\n0 0 0 0 1\n0 0 0 0 0\n0 0 0 0 0\n0 0 0 0 0", "output": "3" }, { "input": "0 0 0 0 0\n0 0 0 0 0\n0 1 0 0 0\n0 0 0 0 0\n0 0 0 0 0", "output": "1" }, { "input": "0 0 0 0 0\n0 0 0 0 0\n0 0 1 0 0\n0 0 0 0 0\n0 0 0 0 0", "output": "0" }, { "input": "0 0 0 0 0...
1,696,422,597
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
OK
TESTS
25
154
0
matrix = [[int(i) for i in input().split()] for j in range(5)] r,c = -1,-1 for i in range(5): for j in range(5): if matrix[i][j] == 1: r = i c = j break print(abs(2-r)+abs(2-c))
Title: Beautiful Matrix Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: You've got a 5<=×<=5 matrix, consisting of 24 zeroes and a single number one. Let's index the matrix rows by numbers from 1 to 5 from top to bottom, let's index the matrix columns by numbers from 1 to 5 from left to ri...
```python matrix = [[int(i) for i in input().split()] for j in range(5)] r,c = -1,-1 for i in range(5): for j in range(5): if matrix[i][j] == 1: r = i c = j break print(abs(2-r)+abs(2-c)) ```
3
367
A
Sereja and Algorithm
PROGRAMMING
1,500
[ "data structures", "implementation" ]
null
null
Sereja loves all sorts of algorithms. He has recently come up with a new algorithm, which receives a string as an input. Let's represent the input string of the algorithm as *q*<==<=*q*1*q*2... *q**k*. The algorithm consists of two steps: 1. Find any continuous subsequence (substring) of three characters of string *q...
The first line contains non-empty string *s*, its length (*n*) doesn't exceed 105. It is guaranteed that string *s* only contains characters: 'x', 'y', 'z'. The second line contains integer *m* (1<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=105) — the number of tests. Next *m* lines contain the tests. The *i*-th line contains a pair of integers *l**...
For each test, print "YES" (without the quotes) if the algorithm works correctly on the corresponding test and "NO" (without the quotes) otherwise.
[ "zyxxxxxxyyz\n5\n5 5\n1 3\n1 11\n1 4\n3 6\n" ]
[ "YES\nYES\nNO\nYES\nNO\n" ]
In the first example, in test one and two the algorithm will always be terminated in one step. In the fourth test you can get string "xzyx" on which the algorithm will terminate. In all other tests the algorithm doesn't work correctly.
500
[ { "input": "zyxxxxxxyyz\n5\n5 5\n1 3\n1 11\n1 4\n3 6", "output": "YES\nYES\nNO\nYES\nNO" }, { "input": "yxzyzxzzxyyzzxxxzyyzzyzxxzxyzyyzxyzxyxxyzxyxzyzxyzxyyxzzzyzxyyxyzxxy\n10\n17 67\n6 35\n12 45\n56 56\n14 30\n25 54\n1 1\n46 54\n3 33\n19 40", "output": "NO\nNO\nNO\nYES\nYES\nNO\nYES\nNO\nNO\nY...
1,622,162,668
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
0
108
2,150,400
import sys, io, os s=input() l=len(s) d={'x':0,'y':1,'z':2} cnt=[[0]*(l+1) for _ in range(3)] for i,c in enumerate(s,1): ic=d[c] cnt[ic][i]+=1 for j in range(3): cnt[j][i]+=cnt[j][i-1] input = io.BytesIO(os.read(0, os.fstat(0).st_size)).readline m=int(input()) for _ in range(m): ...
Title: Sereja and Algorithm Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Sereja loves all sorts of algorithms. He has recently come up with a new algorithm, which receives a string as an input. Let's represent the input string of the algorithm as *q*<==<=*q*1*q*2... *q**k*. The algorit...
```python import sys, io, os s=input() l=len(s) d={'x':0,'y':1,'z':2} cnt=[[0]*(l+1) for _ in range(3)] for i,c in enumerate(s,1): ic=d[c] cnt[ic][i]+=1 for j in range(3): cnt[j][i]+=cnt[j][i-1] input = io.BytesIO(os.read(0, os.fstat(0).st_size)).readline m=int(input()) for _ in r...
-1
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 ...
1,689,914,503
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
OK
TESTS
63
311
27,443,200
import sys input = sys.stdin.readline n, m = map(int, input().split()) a = list(map(int, input().split())) s = [-1] for i in range(1, n): if(a[i] != a[i - 1]): s.append(i - 1) else: s.append(s[-1]) for i in range(m): l, r, x = map(int, input().split()) if(a[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 import sys input = sys.stdin.readline n, m = map(int, input().split()) a = list(map(int, input().split())) s = [-1] for i in range(1, n): if(a[i] != a[i - 1]): s.append(i - 1) else: s.append(s[-1]) for i in range(m): l, r, x = map(int, input().split()) if(...
3
967
B
Watering System
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "math", "sortings" ]
null
null
Arkady wants to water his only flower. Unfortunately, he has a very poor watering system that was designed for $n$ flowers and so it looks like a pipe with $n$ holes. Arkady can only use the water that flows from the first hole. Arkady can block some of the holes, and then pour $A$ liters of water into the pipe. After...
The first line contains three integers $n$, $A$, $B$ ($1 \le n \le 100\,000$, $1 \le B \le A \le 10^4$) — the number of holes, the volume of water Arkady will pour into the system, and the volume he wants to get out of the first hole. The second line contains $n$ integers $s_1, s_2, \ldots, s_n$ ($1 \le s_i \le 10^4$)...
Print a single integer — the number of holes Arkady should block.
[ "4 10 3\n2 2 2 2\n", "4 80 20\n3 2 1 4\n", "5 10 10\n1000 1 1 1 1\n" ]
[ "1\n", "0\n", "4\n" ]
In the first example Arkady should block at least one hole. After that, $\frac{10 \cdot 2}{6} \approx 3.333$ liters of water will flow out of the first hole, and that suits Arkady. In the second example even without blocking any hole, $\frac{80 \cdot 3}{10} = 24$ liters will flow out of the first hole, that is not les...
1,000
[ { "input": "4 10 3\n2 2 2 2", "output": "1" }, { "input": "4 80 20\n3 2 1 4", "output": "0" }, { "input": "5 10 10\n1000 1 1 1 1", "output": "4" }, { "input": "10 300 100\n20 1 3 10 8 5 3 6 4 3", "output": "1" }, { "input": "10 300 100\n20 25 68 40 60 37 44 85 23 ...
1,580,779,814
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
26
187
6,656,000
def _input(): return map(int, input().strip().split()) def _print(s): print(''.join(map(str, s))) n, A, B = _input() s = list(_input()) r = list(s[1:]) r.sort(reverse=True) tot = sum(s) if s[0] * A >= B * tot: print(0) exit(0) cur = tot for i in range(len(r)): cur -= r[i] if s...
Title: Watering System Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Arkady wants to water his only flower. Unfortunately, he has a very poor watering system that was designed for $n$ flowers and so it looks like a pipe with $n$ holes. Arkady can only use the water that flows from the fi...
```python def _input(): return map(int, input().strip().split()) def _print(s): print(''.join(map(str, s))) n, A, B = _input() s = list(_input()) r = list(s[1:]) r.sort(reverse=True) tot = sum(s) if s[0] * A >= B * tot: print(0) exit(0) cur = tot for i in range(len(r)): cur -= r[i]...
3
679
A
Bear and Prime 100
PROGRAMMING
1,400
[ "constructive algorithms", "interactive", "math" ]
null
null
This is an interactive problem. In the output section below you will see the information about flushing the output. Bear Limak thinks of some hidden number — an integer from interval [2,<=100]. Your task is to say if the hidden number is prime or composite. Integer *x*<=&gt;<=1 is called prime if it has exactly two d...
After each query you should read one string from the input. It will be "yes" if the printed integer is a divisor of the hidden number, and "no" otherwise.
Up to 20 times you can ask a query — print an integer from interval [2,<=100] in one line. You have to both print the end-of-line character and flush the output. After flushing you should read a response from the input. In any moment you can print the answer "prime" or "composite" (without the quotes). After that, flu...
[ "yes\nno\nyes\n", "no\nyes\nno\nno\nno\n" ]
[ "2\n80\n5\ncomposite\n", "58\n59\n78\n78\n2\nprime\n" ]
The hidden number in the first query is 30. In a table below you can see a better form of the provided example of the communication process. <img align="middle" class="tex-formula" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/ea790051c34ea7d2761cd9b096412ca7c647a173.png" style="max-width: 100.0%;max-height: 100.0%;"/> The hi...
750
[ { "input": "30", "output": "composite 4" }, { "input": "59", "output": "prime 15" }, { "input": "2", "output": "prime 16" }, { "input": "7", "output": "prime 16" }, { "input": "9", "output": "composite 3" }, { "input": "13", "output": "prime 15" ...
1,596,366,280
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
59
109
6,963,200
from sys import * l=[2,3,5,7,11,13,17,19,23,29,31,37,41,43,47,4,9,25,49] s=0 for i in range(len(l)): print(l[i]) stdout.flush() a=input() if(a=="yes"): s+=1 if(s>=2): print("composite") exit(0) print("prime")
Title: Bear and Prime 100 Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: This is an interactive problem. In the output section below you will see the information about flushing the output. Bear Limak thinks of some hidden number — an integer from interval [2,<=100]. Your task is to say i...
```python from sys import * l=[2,3,5,7,11,13,17,19,23,29,31,37,41,43,47,4,9,25,49] s=0 for i in range(len(l)): print(l[i]) stdout.flush() a=input() if(a=="yes"): s+=1 if(s>=2): print("composite") exit(0) print("prime") ```
3
219
A
k-String
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation", "strings" ]
null
null
A string is called a *k*-string if it can be represented as *k* concatenated copies of some string. For example, the string "aabaabaabaab" is at the same time a 1-string, a 2-string and a 4-string, but it is not a 3-string, a 5-string, or a 6-string and so on. Obviously any string is a 1-string. You are given a string...
The first input line contains integer *k* (1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=1000). The second line contains *s*, all characters in *s* are lowercase English letters. The string length *s* satisfies the inequality 1<=≤<=|*s*|<=≤<=1000, where |*s*| is the length of string *s*.
Rearrange the letters in string *s* in such a way that the result is a *k*-string. Print the result on a single output line. If there are multiple solutions, print any of them. If the solution doesn't exist, print "-1" (without quotes).
[ "2\naazz\n", "3\nabcabcabz\n" ]
[ "azaz\n", "-1\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "2\naazz", "output": "azaz" }, { "input": "3\nabcabcabz", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "1\na", "output": "a" }, { "input": "2\nabba", "output": "abab" }, { "input": "2\naaab", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "7\nabacaba", "output": "-1" }...
1,628,156,861
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
42
280
128,000,000
from sys import stdin, stdout from heapq import heapify , heappush , heappop import sys from collections import Counter,defaultdict,deque from copy import deepcopy import math from itertools import permutations from types import GeneratorType sys.setrecursionlimit(11 ** 5) def bootstrap(f, stttt=[]): def wrappedf...
Title: k-String Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: A string is called a *k*-string if it can be represented as *k* concatenated copies of some string. For example, the string "aabaabaabaab" is at the same time a 1-string, a 2-string and a 4-string, but it is not a 3-string, a ...
```python from sys import stdin, stdout from heapq import heapify , heappush , heappop import sys from collections import Counter,defaultdict,deque from copy import deepcopy import math from itertools import permutations from types import GeneratorType sys.setrecursionlimit(11 ** 5) def bootstrap(f, stttt=[]): de...
3
43
B
Letter
PROGRAMMING
1,100
[ "implementation", "strings" ]
B. Letter
2
256
Vasya decided to write an anonymous letter cutting the letters out of a newspaper heading. He knows heading *s*1 and text *s*2 that he wants to send. Vasya can use every single heading letter no more than once. Vasya doesn't have to cut the spaces out of the heading — he just leaves some blank space to mark them. Help ...
The first line contains a newspaper heading *s*1. The second line contains the letter text *s*2. *s*1 и *s*2 are non-empty lines consisting of spaces, uppercase and lowercase Latin letters, whose lengths do not exceed 200 symbols. The uppercase and lowercase letters should be differentiated. Vasya does not cut spaces o...
If Vasya can write the given anonymous letter, print YES, otherwise print NO
[ "Instead of dogging Your footsteps it disappears but you dont notice anything\nwhere is your dog\n", "Instead of dogging Your footsteps it disappears but you dont notice anything\nYour dog is upstears\n", "Instead of dogging your footsteps it disappears but you dont notice anything\nYour dog is upstears\n", "...
[ "NO\n", "YES\n", "NO\n", "YES\n" ]
none
1,000
[ { "input": "Instead of dogging Your footsteps it disappears but you dont notice anything\nwhere is your dog", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "Instead of dogging Your footsteps it disappears but you dont notice anything\nYour dog is upstears", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "Instead of doggi...
1,681,634,460
2,147,483,647
Python 3
COMPILATION_ERROR
TESTS
0
0
0
import java.util.*; public class B43 { public static void main(String[] args) { Scanner scan = new Scanner(System.in); int[] val = new int[123]; boolean found = true; String s1 = scan.nextLine(), s2 = scan.nextLine(); for(int i = 0; i < s1.length(); i++) val[s1.charAt(i)]++; for(int i = 0; i < ...
Title: Letter Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: Vasya decided to write an anonymous letter cutting the letters out of a newspaper heading. He knows heading *s*1 and text *s*2 that he wants to send. Vasya can use every single heading letter no more than once. Vasya doesn't have to...
```python import java.util.*; public class B43 { public static void main(String[] args) { Scanner scan = new Scanner(System.in); int[] val = new int[123]; boolean found = true; String s1 = scan.nextLine(), s2 = scan.nextLine(); for(int i = 0; i < s1.length(); i++) val[s1.charAt(i)]++; for(int i...
-1
4
B
Before an Exam
PROGRAMMING
1,200
[ "constructive algorithms", "greedy" ]
B. Before an Exam
0
64
Tomorrow Peter has a Biology exam. He does not like this subject much, but *d* days ago he learnt that he would have to take this exam. Peter's strict parents made him prepare for the exam immediately, for this purpose he has to study not less than *minTime**i* and not more than *maxTime**i* hours per each *i*-th day. ...
The first input line contains two integer numbers *d*,<=*sumTime* (1<=≤<=*d*<=≤<=30,<=0<=≤<=*sumTime*<=≤<=240) — the amount of days, during which Peter studied, and the total amount of hours, spent on preparation. Each of the following *d* lines contains two integer numbers *minTime**i*,<=*maxTime**i* (0<=≤<=*minTime**...
In the first line print YES, and in the second line print *d* numbers (separated by a space), each of the numbers — amount of hours, spent by Peter on preparation in the corresponding day, if he followed his parents' instructions; or print NO in the unique line. If there are many solutions, print any of them.
[ "1 48\n5 7\n", "2 5\n0 1\n3 5\n" ]
[ "NO\n", "YES\n1 4 " ]
none
0
[ { "input": "1 48\n5 7", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "2 5\n0 1\n3 5", "output": "YES\n1 4 " }, { "input": "1 1\n5 6", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "1 4\n2 4", "output": "YES\n4 " }, { "input": "2 5\n4 6\n0 0", "output": "YES\n5 0 " }, { "input": "27 97...
1,692,939,234
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
OK
TESTS
15
62
0
d, s = map(int, input().split()) sumamin = 0 sumamax = 0 ans = 'YES' horasmin = [] horasmax = [] for i in range(d): minim, maxim = map(int, input().split()) horasmin.append(minim) horasmax.append(maxim) sumamin += minim sumamax += maxim if s < sumamin or s > sumamax: ans = 'NO' if ans == 'YES...
Title: Before an Exam Time Limit: 0 seconds Memory Limit: 64 megabytes Problem Description: Tomorrow Peter has a Biology exam. He does not like this subject much, but *d* days ago he learnt that he would have to take this exam. Peter's strict parents made him prepare for the exam immediately, for this purpose he has...
```python d, s = map(int, input().split()) sumamin = 0 sumamax = 0 ans = 'YES' horasmin = [] horasmax = [] for i in range(d): minim, maxim = map(int, input().split()) horasmin.append(minim) horasmax.append(maxim) sumamin += minim sumamax += maxim if s < sumamin or s > sumamax: ans = 'NO' if a...
3
908
A
New Year and Counting Cards
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "brute force", "implementation" ]
null
null
Your friend has *n* cards. You know that each card has a lowercase English letter on one side and a digit on the other. Currently, your friend has laid out the cards on a table so only one side of each card is visible. You would like to know if the following statement is true for cards that your friend owns: "If a c...
The first and only line of input will contain a string *s* (1<=≤<=|*s*|<=≤<=50), denoting the sides of the cards that you can see on the table currently. Each character of *s* is either a lowercase English letter or a digit.
Print a single integer, the minimum number of cards you must turn over to verify your claim.
[ "ee\n", "z\n", "0ay1\n" ]
[ "2\n", "0\n", "2\n" ]
In the first sample, we must turn over both cards. Note that even though both cards have the same letter, they could possibly have different numbers on the other side. In the second sample, we don't need to turn over any cards. The statement is vacuously true, since you know your friend has no cards with a vowel on th...
500
[ { "input": "ee", "output": "2" }, { "input": "z", "output": "0" }, { "input": "0ay1", "output": "2" }, { "input": "0abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz1234567896", "output": "10" }, { "input": "0a0a9e9e2i2i9o9o6u6u9z9z4x4x9b9b", "output": "18" }, { "input": "01...
1,588,857,444
2,147,483,647
Python 3
COMPILATION_ERROR
TESTS
0
0
0
s=input() n=len(s) k=0 for i in s: if i=='a' or i=='e' or i=='i' or i=='o' or i=='u': k+=1 elif : try: m=int(i) if m==0 or m==2 or m==4 or m==6 or m==8: pass else: k+=1 else: pass
Title: New Year and Counting Cards Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Your friend has *n* cards. You know that each card has a lowercase English letter on one side and a digit on the other. Currently, your friend has laid out the cards on a table so only one side of each car...
```python s=input() n=len(s) k=0 for i in s: if i=='a' or i=='e' or i=='i' or i=='o' or i=='u': k+=1 elif : try: m=int(i) if m==0 or m==2 or m==4 or m==6 or m==8: pass else: k+=1 else: pass ```
-1
265
A
Colorful Stones (Simplified Edition)
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
There is a sequence of colorful stones. The color of each stone is one of red, green, or blue. You are given a string *s*. The *i*-th (1-based) character of *s* represents the color of the *i*-th stone. If the character is "R", "G", or "B", the color of the corresponding stone is red, green, or blue, respectively. Ini...
The input contains two lines. The first line contains the string *s* (1<=≤<=|*s*|<=≤<=50). The second line contains the string *t* (1<=≤<=|*t*|<=≤<=50). The characters of each string will be one of "R", "G", or "B". It is guaranteed that Liss don't move out of the sequence.
Print the final 1-based position of Liss in a single line.
[ "RGB\nRRR\n", "RRRBGBRBBB\nBBBRR\n", "BRRBGBRGRBGRGRRGGBGBGBRGBRGRGGGRBRRRBRBBBGRRRGGBBB\nBBRBGGRGRGBBBRBGRBRBBBBRBRRRBGBBGBBRRBBGGRBRRBRGRB\n" ]
[ "2\n", "3\n", "15\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "RGB\nRRR", "output": "2" }, { "input": "RRRBGBRBBB\nBBBRR", "output": "3" }, { "input": "BRRBGBRGRBGRGRRGGBGBGBRGBRGRGGGRBRRRBRBBBGRRRGGBBB\nBBRBGGRGRGBBBRBGRBRBBBBRBRRRBGBBGBBRRBBGGRBRRBRGRB", "output": "15" }, { "input": "G\nRRBBRBRRBR", "output": "1" }, ...
1,677,134,627
2,147,483,647
Python 3
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
0
62
0
strinig = input() code = input() index = 0 for i in code: if string[index] == i: index += 1 print(index + 1)
Title: Colorful Stones (Simplified Edition) Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: There is a sequence of colorful stones. The color of each stone is one of red, green, or blue. You are given a string *s*. The *i*-th (1-based) character of *s* represents the color of the *i*-th st...
```python strinig = input() code = input() index = 0 for i in code: if string[index] == i: index += 1 print(index + 1) ```
-1
724
D
Dense Subsequence
PROGRAMMING
1,900
[ "data structures", "greedy", "strings" ]
null
null
You are given a string *s*, consisting of lowercase English letters, and the integer *m*. One should choose some symbols from the given string so that any contiguous subsegment of length *m* has at least one selected symbol. Note that here we choose positions of symbols, not the symbols themselves. Then one uses the ...
The first line of the input contains a single integer *m* (1<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=100<=000). The second line contains the string *s* consisting of lowercase English letters. It is guaranteed that this string is non-empty and its length doesn't exceed 100<=000. It is also guaranteed that the number *m* doesn't exceed the length...
Print the single line containing the lexicographically smallest string, that can be obtained using the procedure described above.
[ "3\ncbabc\n", "2\nabcab\n", "3\nbcabcbaccba\n" ]
[ "a\n", "aab\n", "aaabb\n" ]
In the first sample, one can choose the subsequence {3} and form a string "a". In the second sample, one can choose the subsequence {1, 2, 4} (symbols on this positions are 'a', 'b' and 'a') and rearrange the chosen symbols to form a string "aab".
1,500
[ { "input": "3\ncbabc", "output": "a" }, { "input": "2\nabcab", "output": "aab" }, { "input": "3\nbcabcbaccba", "output": "aaabb" }, { "input": "5\nimmaydobun", "output": "ab" }, { "input": "5\nwjjdqawypvtgrncmqvcsergermprauyevcegjtcrrblkwiugrcjfpjyxngyryxntauxlouv...
1,630,973,401
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
68
233
29,286,400
def process(S, m): d = {} for c in S: if c not in d: d[c] = 0 d[c]+=1 L = [] for c in d: L.append([c, d[c], 0]) L = sorted(L) n = len(S) m2 = len(L) index = 0 curr = set([]) d2 = {} for i in range(m): c = S[i] ...
Title: Dense Subsequence Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: You are given a string *s*, consisting of lowercase English letters, and the integer *m*. One should choose some symbols from the given string so that any contiguous subsegment of length *m* has at least one selected...
```python def process(S, m): d = {} for c in S: if c not in d: d[c] = 0 d[c]+=1 L = [] for c in d: L.append([c, d[c], 0]) L = sorted(L) n = len(S) m2 = len(L) index = 0 curr = set([]) d2 = {} for i in range(m): c = S...
0
318
A
Even Odds
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "math" ]
null
null
Being a nonconformist, Volodya is displeased with the current state of things, particularly with the order of natural numbers (natural number is positive integer number). He is determined to rearrange them. But there are too many natural numbers, so Volodya decided to start with the first *n*. He writes down the follow...
The only line of input contains integers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1012). Please, do not use the %lld specifier to read or write 64-bit integers in C++. It is preferred to use the cin, cout streams or the %I64d specifier.
Print the number that will stand at the position number *k* after Volodya's manipulations.
[ "10 3\n", "7 7\n" ]
[ "5", "6" ]
In the first sample Volodya's sequence will look like this: {1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10}. The third place in the sequence is therefore occupied by the number 5.
500
[ { "input": "10 3", "output": "5" }, { "input": "7 7", "output": "6" }, { "input": "7 1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "7 2", "output": "3" }, { "input": "8 5", "output": "2" }, { "input": "8 3", "output": "5" }, { "input": "8 4", "output...
1,696,529,114
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
25
92
0
n,k=map(int,input().split()) if n%2==0: if k<=(n/2): print(int(2*k-1)) elif k>(n/2): print(int(2*(k-n/2))) elif n%2!=0: if k<=int(n/2)+1: print(int(2*k-1)) elif k>int(n/2)+1: print(int(2*(k-int(n/2)-1)))
Title: Even Odds Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Being a nonconformist, Volodya is displeased with the current state of things, particularly with the order of natural numbers (natural number is positive integer number). He is determined to rearrange them. But there are too ...
```python n,k=map(int,input().split()) if n%2==0: if k<=(n/2): print(int(2*k-1)) elif k>(n/2): print(int(2*(k-n/2))) elif n%2!=0: if k<=int(n/2)+1: print(int(2*k-1)) elif k>int(n/2)+1: print(int(2*(k-int(n/2)-1))) ```
3
858
C
Did you mean...
PROGRAMMING
1,500
[ "dp", "greedy", "implementation" ]
null
null
Beroffice text editor has a wide range of features that help working with text. One of the features is an automatic search for typos and suggestions of how to fix them. Beroffice works only with small English letters (i.e. with 26 letters from a to z). Beroffice thinks that a word is typed with a typo if there are thr...
The only line contains a non-empty word consisting of small English letters. The length of the word is between 1 and 3000 letters.
Print the given word without any changes if there are no typos. If there is at least one typo in the word, insert the minimum number of spaces into the word so that each of the resulting words doesn't have any typos. If there are multiple solutions, print any of them.
[ "hellno\n", "abacaba\n", "asdfasdf\n" ]
[ "hell no \n", "abacaba \n", "asd fasd f \n" ]
none
1,500
[ { "input": "hellno", "output": "hell no " }, { "input": "abacaba", "output": "abacaba " }, { "input": "asdfasdf", "output": "asd fasd f " }, { "input": "ooo", "output": "ooo " }, { "input": "moyaoborona", "output": "moyaoborona " }, { "input": "jxegxxx...
1,505,656,105
2,605
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
108
233
30,003,200
a = input() gl = set(['a', 'e', 'i', 'o', 'u']) cn = [0] * (200 + 1) ans = [] for i in range(len(a)): if a[i] in gl: for i1 in range(ord('a'), ord('z') + 1): cn[i1] = 0 continue cn[ord(a[i])] += 1 st = set() cnt = 0 for j in range(ord('a'), ord('z') + 1): ...
Title: Did you mean... Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Beroffice text editor has a wide range of features that help working with text. One of the features is an automatic search for typos and suggestions of how to fix them. Beroffice works only with small English letters (...
```python a = input() gl = set(['a', 'e', 'i', 'o', 'u']) cn = [0] * (200 + 1) ans = [] for i in range(len(a)): if a[i] in gl: for i1 in range(ord('a'), ord('z') + 1): cn[i1] = 0 continue cn[ord(a[i])] += 1 st = set() cnt = 0 for j in range(ord('a'), ord('z') ...
3
327
A
Flipping Game
PROGRAMMING
1,200
[ "brute force", "dp", "implementation" ]
null
null
Iahub got bored, so he invented a game to be played on paper. He writes *n* integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n*. Each of those integers can be either 0 or 1. He's allowed to do exactly one move: he chooses two indices *i* and *j* (1<=≤<=*i*<=≤<=*j*<=≤<=*n*) and flips all values *a**k* for which their positions are in...
The first line of the input contains an integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100). In the second line of the input there are *n* integers: *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n*. It is guaranteed that each of those *n* values is either 0 or 1.
Print an integer — the maximal number of 1s that can be obtained after exactly one move.
[ "5\n1 0 0 1 0\n", "4\n1 0 0 1\n" ]
[ "4\n", "4\n" ]
In the first case, flip the segment from 2 to 5 (*i* = 2, *j* = 5). That flip changes the sequence, it becomes: [1 1 1 0 1]. So, it contains four ones. There is no way to make the whole sequence equal to [1 1 1 1 1]. In the second case, flipping only the second and the third element (*i* = 2, *j* = 3) will turn all nu...
500
[ { "input": "5\n1 0 0 1 0", "output": "4" }, { "input": "4\n1 0 0 1", "output": "4" }, { "input": "1\n1", "output": "0" }, { "input": "1\n0", "output": "1" }, { "input": "8\n1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0", "output": "7" }, { "input": "18\n0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ...
1,649,021,148
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
2
62
0
n = int(input()) s = str(input()) s = s.replace(" ","") if "0" not in s: print(1) exit() first = s.index("0") s1 = s[::-1] oi = s1.index("0") last = len(s)-oi res = s[first:last] c1 = res.count("1") c0 = res.count("0") print(c0+(s.count("1")-c1))
Title: Flipping Game Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Iahub got bored, so he invented a game to be played on paper. He writes *n* integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n*. Each of those integers can be either 0 or 1. He's allowed to do exactly one move: he chooses two indices *...
```python n = int(input()) s = str(input()) s = s.replace(" ","") if "0" not in s: print(1) exit() first = s.index("0") s1 = s[::-1] oi = s1.index("0") last = len(s)-oi res = s[first:last] c1 = res.count("1") c0 = res.count("0") print(c0+(s.count("1")-c1)) ```
0
0
none
none
none
0
[ "none" ]
null
null
You are given an array *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* consisting of *n* integers, and an integer *k*. You have to split the array into exactly *k* non-empty subsegments. You'll then compute the minimum integer on each subsegment, and take the maximum integer over the *k* obtained minimums. What is the maximum possible inte...
The first line contains two integers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=<=105) — the size of the array *a* and the number of subsegments you have to split the array to. The second line contains *n* integers *a*1,<=<=*a*2,<=<=...,<=<=*a**n* (<=-<=109<=<=≤<=<=*a**i*<=≤<=<=109).
Print single integer — the maximum possible integer you can get if you split the array into *k* non-empty subsegments and take maximum of minimums on the subsegments.
[ "5 2\n1 2 3 4 5\n", "5 1\n-4 -5 -3 -2 -1\n" ]
[ "5\n", "-5\n" ]
A subsegment [*l*,  *r*] (*l* ≤ *r*) of array *a* is the sequence *a*<sub class="lower-index">*l*</sub>,  *a*<sub class="lower-index">*l* + 1</sub>,  ...,  *a*<sub class="lower-index">*r*</sub>. Splitting of array *a* of *n* elements into *k* subsegments [*l*<sub class="lower-index">1</sub>, *r*<sub class="lower-index...
0
[ { "input": "5 2\n1 2 3 4 5", "output": "5" }, { "input": "5 1\n-4 -5 -3 -2 -1", "output": "-5" }, { "input": "10 2\n10 9 1 -9 -7 -9 3 8 -10 5", "output": "10" }, { "input": "10 4\n-8 -1 2 -3 9 -8 4 -3 5 9", "output": "9" }, { "input": "1 1\n504262064", "output...
1,508,140,817
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
3
62
5,529,600
n , k = map(int, input().split()) data = list(map(int, input().split())) min_forward = data[0] min_backward = data[n-1] Min0 = [] Min1 = [] if k == 1 or k > 2: print(min(data)) else: for i in range(n): min_forward = min(min_forward,data[i]) Min0.append(min_forward) min_backwa...
Title: none Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: You are given an array *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* consisting of *n* integers, and an integer *k*. You have to split the array into exactly *k* non-empty subsegments. You'll then compute the minimum integer on each subsegment, and ...
```python n , k = map(int, input().split()) data = list(map(int, input().split())) min_forward = data[0] min_backward = data[n-1] Min0 = [] Min1 = [] if k == 1 or k > 2: print(min(data)) else: for i in range(n): min_forward = min(min_forward,data[i]) Min0.append(min_forward) ...
0
712
C
Memory and De-Evolution
PROGRAMMING
1,600
[ "greedy", "math" ]
null
null
Memory is now interested in the de-evolution of objects, specifically triangles. He starts with an equilateral triangle of side length *x*, and he wishes to perform operations to obtain an equilateral triangle of side length *y*. In a single second, he can modify the length of a single side of the current triangle suc...
The first and only line contains two integers *x* and *y* (3<=≤<=*y*<=&lt;<=*x*<=≤<=100<=000) — the starting and ending equilateral triangle side lengths respectively.
Print a single integer — the minimum number of seconds required for Memory to obtain the equilateral triangle of side length *y* if he starts with the equilateral triangle of side length *x*.
[ "6 3\n", "8 5\n", "22 4\n" ]
[ "4\n", "3\n", "6\n" ]
In the first sample test, Memory starts with an equilateral triangle of side length 6 and wants one of side length 3. Denote a triangle with sides *a*, *b*, and *c* as (*a*, *b*, *c*). Then, Memory can do <img align="middle" class="tex-formula" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/18af21f738bad490df83097a90e1f2879a4b21...
1,500
[ { "input": "6 3", "output": "4" }, { "input": "8 5", "output": "3" }, { "input": "22 4", "output": "6" }, { "input": "4 3", "output": "3" }, { "input": "57 27", "output": "4" }, { "input": "61 3", "output": "9" }, { "input": "5 4", "out...
1,566,631,738
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
4
124
0
x,y = map(int,input().split()) l = [x,x,x] p = 0 while l.count(y) != 3: l.sort() if l[1] + 1 - l[0] > y: l[2] = max(l[1] + 1 - l[0],max(l)-15) else: l[2] = max(y,max(l)-15) p += 1 print(p)
Title: Memory and De-Evolution Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Memory is now interested in the de-evolution of objects, specifically triangles. He starts with an equilateral triangle of side length *x*, and he wishes to perform operations to obtain an equilateral triangle o...
```python x,y = map(int,input().split()) l = [x,x,x] p = 0 while l.count(y) != 3: l.sort() if l[1] + 1 - l[0] > y: l[2] = max(l[1] + 1 - l[0],max(l)-15) else: l[2] = max(y,max(l)-15) p += 1 print(p) ```
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":...
1,690,632,301
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
30
46
0
import sys sys.setrecursionlimit(100000000) input=lambda:sys.stdin.readline().strip() write=lambda x:sys.stdout.write(str(x)) # from random import randint # from copy import deepcopy # from collections import deque # from heapq import heapify,heappush,heappop # from bisect import bisect_left,bisect,insort fr...
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 import sys sys.setrecursionlimit(100000000) input=lambda:sys.stdin.readline().strip() write=lambda x:sys.stdout.write(str(x)) # from random import randint # from copy import deepcopy # from collections import deque # from heapq import heapify,heappush,heappop # from bisect import bisect_left,bisect,...
3
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...
1,658,539,508
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
30
92
0
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- """Python2 Automatically generated by Colaboratory. Original file is located at https://colab.research.google.com/drive/1Y_gvadcJ9SqrMgAYBKxt96WXg5bG2r59 """ x=str(input()) y=[] for i in x: y.append(i.isupper()) if y.count(True)>y.count(False): print(x.upper()) else: print(x.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 # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- """Python2 Automatically generated by Colaboratory. Original file is located at https://colab.research.google.com/drive/1Y_gvadcJ9SqrMgAYBKxt96WXg5bG2r59 """ x=str(input()) y=[] for i in x: y.append(i.isupper()) if y.count(True)>y.count(False): print(x.upper()) else: print...
3.977
45
A
Codecraft III
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "implementation" ]
A. Codecraft III
2
256
Today Vasya visited a widely known site and learned that the continuation of his favourite game Codecraft II will appear after exactly *k* months. He looked at the calendar and learned that at the moment is the month number *s*. Vasya immediately got interested in what month Codecraft III will appear. Help him understa...
The first input line contains the name of the current month. It is guaranteed that it is a proper English name of one of twelve months. The first letter is uppercase, the rest are lowercase. The second line contains integer *k* (0<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=100) — the number of months left till the appearance of Codecraft III.
Print starting from an uppercase letter the name of the month in which the continuation of Codeforces II will appear. The printed name must be contained in the list January, February, March, April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November, December.
[ "November\n3\n", "May\n24\n" ]
[ "February\n", "May\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "November\n3", "output": "February" }, { "input": "May\n24", "output": "May" }, { "input": "April\n0", "output": "April" }, { "input": "September\n0", "output": "September" }, { "input": "August\n0", "output": "August" }, { "input": "June\n1...
1,670,171,856
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
7
122
2,867,200
month = input() n = int(input()) months = { "January" : 1, "February" : 2, "March" : 3, "April" : 4, "May" : 5, "June" : 6, "July" : 7, "August" : 8, "September" : 9, "October" : 10, "November" : 11, "December" : 12 } monthsFlipped = { 1 : "January", ...
Title: Codecraft III Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: Today Vasya visited a widely known site and learned that the continuation of his favourite game Codecraft II will appear after exactly *k* months. He looked at the calendar and learned that at the moment is the month number *...
```python month = input() n = int(input()) months = { "January" : 1, "February" : 2, "March" : 3, "April" : 4, "May" : 5, "June" : 6, "July" : 7, "August" : 8, "September" : 9, "October" : 10, "November" : 11, "December" : 12 } monthsFlipped = { 1 : "...
-1
274
A
k-Multiple Free Set
PROGRAMMING
1,500
[ "binary search", "greedy", "sortings" ]
null
null
A *k*-multiple free set is a set of integers where there is no pair of integers where one is equal to another integer multiplied by *k*. That is, there are no two integers *x* and *y* (*x*<=&lt;<=*y*) from the set, such that *y*<==<=*x*·*k*. You're given a set of *n* distinct positive integers. Your task is to find th...
The first line of the input contains two integers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105,<=1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=109). The next line contains a list of *n* distinct positive integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=109). All the numbers in the lines are separated by single spaces.
On the only line of the output print the size of the largest *k*-multiple free subset of {*a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n*}.
[ "6 2\n2 3 6 5 4 10\n" ]
[ "3\n" ]
In the sample input one of the possible maximum 2-multiple free subsets is {4, 5, 6}.
500
[ { "input": "6 2\n2 3 6 5 4 10", "output": "3" }, { "input": "10 2\n1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10", "output": "6" }, { "input": "1 1\n1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "100 2\n191 17 61 40 77 95 128 88 26 69 79 10 131 106 142 152 68 39 182 53 83 81 6 89 65 148 33 22 5 47 107 121 52 163 1...
1,628,181,553
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
43
466
33,996,800
n, k = map(int, input().split()) a = list(sorted(map(int, input().split()), reverse=True)) s = set() for i in range(len(a)): if a[i] * k not in s: s.add(a[i]) print(len(s))
Title: k-Multiple Free Set Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: A *k*-multiple free set is a set of integers where there is no pair of integers where one is equal to another integer multiplied by *k*. That is, there are no two integers *x* and *y* (*x*<=&lt;<=*y*) from the set, ...
```python n, k = map(int, input().split()) a = list(sorted(map(int, input().split()), reverse=True)) s = set() for i in range(len(a)): if a[i] * k not in s: s.add(a[i]) print(len(s)) ```
3
691
A
Fashion in Berland
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
According to rules of the Berland fashion, a jacket should be fastened by all the buttons except only one, but not necessarily it should be the last one. Also if the jacket has only one button, it should be fastened, so the jacket will not swinging open. You are given a jacket with *n* buttons. Determine if it is fast...
The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000) — the number of buttons on the jacket. The second line contains *n* integers *a**i* (0<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=1). The number *a**i*<==<=0 if the *i*-th button is not fastened. Otherwise *a**i*<==<=1.
In the only line print the word "YES" if the jacket is fastened in a right way. Otherwise print the word "NO".
[ "3\n1 0 1\n", "3\n1 0 0\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "NO\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "3\n1 0 1", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "3\n1 0 0", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "3\n1 1 0", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "3\n1 1 1", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "3\n0 0 1", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "3\n0 0 0", "output": "NO" }...
1,625,587,406
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
13
77
0
n = int(input()) a = list(map(int,input().split())) c = a.count(0) if (c>1 or c<1) and n>1 : print('NO') else: print('YES')
Title: Fashion in Berland Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: According to rules of the Berland fashion, a jacket should be fastened by all the buttons except only one, but not necessarily it should be the last one. Also if the jacket has only one button, it should be fastened,...
```python n = int(input()) a = list(map(int,input().split())) c = a.count(0) if (c>1 or c<1) and n>1 : print('NO') else: print('YES') ```
0
556
A
Case of the Zeros and Ones
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "greedy" ]
null
null
Andrewid the Android is a galaxy-famous detective. In his free time he likes to think about strings containing zeros and ones. Once he thought about a string of length *n* consisting of zeroes and ones. Consider the following operation: we choose any two adjacent positions in the string, and if one them contains 0, an...
First line of the input contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=2·105), the length of the string that Andreid has. The second line contains the string of length *n* consisting only from zeros and ones.
Output the minimum length of the string that may remain after applying the described operations several times.
[ "4\n1100\n", "5\n01010\n", "8\n11101111\n" ]
[ "0\n", "1\n", "6\n" ]
In the first sample test it is possible to change the string like the following: <img align="middle" class="tex-formula" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/10df55364c21c6e8d5da31b6ab6f6294c4fc26b3.png" style="max-width: 100.0%;max-height: 100.0%;"/>. In the second sample test it is possible to change the string like...
250
[ { "input": "4\n1100", "output": "0" }, { "input": "5\n01010", "output": "1" }, { "input": "8\n11101111", "output": "6" }, { "input": "1\n0", "output": "1" }, { "input": "1\n1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "2\n00", "output": "2" }, { "input"...
1,654,613,940
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
49
78
204,800
n = int(input()) arr = input() a = b = 0 for e in arr: if e == '0': a += 1 else: b += 1 print(abs(a - b))
Title: Case of the Zeros and Ones Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Andrewid the Android is a galaxy-famous detective. In his free time he likes to think about strings containing zeros and ones. Once he thought about a string of length *n* consisting of zeroes and ones. Cons...
```python n = int(input()) arr = input() a = b = 0 for e in arr: if e == '0': a += 1 else: b += 1 print(abs(a - b)) ```
3
10
A
Power Consumption Calculation
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "implementation" ]
A. Power Consumption Calculation
1
256
Tom is interested in power consumption of his favourite laptop. His laptop has three modes. In normal mode laptop consumes *P*1 watt per minute. *T*1 minutes after Tom moved the mouse or touched the keyboard for the last time, a screensaver starts and power consumption changes to *P*2 watt per minute. Finally, after *T...
The first line contains 6 integer numbers *n*, *P*1, *P*2, *P*3, *T*1, *T*2 (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100,<=0<=≤<=*P*1,<=*P*2,<=*P*3<=≤<=100,<=1<=≤<=*T*1,<=*T*2<=≤<=60). The following *n* lines contain description of Tom's work. Each *i*-th of these lines contains two space-separated integers *l**i* and *r**i* (0<=≤<=*l**i*<=&lt;...
Output the answer to the problem.
[ "1 3 2 1 5 10\n0 10\n", "2 8 4 2 5 10\n20 30\n50 100\n" ]
[ "30", "570" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "1 3 2 1 5 10\n0 10", "output": "30" }, { "input": "2 8 4 2 5 10\n20 30\n50 100", "output": "570" }, { "input": "3 15 9 95 39 19\n873 989\n1003 1137\n1172 1436", "output": "8445" }, { "input": "4 73 2 53 58 16\n51 52\n209 242\n281 407\n904 945", "output": "5287...
1,645,898,488
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
5
92
512,000
n,p1,p2,p3,t1,t2 = map(int,input().split()) arr = [] for i in range(n): s = list(map(int,input().split())) arr.append(s) ans=(arr[0][1]-arr[0][0])*p1 for i in range(1,n): d = arr[i][0]-arr[i-1][1] if t1>=d: ans += d*p1 elif t1<d<=t2: ans+=t1*p1+(d-t1)*p2 else: ans+=t1*p...
Title: Power Consumption Calculation Time Limit: 1 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: Tom is interested in power consumption of his favourite laptop. His laptop has three modes. In normal mode laptop consumes *P*1 watt per minute. *T*1 minutes after Tom moved the mouse or touched the keyboard f...
```python n,p1,p2,p3,t1,t2 = map(int,input().split()) arr = [] for i in range(n): s = list(map(int,input().split())) arr.append(s) ans=(arr[0][1]-arr[0][0])*p1 for i in range(1,n): d = arr[i][0]-arr[i-1][1] if t1>=d: ans += d*p1 elif t1<d<=t2: ans+=t1*p1+(d-t1)*p2 else: ...
0
462
B
Appleman and Card Game
PROGRAMMING
1,300
[ "greedy" ]
null
null
Appleman has *n* cards. Each card has an uppercase letter written on it. Toastman must choose *k* cards from Appleman's cards. Then Appleman should give Toastman some coins depending on the chosen cards. Formally, for each Toastman's card *i* you should calculate how much Toastman's cards have the letter equal to lette...
The first line contains two integers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105). The next line contains *n* uppercase letters without spaces — the *i*-th letter describes the *i*-th card of the Appleman.
Print a single integer – the answer to the problem.
[ "15 10\nDZFDFZDFDDDDDDF\n", "6 4\nYJSNPI\n" ]
[ "82\n", "4\n" ]
In the first test example Toastman can choose nine cards with letter D and one additional card with any letter. For each card with D he will get 9 coins and for the additional card he will get 1 coin.
1,000
[ { "input": "15 10\nDZFDFZDFDDDDDDF", "output": "82" }, { "input": "6 4\nYJSNPI", "output": "4" }, { "input": "5 3\nAOWBY", "output": "3" }, { "input": "1 1\nV", "output": "1" }, { "input": "2 1\nWT", "output": "1" }, { "input": "2 2\nBL", "output":...
1,554,991,553
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
41
171
1,126,400
n, k = input().split(" ") n = int(n) #qtd de cards k = int(k) #qtd escolhida por Toast s = input() s = list(s) t = list(set(s)) s = sorted(s) t = sorted(t) f = [0]*len(t) i = 0 j = 0 while i < len(s): if s[i] == t[j]: f[j] += 1 i += 1 else: j += 1 f = sorted(f) cont = 0 soma = 0 i ...
Title: Appleman and Card Game Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Appleman has *n* cards. Each card has an uppercase letter written on it. Toastman must choose *k* cards from Appleman's cards. Then Appleman should give Toastman some coins depending on the chosen cards. Formally...
```python n, k = input().split(" ") n = int(n) #qtd de cards k = int(k) #qtd escolhida por Toast s = input() s = list(s) t = list(set(s)) s = sorted(s) t = sorted(t) f = [0]*len(t) i = 0 j = 0 while i < len(s): if s[i] == t[j]: f[j] += 1 i += 1 else: j += 1 f = sorted(f) cont = 0 s...
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...
1,679,248,276
2,147,483,647
Python 3
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
0
62
0
code = input() l = [None] * 10 for i in range (10) : l[i] = input() res = "" for i in range(0 , len(code) , 10) : res += l.index(l[i : i+11]) print(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 code = input() l = [None] * 10 for i in range (10) : l[i] = input() res = "" for i in range(0 , len(code) , 10) : res += l.index(l[i : i+11]) print(res) ```
-1
15
B
Laser
PROGRAMMING
1,800
[ "math" ]
B. Laser
1
64
Petya is the most responsible worker in the Research Institute. So he was asked to make a very important experiment: to melt the chocolate bar with a new laser device. The device consists of a rectangular field of *n*<=×<=*m* cells and a robotic arm. Each cell of the field is a 1<=×<=1 square. The robotic arm has two l...
The first line contains one integer number *t* (1<=≤<=*t*<=≤<=10000) — the number of test sets. Each of the following *t* lines describes one test set. Each line contains integer numbers *n*, *m*, *x*1, *y*1, *x*2, *y*2, separated by a space (2<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=109, 1<=≤<=*x*1,<=*x*2<=≤<=*n*, 1<=≤<=*y*1,<=*y*2<=≤<=*m*...
Each of the *t* lines of the output should contain the answer to the corresponding input test set.
[ "2\n4 4 1 1 3 3\n4 3 1 1 2 2\n" ]
[ "8\n2\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "2\n4 4 1 1 3 3\n4 3 1 1 2 2", "output": "8\n2" }, { "input": "1\n2 2 1 2 2 1", "output": "2" }, { "input": "1\n2 2 1 2 2 1", "output": "2" }, { "input": "1\n3 3 3 2 1 1", "output": "5" }, { "input": "1\n3 4 1 1 1 2", "output": "0" }, { "inp...
1,690,327,820
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
0
92
0
t = int(input()) for _ in range(t): n, m, x1, y1, x2, y2 = map(int, input().split()) area1 = (abs(x2 - x1) + 1) * (abs(y2 - y1) + 1) area2 = (n - abs(x2 - x1)) * (m - abs(y2 - y1)) print(n * m - area1 - area2)
Title: Laser Time Limit: 1 seconds Memory Limit: 64 megabytes Problem Description: Petya is the most responsible worker in the Research Institute. So he was asked to make a very important experiment: to melt the chocolate bar with a new laser device. The device consists of a rectangular field of *n*<=×<=*m* cells an...
```python t = int(input()) for _ in range(t): n, m, x1, y1, x2, y2 = map(int, input().split()) area1 = (abs(x2 - x1) + 1) * (abs(y2 - y1) + 1) area2 = (n - abs(x2 - x1)) * (m - abs(y2 - y1)) print(n * m - area1 - area2) ```
0
69
A
Young Physicist
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation", "math" ]
A. Young Physicist
2
256
A guy named Vasya attends the final grade of a high school. One day Vasya decided to watch a match of his favorite hockey team. And, as the boy loves hockey very much, even more than physics, he forgot to do the homework. Specifically, he forgot to complete his physics tasks. Next day the teacher got very angry at Vasy...
The first line contains a positive integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100), then follow *n* lines containing three integers each: the *x**i* coordinate, the *y**i* coordinate and the *z**i* coordinate of the force vector, applied to the body (<=-<=100<=≤<=*x**i*,<=*y**i*,<=*z**i*<=≤<=100).
Print the word "YES" if the body is in equilibrium, or the word "NO" if it is not.
[ "3\n4 1 7\n-2 4 -1\n1 -5 -3\n", "3\n3 -1 7\n-5 2 -4\n2 -1 -3\n" ]
[ "NO", "YES" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "3\n4 1 7\n-2 4 -1\n1 -5 -3", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "3\n3 -1 7\n-5 2 -4\n2 -1 -3", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "10\n21 32 -46\n43 -35 21\n42 2 -50\n22 40 20\n-27 -9 38\n-4 1 1\n-40 6 -31\n-13 -2 34\n-21 34 -12\n-32 -29 41", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "10...
1,686,397,310
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
81
92
0
def is_equilibrium(n, forces): sum_x = 0 sum_y = 0 sum_z = 0 for force in forces: sum_x += force[0] sum_y += force[1] sum_z += force[2] if sum_x == 0 and sum_y == 0 and sum_z == 0: return "YES" else: return "NO" n = int(input()) forces = [] ...
Title: Young Physicist Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: A guy named Vasya attends the final grade of a high school. One day Vasya decided to watch a match of his favorite hockey team. And, as the boy loves hockey very much, even more than physics, he forgot to do the homework. S...
```python def is_equilibrium(n, forces): sum_x = 0 sum_y = 0 sum_z = 0 for force in forces: sum_x += force[0] sum_y += force[1] sum_z += force[2] if sum_x == 0 and sum_y == 0 and sum_z == 0: return "YES" else: return "NO" n = int(input()) fo...
3.977
508
C
Anya and Ghosts
PROGRAMMING
1,600
[ "constructive algorithms", "greedy" ]
null
null
Anya loves to watch horror movies. In the best traditions of horror, she will be visited by *m* ghosts tonight. Anya has lots of candles prepared for the visits, each candle can produce light for exactly *t* seconds. It takes the girl one second to light one candle. More formally, Anya can spend one second to light one...
The first line contains three integers *m*, *t*, *r* (1<=≤<=*m*,<=*t*,<=*r*<=≤<=300), representing the number of ghosts to visit Anya, the duration of a candle's burning and the minimum number of candles that should burn during each visit. The next line contains *m* space-separated numbers *w**i* (1<=≤<=*i*<=≤<=*m*, ...
If it is possible to make at least *r* candles burn during each visit, then print the minimum number of candles that Anya needs to light for that. If that is impossible, print <=-<=1.
[ "1 8 3\n10\n", "2 10 1\n5 8\n", "1 1 3\n10\n" ]
[ "3\n", "1\n", "-1\n" ]
Anya can start lighting a candle in the same second with ghost visit. But this candle isn't counted as burning at this visit. It takes exactly one second to light up a candle and only after that second this candle is considered burning; it means that if Anya starts lighting candle at moment x, candle is buring from se...
1,500
[ { "input": "1 8 3\n10", "output": "3" }, { "input": "2 10 1\n5 8", "output": "1" }, { "input": "1 1 3\n10", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "21 79 1\n13 42 51 60 69 77 94 103 144 189 196 203 210 215 217 222 224 234 240 260 282", "output": "4" }, { "input": "125 92 2\...
1,689,654,435
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
7
77
2,969,600
m,t,r = map(int,input().split()) ghost_times = list(map(int,input().split())) candles_burning = [0] * 301 ghosts = [0] * 301 answer = 0 for time in ghost_times: ghosts[time] = 1 for i in range(1, max(ghost_times) + r + 1): if ghosts[i] and candles_burning[i] < r: for j in range(i - r + ca...
Title: Anya and Ghosts Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Anya loves to watch horror movies. In the best traditions of horror, she will be visited by *m* ghosts tonight. Anya has lots of candles prepared for the visits, each candle can produce light for exactly *t* seconds. It...
```python m,t,r = map(int,input().split()) ghost_times = list(map(int,input().split())) candles_burning = [0] * 301 ghosts = [0] * 301 answer = 0 for time in ghost_times: ghosts[time] = 1 for i in range(1, max(ghost_times) + r + 1): if ghosts[i] and candles_burning[i] < r: for j in range(...
-1
707
A
Brain's Photos
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Small, but very brave, mouse Brain was not accepted to summer school of young villains. He was upset and decided to postpone his plans of taking over the world, but to become a photographer instead. As you may know, the coolest photos are on the film (because you can specify the hashtag #film for such). Brain took a ...
The first line of the input contains two integers *n* and *m* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=100) — the number of photo pixel matrix rows and columns respectively. Then *n* lines describing matrix rows follow. Each of them contains *m* space-separated characters describing colors of pixels in a row. Each character in the line i...
Print the "#Black&amp;White" (without quotes), if the photo is black-and-white and "#Color" (without quotes), if it is colored, in the only line.
[ "2 2\nC M\nY Y\n", "3 2\nW W\nW W\nB B\n", "1 1\nW\n" ]
[ "#Color", "#Black&amp;White", "#Black&amp;White" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "2 2\nC M\nY Y", "output": "#Color" }, { "input": "3 2\nW W\nW W\nB B", "output": "#Black&White" }, { "input": "1 1\nW", "output": "#Black&White" }, { "input": "2 3\nW W W\nB G Y", "output": "#Color" }, { "input": "1 1\nW", "output": "#Black&White" ...
1,698,600,778
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
50
77
0
n,m=map(int,input().strip().split()) f=0 for i in range(n): li=input().strip().split() if "C" in li or "M" in li or "Y" in li: f=1 if f==1: print("#Color") else: print("#Black&White")
Title: Brain's Photos Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Small, but very brave, mouse Brain was not accepted to summer school of young villains. He was upset and decided to postpone his plans of taking over the world, but to become a photographer instead. As you may know, the...
```python n,m=map(int,input().strip().split()) f=0 for i in range(n): li=input().strip().split() if "C" in li or "M" in li or "Y" in li: f=1 if f==1: print("#Color") else: print("#Black&White") ```
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...
1,647,546,042
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
40
92
0
i = input() j = input() print('YES' if i[::-1] == j else 'NO')
Title: Translation Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: The translation from the Berland language into the Birland language is not an easy task. Those languages are very similar: a berlandish word differs from a birlandish word with the same meaning a little: it is spelled (and pron...
```python i = input() j = input() print('YES' if i[::-1] == j else 'NO') ```
3.977
61
A
Ultra-Fast Mathematician
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation" ]
A. Ultra-Fast Mathematician
2
256
Shapur was an extremely gifted student. He was great at everything including Combinatorics, Algebra, Number Theory, Geometry, Calculus, etc. He was not only smart but extraordinarily fast! He could manage to sum 1018 numbers in a single second. One day in 230 AD Shapur was trying to find out if any one can possibly do...
There are two lines in each input. Each of them contains a single number. It is guaranteed that the numbers are made from 0 and 1 only and that their length is same. The numbers may start with 0. The length of each number doesn't exceed 100.
Write one line — the corresponding answer. Do not omit the leading 0s.
[ "1010100\n0100101\n", "000\n111\n", "1110\n1010\n", "01110\n01100\n" ]
[ "1110001\n", "111\n", "0100\n", "00010\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "1010100\n0100101", "output": "1110001" }, { "input": "000\n111", "output": "111" }, { "input": "1110\n1010", "output": "0100" }, { "input": "01110\n01100", "output": "00010" }, { "input": "011101\n000001", "output": "011100" }, { "input": "...
1,695,471,965
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
3
31
0
n = int(input()) m = int(input()) s = str(m + n) for i in range(len(s)): if s[i] == '2': s = s[:i] + '0' + s[i + 1:] print(s)
Title: Ultra-Fast Mathematician Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: Shapur was an extremely gifted student. He was great at everything including Combinatorics, Algebra, Number Theory, Geometry, Calculus, etc. He was not only smart but extraordinarily fast! He could manage to sum 10...
```python n = int(input()) m = int(input()) s = str(m + n) for i in range(len(s)): if s[i] == '2': s = s[:i] + '0' + s[i + 1:] print(s) ```
0
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...
1,644,905,399
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED
TESTS
7
2,000
24,883,200
n=int(input()) a=list(map(int,input().split())) b=list(map(int,input().split())) c=list(map(int,input().split())) for i in range(n-1): a.remove(b[i]) print(a[0]) for i in range(n-2): b.remove(c[i]) print(b[0])
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().split())) b=list(map(int,input().split())) c=list(map(int,input().split())) for i in range(n-1): a.remove(b[i]) print(a[0]) for i in range(n-2): b.remove(c[i]) print(b[0]) ```
0
200
B
Drinks
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation", "math" ]
null
null
Little Vasya loves orange juice very much. That's why any food and drink in his kitchen necessarily contains orange juice. There are *n* drinks in his fridge, the volume fraction of orange juice in the *i*-th drink equals *p**i* percent. One day Vasya decided to make himself an orange cocktail. He took equal proportio...
The first input line contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of orange-containing drinks in Vasya's fridge. The second line contains *n* integers *p**i* (0<=≤<=*p**i*<=≤<=100) — the volume fraction of orange juice in the *i*-th drink, in percent. The numbers are separated by a space.
Print the volume fraction in percent of orange juice in Vasya's cocktail. The answer will be considered correct if the absolute or relative error does not exceed 10<=<=-<=4.
[ "3\n50 50 100\n", "4\n0 25 50 75\n" ]
[ "66.666666666667\n", "37.500000000000\n" ]
Note to the first sample: let's assume that Vasya takes *x* milliliters of each drink from the fridge. Then the volume of pure juice in the cocktail will equal <img align="middle" class="tex-formula" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/c1fac6e64d3a8ee6a5ac138cbe51e60039b22473.png" style="max-width: 100.0%;max-height: ...
500
[ { "input": "3\n50 50 100", "output": "66.666666666667" }, { "input": "4\n0 25 50 75", "output": "37.500000000000" }, { "input": "3\n0 1 8", "output": "3.000000000000" }, { "input": "5\n96 89 93 95 70", "output": "88.600000000000" }, { "input": "7\n62 41 78 4 38 39...
1,689,189,005
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
31
92
0
tam = int(input()) jugo_perc = [int(x) for x in input().split(" ")] num1 = sum(jugo_perc) ans = num1 / tam print(format(ans, '.12f'))
Title: Drinks Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Little Vasya loves orange juice very much. That's why any food and drink in his kitchen necessarily contains orange juice. There are *n* drinks in his fridge, the volume fraction of orange juice in the *i*-th drink equals *p**i*...
```python tam = int(input()) jugo_perc = [int(x) for x in input().split(" ")] num1 = sum(jugo_perc) ans = num1 / tam print(format(ans, '.12f')) ```
3
448
A
Rewards
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Bizon the Champion is called the Champion for a reason. Bizon the Champion has recently got a present — a new glass cupboard with *n* shelves and he decided to put all his presents there. All the presents can be divided into two types: medals and cups. Bizon the Champion has *a*1 first prize cups, *a*2 second prize c...
The first line contains integers *a*1, *a*2 and *a*3 (0<=≤<=*a*1,<=*a*2,<=*a*3<=≤<=100). The second line contains integers *b*1, *b*2 and *b*3 (0<=≤<=*b*1,<=*b*2,<=*b*3<=≤<=100). The third line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100). The numbers in the lines are separated by single spaces.
Print "YES" (without the quotes) if all the rewards can be put on the shelves in the described manner. Otherwise, print "NO" (without the quotes).
[ "1 1 1\n1 1 1\n4\n", "1 1 3\n2 3 4\n2\n", "1 0 0\n1 0 0\n1\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "YES\n", "NO\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "1 1 1\n1 1 1\n4", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "1 1 3\n2 3 4\n2", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "1 0 0\n1 0 0\n1", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "0 0 0\n0 0 0\n1", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "100 100 100\n100 100 100\n100", "output": "YES" }, ...
1,641,396,834
2,147,483,647
Python 3
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
0
46
0
q=[int(e)for e in input().split()] w=[int(e)for e in input().split()] e=int(input()) r,t=q[0]+q[1]+q[2]+q[3],w[0]+w[1]+w[2]+w[3] j=r while e!=0: if j==0: j=t elif j==r: if r<5: r=0 j=0 else: r-=5 j-=5 elif t<10: ...
Title: Rewards Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Bizon the Champion is called the Champion for a reason. Bizon the Champion has recently got a present — a new glass cupboard with *n* shelves and he decided to put all his presents there. All the presents can be divided into ...
```python q=[int(e)for e in input().split()] w=[int(e)for e in input().split()] e=int(input()) r,t=q[0]+q[1]+q[2]+q[3],w[0]+w[1]+w[2]+w[3] j=r while e!=0: if j==0: j=t elif j==r: if r<5: r=0 j=0 else: r-=5 j-=5 elif t<10:...
-1
855
A
Tom Riddle's Diary
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "brute force", "implementation", "strings" ]
null
null
Harry Potter is on a mission to destroy You-Know-Who's Horcruxes. The first Horcrux that he encountered in the Chamber of Secrets is Tom Riddle's diary. The diary was with Ginny and it forced her to open the Chamber of Secrets. Harry wants to know the different people who had ever possessed the diary to make sure they ...
First line of input contains an integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of names in the list. Next *n* lines each contain a string *s**i*, consisting of lowercase English letters. The length of each string is between 1 and 100.
Output *n* lines each containing either "YES" or "NO" (without quotes), depending on whether this string was already present in the stream or not. You can print each letter in any case (upper or lower).
[ "6\ntom\nlucius\nginny\nharry\nginny\nharry\n", "3\na\na\na\n" ]
[ "NO\nNO\nNO\nNO\nYES\nYES\n", "NO\nYES\nYES\n" ]
In test case 1, for *i* = 5 there exists *j* = 3 such that *s*<sub class="lower-index">*i*</sub> = *s*<sub class="lower-index">*j*</sub> and *j* &lt; *i*, which means that answer for *i* = 5 is "YES".
500
[ { "input": "6\ntom\nlucius\nginny\nharry\nginny\nharry", "output": "NO\nNO\nNO\nNO\nYES\nYES" }, { "input": "3\na\na\na", "output": "NO\nYES\nYES" }, { "input": "1\nzn", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "9\nliyzmbjwnzryjokufuxcqtzwworjeoxkbaqrujrhdidqdvwdfzilwszgnzglnnbogaclckfnb...
1,673,517,237
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
55
62
0
x=[] for i in range(int(input())): n=input() if n in x: print("YES") else: print("NO") x.append(n)
Title: Tom Riddle's Diary Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Harry Potter is on a mission to destroy You-Know-Who's Horcruxes. The first Horcrux that he encountered in the Chamber of Secrets is Tom Riddle's diary. The diary was with Ginny and it forced her to open the Chamber ...
```python x=[] for i in range(int(input())): n=input() if n in x: print("YES") else: print("NO") x.append(n) ```
3
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"...
1,662,063,727
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
OK
TESTS
20
62
0
n,m,a=map(int,input().split()) if n%a ==0: x=n//a else: x=n//a +1 if m%a ==0: y=m//a else: y=m//a+1 print(x*y)
Title: Theatre Square Time Limit: 1 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: Theatre Square in the capital city of Berland has a rectangular shape with the size *n*<=×<=*m* meters. On the occasion of the city's anniversary, a decision was taken to pave the Square with square granite flagstones. Each ...
```python n,m,a=map(int,input().split()) if n%a ==0: x=n//a else: x=n//a +1 if m%a ==0: y=m//a else: y=m//a+1 print(x*y) ```
3.969
485
A
Factory
PROGRAMMING
1,400
[ "implementation", "math", "matrices" ]
null
null
One industrial factory is reforming working plan. The director suggested to set a mythical detail production norm. If at the beginning of the day there were *x* details in the factory storage, then by the end of the day the factory has to produce (remainder after dividing *x* by *m*) more details. Unfortunately, no cu...
The first line contains two integers *a* and *m* (1<=≤<=*a*,<=*m*<=≤<=105).
Print "Yes" (without quotes) if the production will eventually stop, otherwise print "No".
[ "1 5\n", "3 6\n" ]
[ "No\n", "Yes\n" ]
none
1,000
[ { "input": "1 5", "output": "No" }, { "input": "3 6", "output": "Yes" }, { "input": "1 8", "output": "Yes" }, { "input": "2 3", "output": "No" }, { "input": "3 24", "output": "Yes" }, { "input": "1 1", "output": "Yes" }, { "input": "100000 ...
1,624,377,483
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
23
124
0
a,b=map(int,input().split()) flag=0 for i in range(21): a=a*(2**i) if a%b==0: flag=1 break if flag==1: print("Yes") else: print("No")
Title: Factory Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: One industrial factory is reforming working plan. The director suggested to set a mythical detail production norm. If at the beginning of the day there were *x* details in the factory storage, then by the end of the day the fac...
```python a,b=map(int,input().split()) flag=0 for i in range(21): a=a*(2**i) if a%b==0: flag=1 break if flag==1: print("Yes") else: print("No") ```
3