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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...
1,621,420,675
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
6
154
0
n=int(input()) a1=[int(x) for x in input().split()] a2=[int(y) for y in input().split()] a3=[int(z) for z in input().split()] s1=sum(a1) s2=sum(a2) s3=sum(a3) s4=s1+s2+s3 if(s4==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 n=int(input()) a1=[int(x) for x in input().split()] a2=[int(y) for y in input().split()] a3=[int(z) for z in input().split()] s1=sum(a1) s2=sum(a2) s3=sum(a3) s4=s1+s2+s3 if(s4==0): print("YES") else: print("NO") ```
0
777
C
Alyona and Spreadsheet
PROGRAMMING
1,600
[ "binary search", "data structures", "dp", "greedy", "implementation", "two pointers" ]
null
null
During the lesson small girl Alyona works with one famous spreadsheet computer program and learns how to edit tables. Now she has a table filled with integers. The table consists of *n* rows and *m* columns. By *a**i*,<=*j* we will denote the integer located at the *i*-th row and the *j*-th column. We say that the tab...
The first line of the input contains two positive integers *n* and *m* (1<=≤<=*n*·*m*<=≤<=100<=000) — the number of rows and the number of columns in the table respectively. Note that your are given a constraint that bound the product of these two integers, i.e. the number of elements in the table. Each of the followi...
Print "Yes" to the *i*-th line of the output if the table consisting of rows from *l**i* to *r**i* inclusive is sorted in non-decreasing order in at least one column. Otherwise, print "No".
[ "5 4\n1 2 3 5\n3 1 3 2\n4 5 2 3\n5 5 3 2\n4 4 3 4\n6\n1 1\n2 5\n4 5\n3 5\n1 3\n1 5\n" ]
[ "Yes\nNo\nYes\nYes\nYes\nNo\n" ]
In the sample, the whole table is not sorted in any column. However, rows 1–3 are sorted in column 1, while rows 4–5 are sorted in column 3.
1,500
[ { "input": "5 4\n1 2 3 5\n3 1 3 2\n4 5 2 3\n5 5 3 2\n4 4 3 4\n6\n1 1\n2 5\n4 5\n3 5\n1 3\n1 5", "output": "Yes\nNo\nYes\nYes\nYes\nNo" }, { "input": "1 1\n1\n1\n1 1", "output": "Yes" }, { "input": "10 1\n523130301\n127101624\n15573616\n703140639\n628818570\n957494759\n161270109\n38686565...
1,623,138,393
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
114
498
16,384,000
###### ### ####### ####### ## # ##### ### ##### # # # # # # # # # # # # # ### # # # # # # # # # # # # # ### ###### ######### # # # # # # ...
Title: Alyona and Spreadsheet Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: During the lesson small girl Alyona works with one famous spreadsheet computer program and learns how to edit tables. Now she has a table filled with integers. The table consists of *n* rows and *m* columns. By ...
```python ###### ### ####### ####### ## # ##### ### ##### # # # # # # # # # # # # # ### # # # # # # # # # # # # # ### ###### ######### # # # #...
3
271
A
Beautiful Year
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "brute force" ]
null
null
It seems like the year of 2013 came only yesterday. Do you know a curious fact? The year of 2013 is the first year after the old 1987 with only distinct digits. Now you are suggested to solve the following problem: given a year number, find the minimum year number which is strictly larger than the given one and has on...
The single line contains integer *y* (1000<=≤<=*y*<=≤<=9000) — the year number.
Print a single integer — the minimum year number that is strictly larger than *y* and all it's digits are distinct. It is guaranteed that the answer exists.
[ "1987\n", "2013\n" ]
[ "2013\n", "2014\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "1987", "output": "2013" }, { "input": "2013", "output": "2014" }, { "input": "1000", "output": "1023" }, { "input": "1001", "output": "1023" }, { "input": "1234", "output": "1235" }, { "input": "5555", "output": "5601" }, { "inp...
1,690,478,980
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
27
92
0
s = int(input()) + 1 while len(set(str(s)))<4:s+=1 print(s)
Title: Beautiful Year Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: It seems like the year of 2013 came only yesterday. Do you know a curious fact? The year of 2013 is the first year after the old 1987 with only distinct digits. Now you are suggested to solve the following problem: give...
```python s = int(input()) + 1 while len(set(str(s)))<4:s+=1 print(s) ```
3
0
none
none
none
0
[ "none" ]
null
null
You are given two lists of non-zero digits. Let's call an integer pretty if its (base 10) representation has at least one digit from the first list and at least one digit from the second list. What is the smallest positive pretty integer?
The first line contains two integers *n* and *m* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=9) — the lengths of the first and the second lists, respectively. The second line contains *n* distinct digits *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=9) — the elements of the first list. The third line contains *m* distinct digits *b*1,<=*b*2...
Print the smallest pretty integer.
[ "2 3\n4 2\n5 7 6\n", "8 8\n1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8\n8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1\n" ]
[ "25\n", "1\n" ]
In the first example 25, 46, 24567 are pretty, as well as many other integers. The smallest among them is 25. 42 and 24 are not pretty because they don't have digits from the second list. In the second example all integers that have at least one digit different from 9 are pretty. It's obvious that the smallest among t...
0
[ { "input": "2 3\n4 2\n5 7 6", "output": "25" }, { "input": "8 8\n1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8\n8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "1 1\n9\n1", "output": "19" }, { "input": "9 1\n5 4 2 3 6 1 7 9 8\n9", "output": "9" }, { "input": "5 3\n7 2 5 8 6\n3 1 9", "output"...
1,508,056,793
2,093
Python 3
OK
TESTS
52
62
5,529,600
x,y = map(int,input().split()) lst1 = [] lst2 = [] num1 = map(int,input().split()) num2 = map(int,input().split()) for a in num1: lst1.append(a) for b in num2: lst2.append(b) lst1.sort() lst2.sort() intersec = [] for x in range(0,len(lst1)): for y in range(0,len(lst2)): if ...
Title: none Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: You are given two lists of non-zero digits. Let's call an integer pretty if its (base 10) representation has at least one digit from the first list and at least one digit from the second list. What is the smallest positive pretty...
```python x,y = map(int,input().split()) lst1 = [] lst2 = [] num1 = map(int,input().split()) num2 = map(int,input().split()) for a in num1: lst1.append(a) for b in num2: lst2.append(b) lst1.sort() lst2.sort() intersec = [] for x in range(0,len(lst1)): for y in range(0,len(lst2)): ...
3
911
B
Two Cakes
PROGRAMMING
1,200
[ "binary search", "brute force", "implementation" ]
null
null
It's New Year's Eve soon, so Ivan decided it's high time he started setting the table. Ivan has bought two cakes and cut them into pieces: the first cake has been cut into *a* pieces, and the second one — into *b* pieces. Ivan knows that there will be *n* people at the celebration (including himself), so Ivan has set ...
The first line contains three integers *n*, *a* and *b* (1<=≤<=*a*,<=*b*<=≤<=100, 2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=*a*<=+<=*b*) — the number of plates, the number of pieces of the first cake, and the number of pieces of the second cake, respectively.
Print the maximum possible number *x* such that Ivan can distribute the cake in such a way that each plate will contain at least *x* pieces of cake.
[ "5 2 3\n", "4 7 10\n" ]
[ "1\n", "3\n" ]
In the first example there is only one way to distribute cakes to plates, all of them will have 1 cake on it. In the second example you can have two plates with 3 and 4 pieces of the first cake and two plates both with 5 pieces of the second cake. Minimal number of pieces is 3.
0
[ { "input": "5 2 3", "output": "1" }, { "input": "4 7 10", "output": "3" }, { "input": "100 100 100", "output": "2" }, { "input": "10 100 3", "output": "3" }, { "input": "2 9 29", "output": "9" }, { "input": "4 6 10", "output": "3" }, { "inp...
1,580,570,076
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
135
156
0
n,a,b = [int(i) for i in input().split()] maxi = -1 for i in range(1,n): if min(a//i,b//(n-i))>maxi: maxi = int(min(a//i,b//(n-i))) print(maxi)
Title: Two Cakes Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: It's New Year's Eve soon, so Ivan decided it's high time he started setting the table. Ivan has bought two cakes and cut them into pieces: the first cake has been cut into *a* pieces, and the second one — into *b* pieces. Iv...
```python n,a,b = [int(i) for i in input().split()] maxi = -1 for i in range(1,n): if min(a//i,b//(n-i))>maxi: maxi = int(min(a//i,b//(n-i))) print(maxi) ```
3
1,009
B
Minimum Ternary String
PROGRAMMING
1,400
[ "greedy", "implementation" ]
null
null
You are given a ternary string (it is a string which consists only of characters '0', '1' and '2'). You can swap any two adjacent (consecutive) characters '0' and '1' (i.e. replace "01" with "10" or vice versa) or any two adjacent (consecutive) characters '1' and '2' (i.e. replace "12" with "21" or vice versa). For e...
The first line of the input contains the string $s$ consisting only of characters '0', '1' and '2', its length is between $1$ and $10^5$ (inclusive).
Print a single string — the minimum possible (lexicographically) string you can obtain by using the swaps described above arbitrary number of times (possibly, zero).
[ "100210\n", "11222121\n", "20\n" ]
[ "001120\n", "11112222\n", "20\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "100210", "output": "001120" }, { "input": "11222121", "output": "11112222" }, { "input": "20", "output": "20" }, { "input": "1002", "output": "0012" }, { "input": "10", "output": "01" }, { "input": "000021", "output": "000012" }, { ...
1,664,019,446
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
0
77
2,048,000
for i in range(int(input())): n = int(input()) a=list(map(int,input().split())) a1=[0]*10000 for i in a: a1[i]+=1 temp=None best1=None best2=None r=999999999 for i in range(len(a1)): if a1[i]>=4: best2=i best1=i br...
Title: Minimum Ternary String Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: You are given a ternary string (it is a string which consists only of characters '0', '1' and '2'). You can swap any two adjacent (consecutive) characters '0' and '1' (i.e. replace "01" with "10" or vice versa) ...
```python for i in range(int(input())): n = int(input()) a=list(map(int,input().split())) a1=[0]*10000 for i in a: a1[i]+=1 temp=None best1=None best2=None r=999999999 for i in range(len(a1)): if a1[i]>=4: best2=i best1=i ...
-1
490
C
Hacking Cypher
PROGRAMMING
1,700
[ "brute force", "math", "number theory", "strings" ]
null
null
Polycarpus participates in a competition for hacking into a new secure messenger. He's almost won. Having carefully studied the interaction protocol, Polycarpus came to the conclusion that the secret key can be obtained if he properly cuts the public key of the application into two parts. The public key is a long inte...
The first line of the input contains the public key of the messenger — an integer without leading zeroes, its length is in range from 1 to 106 digits. The second line contains a pair of space-separated positive integers *a*, *b* (1<=≤<=*a*,<=*b*<=≤<=108).
In the first line print "YES" (without the quotes), if the method satisfying conditions above exists. In this case, next print two lines — the left and right parts after the cut. These two parts, being concatenated, must be exactly identical to the public key. The left part must be divisible by *a*, and the right part ...
[ "116401024\n97 1024\n", "284254589153928171911281811000\n1009 1000\n", "120\n12 1\n" ]
[ "YES\n11640\n1024\n", "YES\n2842545891539\n28171911281811000\n", "NO\n" ]
none
1,500
[ { "input": "116401024\n97 1024", "output": "YES\n11640\n1024" }, { "input": "284254589153928171911281811000\n1009 1000", "output": "YES\n2842545891539\n28171911281811000" }, { "input": "120\n12 1", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "604\n6 4", "output": "YES\n60\n4" }, { ...
1,688,248,183
2,147,483,647
Python 3
TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED
TESTS
35
1,000
3,072,000
s=input() a,b=input().split() l1=[] l2=[] ss=s ans=s ans1,ans2="","" flag=False while s: if(int(s)%int(a)==0 and s==s.lstrip('0') and len(ss[len(s):])>0 and int(ss[len(s):])%int(b)==0 and ss[len(s):]==ss[len(s):].lstrip('0') and s+ss[len(s):]==ans): ans1=s ans2=ss[len(s):] flag=T...
Title: Hacking Cypher Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Polycarpus participates in a competition for hacking into a new secure messenger. He's almost won. Having carefully studied the interaction protocol, Polycarpus came to the conclusion that the secret key can be obtained...
```python s=input() a,b=input().split() l1=[] l2=[] ss=s ans=s ans1,ans2="","" flag=False while s: if(int(s)%int(a)==0 and s==s.lstrip('0') and len(ss[len(s):])>0 and int(ss[len(s):])%int(b)==0 and ss[len(s):]==ss[len(s):].lstrip('0') and s+ss[len(s):]==ans): ans1=s ans2=ss[len(s):] ...
0
845
C
Two TVs
PROGRAMMING
1,500
[ "data structures", "greedy", "sortings" ]
null
null
Polycarp is a great fan of television. He wrote down all the TV programs he is interested in for today. His list contains *n* shows, *i*-th of them starts at moment *l**i* and ends at moment *r**i*. Polycarp owns two TVs. He can watch two different shows simultaneously with two TVs but he can only watch one show at a...
The first line contains one integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=2·105) — the number of shows. Each of the next *n* lines contains two integers *l**i* and *r**i* (0<=≤<=*l**i*<=&lt;<=*r**i*<=≤<=109) — starting and ending time of *i*-th show.
If Polycarp is able to check out all the shows using only two TVs then print "YES" (without quotes). Otherwise, print "NO" (without quotes).
[ "3\n1 2\n2 3\n4 5\n", "4\n1 2\n2 3\n2 3\n1 2\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "NO\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "3\n1 2\n2 3\n4 5", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "4\n1 2\n2 3\n2 3\n1 2", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "4\n0 1\n1 2\n2 3\n3 4", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "3\n1 2\n2 3\n2 4", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "3\n0 100\n0 100\n0 100", "output": "NO" ...
1,544,719,862
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
58
1,028
20,377,600
from sys import stdin n=int(stdin.readline().strip()) s=[tuple(map(int,stdin.readline().strip().split())) for i in range(n)] s.sort() t1=-1,-1 t2=-1,-1 for i in s: if i[0]>t1[1]: t1=i elif i[0]>t2[1]: t2=i else: print("NO") exit(0) print("YES")
Title: Two TVs Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Polycarp is a great fan of television. He wrote down all the TV programs he is interested in for today. His list contains *n* shows, *i*-th of them starts at moment *l**i* and ends at moment *r**i*. Polycarp owns two TVs. He ...
```python from sys import stdin n=int(stdin.readline().strip()) s=[tuple(map(int,stdin.readline().strip().split())) for i in range(n)] s.sort() t1=-1,-1 t2=-1,-1 for i in s: if i[0]>t1[1]: t1=i elif i[0]>t2[1]: t2=i else: print("NO") exit(0) print("YES") ```
3
701
C
They Are Everywhere
PROGRAMMING
1,500
[ "binary search", "strings", "two pointers" ]
null
null
Sergei B., the young coach of Pokemons, has found the big house which consists of *n* flats ordered in a row from left to right. It is possible to enter each flat from the street. It is possible to go out from each flat. Also, each flat is connected with the flat to the left and the flat to the right. Flat number 1 is ...
The first line contains the integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100<=000) — the number of flats in the house. The second line contains the row *s* with the length *n*, it consists of uppercase and lowercase letters of English alphabet, the *i*-th letter equals the type of Pokemon, which is in the flat number *i*.
Print the minimum number of flats which Sergei B. should visit in order to catch Pokemons of all types which there are in the house.
[ "3\nAaA\n", "7\nbcAAcbc\n", "6\naaBCCe\n" ]
[ "2\n", "3\n", "5\n" ]
In the first test Sergei B. can begin, for example, from the flat number 1 and end in the flat number 2. In the second test Sergei B. can begin, for example, from the flat number 4 and end in the flat number 6. In the third test Sergei B. must begin from the flat number 2 and end in the flat number 6.
1,000
[ { "input": "3\nAaA", "output": "2" }, { "input": "7\nbcAAcbc", "output": "3" }, { "input": "6\naaBCCe", "output": "5" }, { "input": "1\nA", "output": "1" }, { "input": "1\ng", "output": "1" }, { "input": "52\nabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQ...
1,679,629,090
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
11
342
409,600
# Implementé el hint, y si lo logro es gracias al análisis de MF num_flats = int(input()) flats = input() distinct_pokemon = set(flats) num_pokemon = len(distinct_pokemon) ''' El siguiente código es una implementación de: Hay varias formas de hacerlo, una de las más simple consiste en mantener un rango en...
Title: They Are Everywhere Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Sergei B., the young coach of Pokemons, has found the big house which consists of *n* flats ordered in a row from left to right. It is possible to enter each flat from the street. It is possible to go out from each ...
```python # Implementé el hint, y si lo logro es gracias al análisis de MF num_flats = int(input()) flats = input() distinct_pokemon = set(flats) num_pokemon = len(distinct_pokemon) ''' El siguiente código es una implementación de: Hay varias formas de hacerlo, una de las más simple consiste en mantener un ran...
0
818
A
Diplomas and Certificates
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation", "math" ]
null
null
There are *n* students who have taken part in an olympiad. Now it's time to award the students. Some of them will receive diplomas, some wiil get certificates, and others won't receive anything. Students with diplomas and certificates are called winners. But there are some rules of counting the number of diplomas and ...
The first (and the only) line of input contains two integers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*k*<=≤<=1012), where *n* is the number of students and *k* is the ratio between the number of certificates and the number of diplomas.
Output three numbers: the number of students with diplomas, the number of students with certificates and the number of students who are not winners in case when the number of winners is maximum possible. It's possible that there are no winners.
[ "18 2\n", "9 10\n", "1000000000000 5\n", "1000000000000 499999999999\n" ]
[ "3 6 9\n", "0 0 9\n", "83333333333 416666666665 500000000002\n", "1 499999999999 500000000000\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "18 2", "output": "3 6 9" }, { "input": "9 10", "output": "0 0 9" }, { "input": "1000000000000 5", "output": "83333333333 416666666665 500000000002" }, { "input": "1000000000000 499999999999", "output": "1 499999999999 500000000000" }, { "input": "1 1",...
1,662,705,238
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
44
46
0
def solution(n, k): d = (n//2)//(k+1) if d > 0: return [d, k*d, n - (k+1)*d] else: return [0, 0, n] n, k = [int(x) for x in input().strip().split(" ")] ans = solution(n, k) print(ans[0], ans[1], ans[2])
Title: Diplomas and Certificates Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: There are *n* students who have taken part in an olympiad. Now it's time to award the students. Some of them will receive diplomas, some wiil get certificates, and others won't receive anything. Students with...
```python def solution(n, k): d = (n//2)//(k+1) if d > 0: return [d, k*d, n - (k+1)*d] else: return [0, 0, n] n, k = [int(x) for x in input().strip().split(" ")] ans = solution(n, k) print(ans[0], ans[1], ans[2]) ```
3
796
A
Buying A House
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "brute force", "implementation" ]
null
null
Zane the wizard had never loved anyone before, until he fell in love with a girl, whose name remains unknown to us. The girl lives in house *m* of a village. There are *n* houses in that village, lining in a straight line from left to right: house 1, house 2, ..., house *n*. The village is also well-structured: house ...
The first line contains three integers *n*, *m*, and *k* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100, 1<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=*n*, 1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=100) — the number of houses in the village, the house where the girl lives, and the amount of money Zane has (in dollars), respectively. The second line contains *n* integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (0<=≤<=...
Print one integer — the minimum distance, in meters, from the house where the girl Zane likes lives to the house Zane can buy.
[ "5 1 20\n0 27 32 21 19\n", "7 3 50\n62 0 0 0 99 33 22\n", "10 5 100\n1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1\n" ]
[ "40", "30", "20" ]
In the first sample, with *k* = 20 dollars, Zane can buy only house 5. The distance from house *m* = 1 to house 5 is 10 + 10 + 10 + 10 = 40 meters. In the second sample, Zane can buy houses 6 and 7. It is better to buy house 6 than house 7, since house *m* = 3 and house 6 are only 30 meters away, while house *m* = 3 a...
500
[ { "input": "5 1 20\n0 27 32 21 19", "output": "40" }, { "input": "7 3 50\n62 0 0 0 99 33 22", "output": "30" }, { "input": "10 5 100\n1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1", "output": "20" }, { "input": "5 3 1\n1 1 0 0 1", "output": "10" }, { "input": "5 5 5\n1 0 5 6 0", "outpu...
1,598,440,066
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
58
109
307,200
n,m,k=map(int,input().split()) l=list(map(int,input().split())) x=[] y=[] for i in range(n): if l[i]==0: continue elif l[i]<=k: x.append(i+1) for i in range(len(x)): if x[i]>m: y.append(x[i]-m) elif x[i]<m: y.append(m-x[i]) print(min(y)*10)
Title: Buying A House Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Zane the wizard had never loved anyone before, until he fell in love with a girl, whose name remains unknown to us. The girl lives in house *m* of a village. There are *n* houses in that village, lining in a straight li...
```python n,m,k=map(int,input().split()) l=list(map(int,input().split())) x=[] y=[] for i in range(n): if l[i]==0: continue elif l[i]<=k: x.append(i+1) for i in range(len(x)): if x[i]>m: y.append(x[i]-m) elif x[i]<m: y.append(m-x[i]) print(min(y)*10) ```
3
686
A
Free Ice Cream
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "constructive algorithms", "implementation" ]
null
null
After their adventure with the magic mirror Kay and Gerda have returned home and sometimes give free ice cream to kids in the summer. At the start of the day they have *x* ice cream packs. Since the ice cream is free, people start standing in the queue before Kay and Gerda's house even in the night. Each person in the...
The first line contains two space-separated integers *n* and *x* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000, 0<=≤<=*x*<=≤<=109). Each of the next *n* lines contains a character '+' or '-', and an integer *d**i*, separated by a space (1<=≤<=*d**i*<=≤<=109). Record "+ *d**i*" in *i*-th line means that a carrier with *d**i* ice cream packs occ...
Print two space-separated integers — number of ice cream packs left after all operations, and number of kids that left the house in distress.
[ "5 7\n+ 5\n- 10\n- 20\n+ 40\n- 20\n", "5 17\n- 16\n- 2\n- 98\n+ 100\n- 98\n" ]
[ "22 1\n", "3 2\n" ]
Consider the first sample. 1. Initially Kay and Gerda have 7 packs of ice cream. 1. Carrier brings 5 more, so now they have 12 packs. 1. A kid asks for 10 packs and receives them. There are only 2 packs remaining. 1. Another kid asks for 20 packs. Kay and Gerda do not have them, so the kid goes away distressed. 1....
500
[ { "input": "5 7\n+ 5\n- 10\n- 20\n+ 40\n- 20", "output": "22 1" }, { "input": "5 17\n- 16\n- 2\n- 98\n+ 100\n- 98", "output": "3 2" }, { "input": "6 1000000000\n+ 1000000000\n+ 1000000000\n+ 1000000000\n+ 1000000000\n+ 1000000000\n+ 1000000000", "output": "7000000000 0" }, { ...
1,631,545,277
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
34
139
21,708,800
a,b=[int(v) for v in input().split()] sum=0 for i in range(a): x,t=[v for v in input().split()] t=int(t) if x=="+": b+=t else: if b>=t: b-=t else: sum+=1 print(b,sum)
Title: Free Ice Cream Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: After their adventure with the magic mirror Kay and Gerda have returned home and sometimes give free ice cream to kids in the summer. At the start of the day they have *x* ice cream packs. Since the ice cream is free, p...
```python a,b=[int(v) for v in input().split()] sum=0 for i in range(a): x,t=[v for v in input().split()] t=int(t) if x=="+": b+=t else: if b>=t: b-=t else: sum+=1 print(b,sum) ```
3
779
B
Weird Rounding
PROGRAMMING
1,100
[ "brute force", "greedy" ]
null
null
Polycarp is crazy about round numbers. He especially likes the numbers divisible by 10*k*. In the given number of *n* Polycarp wants to remove the least number of digits to get a number that is divisible by 10*k*. For example, if *k*<==<=3, in the number 30020 it is enough to delete a single digit (2). In this case, t...
The only line of the input contains two integer numbers *n* and *k* (0<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=2<=000<=000<=000, 1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=9). It is guaranteed that the answer exists. All numbers in the input are written in traditional notation of integers, that is, without any extra leading zeros.
Print *w* — the required minimal number of digits to erase. After removing the appropriate *w* digits from the number *n*, the result should have a value that is divisible by 10*k*. The result can start with digit 0 in the single case (the result is zero and written by exactly the only digit 0).
[ "30020 3\n", "100 9\n", "10203049 2\n" ]
[ "1\n", "2\n", "3\n" ]
In the example 2 you can remove two digits: 1 and any 0. The result is number 0 which is divisible by any number.
1,000
[ { "input": "30020 3", "output": "1" }, { "input": "100 9", "output": "2" }, { "input": "10203049 2", "output": "3" }, { "input": "0 1", "output": "0" }, { "input": "0 9", "output": "0" }, { "input": "100 2", "output": "0" }, { "input": "102...
1,488,216,568
1,768
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
2
46
4,608,000
a,b=map(int,input().split()) b=10**b k=a//b a=a-(k*b) a=str(a) v=0 if b>int(a): v=len(a)-1 else: for i in range(len(a)): if int(a[i])>1: v=v+1 print(v)
Title: Weird Rounding Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Polycarp is crazy about round numbers. He especially likes the numbers divisible by 10*k*. In the given number of *n* Polycarp wants to remove the least number of digits to get a number that is divisible by 10*k*. For e...
```python a,b=map(int,input().split()) b=10**b k=a//b a=a-(k*b) a=str(a) v=0 if b>int(a): v=len(a)-1 else: for i in range(len(a)): if int(a[i])>1: v=v+1 print(v) ```
0
381
A
Sereja and Dima
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "greedy", "implementation", "two pointers" ]
null
null
Sereja and Dima play a game. The rules of the game are very simple. The players have *n* cards in a row. Each card contains a number, all numbers on the cards are distinct. The players take turns, Sereja moves first. During his turn a player can take one card: either the leftmost card in a row, or the rightmost one. Th...
The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000) — the number of cards on the table. The second line contains space-separated numbers on the cards from left to right. The numbers on the cards are distinct integers from 1 to 1000.
On a single line, print two integers. The first number is the number of Sereja's points at the end of the game, the second number is the number of Dima's points at the end of the game.
[ "4\n4 1 2 10\n", "7\n1 2 3 4 5 6 7\n" ]
[ "12 5\n", "16 12\n" ]
In the first sample Sereja will take cards with numbers 10 and 2, so Sereja's sum is 12. Dima will take cards with numbers 4 and 1, so Dima's sum is 5.
500
[ { "input": "4\n4 1 2 10", "output": "12 5" }, { "input": "7\n1 2 3 4 5 6 7", "output": "16 12" }, { "input": "42\n15 29 37 22 16 5 26 31 6 32 19 3 45 36 33 14 25 20 48 7 42 11 24 28 9 18 8 21 47 17 38 40 44 4 35 1 43 39 41 27 12 13", "output": "613 418" }, { "input": "43\n32 ...
1,673,722,238
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
34
46
0
n = int(input()) l = input().split() for i in range(len(l)): l[i] = int(l[i]) sereja_score = 0 dima_score = 0 for i in range(len(l)): if i % 2 == 0: l2 = [l[0], l[-1]] l1 = max(l2) l.remove((l1)) sereja_score += l1 elif i % 2 == 1: l4 = [l[0], l[-1]] l3 = ma...
Title: Sereja and Dima Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Sereja and Dima play a game. The rules of the game are very simple. The players have *n* cards in a row. Each card contains a number, all numbers on the cards are distinct. The players take turns, Sereja moves first. Du...
```python n = int(input()) l = input().split() for i in range(len(l)): l[i] = int(l[i]) sereja_score = 0 dima_score = 0 for i in range(len(l)): if i % 2 == 0: l2 = [l[0], l[-1]] l1 = max(l2) l.remove((l1)) sereja_score += l1 elif i % 2 == 1: l4 = [l[0], l[-1]] ...
3
725
A
Jumping Ball
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
In a new version of the famous Pinball game, one of the most important parts of the game field is a sequence of *n* bumpers. The bumpers are numbered with integers from 1 to *n* from left to right. There are two types of bumpers. They are denoted by the characters '&lt;' and '&gt;'. When the ball hits the bumper at pos...
The first line of the input contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=200<=000) — the length of the sequence of bumpers. The second line contains the string, which consists of the characters '&lt;' and '&gt;'. The character at the *i*-th position of this string corresponds to the type of the *i*-th bumper.
Print one integer — the number of positions in the sequence such that the ball will eventually fall from the game field if it starts at that position.
[ "4\n&lt;&lt;&gt;&lt;\n", "5\n&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;\n", "4\n&gt;&gt;&lt;&lt;\n" ]
[ "2", "5", "0" ]
In the first sample, the ball will fall from the field if starts at position 1 or position 2. In the second sample, any starting position will result in the ball falling from the field.
500
[ { "input": "4\n<<><", "output": "2" }, { "input": "5\n>>>>>", "output": "5" }, { "input": "4\n>><<", "output": "0" }, { "input": "3\n<<>", "output": "3" }, { "input": "3\n<<<", "output": "3" }, { "input": "3\n><<", "output": "0" }, { "input...
1,479,389,056
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
78
77
614,400
if __name__ == '__main__': n = int(input()) line = str(input()) num = 0 for it in line: if it == '<': num += 1 else: break for it in line[::-1]: if it == '>': num += 1 else: break print(num)
Title: Jumping Ball Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: In a new version of the famous Pinball game, one of the most important parts of the game field is a sequence of *n* bumpers. The bumpers are numbered with integers from 1 to *n* from left to right. There are two types of b...
```python if __name__ == '__main__': n = int(input()) line = str(input()) num = 0 for it in line: if it == '<': num += 1 else: break for it in line[::-1]: if it == '>': num += 1 else: break print(num) ...
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...
1,513,140,278
2,147,483,647
Python 3
COMPILATION_ERROR
TESTS
0
0
0
s = input() b = '' for i in s: b = i + b if s == b print('YES') else: print('NO')
Title: Translation Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: The translation from the Berland language into the Birland language is not an easy task. Those languages are very similar: a berlandish word differs from a birlandish word with the same meaning a little: it is spelled (and pron...
```python s = input() b = '' for i in s: b = i + b if s == b print('YES') else: print('NO') ```
-1
231
A
Team
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "brute force", "greedy" ]
null
null
One day three best friends Petya, Vasya and Tonya decided to form a team and take part in programming contests. Participants are usually offered several problems during programming contests. Long before the start the friends decided that they will implement a problem if at least two of them are sure about the solution....
The first input line contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000) — the number of problems in the contest. Then *n* lines contain three integers each, each integer is either 0 or 1. If the first number in the line equals 1, then Petya is sure about the problem's solution, otherwise he isn't sure. The second numbe...
Print a single integer — the number of problems the friends will implement on the contest.
[ "3\n1 1 0\n1 1 1\n1 0 0\n", "2\n1 0 0\n0 1 1\n" ]
[ "2\n", "1\n" ]
In the first sample Petya and Vasya are sure that they know how to solve the first problem and all three of them know how to solve the second problem. That means that they will write solutions for these problems. Only Petya is sure about the solution for the third problem, but that isn't enough, so the friends won't ta...
500
[ { "input": "3\n1 1 0\n1 1 1\n1 0 0", "output": "2" }, { "input": "2\n1 0 0\n0 1 1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "1\n1 0 0", "output": "0" }, { "input": "2\n1 0 0\n1 1 1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "5\n1 0 0\n0 1 0\n1 1 1\n0 0 1\n0 0 0", "output": "1" }, ...
1,699,743,521
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
21
92
0
# Input n = int(input()) # Count the number of problems each friend is sure about count_sure = 0 for _ in range(n): p, v, t = map(int, input().split()) # Check if at least two friends are sure about the solution if p + v + t >= 2: count_sure += 1 # Output print(count_sure)
Title: Team Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: One day three best friends Petya, Vasya and Tonya decided to form a team and take part in programming contests. Participants are usually offered several problems during programming contests. Long before the start the friends decid...
```python # Input n = int(input()) # Count the number of problems each friend is sure about count_sure = 0 for _ in range(n): p, v, t = map(int, input().split()) # Check if at least two friends are sure about the solution if p + v + t >= 2: count_sure += 1 # Output print(count_sure) ...
3
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...
1,694,479,021
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
33
140
23,449,600
from sys import stdin input = stdin.readline def main(data) -> None: x = sum(data[0]) y = sum(data[1]) z = sum(data[2]) print(x-y) print(y-z) if __name__ == "__main__": input() main([list(map(int, input().split())) for _ in range(3)])
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 from sys import stdin input = stdin.readline def main(data) -> None: x = sum(data[0]) y = sum(data[1]) z = sum(data[2]) print(x-y) print(y-z) if __name__ == "__main__": input() main([list(map(int, input().split())) for _ in range(3)]) ```
3
294
A
Shaass and Oskols
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation", "math" ]
null
null
Shaass has decided to hunt some birds. There are *n* horizontal electricity wires aligned parallel to each other. Wires are numbered 1 to *n* from top to bottom. On each wire there are some oskols sitting next to each other. Oskol is the name of a delicious kind of birds in Shaass's territory. Supposed there are *a**i*...
The first line of the input contains an integer *n*, (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100). The next line contains a list of space-separated integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n*, (0<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=100). The third line contains an integer *m*, (0<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=100). Each of the next *m* lines contains two integers *x**i* and *y**i*. The i...
On the *i*-th line of the output print the number of birds on the *i*-th wire.
[ "5\n10 10 10 10 10\n5\n2 5\n3 13\n2 12\n1 13\n4 6\n", "3\n2 4 1\n1\n2 2\n" ]
[ "0\n12\n5\n0\n16\n", "3\n0\n3\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "5\n10 10 10 10 10\n5\n2 5\n3 13\n2 12\n1 13\n4 6", "output": "0\n12\n5\n0\n16" }, { "input": "3\n2 4 1\n1\n2 2", "output": "3\n0\n3" }, { "input": "5\n58 51 45 27 48\n5\n4 9\n5 15\n4 5\n5 8\n1 43", "output": "0\n66\n57\n7\n0" }, { "input": "10\n48 53 10 28 91 56 8...
1,686,425,194
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
0
30
0
input() s=[*map(int,input().split())] input() for l in open(0): a,b=map(int,l.split()) if a-2 >=0: s[a-2]+=b-1 if a < 5: s[a] +=s[a-1]-b s[a-1]=0 print(*s,sep="\n")
Title: Shaass and Oskols Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Shaass has decided to hunt some birds. There are *n* horizontal electricity wires aligned parallel to each other. Wires are numbered 1 to *n* from top to bottom. On each wire there are some oskols sitting next to each...
```python input() s=[*map(int,input().split())] input() for l in open(0): a,b=map(int,l.split()) if a-2 >=0: s[a-2]+=b-1 if a < 5: s[a] +=s[a-1]-b s[a-1]=0 print(*s,sep="\n") ```
0
501
A
Contest
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Misha and Vasya participated in a Codeforces contest. Unfortunately, each of them solved only one problem, though successfully submitted it at the first attempt. Misha solved the problem that costs *a* points and Vasya solved the problem that costs *b* points. Besides, Misha submitted the problem *c* minutes after the ...
The first line contains four integers *a*, *b*, *c*, *d* (250<=≤<=*a*,<=*b*<=≤<=3500, 0<=≤<=*c*,<=*d*<=≤<=180). It is guaranteed that numbers *a* and *b* are divisible by 250 (just like on any real Codeforces round).
Output on a single line: "Misha" (without the quotes), if Misha got more points than Vasya. "Vasya" (without the quotes), if Vasya got more points than Misha. "Tie" (without the quotes), if both of them got the same number of points.
[ "500 1000 20 30\n", "1000 1000 1 1\n", "1500 1000 176 177\n" ]
[ "Vasya\n", "Tie\n", "Misha\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "500 1000 20 30", "output": "Vasya" }, { "input": "1000 1000 1 1", "output": "Tie" }, { "input": "1500 1000 176 177", "output": "Misha" }, { "input": "1500 1000 74 177", "output": "Misha" }, { "input": "750 2500 175 178", "output": "Vasya" }, { ...
1,611,317,269
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
5
62
409,600
import sys, os from collections import defaultdict input = sys.stdin.readline read = lambda: list(map(int, input().strip().split())) def f(p, t): return(max((3*p)//10, 9 - (p//250)*t)) def main(): a,b,c,d = read() x, y = f(a, c), f(b, d) if x > y:print("Misha") elif x < y:print("Vasy...
Title: Contest Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Misha and Vasya participated in a Codeforces contest. Unfortunately, each of them solved only one problem, though successfully submitted it at the first attempt. Misha solved the problem that costs *a* points and Vasya solved t...
```python import sys, os from collections import defaultdict input = sys.stdin.readline read = lambda: list(map(int, input().strip().split())) def f(p, t): return(max((3*p)//10, 9 - (p//250)*t)) def main(): a,b,c,d = read() x, y = f(a, c), f(b, d) if x > y:print("Misha") elif x < y:p...
0
401
A
Vanya and Cards
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation", "math" ]
null
null
Vanya loves playing. He even has a special set of cards to play with. Each card has a single integer. The number on the card can be positive, negative and can even be equal to zero. The only limit is, the number on each card doesn't exceed *x* in the absolute value. Natasha doesn't like when Vanya spends a long time p...
The first line contains two integers: *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000) — the number of found cards and *x* (1<=≤<=*x*<=≤<=1000) — the maximum absolute value of the number on a card. The second line contains *n* space-separated integers — the numbers on found cards. It is guaranteed that the numbers do not exceed *x* in their a...
Print a single number — the answer to the problem.
[ "3 2\n-1 1 2\n", "2 3\n-2 -2\n" ]
[ "1\n", "2\n" ]
In the first sample, Vanya needs to find a single card with number -2. In the second sample, Vanya needs to find two cards with number 2. He can't find a single card with the required number as the numbers on the lost cards do not exceed 3 in their absolute value.
500
[ { "input": "3 2\n-1 1 2", "output": "1" }, { "input": "2 3\n-2 -2", "output": "2" }, { "input": "4 4\n1 2 3 4", "output": "3" }, { "input": "2 2\n-1 -1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "15 5\n-2 -1 2 -4 -3 4 -4 -2 -2 2 -2 -1 1 -4 -2", "output": "4" }, { "...
1,615,903,400
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
2
62
0
n,x=[int(x) for x in input().split()] ai=[int(x) for x in input().split()] cnt=0 for i in ai: num=-1*i if(num not in ai): cnt+=1 print(cnt)
Title: Vanya and Cards Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Vanya loves playing. He even has a special set of cards to play with. Each card has a single integer. The number on the card can be positive, negative and can even be equal to zero. The only limit is, the number on each...
```python n,x=[int(x) for x in input().split()] ai=[int(x) for x in input().split()] cnt=0 for i in ai: num=-1*i if(num not in ai): cnt+=1 print(cnt) ```
0
948
A
Protect Sheep
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "brute force", "dfs and similar", "graphs", "implementation" ]
null
null
Bob is a farmer. He has a large pasture with many sheep. Recently, he has lost some of them due to wolf attacks. He thus decided to place some shepherd dogs in such a way that all his sheep are protected. The pasture is a rectangle consisting of *R*<=×<=*C* cells. Each cell is either empty, contains a sheep, a wolf or...
First line contains two integers *R* (1<=≤<=*R*<=≤<=500) and *C* (1<=≤<=*C*<=≤<=500), denoting the number of rows and the numbers of columns respectively. Each of the following *R* lines is a string consisting of exactly *C* characters, representing one row of the pasture. Here, 'S' means a sheep, 'W' a wolf and '.' a...
If it is impossible to protect all sheep, output a single line with the word "No". Otherwise, output a line with the word "Yes". Then print *R* lines, representing the pasture after placing dogs. Again, 'S' means a sheep, 'W' a wolf, 'D' is a dog and '.' an empty space. You are not allowed to move, remove or add a she...
[ "6 6\n..S...\n..S.W.\n.S....\n..W...\n...W..\n......\n", "1 2\nSW\n", "5 5\n.S...\n...S.\nS....\n...S.\n.S...\n" ]
[ "Yes\n..SD..\n..SDW.\n.SD...\n.DW...\nDD.W..\n......\n", "No\n", "Yes\n.S...\n...S.\nS.D..\n...S.\n.S...\n" ]
In the first example, we can split the pasture into two halves, one containing wolves and one containing sheep. Note that the sheep at (2,1) is safe, as wolves cannot move diagonally. In the second example, there are no empty spots to put dogs that would guard the lone sheep. In the third example, there are no wolves...
500
[ { "input": "1 2\nSW", "output": "No" }, { "input": "10 10\n....W.W.W.\n.........S\n.S.S...S..\nW.......SS\n.W..W.....\n.W...W....\nS..S...S.S\n....W...S.\n..S..S.S.S\nSS.......S", "output": "Yes\nDDDDWDWDWD\nDDDDDDDDDS\nDSDSDDDSDD\nWDDDDDDDSS\nDWDDWDDDDD\nDWDDDWDDDD\nSDDSDDDSDS\nDDDDWDDDSD\nDDSD...
1,520,698,194
2,094
Python 3
OK
TESTS
98
217
6,144,000
a,b = map(int, input().split()) anslist = [" "*(b+2)] for i in range (a): anslist.append(" "+ input() + " ") anslist.append(" "*(b+2)) flag = 0 for k in range (1,a+1) : p = anslist[k] q = anslist[k+1] r = anslist[k-1] for j in range (1, b+1): if (p[j] == "S" and p[j-1] == "W") or (p[j] == "S" and p[...
Title: Protect Sheep Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Bob is a farmer. He has a large pasture with many sheep. Recently, he has lost some of them due to wolf attacks. He thus decided to place some shepherd dogs in such a way that all his sheep are protected. The pasture is ...
```python a,b = map(int, input().split()) anslist = [" "*(b+2)] for i in range (a): anslist.append(" "+ input() + " ") anslist.append(" "*(b+2)) flag = 0 for k in range (1,a+1) : p = anslist[k] q = anslist[k+1] r = anslist[k-1] for j in range (1, b+1): if (p[j] == "S" and p[j-1] == "W") or (p[j] == ...
3
387
B
George and Round
PROGRAMMING
1,200
[ "brute force", "greedy", "two pointers" ]
null
null
George decided to prepare a Codesecrof round, so he has prepared *m* problems for the round. Let's number the problems with integers 1 through *m*. George estimates the *i*-th problem's complexity by integer *b**i*. To make the round good, he needs to put at least *n* problems there. Besides, he needs to have at least...
The first line contains two integers *n* and *m* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=3000) — the minimal number of problems in a good round and the number of problems George's prepared. The second line contains space-separated integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a*1<=&lt;<=*a*2<=&lt;<=...<=&lt;<=*a**n*<=≤<=106) — the requirem...
Print a single integer — the answer to the problem.
[ "3 5\n1 2 3\n1 2 2 3 3\n", "3 5\n1 2 3\n1 1 1 1 1\n", "3 1\n2 3 4\n1\n" ]
[ "0\n", "2\n", "3\n" ]
In the first sample the set of the prepared problems meets the requirements for a good round. In the second sample, it is enough to come up with and prepare two problems with complexities 2 and 3 to get a good round. In the third sample it is very easy to get a good round if come up with and prepare extra problems wi...
1,000
[ { "input": "3 5\n1 2 3\n1 2 2 3 3", "output": "0" }, { "input": "3 5\n1 2 3\n1 1 1 1 1", "output": "2" }, { "input": "3 1\n2 3 4\n1", "output": "3" }, { "input": "29 100\n20 32 41 67 72 155 331 382 399 412 465 470 484 511 515 529 616 637 679 715 733 763 826 843 862 903 925 97...
1,667,389,570
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
3
31
0
n,m = map(int,input().split()) a = list(map(int,input().split())) b = list(map(int,input().split())) a = [i for i in a if i not in b] print(len(a))
Title: George and Round Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: George decided to prepare a Codesecrof round, so he has prepared *m* problems for the round. Let's number the problems with integers 1 through *m*. George estimates the *i*-th problem's complexity by integer *b**i*. T...
```python n,m = map(int,input().split()) a = list(map(int,input().split())) b = list(map(int,input().split())) a = [i for i in a if i not in b] print(len(a)) ```
0
129
A
Cookies
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Olga came to visit the twins Anna and Maria and saw that they have many cookies. The cookies are distributed into bags. As there are many cookies, Olga decided that it's no big deal if she steals a bag. However, she doesn't want the sisters to quarrel because of nothing when they divide the cookies. That's why Olga wan...
The first line contains the only integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of cookie bags Anna and Maria have. The second line contains *n* integers *a**i* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=100) — the number of cookies in the *i*-th bag.
Print in the only line the only number — the sought number of ways. If there are no such ways print 0.
[ "1\n1\n", "10\n1 2 2 3 4 4 4 2 2 2\n", "11\n2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 99\n" ]
[ "1\n", "8\n", "1\n" ]
In the first sample Olga should take the only bag so that the twins ended up with the even number of cookies. In the second sample Olga can take any of five bags with two cookies or any of three bags with four cookies — 5 + 3 = 8 ways in total. In the third sample, no matter which bag with two cookies Olga chooses, t...
500
[ { "input": "1\n1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "10\n1 2 2 3 4 4 4 2 2 2", "output": "8" }, { "input": "11\n2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 99", "output": "1" }, { "input": "2\n1 1", "output": "0" }, { "input": "2\n2 2", "output": "2" }, { "input": "2\n1 2", "o...
1,693,131,949
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
52
92
0
n=int(input()) lis=list(map(int,input().strip().split())) s=sum(lis) if n==1: print(1) else: c=0 nl=[] if s%2==0: for i in lis: if i not in nl: if i%2==0: c=c+lis.count(i) nl.append(i) else: for i in lis: ...
Title: Cookies Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Olga came to visit the twins Anna and Maria and saw that they have many cookies. The cookies are distributed into bags. As there are many cookies, Olga decided that it's no big deal if she steals a bag. However, she doesn't wan...
```python n=int(input()) lis=list(map(int,input().strip().split())) s=sum(lis) if n==1: print(1) else: c=0 nl=[] if s%2==0: for i in lis: if i not in nl: if i%2==0: c=c+lis.count(i) nl.append(i) else: for ...
3
937
A
Olympiad
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation", "sortings" ]
null
null
The recent All-Berland Olympiad in Informatics featured *n* participants with each scoring a certain amount of points. As the head of the programming committee, you are to determine the set of participants to be awarded with diplomas with respect to the following criteria: - At least one participant should get a di...
The first line contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of participants. The next line contains a sequence of *n* integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (0<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=600) — participants' scores. It's guaranteed that at least one participant has non-zero score.
Print a single integer — the desired number of ways.
[ "4\n1 3 3 2\n", "3\n1 1 1\n", "4\n42 0 0 42\n" ]
[ "3\n", "1\n", "1\n" ]
There are three ways to choose a subset in sample case one. 1. Only participants with 3 points will get diplomas. 1. Participants with 2 or 3 points will get diplomas. 1. Everyone will get a diploma! The only option in sample case two is to award everyone. Note that in sample case three participants with zero sco...
500
[ { "input": "4\n1 3 3 2", "output": "3" }, { "input": "3\n1 1 1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "4\n42 0 0 42", "output": "1" }, { "input": "10\n1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "10\n572 471 540 163 50 30 561 510 43 200", "output": "10" }, { ...
1,617,091,599
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
21
62
0
import sys input = sys.stdin.readline n = int(input()) a = [int(i) for i in input().split()] res = [int(i) for i in a if i > 0] print(len(set(res)))
Title: Olympiad Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: The recent All-Berland Olympiad in Informatics featured *n* participants with each scoring a certain amount of points. As the head of the programming committee, you are to determine the set of participants to be awarded with ...
```python import sys input = sys.stdin.readline n = int(input()) a = [int(i) for i in input().split()] res = [int(i) for i in a if i > 0] print(len(set(res))) ```
3
50
A
Domino piling
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "greedy", "math" ]
A. Domino piling
2
256
You are given a rectangular board of *M*<=×<=*N* squares. Also you are given an unlimited number of standard domino pieces of 2<=×<=1 squares. You are allowed to rotate the pieces. You are asked to place as many dominoes as possible on the board so as to meet the following conditions: 1. Each domino completely covers ...
In a single line you are given two integers *M* and *N* — board sizes in squares (1<=≤<=*M*<=≤<=*N*<=≤<=16).
Output one number — the maximal number of dominoes, which can be placed.
[ "2 4\n", "3 3\n" ]
[ "4\n", "4\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "2 4", "output": "4" }, { "input": "3 3", "output": "4" }, { "input": "1 5", "output": "2" }, { "input": "1 6", "output": "3" }, { "input": "1 15", "output": "7" }, { "input": "1 16", "output": "8" }, { "input": "2 5", "outpu...
1,611,482,840
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
35
154
0
m,n=[int(x) for x in input().split()] print((m*n)//2)
Title: Domino piling Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: You are given a rectangular board of *M*<=×<=*N* squares. Also you are given an unlimited number of standard domino pieces of 2<=×<=1 squares. You are allowed to rotate the pieces. You are asked to place as many dominoes as p...
```python m,n=[int(x) for x in input().split()] print((m*n)//2) ```
3.9615
9
A
Die Roll
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "math", "probabilities" ]
A. Die Roll
1
64
Yakko, Wakko and Dot, world-famous animaniacs, decided to rest from acting in cartoons, and take a leave to travel a bit. Yakko dreamt to go to Pennsylvania, his Motherland and the Motherland of his ancestors. Wakko thought about Tasmania, its beaches, sun and sea. Dot chose Transylvania as the most mysterious and unpr...
The only line of the input file contains two natural numbers Y and W — the results of Yakko's and Wakko's die rolls.
Output the required probability in the form of irreducible fraction in format «A/B», where A — the numerator, and B — the denominator. If the required probability equals to zero, output «0/1». If the required probability equals to 1, output «1/1».
[ "4 2\n" ]
[ "1/2\n" ]
Dot will go to Transylvania, if she is lucky to roll 4, 5 or 6 points.
0
[ { "input": "4 2", "output": "1/2" }, { "input": "1 1", "output": "1/1" }, { "input": "1 2", "output": "5/6" }, { "input": "1 3", "output": "2/3" }, { "input": "1 4", "output": "1/2" }, { "input": "1 5", "output": "1/3" }, { "input": "1 6", ...
1,602,951,171
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
36
218
0
def func (a, b): if (b == 0): return a return func(b, a%b) y, w = map(int, input().split()) a = 7 - max(y, w) b = 6 c = func(a,b) a /= c b /= c print("%d/%d"%(a, b))
Title: Die Roll Time Limit: 1 seconds Memory Limit: 64 megabytes Problem Description: Yakko, Wakko and Dot, world-famous animaniacs, decided to rest from acting in cartoons, and take a leave to travel a bit. Yakko dreamt to go to Pennsylvania, his Motherland and the Motherland of his ancestors. Wakko thought about T...
```python def func (a, b): if (b == 0): return a return func(b, a%b) y, w = map(int, input().split()) a = 7 - max(y, w) b = 6 c = func(a,b) a /= c b /= c print("%d/%d"%(a, b)) ```
3.891
638
C
Road Improvement
PROGRAMMING
1,800
[ "*special", "dfs and similar", "graphs", "greedy", "trees" ]
null
null
In Berland there are *n* cities and *n*<=-<=1 bidirectional roads. Each road connects some pair of cities, from any city you can get to any other one using only the given roads. In each city there is exactly one repair brigade. To repair some road, you need two teams based in the cities connected by the road to work s...
The first line of the input contains a positive integer *n* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=200<=000) — the number of cities in Berland. Each of the next *n*<=-<=1 lines contains two numbers *u**i*, *v**i*, meaning that the *i*-th road connects city *u**i* and city *v**i* (1<=≤<=*u**i*,<=*v**i*<=≤<=*n*, *u**i*<=≠<=*v**i*).
First print number *k* — the minimum number of days needed to repair all the roads in Berland. In next *k* lines print the description of the roads that should be repaired on each of the *k* days. On the *i*-th line print first number *d**i* — the number of roads that should be repaired on the *i*-th day, and then *d*...
[ "4\n1 2\n3 4\n3 2\n", "6\n3 4\n5 4\n3 2\n1 3\n4 6\n" ]
[ "2\n2 2 1\n1 3\n", "3\n1 1 \n2 2 3 \n2 4 5 \n" ]
In the first sample you can repair all the roads in two days, for example, if you repair roads 1 and 2 on the first day and road 3 — on the second day.
1,500
[ { "input": "4\n1 2\n3 4\n3 2", "output": "2\n2 1 2 \n1 3 " }, { "input": "6\n3 4\n5 4\n3 2\n1 3\n4 6", "output": "3\n1 1 \n2 2 3 \n2 4 5 " }, { "input": "8\n1 3\n1 6\n3 4\n6 2\n5 6\n6 7\n7 8", "output": "4\n3 2 3 7 \n2 1 4 \n1 5 \n1 6 " }, { "input": "5\n1 2\n1 3\n1 4\n1 5", ...
1,458,484,187
8,987
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
PRETESTS
3
62
4,812,800
def f(v, u, color): # v - ����� global maxs s = 0 if s == color: s += 1 for i in range(len(arr2[v])): if arr2[v][i][0] != u: f(arr2[v][i][0], v, s) colors[s].append(arr2[v][i][1]) s += 1 if s == color: s += 1 ...
Title: Road Improvement Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: In Berland there are *n* cities and *n*<=-<=1 bidirectional roads. Each road connects some pair of cities, from any city you can get to any other one using only the given roads. In each city there is exactly one repai...
```python def f(v, u, color): # v - ����� global maxs s = 0 if s == color: s += 1 for i in range(len(arr2[v])): if arr2[v][i][0] != u: f(arr2[v][i][0], v, s) colors[s].append(arr2[v][i][1]) s += 1 if s == color: s...
0
876
A
Trip For Meal
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "math" ]
null
null
Winnie-the-Pooh likes honey very much! That is why he decided to visit his friends. Winnie has got three best friends: Rabbit, Owl and Eeyore, each of them lives in his own house. There are winding paths between each pair of houses. The length of a path between Rabbit's and Owl's houses is *a* meters, between Rabbit's ...
First line contains an integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — number of visits. Second line contains an integer *a* (1<=≤<=*a*<=≤<=100) — distance between Rabbit's and Owl's houses. Third line contains an integer *b* (1<=≤<=*b*<=≤<=100) — distance between Rabbit's and Eeyore's houses. Fourth line contains an integer *c* ...
Output one number — minimum distance in meters Winnie must go through to have a meal *n* times.
[ "3\n2\n3\n1\n", "1\n2\n3\n5\n" ]
[ "3\n", "0\n" ]
In the first test case the optimal path for Winnie is the following: first have a meal in Rabbit's house, then in Owl's house, then in Eeyore's house. Thus he will pass the distance 2 + 1 = 3. In the second test case Winnie has a meal in Rabbit's house and that is for him. So he doesn't have to walk anywhere at all.
500
[ { "input": "3\n2\n3\n1", "output": "3" }, { "input": "1\n2\n3\n5", "output": "0" }, { "input": "10\n1\n8\n3", "output": "9" }, { "input": "7\n10\n5\n6", "output": "30" }, { "input": "9\n9\n7\n5", "output": "42" }, { "input": "9\n37\n85\n76", "outpu...
1,508,154,194
2,293
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
PRETESTS
2
61
5,529,600
ip = lambda: int(input()) n = ip() a = ip() b = ip() c = ip() if (n==1): print("0") else: if (a == max(a,b,c)): print(b+c) elif(b==max(a,b,c)): print(a+c) else: print(a+b)
Title: Trip For Meal Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Winnie-the-Pooh likes honey very much! That is why he decided to visit his friends. Winnie has got three best friends: Rabbit, Owl and Eeyore, each of them lives in his own house. There are winding paths between each pair...
```python ip = lambda: int(input()) n = ip() a = ip() b = ip() c = ip() if (n==1): print("0") else: if (a == max(a,b,c)): print(b+c) elif(b==max(a,b,c)): print(a+c) else: print(a+b) ```
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...
1,606,894,110
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
81
310
0
X, Y, Z = 0, 0, 0 for _ in range(int(input())): x, y, z = [int(j) for j in input().split()] X += x Y += y Z += z 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 _ in range(int(input())): x, y, z = [int(j) for j in input().split()] X += x Y += y Z += z if X == 0 and Y == 0 and Z == 0: print("YES") else: print("NO") ```
3.9225
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"...
1,669,996,961
2,147,483,647
Python 3
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
0
31
0
m,n,a=int(input()).split() print(((m+a+-1)/a)*((n+a+-1)/a))
Title: Theatre Square Time Limit: 1 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: Theatre Square in the capital city of Berland has a rectangular shape with the size *n*<=×<=*m* meters. On the occasion of the city's anniversary, a decision was taken to pave the Square with square granite flagstones. Each ...
```python m,n,a=int(input()).split() print(((m+a+-1)/a)*((n+a+-1)/a)) ```
-1
299
B
Ksusha the Squirrel
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "brute force", "implementation" ]
null
null
Ksusha the Squirrel is standing at the beginning of a straight road, divided into *n* sectors. The sectors are numbered 1 to *n*, from left to right. Initially, Ksusha stands in sector 1. Ksusha wants to walk to the end of the road, that is, get to sector *n*. Unfortunately, there are some rocks on the road. We know ...
The first line contains two integers *n* and *k* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=3·105,<=1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=3·105). The next line contains *n* characters — the description of the road: the *i*-th character equals ".", if the *i*-th sector contains no rocks. Otherwise, it equals "#". It is guaranteed that the first and the last characters e...
Print "YES" (without the quotes) if Ksusha can reach the end of the road, otherwise print "NO" (without the quotes).
[ "2 1\n..\n", "5 2\n.#.#.\n", "7 3\n.#.###.\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "YES\n", "NO\n" ]
none
1,000
[ { "input": "2 1\n..", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "5 2\n.#.#.", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "7 3\n.#.###.", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "2 200\n..", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "2 1\n..", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "2 2\n..", "output": "Y...
1,682,842,132
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
1
154
0
n, k = map(int, input().split()) road = input() def can_reach_end(n, k, road): current = 0 last_no_rock_pos = -1 while current < n: if road[current] == '#': current = last_no_rock_pos + k + 1 if current >= n: return 'NO' else: ...
Title: Ksusha the Squirrel Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Ksusha the Squirrel is standing at the beginning of a straight road, divided into *n* sectors. The sectors are numbered 1 to *n*, from left to right. Initially, Ksusha stands in sector 1. Ksusha wants to walk to t...
```python n, k = map(int, input().split()) road = input() def can_reach_end(n, k, road): current = 0 last_no_rock_pos = -1 while current < n: if road[current] == '#': current = last_no_rock_pos + k + 1 if current >= n: return 'NO' else: ...
0
437
C
The Child and Toy
PROGRAMMING
1,400
[ "graphs", "greedy", "sortings" ]
null
null
On Children's Day, the child got a toy from Delayyy as a present. However, the child is so naughty that he can't wait to destroy the toy. The toy consists of *n* parts and *m* ropes. Each rope links two parts, but every pair of parts is linked by at most one rope. To split the toy, the child must remove all its parts....
The first line contains two integers *n* and *m* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000; 0<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=2000). The second line contains *n* integers: *v*1,<=*v*2,<=...,<=*v**n* (0<=≤<=*v**i*<=≤<=105). Then followed *m* lines, each line contains two integers *x**i* and *y**i*, representing a rope from part *x**i* to part *y**i* (1<=≤<=*x**...
Output the minimum total energy the child should spend to remove all *n* parts of the toy.
[ "4 3\n10 20 30 40\n1 4\n1 2\n2 3\n", "4 4\n100 100 100 100\n1 2\n2 3\n2 4\n3 4\n", "7 10\n40 10 20 10 20 80 40\n1 5\n4 7\n4 5\n5 2\n5 7\n6 4\n1 6\n1 3\n4 3\n1 4\n" ]
[ "40\n", "400\n", "160\n" ]
One of the optimal sequence of actions in the first sample is: - First, remove part 3, cost of the action is 20. - Then, remove part 2, cost of the action is 10. - Next, remove part 4, cost of the action is 10. - At last, remove part 1, cost of the action is 0. So the total energy the child paid is 20 + 10 + 10 +...
1,500
[ { "input": "4 3\n10 20 30 40\n1 4\n1 2\n2 3", "output": "40" }, { "input": "4 4\n100 100 100 100\n1 2\n2 3\n2 4\n3 4", "output": "400" }, { "input": "7 10\n40 10 20 10 20 80 40\n1 5\n4 7\n4 5\n5 2\n5 7\n6 4\n1 6\n1 3\n4 3\n1 4", "output": "160" }, { "input": "1 0\n23333", ...
1,626,176,686
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
29
140
23,654,400
n, m =map(int, input().split()) v = list(map(int, input().split())) s = 0 for _ in range(m): x, y = map(int, input().split()) s += min(v[x-1], v[y-1]) print(s)
Title: The Child and Toy Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: On Children's Day, the child got a toy from Delayyy as a present. However, the child is so naughty that he can't wait to destroy the toy. The toy consists of *n* parts and *m* ropes. Each rope links two parts, but ev...
```python n, m =map(int, input().split()) v = list(map(int, input().split())) s = 0 for _ in range(m): x, y = map(int, input().split()) s += min(v[x-1], v[y-1]) print(s) ```
3
550
A
Two Substrings
PROGRAMMING
1,500
[ "brute force", "dp", "greedy", "implementation", "strings" ]
null
null
You are given string *s*. Your task is to determine if the given string *s* contains two non-overlapping substrings "AB" and "BA" (the substrings can go in any order).
The only line of input contains a string *s* of length between 1 and 105 consisting of uppercase Latin letters.
Print "YES" (without the quotes), if string *s* contains two non-overlapping substrings "AB" and "BA", and "NO" otherwise.
[ "ABA\n", "BACFAB\n", "AXBYBXA\n" ]
[ "NO\n", "YES\n", "NO\n" ]
In the first sample test, despite the fact that there are substrings "AB" and "BA", their occurrences overlap, so the answer is "NO". In the second sample test there are the following occurrences of the substrings: BACFAB. In the third sample test there is no substring "AB" nor substring "BA".
1,000
[ { "input": "ABA", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "BACFAB", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "AXBYBXA", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "ABABAB", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "BBBBBBBBBB", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "ABBA", "output": "YES" }, { "...
1,683,879,504
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
85
93
614,400
def contains_AB_and_BA(s): if "AB" in s and "BA" in s[s.index("AB")+2:]: return True if "BA" in s and "AB" in s[s.index("BA")+2:]: return True return False s = input() if contains_AB_and_BA(s): print("Yes") else: print("No")
Title: Two Substrings Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: You are given string *s*. Your task is to determine if the given string *s* contains two non-overlapping substrings "AB" and "BA" (the substrings can go in any order). Input Specification: The only line of input contain...
```python def contains_AB_and_BA(s): if "AB" in s and "BA" in s[s.index("AB")+2:]: return True if "BA" in s and "AB" in s[s.index("BA")+2:]: return True return False s = input() if contains_AB_and_BA(s): print("Yes") else: print("No") ```
3
16
A
Flag
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation" ]
A. Flag
2
64
According to a new ISO standard, a flag of every country should have a chequered field *n*<=×<=*m*, each square should be of one of 10 colours, and the flag should be «striped»: each horizontal row of the flag should contain squares of the same colour, and the colours of adjacent horizontal rows should be different. Be...
The first line of the input contains numbers *n* and *m* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=100), *n* — the amount of rows, *m* — the amount of columns on the flag of Berland. Then there follows the description of the flag: each of the following *n* lines contain *m* characters. Each character is a digit between 0 and 9, and stands ...
Output YES, if the flag meets the new ISO standard, and NO otherwise.
[ "3 3\n000\n111\n222\n", "3 3\n000\n000\n111\n", "3 3\n000\n111\n002\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "NO\n", "NO\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "3 3\n000\n111\n222", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "3 3\n000\n000\n111", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "3 3\n000\n111\n002", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "10 10\n2222222222\n5555555555\n0000000000\n4444444444\n1111111111\n3333333393\n3333333333\n5555555555\n0000000...
1,631,912,913
2,147,483,647
Python 3
COMPILATION_ERROR
TESTS
0
0
0
a,b=map(int, input().split(' ') m= [[int(input()) for x in range(a)] for y in range(b)] flag= True for i in range(a): if m[i]!=m[i+1]: flag= True else: flag= False break if flag==True: print("Yes") else: print("No")
Title: Flag Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 64 megabytes Problem Description: According to a new ISO standard, a flag of every country should have a chequered field *n*<=×<=*m*, each square should be of one of 10 colours, and the flag should be «striped»: each horizontal row of the flag should contain squares of...
```python a,b=map(int, input().split(' ') m= [[int(input()) for x in range(a)] for y in range(b)] flag= True for i in range(a): if m[i]!=m[i+1]: flag= True else: flag= False break if flag==True: print("Yes") else: print("No") ```
-1
725
A
Jumping Ball
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
In a new version of the famous Pinball game, one of the most important parts of the game field is a sequence of *n* bumpers. The bumpers are numbered with integers from 1 to *n* from left to right. There are two types of bumpers. They are denoted by the characters '&lt;' and '&gt;'. When the ball hits the bumper at pos...
The first line of the input contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=200<=000) — the length of the sequence of bumpers. The second line contains the string, which consists of the characters '&lt;' and '&gt;'. The character at the *i*-th position of this string corresponds to the type of the *i*-th bumper.
Print one integer — the number of positions in the sequence such that the ball will eventually fall from the game field if it starts at that position.
[ "4\n&lt;&lt;&gt;&lt;\n", "5\n&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;\n", "4\n&gt;&gt;&lt;&lt;\n" ]
[ "2", "5", "0" ]
In the first sample, the ball will fall from the field if starts at position 1 or position 2. In the second sample, any starting position will result in the ball falling from the field.
500
[ { "input": "4\n<<><", "output": "2" }, { "input": "5\n>>>>>", "output": "5" }, { "input": "4\n>><<", "output": "0" }, { "input": "3\n<<>", "output": "3" }, { "input": "3\n<<<", "output": "3" }, { "input": "3\n><<", "output": "0" }, { "input...
1,663,609,076
2,147,483,647
Python 3
TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED
TESTS
3
2,000
716,800
n=int(input()) s=input() c=0 for x in range(n): pos=x co=0 while True: co+=1 if s[pos]==">": pos+=1 else: pos-=1 if pos<0 or pos>=n: c+=1 break if co>=n: break print(c)
Title: Jumping Ball Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: In a new version of the famous Pinball game, one of the most important parts of the game field is a sequence of *n* bumpers. The bumpers are numbered with integers from 1 to *n* from left to right. There are two types of b...
```python n=int(input()) s=input() c=0 for x in range(n): pos=x co=0 while True: co+=1 if s[pos]==">": pos+=1 else: pos-=1 if pos<0 or pos>=n: c+=1 break if co>=n: break p...
0
940
A
Points on the line
PROGRAMMING
1,200
[ "brute force", "greedy", "sortings" ]
null
null
We've got no test cases. A big olympiad is coming up. But the problemsetters' number one priority should be adding another problem to the round. The diameter of a multiset of points on the line is the largest distance between two points from this set. For example, the diameter of the multiset {1,<=3,<=2,<=1} is 2. D...
The first line contains two integers *n* and *d* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100,<=0<=≤<=*d*<=≤<=100) — the amount of points and the maximum allowed diameter respectively. The second line contains *n* space separated integers (1<=≤<=*x**i*<=≤<=100) — the coordinates of the points.
Output a single integer — the minimum number of points you have to remove.
[ "3 1\n2 1 4\n", "3 0\n7 7 7\n", "6 3\n1 3 4 6 9 10\n" ]
[ "1\n", "0\n", "3\n" ]
In the first test case the optimal strategy is to remove the point with coordinate 4. The remaining points will have coordinates 1 and 2, so the diameter will be equal to 2 - 1 = 1. In the second test case the diameter is equal to 0, so its is unnecessary to remove any points. In the third test case the optimal stra...
500
[ { "input": "3 1\n2 1 4", "output": "1" }, { "input": "3 0\n7 7 7", "output": "0" }, { "input": "6 3\n1 3 4 6 9 10", "output": "3" }, { "input": "11 5\n10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20", "output": "5" }, { "input": "1 100\n1", "output": "0" }, { "input"...
1,554,867,283
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
35
109
0
import sys def minp(): return sys.stdin.readline().strip() r = 0 n, d = map(int,minp().split()) a = sorted(map(int,minp().split())) l = 0 r = 0 b = [] while l < n: while (r < n-1) and (a[r+1]-a[l] <= d): r += 1 b.append(r-l+1) l += 1 print(n-max(b))
Title: Points on the line Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: We've got no test cases. A big olympiad is coming up. But the problemsetters' number one priority should be adding another problem to the round. The diameter of a multiset of points on the line is the largest dista...
```python import sys def minp(): return sys.stdin.readline().strip() r = 0 n, d = map(int,minp().split()) a = sorted(map(int,minp().split())) l = 0 r = 0 b = [] while l < n: while (r < n-1) and (a[r+1]-a[l] <= d): r += 1 b.append(r-l+1) l += 1 print(n-max(b)) ```
3
226
B
Naughty Stone Piles
PROGRAMMING
1,900
[ "greedy" ]
null
null
There are *n* piles of stones of sizes *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* lying on the table in front of you. During one move you can take one pile and add it to the other. As you add pile *i* to pile *j*, the size of pile *j* increases by the current size of pile *i*, and pile *i* stops existing. The cost of the adding opera...
The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) — the number of stone piles. The second line contains *n* space-separated integers: *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=109) — the initial sizes of the stone piles. The third line contains integer *q* (1<=≤<=*q*<=≤<=105) — the number of queries. The las...
Print *q* whitespace-separated integers — the answers to the queries in the order, in which the queries are given in the input. 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.
[ "5\n2 3 4 1 1\n2\n2 3\n" ]
[ "9 8 " ]
In the first sample one way to get the optimal answer goes like this: we add in turns the 4-th and the 5-th piles to the 2-nd one; then we add the 1-st pile to the 3-rd one; we add the 2-nd pile to the 3-rd one. The first two operations cost 1 each; the third one costs 2, the fourth one costs 5 (the size of the 2-nd pi...
1,000
[ { "input": "5\n2 3 4 1 1\n2\n2 3", "output": "9 8 " }, { "input": "2\n2 9\n5\n4 10 7 3 4", "output": "2 2 2 2 2 " }, { "input": "1\n7\n4\n6 2 3 3", "output": "0 0 0 0 " }, { "input": "2\n7 10\n2\n2 4", "output": "7 7 " }, { "input": "1\n10\n5\n5 3 7 7 1", "out...
1,650,741,529
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
4
46
0
n = int(input()) a = list(map(int, input().split())) a.sort() for i in range(1, n): a[i] += a[i - 1]; q = int(input()) queries = list(map(int, input().split())) for qq in range(q): k = queries[qq] if k == 1: print(a[n - 2]) continue d = k s = 0 i = n - 2 while ...
Title: Naughty Stone Piles Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: There are *n* piles of stones of sizes *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* lying on the table in front of you. During one move you can take one pile and add it to the other. As you add pile *i* to pile *j*, the size of pile...
```python n = int(input()) a = list(map(int, input().split())) a.sort() for i in range(1, n): a[i] += a[i - 1]; q = int(input()) queries = list(map(int, input().split())) for qq in range(q): k = queries[qq] if k == 1: print(a[n - 2]) continue d = k s = 0 i = n - 2 ...
0
144
A
Arrival of the General
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
A Ministry for Defense sent a general to inspect the Super Secret Military Squad under the command of the Colonel SuperDuper. Having learned the news, the colonel ordered to all *n* squad soldiers to line up on the parade ground. By the military charter the soldiers should stand in the order of non-increasing of their...
The first input line contains the only integer *n* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) which represents the number of soldiers in the line. The second line contains integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=100) the values of the soldiers' heights in the order of soldiers' heights' increasing in the order from the beginnin...
Print the only integer — the minimum number of seconds the colonel will need to form a line-up the general will like.
[ "4\n33 44 11 22\n", "7\n10 10 58 31 63 40 76\n" ]
[ "2\n", "10\n" ]
In the first sample the colonel will need to swap the first and second soldier and then the third and fourth soldier. That will take 2 seconds. The resulting position of the soldiers is (44, 33, 22, 11). In the second sample the colonel may swap the soldiers in the following sequence: 1. (10, 10, 58, 31, 63, 40, 76)...
500
[ { "input": "4\n33 44 11 22", "output": "2" }, { "input": "7\n10 10 58 31 63 40 76", "output": "10" }, { "input": "2\n88 89", "output": "1" }, { "input": "5\n100 95 100 100 88", "output": "0" }, { "input": "7\n48 48 48 48 45 45 45", "output": "0" }, { "...
1,693,296,374
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
1
62
0
n = int(input()) heights = list(map(int, input().split())) max_height = max(heights) min_height = min(heights) # Count the number of soldiers to move from the beginning and end count_beginning = heights.index(max_height) count_end = n - 1 - heights.index(min_height) # Calculate the minimum number of second...
Title: Arrival of the General Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: A Ministry for Defense sent a general to inspect the Super Secret Military Squad under the command of the Colonel SuperDuper. Having learned the news, the colonel ordered to all *n* squad soldiers to line up on t...
```python n = int(input()) heights = list(map(int, input().split())) max_height = max(heights) min_height = min(heights) # Count the number of soldiers to move from the beginning and end count_beginning = heights.index(max_height) count_end = n - 1 - heights.index(min_height) # Calculate the minimum number...
0
0
none
none
none
0
[ "none" ]
null
null
Leha decided to move to a quiet town Vičkopolis, because he was tired by living in Bankopolis. Upon arrival he immediately began to expand his network of hacked computers. During the week Leha managed to get access to *n* computers throughout the town. Incidentally all the computers, which were hacked by Leha, lie on t...
The first line contains one integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=3·105) denoting the number of hacked computers. The second line contains *n* integers *x*1,<=*x*2,<=...,<=*x**n* (1<=≤<=*x**i*<=≤<=109) denoting the coordinates of hacked computers. It is guaranteed that all *x**i* are distinct.
Print a single integer — the required sum modulo 109<=+<=7.
[ "2\n4 7\n", "3\n4 3 1\n" ]
[ "3\n", "9\n" ]
There are three non-empty subsets in the first sample test:<img align="middle" class="tex-formula" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/02b2d12556dad85f1c6c6912786eb87d4be2ea17.png" style="max-width: 100.0%;max-height: 100.0%;"/>, <img align="middle" class="tex-formula" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/22f6a537962c...
0
[ { "input": "2\n4 7", "output": "3" }, { "input": "3\n4 3 1", "output": "9" }, { "input": "20\n8 11 13 19 21 34 36 44 57 58 61 63 76 78 79 81 85 86 90 95", "output": "83396599" }, { "input": "20\n1 8 9 12 15 17 18 24 30 33 36 41 53 54 59 62 64 66 72 73", "output": "6805914...
1,495,340,392
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
69
1,434
30,515,200
################################################### import atexit import io import sys _INPUT_LINES = sys.stdin.read().splitlines() input = iter(_INPUT_LINES).__next__ _OUTPUT_BUFFER = io.StringIO() sys.stdout = _OUTPUT_BUFFER @atexit.register def write(): sys.__stdout__.write(_OUTPUT_BUFFER.getvalue()) ######...
Title: none Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Leha decided to move to a quiet town Vičkopolis, because he was tired by living in Bankopolis. Upon arrival he immediately began to expand his network of hacked computers. During the week Leha managed to get access to *n* computer...
```python ################################################### import atexit import io import sys _INPUT_LINES = sys.stdin.read().splitlines() input = iter(_INPUT_LINES).__next__ _OUTPUT_BUFFER = io.StringIO() sys.stdout = _OUTPUT_BUFFER @atexit.register def write(): sys.__stdout__.write(_OUTPUT_BUFFER.getvalue(...
3
272
A
Dima and Friends
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation", "math" ]
null
null
Dima and his friends have been playing hide and seek at Dima's place all night. As a result, Dima's place got messy. In the morning they decided that they need to clean the place. To decide who exactly would clean the apartment, the friends want to play a counting-out game. First, all the guys stand in a circle, and t...
The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of Dima's friends. Dima himself isn't considered to be his own friend. The second line contains *n* positive integers, not exceeding 5, representing, how many fingers the Dima's friends will show. The numbers in the lines are separated by a single s...
In a single line print the answer to the problem.
[ "1\n1\n", "1\n2\n", "2\n3 5\n" ]
[ "3\n", "2\n", "3\n" ]
In the first sample Dima can show 1, 3 or 5 fingers. If Dima shows 3 fingers, then the counting-out will go like that: Dima, his friend, Dima, his friend. In the second sample Dima can show 2 or 4 fingers.
500
[ { "input": "1\n1", "output": "3" }, { "input": "1\n2", "output": "2" }, { "input": "2\n3 5", "output": "3" }, { "input": "2\n3 5", "output": "3" }, { "input": "1\n5", "output": "3" }, { "input": "5\n4 4 3 5 1", "output": "4" }, { "input": "...
1,590,674,671
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
30
186
0
n = int(input())+1 l = list(map(int,input().split())) s = sum(l) count =0 for i in range(1,6): s1 = s+i if(s1%n!=1): count+=1 print(count)
Title: Dima and Friends Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Dima and his friends have been playing hide and seek at Dima's place all night. As a result, Dima's place got messy. In the morning they decided that they need to clean the place. To decide who exactly would clean the...
```python n = int(input())+1 l = list(map(int,input().split())) s = sum(l) count =0 for i in range(1,6): s1 = s+i if(s1%n!=1): count+=1 print(count) ```
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"...
1,673,510,861
2,147,483,647
Python 3
COMPILATION_ERROR
TESTS
0
0
0
n, m, a = [int(i) for i in input().split() row = n // a if n % a != 0: row += 1 column = m // a if m % a != 0: column += 1 print(row * column)
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 = [int(i) for i in input().split() row = n // a if n % a != 0: row += 1 column = m // a if m % a != 0: column += 1 print(row * column) ```
-1
832
A
Sasha and Sticks
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "games", "math" ]
null
null
It's one more school day now. Sasha doesn't like classes and is always bored at them. So, each day he invents some game and plays in it alone or with friends. Today he invented one simple game to play with Lena, with whom he shares a desk. The rules are simple. Sasha draws *n* sticks in a row. After that the players t...
The first line contains two integers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*k*<=≤<=1018, *k*<=≤<=*n*) — the number of sticks drawn by Sasha and the number *k* — the number of sticks to be crossed out on each turn.
If Sasha wins, print "YES" (without quotes), otherwise print "NO" (without quotes). You can print each letter in arbitrary case (upper of lower).
[ "1 1\n", "10 4\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "NO\n" ]
In the first example Sasha crosses out 1 stick, and then there are no sticks. So Lena can't make a move, and Sasha wins. In the second example Sasha crosses out 4 sticks, then Lena crosses out 4 sticks, and after that there are only 2 sticks left. Sasha can't make a move. The players make equal number of moves, so Sas...
500
[ { "input": "1 1", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "10 4", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "251656215122324104 164397544865601257", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "963577813436662285 206326039287271924", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "1000000000000000000 1", "output":...
1,617,015,570
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
5
62
0
n,k = map(int, input().split(' ')) if n==k and n%2 == 0: print("NO") elif n==k and n%2 !=0: print("YES") else: scount = k rem = n - k if rem >= k: print('NO') else: print("YES")
Title: Sasha and Sticks Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: It's one more school day now. Sasha doesn't like classes and is always bored at them. So, each day he invents some game and plays in it alone or with friends. Today he invented one simple game to play with Lena, with ...
```python n,k = map(int, input().split(' ')) if n==k and n%2 == 0: print("NO") elif n==k and n%2 !=0: print("YES") else: scount = k rem = n - k if rem >= k: print('NO') else: print("YES") ```
0
842
A
Kirill And The Game
PROGRAMMING
1,200
[ "brute force", "two pointers" ]
null
null
Kirill plays a new computer game. He came to the potion store where he can buy any potion. Each potion is characterized by two integers — amount of experience and cost. The efficiency of a potion is the ratio of the amount of experience to the cost. Efficiency may be a non-integer number. For each two integer numbers ...
First string contains five integer numbers *l*, *r*, *x*, *y*, *k* (1<=≤<=*l*<=≤<=*r*<=≤<=107, 1<=≤<=*x*<=≤<=*y*<=≤<=107, 1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=107).
Print "YES" without quotes if a potion with efficiency exactly *k* can be bought in the store and "NO" without quotes otherwise. You can output each of the letters in any register.
[ "1 10 1 10 1\n", "1 5 6 10 1\n" ]
[ "YES", "NO" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "1 10 1 10 1", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "1 5 6 10 1", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "1 1 1 1 1", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "1 1 1 1 2", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "1 100000 1 100000 100000", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "1 100000 ...
1,625,201,819
2,147,483,647
Python 3
MEMORY_LIMIT_EXCEEDED
TESTS
39
1,309
268,390,400
l,r,x,y,k=map(int,input().split()) set1=set(range(l,r+1)) set2=set(x*k for x in range(x,y+1)) res=set1.intersection(set2) if len(res)==0: print("NO") else: print("YES")
Title: Kirill And The Game Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Kirill plays a new computer game. He came to the potion store where he can buy any potion. Each potion is characterized by two integers — amount of experience and cost. The efficiency of a potion is the ratio of the...
```python l,r,x,y,k=map(int,input().split()) set1=set(range(l,r+1)) set2=set(x*k for x in range(x,y+1)) res=set1.intersection(set2) if len(res)==0: print("NO") else: print("YES") ```
0
554
A
Kyoya and Photobooks
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "brute force", "math", "strings" ]
null
null
Kyoya Ootori is selling photobooks of the Ouran High School Host Club. He has 26 photos, labeled "a" to "z", and he has compiled them into a photo booklet with some photos in some order (possibly with some photos being duplicated). A photo booklet can be described as a string of lowercase letters, consisting of the pho...
The first line of input will be a single string *s* (1<=≤<=|*s*|<=≤<=20). String *s* consists only of lowercase English letters.
Output a single integer equal to the number of distinct photobooks Kyoya Ootori can make.
[ "a\n", "hi\n" ]
[ "51\n", "76\n" ]
In the first case, we can make 'ab','ac',...,'az','ba','ca',...,'za', and 'aa', producing a total of 51 distinct photo booklets.
250
[ { "input": "a", "output": "51" }, { "input": "hi", "output": "76" }, { "input": "y", "output": "51" }, { "input": "kgan", "output": "126" }, { "input": "zoabkyuvus", "output": "276" }, { "input": "spyemhyznjieyhhbk", "output": "451" }, { "i...
1,693,633,398
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
OK
TESTS
33
62
0
str = input() a = len(str) print(a * 25 + 26)
Title: Kyoya and Photobooks Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Kyoya Ootori is selling photobooks of the Ouran High School Host Club. He has 26 photos, labeled "a" to "z", and he has compiled them into a photo booklet with some photos in some order (possibly with some photos b...
```python str = input() a = len(str) print(a * 25 + 26) ```
3
272
A
Dima and Friends
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation", "math" ]
null
null
Dima and his friends have been playing hide and seek at Dima's place all night. As a result, Dima's place got messy. In the morning they decided that they need to clean the place. To decide who exactly would clean the apartment, the friends want to play a counting-out game. First, all the guys stand in a circle, and t...
The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of Dima's friends. Dima himself isn't considered to be his own friend. The second line contains *n* positive integers, not exceeding 5, representing, how many fingers the Dima's friends will show. The numbers in the lines are separated by a single s...
In a single line print the answer to the problem.
[ "1\n1\n", "1\n2\n", "2\n3 5\n" ]
[ "3\n", "2\n", "3\n" ]
In the first sample Dima can show 1, 3 or 5 fingers. If Dima shows 3 fingers, then the counting-out will go like that: Dima, his friend, Dima, his friend. In the second sample Dima can show 2 or 4 fingers.
500
[ { "input": "1\n1", "output": "3" }, { "input": "1\n2", "output": "2" }, { "input": "2\n3 5", "output": "3" }, { "input": "2\n3 5", "output": "3" }, { "input": "1\n5", "output": "3" }, { "input": "5\n4 4 3 5 1", "output": "4" }, { "input": "...
1,588,886,307
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
5
216
6,656,000
n = int(input()) a = list(map(int , input().split())) d = 0 for i in a: d+=i for i in range(2,6,+1): if (d+i)%(n+1)!=1: print(i) break
Title: Dima and Friends Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Dima and his friends have been playing hide and seek at Dima's place all night. As a result, Dima's place got messy. In the morning they decided that they need to clean the place. To decide who exactly would clean the...
```python n = int(input()) a = list(map(int , input().split())) d = 0 for i in a: d+=i for i in range(2,6,+1): if (d+i)%(n+1)!=1: print(i) break ```
0
508
B
Anton and currency you all know
PROGRAMMING
1,300
[ "greedy", "math", "strings" ]
null
null
Berland, 2016. The exchange rate of currency you all know against the burle has increased so much that to simplify the calculations, its fractional part was neglected and the exchange rate is now assumed to be an integer. Reliable sources have informed the financier Anton of some information about the exchange rate of...
The first line contains an odd positive integer *n* — the exchange rate of currency you all know for today. The length of number *n*'s representation is within range from 2 to 105, inclusive. The representation of *n* doesn't contain any leading zeroes.
If the information about tomorrow's exchange rate is inconsistent, that is, there is no integer that meets the condition, print <=-<=1. Otherwise, print the exchange rate of currency you all know against the burle for tomorrow. This should be the maximum possible number of those that are even and that are obtained fro...
[ "527\n", "4573\n", "1357997531\n" ]
[ "572\n", "3574\n", "-1\n" ]
none
1,000
[ { "input": "527", "output": "572" }, { "input": "4573", "output": "3574" }, { "input": "1357997531", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "444443", "output": "444434" }, { "input": "22227", "output": "72222" }, { "input": "24683", "output": "34682" }, ...
1,650,598,672
2,147,483,647
Python 3
COMPILATION_ERROR
TESTS
0
0
0
#include<iostream> #include<bits/stdc++.h> using namespace std; int main() { long long int n,act; cin>>n; act=n; vector<int> v; vector<int> q; while(n>0) { v.push_back(n%10); n=n/10; } reverse(v.begin(),v.end()); long long int x=v[v.size()-1],g=v.size()-1; ...
Title: Anton and currency you all know Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Berland, 2016. The exchange rate of currency you all know against the burle has increased so much that to simplify the calculations, its fractional part was neglected and the exchange rate is now assumed...
```python #include<iostream> #include<bits/stdc++.h> using namespace std; int main() { long long int n,act; cin>>n; act=n; vector<int> v; vector<int> q; while(n>0) { v.push_back(n%10); n=n/10; } reverse(v.begin(),v.end()); long long int x=v[v.size()-1],g=v.si...
-1
0
none
none
none
0
[ "none" ]
null
null
The clique problem is one of the most well-known NP-complete problems. Under some simplification it can be formulated as follows. Consider an undirected graph *G*. It is required to find a subset of vertices *C* of the maximum size such that any two of them are connected by an edge in graph *G*. Sounds simple, doesn't ...
The first line contains the integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=200<=000) — the number of points. Each of the next *n* lines contains two numbers *x**i*, *w**i* (0<=≤<=*x**i*<=≤<=109,<=1<=≤<=*w**i*<=≤<=109) — the coordinate and the weight of a point. All *x**i* are different.
Print a single number — the number of vertexes in the maximum clique of the given graph.
[ "4\n2 3\n3 1\n6 1\n0 2\n" ]
[ "3\n" ]
If you happen to know how to solve this problem without using the specific properties of the graph formulated in the problem statement, then you are able to get a prize of one million dollars! The picture for the sample test.
0
[ { "input": "4\n2 3\n3 1\n6 1\n0 2", "output": "3" }, { "input": "1\n42 23", "output": "1" }, { "input": "2\n1 5\n2 6", "output": "1" }, { "input": "2\n1 5\n12 6", "output": "2" }, { "input": "1\n0 1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "1\n1000000000 10000000...
1,566,436,332
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
3
139
409,600
from collections import defaultdict def dfs(key, count): global XW if XW.get(key): dfs(XW[key], count+1) else: res[0]=max(res[0], count) n = int(input()) XW = defaultdict() for i in range(n): x, w = map(int, input().split()) XW[x] = w res = [0] for key, num in XW.ite...
Title: none Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: The clique problem is one of the most well-known NP-complete problems. Under some simplification it can be formulated as follows. Consider an undirected graph *G*. It is required to find a subset of vertices *C* of the maximum siz...
```python from collections import defaultdict def dfs(key, count): global XW if XW.get(key): dfs(XW[key], count+1) else: res[0]=max(res[0], count) n = int(input()) XW = defaultdict() for i in range(n): x, w = map(int, input().split()) XW[x] = w res = [0] for key, num...
0
960
A
Check the string
PROGRAMMING
1,200
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
A has a string consisting of some number of lowercase English letters 'a'. He gives it to his friend B who appends some number of letters 'b' to the end of this string. Since both A and B like the characters 'a' and 'b', they have made sure that at this point, at least one 'a' and one 'b' exist in the string. B now gi...
The first and only line consists of a string $S$ ($ 1 \le |S| \le 5\,000 $). It is guaranteed that the string will only consist of the lowercase English letters 'a', 'b', 'c'.
Print "YES" or "NO", according to the condition.
[ "aaabccc\n", "bbacc\n", "aabc\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "NO\n", "YES\n" ]
Consider first example: the number of 'c' is equal to the number of 'a'. Consider second example: although the number of 'c' is equal to the number of the 'b', the order is not correct. Consider third example: the number of 'c' is equal to the number of 'b'.
500
[ { "input": "aaabccc", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "bbacc", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "aabc", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "aabbcc", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "aaacccbb", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "abc", "output": "YES" }, { "in...
1,608,193,302
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
55
140
0
s = input(); a = s.count('a'); b = s.count('b'); c = s.count('c') if a==0 or b==0: print('No') exit(0) if a*'a' + b*'b' + c*'c' == s and (a==c or b==c): print('Yes') else: print('No')
Title: Check the string Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: A has a string consisting of some number of lowercase English letters 'a'. He gives it to his friend B who appends some number of letters 'b' to the end of this string. Since both A and B like the characters 'a' and 'b...
```python s = input(); a = s.count('a'); b = s.count('b'); c = s.count('c') if a==0 or b==0: print('No') exit(0) if a*'a' + b*'b' + c*'c' == s and (a==c or b==c): print('Yes') else: print('No') ```
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"...
1,684,676,090
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
1
46
0
n,m,a=map(int,input().split()) dem=0 if n>a or m>a: dem+=1 n-=a m-=a while n>0 or m>0: kt1=False kt2=False if n>0: n-=a kt1=True dem+=1 if m>0: m-=a kt2=True dem+=1 if kt1 and...
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()) dem=0 if n>a or m>a: dem+=1 n-=a m-=a while n>0 or m>0: kt1=False kt2=False if n>0: n-=a kt1=True dem+=1 if m>0: m-=a kt2=True dem+=1 ...
0
976
A
Minimum Binary Number
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
String can be called correct if it consists of characters "0" and "1" and there are no redundant leading zeroes. Here are some examples: "0", "10", "1001". You are given a correct string *s*. You can perform two different operations on this string: 1. swap any pair of adjacent characters (for example, "101" "110"...
The first line contains integer number *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the length of string *s*. The second line contains the string *s* consisting of characters "0" and "1". It is guaranteed that the string *s* is correct.
Print one string — the minimum correct string that you can obtain from the given one.
[ "4\n1001\n", "1\n1\n" ]
[ "100\n", "1\n" ]
In the first example you can obtain the answer by the following sequence of operations: "1001" <img align="middle" class="tex-formula" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/70a0795f45d32287dba0eb83fc4a3f470c6e5537.png" style="max-width: 100.0%;max-height: 100.0%;"/> "1010" <img align="middle" class="tex-formula" src="ht...
0
[ { "input": "4\n1001", "output": "100" }, { "input": "1\n1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "100\n1110111100001111011111111010110011111111011110000111101101011100110110001011000000101010110101011100", "output": "1000000000000000000000000000000000000000" }, { "input": "100\n100000...
1,550,566,475
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
14
124
0
n=input() s=input() print('1'*int(bool(s.count("1")))+"0"*s.count("0"))
Title: Minimum Binary Number Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: String can be called correct if it consists of characters "0" and "1" and there are no redundant leading zeroes. Here are some examples: "0", "10", "1001". You are given a correct string *s*. You can perform two...
```python n=input() s=input() print('1'*int(bool(s.count("1")))+"0"*s.count("0")) ```
3
746
B
Decoding
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "implementation", "strings" ]
null
null
Polycarp is mad about coding, that is why he writes Sveta encoded messages. He calls the median letter in a word the letter which is in the middle of the word. If the word's length is even, the median letter is the left of the two middle letters. In the following examples, the median letter is highlighted: contest, inf...
The first line contains a positive integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=2000) — the length of the encoded word. The second line contains the string *s* of length *n* consisting of lowercase English letters — the encoding.
Print the word that Polycarp encoded.
[ "5\nlogva\n", "2\nno\n", "4\nabba\n" ]
[ "volga\n", "no\n", "baba\n" ]
In the first example Polycarp encoded the word volga. At first, he wrote down the letter l from the position 3, after that his word looked like voga. After that Polycarp wrote down the letter o from the position 2, his word became vga. Then Polycarp wrote down the letter g which was at the second position, the word bec...
1,000
[ { "input": "5\nlogva", "output": "volga" }, { "input": "2\nno", "output": "no" }, { "input": "4\nabba", "output": "baba" }, { "input": "51\nkfsmpaeviowvkdbuhdagquxxqniselafnfbrgbhmsugcbbnlrvv", "output": "vlbcumbrfflsnxugdudvovamfkspeiwkbhaqxqieanbghsgbnrv" }, { "...
1,653,066,956
2,147,483,647
Python 3
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
0
15
0
n1 = int( input() ) n2 = int( input() ) n3 = int( input() ) print( min( n1 , n2 // 2 , n3 // 4 ) * 7 )
Title: Decoding Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Polycarp is mad about coding, that is why he writes Sveta encoded messages. He calls the median letter in a word the letter which is in the middle of the word. If the word's length is even, the median letter is the left of the...
```python n1 = int( input() ) n2 = int( input() ) n3 = int( input() ) print( min( n1 , n2 // 2 , n3 // 4 ) * 7 ) ```
-1
435
A
Queue on Bus Stop
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
It's that time of the year when the Russians flood their countryside summer cottages (dachas) and the bus stop has a lot of people. People rarely go to the dacha on their own, it's usually a group, so the people stand in queue by groups. The bus stop queue has *n* groups of people. The *i*-th group from the beginning ...
The first line contains two integers *n* and *m* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=100). The next line contains *n* integers: *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=*m*).
Print a single integer — the number of buses that is needed to transport all *n* groups to the dacha countryside.
[ "4 3\n2 3 2 1\n", "3 4\n1 2 1\n" ]
[ "3\n", "1\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "4 3\n2 3 2 1", "output": "3" }, { "input": "3 4\n1 2 1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "1 5\n4", "output": "1" }, { "input": "5 1\n1 1 1 1 1", "output": "5" }, { "input": "6 4\n1 3 2 3 4 1", "output": "5" }, { "input": "6 8\n6 1 1 1 4 5", ...
1,542,881,368
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
34
109
0
import math a = list(map(int,input().split())) people = list(map(int,input().split())) total_group = a[0] seat_bus = a[1] max_bus = total_group * seat_bus check = 0 ###check if people have same number of seat_bus ##check_same = [i for i in range(total_group) if people[i] == seat_bus] ###remove the same n...
Title: Queue on Bus Stop Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: It's that time of the year when the Russians flood their countryside summer cottages (dachas) and the bus stop has a lot of people. People rarely go to the dacha on their own, it's usually a group, so the people stand...
```python import math a = list(map(int,input().split())) people = list(map(int,input().split())) total_group = a[0] seat_bus = a[1] max_bus = total_group * seat_bus check = 0 ###check if people have same number of seat_bus ##check_same = [i for i in range(total_group) if people[i] == seat_bus] ###remove ...
3
962
A
Equator
PROGRAMMING
1,300
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Polycarp has created his own training plan to prepare for the programming contests. He will train for $n$ days, all days are numbered from $1$ to $n$, beginning from the first. On the $i$-th day Polycarp will necessarily solve $a_i$ problems. One evening Polycarp plans to celebrate the equator. He will celebrate it on...
The first line contains a single integer $n$ ($1 \le n \le 200\,000$) — the number of days to prepare for the programming contests. The second line contains a sequence $a_1, a_2, \dots, a_n$ ($1 \le a_i \le 10\,000$), where $a_i$ equals to the number of problems, which Polycarp will solve on the $i$-th day.
Print the index of the day when Polycarp will celebrate the equator.
[ "4\n1 3 2 1\n", "6\n2 2 2 2 2 2\n" ]
[ "2\n", "3\n" ]
In the first example Polycarp will celebrate the equator on the evening of the second day, because up to this day (inclusive) he will solve $4$ out of $7$ scheduled problems on four days of the training. In the second example Polycarp will celebrate the equator on the evening of the third day, because up to this day (...
0
[ { "input": "4\n1 3 2 1", "output": "2" }, { "input": "6\n2 2 2 2 2 2", "output": "3" }, { "input": "1\n10000", "output": "1" }, { "input": "3\n2 1 1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "2\n1 3", "output": "2" }, { "input": "4\n2 1 1 3", "output": "3" }...
1,658,508,898
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
OK
TESTS
106
93
20,070,400
from bisect import bisect_left n = int(input()) a = list(map(int, input().split())) for i in range(1, n): a[i] += a[i-1] if a[-1] % 2: mid = (a[-1]+1)//2 else: mid = a[-1]//2 print(bisect_left(a, mid)+1)
Title: Equator Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Polycarp has created his own training plan to prepare for the programming contests. He will train for $n$ days, all days are numbered from $1$ to $n$, beginning from the first. On the $i$-th day Polycarp will necessarily solve...
```python from bisect import bisect_left n = int(input()) a = list(map(int, input().split())) for i in range(1, n): a[i] += a[i-1] if a[-1] % 2: mid = (a[-1]+1)//2 else: mid = a[-1]//2 print(bisect_left(a, mid)+1) ```
3
915
A
Garden
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Luba thinks about watering her garden. The garden can be represented as a segment of length *k*. Luba has got *n* buckets, the *i*-th bucket allows her to water some continuous subsegment of garden of length exactly *a**i* each hour. Luba can't water any parts of the garden that were already watered, also she can't wat...
The first line of input contains two integer numbers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*k*<=≤<=100) — the number of buckets and the length of the garden, respectively. The second line of input contains *n* integer numbers *a**i* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=100) — the length of the segment that can be watered by the *i*-th bucket in one ...
Print one integer number — the minimum number of hours required to water the garden.
[ "3 6\n2 3 5\n", "6 7\n1 2 3 4 5 6\n" ]
[ "2\n", "7\n" ]
In the first test the best option is to choose the bucket that allows to water the segment of length 3. We can't choose the bucket that allows to water the segment of length 5 because then we can't water the whole garden. In the second test we can choose only the bucket that allows us to water the segment of length 1.
0
[ { "input": "3 6\n2 3 5", "output": "2" }, { "input": "6 7\n1 2 3 4 5 6", "output": "7" }, { "input": "5 97\n1 10 50 97 2", "output": "1" }, { "input": "5 97\n1 10 50 100 2", "output": "97" }, { "input": "100 100\n2 46 24 18 86 90 31 38 84 49 58 28 15 80 14 24 87 5...
1,594,291,089
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
83
140
20,172,800
l1 = [int(x) for x in input().split()] total=l1[1] l2 = [int(x) for x in input().split()] l2.sort(reverse=True) ans=1 for x in l2: if total%x==0: ans=x break ans = total//ans print(ans)
Title: Garden Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Luba thinks about watering her garden. The garden can be represented as a segment of length *k*. Luba has got *n* buckets, the *i*-th bucket allows her to water some continuous subsegment of garden of length exactly *a**i* each ...
```python l1 = [int(x) for x in input().split()] total=l1[1] l2 = [int(x) for x in input().split()] l2.sort(reverse=True) ans=1 for x in l2: if total%x==0: ans=x break ans = total//ans print(ans) ```
3
677
A
Vanya and Fence
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Vanya and his friends are walking along the fence of height *h* and they do not want the guard to notice them. In order to achieve this the height of each of the friends should not exceed *h*. If the height of some person is greater than *h* he can bend down and then he surely won't be noticed by the guard. The height ...
The first line of the input contains two integers *n* and *h* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000, 1<=≤<=*h*<=≤<=1000) — the number of friends and the height of the fence, respectively. The second line contains *n* integers *a**i* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=2*h*), the *i*-th of them is equal to the height of the *i*-th person.
Print a single integer — the minimum possible valid width of the road.
[ "3 7\n4 5 14\n", "6 1\n1 1 1 1 1 1\n", "6 5\n7 6 8 9 10 5\n" ]
[ "4\n", "6\n", "11\n" ]
In the first sample, only person number 3 must bend down, so the required width is equal to 1 + 1 + 2 = 4. In the second sample, all friends are short enough and no one has to bend, so the width 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 = 6 is enough. In the third sample, all the persons have to bend, except the last one. The required m...
500
[ { "input": "3 7\n4 5 14", "output": "4" }, { "input": "6 1\n1 1 1 1 1 1", "output": "6" }, { "input": "6 5\n7 6 8 9 10 5", "output": "11" }, { "input": "10 420\n214 614 297 675 82 740 174 23 255 15", "output": "13" }, { "input": "10 561\n657 23 1096 487 785 66 481...
1,696,404,001
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
29
46
0
n, h = map(int, input().split()) arr = list(map(int, input().split())) ans = n for each in arr: if each > h: ans += 1 print(ans)
Title: Vanya and Fence Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Vanya and his friends are walking along the fence of height *h* and they do not want the guard to notice them. In order to achieve this the height of each of the friends should not exceed *h*. If the height of some pers...
```python n, h = map(int, input().split()) arr = list(map(int, input().split())) ans = n for each in arr: if each > h: ans += 1 print(ans) ```
3
379
A
New Year Candles
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Vasily the Programmer loves romance, so this year he decided to illuminate his room with candles. Vasily has *a* candles.When Vasily lights up a new candle, it first burns for an hour and then it goes out. Vasily is smart, so he can make *b* went out candles into a new candle. As a result, this new candle can be used ...
The single line contains two integers, *a* and *b* (1<=≤<=*a*<=≤<=1000; 2<=≤<=*b*<=≤<=1000).
Print a single integer — the number of hours Vasily can light up the room for.
[ "4 2\n", "6 3\n" ]
[ "7\n", "8\n" ]
Consider the first sample. For the first four hours Vasily lights up new candles, then he uses four burned out candles to make two new ones and lights them up. When these candles go out (stop burning), Vasily can make another candle. Overall, Vasily can light up the room for 7 hours.
500
[ { "input": "4 2", "output": "7" }, { "input": "6 3", "output": "8" }, { "input": "1000 1000", "output": "1001" }, { "input": "123 5", "output": "153" }, { "input": "1000 2", "output": "1999" }, { "input": "1 2", "output": "1" }, { "input": ...
1,691,069,839
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
3
31
0
n , m = map(int,input().split()) count = n while n >= m : count += n // m n //= m print(count)
Title: New Year Candles Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Vasily the Programmer loves romance, so this year he decided to illuminate his room with candles. Vasily has *a* candles.When Vasily lights up a new candle, it first burns for an hour and then it goes out. Vasily is s...
```python n , m = map(int,input().split()) count = n while n >= m : count += n // m n //= m print(count) ```
0
525
B
Pasha and String
PROGRAMMING
1,400
[ "constructive algorithms", "greedy", "math", "strings" ]
null
null
Pasha got a very beautiful string *s* for his birthday, the string consists of lowercase Latin letters. The letters in the string are numbered from 1 to |*s*| from left to right, where |*s*| is the length of the given string. Pasha didn't like his present very much so he decided to change it. After his birthday Pasha ...
The first line of the input contains Pasha's string *s* of length from 2 to 2·105 characters, consisting of lowercase Latin letters. The second line contains a single integer *m* (1<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=105) —  the number of days when Pasha changed his string. The third line contains *m* space-separated elements *a**i* (1<=≤<...
In the first line of the output print what Pasha's string *s* will look like after *m* days.
[ "abcdef\n1\n2\n", "vwxyz\n2\n2 2\n", "abcdef\n3\n1 2 3\n" ]
[ "aedcbf\n", "vwxyz\n", "fbdcea\n" ]
none
750
[ { "input": "abcdef\n1\n2", "output": "aedcbf" }, { "input": "vwxyz\n2\n2 2", "output": "vwxyz" }, { "input": "abcdef\n3\n1 2 3", "output": "fbdcea" }, { "input": "jc\n5\n1 1 1 1 1", "output": "cj" }, { "input": "wljqgdlxyc\n13\n3 4 3 3 5 4 4 2 4 4 5 3 3", "out...
1,668,110,927
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
4
46
0
s = list(input()) m = int(input()) transformations = [int(i)-1 for i in input().split()] transformations.sort() index = [0 for char in s] for i, trans in enumerate(transformations): count = transformations.count(trans) if i % 2 == 0 and count % 2 != 0: index[trans: len(s)-trans] = [1 for k in index[tra...
Title: Pasha and String Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Pasha got a very beautiful string *s* for his birthday, the string consists of lowercase Latin letters. The letters in the string are numbered from 1 to |*s*| from left to right, where |*s*| is the length of the given ...
```python s = list(input()) m = int(input()) transformations = [int(i)-1 for i in input().split()] transformations.sort() index = [0 for char in s] for i, trans in enumerate(transformations): count = transformations.count(trans) if i % 2 == 0 and count % 2 != 0: index[trans: len(s)-trans] = [1 for k in...
0
610
A
Pasha and Stick
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "combinatorics", "math" ]
null
null
Pasha has a wooden stick of some positive integer length *n*. He wants to perform exactly three cuts to get four parts of the stick. Each part must have some positive integer length and the sum of these lengths will obviously be *n*. Pasha likes rectangles but hates squares, so he wonders, how many ways are there to ...
The first line of the input contains a positive integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=2·109) — the length of Pasha's stick.
The output should contain a single integer — the number of ways to split Pasha's stick into four parts of positive integer length so that it's possible to make a rectangle by connecting the ends of these parts, but is impossible to form a square.
[ "6\n", "20\n" ]
[ "1\n", "4\n" ]
There is only one way to divide the stick in the first sample {1, 1, 2, 2}. Four ways to divide the stick in the second sample are {1, 1, 9, 9}, {2, 2, 8, 8}, {3, 3, 7, 7} and {4, 4, 6, 6}. Note that {5, 5, 5, 5} doesn't work.
500
[ { "input": "6", "output": "1" }, { "input": "20", "output": "4" }, { "input": "1", "output": "0" }, { "input": "2", "output": "0" }, { "input": "3", "output": "0" }, { "input": "4", "output": "0" }, { "input": "2000000000", "output": "4...
1,565,659,992
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
76
140
0
# @author Matheus Alves dos Santos def divisible_by(value, n): return ((value % n) == 0) length = int(input()) ways = 0 if (divisible_by(length, 2)): ways = (length // 4) if (divisible_by(length, 4)): ways -= 1 print(ways)
Title: Pasha and Stick Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Pasha has a wooden stick of some positive integer length *n*. He wants to perform exactly three cuts to get four parts of the stick. Each part must have some positive integer length and the sum of these lengths will obv...
```python # @author Matheus Alves dos Santos def divisible_by(value, n): return ((value % n) == 0) length = int(input()) ways = 0 if (divisible_by(length, 2)): ways = (length // 4) if (divisible_by(length, 4)): ways -= 1 print(ways) ```
3
702
A
Maximum Increase
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "dp", "greedy", "implementation" ]
null
null
You are given array consisting of *n* integers. Your task is to find the maximum length of an increasing subarray of the given array. A subarray is the sequence of consecutive elements of the array. Subarray is called increasing if each element of this subarray strictly greater than previous.
The first line contains single positive integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) — the number of integers. The second line contains *n* positive integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=109).
Print the maximum length of an increasing subarray of the given array.
[ "5\n1 7 2 11 15\n", "6\n100 100 100 100 100 100\n", "3\n1 2 3\n" ]
[ "3\n", "1\n", "3\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "5\n1 7 2 11 15", "output": "3" }, { "input": "6\n100 100 100 100 100 100", "output": "1" }, { "input": "3\n1 2 3", "output": "3" }, { "input": "1\n1000000000", "output": "1" }, { "input": "10\n802030518 598196518 640274071 983359971 71550121 96204862 7...
1,673,338,443
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
0
31
0
n = int(input()) a = [0] for i in input().split(): a.append(int(i)) dp = [] x = 0 for i in range(1, len(a)): if a[i] <= a[i - 1]: dp.append(x) x = 1 continue x += 1 print(max(dp))
Title: Maximum Increase Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: You are given array consisting of *n* integers. Your task is to find the maximum length of an increasing subarray of the given array. A subarray is the sequence of consecutive elements of the array. Subarray is called...
```python n = int(input()) a = [0] for i in input().split(): a.append(int(i)) dp = [] x = 0 for i in range(1, len(a)): if a[i] <= a[i - 1]: dp.append(x) x = 1 continue x += 1 print(max(dp)) ```
0
938
B
Run For Your Prize
PROGRAMMING
1,100
[ "brute force", "greedy" ]
null
null
You and your friend are participating in a TV show "Run For Your Prize". At the start of the show *n* prizes are located on a straight line. *i*-th prize is located at position *a**i*. Positions of all prizes are distinct. You start at position 1, your friend — at position 106 (and there is no prize in any of these tw...
The first line contains one integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) — the number of prizes. The second line contains *n* integers *a*1, *a*2, ..., *a**n* (2<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=106<=-<=1) — the positions of the prizes. No two prizes are located at the same position. Positions are given in ascending order.
Print one integer — the minimum number of seconds it will take to collect all prizes.
[ "3\n2 3 9\n", "2\n2 999995\n" ]
[ "8\n", "5\n" ]
In the first example you take all the prizes: take the first at 1, the second at 2 and the third at 8. In the second example you take the first prize in 1 second and your friend takes the other in 5 seconds, you do this simultaneously, so the total time is 5.
0
[ { "input": "3\n2 3 9", "output": "8" }, { "input": "2\n2 999995", "output": "5" }, { "input": "1\n20", "output": "19" }, { "input": "6\n2 3 500000 999997 999998 999999", "output": "499999" }, { "input": "1\n999999", "output": "1" }, { "input": "1\n5100...
1,520,034,937
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
6
93
13,004,800
from bisect import bisect def main(): n, l = int(input()), [*map(float, input().split()), 1e6] i = bisect(l, 500000.5) print(int(max(l[i - 1] - 1., 1e6 - l[i]))) if __name__ == '__main__': main()
Title: Run For Your Prize Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: You and your friend are participating in a TV show "Run For Your Prize". At the start of the show *n* prizes are located on a straight line. *i*-th prize is located at position *a**i*. Positions of all prizes are di...
```python from bisect import bisect def main(): n, l = int(input()), [*map(float, input().split()), 1e6] i = bisect(l, 500000.5) print(int(max(l[i - 1] - 1., 1e6 - l[i]))) if __name__ == '__main__': main() ```
0
115
A
Party
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "dfs and similar", "graphs", "trees" ]
null
null
A company has *n* employees numbered from 1 to *n*. Each employee either has no immediate manager or exactly one immediate manager, who is another employee with a different number. An employee *A* is said to be the superior of another employee *B* if at least one of the following is true: - Employee *A* is the immedi...
The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=2000) — the number of employees. The next *n* lines contain the integers *p**i* (1<=≤<=*p**i*<=≤<=*n* or *p**i*<==<=-1). Every *p**i* denotes the immediate manager for the *i*-th employee. If *p**i* is -1, that means that the *i*-th employee does not have an immediate...
Print a single integer denoting the minimum number of groups that will be formed in the party.
[ "5\n-1\n1\n2\n1\n-1\n" ]
[ "3\n" ]
For the first example, three groups are sufficient, for example: - Employee 1 - Employees 2 and 4 - Employees 3 and 5
500
[ { "input": "5\n-1\n1\n2\n1\n-1", "output": "3" }, { "input": "4\n-1\n1\n2\n3", "output": "4" }, { "input": "12\n-1\n1\n2\n3\n-1\n5\n6\n7\n-1\n9\n10\n11", "output": "4" }, { "input": "6\n-1\n-1\n2\n3\n1\n1", "output": "3" }, { "input": "3\n-1\n1\n1", "output": ...
1,695,155,446
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
1
62
0
n=int(input()) b=[] c=[] x=0 res=[] for i in range (n): a=int(input()) b.append(a) for i in range(1,len(b)+1): c.append(i) for j in range(1,len(b)+1): if i==b[j-1]: c.append(j) d=c.copy() res.append(d) c.clear() for i in res: if len(i)==1: x=x+1 print(x)
Title: Party Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: A company has *n* employees numbered from 1 to *n*. Each employee either has no immediate manager or exactly one immediate manager, who is another employee with a different number. An employee *A* is said to be the superior of an...
```python n=int(input()) b=[] c=[] x=0 res=[] for i in range (n): a=int(input()) b.append(a) for i in range(1,len(b)+1): c.append(i) for j in range(1,len(b)+1): if i==b[j-1]: c.append(j) d=c.copy() res.append(d) c.clear() for i in res: if len(i)==1: x=x+1 print(x) ```
0
721
A
One-dimensional Japanese Crossword
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Recently Adaltik discovered japanese crosswords. Japanese crossword is a picture, represented as a table sized *a*<=×<=*b* squares, and each square is colored white or black. There are integers to the left of the rows and to the top of the columns, encrypting the corresponding row or column. The number of integers repr...
The first line of the input contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the length of the row. The second line of the input contains a single string consisting of *n* characters 'B' or 'W', ('B' corresponds to black square, 'W' — to white square in the row that Adaltik drew).
The first line should contain a single integer *k* — the number of integers encrypting the row, e.g. the number of groups of black squares in the row. The second line should contain *k* integers, encrypting the row, e.g. corresponding to sizes of groups of consecutive black squares in the order from left to right.
[ "3\nBBW\n", "5\nBWBWB\n", "4\nWWWW\n", "4\nBBBB\n", "13\nWBBBBWWBWBBBW\n" ]
[ "1\n2 ", "3\n1 1 1 ", "0\n", "1\n4 ", "3\n4 1 3 " ]
The last sample case correspond to the picture in the statement.
500
[ { "input": "3\nBBW", "output": "1\n2 " }, { "input": "5\nBWBWB", "output": "3\n1 1 1 " }, { "input": "4\nWWWW", "output": "0" }, { "input": "4\nBBBB", "output": "1\n4 " }, { "input": "13\nWBBBBWWBWBBBW", "output": "3\n4 1 3 " }, { "input": "1\nB", ...
1,619,044,359
2,147,483,647
Python 3
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
0
31
0
def printStrings(strings): for element in strings: print(element) k=input() n=input() bcount=0 wcount=0 list=[] for i in n: if i=="B": bcount=bcunt+1 elif i=="W": if bcount>=1: wcount=wcount+1 list.append(bcount) bcount=0 if bcount>=1: list.append(bcoun...
Title: One-dimensional Japanese Crossword Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Recently Adaltik discovered japanese crosswords. Japanese crossword is a picture, represented as a table sized *a*<=×<=*b* squares, and each square is colored white or black. There are integers to the...
```python def printStrings(strings): for element in strings: print(element) k=input() n=input() bcount=0 wcount=0 list=[] for i in n: if i=="B": bcount=bcunt+1 elif i=="W": if bcount>=1: wcount=wcount+1 list.append(bcount) bcount=0 if bcount>=1: list.ap...
-1
873
D
Merge Sort
PROGRAMMING
1,800
[ "constructive algorithms", "divide and conquer" ]
null
null
Merge sort is a well-known sorting algorithm. The main function that sorts the elements of array *a* with indices from [*l*,<=*r*) can be implemented as follows: 1. If the segment [*l*,<=*r*) is already sorted in non-descending order (that is, for any *i* such that *l*<=≤<=*i*<=&lt;<=*r*<=-<=1 *a*[*i*]<=≤<=*a*[*i*<=+...
The first line contains two numbers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100000, 1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=200000) — the size of a desired permutation and the number of *mergesort* calls required to sort it.
If a permutation of size *n* such that there will be exactly *k* calls of *mergesort* while sorting it doesn't exist, output <=-<=1. Otherwise output *n* integer numbers *a*[0],<=*a*[1],<=...,<=*a*[*n*<=-<=1] — the elements of a permutation that would meet the required conditions. If there are multiple answers, print a...
[ "3 3\n", "4 1\n", "5 6\n" ]
[ "2 1 3 ", "1 2 3 4 ", "-1\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "3 3", "output": "2 1 3 " }, { "input": "4 1", "output": "1 2 3 4 " }, { "input": "5 6", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "100 100", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "10000 10001", "output": "3 1 5 2 7 4 8 10 6 12 9 13 15 11 17 14 18 20 16 22 19 23 25 21 27...
1,594,489,566
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
36
218
35,635,200
n,k = [int(x) for x in input().split()] if k%2 == 0: print(-1) else: # a completely unsorted list of length n # will have 2(n-1) child calls if k > 2*n-1: print(-1) else: arr = [n-x for x in range(n)] sorts = 2*n-1-k segs = [[(0,n,n//2)]] ...
Title: Merge Sort Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Merge sort is a well-known sorting algorithm. The main function that sorts the elements of array *a* with indices from [*l*,<=*r*) can be implemented as follows: 1. If the segment [*l*,<=*r*) is already sorted in non-desce...
```python n,k = [int(x) for x in input().split()] if k%2 == 0: print(-1) else: # a completely unsorted list of length n # will have 2(n-1) child calls if k > 2*n-1: print(-1) else: arr = [n-x for x in range(n)] sorts = 2*n-1-k segs = [[(0,n,n//2)]] ...
3
312
A
Whose sentence is it?
PROGRAMMING
1,100
[ "implementation", "strings" ]
null
null
One day, liouzhou_101 got a chat record of Freda and Rainbow. Out of curiosity, he wanted to know which sentences were said by Freda, and which were said by Rainbow. According to his experience, he thought that Freda always said "lala." at the end of her sentences, while Rainbow always said "miao." at the beginning of ...
The first line of the input contains an integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=10), number of sentences in the chat record. Each of the next *n* lines contains a sentence. A sentence is a string that contains only Latin letters (A-Z, a-z), underline (_), comma (,), point (.) and space ( ). Its length doesn’t exceed 100.
For each sentence, output "Freda's" if the sentence was said by Freda, "Rainbow's" if the sentence was said by Rainbow, or "OMG&gt;.&lt; I don't know!" if liouzhou_101 can’t recognize whose sentence it is. He can’t recognize a sentence if it begins with "miao." and ends with "lala.", or satisfies neither of the conditi...
[ "5\nI will go to play with you lala.\nwow, welcome.\nmiao.lala.\nmiao.\nmiao .\n" ]
[ "Freda's\nOMG&gt;.&lt; I don't know!\nOMG&gt;.&lt; I don't know!\nRainbow's\nOMG&gt;.&lt; I don't know!\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "5\nI will go to play with you lala.\nwow, welcome.\nmiao.lala.\nmiao.\nmiao .", "output": "Freda's\nOMG>.< I don't know!\nOMG>.< I don't know!\nRainbow's\nOMG>.< I don't know!" }, { "input": "10\nLpAEKiHVJrzSZqBVSSyY\nYECGBlala.\nUZeGpeM.UCwiHmmA\nqt_,.b_.LSwJtJ.\nFAnXZtHlala.\nmiao.iape...
1,474,321,717
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
0
61
0
n = int(input()) for i in range(0, n): text = input() if text[0:4] == "miao.": print("Rainbow's") elif text[-5:len(text)]: print("Freda's") else: print("OMG>.< I don't know!")
Title: Whose sentence is it? Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: One day, liouzhou_101 got a chat record of Freda and Rainbow. Out of curiosity, he wanted to know which sentences were said by Freda, and which were said by Rainbow. According to his experience, he thought that Fr...
```python n = int(input()) for i in range(0, n): text = input() if text[0:4] == "miao.": print("Rainbow's") elif text[-5:len(text)]: print("Freda's") else: print("OMG>.< I don't know!") ```
0
892
A
Greed
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "greedy", "implementation" ]
null
null
Jafar has *n* cans of cola. Each can is described by two integers: remaining volume of cola *a**i* and can's capacity *b**i* (*a**i* <=≤<= *b**i*). Jafar has decided to pour all remaining cola into just 2 cans, determine if he can do this or not!
The first line of the input contains one integer *n* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100<=000) — number of cola cans. The second line contains *n* space-separated integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (0<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=109) — volume of remaining cola in cans. The third line contains *n* space-separated integers that *b*1,<=*b*2,<=...,<...
Print "YES" (without quotes) if it is possible to pour all remaining cola in 2 cans. Otherwise print "NO" (without quotes). You can print each letter in any case (upper or lower).
[ "2\n3 5\n3 6\n", "3\n6 8 9\n6 10 12\n", "5\n0 0 5 0 0\n1 1 8 10 5\n", "4\n4 1 0 3\n5 2 2 3\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "NO\n", "YES\n", "YES\n" ]
In the first sample, there are already 2 cans, so the answer is "YES".
500
[ { "input": "2\n3 5\n3 6", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "3\n6 8 9\n6 10 12", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "5\n0 0 5 0 0\n1 1 8 10 5", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "4\n4 1 0 3\n5 2 2 3", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "10\n9 10 24 11 1 7 8 3 28 14\n86 20 34 11 22 9...
1,510,943,030
2,147,483,647
Python 3
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
0
46
0
n = int(input()) a = list(map(int, input().split())) b = list(map(input().split())) m1 = max(b) b.remove(m1) m2 = max(b) r = 0 for i in a: r += i if r < m1 + m2: print("YES") else: print("NO")
Title: Greed Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Jafar has *n* cans of cola. Each can is described by two integers: remaining volume of cola *a**i* and can's capacity *b**i* (*a**i* <=≤<= *b**i*). Jafar has decided to pour all remaining cola into just 2 cans, determine if he c...
```python n = int(input()) a = list(map(int, input().split())) b = list(map(input().split())) m1 = max(b) b.remove(m1) m2 = max(b) r = 0 for i in a: r += i if r < m1 + m2: print("YES") else: print("NO") ```
-1
478
C
Table Decorations
PROGRAMMING
1,800
[ "greedy" ]
null
null
You have *r* red, *g* green and *b* blue balloons. To decorate a single table for the banquet you need exactly three balloons. Three balloons attached to some table shouldn't have the same color. What maximum number *t* of tables can be decorated if we know number of balloons of each color? Your task is to write a pro...
The single line contains three integers *r*, *g* and *b* (0<=≤<=*r*,<=*g*,<=*b*<=≤<=2·109) — the number of red, green and blue baloons respectively. The numbers are separated by exactly one space.
Print a single integer *t* — the maximum number of tables that can be decorated in the required manner.
[ "5 4 3\n", "1 1 1\n", "2 3 3\n" ]
[ "4\n", "1\n", "2\n" ]
In the first sample you can decorate the tables with the following balloon sets: "rgg", "gbb", "brr", "rrg", where "r", "g" and "b" represent the red, green and blue balls, respectively.
1,500
[ { "input": "5 4 3", "output": "4" }, { "input": "1 1 1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "2 3 3", "output": "2" }, { "input": "0 1 0", "output": "0" }, { "input": "0 3 3", "output": "2" }, { "input": "4 0 4", "output": "2" }, { "input": "100000...
1,652,712,246
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
25
62
28,979,200
a=list(map(int,input().split())) b=max(a) c=sum(a)-b if b>=c: if 2*c>=b: d=min(b//3,c//3) e=b-3*d f=c-3*d g=[e,f] g.sort() a.sort() if a[1]*2==a[2]: xx=a[1] else: xx=0 if 0 in g: print(max(2*d,xx)) elif 2*g[0]<=g[1]: print(max(2*d+g[0],xx)) else: print(max(2*d+g...
Title: Table Decorations Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: You have *r* red, *g* green and *b* blue balloons. To decorate a single table for the banquet you need exactly three balloons. Three balloons attached to some table shouldn't have the same color. What maximum number *...
```python a=list(map(int,input().split())) b=max(a) c=sum(a)-b if b>=c: if 2*c>=b: d=min(b//3,c//3) e=b-3*d f=c-3*d g=[e,f] g.sort() a.sort() if a[1]*2==a[2]: xx=a[1] else: xx=0 if 0 in g: print(max(2*d,xx)) elif 2*g[0]<=g[1]: print(max(2*d+g[0],xx)) else: print...
0
208
A
Dubstep
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "strings" ]
null
null
Vasya works as a DJ in the best Berland nightclub, and he often uses dubstep music in his performance. Recently, he has decided to take a couple of old songs and make dubstep remixes from them. Let's assume that a song consists of some number of words. To make the dubstep remix of this song, Vasya inserts a certain nu...
The input consists of a single non-empty string, consisting only of uppercase English letters, the string's length doesn't exceed 200 characters. It is guaranteed that before Vasya remixed the song, no word contained substring "WUB" in it; Vasya didn't change the word order. It is also guaranteed that initially the son...
Print the words of the initial song that Vasya used to make a dubsteb remix. Separate the words with a space.
[ "WUBWUBABCWUB\n", "WUBWEWUBAREWUBWUBTHEWUBCHAMPIONSWUBMYWUBFRIENDWUB\n" ]
[ "ABC ", "WE ARE THE CHAMPIONS MY FRIEND " ]
In the first sample: "WUBWUBABCWUB" = "WUB" + "WUB" + "ABC" + "WUB". That means that the song originally consisted of a single word "ABC", and all words "WUB" were added by Vasya. In the second sample Vasya added a single word "WUB" between all neighbouring words, in the beginning and in the end, except for words "ARE...
500
[ { "input": "WUBWUBABCWUB", "output": "ABC " }, { "input": "WUBWEWUBAREWUBWUBTHEWUBCHAMPIONSWUBMYWUBFRIENDWUB", "output": "WE ARE THE CHAMPIONS MY FRIEND " }, { "input": "WUBWUBWUBSR", "output": "SR " }, { "input": "RWUBWUBWUBLWUB", "output": "R L " }, { "input": "...
1,676,914,100
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
OK
TESTS
71
124
0
arr = list(input().split('WUB')) for e in arr: if e == '': continue print(e, end=' ')
Title: Dubstep Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Vasya works as a DJ in the best Berland nightclub, and he often uses dubstep music in his performance. Recently, he has decided to take a couple of old songs and make dubstep remixes from them. Let's assume that a song consist...
```python arr = list(input().split('WUB')) for e in arr: if e == '': continue print(e, end=' ') ```
3
260
A
Adding Digits
PROGRAMMING
1,400
[ "implementation", "math" ]
null
null
Vasya has got two number: *a* and *b*. However, Vasya finds number *a* too short. So he decided to repeat the operation of lengthening number *a* *n* times. One operation of lengthening a number means adding exactly one digit to the number (in the decimal notation) to the right provided that the resulting number is di...
The first line contains three integers: *a*,<=*b*,<=*n* (1<=≤<=*a*,<=*b*,<=*n*<=≤<=105).
In a single line print the integer without leading zeros, which Vasya can get when he applies the lengthening operations to number *a* *n* times. If no such number exists, then print number -1. If there are multiple possible answers, print any of them.
[ "5 4 5\n", "12 11 1\n", "260 150 10\n" ]
[ "524848\n", "121\n", "-1\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "5 4 5", "output": "524848" }, { "input": "12 11 1", "output": "121" }, { "input": "260 150 10", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "78843 5684 42717", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "93248 91435 1133", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "100000 10 64479"...
1,647,451,327
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
25
717
307,200
a,b,n=map(int,input().split(" ")) num=a flag=True for i in range(0,10): if (num*10+i)%b==0: num=num*10+i a=num flag=False break if flag==True: print(-1) else: a*=pow(10,n-1) print(a)
Title: Adding Digits Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Vasya has got two number: *a* and *b*. However, Vasya finds number *a* too short. So he decided to repeat the operation of lengthening number *a* *n* times. One operation of lengthening a number means adding exactly one ...
```python a,b,n=map(int,input().split(" ")) num=a flag=True for i in range(0,10): if (num*10+i)%b==0: num=num*10+i a=num flag=False break if flag==True: print(-1) else: a*=pow(10,n-1) print(a) ```
3
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...
1,697,379,472
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
25
154
0
import math l=[] for i in range(5): ll = list(map(int,input().split())) l.append(ll) m = 0 n = 0 x=0 for i in range(5): a = l[i] for j in range(5): if a[j] == 1: m=i n=j x=1 break if x==1: break M=0 if m...
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 import math l=[] for i in range(5): ll = list(map(int,input().split())) l.append(ll) m = 0 n = 0 x=0 for i in range(5): a = l[i] for j in range(5): if a[j] == 1: m=i n=j x=1 break if x==1: break ...
3
262
A
Roma and Lucky Numbers
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Roma (a popular Russian name that means 'Roman') loves the Little Lvov Elephant's lucky numbers. Let us remind you that lucky numbers are positive integers whose decimal representation only contains lucky digits 4 and 7. For example, numbers 47, 744, 4 are lucky and 5, 17, 467 are not. Roma's got *n* positive integer...
The first line contains two integers *n*, *k* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*k*<=≤<=100). The second line contains *n* integers *a**i* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=109) — the numbers that Roma has. The numbers in the lines are separated by single spaces.
In a single line print a single integer — the answer to the problem.
[ "3 4\n1 2 4\n", "3 2\n447 44 77\n" ]
[ "3\n", "2\n" ]
In the first sample all numbers contain at most four lucky digits, so the answer is 3. In the second sample number 447 doesn't fit in, as it contains more than two lucky digits. All other numbers are fine, so the answer is 2.
500
[ { "input": "3 4\n1 2 4", "output": "3" }, { "input": "3 2\n447 44 77", "output": "2" }, { "input": "2 2\n507978501 180480073", "output": "2" }, { "input": "9 6\n655243746 167613748 1470546 57644035 176077477 56984809 44677 215706823 369042089", "output": "9" }, { ...
1,695,844,512
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
34
92
0
n, k= map(int, input().split()) a = 0 b = 0 x = [str(y) for y in input().split()] for i in x: for j in range(len(i)): if i[j] == "4" or i[j] == "7": a+=1 if a <= k: b+=1 a = 0 else: a = 0 print(b)
Title: Roma and Lucky Numbers Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Roma (a popular Russian name that means 'Roman') loves the Little Lvov Elephant's lucky numbers. Let us remind you that lucky numbers are positive integers whose decimal representation only contains lucky digits...
```python n, k= map(int, input().split()) a = 0 b = 0 x = [str(y) for y in input().split()] for i in x: for j in range(len(i)): if i[j] == "4" or i[j] == "7": a+=1 if a <= k: b+=1 a = 0 else: a = 0 print(b) ```
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...
1,593,360,193
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
50
280
20,172,800
s = input() d = {} for i in range(10): x = input() d[x] = str(i) ans = '' for i in range(8): ans += d[s[i*10 : (i * 10 + 10)]] print(ans)
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 s = input() d = {} for i in range(10): x = input() d[x] = str(i) ans = '' for i in range(8): ans += d[s[i*10 : (i * 10 + 10)]] print(ans) ```
3.892425
960
B
Minimize the error
PROGRAMMING
1,500
[ "data structures", "greedy", "sortings" ]
null
null
You are given two arrays *A* and *B*, each of size *n*. The error, *E*, between these two arrays is defined . You have to perform exactly *k*1 operations on array *A* and exactly *k*2 operations on array *B*. In one operation, you have to choose one element of the array and increase or decrease it by 1. Output the min...
The first line contains three space-separated integers *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=103), *k*1 and *k*2 (0<=≤<=*k*1<=+<=*k*2<=≤<=103, *k*1 and *k*2 are non-negative) — size of arrays and number of operations to perform on *A* and *B* respectively. Second line contains *n* space separated integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (<=-...
Output a single integer — the minimum possible value of after doing exactly *k*1 operations on array *A* and exactly *k*2 operations on array *B*.
[ "2 0 0\n1 2\n2 3\n", "2 1 0\n1 2\n2 2\n", "2 5 7\n3 4\n14 4\n" ]
[ "2", "0", "1" ]
In the first sample case, we cannot perform any operations on *A* or *B*. Therefore the minimum possible error *E* = (1 - 2)<sup class="upper-index">2</sup> + (2 - 3)<sup class="upper-index">2</sup> = 2. In the second sample case, we are required to perform exactly one operation on *A*. In order to minimize error, we...
1,000
[ { "input": "2 0 0\n1 2\n2 3", "output": "2" }, { "input": "2 1 0\n1 2\n2 2", "output": "0" }, { "input": "2 5 7\n3 4\n14 4", "output": "1" }, { "input": "2 0 1\n1 2\n2 2", "output": "0" }, { "input": "2 1 1\n0 0\n1 1", "output": "0" }, { "input": "5 5 ...
1,687,425,660
1,260
Python 3
OK
TESTS
80
46
512,000
n, k1, k2 = map (int, input ().split ()) a = list (map (int, input ().split ())) b = list (map (int, input ().split ())) c = list () for i in range (n) : c.append (abs (a[i] - b[i])) c.sort (reverse = True) for i in range (k1 + k2) : if c[0] <= 0 : c[0] += 1 else : c[0] -= 1 i = 1 while i < n and c[i]...
Title: Minimize the error Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: You are given two arrays *A* and *B*, each of size *n*. The error, *E*, between these two arrays is defined . You have to perform exactly *k*1 operations on array *A* and exactly *k*2 operations on array *B*. In one ...
```python n, k1, k2 = map (int, input ().split ()) a = list (map (int, input ().split ())) b = list (map (int, input ().split ())) c = list () for i in range (n) : c.append (abs (a[i] - b[i])) c.sort (reverse = True) for i in range (k1 + k2) : if c[0] <= 0 : c[0] += 1 else : c[0] -= 1 i = 1 while i < ...
3
762
A
k-th divisor
PROGRAMMING
1,400
[ "math", "number theory" ]
null
null
You are given two integers *n* and *k*. Find *k*-th smallest divisor of *n*, or report that it doesn't exist. Divisor of *n* is any such natural number, that *n* can be divided by it without remainder.
The first line contains two integers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1015, 1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=109).
If *n* has less than *k* divisors, output -1. Otherwise, output the *k*-th smallest divisor of *n*.
[ "4 2\n", "5 3\n", "12 5\n" ]
[ "2\n", "-1\n", "6\n" ]
In the first example, number 4 has three divisors: 1, 2 and 4. The second one is 2. In the second example, number 5 has only two divisors: 1 and 5. The third divisor doesn't exist, so the answer is -1.
0
[ { "input": "4 2", "output": "2" }, { "input": "5 3", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "12 5", "output": "6" }, { "input": "1 1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "866421317361600 26880", "output": "866421317361600" }, { "input": "866421317361600 26881", "ou...
1,512,659,473
2,147,483,647
Python 3
TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED
TESTS
4
2,000
5,529,600
a=list(map(int,input().split())) c=0 i=1 l=0 divisor=0 while i<=a[0]+1 : if c==a[1] : break else : if a[0]%i==0 : c+=1 divisor=i i+=1 elif a[0]%i==a[0] : l+=1 break else : i+=1 if l==0 : ...
Title: k-th divisor Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: You are given two integers *n* and *k*. Find *k*-th smallest divisor of *n*, or report that it doesn't exist. Divisor of *n* is any such natural number, that *n* can be divided by it without remainder. Input Specificatio...
```python a=list(map(int,input().split())) c=0 i=1 l=0 divisor=0 while i<=a[0]+1 : if c==a[1] : break else : if a[0]%i==0 : c+=1 divisor=i i+=1 elif a[0]%i==a[0] : l+=1 break else : i+=1 if ...
0
709
A
Juicer
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Kolya is going to make fresh orange juice. He has *n* oranges of sizes *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n*. Kolya will put them in the juicer in the fixed order, starting with orange of size *a*1, then orange of size *a*2 and so on. To be put in the juicer the orange must have size not exceeding *b*, so if Kolya sees an orange ...
The first line of the input contains three integers *n*, *b* and *d* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100<=000, 1<=≤<=*b*<=≤<=*d*<=≤<=1<=000<=000) — the number of oranges, the maximum size of the orange that fits in the juicer and the value *d*, which determines the condition when the waste section should be emptied. The second line co...
Print one integer — the number of times Kolya will have to empty the waste section.
[ "2 7 10\n5 6\n", "1 5 10\n7\n", "3 10 10\n5 7 7\n", "1 1 1\n1\n" ]
[ "1\n", "0\n", "1\n", "0\n" ]
In the first sample, Kolya will squeeze the juice from two oranges and empty the waste section afterwards. In the second sample, the orange won't fit in the juicer so Kolya will have no juice at all.
500
[ { "input": "2 7 10\n5 6", "output": "1" }, { "input": "1 5 10\n7", "output": "0" }, { "input": "3 10 10\n5 7 7", "output": "1" }, { "input": "1 1 1\n1", "output": "0" }, { "input": "2 951637 951638\n44069 951637", "output": "1" }, { "input": "50 100 12...
1,685,849,308
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
4
46
10,956,800
number_of_oranges, orange_limit_size, waste_limit = map(int, input().split()) amount_waste = 0 oranges = map(int, input().split()) for orange in oranges: if orange < orange_limit_size: amount_waste += orange print(amount_waste // waste_limit)
Title: Juicer Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Kolya is going to make fresh orange juice. He has *n* oranges of sizes *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n*. Kolya will put them in the juicer in the fixed order, starting with orange of size *a*1, then orange of size *a*2 and so on. To b...
```python number_of_oranges, orange_limit_size, waste_limit = map(int, input().split()) amount_waste = 0 oranges = map(int, input().split()) for orange in oranges: if orange < orange_limit_size: amount_waste += orange print(amount_waste // waste_limit) ```
0
78
A
Haiku
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation", "strings" ]
A. Haiku
2
256
Haiku is a genre of Japanese traditional poetry. A haiku poem consists of 17 syllables split into three phrases, containing 5, 7 and 5 syllables correspondingly (the first phrase should contain exactly 5 syllables, the second phrase should contain exactly 7 syllables, and the third phrase should contain exactly 5 syll...
The input data consists of three lines. The length of each line is between 1 and 100, inclusive. The *i*-th line contains the *i*-th phrase of the poem. Each phrase consists of one or more words, which are separated by one or more spaces. A word is a non-empty sequence of lowercase Latin letters. Leading and/or trailin...
Print "YES" (without the quotes) if the poem is a haiku. Otherwise, print "NO" (also without the quotes).
[ "on codeforces \nbeta round is running\n a rustling of keys \n", "how many gallons\nof edo s rain did you drink\n cuckoo\n" ]
[ "YES", "NO" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "on codeforces \nbeta round is running\n a rustling of keys ", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "how many gallons\nof edo s rain did you drink\n cuckoo", "output": "NO" }, { "input": " hatsu shigure\n saru mo komino wo\nhoshige nari", ...
1,689,868,242
2,147,483,647
Python 3
COMPILATION_ERROR
TESTS
0
0
0
s1 = input() s2 = input() s3 = input() vowels = 'aeiou' count = 0 for ch in s1: for ch in s2: for ch in s3: if ch in vowels: count += 1 if s1.count==5 and s2.count==7 and s3.count==5:: print("YES") else: ...
Title: Haiku Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: Haiku is a genre of Japanese traditional poetry. A haiku poem consists of 17 syllables split into three phrases, containing 5, 7 and 5 syllables correspondingly (the first phrase should contain exactly 5 syllables, the second phrase...
```python s1 = input() s2 = input() s3 = input() vowels = 'aeiou' count = 0 for ch in s1: for ch in s2: for ch in s3: if ch in vowels: count += 1 if s1.count==5 and s2.count==7 and s3.count==5:: print("YES") else: ...
-1
31
A
Worms Evolution
PROGRAMMING
1,200
[ "implementation" ]
A. Worms Evolution
2
256
Professor Vasechkin is studying evolution of worms. Recently he put forward hypotheses that all worms evolve by division. There are *n* forms of worms. Worms of these forms have lengths *a*1, *a*2, ..., *a**n*. To prove his theory, professor needs to find 3 different forms that the length of the first form is equal to ...
The first line contains integer *n* (3<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — amount of worm's forms. The second line contains *n* space-separated integers *a**i* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=1000) — lengths of worms of each form.
Output 3 distinct integers *i* *j* *k* (1<=≤<=*i*,<=*j*,<=*k*<=≤<=*n*) — such indexes of worm's forms that *a**i*<==<=*a**j*<=+<=*a**k*. If there is no such triple, output -1. If there are several solutions, output any of them. It possible that *a**j*<==<=*a**k*.
[ "5\n1 2 3 5 7\n", "5\n1 8 1 5 1\n" ]
[ "3 2 1\n", "-1\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "5\n1 2 3 5 7", "output": "3 2 1" }, { "input": "5\n1 8 1 5 1", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "4\n303 872 764 401", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "6\n86 402 133 524 405 610", "output": "6 4 1" }, { "input": "8\n217 779 418 895 996 473 3 22", "output":...
1,610,080,730
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
3
186
0
x=int(input()) f=1 y=sorted(list(map(int,input().split()))) for i in range(x-1): if(y[i]+y[i+1] in y[i+2:]): f=0 print(i+2+1,i+1+1,i+1) break if(f): print("-1")
Title: Worms Evolution Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: Professor Vasechkin is studying evolution of worms. Recently he put forward hypotheses that all worms evolve by division. There are *n* forms of worms. Worms of these forms have lengths *a*1, *a*2, ..., *a**n*. To prove his...
```python x=int(input()) f=1 y=sorted(list(map(int,input().split()))) for i in range(x-1): if(y[i]+y[i+1] in y[i+2:]): f=0 print(i+2+1,i+1+1,i+1) break if(f): print("-1") ```
0
472
A
Design Tutorial: Learn from Math
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "math", "number theory" ]
null
null
One way to create a task is to learn from math. You can generate some random math statement or modify some theorems to get something new and build a new task from that. For example, there is a statement called the "Goldbach's conjecture". It says: "each even number no less than four can be expressed as the sum of two ...
The only line contains an integer *n* (12<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=106).
Output two composite integers *x* and *y* (1<=&lt;<=*x*,<=*y*<=&lt;<=*n*) such that *x*<=+<=*y*<==<=*n*. If there are multiple solutions, you can output any of them.
[ "12\n", "15\n", "23\n", "1000000\n" ]
[ "4 8\n", "6 9\n", "8 15\n", "500000 500000\n" ]
In the first example, 12 = 4 + 8 and both 4, 8 are composite numbers. You can output "6 6" or "8 4" as well. In the second example, 15 = 6 + 9. Note that you can't output "1 14" because 1 is not a composite number.
500
[ { "input": "12", "output": "4 8" }, { "input": "15", "output": "6 9" }, { "input": "23", "output": "8 15" }, { "input": "1000000", "output": "500000 500000" }, { "input": "63874", "output": "4 63870" }, { "input": "14568", "output": "4 14564" }, ...
1,699,130,267
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
COMPILATION_ERROR
TESTS
0
0
0
n=input();m=(n%2*5+4);print m,n-m
Title: Design Tutorial: Learn from Math Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: One way to create a task is to learn from math. You can generate some random math statement or modify some theorems to get something new and build a new task from that. For example, there is a statemen...
```python n=input();m=(n%2*5+4);print m,n-m ```
-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...
1,637,602,495
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
30
92
0
s=input() UC=0 LC=0 for i in s: if(i.islower()): LC=LC+1 elif(i.isupper()): UC=UC+1 if(UC>LC): print(s.upper()) elif(LC>UC): print(s.lower()) elif(LC==UC): print(s.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 s=input() UC=0 LC=0 for i in s: if(i.islower()): LC=LC+1 elif(i.isupper()): UC=UC+1 if(UC>LC): print(s.upper()) elif(LC>UC): print(s.lower()) elif(LC==UC): print(s.lower()) ```
3.977
2
A
Winner
PROGRAMMING
1,500
[ "hashing", "implementation" ]
A. Winner
1
64
The winner of the card game popular in Berland "Berlogging" is determined according to the following rules. If at the end of the game there is only one player with the maximum number of points, he is the winner. The situation becomes more difficult if the number of such players is more than one. During each round a pla...
The first line contains an integer number *n* (1<=<=≤<=<=*n*<=<=≤<=<=1000), *n* is the number of rounds played. Then follow *n* lines, containing the information about the rounds in "name score" format in chronological order, where name is a string of lower-case Latin letters with the length from 1 to 32, and score is ...
Print the name of the winner.
[ "3\nmike 3\nandrew 5\nmike 2\n", "3\nandrew 3\nandrew 2\nmike 5\n" ]
[ "andrew\n", "andrew\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "3\nmike 3\nandrew 5\nmike 2", "output": "andrew" }, { "input": "3\nandrew 3\nandrew 2\nmike 5", "output": "andrew" }, { "input": "5\nkaxqybeultn -352\nmgochgrmeyieyskhuourfg -910\nkaxqybeultn 691\nmgochgrmeyieyskhuourfg -76\nkaxqybeultn -303", "output": "kaxqybeultn" },...
1,665,039,025
2,147,483,647
Python 3
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
0
30
0
dic={} dic_1={} dict={} n=int(input()) for j in range(n): dict[j]=input() if dict[j][:-2] not in dic.keys(): dic[dict[j][:-2]]=int(dict[j][-1]) else: dic[dict[j][:-2]]+=int(dict[j][-1]) s=[a for a in dic.values()] m=max(s) while s.count(m)!=1 and j in range(n): x=dic...
Title: Winner Time Limit: 1 seconds Memory Limit: 64 megabytes Problem Description: The winner of the card game popular in Berland "Berlogging" is determined according to the following rules. If at the end of the game there is only one player with the maximum number of points, he is the winner. The situation becomes...
```python dic={} dic_1={} dict={} n=int(input()) for j in range(n): dict[j]=input() if dict[j][:-2] not in dic.keys(): dic[dict[j][:-2]]=int(dict[j][-1]) else: dic[dict[j][:-2]]+=int(dict[j][-1]) s=[a for a in dic.values()] m=max(s) while s.count(m)!=1 and j in range(n): ...
-1
455
A
Boredom
PROGRAMMING
1,500
[ "dp" ]
null
null
Alex doesn't like boredom. That's why whenever he gets bored, he comes up with games. One long winter evening he came up with a game and decided to play it. Given a sequence *a* consisting of *n* integers. The player can make several steps. In a single step he can choose an element of the sequence (let's denote it *a*...
The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) that shows how many numbers are in Alex's sequence. The second line contains *n* integers *a*1, *a*2, ..., *a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=105).
Print a single integer — the maximum number of points that Alex can earn.
[ "2\n1 2\n", "3\n1 2 3\n", "9\n1 2 1 3 2 2 2 2 3\n" ]
[ "2\n", "4\n", "10\n" ]
Consider the third test example. At first step we need to choose any element equal to 2. After that step our sequence looks like this [2, 2, 2, 2]. Then we do 4 steps, on each step we choose any element equals to 2. In total we earn 10 points.
500
[ { "input": "2\n1 2", "output": "2" }, { "input": "3\n1 2 3", "output": "4" }, { "input": "9\n1 2 1 3 2 2 2 2 3", "output": "10" }, { "input": "5\n3 3 4 5 4", "output": "11" }, { "input": "5\n5 3 5 3 4", "output": "16" }, { "input": "5\n4 2 3 2 5", ...
1,668,614,721
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
47
810
13,209,600
n = int(input()) list1 = list(map(int,input().split())) list2 = [0]*1000001 for i in list1: list2[i] += 1 list3 = [0]*1000001 for q in range(1,1000001): list3[q] = max(list3[q-1],list3[q-2]+q*list2[q]) print(list3[max(list1)])
Title: Boredom Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Alex doesn't like boredom. That's why whenever he gets bored, he comes up with games. One long winter evening he came up with a game and decided to play it. Given a sequence *a* consisting of *n* integers. The player can make ...
```python n = int(input()) list1 = list(map(int,input().split())) list2 = [0]*1000001 for i in list1: list2[i] += 1 list3 = [0]*1000001 for q in range(1,1000001): list3[q] = max(list3[q-1],list3[q-2]+q*list2[q]) print(list3[max(list1)]) ```
3
960
A
Check the string
PROGRAMMING
1,200
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
A has a string consisting of some number of lowercase English letters 'a'. He gives it to his friend B who appends some number of letters 'b' to the end of this string. Since both A and B like the characters 'a' and 'b', they have made sure that at this point, at least one 'a' and one 'b' exist in the string. B now gi...
The first and only line consists of a string $S$ ($ 1 \le |S| \le 5\,000 $). It is guaranteed that the string will only consist of the lowercase English letters 'a', 'b', 'c'.
Print "YES" or "NO", according to the condition.
[ "aaabccc\n", "bbacc\n", "aabc\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "NO\n", "YES\n" ]
Consider first example: the number of 'c' is equal to the number of 'a'. Consider second example: although the number of 'c' is equal to the number of the 'b', the order is not correct. Consider third example: the number of 'c' is equal to the number of 'b'.
500
[ { "input": "aaabccc", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "bbacc", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "aabc", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "aabbcc", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "aaacccbb", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "abc", "output": "YES" }, { "in...
1,540,108,759
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
16
140
204,800
s = input() exist = True for prev, nex in zip(list(s)[:-1], list(s)[1:]): if prev > nex: exist = False anum = s.count("a") bnum = s.count("b") cnum = s.count("c") if anum != cnum and bnum != cnum: exist = False if exist: print("YES") else: print("NO")
Title: Check the string Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: A has a string consisting of some number of lowercase English letters 'a'. He gives it to his friend B who appends some number of letters 'b' to the end of this string. Since both A and B like the characters 'a' and 'b...
```python s = input() exist = True for prev, nex in zip(list(s)[:-1], list(s)[1:]): if prev > nex: exist = False anum = s.count("a") bnum = s.count("b") cnum = s.count("c") if anum != cnum and bnum != cnum: exist = False if exist: print("YES") else: print("NO...
0
295
B
Greg and Graph
PROGRAMMING
1,700
[ "dp", "graphs", "shortest paths" ]
null
null
Greg has a weighed directed graph, consisting of *n* vertices. In this graph any pair of distinct vertices has an edge between them in both directions. Greg loves playing with the graph and now he has invented a new game: - The game consists of *n* steps. - On the *i*-th step Greg removes vertex number *x**i* from t...
The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=500) — the number of vertices in the graph. Next *n* lines contain *n* integers each — the graph adjacency matrix: the *j*-th number in the *i*-th line *a**ij* (1<=≤<=*a**ij*<=≤<=105,<=*a**ii*<==<=0) represents the weight of the edge that goes from vertex *i* to verte...
Print *n* integers — the *i*-th number equals the required sum before the *i*-th step. Please, do not use the %lld specifier to read or write 64-bit integers in C++. It is preferred to use the cin, cout streams of the %I64d specifier.
[ "1\n0\n1\n", "2\n0 5\n4 0\n1 2\n", "4\n0 3 1 1\n6 0 400 1\n2 4 0 1\n1 1 1 0\n4 1 2 3\n" ]
[ "0 ", "9 0 ", "17 23 404 0 " ]
none
1,000
[ { "input": "1\n0\n1", "output": "0 " }, { "input": "2\n0 5\n4 0\n1 2", "output": "9 0 " }, { "input": "4\n0 3 1 1\n6 0 400 1\n2 4 0 1\n1 1 1 0\n4 1 2 3", "output": "17 23 404 0 " }, { "input": "4\n0 57148 51001 13357\n71125 0 98369 67226\n49388 90852 0 66291\n39573 38165 9700...
1,670,860,333
2,147,483,647
Python 3
TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED
TESTS
12
3,000
1,228,800
#Lee la entrada A = [] n = int(input()) for i in range(n): arcos = [] arcos = [int(item) for item in input().split()] A.append(arcos) delnode = [int(item) for item in input().split()] #print(A) sumas = [] for w in range(n-1,-1,-1): #Usamos Floyd-Warshall j = delnode[w] -1 for i in range(len(A...
Title: Greg and Graph Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Greg has a weighed directed graph, consisting of *n* vertices. In this graph any pair of distinct vertices has an edge between them in both directions. Greg loves playing with the graph and now he has invented a new game...
```python #Lee la entrada A = [] n = int(input()) for i in range(n): arcos = [] arcos = [int(item) for item in input().split()] A.append(arcos) delnode = [int(item) for item in input().split()] #print(A) sumas = [] for w in range(n-1,-1,-1): #Usamos Floyd-Warshall j = delnode[w] -1 for i in r...
0
408
A
Line to Cashier
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Little Vasya went to the supermarket to get some groceries. He walked about the supermarket for a long time and got a basket full of products. Now he needs to choose the cashier to pay for the products. There are *n* cashiers at the exit from the supermarket. At the moment the queue for the *i*-th cashier already has ...
The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of cashes in the shop. The second line contains *n* space-separated integers: *k*1,<=*k*2,<=...,<=*k**n* (1<=≤<=*k**i*<=≤<=100), where *k**i* is the number of people in the queue to the *i*-th cashier. The *i*-th of the next *n* lines contains *k**i*...
Print a single integer — the minimum number of seconds Vasya needs to get to the cashier.
[ "1\n1\n1\n", "4\n1 4 3 2\n100\n1 2 2 3\n1 9 1\n7 8\n" ]
[ "20\n", "100\n" ]
In the second test sample, if Vasya goes to the first queue, he gets to the cashier in 100·5 + 15 = 515 seconds. But if he chooses the second queue, he will need 1·5 + 2·5 + 2·5 + 3·5 + 4·15 = 100 seconds. He will need 1·5 + 9·5 + 1·5 + 3·15 = 100 seconds for the third one and 7·5 + 8·5 + 2·15 = 105 seconds for the fou...
500
[ { "input": "1\n1\n1", "output": "20" }, { "input": "4\n1 4 3 2\n100\n1 2 2 3\n1 9 1\n7 8", "output": "100" }, { "input": "4\n5 4 5 5\n3 1 3 1 2\n3 1 1 3\n1 1 1 2 2\n2 2 1 1 3", "output": "100" }, { "input": "5\n5 3 6 6 4\n7 5 3 3 9\n6 8 2\n1 10 8 5 9 2\n9 7 8 5 9 10\n9 8 3 3"...
1,667,661,790
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
20
46
0
n = int(input()) input() times = [] for i in range(n): x = [int(i) for i in input().split()] times.append((sum(x)*5) + len(x)*15) print(min(times))
Title: Line to Cashier Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Little Vasya went to the supermarket to get some groceries. He walked about the supermarket for a long time and got a basket full of products. Now he needs to choose the cashier to pay for the products. There are *n* c...
```python n = int(input()) input() times = [] for i in range(n): x = [int(i) for i in input().split()] times.append((sum(x)*5) + len(x)*15) print(min(times)) ```
3
818
A
Diplomas and Certificates
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation", "math" ]
null
null
There are *n* students who have taken part in an olympiad. Now it's time to award the students. Some of them will receive diplomas, some wiil get certificates, and others won't receive anything. Students with diplomas and certificates are called winners. But there are some rules of counting the number of diplomas and ...
The first (and the only) line of input contains two integers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*k*<=≤<=1012), where *n* is the number of students and *k* is the ratio between the number of certificates and the number of diplomas.
Output three numbers: the number of students with diplomas, the number of students with certificates and the number of students who are not winners in case when the number of winners is maximum possible. It's possible that there are no winners.
[ "18 2\n", "9 10\n", "1000000000000 5\n", "1000000000000 499999999999\n" ]
[ "3 6 9\n", "0 0 9\n", "83333333333 416666666665 500000000002\n", "1 499999999999 500000000000\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "18 2", "output": "3 6 9" }, { "input": "9 10", "output": "0 0 9" }, { "input": "1000000000000 5", "output": "83333333333 416666666665 500000000002" }, { "input": "1000000000000 499999999999", "output": "1 499999999999 500000000000" }, { "input": "1 1",...
1,554,141,229
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
2
93
0
n,k=map(int,input().split()) f=int(n/2) f1=int(f/(k+1)) print(f1,f1*2,n-f1*3)
Title: Diplomas and Certificates Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: There are *n* students who have taken part in an olympiad. Now it's time to award the students. Some of them will receive diplomas, some wiil get certificates, and others won't receive anything. Students with...
```python n,k=map(int,input().split()) f=int(n/2) f1=int(f/(k+1)) print(f1,f1*2,n-f1*3) ```
0
334
B
Eight Point Sets
PROGRAMMING
1,400
[ "sortings" ]
null
null
Gerald is very particular to eight point sets. He thinks that any decent eight point set must consist of all pairwise intersections of three distinct integer vertical straight lines and three distinct integer horizontal straight lines, except for the average of these nine points. In other words, there must be three int...
The input consists of eight lines, the *i*-th line contains two space-separated integers *x**i* and *y**i* (0<=≤<=*x**i*,<=*y**i*<=≤<=106). You do not have any other conditions for these points.
In a single line print word "respectable", if the given set of points corresponds to Gerald's decency rules, and "ugly" otherwise.
[ "0 0\n0 1\n0 2\n1 0\n1 2\n2 0\n2 1\n2 2\n", "0 0\n1 0\n2 0\n3 0\n4 0\n5 0\n6 0\n7 0\n", "1 1\n1 2\n1 3\n2 1\n2 2\n2 3\n3 1\n3 2\n" ]
[ "respectable\n", "ugly\n", "ugly\n" ]
none
1,000
[ { "input": "0 0\n0 1\n0 2\n1 0\n1 2\n2 0\n2 1\n2 2", "output": "respectable" }, { "input": "0 0\n1 0\n2 0\n3 0\n4 0\n5 0\n6 0\n7 0", "output": "ugly" }, { "input": "1 1\n1 2\n1 3\n2 1\n2 2\n2 3\n3 1\n3 2", "output": "ugly" }, { "input": "0 0\n0 0\n0 0\n0 0\n0 0\n0 0\n0 0\n0 0...
1,457,188,910
2,147,483,647
Python 3
COMPILATION_ERROR
TESTS
0
0
0
#include <iostream> #include <set> int main() { std::set<int> set1, set2; for(int i = 0; i < 8; i++) { int x, y; std::cin >> x >> y; set1.insert(x); set2.insert(y); } if(set1.size() == 3 && set2.size() == 3) std::cout << "respectable" << std::endl; else std::cout << "ugly" << std::endl; ret...
Title: Eight Point Sets Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Gerald is very particular to eight point sets. He thinks that any decent eight point set must consist of all pairwise intersections of three distinct integer vertical straight lines and three distinct integer horizonta...
```python #include <iostream> #include <set> int main() { std::set<int> set1, set2; for(int i = 0; i < 8; i++) { int x, y; std::cin >> x >> y; set1.insert(x); set2.insert(y); } if(set1.size() == 3 && set2.size() == 3) std::cout << "respectable" << std::endl; else std::cout << "ugly" << std::e...
-1
776
B
Sherlock and his girlfriend
PROGRAMMING
1,200
[ "constructive algorithms", "number theory" ]
null
null
Sherlock has a new girlfriend (so unlike him!). Valentine's day is coming and he wants to gift her some jewelry. He bought *n* pieces of jewelry. The *i*-th piece has price equal to *i*<=+<=1, that is, the prices of the jewelry are 2,<=3,<=4,<=... *n*<=+<=1. Watson gave Sherlock a challenge to color these jewelry pie...
The only line contains single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100000) — the number of jewelry pieces.
The first line of output should contain a single integer *k*, the minimum number of colors that can be used to color the pieces of jewelry with the given constraints. The next line should consist of *n* space-separated integers (between 1 and *k*) that specify the color of each piece in the order of increasing price. ...
[ "3\n", "4\n" ]
[ "2\n1 1 2 ", "2\n2 1 1 2\n" ]
In the first input, the colors for first, second and third pieces of jewelry having respective prices 2, 3 and 4 are 1, 1 and 2 respectively. In this case, as 2 is a prime divisor of 4, colors of jewelry having prices 2 and 4 must be distinct.
1,000
[ { "input": "3", "output": "2\n1 1 2 " }, { "input": "4", "output": "2\n1 1 2 1 " }, { "input": "17", "output": "2\n1 1 2 1 2 1 2 2 2 1 2 1 2 2 2 1 2 " }, { "input": "25", "output": "2\n1 1 2 1 2 1 2 2 2 1 2 1 2 2 2 1 2 1 2 2 2 1 2 2 2 " }, { "input": "85", "ou...
1,644,469,331
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
53
233
307,200
n = int(input()) sieve = [False]*(n+2) two = False for i in range(2,n+2): if not sieve[i]: for j in range(2,(n+1)//i + 1): # To hit one below sieve[i*j] = True two = True # paint prime numbers with different and others with different colors if two: print(2) else: print(1) for...
Title: Sherlock and his girlfriend Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Sherlock has a new girlfriend (so unlike him!). Valentine's day is coming and he wants to gift her some jewelry. He bought *n* pieces of jewelry. The *i*-th piece has price equal to *i*<=+<=1, that is, the ...
```python n = int(input()) sieve = [False]*(n+2) two = False for i in range(2,n+2): if not sieve[i]: for j in range(2,(n+1)//i + 1): # To hit one below sieve[i*j] = True two = True # paint prime numbers with different and others with different colors if two: print(2) else: pr...
3
0
none
none
none
0
[ "none" ]
null
null
A positive integer is called a 2-3-integer, if it is equal to 2*x*·3*y* for some non-negative integers *x* and *y*. In other words, these integers are such integers that only have 2 and 3 among their prime divisors. For example, integers 1, 6, 9, 16 and 108 — are 2-3 integers, while 5, 10, 21 and 120 are not. Print th...
The only line contains two integers *l* and *r* (1<=≤<=*l*<=≤<=*r*<=≤<=2·109).
Print a single integer the number of 2-3-integers on the segment [*l*,<=*r*].
[ "1 10\n", "100 200\n", "1 2000000000\n" ]
[ "7\n", "5\n", "326\n" ]
In the first example the 2-3-integers are 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8 and 9. In the second example the 2-3-integers are 108, 128, 144, 162 and 192.
0
[ { "input": "1 10", "output": "7" }, { "input": "100 200", "output": "5" }, { "input": "1 2000000000", "output": "326" }, { "input": "1088391168 1934917632", "output": "17" }, { "input": "1088391167 1934917632", "output": "17" }, { "input": "1088391169 ...
1,521,303,638
2,738
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
26
93
7,065,600
from math import log def solve(l, r): s = set() for i in range(int(log(r, 2) + 1)): for j in range(int(log(r, 3) + 1)): x = 2**i * 3**j if l <= x <= r: s.add(x) return len(s) def test(): assert solve(1, 10) == 7 assert solve(100, 200) == 5 assert...
Title: none Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: A positive integer is called a 2-3-integer, if it is equal to 2*x*·3*y* for some non-negative integers *x* and *y*. In other words, these integers are such integers that only have 2 and 3 among their prime divisors. For example, i...
```python from math import log def solve(l, r): s = set() for i in range(int(log(r, 2) + 1)): for j in range(int(log(r, 3) + 1)): x = 2**i * 3**j if l <= x <= r: s.add(x) return len(s) def test(): assert solve(1, 10) == 7 assert solve(100, 200) == 5 ...
0
716
A
Crazy Computer
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
ZS the Coder is coding on a crazy computer. If you don't type in a word for a *c* consecutive seconds, everything you typed disappear! More formally, if you typed a word at second *a* and then the next word at second *b*, then if *b*<=-<=*a*<=≤<=*c*, just the new word is appended to other words on the screen. If *b*<...
The first line contains two integers *n* and *c* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100<=000,<=1<=≤<=*c*<=≤<=109) — the number of words ZS the Coder typed and the crazy computer delay respectively. The next line contains *n* integers *t*1,<=*t*2,<=...,<=*t**n* (1<=≤<=*t*1<=&lt;<=*t*2<=&lt;<=...<=&lt;<=*t**n*<=≤<=109), where *t**i* denote...
Print a single positive integer, the number of words that remain on the screen after all *n* words was typed, in other words, at the second *t**n*.
[ "6 5\n1 3 8 14 19 20\n", "6 1\n1 3 5 7 9 10\n" ]
[ "3", "2" ]
The first sample is already explained in the problem statement. For the second sample, after typing the first word at the second 1, it disappears because the next word is typed at the second 3 and 3 - 1 &gt; 1. Similarly, only 1 word will remain at the second 9. Then, a word is typed at the second 10, so there will be...
500
[ { "input": "6 5\n1 3 8 14 19 20", "output": "3" }, { "input": "6 1\n1 3 5 7 9 10", "output": "2" }, { "input": "1 1\n1000000000", "output": "1" }, { "input": "5 5\n1 7 12 13 14", "output": "4" }, { "input": "2 1000000000\n1 1000000000", "output": "2" }, { ...
1,629,310,530
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
81
124
15,155,200
#loser707 n,c=map(int,input().split()) a=list(map(int,input().split())) l=[] ans=0 for x,y in zip(a,a[1:]): l.append(y-x) for i in l: if i<=c: ans=ans+1 else: ans=0 print(ans+1)
Title: Crazy Computer Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: ZS the Coder is coding on a crazy computer. If you don't type in a word for a *c* consecutive seconds, everything you typed disappear! More formally, if you typed a word at second *a* and then the next word at second *...
```python #loser707 n,c=map(int,input().split()) a=list(map(int,input().split())) l=[] ans=0 for x,y in zip(a,a[1:]): l.append(y-x) for i in l: if i<=c: ans=ans+1 else: ans=0 print(ans+1) ```
3
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" }, ...
1,618,691,464
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
19
124
0
s = input() t = list(input()) move = 1 i = 0 while t: if t[0] == s[i]: move += 1 i += 1 t.pop(0) print(move)
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 s = input() t = list(input()) move = 1 i = 0 while t: if t[0] == s[i]: move += 1 i += 1 t.pop(0) print(move) ```
3
0
none
none
none
0
[ "none" ]
null
null
This is an interactive problem. Natasha is going to fly to Mars. Finally, Natasha sat in the rocket. She flies, flies... but gets bored. She wishes to arrive to Mars already! So she decides to find something to occupy herself. She couldn't think of anything better to do than to calculate the distance to the red planet...
The first line contains two integers $m$ and $n$ ($1 \le m \le 10^9$, $1 \le n \le 30$) — the maximum distance to Mars and the number of elements in the sequence $p$.
none
[ "5 2\n1\n-1\n-1\n1\n0\n" ]
[ "1\n2\n4\n5\n3\n" ]
In the example, hacking would look like this: 5 2 3 1 0 This means that the current distance to Mars is equal to $3$, Natasha knows that it does not exceed $5$, and the rocket answers in order: correctly, incorrectly, correctly, incorrectly ... Really: on the first query ($1$) the correct answer is $1$, the rocket...
0
[ { "input": "5 2 3\n1 0", "output": "3 queries, x=3" }, { "input": "1 1 1\n1", "output": "1 queries, x=1" }, { "input": "3 2 3\n1 0", "output": "4 queries, x=3" }, { "input": "6 3 5\n1 1 1", "output": "5 queries, x=5" }, { "input": "10 4 3\n0 0 1 0", "output": ...
1,532,716,016
2,147,483,647
Python 3
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
0
155
1,024,000
import sys, math from fractions import gcd from itertools import permutations debug = 0 if debug: f = open("input.txt", "r") input = f.readline else: input = sys.stdin.readline def mp(): # global input return list(map(int, input().split())) def _main(): m, n = mp() p = [0...
Title: none Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: This is an interactive problem. Natasha is going to fly to Mars. Finally, Natasha sat in the rocket. She flies, flies... but gets bored. She wishes to arrive to Mars already! So she decides to find something to occupy herself. Sh...
```python import sys, math from fractions import gcd from itertools import permutations debug = 0 if debug: f = open("input.txt", "r") input = f.readline else: input = sys.stdin.readline def mp(): # global input return list(map(int, input().split())) def _main(): m, n = mp() ...
-1
1,009
E
Intercity Travelling
PROGRAMMING
2,000
[ "combinatorics", "math", "probabilities" ]
null
null
Leha is planning his journey from Moscow to Saratov. He hates trains, so he has decided to get from one city to another by car. The path from Moscow to Saratov can be represented as a straight line (well, it's not that straight in reality, but in this problem we will consider it to be straight), and the distance betwe...
The first line contains one number $n$ ($1 \le n \le 10^6$) — the distance from Moscow to Saratov. The second line contains $n$ integer numbers $a_1$, $a_2$, ..., $a_n$ ($1 \le a_1 \le a_2 \le \dots \le a_n \le 10^6$), where $a_i$ is the difficulty of $i$-th kilometer after Leha has rested.
Print one number — $p \cdot 2^{n - 1}$, taken modulo $998244353$.
[ "2\n1 2\n", "4\n1 3 3 7\n" ]
[ "5\n", "60\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "2\n1 2", "output": "5" }, { "input": "4\n1 3 3 7", "output": "60" }, { "input": "100\n3 3 3 4 7 8 8 8 9 9 10 12 12 13 14 14 15 15 16 17 17 20 21 21 22 22 23 25 29 31 36 37 37 38 39 40 41 41 41 42 43 44 45 46 46 47 47 49 49 49 51 52 52 53 54 55 59 59 59 60 62 63 63 64 66 69 70...
1,658,429,968
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED
TESTS
3
1,500
20,480,000
n = int(input()) a = list(map(int, input().split())) res = 0 for t in range(1, n + 1): dp = [[0 for i in range(n + 1)] for j in range(n + 1)] dp[0][0] = 1 for i in range(1, n + 1): for j in range(n + 1): for x in range(1, t): if i - x < 0: br...
Title: Intercity Travelling Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Leha is planning his journey from Moscow to Saratov. He hates trains, so he has decided to get from one city to another by car. The path from Moscow to Saratov can be represented as a straight line (well, it's not...
```python n = int(input()) a = list(map(int, input().split())) res = 0 for t in range(1, n + 1): dp = [[0 for i in range(n + 1)] for j in range(n + 1)] dp[0][0] = 1 for i in range(1, n + 1): for j in range(n + 1): for x in range(1, t): if i - x < 0: ...
0
465
A
inc ARG
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Sergey is testing a next-generation processor. Instead of bytes the processor works with memory cells consisting of *n* bits. These bits are numbered from 1 to *n*. An integer is stored in the cell in the following way: the least significant bit is stored in the first bit of the cell, the next significant bit is stored...
The first line contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of bits in the cell. The second line contains a string consisting of *n* characters — the initial state of the cell. The first character denotes the state of the first bit of the cell. The second character denotes the second least significan...
Print a single integer — the number of bits in the cell which change their state after we add 1 to the cell.
[ "4\n1100\n", "4\n1111\n" ]
[ "3\n", "4\n" ]
In the first sample the cell ends up with value 0010, in the second sample — with 0000.
500
[ { "input": "4\n1100", "output": "3" }, { "input": "4\n1111", "output": "4" }, { "input": "1\n0", "output": "1" }, { "input": "1\n1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "2\n00", "output": "1" }, { "input": "2\n01", "output": "1" }, { "input": "2\n1...
1,410,104,004
204
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
PRETESTS
0
46
0
n=input() s=input() i=1 while s[i]=='1': i+=1 if i==len(s): break print(i)
Title: inc ARG Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Sergey is testing a next-generation processor. Instead of bytes the processor works with memory cells consisting of *n* bits. These bits are numbered from 1 to *n*. An integer is stored in the cell in the following way: the lea...
```python n=input() s=input() i=1 while s[i]=='1': i+=1 if i==len(s): break print(i) ```
0
228
A
Is your horseshoe on the other hoof?
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Valera the Horse is going to the party with friends. He has been following the fashion trends for a while, and he knows that it is very popular to wear all horseshoes of different color. Valera has got four horseshoes left from the last year, but maybe some of them have the same color. In this case he needs to go to th...
The first line contains four space-separated integers *s*1,<=*s*2,<=*s*3,<=*s*4 (1<=≤<=*s*1,<=*s*2,<=*s*3,<=*s*4<=≤<=109) — the colors of horseshoes Valera has. Consider all possible colors indexed with integers.
Print a single integer — the minimum number of horseshoes Valera needs to buy.
[ "1 7 3 3\n", "7 7 7 7\n" ]
[ "1\n", "3\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "1 7 3 3", "output": "1" }, { "input": "7 7 7 7", "output": "3" }, { "input": "81170865 673572653 756938629 995577259", "output": "0" }, { "input": "3491663 217797045 522540872 715355328", "output": "0" }, { "input": "251590420 586975278 916631563 58697...
1,689,740,765
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
34
62
0
n=list(map(int, input().split())) st=set(n) print(len(n)-len(st))
Title: Is your horseshoe on the other hoof? Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Valera the Horse is going to the party with friends. He has been following the fashion trends for a while, and he knows that it is very popular to wear all horseshoes of different color. Valera has ...
```python n=list(map(int, input().split())) st=set(n) print(len(n)-len(st)) ```
3
697
A
Pineapple Incident
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "implementation", "math" ]
null
null
Ted has a pineapple. This pineapple is able to bark like a bulldog! At time *t* (in seconds) it barks for the first time. Then every *s* seconds after it, it barks twice with 1 second interval. Thus it barks at times *t*, *t*<=+<=*s*, *t*<=+<=*s*<=+<=1, *t*<=+<=2*s*, *t*<=+<=2*s*<=+<=1, etc. Barney woke up in the morn...
The first and only line of input contains three integers *t*, *s* and *x* (0<=≤<=*t*,<=*x*<=≤<=109, 2<=≤<=*s*<=≤<=109) — the time the pineapple barks for the first time, the pineapple barking interval, and the time Barney wants to eat the pineapple respectively.
Print a single "YES" (without quotes) if the pineapple will bark at time *x* or a single "NO" (without quotes) otherwise in the only line of output.
[ "3 10 4\n", "3 10 3\n", "3 8 51\n", "3 8 52\n" ]
[ "NO\n", "YES\n", "YES\n", "YES\n" ]
In the first and the second sample cases pineapple will bark at moments 3, 13, 14, ..., so it won't bark at the moment 4 and will bark at the moment 3. In the third and fourth sample cases pineapple will bark at moments 3, 11, 12, 19, 20, 27, 28, 35, 36, 43, 44, 51, 52, 59, ..., so it will bark at both moments 51 and ...
500
[ { "input": "3 10 4", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "3 10 3", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "3 8 51", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "3 8 52", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "456947336 740144 45", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "33 232603 599417964", "ou...
1,697,770,612
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
0
46
0
t, s, x = map(int, input().split()) c = 0 ct = t while ct <= x: #print(abs(ct-t)) if abs(ct-t) < 2: print("YES") exit() ct += s print("NO")
Title: Pineapple Incident Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Ted has a pineapple. This pineapple is able to bark like a bulldog! At time *t* (in seconds) it barks for the first time. Then every *s* seconds after it, it barks twice with 1 second interval. Thus it barks at times...
```python t, s, x = map(int, input().split()) c = 0 ct = t while ct <= x: #print(abs(ct-t)) if abs(ct-t) < 2: print("YES") exit() ct += s print("NO") ```
0
559
A
Gerald's Hexagon
PROGRAMMING
1,600
[ "brute force", "geometry", "math" ]
null
null
Gerald got a very curious hexagon for his birthday. The boy found out that all the angles of the hexagon are equal to . Then he measured the length of its sides, and found that each of them is equal to an integer number of centimeters. There the properties of the hexagon ended and Gerald decided to draw on it. He pain...
The first and the single line of the input contains 6 space-separated integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=*a*3,<=*a*4,<=*a*5 and *a*6 (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=1000) — the lengths of the sides of the hexagons in centimeters in the clockwise order. It is guaranteed that the hexagon with the indicated properties and the exactly such sides ex...
Print a single integer — the number of triangles with the sides of one 1 centimeter, into which the hexagon is split.
[ "1 1 1 1 1 1\n", "1 2 1 2 1 2\n" ]
[ "6\n", "13\n" ]
This is what Gerald's hexagon looks like in the first sample: <img class="tex-graphics" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/84d193e27b02c38eb1eadc536602a2ec0b9f9519.png" style="max-width: 100.0%;max-height: 100.0%;"/> And that's what it looks like in the second sample: <img class="tex-graphics" src="https://espress...
500
[ { "input": "1 1 1 1 1 1", "output": "6" }, { "input": "1 2 1 2 1 2", "output": "13" }, { "input": "2 4 5 3 3 6", "output": "83" }, { "input": "45 19 48 18 46 21", "output": "6099" }, { "input": "66 6 65 6 66 5", "output": "5832" }, { "input": "7 5 4 8 ...
1,672,988,161
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
2
46
0
import sys input = sys.stdin.readline w = list(map(int, input().split())) for i in range(6): if w[1] == w[5] and w[2] == w[4]: c = 0 a, b = w[0], w[3] for j in range(w[1]): c += 2*a + 1 a += 1 for j in range(w[2]): c += 2*b + 1 ...
Title: Gerald's Hexagon Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Gerald got a very curious hexagon for his birthday. The boy found out that all the angles of the hexagon are equal to . Then he measured the length of its sides, and found that each of them is equal to an integer numbe...
```python import sys input = sys.stdin.readline w = list(map(int, input().split())) for i in range(6): if w[1] == w[5] and w[2] == w[4]: c = 0 a, b = w[0], w[3] for j in range(w[1]): c += 2*a + 1 a += 1 for j in range(w[2]): c += 2*b +...
0
432
A
Choosing Teams
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "greedy", "implementation", "sortings" ]
null
null
The Saratov State University Olympiad Programmers Training Center (SSU OPTC) has *n* students. For each student you know the number of times he/she has participated in the ACM ICPC world programming championship. According to the ACM ICPC rules, each person can participate in the world championship at most 5 times. Th...
The first line contains two integers, *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=2000; 1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=5). The next line contains *n* integers: *y*1,<=*y*2,<=...,<=*y**n* (0<=≤<=*y**i*<=≤<=5), where *y**i* shows the number of times the *i*-th person participated in the ACM ICPC world championship.
Print a single number — the answer to the problem.
[ "5 2\n0 4 5 1 0\n", "6 4\n0 1 2 3 4 5\n", "6 5\n0 0 0 0 0 0\n" ]
[ "1\n", "0\n", "2\n" ]
In the first sample only one team could be made: the first, the fourth and the fifth participants. In the second sample no teams could be created. In the third sample two teams could be created. Any partition into two teams fits.
500
[ { "input": "5 2\n0 4 5 1 0", "output": "1" }, { "input": "6 4\n0 1 2 3 4 5", "output": "0" }, { "input": "6 5\n0 0 0 0 0 0", "output": "2" }, { "input": "3 4\n0 1 0", "output": "1" }, { "input": "3 4\n0 2 0", "output": "0" }, { "input": "6 5\n0 0 0 0 0...
1,690,557,152
2,147,483,647
Python 3
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
2
30
0
def f(k, members): team=0 members.sort() while(members[0]<=(5-k) and members[1]<=(5-k) and members[2]<=(5-k)): members = members[3:] team+=1 return team nk = input().split(" ") mem = input().split(" ") mem = [int(i) for i in mem] print(f(int(nk[1]),mem))
Title: Choosing Teams Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: The Saratov State University Olympiad Programmers Training Center (SSU OPTC) has *n* students. For each student you know the number of times he/she has participated in the ACM ICPC world programming championship. Accordi...
```python def f(k, members): team=0 members.sort() while(members[0]<=(5-k) and members[1]<=(5-k) and members[2]<=(5-k)): members = members[3:] team+=1 return team nk = input().split(" ") mem = input().split(" ") mem = [int(i) for i in mem] print(f(int(nk[1]),mem)) ```
-1
711
A
Bus to Udayland
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "brute force", "implementation" ]
null
null
ZS the Coder and Chris the Baboon are travelling to Udayland! To get there, they have to get on the special IOI bus. The IOI bus has *n* rows of seats. There are 4 seats in each row, and the seats are separated into pairs by a walkway. When ZS and Chris came, some places in the bus was already occupied. ZS and Chris a...
The first line of the input contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000) — the number of rows of seats in the bus. Then, *n* lines follow. Each line contains exactly 5 characters, the first two of them denote the first pair of seats in the row, the third character denotes the walkway (it always equals '|') and t...
If it is possible for Chris and ZS to sit at neighbouring empty seats, print "YES" (without quotes) in the first line. In the next *n* lines print the bus configuration, where the characters in the pair of seats for Chris and ZS is changed with characters '+'. Thus the configuration should differ from the input one by ...
[ "6\nOO|OX\nXO|XX\nOX|OO\nXX|OX\nOO|OO\nOO|XX\n", "4\nXO|OX\nXO|XX\nOX|OX\nXX|OX\n", "5\nXX|XX\nXX|XX\nXO|OX\nXO|OO\nOX|XO\n" ]
[ "YES\n++|OX\nXO|XX\nOX|OO\nXX|OX\nOO|OO\nOO|XX\n", "NO\n", "YES\nXX|XX\nXX|XX\nXO|OX\nXO|++\nOX|XO\n" ]
Note that the following is an incorrect configuration for the first sample case because the seats must be in the same pair. O+|+X XO|XX OX|OO XX|OX OO|OO OO|XX
500
[ { "input": "6\nOO|OX\nXO|XX\nOX|OO\nXX|OX\nOO|OO\nOO|XX", "output": "YES\n++|OX\nXO|XX\nOX|OO\nXX|OX\nOO|OO\nOO|XX" }, { "input": "4\nXO|OX\nXO|XX\nOX|OX\nXX|OX", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "5\nXX|XX\nXX|XX\nXO|OX\nXO|OO\nOX|XO", "output": "YES\nXX|XX\nXX|XX\nXO|OX\nXO|++\nOX|XO" ...
1,631,048,321
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
0
61
6,963,200
w = True for i in range(int(input())): t = input() if t[0] == t[1] == 'O' and w == True: w = False print('++|'+ t[3] + t[4]) elif t[3] == t[4] == 'O' and w == True: w = False print(t[3] + t[4] + '|++') else: print(t)
Title: Bus to Udayland Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: ZS the Coder and Chris the Baboon are travelling to Udayland! To get there, they have to get on the special IOI bus. The IOI bus has *n* rows of seats. There are 4 seats in each row, and the seats are separated into pai...
```python w = True for i in range(int(input())): t = input() if t[0] == t[1] == 'O' and w == True: w = False print('++|'+ t[3] + t[4]) elif t[3] == t[4] == 'O' and w == True: w = False print(t[3] + t[4] + '|++') else: print(t) ```
0
59
A
Word
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation", "strings" ]
A. Word
2
256
Vasya is very upset that many people on the Net mix uppercase and lowercase letters in one word. That's why he decided to invent an extension for his favorite browser that would change the letters' register in every word so that it either only consisted of lowercase letters or, vice versa, only of uppercase ones. At th...
The first line contains a word *s* — it consists of uppercase and lowercase Latin letters and possesses the length from 1 to 100.
Print the corrected word *s*. If the given word *s* has strictly more uppercase letters, make the word written in the uppercase register, otherwise - in the lowercase one.
[ "HoUse\n", "ViP\n", "maTRIx\n" ]
[ "house\n", "VIP\n", "matrix\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "HoUse", "output": "house" }, { "input": "ViP", "output": "VIP" }, { "input": "maTRIx", "output": "matrix" }, { "input": "BNHWpnpawg", "output": "bnhwpnpawg" }, { "input": "VTYGP", "output": "VTYGP" }, { "input": "CHNenu", "output": "chn...
1,682,605,273
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
30
122
0
word = input() big_letter = 0 small_letter = 0 for i in word: if ord(i) < 95: big_letter += 1 else: small_letter += 1 print(word.lower() if small_letter >= big_letter else 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() big_letter = 0 small_letter = 0 for i in word: if ord(i) < 95: big_letter += 1 else: small_letter += 1 print(word.lower() if small_letter >= big_letter else word.upper()) ```
3.9695
977
A
Wrong Subtraction
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Little girl Tanya is learning how to decrease a number by one, but she does it wrong with a number consisting of two or more digits. Tanya subtracts one from a number by the following algorithm: - if the last digit of the number is non-zero, she decreases the number by one; - if the last digit of the number is zero,...
The first line of the input contains two integer numbers $n$ and $k$ ($2 \le n \le 10^9$, $1 \le k \le 50$) — the number from which Tanya will subtract and the number of subtractions correspondingly.
Print one integer number — the result of the decreasing $n$ by one $k$ times. It is guaranteed that the result will be positive integer number.
[ "512 4\n", "1000000000 9\n" ]
[ "50\n", "1\n" ]
The first example corresponds to the following sequence: $512 \rightarrow 511 \rightarrow 510 \rightarrow 51 \rightarrow 50$.
0
[ { "input": "512 4", "output": "50" }, { "input": "1000000000 9", "output": "1" }, { "input": "131203 11", "output": "12" }, { "input": "999999999 50", "output": "9999" }, { "input": "999999999 49", "output": "99990" }, { "input": "131203 9", "outpu...
1,696,433,373
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
11
46
0
s = input() l = list(map(int, s.split())) for i in range(0,l[1]): if(l[0]%10==0): l[0]=l[0]//10 else: l[0]=l[0]-1 print(l[0])
Title: Wrong Subtraction Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Little girl Tanya is learning how to decrease a number by one, but she does it wrong with a number consisting of two or more digits. Tanya subtracts one from a number by the following algorithm: - if the last digit ...
```python s = input() l = list(map(int, s.split())) for i in range(0,l[1]): if(l[0]%10==0): l[0]=l[0]//10 else: l[0]=l[0]-1 print(l[0]) ```
3