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3.99
486
A
Calculating Function
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation", "math" ]
null
null
For a positive integer *n* let's define a function *f*: *f*(*n*)<==<=<=-<=1<=+<=2<=-<=3<=+<=..<=+<=(<=-<=1)*n**n* Your task is to calculate *f*(*n*) for a given integer *n*.
The single line contains the positive integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1015).
Print *f*(*n*) in a single line.
[ "4\n", "5\n" ]
[ "2\n", "-3\n" ]
*f*(4) =  - 1 + 2 - 3 + 4 = 2 *f*(5) =  - 1 + 2 - 3 + 4 - 5 =  - 3
500
[ { "input": "4", "output": "2" }, { "input": "5", "output": "-3" }, { "input": "1000000000", "output": "500000000" }, { "input": "1000000001", "output": "-500000001" }, { "input": "1000000000000000", "output": "500000000000000" }, { "input": "100", ...
1,698,346,210
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
OK
TESTS
39
46
0
z=int(input()) f=0 if z&1==1: z+=1 z=-(z//2) else: z=z//2 print(z)
Title: Calculating Function Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: For a positive integer *n* let's define a function *f*: *f*(*n*)<==<=<=-<=1<=+<=2<=-<=3<=+<=..<=+<=(<=-<=1)*n**n* Your task is to calculate *f*(*n*) for a given integer *n*. Input Specification: The single line...
```python z=int(input()) f=0 if z&1==1: z+=1 z=-(z//2) else: z=z//2 print(z) ```
3
120
B
Quiz League
PROGRAMMING
1,100
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
A team quiz game called "What? Where? When?" is very popular in Berland. The game is centered on two teams competing. They are the team of six Experts versus the team of the Audience. A person from the audience asks a question and the experts are allowed a minute on brainstorming and finding the right answer to the que...
The first line contains two positive integers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000 and 1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=*n*) — the numbers of sectors on the table and the number of the sector where the arrow is pointing. The second line contains *n* numbers: *a**i*<==<=0 if the question from sector *i* has already been asked and *a**i*<==<=1 ...
Print the single number — the number of the sector containing the question the experts will be asked. It is guaranteed that the answer exists, that is that not all the questions have already been asked.
[ "5 5\n0 1 0 1 0\n", "2 1\n1 1\n" ]
[ "2\n", "1\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "5 5\n0 1 0 1 0", "output": "2" }, { "input": "2 1\n1 1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "3 2\n1 0 0", "output": "1" }, { "input": "3 3\n0 1 0", "output": "2" }, { "input": "1 1\n1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "6 3\n0 0 1 1 0 1", "output":...
1,604,430,666
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
30
140
0
import sys sys.stdin = open(r'input.txt', 'r') sys.stdout = open(r'output.txt', 'w') n, k = map(int, input().split()) a = list(map(int, input().split())) i = k-1; while (True): if i == n: i = 0 continue if a[i] == 1: print(i+1) break i += 1
Title: Quiz League Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: A team quiz game called "What? Where? When?" is very popular in Berland. The game is centered on two teams competing. They are the team of six Experts versus the team of the Audience. A person from the audience asks a quest...
```python import sys sys.stdin = open(r'input.txt', 'r') sys.stdout = open(r'output.txt', 'w') n, k = map(int, input().split()) a = list(map(int, input().split())) i = k-1; while (True): if i == n: i = 0 continue if a[i] == 1: print(i+1) break i += 1 ``...
3
834
B
The Festive Evening
PROGRAMMING
1,100
[ "data structures", "implementation" ]
null
null
It's the end of July – the time when a festive evening is held at Jelly Castle! Guests from all over the kingdom gather here to discuss new trends in the world of confectionery. Yet some of the things discussed here are not supposed to be disclosed to the general public: the information can cause discord in the kingdom...
Two integers are given in the first string: the number of guests *n* and the number of guards *k* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=106, 1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=26). In the second string, *n* uppercase English letters *s*1*s*2... *s**n* are given, where *s**i* is the entrance used by the *i*-th guest.
Output «YES» if at least one door was unguarded during some time, and «NO» otherwise. You can output each letter in arbitrary case (upper or lower).
[ "5 1\nAABBB\n", "5 1\nABABB\n" ]
[ "NO\n", "YES\n" ]
In the first sample case, the door A is opened right before the first guest's arrival and closed when the second guest enters the castle. The door B is opened right before the arrival of the third guest, and closed after the fifth one arrives. One guard can handle both doors, as the first one is closed before the secon...
1,000
[ { "input": "5 1\nAABBB", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "5 1\nABABB", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "26 1\nABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "27 1\nABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZA", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "5 2\nABACA", "output": "NO" ...
1,585,726,076
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
0
109
0
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- # Baqir Khan # Software Engineer (Backend) from sys import stdin inp = stdin.readline n, k = map(int, inp().split()) s = inp()[:-1] out_time = [-1] * 26 in_time = [-1] * 26 for i in range(n): if in_time[ord(s[i]) - ord("A")] == -1: in_time[ord(s[i]) - ord("A")] = i for i in ran...
Title: The Festive Evening Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: It's the end of July – the time when a festive evening is held at Jelly Castle! Guests from all over the kingdom gather here to discuss new trends in the world of confectionery. Yet some of the things discussed here...
```python # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- # Baqir Khan # Software Engineer (Backend) from sys import stdin inp = stdin.readline n, k = map(int, inp().split()) s = inp()[:-1] out_time = [-1] * 26 in_time = [-1] * 26 for i in range(n): if in_time[ord(s[i]) - ord("A")] == -1: in_time[ord(s[i]) - ord("A")] = i fo...
0
109
A
Lucky Sum of Digits
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "brute force", "implementation" ]
A. Lucky Sum of Digits
2
256
Petya loves lucky numbers. We all know that lucky numbers are the positive integers whose decimal representations contain only the lucky digits 4 and 7. For example, numbers 47, 744, 4 are lucky and 5, 17, 467 are not. Petya wonders eagerly what minimum lucky number has the sum of digits equal to *n*. Help him cope wi...
The single line contains an integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=106) — the sum of digits of the required lucky number.
Print on the single line the result — the minimum lucky number, whose sum of digits equals *n*. If such number does not exist, print -1.
[ "11\n", "10\n" ]
[ "47\n", "-1\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "11", "output": "47" }, { "input": "10", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "64", "output": "4477777777" }, { "input": "1", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "4", "output": "4" }, { "input": "7", "output": "7" }, { "input": "12", "outpu...
1,600,514,142
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
51
310
614,400
n=int(input()) a=n%7 x=n//7 while (a%4): a=a+7 x=x-1 y=a//4 if max(0,x)*7+max(y,0)*4!=n: print (-1) else: print (('4'*y)+('7'*x))
Title: Lucky Sum of Digits Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: Petya loves lucky numbers. We all know that lucky numbers are the positive integers whose decimal representations contain only the lucky digits 4 and 7. For example, numbers 47, 744, 4 are lucky and 5, 17, 467 are not. ...
```python n=int(input()) a=n%7 x=n//7 while (a%4): a=a+7 x=x-1 y=a//4 if max(0,x)*7+max(y,0)*4!=n: print (-1) else: print (('4'*y)+('7'*x)) ```
3.921356
822
A
I'm bored with life
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation", "math", "number theory" ]
null
null
Holidays have finished. Thanks to the help of the hacker Leha, Noora managed to enter the university of her dreams which is located in a town Pavlopolis. It's well known that universities provide students with dormitory for the period of university studies. Consequently Noora had to leave Vičkopolis and move to Pavlopo...
The first and single line contains two integers *A* and *B* (1<=≤<=*A*,<=*B*<=≤<=109,<=*min*(*A*,<=*B*)<=≤<=12).
Print a single integer denoting the greatest common divisor of integers *A*! and *B*!.
[ "4 3\n" ]
[ "6\n" ]
Consider the sample. 4! = 1·2·3·4 = 24. 3! = 1·2·3 = 6. The greatest common divisor of integers 24 and 6 is exactly 6.
500
[ { "input": "4 3", "output": "6" }, { "input": "10 399603090", "output": "3628800" }, { "input": "6 973151934", "output": "720" }, { "input": "2 841668075", "output": "2" }, { "input": "7 415216919", "output": "5040" }, { "input": "3 283733059", "ou...
1,638,195,083
2,147,483,647
Python 3
TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED
TESTS
1
1,000
204,800
a,b=map(int,input().split()) za=a zb=b af=1 bf=1 for i in range(a): af*=za za-=1 for i in range(b): bf*=zb zb-=1 f=min(af,bf) while True: if af%f==0 and bf%f==0: print(f) break f-=1
Title: I'm bored with life Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Holidays have finished. Thanks to the help of the hacker Leha, Noora managed to enter the university of her dreams which is located in a town Pavlopolis. It's well known that universities provide students with dormi...
```python a,b=map(int,input().split()) za=a zb=b af=1 bf=1 for i in range(a): af*=za za-=1 for i in range(b): bf*=zb zb-=1 f=min(af,bf) while True: if af%f==0 and bf%f==0: print(f) break f-=1 ```
0
844
A
Diversity
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "greedy", "implementation", "strings" ]
null
null
Calculate the minimum number of characters you need to change in the string *s*, so that it contains at least *k* different letters, or print that it is impossible. String *s* consists only of lowercase Latin letters, and it is allowed to change characters only to lowercase Latin letters too.
First line of input contains string *s*, consisting only of lowercase Latin letters (1<=≤<=|*s*|<=≤<=1000, |*s*| denotes the length of *s*). Second line of input contains integer *k* (1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=26).
Print single line with a minimum number of necessary changes, or the word «impossible» (without quotes) if it is impossible.
[ "yandex\n6\n", "yahoo\n5\n", "google\n7\n" ]
[ "0\n", "1\n", "impossible\n" ]
In the first test case string contains 6 different letters, so we don't need to change anything. In the second test case string contains 4 different letters: {'*a*', '*h*', '*o*', '*y*'}. To get 5 different letters it is necessary to change one occurrence of '*o*' to some letter, which doesn't occur in the string, for...
500
[ { "input": "yandex\n6", "output": "0" }, { "input": "yahoo\n5", "output": "1" }, { "input": "google\n7", "output": "impossible" }, { "input": "a\n1", "output": "0" }, { "input": "z\n2", "output": "impossible" }, { "input": "fwgfrwgkuwghfiruhewgirueguhe...
1,503,597,256
4,756
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
CHALLENGES
0
46
0
s=[i for i in input()] n=int(input()) if len(s)<n: print('impossible') else: s=len(set(s)) print(n-s)
Title: Diversity Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Calculate the minimum number of characters you need to change in the string *s*, so that it contains at least *k* different letters, or print that it is impossible. String *s* consists only of lowercase Latin letters, and it...
```python s=[i for i in input()] n=int(input()) if len(s)<n: print('impossible') else: s=len(set(s)) print(n-s) ```
0
769
A
Year of University Entrance
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "*special", "implementation", "sortings" ]
null
null
There is the faculty of Computer Science in Berland. In the social net "TheContact!" for each course of this faculty there is the special group whose name equals the year of university entrance of corresponding course of students at the university. Each of students joins the group of his course and joins all groups f...
The first line contains the positive odd integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=5) — the number of groups which Igor joined. The next line contains *n* distinct integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (2010<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=2100) — years of student's university entrance for each group in which Igor is the member. It is guaranteed tha...
Print the year of Igor's university entrance.
[ "3\n2014 2016 2015\n", "1\n2050\n" ]
[ "2015\n", "2050\n" ]
In the first test the value *x* = 1. Igor entered the university in 2015. So he joined groups members of which are students who entered the university in 2014, 2015 and 2016. In the second test the value *x* = 0. Igor entered only the group which corresponds to the year of his university entrance.
500
[ { "input": "3\n2014 2016 2015", "output": "2015" }, { "input": "1\n2050", "output": "2050" }, { "input": "1\n2010", "output": "2010" }, { "input": "1\n2011", "output": "2011" }, { "input": "3\n2010 2011 2012", "output": "2011" }, { "input": "3\n2049 20...
1,593,340,849
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
45
155
20,172,800
n = int(input()) l = [int(x) for x in input().split()] l.sort() print(l[n//2])
Title: Year of University Entrance Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: There is the faculty of Computer Science in Berland. In the social net "TheContact!" for each course of this faculty there is the special group whose name equals the year of university entrance of correspond...
```python n = int(input()) l = [int(x) for x in input().split()] l.sort() print(l[n//2]) ```
3
468
C
Hack it!
PROGRAMMING
2,500
[ "binary search", "constructive algorithms", "math" ]
null
null
Little X has met the following problem recently. Let's define *f*(*x*) as the sum of digits in decimal representation of number *x* (for example, *f*(1234)<==<=1<=+<=2<=+<=3<=+<=4). You are to calculate Of course Little X has solved this problem quickly, has locked it, and then has tried to hack others. He has seen...
The first line contains a single integer *a* (1<=≤<=*a*<=≤<=1018).
Print two integers: *l*,<=*r* (1<=≤<=*l*<=≤<=*r*<=&lt;<=10200) — the required test data. Leading zeros aren't allowed. It's guaranteed that the solution exists.
[ "46\n", "126444381000032\n" ]
[ "1 10\n", "2333333 2333333333333\n" ]
none
1,500
[ { "input": "46", "output": "1 10" }, { "input": "126444381000032", "output": "2333333 2333333333333" }, { "input": "69645082595", "output": "613752823618441225798858488535 713259406474207764329704856394" }, { "input": "70602205995", "output": "11 2492213340204320744986569...
1,635,324,634
2,147,483,647
Python 3
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
0
15
4,198,400
n = int(input()) yu = 81000000000000000001 % a k = n - yu ed = 1000000000000000000 + k print(k, ed)
Title: Hack it! Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Little X has met the following problem recently. Let's define *f*(*x*) as the sum of digits in decimal representation of number *x* (for example, *f*(1234)<==<=1<=+<=2<=+<=3<=+<=4). You are to calculate Of course Little X ...
```python n = int(input()) yu = 81000000000000000001 % a k = n - yu ed = 1000000000000000000 + k print(k, ed) ```
-1
551
A
GukiZ and Contest
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "brute force", "implementation", "sortings" ]
null
null
Professor GukiZ likes programming contests. He especially likes to rate his students on the contests he prepares. Now, he has decided to prepare a new contest. In total, *n* students will attend, and before the start, every one of them has some positive integer rating. Students are indexed from 1 to *n*. Let's denote...
The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=2000), number of GukiZ's students. The second line contains *n* numbers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=... *a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=2000) where *a**i* is the rating of *i*-th student (1<=≤<=*i*<=≤<=*n*).
In a single line, print the position after the end of the contest for each of *n* students in the same order as they appear in the input.
[ "3\n1 3 3\n", "1\n1\n", "5\n3 5 3 4 5\n" ]
[ "3 1 1\n", "1\n", "4 1 4 3 1\n" ]
In the first sample, students 2 and 3 are positioned first (there is no other student with higher rating), and student 1 is positioned third since there are two students with higher rating. In the second sample, first student is the only one on the contest. In the third sample, students 2 and 5 share the first positi...
500
[ { "input": "3\n1 3 3", "output": "3 1 1" }, { "input": "1\n1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "5\n3 5 3 4 5", "output": "4 1 4 3 1" }, { "input": "7\n1 3 5 4 2 2 1", "output": "6 3 1 2 4 4 6" }, { "input": "11\n5 6 4 2 9 7 6 6 6 6 7", "output": "9 4 10 11 1 2 4 4...
1,476,351,266
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
36
93
4,915,200
import sys n = int(input()) alist = list(map(int, sys.stdin.readline().split())) blist = sorted(alist)[::-1] clist = [str(blist.index(a)+1) for a in alist] print(' '.join(clist))
Title: GukiZ and Contest Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Professor GukiZ likes programming contests. He especially likes to rate his students on the contests he prepares. Now, he has decided to prepare a new contest. In total, *n* students will attend, and before the star...
```python import sys n = int(input()) alist = list(map(int, sys.stdin.readline().split())) blist = sorted(alist)[::-1] clist = [str(blist.index(a)+1) for a in alist] print(' '.join(clist)) ```
3
315
B
Sereja and Array
PROGRAMMING
1,200
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Sereja has got an array, consisting of *n* integers, *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n*. Sereja is an active boy, so he is now going to complete *m* operations. Each operation will have one of the three forms: 1. Make *v**i*-th array element equal to *x**i*. In other words, perform the assignment *a**v**i*<==<=*x**i*. 1. In...
The first line contains integers *n*, *m* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=105). The second line contains *n* space-separated integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=109) — the original array. Next *m* lines describe operations, the *i*-th line describes the *i*-th operation. The first number in the *i*-th line is i...
For each third type operation print value *a**q**i*. Print the values in the order, in which the corresponding queries follow in the input.
[ "10 11\n1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10\n3 2\n3 9\n2 10\n3 1\n3 10\n1 1 10\n2 10\n2 10\n3 1\n3 10\n3 9\n" ]
[ "2\n9\n11\n20\n30\n40\n39\n" ]
none
1,000
[ { "input": "10 11\n1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10\n3 2\n3 9\n2 10\n3 1\n3 10\n1 1 10\n2 10\n2 10\n3 1\n3 10\n3 9", "output": "2\n9\n11\n20\n30\n40\n39" }, { "input": "1 3\n1\n1 1 2\n2 1\n3 1", "output": "3" }, { "input": "1 1\n1\n3 1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "6 6\n202714501 613423...
1,694,705,915
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED
TESTS
10
1,000
11,980,800
n,m = map(int, input().split()) a = list(map(int, input().split())) x = 0 for _ in range(m): b = list(map(int, input().split())) if b[0] == 1: a[b[1]-1] = b[2]-x elif b[0] == 2: x += b[1] else: print(a[b[1]-1]+x)
Title: Sereja and Array Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Sereja has got an array, consisting of *n* integers, *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n*. Sereja is an active boy, so he is now going to complete *m* operations. Each operation will have one of the three forms: 1. Make *v**i*...
```python n,m = map(int, input().split()) a = list(map(int, input().split())) x = 0 for _ in range(m): b = list(map(int, input().split())) if b[0] == 1: a[b[1]-1] = b[2]-x elif b[0] == 2: x += b[1] else: print(a[b[1]-1]+x) ```
0
263
A
Beautiful Matrix
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
You've got a 5<=×<=5 matrix, consisting of 24 zeroes and a single number one. Let's index the matrix rows by numbers from 1 to 5 from top to bottom, let's index the matrix columns by numbers from 1 to 5 from left to right. In one move, you are allowed to apply one of the two following transformations to the matrix: 1....
The input consists of five lines, each line contains five integers: the *j*-th integer in the *i*-th line of the input represents the element of the matrix that is located on the intersection of the *i*-th row and the *j*-th column. It is guaranteed that the matrix consists of 24 zeroes and a single number one.
Print a single integer — the minimum number of moves needed to make the matrix beautiful.
[ "0 0 0 0 0\n0 0 0 0 1\n0 0 0 0 0\n0 0 0 0 0\n0 0 0 0 0\n", "0 0 0 0 0\n0 0 0 0 0\n0 1 0 0 0\n0 0 0 0 0\n0 0 0 0 0\n" ]
[ "3\n", "1\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "0 0 0 0 0\n0 0 0 0 1\n0 0 0 0 0\n0 0 0 0 0\n0 0 0 0 0", "output": "3" }, { "input": "0 0 0 0 0\n0 0 0 0 0\n0 1 0 0 0\n0 0 0 0 0\n0 0 0 0 0", "output": "1" }, { "input": "0 0 0 0 0\n0 0 0 0 0\n0 0 1 0 0\n0 0 0 0 0\n0 0 0 0 0", "output": "0" }, { "input": "0 0 0 0 0...
1,695,645,621
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
25
92
0
#263a #2300011863 张骏逸 for i in range(5): l=list(map(str,input().split())) if '1' in l:#双重循环也可以找1,但是不如in x=i;y=l.index('1') dis=abs(x-2)+abs(y-2) print(dis)
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 #263a #2300011863 张骏逸 for i in range(5): l=list(map(str,input().split())) if '1' in l:#双重循环也可以找1,但是不如in x=i;y=l.index('1') dis=abs(x-2)+abs(y-2) print(dis) ```
3
126
B
Password
PROGRAMMING
1,700
[ "binary search", "dp", "hashing", "string suffix structures", "strings" ]
null
null
Asterix, Obelix and their temporary buddies Suffix and Prefix has finally found the Harmony temple. However, its doors were firmly locked and even Obelix had no luck opening them. A little later they found a string *s*, carved on a rock below the temple's gates. Asterix supposed that that's the password that opens the...
You are given the string *s* whose length can vary from 1 to 106 (inclusive), consisting of small Latin letters.
Print the string *t*. If a suitable *t* string does not exist, then print "Just a legend" without the quotes.
[ "fixprefixsuffix\n", "abcdabc\n" ]
[ "fix", "Just a legend" ]
none
1,000
[ { "input": "fixprefixsuffix", "output": "fix" }, { "input": "abcdabc", "output": "Just a legend" }, { "input": "qwertyqwertyqwerty", "output": "qwerty" }, { "input": "papapapap", "output": "papap" }, { "input": "aaaaaaaaaa", "output": "aaaaaaaa" }, { "...
1,598,596,416
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
14
278
0
#code s=input() s=s.lower() n=len(s) pi=[0]*n ls=[0]*26 m=0;i=1 while i<n: if s[i]==s[m]: m+=1 pi[i]=m i+=1 else: if m: m=pi[m-1] else: pi[i]=0 i+=1 cr=pi[n-1] if cr==0: print("Just a legend") else: an=s[n-...
Title: Password Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Asterix, Obelix and their temporary buddies Suffix and Prefix has finally found the Harmony temple. However, its doors were firmly locked and even Obelix had no luck opening them. A little later they found a string *s*, carve...
```python #code s=input() s=s.lower() n=len(s) pi=[0]*n ls=[0]*26 m=0;i=1 while i<n: if s[i]==s[m]: m+=1 pi[i]=m i+=1 else: if m: m=pi[m-1] else: pi[i]=0 i+=1 cr=pi[n-1] if cr==0: print("Just a legend") else: ...
0
584
A
Olesya and Rodion
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "math" ]
null
null
Olesya loves numbers consisting of *n* digits, and Rodion only likes numbers that are divisible by *t*. Find some number that satisfies both of them. Your task is: given the *n* and *t* print an integer strictly larger than zero consisting of *n* digits that is divisible by *t*. If such number doesn't exist, print <=-...
The single line contains two numbers, *n* and *t* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100, 2<=≤<=*t*<=≤<=10) — the length of the number and the number it should be divisible by.
Print one such positive number without leading zeroes, — the answer to the problem, or <=-<=1, if such number doesn't exist. If there are multiple possible answers, you are allowed to print any of them.
[ "3 2\n" ]
[ "712" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "3 2", "output": "222" }, { "input": "2 2", "output": "22" }, { "input": "4 3", "output": "3333" }, { "input": "5 3", "output": "33333" }, { "input": "10 7", "output": "7777777777" }, { "input": "2 9", "output": "99" }, { "input"...
1,687,940,824
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
5
46
0
n, m = map(int, input().split()) if m > n: print(-1) else: print(n * str(m))
Title: Olesya and Rodion Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Olesya loves numbers consisting of *n* digits, and Rodion only likes numbers that are divisible by *t*. Find some number that satisfies both of them. Your task is: given the *n* and *t* print an integer strictly larg...
```python n, m = map(int, input().split()) if m > n: print(-1) else: print(n * str(m)) ```
0
0
none
none
none
0
[ "none" ]
null
null
Vasya has *n* items lying in a line. The items are consecutively numbered by numbers from 1 to *n* in such a way that the leftmost item has number 1, the rightmost item has number *n*. Each item has a weight, the *i*-th item weights *w**i* kilograms. Vasya needs to collect all these items, however he won't do it by hi...
The first line contains five integers *n*,<=*l*,<=*r*,<=*Q**l*,<=*Q**r* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105;<=1<=≤<=*l*,<=*r*<=≤<=100;<=1<=≤<=*Q**l*,<=*Q**r*<=≤<=104). The second line contains *n* integers *w*1,<=*w*2,<=...,<=*w**n* (1<=≤<=*w**i*<=≤<=100).
In the single line print a single number — the answer to the problem.
[ "3 4 4 19 1\n42 3 99\n", "4 7 2 3 9\n1 2 3 4\n" ]
[ "576\n", "34\n" ]
Consider the first sample. As *l* = *r*, we can take an item in turns: first from the left side, then from the right one and last item from the left. In total the robot spends 4·42 + 4·99 + 4·3 = 576 energy units. The second sample. The optimal solution is to take one item from the right, then one item from the left a...
0
[ { "input": "3 4 4 19 1\n42 3 99", "output": "576" }, { "input": "4 7 2 3 9\n1 2 3 4", "output": "34" }, { "input": "2 100 100 10000 10000\n100 100", "output": "20000" }, { "input": "2 3 4 5 6\n1 2", "output": "11" }, { "input": "1 78 94 369 10000\n93", "output...
1,587,235,200
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
4
155
0
from sys import stdin from itertools import accumulate def arr_sum(arr): return list(accumulate(arr, lambda x, y: x + y)) rints = lambda: [int(x) for x in stdin.readline().split()] n, l, r, ql, qr = rints() w, ans = [0] + rints(), float('inf') mem = arr_sum(w) for i in range(n): s1, s2 = mem[...
Title: none Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Vasya has *n* items lying in a line. The items are consecutively numbered by numbers from 1 to *n* in such a way that the leftmost item has number 1, the rightmost item has number *n*. Each item has a weight, the *i*-th item weigh...
```python from sys import stdin from itertools import accumulate def arr_sum(arr): return list(accumulate(arr, lambda x, y: x + y)) rints = lambda: [int(x) for x in stdin.readline().split()] n, l, r, ql, qr = rints() w, ans = [0] + rints(), float('inf') mem = arr_sum(w) for i in range(n): s1,...
0
478
B
Random Teams
PROGRAMMING
1,300
[ "combinatorics", "constructive algorithms", "greedy", "math" ]
null
null
*n* participants of the competition were split into *m* teams in some manner so that each team has at least one participant. After the competition each pair of participants from the same team became friends. Your task is to write a program that will find the minimum and the maximum number of pairs of friends that coul...
The only line of input contains two integers *n* and *m*, separated by a single space (1<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=109) — the number of participants and the number of teams respectively.
The only line of the output should contain two integers *k**min* and *k**max* — the minimum possible number of pairs of friends and the maximum possible number of pairs of friends respectively.
[ "5 1\n", "3 2\n", "6 3\n" ]
[ "10 10\n", "1 1\n", "3 6\n" ]
In the first sample all the participants get into one team, so there will be exactly ten pairs of friends. In the second sample at any possible arrangement one team will always have two participants and the other team will always have one participant. Thus, the number of pairs of friends will always be equal to one. ...
1,000
[ { "input": "5 1", "output": "10 10" }, { "input": "3 2", "output": "1 1" }, { "input": "6 3", "output": "3 6" }, { "input": "5 3", "output": "2 3" }, { "input": "10 2", "output": "20 36" }, { "input": "10 6", "output": "4 10" }, { "input": ...
1,687,733,770
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
0
93
2,048,000
import math def solve(n, m): upper = math.ceil(n/m) lower = math.floor(n/m) # print(lower, upper) groups = [] for i in range(m): if (m-i)*lower == n-sum(groups): print(i) groups += [lower for _ in range(m-i)] break else: groups.appe...
Title: Random Teams Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: *n* participants of the competition were split into *m* teams in some manner so that each team has at least one participant. After the competition each pair of participants from the same team became friends. Your task is ...
```python import math def solve(n, m): upper = math.ceil(n/m) lower = math.floor(n/m) # print(lower, upper) groups = [] for i in range(m): if (m-i)*lower == n-sum(groups): print(i) groups += [lower for _ in range(m-i)] break else: g...
-1
960
A
Check the string
PROGRAMMING
1,200
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
A has a string consisting of some number of lowercase English letters 'a'. He gives it to his friend B who appends some number of letters 'b' to the end of this string. Since both A and B like the characters 'a' and 'b', they have made sure that at this point, at least one 'a' and one 'b' exist in the string. B now gi...
The first and only line consists of a string $S$ ($ 1 \le |S| \le 5\,000 $). It is guaranteed that the string will only consist of the lowercase English letters 'a', 'b', 'c'.
Print "YES" or "NO", according to the condition.
[ "aaabccc\n", "bbacc\n", "aabc\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "NO\n", "YES\n" ]
Consider first example: the number of 'c' is equal to the number of 'a'. Consider second example: although the number of 'c' is equal to the number of the 'b', the order is not correct. Consider third example: the number of 'c' is equal to the number of 'b'.
500
[ { "input": "aaabccc", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "bbacc", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "aabc", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "aabbcc", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "aaacccbb", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "abc", "output": "YES" }, { "in...
1,618,841,215
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
5
62
0
#problem90 s = input() if s[:1] == 'a': if s.count('a')==s.count('c') or s.count('b')==s.count('c'): print('YES') else: print('NO') 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 #problem90 s = input() if s[:1] == 'a': if s.count('a')==s.count('c') or s.count('b')==s.count('c'): print('YES') else: print('NO') else: print('NO') ```
0
404
A
Valera and X
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Valera is a little boy. Yesterday he got a huge Math hometask at school, so Valera didn't have enough time to properly learn the English alphabet for his English lesson. Unfortunately, the English teacher decided to have a test on alphabet today. At the test Valera got a square piece of squared paper. The length of the...
The first line contains integer *n* (3<=≤<=*n*<=&lt;<=300; *n* is odd). Each of the next *n* lines contains *n* small English letters — the description of Valera's paper.
Print string "YES", if the letters on the paper form letter "X". Otherwise, print string "NO". Print the strings without quotes.
[ "5\nxooox\noxoxo\nsoxoo\noxoxo\nxooox\n", "3\nwsw\nsws\nwsw\n", "3\nxpx\npxp\nxpe\n" ]
[ "NO\n", "YES\n", "NO\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "5\nxooox\noxoxo\nsoxoo\noxoxo\nxooox", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "3\nwsw\nsws\nwsw", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "3\nxpx\npxp\nxpe", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "5\nliiil\nilili\niilii\nilili\nliiil", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "7\nbwccccb\nck...
1,674,965,245
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
17
77
3,993,600
import sys from math import ceil,floor,sqrt,log,dist from collections import defaultdict from operator import itemgetter rmi=lambda:map(int,input().split()) rs=lambda:input() ri=lambda:int(rs()) inf=float('inf') def f(): n=ri() mtr=[] for i in range(n): s=rs() if i==0: ...
Title: Valera and X Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Valera is a little boy. Yesterday he got a huge Math hometask at school, so Valera didn't have enough time to properly learn the English alphabet for his English lesson. Unfortunately, the English teacher decided to have a...
```python import sys from math import ceil,floor,sqrt,log,dist from collections import defaultdict from operator import itemgetter rmi=lambda:map(int,input().split()) rs=lambda:input() ri=lambda:int(rs()) inf=float('inf') def f(): n=ri() mtr=[] for i in range(n): s=rs() if i==0:...
0
988
A
Diverse Team
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "brute force", "implementation" ]
null
null
There are $n$ students in a school class, the rating of the $i$-th student on Codehorses is $a_i$. You have to form a team consisting of $k$ students ($1 \le k \le n$) such that the ratings of all team members are distinct. If it is impossible to form a suitable team, print "NO" (without quotes). Otherwise print "YES"...
The first line contains two integers $n$ and $k$ ($1 \le k \le n \le 100$) — the number of students and the size of the team you have to form. The second line contains $n$ integers $a_1, a_2, \dots, a_n$ ($1 \le a_i \le 100$), where $a_i$ is the rating of $i$-th student.
If it is impossible to form a suitable team, print "NO" (without quotes). Otherwise print "YES", and then print $k$ distinct integers from $1$ to $n$ which should be the indices of students in the team you form. All the ratings of the students in the team should be distinct. You may print the indices in any order. If t...
[ "5 3\n15 13 15 15 12\n", "5 4\n15 13 15 15 12\n", "4 4\n20 10 40 30\n" ]
[ "YES\n1 2 5 \n", "NO\n", "YES\n1 2 3 4 \n" ]
All possible answers for the first example: - {1 2 5} - {2 3 5} - {2 4 5} Note that the order does not matter.
0
[ { "input": "5 3\n15 13 15 15 12", "output": "YES\n1 2 5 " }, { "input": "5 4\n15 13 15 15 12", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "4 4\n20 10 40 30", "output": "YES\n1 2 3 4 " }, { "input": "1 1\n1", "output": "YES\n1 " }, { "input": "100 53\n16 17 1 2 27 5 9 9 53 24 17...
1,678,511,896
256
Python 3
OK
TESTS
10
31
0
n,k = list(map(int,input().split())) arr = list(map(int,input().split())) ln = len(set(arr)) st = list(set(arr)) if ln<k: print("NO") else: ans =[] for i in range(k): ans.append(arr.index(st[i])+1) print('YES') print(*ans)
Title: Diverse Team Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: There are $n$ students in a school class, the rating of the $i$-th student on Codehorses is $a_i$. You have to form a team consisting of $k$ students ($1 \le k \le n$) such that the ratings of all team members are distinct...
```python n,k = list(map(int,input().split())) arr = list(map(int,input().split())) ln = len(set(arr)) st = list(set(arr)) if ln<k: print("NO") else: ans =[] for i in range(k): ans.append(arr.index(st[i])+1) print('YES') print(*ans) ```
3
518
B
Tanya and Postcard
PROGRAMMING
1,400
[ "greedy", "implementation", "strings" ]
null
null
Little Tanya decided to present her dad a postcard on his Birthday. She has already created a message — string *s* of length *n*, consisting of uppercase and lowercase English letters. Tanya can't write yet, so she found a newspaper and decided to cut out the letters and glue them into the postcard to achieve string *s...
The first line contains line *s* (1<=≤<=|*s*|<=≤<=2·105), consisting of uppercase and lowercase English letters — the text of Tanya's message. The second line contains line *t* (|*s*|<=≤<=|*t*|<=≤<=2·105), consisting of uppercase and lowercase English letters — the text written in the newspaper. Here |*a*| means the ...
Print two integers separated by a space: - the first number is the number of times Tanya shouts "YAY!" while making the message, - the second number is the number of times Tanya says "WHOOPS" while making the message.
[ "AbC\nDCbA\n", "ABC\nabc\n", "abacaba\nAbaCaBA\n" ]
[ "3 0\n", "0 3\n", "3 4\n" ]
none
1,000
[ { "input": "AbC\nDCbA", "output": "3 0" }, { "input": "ABC\nabc", "output": "0 3" }, { "input": "abacaba\nAbaCaBA", "output": "3 4" }, { "input": "zzzzz\nZZZZZ", "output": "0 5" }, { "input": "zzzZZZ\nZZZzzZ", "output": "5 1" }, { "input": "abcdefghijk...
1,690,901,910
2,147,483,647
Python 3
TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED
TESTS
7
2,000
5,632,000
def letrasIguais(p1, p2): p1 = sorted(p1) p2 = sorted(p2) y, w = 0, 0 iguais = True for repe in range(2): for letter in range(len(p1)-1, -1, -1): for letter2 in range(len(p2)-1, -1, -1): if iguais: if p1[letter] == p2[letter2] : ...
Title: Tanya and Postcard Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Little Tanya decided to present her dad a postcard on his Birthday. She has already created a message — string *s* of length *n*, consisting of uppercase and lowercase English letters. Tanya can't write yet, so she f...
```python def letrasIguais(p1, p2): p1 = sorted(p1) p2 = sorted(p2) y, w = 0, 0 iguais = True for repe in range(2): for letter in range(len(p1)-1, -1, -1): for letter2 in range(len(p2)-1, -1, -1): if iguais: if p1[letter] == p2[letter2] : ...
0
442
A
Borya and Hanabi
PROGRAMMING
1,700
[ "bitmasks", "brute force", "implementation" ]
null
null
Have you ever played Hanabi? If not, then you've got to try it out! This problem deals with a simplified version of the game. Overall, the game has 25 types of cards (5 distinct colors and 5 distinct values). Borya is holding *n* cards. The game is somewhat complicated by the fact that everybody sees Borya's cards exc...
The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of Borya's cards. The next line contains the descriptions of *n* cards. The description of each card consists of exactly two characters. The first character shows the color (overall this position can contain five distinct letters — R, G, B, Y, W). The...
Print a single integer — the minimum number of hints that the other players should make.
[ "2\nG3 G3\n", "4\nG4 R4 R3 B3\n", "5\nB1 Y1 W1 G1 R1\n" ]
[ "0\n", "2\n", "4\n" ]
In the first sample Borya already knows for each card that it is a green three. In the second sample we can show all fours and all red cards. In the third sample you need to make hints about any four colors.
500
[ { "input": "2\nG3 G3", "output": "0" }, { "input": "4\nG4 R4 R3 B3", "output": "2" }, { "input": "5\nB1 Y1 W1 G1 R1", "output": "4" }, { "input": "10\nY4 B1 R3 G5 R5 W3 W5 W2 R1 Y1", "output": "6" }, { "input": "3\nG4 G3 B4", "output": "2" }, { "input"...
1,525,611,664
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
54
171
7,475,200
from itertools import chain, combinations from copy import deepcopy def powerset(iterable): s = list(iterable) return chain.from_iterable(combinations(s, r) for r in range(len(s)+1)) n = int(input()) locations = input().split() matrixG = [[0]*5 for i in range(5)] for i in locations: if i[0] == "R":...
Title: Borya and Hanabi Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Have you ever played Hanabi? If not, then you've got to try it out! This problem deals with a simplified version of the game. Overall, the game has 25 types of cards (5 distinct colors and 5 distinct values). Borya is...
```python from itertools import chain, combinations from copy import deepcopy def powerset(iterable): s = list(iterable) return chain.from_iterable(combinations(s, r) for r in range(len(s)+1)) n = int(input()) locations = input().split() matrixG = [[0]*5 for i in range(5)] for i in locations: if i[...
3
525
C
Ilya and Sticks
PROGRAMMING
1,600
[ "greedy", "math", "sortings" ]
null
null
In the evening, after the contest Ilya was bored, and he really felt like maximizing. He remembered that he had a set of *n* sticks and an instrument. Each stick is characterized by its length *l**i*. Ilya decided to make a rectangle from the sticks. And due to his whim, he decided to make rectangles in such a way tha...
The first line of the input contains a positive integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) — the number of the available sticks. The second line of the input contains *n* positive integers *l**i* (2<=≤<=*l**i*<=≤<=106) — the lengths of the sticks.
The first line of the output must contain a single non-negative integer — the maximum total area of the rectangles that Ilya can make from the available sticks.
[ "4\n2 4 4 2\n", "4\n2 2 3 5\n", "4\n100003 100004 100005 100006\n" ]
[ "8\n", "0\n", "10000800015\n" ]
none
1,000
[ { "input": "4\n2 4 4 2", "output": "8" }, { "input": "4\n2 2 3 5", "output": "0" }, { "input": "4\n100003 100004 100005 100006", "output": "10000800015" }, { "input": "8\n5 3 3 3 3 4 4 4", "output": "25" }, { "input": "10\n123 124 123 124 2 2 2 2 9 9", "output...
1,597,144,414
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
4
156
20,275,200
from collections import Counter n = int(input()) v = list(map(int ,input().split())) temp = dict(Counter(v)) rec = [] for item1,item2 in temp.items(): l_temp = [] l_temp.append(item1) l_temp.append(item2) rec.append(l_temp) rec.sort(reverse=True) ans = 0 for i in range(0,len(rec)): an...
Title: Ilya and Sticks Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: In the evening, after the contest Ilya was bored, and he really felt like maximizing. He remembered that he had a set of *n* sticks and an instrument. Each stick is characterized by its length *l**i*. Ilya decided to m...
```python from collections import Counter n = int(input()) v = list(map(int ,input().split())) temp = dict(Counter(v)) rec = [] for item1,item2 in temp.items(): l_temp = [] l_temp.append(item1) l_temp.append(item2) rec.append(l_temp) rec.sort(reverse=True) ans = 0 for i in range(0,len(rec)...
0
106
B
Choosing Laptop
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "brute force", "implementation" ]
B. Choosing Laptop
2
256
Vasya is choosing a laptop. The shop has *n* laptops to all tastes. Vasya is interested in the following properties: processor speed, ram and hdd. Vasya is a programmer and not a gamer which is why he is not interested in all other properties. If all three properties of a laptop are strictly less than those propertie...
The first line contains number *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100). Then follow *n* lines. Each describes a laptop as *speed* *ram* *hdd* *cost*. Besides, - *speed*, *ram*, *hdd* and *cost* are integers - 1000<=≤<=*speed*<=≤<=4200 is the processor's speed in megahertz - 256<=≤<=*ram*<=≤<=4096 the RAM volume in megabytes - 1...
Print a single number — the number of a laptop Vasya will choose. The laptops are numbered with positive integers from 1 to *n* in the order in which they are given in the input data.
[ "5\n2100 512 150 200\n2000 2048 240 350\n2300 1024 200 320\n2500 2048 80 300\n2000 512 180 150\n" ]
[ "4" ]
In the third sample Vasya considers the first and fifth laptops outdated as all of their properties cannot match those of the third laptop. The fourth one is the cheapest among the laptops that are left. Thus, Vasya chooses the fourth laptop.
1,000
[ { "input": "5\n2100 512 150 200\n2000 2048 240 350\n2300 1024 200 320\n2500 2048 80 300\n2000 512 180 150", "output": "4" }, { "input": "2\n1500 500 50 755\n1600 600 80 700", "output": "2" }, { "input": "2\n1500 512 50 567\n1600 400 70 789", "output": "1" }, { "input": "4\n10...
1,595,958,796
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
55
218
6,963,200
n = int(input().rstrip()) l = [] for i in range(n): c, m, h, p = map(int, input().rstrip().split()) l.append([c, m, h, p]) mn = 0 for i in range(n): o = False for j in range(n): if i == j: continue if (l[i][0] < l[j][0] and l[i][1] < l[j][1] and...
Title: Choosing Laptop Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: Vasya is choosing a laptop. The shop has *n* laptops to all tastes. Vasya is interested in the following properties: processor speed, ram and hdd. Vasya is a programmer and not a gamer which is why he is not interested in ...
```python n = int(input().rstrip()) l = [] for i in range(n): c, m, h, p = map(int, input().rstrip().split()) l.append([c, m, h, p]) mn = 0 for i in range(n): o = False for j in range(n): if i == j: continue if (l[i][0] < l[j][0] and l[i][1] < l[j][1] ...
3.93253
898
B
Proper Nutrition
PROGRAMMING
1,100
[ "brute force", "implementation", "number theory" ]
null
null
Vasya has *n* burles. One bottle of Ber-Cola costs *a* burles and one Bars bar costs *b* burles. He can buy any non-negative integer number of bottles of Ber-Cola and any non-negative integer number of Bars bars. Find out if it's possible to buy some amount of bottles of Ber-Cola and Bars bars and spend exactly *n* bu...
First line contains single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=10<=000<=000) — amount of money, that Vasya has. Second line contains single integer *a* (1<=≤<=*a*<=≤<=10<=000<=000) — cost of one bottle of Ber-Cola. Third line contains single integer *b* (1<=≤<=*b*<=≤<=10<=000<=000) — cost of one Bars bar.
If Vasya can't buy Bars and Ber-Cola in such a way to spend exactly *n* burles print «NO» (without quotes). Otherwise in first line print «YES» (without quotes). In second line print two non-negative integers *x* and *y* — number of bottles of Ber-Cola and number of Bars bars Vasya should buy in order to spend exactly...
[ "7\n2\n3\n", "100\n25\n10\n", "15\n4\n8\n", "9960594\n2551\n2557\n" ]
[ "YES\n2 1\n", "YES\n0 10\n", "NO\n", "YES\n1951 1949\n" ]
In first example Vasya can buy two bottles of Ber-Cola and one Bars bar. He will spend exactly 2·2 + 1·3 = 7 burles. In second example Vasya can spend exactly *n* burles multiple ways: - buy two bottles of Ber-Cola and five Bars bars; - buy four bottles of Ber-Cola and don't buy Bars bars; - don't buy Ber-Cola an...
750
[ { "input": "7\n2\n3", "output": "YES\n2 1" }, { "input": "100\n25\n10", "output": "YES\n0 10" }, { "input": "15\n4\n8", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "9960594\n2551\n2557", "output": "YES\n1951 1949" }, { "input": "10000000\n1\n1", "output": "YES\n0 10000000" ...
1,543,299,909
2,147,483,647
Python 3
TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED
TESTS
46
1,000
0
from sys import stdin, stdout n = int(stdin.readline()) a = int(stdin.readline()) b = int(stdin.readline()) x = 0 flg = False while n >= 0: if int(n / b) == n / b: print("YES") print(x, int(n / b)) flg = True break n = n - a x += 1 if not flg: print("NO...
Title: Proper Nutrition Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Vasya has *n* burles. One bottle of Ber-Cola costs *a* burles and one Bars bar costs *b* burles. He can buy any non-negative integer number of bottles of Ber-Cola and any non-negative integer number of Bars bars. Find...
```python from sys import stdin, stdout n = int(stdin.readline()) a = int(stdin.readline()) b = int(stdin.readline()) x = 0 flg = False while n >= 0: if int(n / b) == n / b: print("YES") print(x, int(n / b)) flg = True break n = n - a x += 1 if not flg: ...
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...
1,611,025,571
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
81
312
2,355,200
import string i=lambda:map(int,input().split()); n=int(input()); a1=0; b1=0; c1=0; for l in range(n): a,b,c=i(); a1+=a; b1+=b; c1+=c; if(a1==0&b1==0&c1==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 import string i=lambda:map(int,input().split()); n=int(input()); a1=0; b1=0; c1=0; for l in range(n): a,b,c=i(); a1+=a; b1+=b; c1+=c; if(a1==0&b1==0&c1==0): print("YES"); else: print("NO"); ```
3.917613
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...
1,512,212,734
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
39
155
19,660,800
N = int(input()) s = input() t = input() S = [int(m) for m in s.split() ] T = [int(m) for m in t.split() ] if N>1: x = [] x.append(max(T)) T.remove(max(T)) x.append(max(T)) T.remove(max(T)) if sum(x)>=sum(S): print("YES") else: print("NO") else: if sum(T)> sum(S): print("YES"...
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()) s = input() t = input() S = [int(m) for m in s.split() ] T = [int(m) for m in t.split() ] if N>1: x = [] x.append(max(T)) T.remove(max(T)) x.append(max(T)) T.remove(max(T)) if sum(x)>=sum(S): print("YES") else: print("NO") else: if sum(T)> sum(S): p...
3
320
A
Magic Numbers
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "brute force", "greedy" ]
null
null
A magic number is a number formed by concatenation of numbers 1, 14 and 144. We can use each of these numbers any number of times. Therefore 14144, 141414 and 1411 are magic numbers but 1444, 514 and 414 are not. You're given a number. Determine if it is a magic number or not.
The first line of input contains an integer *n*, (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=109). This number doesn't contain leading zeros.
Print "YES" if *n* is a magic number or print "NO" if it's not.
[ "114114\n", "1111\n", "441231\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "YES\n", "NO\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "114114", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "1111", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "441231", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "1", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "14", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "114", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "9",...
1,635,178,939
2,147,483,647
Python 3
TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED
TESTS
2
2,000
4,505,600
n=input() mn=True while len(n)>0: if len(n)>2: if n[0]+n[1]+n[2]=='144': n=n[3:] continue elif n[0]+n[1]=='14': n=n[2:] continue elif n[0]=='1': n=n[1:] continue else: mn=False ...
Title: Magic Numbers Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: A magic number is a number formed by concatenation of numbers 1, 14 and 144. We can use each of these numbers any number of times. Therefore 14144, 141414 and 1411 are magic numbers but 1444, 514 and 414 are not. You're ...
```python n=input() mn=True while len(n)>0: if len(n)>2: if n[0]+n[1]+n[2]=='144': n=n[3:] continue elif n[0]+n[1]=='14': n=n[2:] continue elif n[0]=='1': n=n[1:] continue else: mn=Fal...
0
605
A
Sorting Railway Cars
PROGRAMMING
1,600
[ "constructive algorithms", "greedy" ]
null
null
An infinitely long railway has a train consisting of *n* cars, numbered from 1 to *n* (the numbers of all the cars are distinct) and positioned in arbitrary order. David Blaine wants to sort the railway cars in the order of increasing numbers. In one move he can make one of the cars disappear from its place and telepor...
The first line of the input contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100<=000) — the number of cars in the train. The second line contains *n* integers *p**i* (1<=≤<=*p**i*<=≤<=*n*, *p**i*<=≠<=*p**j* if *i*<=≠<=*j*) — the sequence of the numbers of the cars in the train.
Print a single integer — the minimum number of actions needed to sort the railway cars.
[ "5\n4 1 2 5 3\n", "4\n4 1 3 2\n" ]
[ "2\n", "2\n" ]
In the first sample you need first to teleport the 4-th car, and then the 5-th car to the end of the train.
500
[ { "input": "5\n4 1 2 5 3", "output": "2" }, { "input": "4\n4 1 3 2", "output": "2" }, { "input": "1\n1", "output": "0" }, { "input": "2\n1 2", "output": "0" }, { "input": "2\n2 1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "6\n5 3 6 1 4 2", "output": "4" }, ...
1,450,098,954
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
66
140
6,963,200
def main(): n = int(input()) l = [n] * (n + 1) for a in map(int, input().split()): l[a] = l[a - 1] - 1 print(min(l)) if __name__ == '__main__': main()
Title: Sorting Railway Cars Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: An infinitely long railway has a train consisting of *n* cars, numbered from 1 to *n* (the numbers of all the cars are distinct) and positioned in arbitrary order. David Blaine wants to sort the railway cars in the...
```python def main(): n = int(input()) l = [n] * (n + 1) for a in map(int, input().split()): l[a] = l[a - 1] - 1 print(min(l)) if __name__ == '__main__': main() ```
3
999
A
Mishka and Contest
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "brute force", "implementation" ]
null
null
Mishka started participating in a programming contest. There are $n$ problems in the contest. Mishka's problem-solving skill is equal to $k$. Mishka arranges all problems from the contest into a list. Because of his weird principles, Mishka only solves problems from one of the ends of the list. Every time, he chooses ...
The first line of input contains two integers $n$ and $k$ ($1 \le n, k \le 100$) — the number of problems in the contest and Mishka's problem-solving skill. The second line of input contains $n$ integers $a_1, a_2, \dots, a_n$ ($1 \le a_i \le 100$), where $a_i$ is the difficulty of the $i$-th problem. The problems are...
Print one integer — the maximum number of problems Mishka can solve.
[ "8 4\n4 2 3 1 5 1 6 4\n", "5 2\n3 1 2 1 3\n", "5 100\n12 34 55 43 21\n" ]
[ "5\n", "0\n", "5\n" ]
In the first example, Mishka can solve problems in the following order: $[4, 2, 3, 1, 5, 1, 6, 4] \rightarrow [2, 3, 1, 5, 1, 6, 4] \rightarrow [2, 3, 1, 5, 1, 6] \rightarrow [3, 1, 5, 1, 6] \rightarrow [1, 5, 1, 6] \rightarrow [5, 1, 6]$, so the number of solved problems will be equal to $5$. In the second example, M...
0
[ { "input": "8 4\n4 2 3 1 5 1 6 4", "output": "5" }, { "input": "5 2\n3 1 2 1 3", "output": "0" }, { "input": "5 100\n12 34 55 43 21", "output": "5" }, { "input": "100 100\n44 47 36 83 76 94 86 69 31 2 22 77 37 51 10 19 25 78 53 25 1 29 48 95 35 53 22 72 49 86 60 38 13 91 89 1...
1,663,000,952
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
48
61
0
(a,b)=[int(x) for x in input().split()] l=[int(x) for x in input().split()] c=0 while(bool(l)and(l[0]<=b or l[-1]<=b)): if l[0]<=b: c+=1 l=l[1:] elif l[-1]<=b: c+=1 l.pop() print(c)
Title: Mishka and Contest Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Mishka started participating in a programming contest. There are $n$ problems in the contest. Mishka's problem-solving skill is equal to $k$. Mishka arranges all problems from the contest into a list. Because of his...
```python (a,b)=[int(x) for x in input().split()] l=[int(x) for x in input().split()] c=0 while(bool(l)and(l[0]<=b or l[-1]<=b)): if l[0]<=b: c+=1 l=l[1:] elif l[-1]<=b: c+=1 l.pop() print(c) ```
3
731
A
Night at the Museum
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation", "strings" ]
null
null
Grigoriy, like the hero of one famous comedy film, found a job as a night security guard at the museum. At first night he received embosser and was to take stock of the whole exposition. Embosser is a special devise that allows to "print" the text of a plastic tape. Text is printed sequentially, character by character...
The only line of input contains the name of some exhibit — the non-empty string consisting of no more than 100 characters. It's guaranteed that the string consists of only lowercase English letters.
Print one integer — the minimum number of rotations of the wheel, required to print the name given in the input.
[ "zeus\n", "map\n", "ares\n" ]
[ "18\n", "35\n", "34\n" ]
To print the string from the first sample it would be optimal to perform the following sequence of rotations: 1. from 'a' to 'z' (1 rotation counterclockwise), 1. from 'z' to 'e' (5 clockwise rotations), 1. from 'e' to 'u' (10 rotations counterclockwise), 1. from 'u' to 's' (2 counterclockwise rotations).
500
[ { "input": "zeus", "output": "18" }, { "input": "map", "output": "35" }, { "input": "ares", "output": "34" }, { "input": "l", "output": "11" }, { "input": "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzabcdefghijklmnopqrstuv", "...
1,649,111,000
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
44
46
0
word = input() default = 'a' num_of_rotation = 0 for c in word: num_clockwise = abs(ord(default)-ord(c)) num_counterclockwise = 26-num_clockwise if num_clockwise >= num_counterclockwise: num_of_rotation += num_counterclockwise else: num_of_rotation += num_clockwise default ...
Title: Night at the Museum Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Grigoriy, like the hero of one famous comedy film, found a job as a night security guard at the museum. At first night he received embosser and was to take stock of the whole exposition. Embosser is a special devis...
```python word = input() default = 'a' num_of_rotation = 0 for c in word: num_clockwise = abs(ord(default)-ord(c)) num_counterclockwise = 26-num_clockwise if num_clockwise >= num_counterclockwise: num_of_rotation += num_counterclockwise else: num_of_rotation += num_clockwise ...
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...
1,690,292,305
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
OK
TESTS
29
62
0
n, h = map(int, input().split()) a = list(map(int, input().split())) stnd = 0 bnd = 0 for i in range(n): if a[i] > h: bnd += 1 else: stnd += 1 print(2 * bnd + stnd)
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()) a = list(map(int, input().split())) stnd = 0 bnd = 0 for i in range(n): if a[i] > h: bnd += 1 else: stnd += 1 print(2 * bnd + stnd) ```
3
807
B
T-Shirt Hunt
PROGRAMMING
1,300
[ "brute force", "implementation" ]
null
null
Not so long ago the Codecraft-17 contest was held on Codeforces. The top 25 participants, and additionally random 25 participants out of those who got into top 500, will receive a Codeforces T-shirt. Unfortunately, you didn't manage to get into top 25, but you got into top 500, taking place *p*. Now the elimination r...
The only line contains three integers *p*, *x* and *y* (26<=≤<=*p*<=≤<=500; 1<=≤<=*y*<=≤<=*x*<=≤<=20000) — your place in Codecraft-17, your current score in the elimination round of 8VC Venture Cup 2017, and the smallest number of points you consider sufficient for winning the current round.
Output a single integer — the smallest number of successful hacks you have to do in order to both win the elimination round of 8VC Venture Cup 2017 and ensure getting a Codecraft-17 T-shirt. It's guaranteed that your goal is achievable for any valid input data.
[ "239 10880 9889\n", "26 7258 6123\n", "493 8000 8000\n", "101 6800 6500\n", "329 19913 19900\n" ]
[ "0\n", "2\n", "24\n", "0\n", "8\n" ]
In the first example, there is no need to do any hacks since 10880 points already bring the T-shirt to the 239-th place of Codecraft-17 (that is, you). In this case, according to the pseudocode, the T-shirts will be given to the participants at the following places: In the second example, you have to do two successfu...
1,000
[ { "input": "239 10880 9889", "output": "0" }, { "input": "26 7258 6123", "output": "2" }, { "input": "493 8000 8000", "output": "24" }, { "input": "101 6800 6500", "output": "0" }, { "input": "329 19913 19900", "output": "8" }, { "input": "264 19252 10...
1,564,389,006
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
48
155
1,228,800
import math def get_tshirts(S): winners = [] i = (S // 50) % 475 for x in range(25): i = (i * 96 + 42) % 475 winners.append(26 + i) return winners class CodeforcesTask807BSolution: def __init__(self): self.result = '' self.p_x_y = [] def read_input(self): ...
Title: T-Shirt Hunt Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Not so long ago the Codecraft-17 contest was held on Codeforces. The top 25 participants, and additionally random 25 participants out of those who got into top 500, will receive a Codeforces T-shirt. Unfortunately, you di...
```python import math def get_tshirts(S): winners = [] i = (S // 50) % 475 for x in range(25): i = (i * 96 + 42) % 475 winners.append(26 + i) return winners class CodeforcesTask807BSolution: def __init__(self): self.result = '' self.p_x_y = [] def read_input(...
3
253
B
Physics Practical
PROGRAMMING
1,400
[ "binary search", "dp", "sortings", "two pointers" ]
null
null
One day Vasya was on a physics practical, performing the task on measuring the capacitance. He followed the teacher's advice and did as much as *n* measurements, and recorded the results in the notebook. After that he was about to show the results to the teacher, but he remembered that at the last lesson, the teacher h...
The first line contains integer *n* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) — the number of measurements Vasya made. The second line contains *n* integers *c*1,<=*c*2,<=...,<=*c**n* (1<=≤<=*c**i*<=≤<=5000) — the results of the measurements. The numbers on the second line are separated by single spaces.
Print a single integer — the minimum number of results Vasya will have to remove.
[ "6\n4 5 3 8 3 7\n", "4\n4 3 2 4\n" ]
[ "2\n", "0\n" ]
In the first sample you can remove the fourth and the sixth measurement results (values 8 and 7). Then the maximum of the remaining values will be 5, and the minimum one will be 3. Or else, you can remove the third and fifth results (both equal 3). After that the largest remaining result will be 8, and the smallest one...
1,000
[ { "input": "6\n4 5 3 8 3 7", "output": "2" }, { "input": "4\n4 3 2 4", "output": "0" }, { "input": "6\n5 6 4 9 4 8", "output": "1" }, { "input": "4\n5 4 1 5", "output": "1" }, { "input": "2\n3 2", "output": "0" }, { "input": "10\n39 9 18 13 6 16 47 15 ...
1,620,464,155
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
3
92
6,963,200
def bsearch(lst, target): left = 0 right = len(lst) - 1 if target == lst[right]: return right while left <= right: mid = (left + right) // 2 if lst[mid] <= target < lst[mid + 1]: return mid elif target >= lst[mid + 1]: left = mid + 1 els...
Title: Physics Practical Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: One day Vasya was on a physics practical, performing the task on measuring the capacitance. He followed the teacher's advice and did as much as *n* measurements, and recorded the results in the notebook. After that he...
```python def bsearch(lst, target): left = 0 right = len(lst) - 1 if target == lst[right]: return right while left <= right: mid = (left + right) // 2 if lst[mid] <= target < lst[mid + 1]: return mid elif target >= lst[mid + 1]: left = mid + 1 ...
0
991
B
Getting an A
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "greedy", "sortings" ]
null
null
Translator's note: in Russia's most widespread grading system, there are four grades: 5, 4, 3, 2, the higher the better, roughly corresponding to A, B, C and F respectively in American grading system. The term is coming to an end and students start thinking about their grades. Today, a professor told his students that...
The first line contains a single integer $n$ — the number of Vasya's grades ($1 \leq n \leq 100$). The second line contains $n$ integers from $2$ to $5$ — Vasya's grades for his lab works.
Output a single integer — the minimum amount of lab works that Vasya has to redo. It can be shown that Vasya can always redo enough lab works to get a $5$.
[ "3\n4 4 4\n", "4\n5 4 5 5\n", "4\n5 3 3 5\n" ]
[ "2\n", "0\n", "1\n" ]
In the first sample, it is enough to redo two lab works to make two $4$s into $5$s. In the second sample, Vasya's average is already $4.75$ so he doesn't have to redo anything to get a $5$. In the second sample Vasya has to redo one lab work to get rid of one of the $3$s, that will make the average exactly $4.5$ so t...
1,000
[ { "input": "3\n4 4 4", "output": "2" }, { "input": "4\n5 4 5 5", "output": "0" }, { "input": "4\n5 3 3 5", "output": "1" }, { "input": "1\n5", "output": "0" }, { "input": "4\n3 2 5 4", "output": "2" }, { "input": "5\n5 4 3 2 5", "output": "2" }, ...
1,639,836,408
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
OK
TESTS
61
93
0
import math n = int(input()) arr = [int(x) for x in input().split(' ')] tol = sum(arr) arr.sort() i = 0 while tol < int(math.ceil(4.5*n)): tol += (5 - arr[i]) i += 1 print(i)
Title: Getting an A Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Translator's note: in Russia's most widespread grading system, there are four grades: 5, 4, 3, 2, the higher the better, roughly corresponding to A, B, C and F respectively in American grading system. The term is coming t...
```python import math n = int(input()) arr = [int(x) for x in input().split(' ')] tol = sum(arr) arr.sort() i = 0 while tol < int(math.ceil(4.5*n)): tol += (5 - arr[i]) i += 1 print(i) ```
3
958
B1
Maximum Control (easy)
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
The Resistance is trying to take control over all planets in a particular solar system. This solar system is shaped like a tree. More precisely, some planets are connected by bidirectional hyperspace tunnels in such a way that there is a path between every pair of the planets, but removing any tunnel would disconnect s...
The first line of the input contains an integer *N* (2<=≤<=*N*<=≤<=1000) – the number of planets in the galaxy. The next *N*<=-<=1 lines describe the hyperspace tunnels between the planets. Each of the *N*<=-<=1 lines contains two space-separated integers *u* and *v* (1<=≤<=*u*,<=*v*<=≤<=*N*) indicating that there is ...
A single integer denoting the number of remote planets.
[ "5\n4 1\n4 2\n1 3\n1 5\n", "4\n1 2\n4 3\n1 4\n" ]
[ "3\n", "2\n" ]
In the first example, only planets 2, 3 and 5 are connected by a single tunnel. In the second example, the remote planets are 2 and 3. Note that this problem has only two versions – easy and medium.
0
[ { "input": "5\n4 1\n4 2\n1 3\n1 5", "output": "3" }, { "input": "4\n1 2\n4 3\n1 4", "output": "2" }, { "input": "10\n4 3\n2 6\n10 1\n5 7\n5 8\n10 6\n5 9\n9 3\n2 9", "output": "4" } ]
1,690,077,499
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
9
46
307,200
from collections import Counter n = int(input()) cnt = Counter() for _ in range(n - 1): a, b = (int(i) for i in input().split()) cnt[a] += 1 cnt[b] += 1 res = sum(v == 1 for v in cnt.values()) print(res)
Title: Maximum Control (easy) Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: The Resistance is trying to take control over all planets in a particular solar system. This solar system is shaped like a tree. More precisely, some planets are connected by bidirectional hyperspace tunnels in s...
```python from collections import Counter n = int(input()) cnt = Counter() for _ in range(n - 1): a, b = (int(i) for i in input().split()) cnt[a] += 1 cnt[b] += 1 res = sum(v == 1 for v in cnt.values()) print(res) ```
3
988
A
Diverse Team
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "brute force", "implementation" ]
null
null
There are $n$ students in a school class, the rating of the $i$-th student on Codehorses is $a_i$. You have to form a team consisting of $k$ students ($1 \le k \le n$) such that the ratings of all team members are distinct. If it is impossible to form a suitable team, print "NO" (without quotes). Otherwise print "YES"...
The first line contains two integers $n$ and $k$ ($1 \le k \le n \le 100$) — the number of students and the size of the team you have to form. The second line contains $n$ integers $a_1, a_2, \dots, a_n$ ($1 \le a_i \le 100$), where $a_i$ is the rating of $i$-th student.
If it is impossible to form a suitable team, print "NO" (without quotes). Otherwise print "YES", and then print $k$ distinct integers from $1$ to $n$ which should be the indices of students in the team you form. All the ratings of the students in the team should be distinct. You may print the indices in any order. If t...
[ "5 3\n15 13 15 15 12\n", "5 4\n15 13 15 15 12\n", "4 4\n20 10 40 30\n" ]
[ "YES\n1 2 5 \n", "NO\n", "YES\n1 2 3 4 \n" ]
All possible answers for the first example: - {1 2 5} - {2 3 5} - {2 4 5} Note that the order does not matter.
0
[ { "input": "5 3\n15 13 15 15 12", "output": "YES\n1 2 5 " }, { "input": "5 4\n15 13 15 15 12", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "4 4\n20 10 40 30", "output": "YES\n1 2 3 4 " }, { "input": "1 1\n1", "output": "YES\n1 " }, { "input": "100 53\n16 17 1 2 27 5 9 9 53 24 17...
1,672,756,433
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
1
30
0
n=list(map(int,input().split())) inp=list(map(int,input().split())) distinct_inp=set(inp) count=len(distinct_inp) if n[1]<=count: print("YES") for i in distinct_inp: print(inp.index(i)+1,end=" ")
Title: Diverse Team Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: There are $n$ students in a school class, the rating of the $i$-th student on Codehorses is $a_i$. You have to form a team consisting of $k$ students ($1 \le k \le n$) such that the ratings of all team members are distinct...
```python n=list(map(int,input().split())) inp=list(map(int,input().split())) distinct_inp=set(inp) count=len(distinct_inp) if n[1]<=count: print("YES") for i in distinct_inp: print(inp.index(i)+1,end=" ") ```
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",...
1,620,934,264
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
44
62
6,758,400
s = input().split() n , k = int(s[0]), int(s[1]) d = int((n//2) / (k+1)) c = k*d nw = n - (c + d) print(d, c, nw)
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 s = input().split() n , k = int(s[0]), int(s[1]) d = int((n//2) / (k+1)) c = k*d nw = n - (c + d) print(d, c, nw) ```
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"...
1,686,050,919
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
OK
TESTS
20
62
0
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- def solve(): n, m, a = map(int, input().split()) print(((n + a - 1) // a) * ((m + a - 1) // a)) def main(): t = 1 # t = int(input()) for i in range(t): solve() if __name__ == "__main__": main()
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 # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- def solve(): n, m, a = map(int, input().split()) print(((n + a - 1) // a) * ((m + a - 1) // a)) def main(): t = 1 # t = int(input()) for i in range(t): solve() if __name__ == "__main__": main() ```
3.969
148
A
Insomnia cure
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "constructive algorithms", "implementation", "math" ]
null
null
«One dragon. Two dragon. Three dragon», — the princess was counting. She had trouble falling asleep, and she got bored of counting lambs when she was nine. However, just counting dragons was boring as well, so she entertained herself at best she could. Tonight she imagined that all dragons were here to steal her, and ...
Input data contains integer numbers *k*,<=*l*,<=*m*,<=*n* and *d*, each number in a separate line (1<=≤<=*k*,<=*l*,<=*m*,<=*n*<=≤<=10, 1<=≤<=*d*<=≤<=105).
Output the number of damaged dragons.
[ "1\n2\n3\n4\n12\n", "2\n3\n4\n5\n24\n" ]
[ "12\n", "17\n" ]
In the first case every first dragon got punched with a frying pan. Some of the dragons suffered from other reasons as well, but the pan alone would be enough. In the second case dragons 1, 7, 11, 13, 17, 19 and 23 escaped unharmed.
1,000
[ { "input": "1\n2\n3\n4\n12", "output": "12" }, { "input": "2\n3\n4\n5\n24", "output": "17" }, { "input": "1\n1\n1\n1\n100000", "output": "100000" }, { "input": "10\n9\n8\n7\n6", "output": "0" }, { "input": "8\n4\n4\n3\n65437", "output": "32718" }, { "i...
1,696,440,203
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
40
122
4,505,600
k = int(input()) l = int(input()) m = int(input()) n = int(input()) d = int(input()) mas = [] for i in range(d): if (i+1)%k==0 or (i+1)%l==0 or (i+1)%m==0 or (i+1)%n==0: mas.append(i) print(len(mas))
Title: Insomnia cure Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: «One dragon. Two dragon. Three dragon», — the princess was counting. She had trouble falling asleep, and she got bored of counting lambs when she was nine. However, just counting dragons was boring as well, so she entert...
```python k = int(input()) l = int(input()) m = int(input()) n = int(input()) d = int(input()) mas = [] for i in range(d): if (i+1)%k==0 or (i+1)%l==0 or (i+1)%m==0 or (i+1)%n==0: mas.append(i) print(len(mas)) ```
3
236
A
Boy or Girl
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "brute force", "implementation", "strings" ]
null
null
Those days, many boys use beautiful girls' photos as avatars in forums. So it is pretty hard to tell the gender of a user at the first glance. Last year, our hero went to a forum and had a nice chat with a beauty (he thought so). After that they talked very often and eventually they became a couple in the network. Bu...
The first line contains a non-empty string, that contains only lowercase English letters — the user name. This string contains at most 100 letters.
If it is a female by our hero's method, print "CHAT WITH HER!" (without the quotes), otherwise, print "IGNORE HIM!" (without the quotes).
[ "wjmzbmr\n", "xiaodao\n", "sevenkplus\n" ]
[ "CHAT WITH HER!\n", "IGNORE HIM!\n", "CHAT WITH HER!\n" ]
For the first example. There are 6 distinct characters in "wjmzbmr". These characters are: "w", "j", "m", "z", "b", "r". So wjmzbmr is a female and you should print "CHAT WITH HER!".
500
[ { "input": "wjmzbmr", "output": "CHAT WITH HER!" }, { "input": "xiaodao", "output": "IGNORE HIM!" }, { "input": "sevenkplus", "output": "CHAT WITH HER!" }, { "input": "pezu", "output": "CHAT WITH HER!" }, { "input": "wnemlgppy", "output": "CHAT WITH HER!" },...
1,695,015,622
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
1
62
0
letters = [] s = input() count = 0 for i in range(len(s)): letters.append(s[i]) for i in range(len(s)): if s[i] not in letters: count += 1 if count % 2 == 0: print("CHAT WITH HER!") else: print("IGNORE HIM!")
Title: Boy or Girl Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Those days, many boys use beautiful girls' photos as avatars in forums. So it is pretty hard to tell the gender of a user at the first glance. Last year, our hero went to a forum and had a nice chat with a beauty (he though...
```python letters = [] s = input() count = 0 for i in range(len(s)): letters.append(s[i]) for i in range(len(s)): if s[i] not in letters: count += 1 if count % 2 == 0: print("CHAT WITH HER!") else: print("IGNORE HIM!") ```
0
675
A
Infinite Sequence
PROGRAMMING
1,100
[ "math" ]
null
null
Vasya likes everything infinite. Now he is studying the properties of a sequence *s*, such that its first element is equal to *a* (*s*1<==<=*a*), and the difference between any two neighbouring elements is equal to *c* (*s**i*<=-<=*s**i*<=-<=1<==<=*c*). In particular, Vasya wonders if his favourite integer *b* appears ...
The first line of the input contain three integers *a*, *b* and *c* (<=-<=109<=≤<=*a*,<=*b*,<=*c*<=≤<=109) — the first element of the sequence, Vasya's favorite number and the difference between any two neighbouring elements of the sequence, respectively.
If *b* appears in the sequence *s* print "YES" (without quotes), otherwise print "NO" (without quotes).
[ "1 7 3\n", "10 10 0\n", "1 -4 5\n", "0 60 50\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "YES\n", "NO\n", "NO\n" ]
In the first sample, the sequence starts from integers 1, 4, 7, so 7 is its element. In the second sample, the favorite integer of Vasya is equal to the first element of the sequence. In the third sample all elements of the sequence are greater than Vasya's favorite integer. In the fourth sample, the sequence starts...
500
[ { "input": "1 7 3", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "10 10 0", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "1 -4 5", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "0 60 50", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "1 -4 -5", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "0 1 0", "output": "NO" }, { ...
1,530,100,142
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
178
93
0
a, b, c = map(int, input().split()) if c: div, mod = divmod(b - a, c) print('NO' if mod or div < 0 else 'YES') else: print('YES' if a == b else 'NO')
Title: Infinite Sequence Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Vasya likes everything infinite. Now he is studying the properties of a sequence *s*, such that its first element is equal to *a* (*s*1<==<=*a*), and the difference between any two neighbouring elements is equal to *c...
```python a, b, c = map(int, input().split()) if c: div, mod = divmod(b - a, c) print('NO' if mod or div < 0 else 'YES') else: print('YES' if a == b else 'NO') ```
3
350
A
TL
PROGRAMMING
1,200
[ "brute force", "greedy", "implementation" ]
null
null
Valera wanted to prepare a Codesecrof round. He's already got one problem and he wants to set a time limit (TL) on it. Valera has written *n* correct solutions. For each correct solution, he knows its running time (in seconds). Valera has also wrote *m* wrong solutions and for each wrong solution he knows its running ...
The first line contains two integers *n*, *m* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=100). The second line contains *n* space-separated positive integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=100) — the running time of each of the *n* correct solutions in seconds. The third line contains *m* space-separated positive integers *b*1...
If there is a valid TL value, print it. Otherwise, print -1.
[ "3 6\n4 5 2\n8 9 6 10 7 11\n", "3 1\n3 4 5\n6\n" ]
[ "5", "-1\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "3 6\n4 5 2\n8 9 6 10 7 11", "output": "5" }, { "input": "3 1\n3 4 5\n6", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "2 5\n45 99\n49 41 77 83 45", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "50 50\n18 13 5 34 10 36 36 12 15 11 16 17 14 36 23 45 32 24 31 18 24 32 7 1 31 3 49 8 16 23 3 39 47 43...
1,606,465,538
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
45
310
0
n,m = map(int,input().split()) a = [int(x) for x in input().split()] b = [int(x) for x in input().split()] v = min(a) p = max(a) c= min(b) if(max(2*v,p)<c): print(max(2*v,p)) else: print(-1)
Title: TL Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Valera wanted to prepare a Codesecrof round. He's already got one problem and he wants to set a time limit (TL) on it. Valera has written *n* correct solutions. For each correct solution, he knows its running time (in seconds). Val...
```python n,m = map(int,input().split()) a = [int(x) for x in input().split()] b = [int(x) for x in input().split()] v = min(a) p = max(a) c= min(b) if(max(2*v,p)<c): print(max(2*v,p)) else: print(-1) ```
3
812
B
Sagheer, the Hausmeister
PROGRAMMING
1,600
[ "bitmasks", "brute force", "dp" ]
null
null
Some people leave the lights at their workplaces on when they leave that is a waste of resources. As a hausmeister of DHBW, Sagheer waits till all students and professors leave the university building, then goes and turns all the lights off. The building consists of *n* floors with stairs at the left and the right sid...
The first line contains two integers *n* and *m* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=15 and 1<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=100) — the number of floors and the number of rooms in each floor, respectively. The next *n* lines contains the building description. Each line contains a binary string of length *m*<=+<=2 representing a floor (the left stairs, then ...
Print a single integer — the minimum total time needed to turn off all the lights.
[ "2 2\n0010\n0100\n", "3 4\n001000\n000010\n000010\n", "4 3\n01110\n01110\n01110\n01110\n" ]
[ "5\n", "12\n", "18\n" ]
In the first example, Sagheer will go to room 1 in the ground floor, then he will go to room 2 in the second floor using the left or right stairs. In the second example, he will go to the fourth room in the ground floor, use right stairs, go to the fourth room in the second floor, use right stairs again, then go to th...
1,000
[ { "input": "2 2\n0010\n0100", "output": "5" }, { "input": "3 4\n001000\n000010\n000010", "output": "12" }, { "input": "4 3\n01110\n01110\n01110\n01110", "output": "18" }, { "input": "3 2\n0000\n0100\n0100", "output": "4" }, { "input": "1 89\n0000000000000000000000...
1,672,051,725
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
72
46
0
n, m = map(int, input().split()) p = [input() for y in range(n)][::-1] l = r = d = 0 i = j = 0 for y, t in enumerate(p): if '1' in t: l, r = min(l - i, r - j) + 2 * m + 2, min(l + i, r + j) i, j = t.find('1'), t.rfind('1') l, r, d = l - i, r + j, y print(min(l, r) + d) ...
Title: Sagheer, the Hausmeister Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Some people leave the lights at their workplaces on when they leave that is a waste of resources. As a hausmeister of DHBW, Sagheer waits till all students and professors leave the university building, then goe...
```python n, m = map(int, input().split()) p = [input() for y in range(n)][::-1] l = r = d = 0 i = j = 0 for y, t in enumerate(p): if '1' in t: l, r = min(l - i, r - j) + 2 * m + 2, min(l + i, r + j) i, j = t.find('1'), t.rfind('1') l, r, d = l - i, r + j, y print(min(l, r) + d) ...
3
59
A
Word
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation", "strings" ]
A. Word
2
256
Vasya is very upset that many people on the Net mix uppercase and lowercase letters in one word. That's why he decided to invent an extension for his favorite browser that would change the letters' register in every word so that it either only consisted of lowercase letters or, vice versa, only of uppercase ones. At th...
The first line contains a word *s* — it consists of uppercase and lowercase Latin letters and possesses the length from 1 to 100.
Print the corrected word *s*. If the given word *s* has strictly more uppercase letters, make the word written in the uppercase register, otherwise - in the lowercase one.
[ "HoUse\n", "ViP\n", "maTRIx\n" ]
[ "house\n", "VIP\n", "matrix\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "HoUse", "output": "house" }, { "input": "ViP", "output": "VIP" }, { "input": "maTRIx", "output": "matrix" }, { "input": "BNHWpnpawg", "output": "bnhwpnpawg" }, { "input": "VTYGP", "output": "VTYGP" }, { "input": "CHNenu", "output": "chn...
1,672,596,272
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
30
92
0
word = input() count = 0 for char in word: if char != char.lower(): count += 1 if count > len(word) // 2: print(word.upper()) else: print(word.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 word = input() count = 0 for char in word: if char != char.lower(): count += 1 if count > len(word) // 2: print(word.upper()) else: print(word.lower()) ```
3.977
560
B
Gerald is into Art
PROGRAMMING
1,200
[ "constructive algorithms", "implementation" ]
null
null
Gerald bought two very rare paintings at the Sotheby's auction and he now wants to hang them on the wall. For that he bought a special board to attach it to the wall and place the paintings on the board. The board has shape of an *a*1<=×<=*b*1 rectangle, the paintings have shape of a *a*2<=×<=*b*2 and *a*3<=×<=*b*3 rec...
The first line contains two space-separated numbers *a*1 and *b*1 — the sides of the board. Next two lines contain numbers *a*2,<=*b*2,<=*a*3 and *b*3 — the sides of the paintings. All numbers *a**i*,<=*b**i* in the input are integers and fit into the range from 1 to 1000.
If the paintings can be placed on the wall, print "YES" (without the quotes), and if they cannot, print "NO" (without the quotes).
[ "3 2\n1 3\n2 1\n", "5 5\n3 3\n3 3\n", "4 2\n2 3\n1 2\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "NO\n", "YES\n" ]
That's how we can place the pictures in the first test: <img class="tex-graphics" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/b41bf40c649073c6d3dd62eb7ae7adfc4bd131bd.png" style="max-width: 100.0%;max-height: 100.0%;"/> And that's how we can do it in the third one. <img class="tex-graphics" src="https://espresso.codeforces...
1,000
[ { "input": "3 2\n1 3\n2 1", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "5 5\n3 3\n3 3", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "4 2\n2 3\n1 2", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "3 3\n1 1\n1 1", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "1000 1000\n999 999\n1 1000", "output": "YES" }, { "in...
1,437,703,801
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
101
109
307,200
x,y = map(int, input().split()) a1,a2 = map(int, input().split()) b1,b2 = map(int, input().split()) ans = False if (a1+b2<=x and max(b1,a2)<=y) or (a1+b2<=y and max(b1,a2)<=x): ans = True if a1+b1<=x and max(a2,b2)<=y or a1+b1<=y and max(a2,b2)<=x: ans = True if a2+b1<=x and max(a1,b2)<=y or a2+b1<=y and max(...
Title: Gerald is into Art Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Gerald bought two very rare paintings at the Sotheby's auction and he now wants to hang them on the wall. For that he bought a special board to attach it to the wall and place the paintings on the board. The board ha...
```python x,y = map(int, input().split()) a1,a2 = map(int, input().split()) b1,b2 = map(int, input().split()) ans = False if (a1+b2<=x and max(b1,a2)<=y) or (a1+b2<=y and max(b1,a2)<=x): ans = True if a1+b1<=x and max(a2,b2)<=y or a1+b1<=y and max(a2,b2)<=x: ans = True if a2+b1<=x and max(a1,b2)<=y or a2+b1<=...
3
526
C
Om Nom and Candies
PROGRAMMING
2,000
[ "brute force", "greedy", "math" ]
null
null
A sweet little monster Om Nom loves candies very much. One day he found himself in a rather tricky situation that required him to think a bit in order to enjoy candies the most. Would you succeed with the same task if you were on his place? One day, when he came to his friend Evan, Om Nom didn't find him at home but h...
The single line contains five integers *C*,<=*H**r*,<=*H**b*,<=*W**r*,<=*W**b* (1<=≤<=*C*,<=*H**r*,<=*H**b*,<=*W**r*,<=*W**b*<=≤<=109).
Print a single integer — the maximum number of joy units that Om Nom can get.
[ "10 3 5 2 3\n" ]
[ "16\n" ]
In the sample test Om Nom can eat two candies of each type and thus get 16 joy units.
1,250
[ { "input": "10 3 5 2 3", "output": "16" }, { "input": "5 3 1 6 7", "output": "0" }, { "input": "982068341 55 57 106 109", "output": "513558662" }, { "input": "930064129 32726326 25428197 83013449 64501049", "output": "363523396" }, { "input": "927155987 21197 1599...
1,428,169,763
4,463
Python 3
TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED
PRETESTS
2
1,000
0
#!/usr/bin/python3 d = input().split(' ') for i in range(len(d)): d[i] = int(d[i]) i = 0 m = 0 while(i*d[3] <= d[0]): j = (d[0]-i*d[3])//d[4] t = i*d[1]+j*d[2] if(t>m): m=t i += 1 print(m)
Title: Om Nom and Candies Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: A sweet little monster Om Nom loves candies very much. One day he found himself in a rather tricky situation that required him to think a bit in order to enjoy candies the most. Would you succeed with the same task i...
```python #!/usr/bin/python3 d = input().split(' ') for i in range(len(d)): d[i] = int(d[i]) i = 0 m = 0 while(i*d[3] <= d[0]): j = (d[0]-i*d[3])//d[4] t = i*d[1]+j*d[2] if(t>m): m=t i += 1 print(m) ```
0
330
A
Cakeminator
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "brute force", "implementation" ]
null
null
You are given a rectangular cake, represented as an *r*<=×<=*c* grid. Each cell either has an evil strawberry, or is empty. For example, a 3<=×<=4 cake may look as follows: The cakeminator is going to eat the cake! Each time he eats, he chooses a row or a column that does not contain any evil strawberries and contains...
The first line contains two integers *r* and *c* (2<=≤<=*r*,<=*c*<=≤<=10), denoting the number of rows and the number of columns of the cake. The next *r* lines each contains *c* characters — the *j*-th character of the *i*-th line denotes the content of the cell at row *i* and column *j*, and is either one of these: ...
Output the maximum number of cake cells that the cakeminator can eat.
[ "3 4\nS...\n....\n..S.\n" ]
[ "8\n" ]
For the first example, one possible way to eat the maximum number of cake cells is as follows (perform 3 eats).
500
[ { "input": "3 4\nS...\n....\n..S.", "output": "8" }, { "input": "2 2\n..\n..", "output": "4" }, { "input": "2 2\nSS\nSS", "output": "0" }, { "input": "7 3\nS..\nS..\nS..\nS..\nS..\nS..\nS..", "output": "14" }, { "input": "3 5\n..S..\nSSSSS\n..S..", "output": "...
1,601,278,638
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
42
310
0
import sys input = sys.stdin.readline ############ ---- Input Functions ---- ############ def inp(): return(int(input())) def inlt(): return(list(map(int,input().split()))) def insr(): s = input() return(list(s[:len(s) - 1])) def invr(): return(map(int,input().split())) def solution(...
Title: Cakeminator Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: You are given a rectangular cake, represented as an *r*<=×<=*c* grid. Each cell either has an evil strawberry, or is empty. For example, a 3<=×<=4 cake may look as follows: The cakeminator is going to eat the cake! Each ti...
```python import sys input = sys.stdin.readline ############ ---- Input Functions ---- ############ def inp(): return(int(input())) def inlt(): return(list(map(int,input().split()))) def insr(): s = input() return(list(s[:len(s) - 1])) def invr(): return(map(int,input().split())) def...
3
476
A
Dreamoon and Stairs
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation", "math" ]
null
null
Dreamoon wants to climb up a stair of *n* steps. He can climb 1 or 2 steps at each move. Dreamoon wants the number of moves to be a multiple of an integer *m*. What is the minimal number of moves making him climb to the top of the stairs that satisfies his condition?
The single line contains two space separated integers *n*, *m* (0<=&lt;<=*n*<=≤<=10000,<=1<=&lt;<=*m*<=≤<=10).
Print a single integer — the minimal number of moves being a multiple of *m*. If there is no way he can climb satisfying condition print <=-<=1 instead.
[ "10 2\n", "3 5\n" ]
[ "6\n", "-1\n" ]
For the first sample, Dreamoon could climb in 6 moves with following sequence of steps: {2, 2, 2, 2, 1, 1}. For the second sample, there are only three valid sequence of steps {2, 1}, {1, 2}, {1, 1, 1} with 2, 2, and 3 steps respectively. All these numbers are not multiples of 5.
500
[ { "input": "10 2", "output": "6" }, { "input": "3 5", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "29 7", "output": "21" }, { "input": "2 2", "output": "2" }, { "input": "1 2", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "10000 2", "output": "5000" }, { "input": "10000 ...
1,685,535,496
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
OK
TESTS
35
62
0
def solve(n, m): if(m > n): return -1 a = 0 if(n%2 == 0): a = n // 2 else: a = n//2 + 1 while(a%m != 0): a += 1 return a n, m = map(int, input().split()) print(solve(n, m))
Title: Dreamoon and Stairs Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Dreamoon wants to climb up a stair of *n* steps. He can climb 1 or 2 steps at each move. Dreamoon wants the number of moves to be a multiple of an integer *m*. What is the minimal number of moves making him climb ...
```python def solve(n, m): if(m > n): return -1 a = 0 if(n%2 == 0): a = n // 2 else: a = n//2 + 1 while(a%m != 0): a += 1 return a n, m = map(int, input().split()) print(solve(n, m)) ```
3
69
A
Young Physicist
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation", "math" ]
A. Young Physicist
2
256
A guy named Vasya attends the final grade of a high school. One day Vasya decided to watch a match of his favorite hockey team. And, as the boy loves hockey very much, even more than physics, he forgot to do the homework. Specifically, he forgot to complete his physics tasks. Next day the teacher got very angry at Vasy...
The first line contains a positive integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100), then follow *n* lines containing three integers each: the *x**i* coordinate, the *y**i* coordinate and the *z**i* coordinate of the force vector, applied to the body (<=-<=100<=≤<=*x**i*,<=*y**i*,<=*z**i*<=≤<=100).
Print the word "YES" if the body is in equilibrium, or the word "NO" if it is not.
[ "3\n4 1 7\n-2 4 -1\n1 -5 -3\n", "3\n3 -1 7\n-5 2 -4\n2 -1 -3\n" ]
[ "NO", "YES" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "3\n4 1 7\n-2 4 -1\n1 -5 -3", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "3\n3 -1 7\n-5 2 -4\n2 -1 -3", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "10\n21 32 -46\n43 -35 21\n42 2 -50\n22 40 20\n-27 -9 38\n-4 1 1\n-40 6 -31\n-13 -2 34\n-21 34 -12\n-32 -29 41", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "10...
1,629,892,768
568
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
0
92
6,963,200
n = int(input()) s1=0 s2=0 s3=0 for i in range(n): a= list(map(int,input().split()))[:3] s1+=a[0] s2+=a[1] s3+=a[2] if(s1+s2+s3==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()) s1=0 s2=0 s3=0 for i in range(n): a= list(map(int,input().split()))[:3] s1+=a[0] s2+=a[1] s3+=a[2] if(s1+s2+s3==0): print("yes") else: print("no") ```
0
1,004
B
Sonya and Exhibition
PROGRAMMING
1,300
[ "constructive algorithms", "greedy", "implementation", "math" ]
null
null
Sonya decided to organize an exhibition of flowers. Since the girl likes only roses and lilies, she decided that only these two kinds of flowers should be in this exhibition. There are $n$ flowers in a row in the exhibition. Sonya can put either a rose or a lily in the $i$-th position. Thus each of $n$ positions shoul...
The first line contains two integers $n$ and $m$ ($1\leq n, m\leq 10^3$) — the number of flowers and visitors respectively. Each of the next $m$ lines contains two integers $l_i$ and $r_i$ ($1\leq l_i\leq r_i\leq n$), meaning that $i$-th visitor will visit all flowers from $l_i$ to $r_i$ inclusive.
Print the string of $n$ characters. The $i$-th symbol should be «0» if you want to put a rose in the $i$-th position, otherwise «1» if you want to put a lily. If there are multiple answers, print any.
[ "5 3\n1 3\n2 4\n2 5\n", "6 3\n5 6\n1 4\n4 6\n" ]
[ "01100", "110010" ]
In the first example, Sonya can put roses in the first, fourth, and fifth positions, and lilies in the second and third positions; - in the segment $[1\ldots3]$, there are one rose and two lilies, so the beauty is equal to $1\cdot 2=2$; - in the segment $[2\ldots4]$, there are one rose and two lilies, so the beauty ...
1,000
[ { "input": "5 3\n1 3\n2 4\n2 5", "output": "01010" }, { "input": "6 3\n5 6\n1 4\n4 6", "output": "010101" }, { "input": "10 4\n3 3\n1 6\n9 9\n10 10", "output": "0101010101" }, { "input": "1 1\n1 1", "output": "0" }, { "input": "1000 10\n3 998\n2 1000\n1 999\n2 100...
1,530,814,279
5,779
Python 3
OK
TESTS
27
124
102,400
f,n=[int(x) for x in input().split(' ')] ls={} rs={} for i in range(n): l, r = [int(x) for x in input().split(' ')] ls[i]=l rs[i]=r s="" for i in range(f): s+=str(i%2) print(s)
Title: Sonya and Exhibition Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Sonya decided to organize an exhibition of flowers. Since the girl likes only roses and lilies, she decided that only these two kinds of flowers should be in this exhibition. There are $n$ flowers in a row in the ...
```python f,n=[int(x) for x in input().split(' ')] ls={} rs={} for i in range(n): l, r = [int(x) for x in input().split(' ')] ls[i]=l rs[i]=r s="" for i in range(f): s+=str(i%2) print(s) ```
3
538
A
Cutting Banner
PROGRAMMING
1,400
[ "brute force", "implementation" ]
null
null
A large banner with word CODEFORCES was ordered for the 1000-th onsite round of Codeforcesω that takes place on the Miami beach. Unfortunately, the company that made the banner mixed up two orders and delivered somebody else's banner that contains someone else's word. The word on the banner consists only of upper-case ...
The single line of the input contains the word written on the banner. The word only consists of upper-case English letters. The word is non-empty and its length doesn't exceed 100 characters. It is guaranteed that the word isn't word CODEFORCES.
Print 'YES', if there exists a way to cut out the substring, and 'NO' otherwise (without the quotes).
[ "CODEWAITFORITFORCES\n", "BOTTOMCODER\n", "DECODEFORCES\n", "DOGEFORCES\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "NO\n", "YES\n", "NO\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "CODEWAITFORITFORCES", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "BOTTOMCODER", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "DECODEFORCES", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "DOGEFORCES", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "ABACABA", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "CODEFORCE", ...
1,571,060,250
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
55
155
0
n = input() e = "CODEFORCES" i,flag = 0,-1 if n[0] == "C" and len(n) >= len(e): while True: if i == len(e): flag = 1 break elif n[i] == e[i]: i += 1 else: break j = (len(n) - (len(e[i:]))) if n[j:] == e[i:] or flag ==1: print("YES") else: print("NO") elif len(n) < len(e): print("NO") ...
Title: Cutting Banner Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: A large banner with word CODEFORCES was ordered for the 1000-th onsite round of Codeforcesω that takes place on the Miami beach. Unfortunately, the company that made the banner mixed up two orders and delivered somebody ...
```python n = input() e = "CODEFORCES" i,flag = 0,-1 if n[0] == "C" and len(n) >= len(e): while True: if i == len(e): flag = 1 break elif n[i] == e[i]: i += 1 else: break j = (len(n) - (len(e[i:]))) if n[j:] == e[i:] or flag ==1: print("YES") else: print("NO") elif len(n) < len(e): pr...
3
371
C
Hamburgers
PROGRAMMING
1,600
[ "binary search", "brute force" ]
null
null
Polycarpus loves hamburgers very much. He especially adores the hamburgers he makes with his own hands. Polycarpus thinks that there are only three decent ingredients to make hamburgers from: a bread, sausage and cheese. He writes down the recipe of his favorite "Le Hamburger de Polycarpus" as a string of letters 'B' (...
The first line of the input contains a non-empty string that describes the recipe of "Le Hamburger de Polycarpus". The length of the string doesn't exceed 100, the string contains only letters 'B' (uppercase English B), 'S' (uppercase English S) and 'C' (uppercase English C). The second line contains three integers *n...
Print the maximum number of hamburgers Polycarpus can make. If he can't make any hamburger, print 0.
[ "BBBSSC\n6 4 1\n1 2 3\n4\n", "BBC\n1 10 1\n1 10 1\n21\n", "BSC\n1 1 1\n1 1 3\n1000000000000\n" ]
[ "2\n", "7\n", "200000000001\n" ]
none
1,500
[ { "input": "BBBSSC\n6 4 1\n1 2 3\n4", "output": "2" }, { "input": "BBC\n1 10 1\n1 10 1\n21", "output": "7" }, { "input": "BSC\n1 1 1\n1 1 3\n1000000000000", "output": "200000000001" }, { "input": "B\n1 1 1\n1 1 1\n381", "output": "382" }, { "input": "BSC\n3 5 6\n7...
1,697,756,094
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
OK
TESTS
31
62
0
def can_make_boxes(recipe, nb, ns, nc, pb, ps, pc, r, boxes): b_needed = recipe.count('B') * boxes s_needed = recipe.count('S') * boxes c_needed = recipe.count('C') * boxes total_cost = max(0, b_needed - nb) * pb + max(0, s_needed - ns) * ps + max(0, c_needed - nc) * pc return total_cost <= r def...
Title: Hamburgers Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Polycarpus loves hamburgers very much. He especially adores the hamburgers he makes with his own hands. Polycarpus thinks that there are only three decent ingredients to make hamburgers from: a bread, sausage and cheese. He ...
```python def can_make_boxes(recipe, nb, ns, nc, pb, ps, pc, r, boxes): b_needed = recipe.count('B') * boxes s_needed = recipe.count('S') * boxes c_needed = recipe.count('C') * boxes total_cost = max(0, b_needed - nb) * pb + max(0, s_needed - ns) * ps + max(0, c_needed - nc) * pc return total_cost...
3
61
A
Ultra-Fast Mathematician
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation" ]
A. Ultra-Fast Mathematician
2
256
Shapur was an extremely gifted student. He was great at everything including Combinatorics, Algebra, Number Theory, Geometry, Calculus, etc. He was not only smart but extraordinarily fast! He could manage to sum 1018 numbers in a single second. One day in 230 AD Shapur was trying to find out if any one can possibly do...
There are two lines in each input. Each of them contains a single number. It is guaranteed that the numbers are made from 0 and 1 only and that their length is same. The numbers may start with 0. The length of each number doesn't exceed 100.
Write one line — the corresponding answer. Do not omit the leading 0s.
[ "1010100\n0100101\n", "000\n111\n", "1110\n1010\n", "01110\n01100\n" ]
[ "1110001\n", "111\n", "0100\n", "00010\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "1010100\n0100101", "output": "1110001" }, { "input": "000\n111", "output": "111" }, { "input": "1110\n1010", "output": "0100" }, { "input": "01110\n01100", "output": "00010" }, { "input": "011101\n000001", "output": "011100" }, { "input": "...
1,595,969,381
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
102
109
6,656,000
n1 = input().strip() n2 = input().strip() def n3(n1, n2): return "".join(["0" if n1[i] == n2[i] else "1" for i in range(len(n1))]) print(n3(n1, n2))
Title: Ultra-Fast Mathematician Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: Shapur was an extremely gifted student. He was great at everything including Combinatorics, Algebra, Number Theory, Geometry, Calculus, etc. He was not only smart but extraordinarily fast! He could manage to sum 10...
```python n1 = input().strip() n2 = input().strip() def n3(n1, n2): return "".join(["0" if n1[i] == n2[i] else "1" for i in range(len(n1))]) print(n3(n1, n2)) ```
3.960352
0
none
none
none
0
[ "none" ]
null
null
Alyona's mother wants to present an array of *n* non-negative integers to Alyona. The array should be special. Alyona is a capricious girl so after she gets the array, she inspects *m* of its subarrays. Subarray is a set of some subsequent elements of the array. The *i*-th subarray is described with two integers *l**...
The first line contains two integers *n* and *m* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=105). The next *m* lines contain information about the subarrays chosen by Alyona. The *i*-th of these lines contains two integers *l**i* and *r**i* (1<=≤<=*l**i*<=≤<=*r**i*<=≤<=*n*), that describe the subarray *a*[*l**i*],<=*a*[*l**i*<=+<=1],<=...,...
In the first line print single integer — the maximum possible minimum mex. In the second line print *n* integers — the array *a*. All the elements in *a* should be between 0 and 109. It is guaranteed that there is an optimal answer in which all the elements in *a* are between 0 and 109. If there are multiple solutio...
[ "5 3\n1 3\n2 5\n4 5\n", "4 2\n1 4\n2 4\n" ]
[ "2\n1 0 2 1 0\n", "3\n5 2 0 1" ]
The first example: the mex of the subarray (1, 3) is equal to 3, the mex of the subarray (2, 5) is equal to 3, the mex of the subarray (4, 5) is equal to 2 as well, thus the minumal mex among the subarrays chosen by Alyona is equal to 2.
0
[ { "input": "5 3\n1 3\n2 5\n4 5", "output": "2\n0 1 0 1 0" }, { "input": "4 2\n1 4\n2 4", "output": "3\n0 1 2 0" }, { "input": "1 1\n1 1", "output": "1\n0" }, { "input": "2 1\n2 2", "output": "1\n0 0" }, { "input": "5 6\n2 4\n2 3\n1 4\n3 4\n2 5\n1 3", "output":...
1,549,893,050
2,147,483,647
Python 3
COMPILATION_ERROR
TESTS
0
0
0
#include<bits/stdc++.h> using namespace std; #define DEBUG(x) cout << '>' << #x << ':' << x << endl; #define REP(i,n) for(int i=0;i<(n);i++) #define FOR(i,a,b) for(int i=(a);i<=(b);i++) #define FORD(i,a,b) for(int i=(a);i>=(b);i--) #define A first #define B second #define make_pair MP #define MOD 1000000007 #...
Title: none Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Alyona's mother wants to present an array of *n* non-negative integers to Alyona. The array should be special. Alyona is a capricious girl so after she gets the array, she inspects *m* of its subarrays. Subarray is a set of some...
```python #include<bits/stdc++.h> using namespace std; #define DEBUG(x) cout << '>' << #x << ':' << x << endl; #define REP(i,n) for(int i=0;i<(n);i++) #define FOR(i,a,b) for(int i=(a);i<=(b);i++) #define FORD(i,a,b) for(int i=(a);i>=(b);i--) #define A first #define B second #define make_pair MP #define MOD 100...
-1
873
F
Forbidden Indices
PROGRAMMING
2,400
[ "dsu", "string suffix structures", "strings" ]
null
null
You are given a string *s* consisting of *n* lowercase Latin letters. Some indices in this string are marked as forbidden. You want to find a string *a* such that the value of |*a*|·*f*(*a*) is maximum possible, where *f*(*a*) is the number of occurences of *a* in *s* such that these occurences end in non-forbidden in...
The first line contains an integer number *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=200000) — the length of *s*. The second line contains a string *s*, consisting of *n* lowercase Latin letters. The third line contains a string *t*, consisting of *n* characters 0 and 1. If *i*-th character in *t* is 1, then *i* is a forbidden index (otherw...
Print the maximum possible value of |*a*|·*f*(*a*).
[ "5\nababa\n00100\n", "5\nababa\n00000\n", "5\nababa\n11111\n" ]
[ "5\n", "6\n", "0\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "5\nababa\n00100", "output": "5" }, { "input": "5\nababa\n00000", "output": "6" }, { "input": "5\nababa\n11111", "output": "0" }, { "input": "100\neebdeddddbecdbddaaecbbaccbecdeacedddcaddcdebedbabbceeeadecadbbeaecdaeabbceacbdbdbbdacebbbccdcbbeedbe\n1101101101110110...
1,677,188,779
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
3
77
11,571,200
def SAIS(A): """ Calculates suffix array in O(len(A) + max(A)) Input: Int list A with A[i] >= 0 for all i """ n = len(A) buckets = [0] * (max(A) + 2) for a in A: buckets[a + 1] += 1 for b in range(1, len(buckets)): buckets[b] += buckets[b - 1] isL = [1] * n fo...
Title: Forbidden Indices Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: You are given a string *s* consisting of *n* lowercase Latin letters. Some indices in this string are marked as forbidden. You want to find a string *a* such that the value of |*a*|·*f*(*a*) is maximum possible, wher...
```python def SAIS(A): """ Calculates suffix array in O(len(A) + max(A)) Input: Int list A with A[i] >= 0 for all i """ n = len(A) buckets = [0] * (max(A) + 2) for a in A: buckets[a + 1] += 1 for b in range(1, len(buckets)): buckets[b] += buckets[b - 1] isL = [1] ...
0
851
B
Arpa and an exam about geometry
PROGRAMMING
1,400
[ "geometry", "math" ]
null
null
Arpa is taking a geometry exam. Here is the last problem of the exam. You are given three points *a*,<=*b*,<=*c*. Find a point and an angle such that if we rotate the page around the point by the angle, the new position of *a* is the same as the old position of *b*, and the new position of *b* is the same as the old ...
The only line contains six integers *a**x*,<=*a**y*,<=*b**x*,<=*b**y*,<=*c**x*,<=*c**y* (|*a**x*|,<=|*a**y*|,<=|*b**x*|,<=|*b**y*|,<=|*c**x*|,<=|*c**y*|<=≤<=109). It's guaranteed that the points are distinct.
Print "Yes" if the problem has a solution, "No" otherwise. You can print each letter in any case (upper or lower).
[ "0 1 1 1 1 0\n", "1 1 0 0 1000 1000\n" ]
[ "Yes\n", "No\n" ]
In the first sample test, rotate the page around (0.5, 0.5) by <img align="middle" class="tex-formula" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/9d845923f4d356a48d8ede337db0303821311f0c.png" style="max-width: 100.0%;max-height: 100.0%;"/>. In the second sample test, you can't find any solution.
1,000
[ { "input": "0 1 1 1 1 0", "output": "Yes" }, { "input": "1 1 0 0 1000 1000", "output": "No" }, { "input": "1 0 2 0 3 0", "output": "No" }, { "input": "3 4 0 0 4 3", "output": "Yes" }, { "input": "-1000000000 1 0 0 1000000000 1", "output": "Yes" }, { "i...
1,699,261,184
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
2
46
0
import math a= list(map(int,input().split())) d=(a[3]-a[1])**2 + (a[0]-a[2])**2 e=(a[5]-a[1])**2 + (a[0]-a[4])**2 f=(a[3]-a[5])**2 + (a[4]-a[2])**2 if d==e or e==f or d==f: print("Yes") else: print("No")
Title: Arpa and an exam about geometry Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Arpa is taking a geometry exam. Here is the last problem of the exam. You are given three points *a*,<=*b*,<=*c*. Find a point and an angle such that if we rotate the page around the point by the angle...
```python import math a= list(map(int,input().split())) d=(a[3]-a[1])**2 + (a[0]-a[2])**2 e=(a[5]-a[1])**2 + (a[0]-a[4])**2 f=(a[3]-a[5])**2 + (a[4]-a[2])**2 if d==e or e==f or d==f: print("Yes") else: print("No") ```
0
66
B
Petya and Countryside
PROGRAMMING
1,100
[ "brute force", "implementation" ]
B. Petya and Countryside
2
256
Little Petya often travels to his grandmother in the countryside. The grandmother has a large garden, which can be represented as a rectangle 1<=×<=*n* in size, when viewed from above. This rectangle is divided into *n* equal square sections. The garden is very unusual as each of the square sections possesses its own f...
The first line contains a positive integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000). The second line contains *n* positive integers which are the height of the sections. All the numbers are no less than 1 and not more than 1000.
Print a single number, the maximal number of watered sections if we create artificial rain above exactly one section.
[ "1\n2\n", "5\n1 2 1 2 1\n", "8\n1 2 1 1 1 3 3 4\n" ]
[ "1\n", "3\n", "6\n" ]
none
1,000
[ { "input": "1\n2", "output": "1" }, { "input": "5\n1 2 1 2 1", "output": "3" }, { "input": "8\n1 2 1 1 1 3 3 4", "output": "6" }, { "input": "10\n1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10", "output": "10" }, { "input": "10\n10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1", "output": "10" }, { "input...
1,686,541,625
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
OK
TESTS
80
154
1,945,600
n=int(input()) a=list(map(int,input().split())) ans=0 for i in range(len(a)): r=i t=i-1 k=1 while t>=0 and a[t]<=a[r]: k+=1 r=t t-=1 q=i+1 s=i while q<n and a[s]>=a[q]: s=q q+=1 k+=1 ans=max(ans,k) print(ans)
Title: Petya and Countryside Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: Little Petya often travels to his grandmother in the countryside. The grandmother has a large garden, which can be represented as a rectangle 1<=×<=*n* in size, when viewed from above. This rectangle is divided into *...
```python n=int(input()) a=list(map(int,input().split())) ans=0 for i in range(len(a)): r=i t=i-1 k=1 while t>=0 and a[t]<=a[r]: k+=1 r=t t-=1 q=i+1 s=i while q<n and a[s]>=a[q]: s=q q+=1 k+=1 ans=max(ans,k) print(ans) ...
3.957876
298
A
Snow Footprints
PROGRAMMING
1,300
[ "greedy", "implementation" ]
null
null
There is a straight snowy road, divided into *n* blocks. The blocks are numbered from 1 to *n* from left to right. If one moves from the *i*-th block to the (*i*<=+<=1)-th block, he will leave a right footprint on the *i*-th block. Similarly, if one moves from the *i*-th block to the (*i*<=-<=1)-th block, he will leave...
The first line of the input contains integer *n* (3<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000). The second line contains the description of the road — the string that consists of *n* characters. Each character will be either "." (a block without footprint), or "L" (a block with a left footprint), "R" (a block with a right footprint). It's gu...
Print two space-separated integers — the values of *s* and *t*. If there are several possible solutions you can print any of them.
[ "9\n..RRLL...\n", "11\n.RRRLLLLL..\n" ]
[ "3 4\n", "7 5\n" ]
The first test sample is the one in the picture.
500
[ { "input": "11\n.RRRLLLLL..", "output": "7 5" }, { "input": "4\n.RL.", "output": "3 2" }, { "input": "3\n.L.", "output": "2 1" }, { "input": "3\n.R.", "output": "2 3" } ]
1,580,639,464
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
1
218
0
n = int(input()) s = input() start = 0 for i in range(n): if s[i] != '.': start = i+1 break t = start for i in range(n): if s[i] != '.': if s[i] == 'R': t = i + 1 else: t = i - 1 print(start, t)
Title: Snow Footprints Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: There is a straight snowy road, divided into *n* blocks. The blocks are numbered from 1 to *n* from left to right. If one moves from the *i*-th block to the (*i*<=+<=1)-th block, he will leave a right footprint on the *...
```python n = int(input()) s = input() start = 0 for i in range(n): if s[i] != '.': start = i+1 break t = start for i in range(n): if s[i] != '.': if s[i] == 'R': t = i + 1 else: t = i - 1 print(start, t) ```
0
732
A
Buy a Shovel
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "brute force", "constructive algorithms", "implementation", "math" ]
null
null
Polycarp urgently needs a shovel! He comes to the shop and chooses an appropriate one. The shovel that Policarp chooses is sold for *k* burles. Assume that there is an unlimited number of such shovels in the shop. In his pocket Polycarp has an unlimited number of "10-burle coins" and exactly one coin of *r* burles (1<...
The single line of input contains two integers *k* and *r* (1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=1000, 1<=≤<=*r*<=≤<=9) — the price of one shovel and the denomination of the coin in Polycarp's pocket that is different from "10-burle coins". Remember that he has an unlimited number of coins in the denomination of 10, that is, Polycarp has e...
Print the required minimum number of shovels Polycarp has to buy so that he can pay for them without any change.
[ "117 3\n", "237 7\n", "15 2\n" ]
[ "9\n", "1\n", "2\n" ]
In the first example Polycarp can buy 9 shovels and pay 9·117 = 1053 burles. Indeed, he can pay this sum by using 10-burle coins and one 3-burle coin. He can't buy fewer shovels without any change. In the second example it is enough for Polycarp to buy one shovel. In the third example Polycarp should buy two shovels ...
500
[ { "input": "117 3", "output": "9" }, { "input": "237 7", "output": "1" }, { "input": "15 2", "output": "2" }, { "input": "1 1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "1 9", "output": "9" }, { "input": "1000 3", "output": "1" }, { "input": "1000 1", ...
1,675,588,155
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
54
46
0
k,r = map(int, input().split()) counting = True count =1 while(counting): if(k*count%10 == 0): counting = False elif(k*count%10==r): counting = False count = count+1 print(count-1)
Title: Buy a Shovel Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Polycarp urgently needs a shovel! He comes to the shop and chooses an appropriate one. The shovel that Policarp chooses is sold for *k* burles. Assume that there is an unlimited number of such shovels in the shop. In his ...
```python k,r = map(int, input().split()) counting = True count =1 while(counting): if(k*count%10 == 0): counting = False elif(k*count%10==r): counting = False count = count+1 print(count-1) ```
3
724
C
Ray Tracing
PROGRAMMING
1,800
[ "greedy", "hashing", "implementation", "math", "number theory", "sortings" ]
null
null
There are *k* sensors located in the rectangular room of size *n*<=×<=*m* meters. The *i*-th sensor is located at point (*x**i*,<=*y**i*). All sensors are located at distinct points strictly inside the rectangle. Opposite corners of the room are located at points (0,<=0) and (*n*,<=*m*). Walls of the room are paralle...
The first line of the input contains three integers *n*, *m* and *k* (2<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=100<=000, 1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=100<=000) — lengths of the room's walls and the number of sensors. Each of the following *k* lines contains two integers *x**i* and *y**i* (1<=≤<=*x**i*<=≤<=*n*<=-<=1, 1<=≤<=*y**i*<=≤<=*m*<=-<=1) — coordin...
Print *k* integers. The *i*-th of them should be equal to the number of seconds when the ray first passes through the point where the *i*-th sensor is located, or <=-<=1 if this will never happen.
[ "3 3 4\n1 1\n1 2\n2 1\n2 2\n", "3 4 6\n1 1\n2 1\n1 2\n2 2\n1 3\n2 3\n", "7 4 5\n1 3\n2 2\n5 1\n5 3\n4 3\n" ]
[ "1\n-1\n-1\n2\n", "1\n-1\n-1\n2\n5\n-1\n", "13\n2\n9\n5\n-1\n" ]
In the first sample, the ray will consequently pass through the points (0, 0), (1, 1), (2, 2), (3, 3). Thus, it will stop at the point (3, 3) after 3 seconds. In the second sample, the ray will consequently pass through the following points: (0, 0), (1, 1), (2, 2), (3, 3), (2, 4), (1, 3), (0, 2), (1, 1), (2, 0), (3, 1...
1,500
[ { "input": "3 3 4\n1 1\n1 2\n2 1\n2 2", "output": "1\n-1\n-1\n2" }, { "input": "3 4 6\n1 1\n2 1\n1 2\n2 2\n1 3\n2 3", "output": "1\n-1\n-1\n2\n5\n-1" }, { "input": "7 4 5\n1 3\n2 2\n5 1\n5 3\n4 3", "output": "13\n2\n9\n5\n-1" }, { "input": "10 10 10\n3 8\n1 7\n2 3\n4 2\n4 8\n...
1,476,477,708
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
0
31
4,812,800
print("Ray Tracing program") print("first is width, second is hight ,third number of point") s=input() #take firs line of input s=s.split() m,n,k=int(s[0])+1,int(s[1])+1,int(s[2]) #m=width , n=hight , k=inputs arr=[] # initialize the width and hight of the array for i in range(n): arr.append([0 for j in ...
Title: Ray Tracing Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: There are *k* sensors located in the rectangular room of size *n*<=×<=*m* meters. The *i*-th sensor is located at point (*x**i*,<=*y**i*). All sensors are located at distinct points strictly inside the rectangle. Opposite...
```python print("Ray Tracing program") print("first is width, second is hight ,third number of point") s=input() #take firs line of input s=s.split() m,n,k=int(s[0])+1,int(s[1])+1,int(s[2]) #m=width , n=hight , k=inputs arr=[] # initialize the width and hight of the array for i in range(n): arr.append([0...
0
583
A
Asphalting Roads
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
City X consists of *n* vertical and *n* horizontal infinite roads, forming *n*<=×<=*n* intersections. Roads (both vertical and horizontal) are numbered from 1 to *n*, and the intersections are indicated by the numbers of the roads that form them. Sand roads have long been recognized out of date, so the decision was ma...
The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=50) — the number of vertical and horizontal roads in the city. Next *n*2 lines contain the order of intersections in the schedule. The *i*-th of them contains two numbers *h**i*,<=*v**i* (1<=≤<=*h**i*,<=*v**i*<=≤<=*n*), separated by a space, and meaning that the inte...
In the single line print the numbers of the days when road works will be in progress in ascending order. The days are numbered starting from 1.
[ "2\n1 1\n1 2\n2 1\n2 2\n", "1\n1 1\n" ]
[ "1 4 \n", "1 \n" ]
In the sample the brigade acts like that: 1. On the first day the brigade comes to the intersection of the 1-st horizontal and the 1-st vertical road. As none of them has been asphalted, the workers asphalt the 1-st vertical and the 1-st horizontal road; 1. On the second day the brigade of the workers comes to the i...
500
[ { "input": "2\n1 1\n1 2\n2 1\n2 2", "output": "1 4 " }, { "input": "1\n1 1", "output": "1 " }, { "input": "2\n1 1\n2 2\n1 2\n2 1", "output": "1 2 " }, { "input": "2\n1 2\n2 2\n2 1\n1 1", "output": "1 3 " }, { "input": "3\n2 2\n1 2\n3 2\n3 3\n1 1\n2 3\n1 3\n3 1\n2 ...
1,528,663,604
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
39
109
0
hm = int(input()) hm2 = hm*hm rows = [] cols = [] lis = [] for i in range(1, hm+1): rows.append(i) cols.append(i) for i in range(1, hm2+1): row, col = input().split(" ") row = int(row) col = int(col) if row in rows and col in cols: lis.append(i) rows.remove(...
Title: Asphalting Roads Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: City X consists of *n* vertical and *n* horizontal infinite roads, forming *n*<=×<=*n* intersections. Roads (both vertical and horizontal) are numbered from 1 to *n*, and the intersections are indicated by the numbers ...
```python hm = int(input()) hm2 = hm*hm rows = [] cols = [] lis = [] for i in range(1, hm+1): rows.append(i) cols.append(i) for i in range(1, hm2+1): row, col = input().split(" ") row = int(row) col = int(col) if row in rows and col in cols: lis.append(i) ro...
3
976
E
Well played!
PROGRAMMING
2,100
[ "greedy", "sortings" ]
null
null
Recently Max has got himself into popular CCG "BrainStone". As "BrainStone" is a pretty intellectual game, Max has to solve numerous hard problems during the gameplay. Here is one of them: Max owns *n* creatures, *i*-th of them can be described with two numbers — its health *hp**i* and its damage *dmg**i*. Max also ha...
The first line contains three integers *n*, *a*, *b* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=2·105, 0<=≤<=*a*<=≤<=20, 0<=≤<=*b*<=≤<=2·105) — the number of creatures, spells of the first type and spells of the second type, respectively. The *i*-th of the next *n* lines contain two number *hp**i* and *dmg**i* (1<=≤<=*hp**i*,<=*dmg**i*<=≤<=109) ...
Print single integer — maximum total damage creatures can deal.
[ "2 1 1\n10 15\n6 1\n", "3 0 3\n10 8\n7 11\n5 2\n" ]
[ "27\n", "26\n" ]
In the first example Max should use the spell of the first type on the second creature, then the spell of the second type on the same creature. Then total damage will be equal to 15 + 6·2 = 27. In the second example Max should use the spell of the second type on the first creature, then the spell of the second type on...
0
[ { "input": "2 1 1\n10 15\n6 1", "output": "27" }, { "input": "3 0 3\n10 8\n7 11\n5 2", "output": "26" }, { "input": "1 0 0\n2 1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "1 0 200000\n1 2", "output": "2" }, { "input": "7 5 7\n29 25\n84 28\n34 34\n14 76\n85 9\n40 57\n99 88", ...
1,657,225,198
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
9
358
10,854,400
from sys import stdin,exit #parsea una línea def parser(): return map(int, stdin.readline().split()) #recibiendo los valores de n, a y b n,a,b=parser() #inicializando las listas de vida y daño hp=[] dmg=[] #recibiendo los parametros de las criaturas for creature in range(n): h,d=parser() hp.append(h) ...
Title: Well played! Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Recently Max has got himself into popular CCG "BrainStone". As "BrainStone" is a pretty intellectual game, Max has to solve numerous hard problems during the gameplay. Here is one of them: Max owns *n* creatures, *i*-th o...
```python from sys import stdin,exit #parsea una línea def parser(): return map(int, stdin.readline().split()) #recibiendo los valores de n, a y b n,a,b=parser() #inicializando las listas de vida y daño hp=[] dmg=[] #recibiendo los parametros de las criaturas for creature in range(n): h,d=parser() hp.ap...
0
585
A
Gennady the Dentist
PROGRAMMING
1,800
[ "brute force", "implementation" ]
null
null
Gennady is one of the best child dentists in Berland. Today *n* children got an appointment with him, they lined up in front of his office. All children love to cry loudly at the reception at the dentist. We enumerate the children with integers from 1 to *n* in the order they go in the line. Every child is associated ...
The first line of the input contains a positive integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=4000) — the number of kids in the line. Next *n* lines contain three integers each *v**i*,<=*d**i*,<=*p**i* (1<=≤<=*v**i*,<=*d**i*,<=*p**i*<=≤<=106) — the volume of the cry in the doctor's office, the volume of the cry in the hall and the conf...
In the first line print number *k* — the number of children whose teeth Gennady will cure. In the second line print *k* integers — the numbers of the children who will make it to the end of the line in the increasing order.
[ "5\n4 2 2\n4 1 2\n5 2 4\n3 3 5\n5 1 2\n", "5\n4 5 1\n5 3 9\n4 1 2\n2 1 8\n4 1 9\n" ]
[ "2\n1 3 ", "4\n1 2 4 5 " ]
In the first example, Gennady first treats the teeth of the first child who will cry with volume 4. The confidences of the remaining children will get equal to  - 2, 1, 3, 1, respectively. Thus, the second child also cries at the volume of 1 and run to the exit. The confidence of the remaining children will be equal to...
500
[ { "input": "5\n4 2 2\n4 1 2\n5 2 4\n3 3 5\n5 1 2", "output": "2\n1 3 " }, { "input": "5\n4 5 1\n5 3 9\n4 1 2\n2 1 8\n4 1 9", "output": "4\n1 2 4 5 " }, { "input": "10\n10 7 10\n3 6 11\n8 4 10\n10 1 11\n7 3 13\n7 2 13\n7 6 14\n3 4 17\n9 4 20\n5 2 24", "output": "3\n1 2 5 " }, { ...
1,542,010,262
2,147,483,647
Python 3
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
0
108
0
n,k=map(int,input().split()) k=10**k s=n*k while n*k>0: if n>k: n=n%k else: k=k%n D=s//n+k print(D)
Title: Gennady the Dentist Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Gennady is one of the best child dentists in Berland. Today *n* children got an appointment with him, they lined up in front of his office. All children love to cry loudly at the reception at the dentist. We enumer...
```python n,k=map(int,input().split()) k=10**k s=n*k while n*k>0: if n>k: n=n%k else: k=k%n D=s//n+k print(D) ```
-1
69
A
Young Physicist
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation", "math" ]
A. Young Physicist
2
256
A guy named Vasya attends the final grade of a high school. One day Vasya decided to watch a match of his favorite hockey team. And, as the boy loves hockey very much, even more than physics, he forgot to do the homework. Specifically, he forgot to complete his physics tasks. Next day the teacher got very angry at Vasy...
The first line contains a positive integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100), then follow *n* lines containing three integers each: the *x**i* coordinate, the *y**i* coordinate and the *z**i* coordinate of the force vector, applied to the body (<=-<=100<=≤<=*x**i*,<=*y**i*,<=*z**i*<=≤<=100).
Print the word "YES" if the body is in equilibrium, or the word "NO" if it is not.
[ "3\n4 1 7\n-2 4 -1\n1 -5 -3\n", "3\n3 -1 7\n-5 2 -4\n2 -1 -3\n" ]
[ "NO", "YES" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "3\n4 1 7\n-2 4 -1\n1 -5 -3", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "3\n3 -1 7\n-5 2 -4\n2 -1 -3", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "10\n21 32 -46\n43 -35 21\n42 2 -50\n22 40 20\n-27 -9 38\n-4 1 1\n-40 6 -31\n-13 -2 34\n-21 34 -12\n-32 -29 41", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "10...
1,514,035,991
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
81
124
5,632,000
x, y, z = 0, 0, 0 for i in range(int(input())): x1,y1,z1 = map(int, input().split()) x += x1 y += y1 z += z1 print(('NO', 'YES')[int (x == 0 and y == 0 and z == 0)])
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 i in range(int(input())): x1,y1,z1 = map(int, input().split()) x += x1 y += y1 z += z1 print(('NO', 'YES')[int (x == 0 and y == 0 and z == 0)]) ```
3.95851
990
B
Micro-World
PROGRAMMING
1,200
[ "greedy", "sortings" ]
null
null
You have a Petri dish with bacteria and you are preparing to dive into the harsh micro-world. But, unfortunately, you don't have any microscope nearby, so you can't watch them. You know that you have $n$ bacteria in the Petri dish and size of the $i$-th bacteria is $a_i$. Also you know intergalactic positive integer c...
The first line contains two space separated positive integers $n$ and $K$ ($1 \le n \le 2 \cdot 10^5$, $1 \le K \le 10^6$) — number of bacteria and intergalactic constant $K$. The second line contains $n$ space separated integers $a_1, a_2, \dots, a_n$ ($1 \le a_i \le 10^6$) — sizes of bacteria you have.
Print the only integer — minimal possible number of bacteria can remain.
[ "7 1\n101 53 42 102 101 55 54\n", "6 5\n20 15 10 15 20 25\n", "7 1000000\n1 1 1 1 1 1 1\n" ]
[ "3\n", "1\n", "7\n" ]
The first example is clarified in the problem statement. In the second example an optimal possible sequence of swallows is: $[20, 15, 10, 15, \underline{20}, 25]$ $\to$ $[20, 15, 10, \underline{15}, 25]$ $\to$ $[20, 15, \underline{10}, 25]$ $\to$ $[20, \underline{15}, 25]$ $\to$ $[\underline{20}, 25]$ $\to$ $[25]$. I...
0
[ { "input": "7 1\n101 53 42 102 101 55 54", "output": "3" }, { "input": "6 5\n20 15 10 15 20 25", "output": "1" }, { "input": "7 1000000\n1 1 1 1 1 1 1", "output": "7" }, { "input": "1 1\n1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "1 4\n8", "output": "1" }, { "inp...
1,548,687,991
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
14
436
14,643,200
n, k = input().split() k = int(k) l = input().split() l = list(map(int, l)) l.sort() n= int(n) if n==1: print(0) else: f=l[0] arr=[] mat=[] c=0 for i in range(len(l)): if l[i]==f: c=c+1 else: mat.append(c) arr.append(f) ...
Title: Micro-World Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: You have a Petri dish with bacteria and you are preparing to dive into the harsh micro-world. But, unfortunately, you don't have any microscope nearby, so you can't watch them. You know that you have $n$ bacteria in the Pe...
```python n, k = input().split() k = int(k) l = input().split() l = list(map(int, l)) l.sort() n= int(n) if n==1: print(0) else: f=l[0] arr=[] mat=[] c=0 for i in range(len(l)): if l[i]==f: c=c+1 else: mat.append(c) arr.appe...
0
71
A
Way Too Long Words
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "strings" ]
A. Way Too Long Words
1
256
Sometimes some words like "localization" or "internationalization" are so long that writing them many times in one text is quite tiresome. Let's consider a word too long, if its length is strictly more than 10 characters. All too long words should be replaced with a special abbreviation. This abbreviation is made lik...
The first line contains an integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100). Each of the following *n* lines contains one word. All the words consist of lowercase Latin letters and possess the lengths of from 1 to 100 characters.
Print *n* lines. The *i*-th line should contain the result of replacing of the *i*-th word from the input data.
[ "4\nword\nlocalization\ninternationalization\npneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis\n" ]
[ "word\nl10n\ni18n\np43s\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "4\nword\nlocalization\ninternationalization\npneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis", "output": "word\nl10n\ni18n\np43s" }, { "input": "5\nabcdefgh\nabcdefghi\nabcdefghij\nabcdefghijk\nabcdefghijklm", "output": "abcdefgh\nabcdefghi\nabcdefghij\na9k\na11m" }, { "input":...
1,689,946,326
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
20
46
0
n=int(input()) words=[] for i in range(n): word = input() if len(word)<=10: words.append(word) else: words.append(word[0]+str(len(word[1:-1]))+word[-1]) for word in words: print(word)
Title: Way Too Long Words Time Limit: 1 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: Sometimes some words like "localization" or "internationalization" are so long that writing them many times in one text is quite tiresome. Let's consider a word too long, if its length is strictly more than 10 character...
```python n=int(input()) words=[] for i in range(n): word = input() if len(word)<=10: words.append(word) else: words.append(word[0]+str(len(word[1:-1]))+word[-1]) for word in words: print(word) ```
3.977
703
A
Mishka and Game
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Mishka is a little polar bear. As known, little bears loves spending their free time playing dice for chocolates. Once in a wonderful sunny morning, walking around blocks of ice, Mishka met her friend Chris, and they started playing the game. Rules of the game are very simple: at first number of rounds *n* is defined....
The first line of the input contains single integer *n* *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of game rounds. The next *n* lines contains rounds description. *i*-th of them contains pair of integers *m**i* and *c**i* (1<=≤<=*m**i*,<=<=*c**i*<=≤<=6) — values on dice upper face after Mishka's and Chris' throws in *i*-th ...
If Mishka is the winner of the game, print "Mishka" (without quotes) in the only line. If Chris is the winner of the game, print "Chris" (without quotes) in the only line. If the result of the game is draw, print "Friendship is magic!^^" (without quotes) in the only line.
[ "3\n3 5\n2 1\n4 2\n", "2\n6 1\n1 6\n", "3\n1 5\n3 3\n2 2\n" ]
[ "Mishka", "Friendship is magic!^^", "Chris" ]
In the first sample case Mishka loses the first round, but wins second and third rounds and thus she is the winner of the game. In the second sample case Mishka wins the first round, Chris wins the second round, and the game ends with draw with score 1:1. In the third sample case Chris wins the first round, but there...
500
[ { "input": "3\n3 5\n2 1\n4 2", "output": "Mishka" }, { "input": "2\n6 1\n1 6", "output": "Friendship is magic!^^" }, { "input": "3\n1 5\n3 3\n2 2", "output": "Chris" }, { "input": "6\n4 1\n4 2\n5 3\n5 1\n5 3\n4 1", "output": "Mishka" }, { "input": "8\n2 4\n1 4\n1 ...
1,674,538,348
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
1
31
0
n=int(input()) for i in range(n): m=0 c=0 x,y=map(int,input().split()) if x>y: m=m+1 elif y>x: c=c+1 if m==c: print("Friendship is magic!^^") elif m>c: print("Mishka") else: print("Chris")
Title: Mishka and Game Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Mishka is a little polar bear. As known, little bears loves spending their free time playing dice for chocolates. Once in a wonderful sunny morning, walking around blocks of ice, Mishka met her friend Chris, and they st...
```python n=int(input()) for i in range(n): m=0 c=0 x,y=map(int,input().split()) if x>y: m=m+1 elif y>x: c=c+1 if m==c: print("Friendship is magic!^^") elif m>c: print("Mishka") else: print("Chris") ```
0
59
A
Word
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation", "strings" ]
A. Word
2
256
Vasya is very upset that many people on the Net mix uppercase and lowercase letters in one word. That's why he decided to invent an extension for his favorite browser that would change the letters' register in every word so that it either only consisted of lowercase letters or, vice versa, only of uppercase ones. At th...
The first line contains a word *s* — it consists of uppercase and lowercase Latin letters and possesses the length from 1 to 100.
Print the corrected word *s*. If the given word *s* has strictly more uppercase letters, make the word written in the uppercase register, otherwise - in the lowercase one.
[ "HoUse\n", "ViP\n", "maTRIx\n" ]
[ "house\n", "VIP\n", "matrix\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "HoUse", "output": "house" }, { "input": "ViP", "output": "VIP" }, { "input": "maTRIx", "output": "matrix" }, { "input": "BNHWpnpawg", "output": "bnhwpnpawg" }, { "input": "VTYGP", "output": "VTYGP" }, { "input": "CHNenu", "output": "chn...
1,642,580,277
2,147,483,647
Python 3
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
0
62
0
n=input() l=0 u=0 n1="" for i in range(len(n)): if(n[i] >= 'A' and n[i] <= 'Z'): u+=1 elif(n[i] >= 'a' and n[i] <= 'z'): l+=1 if u==l: print(n1 = n1 + chr((ord(n[i]) - 32))) elif u>l: ptint(n1 = n1 + chr((ord(n[i]) + 32))) else: print( n1 = n1 + n[i])
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 n=input() l=0 u=0 n1="" for i in range(len(n)): if(n[i] >= 'A' and n[i] <= 'Z'): u+=1 elif(n[i] >= 'a' and n[i] <= 'z'): l+=1 if u==l: print(n1 = n1 + chr((ord(n[i]) - 32))) elif u>l: ptint(n1 = n1 + chr((ord(n[i]) + 32))) else: print( n1 = n1 + n[i]) ...
-1
706
B
Interesting drink
PROGRAMMING
1,100
[ "binary search", "dp", "implementation" ]
null
null
Vasiliy likes to rest after a hard work, so you may often meet him in some bar nearby. As all programmers do, he loves the famous drink "Beecola", which can be bought in *n* different shops in the city. It's known that the price of one bottle in the shop *i* is equal to *x**i* coins. Vasiliy plans to buy his favorite ...
The first line of the input contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100<=000) — the number of shops in the city that sell Vasiliy's favourite drink. The second line contains *n* integers *x**i* (1<=≤<=*x**i*<=≤<=100<=000) — prices of the bottles of the drink in the *i*-th shop. The third line contains a single i...
Print *q* integers. The *i*-th of them should be equal to the number of shops where Vasiliy will be able to buy a bottle of the drink on the *i*-th day.
[ "5\n3 10 8 6 11\n4\n1\n10\n3\n11\n" ]
[ "0\n4\n1\n5\n" ]
On the first day, Vasiliy won't be able to buy a drink in any of the shops. On the second day, Vasiliy can buy a drink in the shops 1, 2, 3 and 4. On the third day, Vasiliy can buy a drink only in the shop number 1. Finally, on the last day Vasiliy can buy a drink in any shop.
1,000
[ { "input": "5\n3 10 8 6 11\n4\n1\n10\n3\n11", "output": "0\n4\n1\n5" }, { "input": "5\n868 987 714 168 123\n10\n424\n192\n795\n873\n117\n914\n735\n158\n631\n471", "output": "2\n2\n3\n4\n0\n4\n3\n1\n2\n2" }, { "input": "3\n435 482 309\n7\n245\n241\n909\n745\n980\n29\n521", "output": "...
1,693,670,403
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
4
46
1,638,400
import sys scan = sys.stdin n = int(scan.readline()) x = list(map(int, scan.readline().split())) q = int(scan.readline()) m = [] for i in range(q): mi = int(scan.readline()) m.append(mi) x.append(mi) x.sort() x.reverse() mcopy = m.copy() mcopy.sort() for i in m: print(n + q - x....
Title: Interesting drink Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Vasiliy likes to rest after a hard work, so you may often meet him in some bar nearby. As all programmers do, he loves the famous drink "Beecola", which can be bought in *n* different shops in the city. It's known tha...
```python import sys scan = sys.stdin n = int(scan.readline()) x = list(map(int, scan.readline().split())) q = int(scan.readline()) m = [] for i in range(q): mi = int(scan.readline()) m.append(mi) x.append(mi) x.sort() x.reverse() mcopy = m.copy() mcopy.sort() for i in m: print(...
0
559
B
Equivalent Strings
PROGRAMMING
1,700
[ "divide and conquer", "hashing", "sortings", "strings" ]
null
null
Today on a lecture about strings Gerald learned a new definition of string equivalency. Two strings *a* and *b* of equal length are called equivalent in one of the two cases: 1. They are equal. 1. If we split string *a* into two halves of the same size *a*1 and *a*2, and string *b* into two halves of the same size ...
The first two lines of the input contain two strings given by the teacher. Each of them has the length from 1 to 200<=000 and consists of lowercase English letters. The strings have the same length.
Print "YES" (without the quotes), if these two strings are equivalent, and "NO" (without the quotes) otherwise.
[ "aaba\nabaa\n", "aabb\nabab\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "NO\n" ]
In the first sample you should split the first string into strings "aa" and "ba", the second one — into strings "ab" and "aa". "aa" is equivalent to "aa"; "ab" is equivalent to "ba" as "ab" = "a" + "b", "ba" = "b" + "a". In the second sample the first string can be splitted into strings "aa" and "bb", that are equival...
1,000
[ { "input": "aaba\nabaa", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "aabb\nabab", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "a\na", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "a\nb", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "ab\nab", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "ab\nba", "output": "YES" }, { ...
1,623,778,912
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
2
46
0
s1 = input() s2 = input() a1,a2 = [s1[:len(s1)//2],s1[len(s1)//2:]] b1,b2 = [s2[:len(s1)//2],s2[len(s1)//2:]] if a1 == b1 or a2 == b2 or a1 == b2 or a2 == b1: print("YES") else: print("NO")
Title: Equivalent Strings Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Today on a lecture about strings Gerald learned a new definition of string equivalency. Two strings *a* and *b* of equal length are called equivalent in one of the two cases: 1. They are equal. 1. If we split str...
```python s1 = input() s2 = input() a1,a2 = [s1[:len(s1)//2],s1[len(s1)//2:]] b1,b2 = [s2[:len(s1)//2],s2[len(s1)//2:]] if a1 == b1 or a2 == b2 or a1 == b2 or a2 == b1: print("YES") else: print("NO") ```
0
1
A
Theatre Square
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "math" ]
A. Theatre Square
1
256
Theatre Square in the capital city of Berland has a rectangular shape with the size *n*<=×<=*m* meters. On the occasion of the city's anniversary, a decision was taken to pave the Square with square granite flagstones. Each flagstone is of the size *a*<=×<=*a*. What is the least number of flagstones needed to pave the...
The input contains three positive integer numbers in the first line: *n*,<=<=*m* and *a* (1<=≤<=<=*n*,<=*m*,<=*a*<=≤<=109).
Write the needed number of flagstones.
[ "6 6 4\n" ]
[ "4\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "6 6 4", "output": "4" }, { "input": "1 1 1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "2 1 1", "output": "2" }, { "input": "1 2 1", "output": "2" }, { "input": "2 2 1", "output": "4" }, { "input": "2 1 2", "output": "1" }, { "input": "1 1 3"...
1,693,403,317
2,147,483,647
Python 3
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
0
31
0
n = int(input()) m = int(input()) a = int(input()) length = 0 width = 0 count = 0 while length < n: length += a count += 1 while width < n: width += a count += 1 print(count)
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 = int(input()) m = int(input()) a = int(input()) length = 0 width = 0 count = 0 while length < n: length += a count += 1 while width < n: width += a count += 1 print(count) ```
-1
166
E
Tetrahedron
PROGRAMMING
1,500
[ "dp", "math", "matrices" ]
null
null
You are given a tetrahedron. Let's mark its vertices with letters *A*, *B*, *C* and *D* correspondingly. An ant is standing in the vertex *D* of the tetrahedron. The ant is quite active and he wouldn't stay idle. At each moment of time he makes a step from one vertex to another one along some edge of the tetrahedron. ...
The first line contains the only integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=107) — the required length of the cyclic path.
Print the only integer — the required number of ways modulo 1000000007 (109<=+<=7).
[ "2\n", "4\n" ]
[ "3\n", "21\n" ]
The required paths in the first sample are: - *D* - *A* - *D* - *D* - *B* - *D* - *D* - *C* - *D*
1,000
[ { "input": "2", "output": "3" }, { "input": "4", "output": "21" }, { "input": "1", "output": "0" }, { "input": "3", "output": "6" }, { "input": "5", "output": "60" }, { "input": "6", "output": "183" }, { "input": "7", "output": "546" ...
1,681,542,136
2,147,483,647
Python 3
TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED
TESTS
12
2,000
118,681,600
m=1000000007 n=int(input()) dp=[[None for j in range(n+1)] for i in range(2)] dp[0][0]=1 dp[1][0]=0 for i in range(1,n+1): dp[0][i]=(3*dp[1][i-1])%m dp[1][i]=(2*dp[1][i-1]+dp[0][i-1])%m print(dp[0][n])
Title: Tetrahedron Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: You are given a tetrahedron. Let's mark its vertices with letters *A*, *B*, *C* and *D* correspondingly. An ant is standing in the vertex *D* of the tetrahedron. The ant is quite active and he wouldn't stay idle. At each m...
```python m=1000000007 n=int(input()) dp=[[None for j in range(n+1)] for i in range(2)] dp[0][0]=1 dp[1][0]=0 for i in range(1,n+1): dp[0][i]=(3*dp[1][i-1])%m dp[1][i]=(2*dp[1][i-1]+dp[0][i-1])%m print(dp[0][n]) ```
0
8
B
Obsession with Robots
PROGRAMMING
1,400
[ "constructive algorithms", "graphs", "implementation" ]
B. Obsession with Robots
2
64
The whole world got obsessed with robots,and to keep pace with the progress, great Berland's programmer Draude decided to build his own robot. He was working hard at the robot. He taught it to walk the shortest path from one point to another, to record all its movements, but like in many Draude's programs, there was a ...
The first line of the input file contains the recording of the robot's movements. This recording is a non-empty string, consisting of uppercase Latin letters L, R, U and D, standing for movements left, right, up and down respectively. The length of the string does not exceed 100.
In the first line output the only word OK (if the above described map exists), or BUG (if such a map does not exist).
[ "LLUUUR\n", "RRUULLDD\n" ]
[ "OK\n", "BUG\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "LLUUUR", "output": "OK" }, { "input": "RRUULLDD", "output": "BUG" }, { "input": "L", "output": "OK" }, { "input": "R", "output": "OK" }, { "input": "R", "output": "OK" }, { "input": "RR", "output": "OK" }, { "input": "DL", "...
1,663,948,704
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
30
154
0
S = input() seen = set() seen.add((0,0)) y,x=0,0 for c in S: py,px=y,x if c=='U': y+=1 elif c=='D': y-=1 elif c=='L': x-=1 else: x+=1 for y1,x1 in ((1,0),(-1,0),(0,1),(0,-1)): y2,x2=y+y1,x+x1 if y2==py and x2==px:continue ...
Title: Obsession with Robots Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 64 megabytes Problem Description: The whole world got obsessed with robots,and to keep pace with the progress, great Berland's programmer Draude decided to build his own robot. He was working hard at the robot. He taught it to walk the shortest path fr...
```python S = input() seen = set() seen.add((0,0)) y,x=0,0 for c in S: py,px=y,x if c=='U': y+=1 elif c=='D': y-=1 elif c=='L': x-=1 else: x+=1 for y1,x1 in ((1,0),(-1,0),(0,1),(0,-1)): y2,x2=y+y1,x+x1 if y2==py and x2==px:con...
0
131
A
cAPS lOCK
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation", "strings" ]
null
null
wHAT DO WE NEED cAPS LOCK FOR? Caps lock is a computer keyboard key. Pressing it sets an input mode in which typed letters are capital by default. If it is pressed by accident, it leads to accidents like the one we had in the first passage. Let's consider that a word has been typed with the Caps lock key accidentall...
The first line of the input data contains a word consisting of uppercase and lowercase Latin letters. The word's length is from 1 to 100 characters, inclusive.
Print the result of the given word's processing.
[ "cAPS\n", "Lock\n" ]
[ "Caps", "Lock\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "cAPS", "output": "Caps" }, { "input": "Lock", "output": "Lock" }, { "input": "cAPSlOCK", "output": "cAPSlOCK" }, { "input": "CAPs", "output": "CAPs" }, { "input": "LoCK", "output": "LoCK" }, { "input": "OOPS", "output": "oops" }, { ...
1,696,364,728
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
2
46
0
word = input() word.lower() print(word.capitalize())
Title: cAPS lOCK Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: wHAT DO WE NEED cAPS LOCK FOR? Caps lock is a computer keyboard key. Pressing it sets an input mode in which typed letters are capital by default. If it is pressed by accident, it leads to accidents like the one we had in th...
```python word = input() word.lower() print(word.capitalize()) ```
0
712
A
Memory and Crow
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation", "math" ]
null
null
There are *n* integers *b*1,<=*b*2,<=...,<=*b**n* written in a row. For all *i* from 1 to *n*, values *a**i* are defined by the crows performing the following procedure: - The crow sets *a**i* initially 0. - The crow then adds *b**i* to *a**i*, subtracts *b**i*<=+<=1, adds the *b**i*<=+<=2 number, and so on until th...
The first line of the input contains a single integer *n* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100<=000) — the number of integers written in the row. The next line contains *n*, the *i*'th of which is *a**i* (<=-<=109<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=109) — the value of the *i*'th number.
Print *n* integers corresponding to the sequence *b*1,<=*b*2,<=...,<=*b**n*. It's guaranteed that the answer is unique and fits in 32-bit integer type.
[ "5\n6 -4 8 -2 3\n", "5\n3 -2 -1 5 6\n" ]
[ "2 4 6 1 3 \n", "1 -3 4 11 6 \n" ]
In the first sample test, the crows report the numbers 6, - 4, 8, - 2, and 3 when he starts at indices 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 respectively. It is easy to check that the sequence 2 4 6 1 3 satisfies the reports. For example, 6 = 2 - 4 + 6 - 1 + 3, and  - 4 = 4 - 6 + 1 - 3. In the second sample test, the sequence 1,  - 3, 4, ...
500
[ { "input": "5\n6 -4 8 -2 3", "output": "2 4 6 1 3 " }, { "input": "5\n3 -2 -1 5 6", "output": "1 -3 4 11 6 " }, { "input": "10\n13 -2 532 -63 -23 -63 -64 -23 12 10", "output": "11 530 469 -86 -86 -127 -87 -11 22 10 " }, { "input": "10\n0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0", "output": "0 0...
1,584,861,943
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
0
108
0
n=int(input()) s=input() res='' if n%2!=0: for i in range(n): if i%2==0: res=res+s[i] else: res=s[i]+res else: for i in range(n): if i%2==0: res=s[i]+res else: res=res+s[i] print(res)
Title: Memory and Crow Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: There are *n* integers *b*1,<=*b*2,<=...,<=*b**n* written in a row. For all *i* from 1 to *n*, values *a**i* are defined by the crows performing the following procedure: - The crow sets *a**i* initially 0. - The crow...
```python n=int(input()) s=input() res='' if n%2!=0: for i in range(n): if i%2==0: res=res+s[i] else: res=s[i]+res else: for i in range(n): if i%2==0: res=s[i]+res else: res=res+s[i] print(res) `...
0
109
B
Lucky Probability
PROGRAMMING
1,900
[ "brute force", "probabilities" ]
B. Lucky Probability
2
256
Petya loves lucky numbers. We all know that lucky numbers are the positive integers whose decimal representations contain only the lucky digits 4 and 7. For example, numbers 47, 744, 4 are lucky and 5, 17, 467 are not. Petya and his friend Vasya play an interesting game. Petya randomly chooses an integer *p* from the ...
The single line contains five integers *p**l*, *p**r*, *v**l*, *v**r* and *k* (1<=≤<=*p**l*<=≤<=*p**r*<=≤<=109,<=1<=≤<=*v**l*<=≤<=*v**r*<=≤<=109,<=1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=1000).
On the single line print the result with an absolute error of no more than 10<=-<=9.
[ "1 10 1 10 2\n", "5 6 8 10 1\n" ]
[ "0.320000000000\n", "1.000000000000\n" ]
Consider that [*a*, *b*] denotes an interval of integers; this interval includes the boundaries. That is, <img align="middle" class="tex-formula" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/18b4a6012d95ad18891561410f0314497a578d63.png" style="max-width: 100.0%;max-height: 100.0%;"/> In first case there are 32 suitable pairs:...
1,000
[ { "input": "1 10 1 10 2", "output": "0.320000000000" }, { "input": "5 6 8 10 1", "output": "1.000000000000" }, { "input": "1 20 100 120 5", "output": "0.150000000000" }, { "input": "1 10 1 10 3", "output": "0.000000000000" }, { "input": "1 100 1 100 2", "outpu...
1,600,419,875
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
50
218
307,200
def gen_len(l): gen = [] for i in range(2 ** l): k = int(bin(i)[2:].rjust(l, '0').replace('0', '4').replace('1', '7')) if k <= 10 ** 9: gen.append(k) return gen def pairs_with_k_len(a, k): l = 0 r = k - 1 while r < len(a): yield l, r l ...
Title: Lucky Probability Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: Petya loves lucky numbers. We all know that lucky numbers are the positive integers whose decimal representations contain only the lucky digits 4 and 7. For example, numbers 47, 744, 4 are lucky and 5, 17, 467 are not. P...
```python def gen_len(l): gen = [] for i in range(2 ** l): k = int(bin(i)[2:].rjust(l, '0').replace('0', '4').replace('1', '7')) if k <= 10 ** 9: gen.append(k) return gen def pairs_with_k_len(a, k): l = 0 r = k - 1 while r < len(a): yield l, r ...
0
902
A
Visiting a Friend
PROGRAMMING
1,100
[ "greedy", "implementation" ]
null
null
Pig is visiting a friend. Pig's house is located at point 0, and his friend's house is located at point *m* on an axis. Pig can use teleports to move along the axis. To use a teleport, Pig should come to a certain point (where the teleport is located) and choose where to move: for each teleport there is the rightmos...
The first line contains two integers *n* and *m* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100,<=1<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=100) — the number of teleports and the location of the friend's house. The next *n* lines contain information about teleports. The *i*-th of these lines contains two integers *a**i* and *b**i* (0<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=*b**i*<=≤<=*m*), where ...
Print "YES" if there is a path from Pig's house to his friend's house that uses only teleports, and "NO" otherwise. You can print each letter in arbitrary case (upper or lower).
[ "3 5\n0 2\n2 4\n3 5\n", "3 7\n0 4\n2 5\n6 7\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "NO\n" ]
The first example is shown on the picture below: Pig can use the first teleport from his house (point 0) to reach point 2, then using the second teleport go from point 2 to point 3, then using the third teleport go from point 3 to point 5, where his friend lives. The second example is shown on the picture below: You...
500
[ { "input": "3 5\n0 2\n2 4\n3 5", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "3 7\n0 4\n2 5\n6 7", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "1 1\n0 0", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "30 10\n0 7\n1 2\n1 2\n1 4\n1 4\n1 3\n2 2\n2 4\n2 6\n2 9\n2 2\n3 5\n3 8\n4 8\n4 5\n4 6\n5 6\n5 7\n6 6\n6 9\n6 7\n6 9\n7 7...
1,513,698,190
490
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
14
62
5,529,600
n, m = list(map(int, input().split())) al = [None] * m for i in range(n): a, b = list(map(int, input().split())) for j in range(a, b): al[j] = 1 g = True for i in range(m): if al[i] is None: print('NO') g = False if g: print('YES')
Title: Visiting a Friend Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Pig is visiting a friend. Pig's house is located at point 0, and his friend's house is located at point *m* on an axis. Pig can use teleports to move along the axis. To use a teleport, Pig should come to a certain ...
```python n, m = list(map(int, input().split())) al = [None] * m for i in range(n): a, b = list(map(int, input().split())) for j in range(a, b): al[j] = 1 g = True for i in range(m): if al[i] is None: print('NO') g = False if g: print('YES') ```
0
723
A
The New Year: Meeting Friends
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation", "math", "sortings" ]
null
null
There are three friend living on the straight line *Ox* in Lineland. The first friend lives at the point *x*1, the second friend lives at the point *x*2, and the third friend lives at the point *x*3. They plan to celebrate the New Year together, so they need to meet at one point. What is the minimum total distance they...
The first line of the input contains three distinct integers *x*1, *x*2 and *x*3 (1<=≤<=*x*1,<=*x*2,<=*x*3<=≤<=100) — the coordinates of the houses of the first, the second and the third friends respectively.
Print one integer — the minimum total distance the friends need to travel in order to meet together.
[ "7 1 4\n", "30 20 10\n" ]
[ "6\n", "20\n" ]
In the first sample, friends should meet at the point 4. Thus, the first friend has to travel the distance of 3 (from the point 7 to the point 4), the second friend also has to travel the distance of 3 (from the point 1 to the point 4), while the third friend should not go anywhere because he lives at the point 4.
500
[ { "input": "7 1 4", "output": "6" }, { "input": "30 20 10", "output": "20" }, { "input": "1 4 100", "output": "99" }, { "input": "100 1 91", "output": "99" }, { "input": "1 45 100", "output": "99" }, { "input": "1 2 3", "output": "2" }, { "...
1,675,189,597
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
48
46
0
n_t = list(map(int, input().split())) minn = [abs(n_t[0] - n_t[1]), abs(n_t[0] - n_t[2]), abs(n_t[1] - n_t[2])] minn.sort() print(minn[-1]) '21 5 93'
Title: The New Year: Meeting Friends Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: There are three friend living on the straight line *Ox* in Lineland. The first friend lives at the point *x*1, the second friend lives at the point *x*2, and the third friend lives at the point *x*3. They ...
```python n_t = list(map(int, input().split())) minn = [abs(n_t[0] - n_t[1]), abs(n_t[0] - n_t[2]), abs(n_t[1] - n_t[2])] minn.sort() print(minn[-1]) '21 5 93' ```
3
870
A
Search for Pretty Integers
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "brute force", "implementation" ]
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...
500
[ { "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"...
1,670,505,837
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
0
46
0
r = list(map(int, input().split())) a = list(map(int, input().split())) b = list(map(int, input().split())) a_sorty = [] b_sorty = [] for x in range(len(a)): if a[x] not in a_sorty: a_sorty.append(a[x]) for y in range(len(b)): if b[y] not in b_sorty: b_sorty.append(b[y]) a_sorty...
Title: Search for Pretty Integers 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 sm...
```python r = list(map(int, input().split())) a = list(map(int, input().split())) b = list(map(int, input().split())) a_sorty = [] b_sorty = [] for x in range(len(a)): if a[x] not in a_sorty: a_sorty.append(a[x]) for y in range(len(b)): if b[y] not in b_sorty: b_sorty.append(b[y]) ...
0
236
A
Boy or Girl
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "brute force", "implementation", "strings" ]
null
null
Those days, many boys use beautiful girls' photos as avatars in forums. So it is pretty hard to tell the gender of a user at the first glance. Last year, our hero went to a forum and had a nice chat with a beauty (he thought so). After that they talked very often and eventually they became a couple in the network. Bu...
The first line contains a non-empty string, that contains only lowercase English letters — the user name. This string contains at most 100 letters.
If it is a female by our hero's method, print "CHAT WITH HER!" (without the quotes), otherwise, print "IGNORE HIM!" (without the quotes).
[ "wjmzbmr\n", "xiaodao\n", "sevenkplus\n" ]
[ "CHAT WITH HER!\n", "IGNORE HIM!\n", "CHAT WITH HER!\n" ]
For the first example. There are 6 distinct characters in "wjmzbmr". These characters are: "w", "j", "m", "z", "b", "r". So wjmzbmr is a female and you should print "CHAT WITH HER!".
500
[ { "input": "wjmzbmr", "output": "CHAT WITH HER!" }, { "input": "xiaodao", "output": "IGNORE HIM!" }, { "input": "sevenkplus", "output": "CHAT WITH HER!" }, { "input": "pezu", "output": "CHAT WITH HER!" }, { "input": "wnemlgppy", "output": "CHAT WITH HER!" },...
1,695,196,659
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
85
92
0
user_name = input() distinct = {} for char in user_name: if char not in distinct: distinct[char] = 0 else: distinct[char] += 1 # print(distinct) rep = 0 count = 0 for val in distinct.values(): if val == 0: count += 1 else: rep +=1 if (count + rep) % 2...
Title: Boy or Girl Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Those days, many boys use beautiful girls' photos as avatars in forums. So it is pretty hard to tell the gender of a user at the first glance. Last year, our hero went to a forum and had a nice chat with a beauty (he though...
```python user_name = input() distinct = {} for char in user_name: if char not in distinct: distinct[char] = 0 else: distinct[char] += 1 # print(distinct) rep = 0 count = 0 for val in distinct.values(): if val == 0: count += 1 else: rep +=1 if (count ...
3
987
A
Infinity Gauntlet
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
You took a peek on Thanos wearing Infinity Gauntlet. In the Gauntlet there is a place for six Infinity Gems: - the Power Gem of purple color, - the Time Gem of green color, - the Space Gem of blue color, - the Soul Gem of orange color, - the Reality Gem of red color, - the Mind Gem of yellow color. Using colors...
In the first line of input there is one integer $n$ ($0 \le n \le 6$) — the number of Gems in Infinity Gauntlet. In next $n$ lines there are colors of Gems you saw. Words used for colors are: purple, green, blue, orange, red, yellow. It is guaranteed that all the colors are distinct. All colors are given in lowercase ...
In the first line output one integer $m$ ($0 \le m \le 6$) — the number of absent Gems. Then in $m$ lines print the names of absent Gems, each on its own line. Words used for names are: Power, Time, Space, Soul, Reality, Mind. Names can be printed in any order. Keep the first letter uppercase, others lowercase.
[ "4\nred\npurple\nyellow\norange\n", "0\n" ]
[ "2\nSpace\nTime\n", "6\nTime\nMind\nSoul\nPower\nReality\nSpace\n" ]
In the first sample Thanos already has Reality, Power, Mind and Soul Gems, so he needs two more: Time and Space. In the second sample Thanos doesn't have any Gems, so he needs all six.
500
[ { "input": "4\nred\npurple\nyellow\norange", "output": "2\nSpace\nTime" }, { "input": "0", "output": "6\nMind\nSpace\nPower\nTime\nReality\nSoul" }, { "input": "6\npurple\nblue\nyellow\nred\ngreen\norange", "output": "0" }, { "input": "1\npurple", "output": "5\nTime\nReal...
1,664,401,640
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
OK
TESTS
64
62
0
n = int(input()) gems = ['Power', 'Time', 'Space', 'Soul', 'Reality', 'Mind'] colors = ['purple', 'green', 'blue', 'orange', 'red', 'yellow'] d = dict(zip(colors, gems)) for i in range(n): gems.remove(d[input()]) print(6 - n) for i in range(6-n): print(gems[i])
Title: Infinity Gauntlet Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: You took a peek on Thanos wearing Infinity Gauntlet. In the Gauntlet there is a place for six Infinity Gems: - the Power Gem of purple color, - the Time Gem of green color, - the Space Gem of blue color, - the So...
```python n = int(input()) gems = ['Power', 'Time', 'Space', 'Soul', 'Reality', 'Mind'] colors = ['purple', 'green', 'blue', 'orange', 'red', 'yellow'] d = dict(zip(colors, gems)) for i in range(n): gems.remove(d[input()]) print(6 - n) for i in range(6-n): print(gems[i]) ```
3
322
B
Ciel and Flowers
PROGRAMMING
1,600
[ "combinatorics", "math" ]
null
null
Fox Ciel has some flowers: *r* red flowers, *g* green flowers and *b* blue flowers. She wants to use these flowers to make several bouquets. There are 4 types of bouquets: - To make a "red bouquet", it needs 3 red flowers. - To make a "green bouquet", it needs 3 green flowers. - To make a "blue bouquet", it needs 3...
The first line contains three integers *r*, *g* and *b* (0<=≤<=*r*,<=*g*,<=*b*<=≤<=109) — the number of red, green and blue flowers.
Print the maximal number of bouquets Fox Ciel can make.
[ "3 6 9\n", "4 4 4\n", "0 0 0\n" ]
[ "6\n", "4\n", "0\n" ]
In test case 1, we can make 1 red bouquet, 2 green bouquets and 3 blue bouquets. In test case 2, we can make 1 red, 1 green, 1 blue and 1 mixing bouquet.
1,000
[ { "input": "3 6 9", "output": "6" }, { "input": "4 4 4", "output": "4" }, { "input": "0 0 0", "output": "0" }, { "input": "0 3 6", "output": "3" }, { "input": "7 8 9", "output": "7" }, { "input": "8 8 9", "output": "8" }, { "input": "15 3 9...
1,373,011,460
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
40
93
0
r, g, b = map(int, input().split(' ')) s = 0 for i in range(0, 10): for j in range(0, 10): for k in range(0, 10): if (r >= i and g >= j and b >= k): s = max(s, (r - i) // 3 + (g - j) // 3 + (b - k) // 3 + min(i, min(j, k))) print(s)
Title: Ciel and Flowers Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Fox Ciel has some flowers: *r* red flowers, *g* green flowers and *b* blue flowers. She wants to use these flowers to make several bouquets. There are 4 types of bouquets: - To make a "red bouquet", it needs 3 red fl...
```python r, g, b = map(int, input().split(' ')) s = 0 for i in range(0, 10): for j in range(0, 10): for k in range(0, 10): if (r >= i and g >= j and b >= k): s = max(s, (r - i) // 3 + (g - j) // 3 + (b - k) // 3 + min(i, min(j, k))) print(s) ```
3
546
A
Soldier and Bananas
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "brute force", "implementation", "math" ]
null
null
A soldier wants to buy *w* bananas in the shop. He has to pay *k* dollars for the first banana, 2*k* dollars for the second one and so on (in other words, he has to pay *i*·*k* dollars for the *i*-th banana). He has *n* dollars. How many dollars does he have to borrow from his friend soldier to buy *w* bananas?
The first line contains three positive integers *k*,<=*n*,<=*w* (1<=<=≤<=<=*k*,<=*w*<=<=≤<=<=1000, 0<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=109), the cost of the first banana, initial number of dollars the soldier has and number of bananas he wants.
Output one integer — the amount of dollars that the soldier must borrow from his friend. If he doesn't have to borrow money, output 0.
[ "3 17 4\n" ]
[ "13" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "3 17 4", "output": "13" }, { "input": "1 2 1", "output": "0" }, { "input": "1 1 1", "output": "0" }, { "input": "1 5 6", "output": "16" }, { "input": "1 1000000000 1", "output": "0" }, { "input": "1000 0 1000", "output": "500500000" }...
1,694,360,302
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
15
46
0
k,n,w=input().split() c=0 for i in range(1,int(w)+1): c=c+i*int(k) if c<int(n): print(0) else: print(c-int(n))
Title: Soldier and Bananas Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: A soldier wants to buy *w* bananas in the shop. He has to pay *k* dollars for the first banana, 2*k* dollars for the second one and so on (in other words, he has to pay *i*·*k* dollars for the *i*-th banana). He h...
```python k,n,w=input().split() c=0 for i in range(1,int(w)+1): c=c+i*int(k) if c<int(n): print(0) else: print(c-int(n)) ```
3
732
A
Buy a Shovel
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "brute force", "constructive algorithms", "implementation", "math" ]
null
null
Polycarp urgently needs a shovel! He comes to the shop and chooses an appropriate one. The shovel that Policarp chooses is sold for *k* burles. Assume that there is an unlimited number of such shovels in the shop. In his pocket Polycarp has an unlimited number of "10-burle coins" and exactly one coin of *r* burles (1<...
The single line of input contains two integers *k* and *r* (1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=1000, 1<=≤<=*r*<=≤<=9) — the price of one shovel and the denomination of the coin in Polycarp's pocket that is different from "10-burle coins". Remember that he has an unlimited number of coins in the denomination of 10, that is, Polycarp has e...
Print the required minimum number of shovels Polycarp has to buy so that he can pay for them without any change.
[ "117 3\n", "237 7\n", "15 2\n" ]
[ "9\n", "1\n", "2\n" ]
In the first example Polycarp can buy 9 shovels and pay 9·117 = 1053 burles. Indeed, he can pay this sum by using 10-burle coins and one 3-burle coin. He can't buy fewer shovels without any change. In the second example it is enough for Polycarp to buy one shovel. In the third example Polycarp should buy two shovels ...
500
[ { "input": "117 3", "output": "9" }, { "input": "237 7", "output": "1" }, { "input": "15 2", "output": "2" }, { "input": "1 1", "output": "1" }, { "input": "1 9", "output": "9" }, { "input": "1000 3", "output": "1" }, { "input": "1000 1", ...
1,692,879,340
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
OK
TESTS
54
62
0
a, b = [int(i) for i in input().split()] i = 1 while (a * i) % 10 != b and (i * a) % 10 != 0: i += 1 print(i)
Title: Buy a Shovel Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Polycarp urgently needs a shovel! He comes to the shop and chooses an appropriate one. The shovel that Policarp chooses is sold for *k* burles. Assume that there is an unlimited number of such shovels in the shop. In his ...
```python a, b = [int(i) for i in input().split()] i = 1 while (a * i) % 10 != b and (i * a) % 10 != 0: i += 1 print(i) ```
3
884
B
Japanese Crosswords Strike Back
PROGRAMMING
1,100
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
A one-dimensional Japanese crossword can be represented as a binary string of length *x*. An encoding of this crossword is an array *a* of size *n*, where *n* is the number of segments formed completely of 1's, and *a**i* is the length of *i*-th segment. No two segments touch or intersect. For example: - If *x*<==<...
The first line contains two integer numbers *n* and *x* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100000, 1<=≤<=*x*<=≤<=109) — the number of elements in the encoding and the length of the crossword Mishka picked. The second line contains *n* integer numbers *a*1, *a*2, ..., *a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=10000) — the encoding.
Print YES if there exists exaclty one crossword with chosen length and encoding. Otherwise, print NO.
[ "2 4\n1 3\n", "3 10\n3 3 2\n", "2 10\n1 3\n" ]
[ "NO\n", "YES\n", "NO\n" ]
none
0
[ { "input": "2 4\n1 3", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "3 10\n3 3 2", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "2 10\n1 3", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "1 1\n1", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "1 10\n10", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "1 10000\n10000", "output":...
1,580,848,733
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
66
186
9,216,000
l = [int(x) for x in input().split()] n = l[0] x = l[1] l = [int(x) for x in input().split()] count = 0 for e in l: count += e+1 if count == x+1: print("YES") else: print("NO")
Title: Japanese Crosswords Strike Back Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: A one-dimensional Japanese crossword can be represented as a binary string of length *x*. An encoding of this crossword is an array *a* of size *n*, where *n* is the number of segments formed completely ...
```python l = [int(x) for x in input().split()] n = l[0] x = l[1] l = [int(x) for x in input().split()] count = 0 for e in l: count += e+1 if count == x+1: print("YES") else: print("NO") ```
3
965
A
Paper Airplanes
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "math" ]
null
null
To make a paper airplane, one has to use a rectangular piece of paper. From a sheet of standard size you can make $s$ airplanes. A group of $k$ people decided to make $n$ airplanes each. They are going to buy several packs of paper, each of them containing $p$ sheets, and then distribute the sheets between the people....
The only line contains four integers $k$, $n$, $s$, $p$ ($1 \le k, n, s, p \le 10^4$) — the number of people, the number of airplanes each should make, the number of airplanes that can be made using one sheet and the number of sheets in one pack, respectively.
Print a single integer — the minimum number of packs they should buy.
[ "5 3 2 3\n", "5 3 100 1\n" ]
[ "4\n", "5\n" ]
In the first sample they have to buy $4$ packs of paper: there will be $12$ sheets in total, and giving $2$ sheets to each person is enough to suit everyone's needs. In the second sample they have to buy a pack for each person as they can't share sheets.
500
[ { "input": "5 3 2 3", "output": "4" }, { "input": "5 3 100 1", "output": "5" }, { "input": "10000 10000 1 1", "output": "100000000" }, { "input": "1 1 10000 10000", "output": "1" }, { "input": "300 300 21 23", "output": "196" }, { "input": "300 2 37 51...
1,524,753,761
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
2
77
7,065,600
line=input() temp=line.split(' ') k=int(temp[0]) n=int(temp[1]) s=int(temp[2]) p=int(temp[3]) sheetperperson=(n/s)+1 res=int((sheetperperson*k)/p) print(res)
Title: Paper Airplanes Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: To make a paper airplane, one has to use a rectangular piece of paper. From a sheet of standard size you can make $s$ airplanes. A group of $k$ people decided to make $n$ airplanes each. They are going to buy several p...
```python line=input() temp=line.split(' ') k=int(temp[0]) n=int(temp[1]) s=int(temp[2]) p=int(temp[3]) sheetperperson=(n/s)+1 res=int((sheetperperson*k)/p) print(res) ```
0
58
A
Chat room
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "greedy", "strings" ]
A. Chat room
1
256
Vasya has recently learned to type and log on to the Internet. He immediately entered a chat room and decided to say hello to everybody. Vasya typed the word *s*. It is considered that Vasya managed to say hello if several letters can be deleted from the typed word so that it resulted in the word "hello". For example, ...
The first and only line contains the word *s*, which Vasya typed. This word consisits of small Latin letters, its length is no less that 1 and no more than 100 letters.
If Vasya managed to say hello, print "YES", otherwise print "NO".
[ "ahhellllloou\n", "hlelo\n" ]
[ "YES\n", "NO\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "ahhellllloou", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "hlelo", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "helhcludoo", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "hehwelloho", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "pnnepelqomhhheollvlo", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "tymbzjyqhymeda...
1,608,868,433
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
0
77
0
string1 = input() string2 = 'hello' i = 0 j = 0 while i<len(string1) and j<len(string2): if string1[i] == string2[j]: i = i+1 j = j+1 else: i = i+1 if j==len(string2): print("Yes") else: print('No')
Title: Chat room Time Limit: 1 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: Vasya has recently learned to type and log on to the Internet. He immediately entered a chat room and decided to say hello to everybody. Vasya typed the word *s*. It is considered that Vasya managed to say hello if several letter...
```python string1 = input() string2 = 'hello' i = 0 j = 0 while i<len(string1) and j<len(string2): if string1[i] == string2[j]: i = i+1 j = j+1 else: i = i+1 if j==len(string2): print("Yes") else: print('No') ```
0
0
none
none
none
0
[ "none" ]
null
null
Watchmen are in a danger and Doctor Manhattan together with his friend Daniel Dreiberg should warn them as soon as possible. There are *n* watchmen on a plane, the *i*-th watchman is located at point (*x**i*,<=*y**i*). They need to arrange a plan, but there are some difficulties on their way. As you know, Doctor Manha...
The first line of the input contains the single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=200<=000) — the number of watchmen. Each of the following *n* lines contains two integers *x**i* and *y**i* (|*x**i*|,<=|*y**i*|<=≤<=109). Some positions may coincide.
Print the number of pairs of watchmen such that the distance between them calculated by Doctor Manhattan is equal to the distance calculated by Daniel.
[ "3\n1 1\n7 5\n1 5\n", "6\n0 0\n0 1\n0 2\n-1 1\n0 1\n1 1\n" ]
[ "2\n", "11\n" ]
In the first sample, the distance between watchman 1 and watchman 2 is equal to |1 - 7| + |1 - 5| = 10 for Doctor Manhattan and <img align="middle" class="tex-formula" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/bcb5b7064b5f02088da0fdcf677e6fda495dd0df.png" style="max-width: 100.0%;max-height: 100.0%;"/> for Daniel. For pairs...
0
[ { "input": "3\n1 1\n7 5\n1 5", "output": "2" }, { "input": "6\n0 0\n0 1\n0 2\n-1 1\n0 1\n1 1", "output": "11" }, { "input": "10\n46 -55\n46 45\n46 45\n83 -55\n46 45\n83 -55\n46 45\n83 45\n83 45\n46 -55", "output": "33" }, { "input": "1\n-5 -90", "output": "0" }, { ...
1,566,344,063
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
2
109
0
n = int(input()) w = [None]*n for i in range(n): x,y = map(int,input().split()) w[i] = (x,y) w.sort() eq = 0 np = 0 for i in range(n): eq += 1 if i+1==n or w[i][0] != w[i+1][0]: #print("keq",eq) comb = eq*(eq-1)//2 np += comb eq = 0 elif i>0 and w[i][0] == w[i-1][0] and w[i][1]==w[i-1][1]: np -= 1 def so...
Title: none Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Watchmen are in a danger and Doctor Manhattan together with his friend Daniel Dreiberg should warn them as soon as possible. There are *n* watchmen on a plane, the *i*-th watchman is located at point (*x**i*,<=*y**i*). They need ...
```python n = int(input()) w = [None]*n for i in range(n): x,y = map(int,input().split()) w[i] = (x,y) w.sort() eq = 0 np = 0 for i in range(n): eq += 1 if i+1==n or w[i][0] != w[i+1][0]: #print("keq",eq) comb = eq*(eq-1)//2 np += comb eq = 0 elif i>0 and w[i][0] == w[i-1][0] and w[i][1]==w[i-1][1]: np -...
0
116
A
Tram
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Linear Kingdom has exactly one tram line. It has *n* stops, numbered from 1 to *n* in the order of tram's movement. At the *i*-th stop *a**i* passengers exit the tram, while *b**i* passengers enter it. The tram is empty before it arrives at the first stop. Also, when the tram arrives at the last stop, all passengers ex...
The first line contains a single number *n* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000) — the number of the tram's stops. Then *n* lines follow, each contains two integers *a**i* and *b**i* (0<=≤<=*a**i*,<=*b**i*<=≤<=1000) — the number of passengers that exits the tram at the *i*-th stop, and the number of passengers that enter the tram at...
Print a single integer denoting the minimum possible capacity of the tram (0 is allowed).
[ "4\n0 3\n2 5\n4 2\n4 0\n" ]
[ "6\n" ]
For the first example, a capacity of 6 is sufficient: - At the first stop, the number of passengers inside the tram before arriving is 0. Then, 3 passengers enter the tram, and the number of passengers inside the tram becomes 3. - At the second stop, 2 passengers exit the tram (1 passenger remains inside). Then, 5 ...
500
[ { "input": "4\n0 3\n2 5\n4 2\n4 0", "output": "6" }, { "input": "5\n0 4\n4 6\n6 5\n5 4\n4 0", "output": "6" }, { "input": "10\n0 5\n1 7\n10 8\n5 3\n0 5\n3 3\n8 8\n0 6\n10 1\n9 0", "output": "18" }, { "input": "3\n0 1\n1 1\n1 0", "output": "1" }, { "input": "4\n0 1...
1,688,328,720
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
2
92
0
n = int(input()) c=0 z=0 s=[] for i in range(0,n): s.append (input().split()) if i != 0: z=int(s[i-1][1])-int(s[i][0])+int(s[i][1]) if z> c: c=z print(c)
Title: Tram Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Linear Kingdom has exactly one tram line. It has *n* stops, numbered from 1 to *n* in the order of tram's movement. At the *i*-th stop *a**i* passengers exit the tram, while *b**i* passengers enter it. The tram is empty before it ...
```python n = int(input()) c=0 z=0 s=[] for i in range(0,n): s.append (input().split()) if i != 0: z=int(s[i-1][1])-int(s[i][0])+int(s[i][1]) if z> c: c=z print(c) ```
0
641
A
Little Artem and Grasshopper
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
Little Artem found a grasshopper. He brought it to his house and constructed a jumping area for him. The area looks like a strip of cells 1<=×<=*n*. Each cell contains the direction for the next jump and the length of that jump. Grasshopper starts in the first cell and follows the instructions written on the cells. Gr...
The first line of the input contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100<=000) — length of the strip. Next line contains a string of length *n* which consists of characters "&lt;" and "&gt;" only, that provide the direction of the jump from the corresponding cell. Next line contains *n* integers *d**i* (1<=≤<=*d*...
Print "INFINITE" (without quotes) if grasshopper will continue his jumps forever. Otherwise print "FINITE" (without quotes).
[ "2\n&gt;&lt;\n1 2\n", "3\n&gt;&gt;&lt;\n2 1 1\n" ]
[ "FINITE\n", "INFINITE" ]
In the first sample grasshopper starts from the first cell and jumps to the right on the next cell. When he is in the second cell he needs to jump two cells left so he will jump out of the strip. Second sample grasshopper path is 1 - 3 - 2 - 3 - 2 - 3 and so on. The path is infinite.
500
[ { "input": "2\n><\n1 2", "output": "FINITE" }, { "input": "3\n>><\n2 1 1", "output": "INFINITE" }, { "input": "1\n>\n1000000000", "output": "FINITE" }, { "input": "1\n<\n1000000000", "output": "FINITE" }, { "input": "2\n>>\n1 1", "output": "FINITE" }, { ...
1,462,632,820
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
0
46
4,608,000
def main(): n = int(input()) arrows = input() cells = [int(x) for x in input().split()] print(solver(arrows, cells)) def solver(arrows, cells): for i in range(len(arrows)): if arrows[i] == '<': cells[i] = - cells[i] visited = [False] * len(cells) index = 0 print(cells) while True: if inde...
Title: Little Artem and Grasshopper Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Little Artem found a grasshopper. He brought it to his house and constructed a jumping area for him. The area looks like a strip of cells 1<=×<=*n*. Each cell contains the direction for the next jump and t...
```python def main(): n = int(input()) arrows = input() cells = [int(x) for x in input().split()] print(solver(arrows, cells)) def solver(arrows, cells): for i in range(len(arrows)): if arrows[i] == '<': cells[i] = - cells[i] visited = [False] * len(cells) index = 0 print(cells) while True: ...
0
80
A
Panoramix's Prediction
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "brute force" ]
A. Panoramix's Prediction
2
256
A prime number is a number which has exactly two distinct divisors: one and itself. For example, numbers 2, 7, 3 are prime, and 1, 6, 4 are not. The next prime number after *x* is the smallest prime number greater than *x*. For example, the next prime number after 2 is 3, and the next prime number after 3 is 5. Note t...
The first and only input line contains two positive integers — *n* and *m* (2<=≤<=*n*<=&lt;<=*m*<=≤<=50). It is guaranteed that *n* is prime. Pretests contain all the cases with restrictions 2<=≤<=*n*<=&lt;<=*m*<=≤<=4.
Print YES, if *m* is the next prime number after *n*, or NO otherwise.
[ "3 5\n", "7 11\n", "7 9\n" ]
[ "YES", "YES", "NO" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "3 5", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "7 11", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "7 9", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "2 3", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "2 4", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "3 4", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "3 5", ...
1,569,110,874
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3
RUNTIME_ERROR
TESTS
0
404
2,560,000
x =int(input()) z =int(input()) if (z /z ==1) & (z/1 ==z )&(z%2!=0)&(x%2!=0)& (x/x ==1) & (x/1 ==x): print("YES") else: print("NO")
Title: Panoramix's Prediction Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: A prime number is a number which has exactly two distinct divisors: one and itself. For example, numbers 2, 7, 3 are prime, and 1, 6, 4 are not. The next prime number after *x* is the smallest prime number greater t...
```python x =int(input()) z =int(input()) if (z /z ==1) & (z/1 ==z )&(z%2!=0)&(x%2!=0)& (x/x ==1) & (x/1 ==x): print("YES") else: print("NO") ```
-1
496
B
Secret Combination
PROGRAMMING
1,500
[ "brute force", "constructive algorithms", "implementation" ]
null
null
You got a box with a combination lock. The lock has a display showing *n* digits. There are two buttons on the box, each button changes digits on the display. You have quickly discovered that the first button adds 1 to all the digits (all digits 9 become digits 0), and the second button shifts all the digits on the dis...
The first line contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000) — the number of digits on the display. The second line contains *n* digits — the initial state of the display.
Print a single line containing *n* digits — the desired state of the display containing the smallest possible number.
[ "3\n579\n", "4\n2014\n" ]
[ "024\n", "0142\n" ]
none
1,000
[ { "input": "3\n579", "output": "024" }, { "input": "4\n2014", "output": "0142" }, { "input": "1\n1", "output": "0" }, { "input": "3\n039", "output": "014" }, { "input": "4\n4444", "output": "0000" }, { "input": "5\n46802", "output": "02468" }, ...
1,699,017,997
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
1
46
0
n = int(input()) init_display = input() def add_button(y, n): added = '' for i in range(n): added += str((int(y[i]) + int(10 - int(y[0]))) % 10) return added min = add_button(init_display,n) for i in range(1,n): if int(add_button(init_display,n))<int(min): ...
Title: Secret Combination Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: You got a box with a combination lock. The lock has a display showing *n* digits. There are two buttons on the box, each button changes digits on the display. You have quickly discovered that the first button adds 1 ...
```python n = int(input()) init_display = input() def add_button(y, n): added = '' for i in range(n): added += str((int(y[i]) + int(10 - int(y[0]))) % 10) return added min = add_button(init_display,n) for i in range(1,n): if int(add_button(init_display,n))<int(min)...
0
313
A
Ilya and Bank Account
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "implementation", "number theory" ]
null
null
Ilya is a very clever lion, he lives in an unusual city ZooVille. In this city all the animals have their rights and obligations. Moreover, they even have their own bank accounts. The state of a bank account is an integer. The state of a bank account can be a negative number. This means that the owner of the account ow...
The single line contains integer *n* (10<=≤<=|*n*|<=≤<=109) — the state of Ilya's bank account.
In a single line print an integer — the maximum state of the bank account that Ilya can get.
[ "2230\n", "-10\n", "-100003\n" ]
[ "2230\n", "0\n", "-10000\n" ]
In the first test sample Ilya doesn't profit from using the present. In the second test sample you can delete digit 1 and get the state of the account equal to 0.
500
[ { "input": "2230", "output": "2230" }, { "input": "-10", "output": "0" }, { "input": "-100003", "output": "-10000" }, { "input": "544883178", "output": "544883178" }, { "input": "-847251738", "output": "-84725173" }, { "input": "423654797", "output...
1,684,837,624
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
1
92
0
n=int(input()) print(max(n,n//10,(n//100)*100+abs(n%10)))
Title: Ilya and Bank Account Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Ilya is a very clever lion, he lives in an unusual city ZooVille. In this city all the animals have their rights and obligations. Moreover, they even have their own bank accounts. The state of a bank account is an...
```python n=int(input()) print(max(n,n//10,(n//100)*100+abs(n%10))) ```
0
811
A
Vladik and Courtesy
PROGRAMMING
800
[ "brute force", "implementation" ]
null
null
At regular competition Vladik and Valera won *a* and *b* candies respectively. Vladik offered 1 his candy to Valera. After that Valera gave Vladik 2 his candies, so that no one thought that he was less generous. Vladik for same reason gave 3 candies to Valera in next turn. More formally, the guys take turns giving eac...
Single line of input data contains two space-separated integers *a*, *b* (1<=≤<=*a*,<=*b*<=≤<=109) — number of Vladik and Valera candies respectively.
Pring a single line "Vladik’’ in case, if Vladik first who can’t give right amount of candy, or "Valera’’ otherwise.
[ "1 1\n", "7 6\n" ]
[ "Valera\n", "Vladik\n" ]
Illustration for first test case: <img class="tex-graphics" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/ad9b7d0e481208de8e3a585aa1d96b9e1dda4fd7.png" style="max-width: 100.0%;max-height: 100.0%;"/> Illustration for second test case: <img class="tex-graphics" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/9f4836d2ccdffaee5a63898e5d4e...
500
[ { "input": "1 1", "output": "Valera" }, { "input": "7 6", "output": "Vladik" }, { "input": "25 38", "output": "Vladik" }, { "input": "8311 2468", "output": "Valera" }, { "input": "250708 857756", "output": "Vladik" }, { "input": "957985574 24997558", ...
1,694,190,808
748
PyPy 3
OK
TESTS
42
93
1,228,800
import sys input = sys.stdin.buffer.readline def process(a, b): for x in range(1, 10**5): if x*x > a: a_fail = x break for x in range(1, 10**5): if x*(x+1) > b: b_fail = x break if b_fail < a_fail: sys.stdout.write('V...
Title: Vladik and Courtesy Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: At regular competition Vladik and Valera won *a* and *b* candies respectively. Vladik offered 1 his candy to Valera. After that Valera gave Vladik 2 his candies, so that no one thought that he was less generous. Vla...
```python import sys input = sys.stdin.buffer.readline def process(a, b): for x in range(1, 10**5): if x*x > a: a_fail = x break for x in range(1, 10**5): if x*(x+1) > b: b_fail = x break if b_fail < a_fail: sys.stdou...
3
242
B
Big Segment
PROGRAMMING
1,100
[ "implementation", "sortings" ]
null
null
A coordinate line has *n* segments, the *i*-th segment starts at the position *l**i* and ends at the position *r**i*. We will denote such a segment as [*l**i*,<=*r**i*]. You have suggested that one of the defined segments covers all others. In other words, there is such segment in the given set, which contains all oth...
The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) — the number of segments. Next *n* lines contain the descriptions of the segments. The *i*-th line contains two space-separated integers *l**i*,<=*r**i* (1<=≤<=*l**i*<=≤<=*r**i*<=≤<=109) — the borders of the *i*-th segment. It is guaranteed that no two segments c...
Print a single integer — the number of the segment that covers all other segments in the set. If there's no solution, print -1. The segments are numbered starting from 1 in the order in which they appear in the input.
[ "3\n1 1\n2 2\n3 3\n", "6\n1 5\n2 3\n1 10\n7 10\n7 7\n10 10\n" ]
[ "-1\n", "3\n" ]
none
1,000
[ { "input": "3\n1 1\n2 2\n3 3", "output": "-1" }, { "input": "6\n1 5\n2 3\n1 10\n7 10\n7 7\n10 10", "output": "3" }, { "input": "4\n1 5\n2 2\n2 4\n2 5", "output": "1" }, { "input": "5\n3 3\n1 3\n2 2\n2 3\n1 2", "output": "2" }, { "input": "7\n7 7\n8 8\n3 7\n1 6\n1 ...
1,596,295,132
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
45
622
10,956,800
n = int(input()) L = [0]*n R = [0]*n for i in range(n): L[i], R[i] = map(int, input().split()) smallest = min(L) largest = max(R) for i in range(n): if L[i] == smallest and R[i] == largest: print(i+1) exit() print(-1)
Title: Big Segment Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: A coordinate line has *n* segments, the *i*-th segment starts at the position *l**i* and ends at the position *r**i*. We will denote such a segment as [*l**i*,<=*r**i*]. You have suggested that one of the defined segments ...
```python n = int(input()) L = [0]*n R = [0]*n for i in range(n): L[i], R[i] = map(int, input().split()) smallest = min(L) largest = max(R) for i in range(n): if L[i] == smallest and R[i] == largest: print(i+1) exit() print(-1) ```
3
776
A
A Serial Killer
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "brute force", "implementation", "strings" ]
null
null
Our beloved detective, Sherlock is currently trying to catch a serial killer who kills a person each day. Using his powers of deduction, he came to know that the killer has a strategy for selecting his next victim. The killer starts with two potential victims on his first day, selects one of these two, kills selected ...
First line of input contains two names (length of each of them doesn't exceed 10), the two initials potential victims. Next line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000), the number of days. Next *n* lines contains two names (length of each of them doesn't exceed 10), first being the person murdered on this day and t...
Output *n*<=+<=1 lines, the *i*-th line should contain the two persons from which the killer selects for the *i*-th murder. The (*n*<=+<=1)-th line should contain the two persons from which the next victim is selected. In each line, the two names can be printed in any order.
[ "ross rachel\n4\nross joey\nrachel phoebe\nphoebe monica\nmonica chandler\n", "icm codeforces\n1\ncodeforces technex\n" ]
[ "ross rachel\njoey rachel\njoey phoebe\njoey monica\njoey chandler\n", "icm codeforces\nicm technex\n" ]
In first example, the killer starts with ross and rachel. - After day 1, ross is killed and joey appears. - After day 2, rachel is killed and phoebe appears. - After day 3, phoebe is killed and monica appears. - After day 4, monica is killed and chandler appears.
500
[ { "input": "ross rachel\n4\nross joey\nrachel phoebe\nphoebe monica\nmonica chandler", "output": "ross rachel\njoey rachel\njoey phoebe\njoey monica\njoey chandler" }, { "input": "icm codeforces\n1\ncodeforces technex", "output": "icm codeforces\nicm technex" }, { "input": "a b\n3\na c\n...
1,590,008,814
2,147,483,647
Python 3
OK
TESTS
57
124
0
p1,p2 = input().split() n = int(input()) print(p1,p2) for i in range(n): killed,potential = input().split() if killed == p1: print(p2, potential) p1 = potential elif killed == p2: print(p1, potential) p2 = potential
Title: A Serial Killer Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Our beloved detective, Sherlock is currently trying to catch a serial killer who kills a person each day. Using his powers of deduction, he came to know that the killer has a strategy for selecting his next victim. The...
```python p1,p2 = input().split() n = int(input()) print(p1,p2) for i in range(n): killed,potential = input().split() if killed == p1: print(p2, potential) p1 = potential elif killed == p2: print(p1, potential) p2 = potential ```
3
96
A
Football
PROGRAMMING
900
[ "implementation", "strings" ]
A. Football
2
256
Petya loves football very much. One day, as he was watching a football match, he was writing the players' current positions on a piece of paper. To simplify the situation he depicted it as a string consisting of zeroes and ones. A zero corresponds to players of one team; a one corresponds to players of another team. If...
The first input line contains a non-empty string consisting of characters "0" and "1", which represents players. The length of the string does not exceed 100 characters. There's at least one player from each team present on the field.
Print "YES" if the situation is dangerous. Otherwise, print "NO".
[ "001001\n", "1000000001\n" ]
[ "NO\n", "YES\n" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "001001", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "1000000001", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "00100110111111101", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "11110111111111111", "output": "YES" }, { "input": "01", "output": "NO" }, { "input": "10100101", "outp...
1,669,306,871
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
2
92
0
a=input() a=list(a) num_1=0 num_2=0 for i in range(len(a)-1): if num_1>=7 or num_2>=7: print('YES') break if a[i]=='1': num_1+=1 if a[i+1]=='0' and a[i]!=len(a): num_1=0 else: num_2+=1 if a[i+1]=='1' and a[i]!=len(a): ...
Title: Football Time Limit: 2 seconds Memory Limit: 256 megabytes Problem Description: Petya loves football very much. One day, as he was watching a football match, he was writing the players' current positions on a piece of paper. To simplify the situation he depicted it as a string consisting of zeroes and ones. A...
```python a=input() a=list(a) num_1=0 num_2=0 for i in range(len(a)-1): if num_1>=7 or num_2>=7: print('YES') break if a[i]=='1': num_1+=1 if a[i+1]=='0' and a[i]!=len(a): num_1=0 else: num_2+=1 if a[i+1]=='1' and a[i]!=len(a): ...
0
368
B
Sereja and Suffixes
PROGRAMMING
1,100
[ "data structures", "dp" ]
null
null
Sereja has an array *a*, consisting of *n* integers *a*1, *a*2, ..., *a**n*. The boy cannot sit and do nothing, he decided to study an array. Sereja took a piece of paper and wrote out *m* integers *l*1,<=*l*2,<=...,<=*l**m* (1<=≤<=*l**i*<=≤<=*n*). For each number *l**i* he wants to know how many distinct numbers are s...
The first line contains two integers *n* and *m* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=105). The second line contains *n* integers *a*1, *a*2, ..., *a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=105) — the array elements. Next *m* lines contain integers *l*1,<=*l*2,<=...,<=*l**m*. The *i*-th line contains integer *l**i* (1<=≤<=*l**i*<=≤<=*n*).
Print *m* lines — on the *i*-th line print the answer to the number *l**i*.
[ "10 10\n1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 100000 99999\n1\n2\n3\n4\n5\n6\n7\n8\n9\n10\n" ]
[ "6\n6\n6\n6\n6\n5\n4\n3\n2\n1\n" ]
none
1,000
[ { "input": "10 10\n1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 100000 99999\n1\n2\n3\n4\n5\n6\n7\n8\n9\n10", "output": "6\n6\n6\n6\n6\n5\n4\n3\n2\n1" }, { "input": "8 3\n8 6 4 3 4 2 4 8\n6\n4\n2", "output": "3\n4\n5" }, { "input": "7 10\n1 3 8 6 2 2 7\n4\n2\n6\n3\n4\n4\n6\n2\n7\n4", "output": "3\n5\n2\n4\n3\n3\...
1,667,913,341
2,147,483,647
Python 3
TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED
TESTS
10
1,000
4,915,200
n, m = map(int,input().split()) lst = [int(x) for x in input().split()] dp = [1]*n rev_lst = list(reversed(lst)) #print(rev_lst) for i in range(1,n): Flag = True for j in range(i): if rev_lst[j] == rev_lst[i]: dp[i] = dp[i-1] Flag = False if Flag: dp[i] ...
Title: Sereja and Suffixes Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Sereja has an array *a*, consisting of *n* integers *a*1, *a*2, ..., *a**n*. The boy cannot sit and do nothing, he decided to study an array. Sereja took a piece of paper and wrote out *m* integers *l*1,<=*l*2,<=......
```python n, m = map(int,input().split()) lst = [int(x) for x in input().split()] dp = [1]*n rev_lst = list(reversed(lst)) #print(rev_lst) for i in range(1,n): Flag = True for j in range(i): if rev_lst[j] == rev_lst[i]: dp[i] = dp[i-1] Flag = False if Flag: ...
0
733
A
Grasshopper And the String
PROGRAMMING
1,000
[ "implementation" ]
null
null
One day, the Grasshopper was jumping on the lawn and found a piece of paper with a string. Grasshopper became interested what is the minimum jump ability he should have in order to be able to reach the far end of the string, jumping only on vowels of the English alphabet. Jump ability is the maximum possible length of ...
The first line contains non-empty string consisting of capital English letters. It is guaranteed that the length of the string does not exceed 100.
Print single integer *a* — the minimum jump ability of the Grasshopper (in the number of symbols) that is needed to overcome the given string, jumping only on vowels.
[ "ABABBBACFEYUKOTT\n", "AAA\n" ]
[ "4", "1" ]
none
500
[ { "input": "ABABBBACFEYUKOTT", "output": "4" }, { "input": "AAA", "output": "1" }, { "input": "A", "output": "1" }, { "input": "B", "output": "2" }, { "input": "AEYUIOAEIYAEOUIYOEIUYEAOIUEOEAYOEIUYAEOUIYEOIKLMJNHGTRWSDZXCVBNMHGFDSXVWRTPPPLKMNBXIUOIUOIUOIUOOIU", ...
1,685,384,497
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
3
46
0
s = input() vowels = "AEIOUY" prev_i = -1 curr_i = -1 ans = 0 for i, ch in enumerate(s): if ch in vowels: prev_i = curr_i curr_i = i ans = max(ans, curr_i-prev_i) print(ans)
Title: Grasshopper And the String Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: One day, the Grasshopper was jumping on the lawn and found a piece of paper with a string. Grasshopper became interested what is the minimum jump ability he should have in order to be able to reach the far en...
```python s = input() vowels = "AEIOUY" prev_i = -1 curr_i = -1 ans = 0 for i, ch in enumerate(s): if ch in vowels: prev_i = curr_i curr_i = i ans = max(ans, curr_i-prev_i) print(ans) ```
0
0
none
none
none
0
[ "none" ]
null
null
Limak is a little polar bear. He doesn't have many toys and thus he often plays with polynomials. He considers a polynomial valid if its degree is *n* and its coefficients are integers not exceeding *k* by the absolute value. More formally: Let *a*0,<=*a*1,<=...,<=*a**n* denote the coefficients, so . Then, a polynomi...
The first line contains two integers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=200<=000,<=1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=109) — the degree of the polynomial and the limit for absolute values of coefficients. The second line contains *n*<=+<=1 integers *a*0,<=*a*1,<=...,<=*a**n* (|*a**i*|<=≤<=*k*,<=*a**n*<=≠<=0) — describing a valid polynomial . It's...
Print the number of ways to change one coefficient to get a valid polynomial *Q* that *Q*(2)<==<=0.
[ "3 1000000000\n10 -9 -3 5\n", "3 12\n10 -9 -3 5\n", "2 20\n14 -7 19\n" ]
[ "3\n", "2\n", "0\n" ]
In the first sample, we are given a polynomial *P*(*x*) = 10 - 9*x* - 3*x*<sup class="upper-index">2</sup> + 5*x*<sup class="upper-index">3</sup>. Limak can change one coefficient in three ways: 1. He can set *a*<sub class="lower-index">0</sub> =  - 10. Then he would get *Q*(*x*) =  - 10 - 9*x* - 3*x*<sup class="upp...
0
[]
1,692,040,840
2,147,483,647
PyPy 3-64
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
0
30
0
print("_RANDOM_GUESS_1692040840.0840833")# 1692040840.084097
Title: none Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Limak is a little polar bear. He doesn't have many toys and thus he often plays with polynomials. He considers a polynomial valid if its degree is *n* and its coefficients are integers not exceeding *k* by the absolute value. Mor...
```python print("_RANDOM_GUESS_1692040840.0840833")# 1692040840.084097 ```
0
441
B
Valera and Fruits
PROGRAMMING
1,400
[ "greedy", "implementation" ]
null
null
Valera loves his garden, where *n* fruit trees grow. This year he will enjoy a great harvest! On the *i*-th tree *b**i* fruit grow, they will ripen on a day number *a**i*. Unfortunately, the fruit on the tree get withered, so they can only be collected on day *a**i* and day *a**i*<=+<=1 (all fruits that are not collec...
The first line contains two space-separated integers *n* and *v* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*v*<=≤<=3000) — the number of fruit trees in the garden and the number of fruits that Valera can collect in a day. Next *n* lines contain the description of trees in the garden. The *i*-th line contains two space-separated integers *a**i* a...
Print a single integer — the maximum number of fruit that Valera can collect.
[ "2 3\n1 5\n2 3\n", "5 10\n3 20\n2 20\n1 20\n4 20\n5 20\n" ]
[ "8\n", "60\n" ]
In the first sample, in order to obtain the optimal answer, you should act as follows. - On the first day collect 3 fruits from the 1-st tree. - On the second day collect 1 fruit from the 2-nd tree and 2 fruits from the 1-st tree. - On the third day collect the remaining fruits from the 2-nd tree. In the second s...
1,000
[ { "input": "2 3\n1 5\n2 3", "output": "8" }, { "input": "5 10\n3 20\n2 20\n1 20\n4 20\n5 20", "output": "60" }, { "input": "10 3000\n1 2522\n4 445\n8 1629\n5 772\n9 2497\n6 81\n3 426\n7 1447\n2 575\n10 202", "output": "10596" }, { "input": "5 3000\n5 772\n1 2522\n2 575\n4 445...
1,626,722,697
2,147,483,647
Python 3
WRONG_ANSWER
TESTS
25
77
7,168,000
n, v = map(int, input().split()) d = {} for i in range(n): a,b = map(int, input().split()) if a in d : d[a] += b else : d[a] = b c = 0 for i in range(1, n+2): quota = v if i-1 in d : if quota>d[i-1]: c += d[i-1] quota -= d[i-1] d[i-1] = 0 ...
Title: Valera and Fruits Time Limit: None seconds Memory Limit: None megabytes Problem Description: Valera loves his garden, where *n* fruit trees grow. This year he will enjoy a great harvest! On the *i*-th tree *b**i* fruit grow, they will ripen on a day number *a**i*. Unfortunately, the fruit on the tree get wit...
```python n, v = map(int, input().split()) d = {} for i in range(n): a,b = map(int, input().split()) if a in d : d[a] += b else : d[a] = b c = 0 for i in range(1, n+2): quota = v if i-1 in d : if quota>d[i-1]: c += d[i-1] quota -= d[i-1] d...
0