contestId int64 0 1.01k | index stringclasses 57
values | name stringlengths 2 58 | type stringclasses 2
values | rating int64 0 3.5k | tags listlengths 0 11 | title stringclasses 522
values | time-limit stringclasses 8
values | memory-limit stringclasses 8
values | problem-description stringlengths 0 7.15k | input-specification stringlengths 0 2.05k | output-specification stringlengths 0 1.5k | demo-input listlengths 0 7 | demo-output listlengths 0 7 | note stringlengths 0 5.24k | points float64 0 425k | test_cases listlengths 0 402 | creationTimeSeconds int64 1.37B 1.7B | relativeTimeSeconds int64 8 2.15B | programmingLanguage stringclasses 3
values | verdict stringclasses 14
values | testset stringclasses 12
values | passedTestCount int64 0 1k | timeConsumedMillis int64 0 15k | memoryConsumedBytes int64 0 805M | code stringlengths 3 65.5k | prompt stringlengths 262 8.2k | response stringlengths 17 65.5k | score float64 -1 3.99 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 | none | none | none | 0 | [
"none"
] | null | null | Let's introduce a number system which is based on a roman digits. There are digits I, V, X, L which correspond to the numbers $1$, $5$, $10$ and $50$ respectively. The use of other roman digits is not allowed.
Numbers in this system are written as a sequence of one or more digits. We define the value of the sequence s... | The only line of the input file contains a single integer $n$ ($1 \le n \le 10^9$) — the number of roman digits to use. | Output a single integer — the number of distinct integers which can be represented using $n$ roman digits exactly. | [
"1\n",
"2\n",
"10\n"
] | [
"4\n",
"10\n",
"244\n"
] | In the first sample there are exactly $4$ integers which can be represented — I, V, X and L.
In the second sample it is possible to represent integers $2$ (II), $6$ (VI), $10$ (VV), $11$ (XI), $15$ (XV), $20$ (XX), $51$ (IL), $55$ (VL), $60$ (XL) and $100$ (LL). | 0 | [
{
"input": "1",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "2",
"output": "10"
},
{
"input": "10",
"output": "244"
},
{
"input": "1000",
"output": "48753"
},
{
"input": "2000",
"output": "97753"
},
{
"input": "5000",
"output": "244753"
},
{
"input": "1000... | 1,530,458,311 | 4,411 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | PRETESTS | 3 | 93 | 0 |
def mi():
return map(int, input().split())
def fun(n):
if n%3==0:
return (2/3)*n**2
else:
return (2/3)*n**2+(1/3)
a = [1,5,10,50]
n = int(input())
if n==1:
print (4)
exit(0)
elif n==2:
print (10)
exit(0)
n+=1
import math
print (int((math.ceil(fun(n))+math.ceil(fun(n-1))+math.ceil(fun(n+1... | Title: none
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Let's introduce a number system which is based on a roman digits. There are digits I, V, X, L which correspond to the numbers $1$, $5$, $10$ and $50$ respectively. The use of other roman digits is not allowed.
Numbers in this sys... | ```python
def mi():
return map(int, input().split())
def fun(n):
if n%3==0:
return (2/3)*n**2
else:
return (2/3)*n**2+(1/3)
a = [1,5,10,50]
n = int(input())
if n==1:
print (4)
exit(0)
elif n==2:
print (10)
exit(0)
n+=1
import math
print (int((math.ceil(fun(n))+math.ceil(fun(n-1))+math.ce... | 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... | 1,693,756,548 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 4 | 46 | 0 | a = str(input())
d1 = a.find('h')
d2 = a.find('e')
d3 = a.find('l')
d5 = a.rfind('l')
d4 = a.find('o')
if -1 < d1 < d2 < d3 < d5 < d4:
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
a = str(input())
d1 = a.find('h')
d2 = a.find('e')
d3 = a.find('l')
d5 = a.rfind('l')
d4 = a.find('o')
if -1 < d1 < d2 < d3 < d5 < d4:
print('YES')
else:
print('NO')
``` | 0 |
63 | A | Sinking Ship | PROGRAMMING | 900 | [
"implementation",
"sortings",
"strings"
] | A. Sinking Ship | 2 | 256 | The ship crashed into a reef and is sinking. Now the entire crew must be evacuated. All *n* crew members have already lined up in a row (for convenience let's label them all from left to right with positive integers from 1 to *n*) and await further instructions. However, one should evacuate the crew properly, in a stri... | The first line contains an integer *n*, which is the number of people in the crew (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100). Then follow *n* lines. The *i*-th of those lines contains two words — the name of the crew member who is *i*-th in line, and his status on the ship. The words are separated by exactly one space. There are no other spa... | Print *n* lines. The *i*-th of them should contain the name of the crew member who must be the *i*-th one to leave the ship. | [
"6\nJack captain\nAlice woman\nCharlie man\nTeddy rat\nBob child\nJulia woman\n"
] | [
"Teddy\nAlice\nBob\nJulia\nCharlie\nJack\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "6\nJack captain\nAlice woman\nCharlie man\nTeddy rat\nBob child\nJulia woman",
"output": "Teddy\nAlice\nBob\nJulia\nCharlie\nJack"
},
{
"input": "1\nA captain",
"output": "A"
},
{
"input": "1\nAbcdefjhij captain",
"output": "Abcdefjhij"
},
{
"input": "5\nA captain... | 1,532,932,123 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 26 | 218 | 0 | n=int(input())
d=dict()
while n:
name,cat=input().split(" ")
#print(cat[0])
if(cat=="woman" or cat=="child"):
if("woman" not in d.keys()):
d["woman"]=[]
d["woman"].append(name)
else:
if(cat not in d.keys()):
d[cat]=[]
d[cat].append(name)
n-=1
if("rat" in d.keys()):
... | Title: Sinking Ship
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
The ship crashed into a reef and is sinking. Now the entire crew must be evacuated. All *n* crew members have already lined up in a row (for convenience let's label them all from left to right with positive integers from 1 to ... | ```python
n=int(input())
d=dict()
while n:
name,cat=input().split(" ")
#print(cat[0])
if(cat=="woman" or cat=="child"):
if("woman" not in d.keys()):
d["woman"]=[]
d["woman"].append(name)
else:
if(cat not in d.keys()):
d[cat]=[]
d[cat].append(name)
n-=1
if("rat" in d.k... | 3.9455 |
287 | A | IQ Test | PROGRAMMING | 1,100 | [
"brute force",
"implementation"
] | null | null | In the city of Ultima Thule job applicants are often offered an IQ test.
The test is as follows: the person gets a piece of squared paper with a 4<=×<=4 square painted on it. Some of the square's cells are painted black and others are painted white. Your task is to repaint at most one cell the other color so that the... | Four lines contain four characters each: the *j*-th character of the *i*-th line equals "." if the cell in the *i*-th row and the *j*-th column of the square is painted white, and "#", if the cell is black. | Print "YES" (without the quotes), if the test can be passed and "NO" (without the quotes) otherwise. | [
"####\n.#..\n####\n....\n",
"####\n....\n####\n....\n"
] | [
"YES\n",
"NO\n"
] | In the first test sample it is enough to repaint the first cell in the second row. After such repainting the required 2 × 2 square is on the intersection of the 1-st and 2-nd row with the 1-st and 2-nd column. | 500 | [
{
"input": "###.\n...#\n###.\n...#",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": ".##.\n#..#\n.##.\n#..#",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": ".#.#\n#.#.\n.#.#\n#.#.",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "##..\n..##\n##..\n..##",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "#.#.\n#.#.\n.#.#\n.#.#",
"ou... | 1,668,985,555 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | RUNTIME_ERROR | TESTS | 0 | 31 | 409,600 | import math
import random
import sys
import string
input = sys.stdin.readline
############ ---- Input Functions ---- ############
def inp():
return(int(input()))
def inlt():
return(list(map(int,input().split())))
def insr(): #For taking string inputs. Actually it returns... | Title: IQ Test
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
In the city of Ultima Thule job applicants are often offered an IQ test.
The test is as follows: the person gets a piece of squared paper with a 4<=×<=4 square painted on it. Some of the square's cells are painted black and o... | ```python
import math
import random
import sys
import string
input = sys.stdin.readline
############ ---- Input Functions ---- ############
def inp():
return(int(input()))
def inlt():
return(list(map(int,input().split())))
def insr(): #For taking string inputs. Actually ... | -1 | |
946 | B | Weird Subtraction Process | PROGRAMMING | 1,100 | [
"math",
"number theory"
] | null | null | You have two variables *a* and *b*. Consider the following sequence of actions performed with these variables:
1. If *a*<==<=0 or *b*<==<=0, end the process. Otherwise, go to step 2;1. If *a*<=≥<=2·*b*, then set the value of *a* to *a*<=-<=2·*b*, and repeat step 1. Otherwise, go to step 3;1. If *b*<=≥<=2·*a*, then s... | The only line of the input contains two integers *n* and *m* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=1018). *n* is the initial value of variable *a*, and *m* is the initial value of variable *b*. | Print two integers — the values of *a* and *b* after the end of the process. | [
"12 5\n",
"31 12\n"
] | [
"0 1\n",
"7 12\n"
] | Explanations to the samples:
1. *a* = 12, *b* = 5 <img align="middle" class="tex-formula" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/70a0795f45d32287dba0eb83fc4a3f470c6e5537.png" style="max-width: 100.0%;max-height: 100.0%;"/> *a* = 2, *b* = 5 <img align="middle" class="tex-formula" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/70a0... | 0 | [
{
"input": "12 5",
"output": "0 1"
},
{
"input": "31 12",
"output": "7 12"
},
{
"input": "1000000000000000000 7",
"output": "8 7"
},
{
"input": "31960284556200 8515664064180",
"output": "14928956427840 8515664064180"
},
{
"input": "1000000000000000000 100000000000... | 1,587,578,171 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | OK | TESTS | 81 | 140 | 0 | a, b = map(int, input().split())
while(a!=0 and b!=0):
tempa = a//b
tempb = b//a
if tempa>=2:
a -= (tempa-tempa%2)*b
elif tempb>=2:
b -= (tempb-tempb%2)*a
else:
break
print(a, b)
| Title: Weird Subtraction Process
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
You have two variables *a* and *b*. Consider the following sequence of actions performed with these variables:
1. If *a*<==<=0 or *b*<==<=0, end the process. Otherwise, go to step 2;1. If *a*<=≥<=2·*b*, then... | ```python
a, b = map(int, input().split())
while(a!=0 and b!=0):
tempa = a//b
tempb = b//a
if tempa>=2:
a -= (tempa-tempa%2)*b
elif tempb>=2:
b -= (tempb-tempb%2)*a
else:
break
print(a, b)
``` | 3 | |
577 | A | Multiplication Table | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"implementation",
"number theory"
] | null | null | Let's consider a table consisting of *n* rows and *n* columns. The cell located at the intersection of *i*-th row and *j*-th column contains number *i*<=×<=*j*. The rows and columns are numbered starting from 1.
You are given a positive integer *x*. Your task is to count the number of cells in a table that contain num... | The single line contains numbers *n* and *x* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105, 1<=≤<=*x*<=≤<=109) — the size of the table and the number that we are looking for in the table. | Print a single number: the number of times *x* occurs in the table. | [
"10 5\n",
"6 12\n",
"5 13\n"
] | [
"2\n",
"4\n",
"0\n"
] | A table for the second sample test is given below. The occurrences of number 12 are marked bold. | 500 | [
{
"input": "10 5",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "6 12",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "5 13",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "1 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "2 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "100000 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "1 10000000... | 1,643,710,162 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 2 | 61 | 0 | from math import sqrt
(x, n) = map(int,input().split())
def factors1(x):
k = int(sqrt(x))
out = []
for i in range(1, k+1):
if x%i == 0:
out.append(i)
if x//i != i:
out.append(x//i)
out.sort()
return out
m = factors1(x)
l = len(m)
... | Title: Multiplication Table
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Let's consider a table consisting of *n* rows and *n* columns. The cell located at the intersection of *i*-th row and *j*-th column contains number *i*<=×<=*j*. The rows and columns are numbered starting from 1.
Y... | ```python
from math import sqrt
(x, n) = map(int,input().split())
def factors1(x):
k = int(sqrt(x))
out = []
for i in range(1, k+1):
if x%i == 0:
out.append(i)
if x//i != i:
out.append(x//i)
out.sort()
return out
m = factors1(x)
l... | 0 | |
9 | A | Die Roll | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"math",
"probabilities"
] | A. Die Roll | 1 | 64 | Yakko, Wakko and Dot, world-famous animaniacs, decided to rest from acting in cartoons, and take a leave to travel a bit. Yakko dreamt to go to Pennsylvania, his Motherland and the Motherland of his ancestors. Wakko thought about Tasmania, its beaches, sun and sea. Dot chose Transylvania as the most mysterious and unpr... | The only line of the input file contains two natural numbers Y and W — the results of Yakko's and Wakko's die rolls. | Output the required probability in the form of irreducible fraction in format «A/B», where A — the numerator, and B — the denominator. If the required probability equals to zero, output «0/1». If the required probability equals to 1, output «1/1». | [
"4 2\n"
] | [
"1/2\n"
] | Dot will go to Transylvania, if she is lucky to roll 4, 5 or 6 points. | 0 | [
{
"input": "4 2",
"output": "1/2"
},
{
"input": "1 1",
"output": "1/1"
},
{
"input": "1 2",
"output": "5/6"
},
{
"input": "1 3",
"output": "2/3"
},
{
"input": "1 4",
"output": "1/2"
},
{
"input": "1 5",
"output": "1/3"
},
{
"input": "1 6",
... | 1,629,831,126 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 6 | 122 | 6,758,400 | a, b = map(int, input().split())
n = 6 - max(a,b)
if n == 0 and a == b:
print('1/6')
elif n == 0:
print('0/6')
elif n == 1:
print('1/3')
elif n == 2:
print('1/2')
elif n == 3:
print('2/3')
elif n == 4:
print('5/6')
elif n == 5:
print('1/1') | Title: Die Roll
Time Limit: 1 seconds
Memory Limit: 64 megabytes
Problem Description:
Yakko, Wakko and Dot, world-famous animaniacs, decided to rest from acting in cartoons, and take a leave to travel a bit. Yakko dreamt to go to Pennsylvania, his Motherland and the Motherland of his ancestors. Wakko thought about T... | ```python
a, b = map(int, input().split())
n = 6 - max(a,b)
if n == 0 and a == b:
print('1/6')
elif n == 0:
print('0/6')
elif n == 1:
print('1/3')
elif n == 2:
print('1/2')
elif n == 3:
print('2/3')
elif n == 4:
print('5/6')
elif n == 5:
print('1/1')
``` | 0 |
899 | C | Dividing the numbers | PROGRAMMING | 1,300 | [
"constructive algorithms",
"graphs",
"math"
] | null | null | Petya has *n* integers: 1,<=2,<=3,<=...,<=*n*. He wants to split these integers in two non-empty groups in such a way that the absolute difference of sums of integers in each group is as small as possible.
Help Petya to split the integers. Each of *n* integers should be exactly in one group. | The first line contains a single integer *n* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=60<=000) — the number of integers Petya has. | Print the smallest possible absolute difference in the first line.
In the second line print the size of the first group, followed by the integers in that group. You can print these integers in arbitrary order. If there are multiple answers, print any of them. | [
"4\n",
"2\n"
] | [
"0\n2 1 4 \n",
"1\n1 1 \n"
] | In the first example you have to put integers 1 and 4 in the first group, and 2 and 3 in the second. This way the sum in each group is 5, and the absolute difference is 0.
In the second example there are only two integers, and since both groups should be non-empty, you have to put one integer in the first group and on... | 1,500 | [
{
"input": "4",
"output": "0\n2 1 4 "
},
{
"input": "2",
"output": "1\n1 1 "
},
{
"input": "3",
"output": "0\n1\n3 "
},
{
"input": "5",
"output": "1\n3\n1 2 5 "
},
{
"input": "59998",
"output": "1\n29999 1 4 5 8 9 12 13 16 17 20 21 24 25 28 29 32 33 36 37 40 4... | 1,578,884,000 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | COMPILATION_ERROR | TESTS | 0 | 0 | 0 | #pragma warning(disable:4996)
#include<iostream>
#include<cstdio>
#include<cmath>
#include<cstring>
#include<algorithm>
using namespace std;
typedef long long ll;
int a[60005],ans[60005];
int n;
int spl(int st)
{
int i, j,k=0;
for (i = st, j = n; i < j; i+=2,j-=2)
{
if (i == (j - 1))
{
a[++k]... | Title: Dividing the numbers
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Petya has *n* integers: 1,<=2,<=3,<=...,<=*n*. He wants to split these integers in two non-empty groups in such a way that the absolute difference of sums of integers in each group is as small as possible.
Help P... | ```python
#pragma warning(disable:4996)
#include<iostream>
#include<cstdio>
#include<cmath>
#include<cstring>
#include<algorithm>
using namespace std;
typedef long long ll;
int a[60005],ans[60005];
int n;
int spl(int st)
{
int i, j,k=0;
for (i = st, j = n; i < j; i+=2,j-=2)
{
if (i == (j - 1))
{
... | -1 | |
115 | A | Party | PROGRAMMING | 900 | [
"dfs and similar",
"graphs",
"trees"
] | null | null | A company has *n* employees numbered from 1 to *n*. Each employee either has no immediate manager or exactly one immediate manager, who is another employee with a different number. An employee *A* is said to be the superior of another employee *B* if at least one of the following is true:
- Employee *A* is the immedi... | The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=2000) — the number of employees.
The next *n* lines contain the integers *p**i* (1<=≤<=*p**i*<=≤<=*n* or *p**i*<==<=-1). Every *p**i* denotes the immediate manager for the *i*-th employee. If *p**i* is -1, that means that the *i*-th employee does not have an immediate... | Print a single integer denoting the minimum number of groups that will be formed in the party. | [
"5\n-1\n1\n2\n1\n-1\n"
] | [
"3\n"
] | For the first example, three groups are sufficient, for example:
- Employee 1 - Employees 2 and 4 - Employees 3 and 5 | 500 | [
{
"input": "5\n-1\n1\n2\n1\n-1",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "4\n-1\n1\n2\n3",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "12\n-1\n1\n2\n3\n-1\n5\n6\n7\n-1\n9\n10\n11",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "6\n-1\n-1\n2\n3\n1\n1",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "3\n-1\n1\n1",
"output": ... | 1,691,782,477 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 30 | 0 | n = int(input())
tree = [-1]*n
for i in range(n):
tree[i] = int(input())
def HeightSearch(s):
global maxHeight
global height
if tree[s-1] > maxHeight:
maxHeight = tree[s-1]
if tree[s-1] == -1:
return 1
if height[s] == None:
... | Title: Party
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
A company has *n* employees numbered from 1 to *n*. Each employee either has no immediate manager or exactly one immediate manager, who is another employee with a different number. An employee *A* is said to be the superior of an... | ```python
n = int(input())
tree = [-1]*n
for i in range(n):
tree[i] = int(input())
def HeightSearch(s):
global maxHeight
global height
if tree[s-1] > maxHeight:
maxHeight = tree[s-1]
if tree[s-1] == -1:
return 1
if height[s] == None:
... | 0 | |
622 | C | Not Equal on a Segment | PROGRAMMING | 1,700 | [
"data structures",
"implementation"
] | null | null | You are given array *a* with *n* integers and *m* queries. The *i*-th query is given with three integers *l**i*,<=*r**i*,<=*x**i*.
For the *i*-th query find any position *p**i* (*l**i*<=≤<=*p**i*<=≤<=*r**i*) so that *a**p**i*<=≠<=*x**i*. | The first line contains two integers *n*,<=*m* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=2·105) — the number of elements in *a* and the number of queries.
The second line contains *n* integers *a**i* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=106) — the elements of the array *a*.
Each of the next *m* lines contains three integers *l**i*,<=*r**i*,<=*x**i* (1<=≤<=... | Print *m* lines. On the *i*-th line print integer *p**i* — the position of any number not equal to *x**i* in segment [*l**i*,<=*r**i*] or the value <=-<=1 if there is no such number. | [
"6 4\n1 2 1 1 3 5\n1 4 1\n2 6 2\n3 4 1\n3 4 2\n"
] | [
"2\n6\n-1\n4\n"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "6 4\n1 2 1 1 3 5\n1 4 1\n2 6 2\n3 4 1\n3 4 2",
"output": "2\n6\n-1\n4"
},
{
"input": "1 1\n1\n1 1 1",
"output": "-1"
},
{
"input": "1 1\n2\n1 1 2",
"output": "-1"
},
{
"input": "1 1\n569888\n1 1 967368",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "10 10\n1 1 1 1 1 1 ... | 1,463,557,015 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 1 | 62 | 4,608,000 | n,m=map(int,input().split(' '))
a=list(map(int,input().split(' ')))
d=dict()
for i in range(n):
d[a[i]]=d.get(a[i],[])
d[a[i]].append(i)
for i in range(m):
t=0
l,r,x=map(int,input().split(' '))
pos=d.get(x,0)
if pos==0:
print(l)
else:
for i in pos:
... | Title: Not Equal on a Segment
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
You are given array *a* with *n* integers and *m* queries. The *i*-th query is given with three integers *l**i*,<=*r**i*,<=*x**i*.
For the *i*-th query find any position *p**i* (*l**i*<=≤<=*p**i*<=≤<=*r**i*) so ... | ```python
n,m=map(int,input().split(' '))
a=list(map(int,input().split(' ')))
d=dict()
for i in range(n):
d[a[i]]=d.get(a[i],[])
d[a[i]].append(i)
for i in range(m):
t=0
l,r,x=map(int,input().split(' '))
pos=d.get(x,0)
if pos==0:
print(l)
else:
for i in pos... | 0 | |
509 | A | Maximum in Table | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"brute force",
"implementation"
] | null | null | An *n*<=×<=*n* table *a* is defined as follows:
- The first row and the first column contain ones, that is: *a**i*,<=1<==<=*a*1,<=*i*<==<=1 for all *i*<==<=1,<=2,<=...,<=*n*. - Each of the remaining numbers in the table is equal to the sum of the number above it and the number to the left of it. In other words, the ... | The only line of input contains a positive integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=10) — the number of rows and columns of the table. | Print a single line containing a positive integer *m* — the maximum value in the table. | [
"1\n",
"5\n"
] | [
"1",
"70"
] | In the second test the rows of the table look as follows: | 0 | [
{
"input": "1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "5",
"output": "70"
},
{
"input": "2",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "3",
"output": "6"
},
{
"input": "4",
"output": "20"
},
{
"input": "6",
"output": "252"
},
{
"input": "7",
"output": "924"
... | 1,679,690,380 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | OK | TESTS | 10 | 62 | 0 | n = int(input())
final = [[1 for i in range(n)] for j in range(n)]
for i in range(1, n):
for j in range(i, n):
if i == j:
final[i][j] = 2*final[i-1][j]
else:
final[i][j] = final[i-1][j] + final[i][j-1]
print(final[-1][-1]) | Title: Maximum in Table
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
An *n*<=×<=*n* table *a* is defined as follows:
- The first row and the first column contain ones, that is: *a**i*,<=1<==<=*a*1,<=*i*<==<=1 for all *i*<==<=1,<=2,<=...,<=*n*. - Each of the remaining numbers in the t... | ```python
n = int(input())
final = [[1 for i in range(n)] for j in range(n)]
for i in range(1, n):
for j in range(i, n):
if i == j:
final[i][j] = 2*final[i-1][j]
else:
final[i][j] = final[i-1][j] + final[i][j-1]
print(final[-1][-1])
``` | 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... | 1,561,724,368 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 81 | 248 | 0 | n = int(input())
l = []
for i in range(n):
l.append(list(map(int, input().split())))
x = [sum(i) for i in zip(*l)]
m = [i for i in x if(i==0)]
if(len(m)==len(x)):
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())
l = []
for i in range(n):
l.append(list(map(int, input().split())))
x = [sum(i) for i in zip(*l)]
m = [i for i in x if(i==0)]
if(len(m)==len(x)):
print('YES')
else:
print('NO')
``` | 3.938 |
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... | 1,594,727,593 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 18 | 109 | 6,758,400 | from math import ceil
k,n,s,p=map(int,input().split())
print(ceil((ceil((n/s))*k)/p)) | Title: Paper Airplanes
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
To make a paper airplane, one has to use a rectangular piece of paper. From a sheet of standard size you can make $s$ airplanes.
A group of $k$ people decided to make $n$ airplanes each. They are going to buy several p... | ```python
from math import ceil
k,n,s,p=map(int,input().split())
print(ceil((ceil((n/s))*k)/p))
``` | 3 | |
75 | A | Life Without Zeros | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"implementation"
] | A. Life Without Zeros | 2 | 256 | Can you imagine our life if we removed all zeros from it? For sure we will have many problems.
In this problem we will have a simple example if we removed all zeros from our life, it's the addition operation. Let's assume you are given this equation *a*<=+<=*b*<==<=*c*, where *a* and *b* are positive integers, and *c*... | The input will consist of two lines, the first line will contain the integer *a*, and the second line will contain the integer *b* which are in the equation as described above (1<=≤<=*a*,<=*b*<=≤<=109). There won't be any leading zeros in both. The value of *c* should be calculated as *c*<==<=*a*<=+<=*b*. | The output will be just one line, you should print "YES" if the equation will remain correct after removing all zeros, and print "NO" otherwise. | [
"101\n102\n",
"105\n106\n"
] | [
"YES\n",
"NO\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "101\n102",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "105\n106",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "544\n397",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "822\n280",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "101\n413",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "309\n139",
"output": "NO"
}... | 1,690,919,735 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 43 | 62 | 0 | n=int(input())
l=int(input())
c=n+l
n1=''
n2=''
n3=''
for i in str(n):
if i!="0":
n1+=i
for i in str(l):
if i!="0":
n2+=i
for i in str(c):
if i!="0":
n3+=i
if int(n3)==int(n1)+int(n2):
print("YES")
else:
print("NO")
| Title: Life Without Zeros
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
Can you imagine our life if we removed all zeros from it? For sure we will have many problems.
In this problem we will have a simple example if we removed all zeros from our life, it's the addition operation. Let's assu... | ```python
n=int(input())
l=int(input())
c=n+l
n1=''
n2=''
n3=''
for i in str(n):
if i!="0":
n1+=i
for i in str(l):
if i!="0":
n2+=i
for i in str(c):
if i!="0":
n3+=i
if int(n3)==int(n1)+int(n2):
print("YES")
else:
print("NO")
``` | 3.9845 |
831 | A | Unimodal Array | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Array of integers is unimodal, if:
- it is strictly increasing in the beginning; - after that it is constant; - after that it is strictly decreasing.
The first block (increasing) and the last block (decreasing) may be absent. It is allowed that both of this blocks are absent.
For example, the following three arra... | The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of elements in the array.
The second line contains *n* integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=1<=000) — the elements of the array. | Print "YES" if the given array is unimodal. Otherwise, print "NO".
You can output each letter in any case (upper or lower). | [
"6\n1 5 5 5 4 2\n",
"5\n10 20 30 20 10\n",
"4\n1 2 1 2\n",
"7\n3 3 3 3 3 3 3\n"
] | [
"YES\n",
"YES\n",
"NO\n",
"YES\n"
] | In the first example the array is unimodal, because it is strictly increasing in the beginning (from position 1 to position 2, inclusively), that it is constant (from position 2 to position 4, inclusively) and then it is strictly decreasing (from position 4 to position 6, inclusively). | 500 | [
{
"input": "6\n1 5 5 5 4 2",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "5\n10 20 30 20 10",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "4\n1 2 1 2",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "7\n3 3 3 3 3 3 3",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "6\n5 7 11 11 2 1",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input":... | 1,641,224,299 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | RUNTIME_ERROR | TESTS | 0 | 30 | 0 | n = int ( input ())
a = list(map(int,input().split()))
c = 0
while c < n-1 and a[c+1] > a[c]:
c = c + 1
while c < n-1 and a[c] == a[c+1]:
c = c + 1
while c < n-1 and a[c+1] < a[c]:
c = c + 1
if c == n - 1 :
print (YES)
else:
print(NO)
| Title: Unimodal Array
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Array of integers is unimodal, if:
- it is strictly increasing in the beginning; - after that it is constant; - after that it is strictly decreasing.
The first block (increasing) and the last block (decreasing) may ... | ```python
n = int ( input ())
a = list(map(int,input().split()))
c = 0
while c < n-1 and a[c+1] > a[c]:
c = c + 1
while c < n-1 and a[c] == a[c+1]:
c = c + 1
while c < n-1 and a[c+1] < a[c]:
c = c + 1
if c == n - 1 :
print (YES)
else:
print(NO)
``` | -1 | |
0 | none | none | none | 0 | [
"none"
] | null | null | You are given two lists of non-zero digits.
Let's call an integer pretty if its (base 10) representation has at least one digit from the first list and at least one digit from the second list. What is the smallest positive pretty integer? | The first line contains two integers *n* and *m* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=9) — the lengths of the first and the second lists, respectively.
The second line contains *n* distinct digits *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=9) — the elements of the first list.
The third line contains *m* distinct digits *b*1,<=*b*2... | Print the smallest pretty integer. | [
"2 3\n4 2\n5 7 6\n",
"8 8\n1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8\n8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1\n"
] | [
"25\n",
"1\n"
] | In the first example 25, 46, 24567 are pretty, as well as many other integers. The smallest among them is 25. 42 and 24 are not pretty because they don't have digits from the second list.
In the second example all integers that have at least one digit different from 9 are pretty. It's obvious that the smallest among t... | 0 | [
{
"input": "2 3\n4 2\n5 7 6",
"output": "25"
},
{
"input": "8 8\n1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8\n8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "1 1\n9\n1",
"output": "19"
},
{
"input": "9 1\n5 4 2 3 6 1 7 9 8\n9",
"output": "9"
},
{
"input": "5 3\n7 2 5 8 6\n3 1 9",
"output"... | 1,643,970,393 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 3 | 31 | 0 | n,m = map(int, input().split())
a = list(map(int, input().split()))
b = list(map(int, input().split()))
s = set(b)
a.sort()
b.sort()
key = 0
for i in range (len(a)):
if a[i] in s:
print(a[i])
key = 1
break
if key == 0:
l = []
l.append(str(min(a[0],b[0])))
l.append(str(... | Title: none
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
You are given two lists of non-zero digits.
Let's call an integer pretty if its (base 10) representation has at least one digit from the first list and at least one digit from the second list. What is the smallest positive pretty... | ```python
n,m = map(int, input().split())
a = list(map(int, input().split()))
b = list(map(int, input().split()))
s = set(b)
a.sort()
b.sort()
key = 0
for i in range (len(a)):
if a[i] in s:
print(a[i])
key = 1
break
if key == 0:
l = []
l.append(str(min(a[0],b[0])))
l.a... | 0 | |
180 | C | Letter | PROGRAMMING | 1,400 | [
"dp"
] | null | null | Patrick has just finished writing a message to his sweetheart Stacey when he noticed that the message didn't look fancy. Patrick was nervous while writing the message, so some of the letters there were lowercase and some of them were uppercase.
Patrick believes that a message is fancy if any uppercase letter stands to... | The only line of the input contains a non-empty string consisting of uppercase and lowercase letters. The string's length does not exceed 105. | Print a single number — the least number of actions needed to make the message fancy. | [
"PRuvetSTAaYA\n",
"OYPROSTIYAOPECHATALSYAPRIVETSTASYA\n",
"helloworld\n"
] | [
"5\n",
"0\n",
"0\n"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "PRuvetSTAaYA",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "OYPROSTIYAOPECHATALSYAPRIVETSTASYA",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "helloworld",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "P",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "t",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "XdJ",
"output": "1... | 1,667,632,704 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 22 | 124 | 3,788,800 | from functools import lru_cache
import sys
import threading
sys.setrecursionlimit(1 << 30)
def main():
s = input()
@lru_cache
def dp(i, hasLower):
if i >= len(s):
return 0
if ord(s[i]) >= 97:
return min(1 + dp(i + 1, hasLower), dp(i + 1, True))
... | Title: Letter
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Patrick has just finished writing a message to his sweetheart Stacey when he noticed that the message didn't look fancy. Patrick was nervous while writing the message, so some of the letters there were lowercase and some of them... | ```python
from functools import lru_cache
import sys
import threading
sys.setrecursionlimit(1 << 30)
def main():
s = input()
@lru_cache
def dp(i, hasLower):
if i >= len(s):
return 0
if ord(s[i]) >= 97:
return min(1 + dp(i + 1, hasLower), dp(i + 1, Tru... | 0 | |
23 | A | You're Given a String... | PROGRAMMING | 1,200 | [
"brute force",
"greedy"
] | A. You're Given a String... | 2 | 256 | You're given a string of lower-case Latin letters. Your task is to find the length of its longest substring that can be met in the string at least twice. These occurrences can overlap (see sample test 2). | The first input line contains the string. It's guaranteed, that the string is non-empty, consists of lower-case Latin letters, and its length doesn't exceed 100. | Output one number — length of the longest substring that can be met in the string at least twice. | [
"abcd\n",
"ababa\n",
"zzz\n"
] | [
"0",
"3",
"2"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "abcd",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "ababa",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "zzz",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "kmmm",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "wzznz",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "qlzazaaqll",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "lzggg... | 1,577,358,309 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 3 | 186 | 0 | x=input()
a=x[:len(x)//2]
b=x[len(x)//2:]
if a in b :
print(max(len(a),len(b)))
else:
print(0)
| Title: You're Given a String...
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
You're given a string of lower-case Latin letters. Your task is to find the length of its longest substring that can be met in the string at least twice. These occurrences can overlap (see sample test 2).
Input Sp... | ```python
x=input()
a=x[:len(x)//2]
b=x[len(x)//2:]
if a in b :
print(max(len(a),len(b)))
else:
print(0)
``` | 0 |
950 | A | Left-handers, Right-handers and Ambidexters | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation",
"math"
] | null | null | You are at a water bowling training. There are *l* people who play with their left hand, *r* people, who play with their right hand, and *a* ambidexters, who can play with left or right hand.
The coach decided to form a team of even number of players, exactly half of the players should play with their right hand, and ... | The only line contains three integers *l*, *r* and *a* (0<=≤<=*l*,<=*r*,<=*a*<=≤<=100) — the number of left-handers, the number of right-handers and the number of ambidexters at the training. | Print a single even integer — the maximum number of players in the team. It is possible that the team can only have zero number of players. | [
"1 4 2\n",
"5 5 5\n",
"0 2 0\n"
] | [
"6\n",
"14\n",
"0\n"
] | In the first example you can form a team of 6 players. You should take the only left-hander and two ambidexters to play with left hand, and three right-handers to play with right hand. The only person left can't be taken into the team.
In the second example you can form a team of 14 people. You have to take all five l... | 500 | [
{
"input": "1 4 2",
"output": "6"
},
{
"input": "5 5 5",
"output": "14"
},
{
"input": "0 2 0",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "30 70 34",
"output": "128"
},
{
"input": "89 32 24",
"output": "112"
},
{
"input": "89 44 77",
"output": "210"
},
{
... | 1,557,121,989 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 79 | 109 | 0 | s=[int(n) for n in input().split()]
m=0
if s[1]==s[0]:
m=2*s[0]
if s[2]>=2:
m+=2*(s[2]//2)
elif s[1]>s[0]:
k=s[0]+s[2]
if k==s[1]:
m=2*k
elif k>s[1]:
d=k-s[1]
m=2*s[1]
if d>=2:
m=m+2*(d//2)
elif k<s[1]:
d=s[1]-k
m=2*k
elif s[0]>s[1]:
k=s[1]+s[2]
if k==s[0]:
m=2*k
el... | Title: Left-handers, Right-handers and Ambidexters
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
You are at a water bowling training. There are *l* people who play with their left hand, *r* people, who play with their right hand, and *a* ambidexters, who can play with left or right hand.... | ```python
s=[int(n) for n in input().split()]
m=0
if s[1]==s[0]:
m=2*s[0]
if s[2]>=2:
m+=2*(s[2]//2)
elif s[1]>s[0]:
k=s[0]+s[2]
if k==s[1]:
m=2*k
elif k>s[1]:
d=k-s[1]
m=2*s[1]
if d>=2:
m=m+2*(d//2)
elif k<s[1]:
d=s[1]-k
m=2*k
elif s[0]>s[1]:
k=s[1]+s[2]
if k==s[0]:
... | 3 | |
887 | A | Div. 64 | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Top-model Izabella participates in the competition. She wants to impress judges and show her mathematical skills.
Her problem is following: for given string, consisting of only 0 and 1, tell if it's possible to remove some digits in such a way, that remaining number is a representation of some positive integer, divisi... | In the only line given a non-empty binary string *s* with length up to 100. | Print «yes» (without quotes) if it's possible to remove digits required way and «no» otherwise. | [
"100010001\n",
"100\n"
] | [
"yes",
"no"
] | In the first test case, you can get string 1 000 000 after removing two ones which is a representation of number 64 in the binary numerical system.
You can read more about binary numeral system representation here: [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_system](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_system) | 500 | [
{
"input": "100010001",
"output": "yes"
},
{
"input": "100",
"output": "no"
},
{
"input": "0000001000000",
"output": "yes"
},
{
"input": "1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111",
"output": "no"
},
{
"in... | 1,511,945,556 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 12 | 62 | 5,529,600 | s=input()
n =len(s)
if n<7:print("no")
else:
ct0=0
for i in range(n-1,-1,-1):
if ct0==6:
print('yes')
break
if s[i]=='0':
ct0+=1
else:
print('no')
| Title: Div. 64
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Top-model Izabella participates in the competition. She wants to impress judges and show her mathematical skills.
Her problem is following: for given string, consisting of only 0 and 1, tell if it's possible to remove some dig... | ```python
s=input()
n =len(s)
if n<7:print("no")
else:
ct0=0
for i in range(n-1,-1,-1):
if ct0==6:
print('yes')
break
if s[i]=='0':
ct0+=1
else:
print('no')
``` | 0 | |
259 | B | Little Elephant and Magic Square | PROGRAMMING | 1,100 | [
"brute force",
"implementation"
] | null | null | Little Elephant loves magic squares very much.
A magic square is a 3<=×<=3 table, each cell contains some positive integer. At that the sums of integers in all rows, columns and diagonals of the table are equal. The figure below shows the magic square, the sum of integers in all its rows, columns and diagonals equals ... | The first three lines of the input contain the Little Elephant's notes. The first line contains elements of the first row of the magic square. The second line contains the elements of the second row, the third line is for the third row. The main diagonal elements that have been forgotten by the Elephant are represented... | Print three lines, in each line print three integers — the Little Elephant's magic square. If there are multiple magic squares, you are allowed to print any of them. Note that all numbers you print must be positive and not exceed 105.
It is guaranteed that there exists at least one magic square that meets the conditio... | [
"0 1 1\n1 0 1\n1 1 0\n",
"0 3 6\n5 0 5\n4 7 0\n"
] | [
"1 1 1\n1 1 1\n1 1 1\n",
"6 3 6\n5 5 5\n4 7 4\n"
] | none | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "0 1 1\n1 0 1\n1 1 0",
"output": "1 1 1\n1 1 1\n1 1 1"
},
{
"input": "0 3 6\n5 0 5\n4 7 0",
"output": "6 3 6\n5 5 5\n4 7 4"
},
{
"input": "0 4 4\n4 0 4\n4 4 0",
"output": "4 4 4\n4 4 4\n4 4 4"
},
{
"input": "0 54 48\n36 0 78\n66 60 0",
"output": "69 54 48\n36 5... | 1,620,034,167 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | OK | TESTS | 24 | 186 | 0 | a,b,c=map(int,input().split())
d,e,f=map(int,input().split())
g,h,i=map(int,input().split())
Sum=(b+c+d+f+g+h)//2
a=Sum -b - c
e=Sum -d -f
i=Sum -g -h
print(a,b,c)
print(d,e,f)
print(g,h,i) | Title: Little Elephant and Magic Square
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Little Elephant loves magic squares very much.
A magic square is a 3<=×<=3 table, each cell contains some positive integer. At that the sums of integers in all rows, columns and diagonals of the table ... | ```python
a,b,c=map(int,input().split())
d,e,f=map(int,input().split())
g,h,i=map(int,input().split())
Sum=(b+c+d+f+g+h)//2
a=Sum -b - c
e=Sum -d -f
i=Sum -g -h
print(a,b,c)
print(d,e,f)
print(g,h,i)
``` | 3 | |
599 | A | Patrick and Shopping | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Today Patrick waits for a visit from his friend Spongebob. To prepare for the visit, Patrick needs to buy some goodies in two stores located near his house. There is a *d*1 meter long road between his house and the first shop and a *d*2 meter long road between his house and the second shop. Also, there is a road of len... | The first line of the input contains three integers *d*1, *d*2, *d*3 (1<=≤<=*d*1,<=*d*2,<=*d*3<=≤<=108) — the lengths of the paths.
- *d*1 is the length of the path connecting Patrick's house and the first shop; - *d*2 is the length of the path connecting Patrick's house and the second shop; - *d*3 is the length o... | Print the minimum distance that Patrick will have to walk in order to visit both shops and return to his house. | [
"10 20 30\n",
"1 1 5\n"
] | [
"60\n",
"4\n"
] | The first sample is shown on the picture in the problem statement. One of the optimal routes is: house <img align="middle" class="tex-formula" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/70a0795f45d32287dba0eb83fc4a3f470c6e5537.png" style="max-width: 100.0%;max-height: 100.0%;"/> first shop <img align="middle" class="tex-form... | 500 | [
{
"input": "10 20 30",
"output": "60"
},
{
"input": "1 1 5",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "100 33 34",
"output": "134"
},
{
"input": "777 777 777",
"output": "2331"
},
{
"input": "2 2 8",
"output": "8"
},
{
"input": "12 34 56",
"output": "92"
},
... | 1,593,102,908 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 2 | 93 | 6,656,000 | d1,d2,d3 = map(int,input().split())
print(min((d1+d2+d3),(2*d1+2*d2))) | Title: Patrick and Shopping
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Today Patrick waits for a visit from his friend Spongebob. To prepare for the visit, Patrick needs to buy some goodies in two stores located near his house. There is a *d*1 meter long road between his house and the... | ```python
d1,d2,d3 = map(int,input().split())
print(min((d1+d2+d3),(2*d1+2*d2)))
``` | 0 | |
798 | A | Mike and palindrome | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"brute force",
"constructive algorithms",
"strings"
] | null | null | Mike has a string *s* consisting of only lowercase English letters. He wants to change exactly one character from the string so that the resulting one is a palindrome.
A palindrome is a string that reads the same backward as forward, for example strings "z", "aaa", "aba", "abccba" are palindromes, but strings "codefo... | The first and single line contains string *s* (1<=≤<=|*s*|<=≤<=15). | Print "YES" (without quotes) if Mike can change exactly one character so that the resulting string is palindrome or "NO" (without quotes) otherwise. | [
"abccaa\n",
"abbcca\n",
"abcda\n"
] | [
"YES\n",
"NO\n",
"YES\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "abccaa",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "abbcca",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "abcda",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "kyw",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "fccf",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "mnlm",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input":... | 1,671,301,797 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 46 | 0 | s = str(input())
l = len(s)
for i in range(l):
if s[i] != s[(l - 1) - i]:
print("NO")
break
else:
print("YRS")
| Title: Mike and palindrome
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Mike has a string *s* consisting of only lowercase English letters. He wants to change exactly one character from the string so that the resulting one is a palindrome.
A palindrome is a string that reads the same ... | ```python
s = str(input())
l = len(s)
for i in range(l):
if s[i] != s[(l - 1) - i]:
print("NO")
break
else:
print("YRS")
``` | 0 | |
112 | A | Petya and Strings | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation",
"strings"
] | A. Petya and Strings | 2 | 256 | Little Petya loves presents. His mum bought him two strings of the same size for his birthday. The strings consist of uppercase and lowercase Latin letters. Now Petya wants to compare those two strings lexicographically. The letters' case does not matter, that is an uppercase letter is considered equivalent to the corr... | Each of the first two lines contains a bought string. The strings' lengths range from 1 to 100 inclusive. It is guaranteed that the strings are of the same length and also consist of uppercase and lowercase Latin letters. | If the first string is less than the second one, print "-1". If the second string is less than the first one, print "1". If the strings are equal, print "0". Note that the letters' case is not taken into consideration when the strings are compared. | [
"aaaa\naaaA\n",
"abs\nAbz\n",
"abcdefg\nAbCdEfF\n"
] | [
"0\n",
"-1\n",
"1\n"
] | If you want more formal information about the lexicographical order (also known as the "dictionary order" or "alphabetical order"), you can visit the following site:
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lexicographical_order | 500 | [
{
"input": "aaaa\naaaA",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "abs\nAbz",
"output": "-1"
},
{
"input": "abcdefg\nAbCdEfF",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "asadasdasd\nasdwasdawd",
"output": "-1"
},
{
"input": "aslkjlkasdd\nasdlkjdajwi",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input":... | 1,699,198,540 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 53 | 92 | 0 | str1=input().lower()
str2=input().lower()
if str1<str2:
print(-1)
elif str2<str1:
print(1)
else:
print(0)
| Title: Petya and Strings
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
Little Petya loves presents. His mum bought him two strings of the same size for his birthday. The strings consist of uppercase and lowercase Latin letters. Now Petya wants to compare those two strings lexicographically. ... | ```python
str1=input().lower()
str2=input().lower()
if str1<str2:
print(-1)
elif str2<str1:
print(1)
else:
print(0)
``` | 3.977 |
926 | B | Add Points | PROGRAMMING | 1,800 | [] | null | null | There are *n* points on a straight line, and the *i*-th point among them is located at *x**i*. All these coordinates are distinct.
Determine the number *m* — the smallest number of points you should add on the line to make the distances between all neighboring points equal. | The first line contains a single integer *n* (3<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100<=000) — the number of points.
The second line contains a sequence of integers *x*1,<=*x*2,<=...,<=*x**n* (<=-<=109<=≤<=*x**i*<=≤<=109) — the coordinates of the points. All these coordinates are distinct. The points can be given in an arbitrary order. | Print a single integer *m* — the smallest number of points you should add on the line to make the distances between all neighboring points equal. | [
"3\n-5 10 5\n",
"6\n100 200 400 300 600 500\n",
"4\n10 9 0 -1\n"
] | [
"1\n",
"0\n",
"8\n"
] | In the first example you can add one point with coordinate 0.
In the second example the distances between all neighboring points are already equal, so you shouldn't add anything. | 0 | [
{
"input": "3\n-5 10 5",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "6\n100 200 400 300 600 500",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "4\n10 9 0 -1",
"output": "8"
},
{
"input": "3\n1 4 7",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "3\n1 4 6",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "3\n1 2 6",
"... | 1,698,400,110 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 3 | 31 | 0 | def gcd(a: int, b: int):
if a % b == 0:
return b
return gcd(b, a % b)
def main():
n = int(input())
e = input()
v = []
c = []
for i in e.split(" "):
v.append(int(i))
v.sort()
for i in range(1, n):
c.append(v[i] - v[i-1])
g = 10**9
... | Title: Add Points
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
There are *n* points on a straight line, and the *i*-th point among them is located at *x**i*. All these coordinates are distinct.
Determine the number *m* — the smallest number of points you should add on the line to make ... | ```python
def gcd(a: int, b: int):
if a % b == 0:
return b
return gcd(b, a % b)
def main():
n = int(input())
e = input()
v = []
c = []
for i in e.split(" "):
v.append(int(i))
v.sort()
for i in range(1, n):
c.append(v[i] - v[i-1])
g = ... | 0 | |
12 | A | Super Agent | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation"
] | A. Super Agent | 2 | 256 | There is a very secret base in Potatoland where potato mash is made according to a special recipe. The neighbours from Porridgia decided to seize this recipe and to sell it to Pilauland. For this mission they have been preparing special agent Pearlo for many years. When, finally, Pearlo learned all secrets of espionage... | Input contains the matrix of three rows of three symbols each. Symbol «X» means that the corresponding button was pressed, and «.» means that is was not pressed. The matrix may contain no «X», also it may contain no «.». | Print YES if the password is symmetric with respect to the central button of the terminal and NO otherwise. | [
"XX.\n...\n.XX\n",
"X.X\nX..\n...\n"
] | [
"YES\n",
"NO\n"
] | If you are not familiar with the term «central symmetry», you may look into http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_symmetry | 0 | [
{
"input": "XX.\n...\n.XX",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": ".X.\n.X.\n.X.",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "XXX\nXXX\nXXX",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "XXX\nX.X\nXXX",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "X..\n.X.\n..X",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "...\n... | 1,548,643,685 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | RUNTIME_ERROR | TESTS | 0 | 154 | 0 | a=input().split();b=input().split();c=input().split();pd=0
for i in range(0,3):
for j in range(2,-1,-1):
if a[i]!=c[j]:
pd=1
if b[0]!=b[2]:
pd=1
if pd==0:
print('YES')
else:
print('NO') | Title: Super Agent
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
There is a very secret base in Potatoland where potato mash is made according to a special recipe. The neighbours from Porridgia decided to seize this recipe and to sell it to Pilauland. For this mission they have been preparin... | ```python
a=input().split();b=input().split();c=input().split();pd=0
for i in range(0,3):
for j in range(2,-1,-1):
if a[i]!=c[j]:
pd=1
if b[0]!=b[2]:
pd=1
if pd==0:
print('YES')
else:
print('NO')
``` | -1 |
340 | C | Tourist Problem | PROGRAMMING | 1,600 | [
"combinatorics",
"implementation",
"math"
] | null | null | Iahub is a big fan of tourists. He wants to become a tourist himself, so he planned a trip. There are *n* destinations on a straight road that Iahub wants to visit. Iahub starts the excursion from kilometer 0. The *n* destinations are described by a non-negative integers sequence *a*1, *a*2, ..., *a**n*. The number *a*... | The first line contains integer *n* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105). Next line contains *n* distinct integers *a*1, *a*2, ..., *a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=107). | Output two integers — the numerator and denominator of a fraction which is equal to the wanted average number. The fraction must be irreducible. | [
"3\n2 3 5\n"
] | [
"22 3"
] | Consider 6 possible routes:
- [2, 3, 5]: total distance traveled: |2 – 0| + |3 – 2| + |5 – 3| = 5; - [2, 5, 3]: |2 – 0| + |5 – 2| + |3 – 5| = 7; - [3, 2, 5]: |3 – 0| + |2 – 3| + |5 – 2| = 7; - [3, 5, 2]: |3 – 0| + |5 – 3| + |2 – 5| = 8; - [5, 2, 3]: |5 – 0| + |2 – 5| + |3 – 2| = 9; - [5, 3, 2]: |5 – 0| + |3 – 5|... | 2,000 | [
{
"input": "3\n2 3 5",
"output": "22 3"
},
{
"input": "4\n1 5 77 2",
"output": "547 4"
},
{
"input": "5\n3 3842 288 199 334",
"output": "35918 5"
},
{
"input": "7\n1 2 3 40 52 33 86",
"output": "255 1"
},
{
"input": "7\n1 10 100 1000 10000 1000000 10000000",
"... | 1,377,878,697 | 2,097 | Python 3 | TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED | PRETESTS | 9 | 1,000 | 5,120,000 | from fractions import Fraction
import math
n = int(input())
l = input().split(' ')
l = [int(i) for i in l]
result = 0
for i in range(n) :
for j in range(n) :
result += abs(l[i]-l[j])
result = Fraction(result+sum(l),n)
print(result.numerator,result.denominator)
| Title: Tourist Problem
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Iahub is a big fan of tourists. He wants to become a tourist himself, so he planned a trip. There are *n* destinations on a straight road that Iahub wants to visit. Iahub starts the excursion from kilometer 0. The *n* d... | ```python
from fractions import Fraction
import math
n = int(input())
l = input().split(' ')
l = [int(i) for i in l]
result = 0
for i in range(n) :
for j in range(n) :
result += abs(l[i]-l[j])
result = Fraction(result+sum(l),n)
print(result.numerator,result.denominator)
``` | 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... | 1,665,487,480 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 92 | 0 | s = int(input())
x,y,z=0,0,0
for i in range(s):
xi,yi,zi = [int(x) for x in input().split()]
x += xi
y += yi
z += zi
print(x,y,z)
if x==0 and y==0 and z==0:
print("YES")
else:
print("NO") | Title: Young Physicist
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
A guy named Vasya attends the final grade of a high school. One day Vasya decided to watch a match of his favorite hockey team. And, as the boy loves hockey very much, even more than physics, he forgot to do the homework. S... | ```python
s = int(input())
x,y,z=0,0,0
for i in range(s):
xi,yi,zi = [int(x) for x in input().split()]
x += xi
y += yi
z += zi
print(x,y,z)
if x==0 and y==0 and z==0:
print("YES")
else:
print("NO")
``` | 0 |
813 | A | The Contest | PROGRAMMING | 1,100 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Pasha is participating in a contest on one well-known website. This time he wants to win the contest and will do anything to get to the first place!
This contest consists of *n* problems, and Pasha solves *i*th problem in *a**i* time units (his solutions are always correct). At any moment of time he can be thinking ab... | The first line contains one integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000) — the number of problems. The second line contains *n* integers *a**i* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=105) — the time Pasha needs to solve *i*th problem.
The third line contains one integer *m* (0<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=1000) — the number of periods of time when the website is work... | If Pasha can solve and submit all the problems before the end of the contest, print the minimal moment of time by which he can have all the solutions submitted.
Otherwise print "-1" (without brackets). | [
"2\n3 4\n2\n1 4\n7 9\n",
"1\n5\n1\n1 4\n",
"1\n5\n1\n1 5\n"
] | [
"7\n",
"-1\n",
"5\n"
] | In the first example Pasha can act like this: he solves the second problem in 4 units of time and sends it immediately. Then he spends 3 time units to solve the first problem and sends it 7 time units after the contest starts, because at this moment the website starts working again.
In the second example Pasha invents... | 0 | [
{
"input": "2\n3 4\n2\n1 4\n7 9",
"output": "7"
},
{
"input": "1\n5\n1\n1 4",
"output": "-1"
},
{
"input": "1\n5\n1\n1 5",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "5\n100000 100000 100000 100000 100000\n0",
"output": "-1"
},
{
"input": "5\n886 524 128 4068 298\n3\n416 3755\n4... | 1,496,676,483 | 1,383 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 4 | 46 | 0 | n = int(input())
arr = list(map(int, input().split()))
m = int(input())
moment = 0
my = 0
for i in range(m):
a, b = map(int, input().split())
if b > my:
my = b
moment = a
if sum(arr) <= my:
print(str(max(moment, sum(arr))))
else:
print('-1') | Title: The Contest
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Pasha is participating in a contest on one well-known website. This time he wants to win the contest and will do anything to get to the first place!
This contest consists of *n* problems, and Pasha solves *i*th problem in ... | ```python
n = int(input())
arr = list(map(int, input().split()))
m = int(input())
moment = 0
my = 0
for i in range(m):
a, b = map(int, input().split())
if b > my:
my = b
moment = a
if sum(arr) <= my:
print(str(max(moment, sum(arr))))
else:
print('-1')
``` | 0 | |
499 | B | Lecture | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"implementation",
"strings"
] | null | null | You have a new professor of graph theory and he speaks very quickly. You come up with the following plan to keep up with his lecture and make notes.
You know two languages, and the professor is giving the lecture in the first one. The words in both languages consist of lowercase English characters, each language consi... | The first line contains two integers, *n* and *m* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=3000, 1<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=3000) — the number of words in the professor's lecture and the number of words in each of these languages.
The following *m* lines contain the words. The *i*-th line contains two strings *a**i*, *b**i* meaning that the word *a**i* bel... | Output exactly *n* words: how you will record the lecture in your notebook. Output the words of the lecture in the same order as in the input. | [
"4 3\ncodeforces codesecrof\ncontest round\nletter message\ncodeforces contest letter contest\n",
"5 3\njoll wuqrd\neuzf un\nhbnyiyc rsoqqveh\nhbnyiyc joll joll euzf joll\n"
] | [
"codeforces round letter round\n",
"hbnyiyc joll joll un joll\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "4 3\ncodeforces codesecrof\ncontest round\nletter message\ncodeforces contest letter contest",
"output": "codeforces round letter round"
},
{
"input": "5 3\njoll wuqrd\neuzf un\nhbnyiyc rsoqqveh\nhbnyiyc joll joll euzf joll",
"output": "hbnyiyc joll joll un joll"
},
{
"input"... | 1,658,761,579 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | OK | TESTS | 37 | 202 | 7,577,600 | import string
l=list(map(int,input().split()))
dict={}
for i in range(l[1]):
str1=input()
l2=str1.split()
if len(l2[0])<=len(l2[1]):
dict[l2[1]]=l2[0]
else:
dict[l2[0]]=l2[1]
str3=input()
l3=str3.split()
for k in l3:
if k in dict:
print(dict[k],end=" ")
... | Title: Lecture
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
You have a new professor of graph theory and he speaks very quickly. You come up with the following plan to keep up with his lecture and make notes.
You know two languages, and the professor is giving the lecture in the first ... | ```python
import string
l=list(map(int,input().split()))
dict={}
for i in range(l[1]):
str1=input()
l2=str1.split()
if len(l2[0])<=len(l2[1]):
dict[l2[1]]=l2[0]
else:
dict[l2[0]]=l2[1]
str3=input()
l3=str3.split()
for k in l3:
if k in dict:
print(dict[k],end... | 3 | |
746 | A | Compote | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation",
"math"
] | null | null | Nikolay has *a* lemons, *b* apples and *c* pears. He decided to cook a compote. According to the recipe the fruits should be in the ratio 1:<=2:<=4. It means that for each lemon in the compote should be exactly 2 apples and exactly 4 pears. You can't crumble up, break up or cut these fruits into pieces. These fruits — ... | The first line contains the positive integer *a* (1<=≤<=*a*<=≤<=1000) — the number of lemons Nikolay has.
The second line contains the positive integer *b* (1<=≤<=*b*<=≤<=1000) — the number of apples Nikolay has.
The third line contains the positive integer *c* (1<=≤<=*c*<=≤<=1000) — the number of pears Nikolay has... | Print the maximum total number of lemons, apples and pears from which Nikolay can cook the compote. | [
"2\n5\n7\n",
"4\n7\n13\n",
"2\n3\n2\n"
] | [
"7\n",
"21\n",
"0\n"
] | In the first example Nikolay can use 1 lemon, 2 apples and 4 pears, so the answer is 1 + 2 + 4 = 7.
In the second example Nikolay can use 3 lemons, 6 apples and 12 pears, so the answer is 3 + 6 + 12 = 21.
In the third example Nikolay don't have enough pears to cook any compote, so the answer is 0. | 500 | [
{
"input": "2\n5\n7",
"output": "7"
},
{
"input": "4\n7\n13",
"output": "21"
},
{
"input": "2\n3\n2",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "1\n1\n1",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "1\n2\n4",
"output": "7"
},
{
"input": "1000\n1000\n1000",
"output": "1750"
}... | 1,681,527,726 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | RUNTIME_ERROR | TESTS | 6 | 31 | 0 | a_lemons = int(input())
b_apples = int(input())
c_pears = int(input())
flag_b = False
flag_a = False
pears_availabel = (c_pears//4)*4
if pears_availabel < 4:
print(0)
else:
if b_apples >= pears_availabel/2 :
flag_b = True
apples_available = pears_availabel/2
if a_lemons >= ap... | Title: Compote
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Nikolay has *a* lemons, *b* apples and *c* pears. He decided to cook a compote. According to the recipe the fruits should be in the ratio 1:<=2:<=4. It means that for each lemon in the compote should be exactly 2 apples and exa... | ```python
a_lemons = int(input())
b_apples = int(input())
c_pears = int(input())
flag_b = False
flag_a = False
pears_availabel = (c_pears//4)*4
if pears_availabel < 4:
print(0)
else:
if b_apples >= pears_availabel/2 :
flag_b = True
apples_available = pears_availabel/2
if a_le... | -1 | |
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... | 1,530,814,947 | 6,447 | Python 3 | SKIPPED | TESTS | 27 | 124 | 0 | n,k=input().split()
n,k=int(n),int(k)
ls=[]
for i in range(n):
if i%2==0:
ls.append("0")
else:
ls.append("1")
print("".join(ls))
| 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
n,k=input().split()
n,k=int(n),int(k)
ls=[]
for i in range(n):
if i%2==0:
ls.append("0")
else:
ls.append("1")
print("".join(ls))
``` | -1 | |
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":... | 1,687,540,431 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | OK | TESTS | 20 | 62 | 0 | words = int(input())
all_words = []
for word in range(words):
all_words.append(input())
for i in range(len(all_words)):
if len(all_words[i]) > 10:
temp = all_words[i]
all_words[i] = temp[0] + str(len(temp[1:-1])) + temp[-1]
print(all_words[i]) | 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
words = int(input())
all_words = []
for word in range(words):
all_words.append(input())
for i in range(len(all_words)):
if len(all_words[i]) > 10:
temp = all_words[i]
all_words[i] = temp[0] + str(len(temp[1:-1])) + temp[-1]
print(all_words[i])
``` | 3.969 |
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... | 1,629,495,399 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 2 | 124 | 6,758,400 | s = input()
a = 0
for i in s:
if i.islower() == True:
a = a + 1
if len(s) - a < a:
print(s.lower())
else:
print(s.upper())
| Title: Word
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
Vasya is very upset that many people on the Net mix uppercase and lowercase letters in one word. That's why he decided to invent an extension for his favorite browser that would change the letters' register in every word so that it ei... | ```python
s = input()
a = 0
for i in s:
if i.islower() == True:
a = a + 1
if len(s) - a < a:
print(s.lower())
else:
print(s.upper())
``` | 0 |
0 | none | none | none | 0 | [
"none"
] | null | null | Andrewid the Android is a galaxy-famous detective. He is now investigating the case of vandalism at the exhibition of contemporary art.
The main exhibit is a construction of *n* matryoshka dolls that can be nested one into another. The matryoshka dolls are numbered from 1 to *n*. A matryoshka with a smaller number can... | The first line contains integers *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) and *k* (1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=105) — the number of matryoshkas and matryoshka chains in the initial configuration.
The next *k* lines contain the descriptions of the chains: the *i*-th line first contains number *m**i* (1<=≤<=*m**i*<=≤<=*n*), and then *m**i* numbers *a... | In the single line print the minimum number of seconds needed to assemble one large chain from the initial configuration. | [
"3 2\n2 1 2\n1 3\n",
"7 3\n3 1 3 7\n2 2 5\n2 4 6\n"
] | [
"1\n",
"10\n"
] | In the first sample test there are two chains: 1 → 2 and 3. In one second you can nest the first chain into the second one and get 1 → 2 → 3.
In the second sample test you need to disassemble all the three chains into individual matryoshkas in 2 + 1 + 1 = 4 seconds and then assemble one big chain in 6 seconds. | 0 | [
{
"input": "3 2\n2 1 2\n1 3",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "7 3\n3 1 3 7\n2 2 5\n2 4 6",
"output": "10"
},
{
"input": "1 1\n1 1",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "3 2\n1 2\n2 1 3",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "5 3\n1 4\n3 1 2 3\n1 5",
"output": "2"
},
{
"in... | 1,649,498,253 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | OK | TESTS | 47 | 779 | 11,161,600 | n, k = map(int, input().split())
ds = []
c = 0
for _ in range(k):
arr = list(map(int, input().split()))
if 1 in arr[1:]:
ds = arr[1:]
else:
c += arr[0] - 1
l = ds[-1]
for i, d in enumerate(ds):
if i and d > ds[i - 1] + 1:
c += len(ds) - i
l = ds[i - 1]
break
p... | Title: none
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Andrewid the Android is a galaxy-famous detective. He is now investigating the case of vandalism at the exhibition of contemporary art.
The main exhibit is a construction of *n* matryoshka dolls that can be nested one into anothe... | ```python
n, k = map(int, input().split())
ds = []
c = 0
for _ in range(k):
arr = list(map(int, input().split()))
if 1 in arr[1:]:
ds = arr[1:]
else:
c += arr[0] - 1
l = ds[-1]
for i, d in enumerate(ds):
if i and d > ds[i - 1] + 1:
c += len(ds) - i
l = ds[i - 1]
... | 3 | |
810 | B | Summer sell-off | PROGRAMMING | 1,300 | [
"greedy",
"sortings"
] | null | null | Summer holidays! Someone is going on trips, someone is visiting grandparents, but someone is trying to get a part-time job. This summer Noora decided that she wants to earn some money, and took a job in a shop as an assistant.
Shop, where Noora is working, has a plan on the following *n* days. For each day sales manag... | The first line contains two integers *n* and *f* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105,<=0<=≤<=*f*<=≤<=*n*) denoting the number of days in shop's plan and the number of days that Noora has to choose for sell-out.
Each line of the following *n* subsequent lines contains two integers *k**i*,<=*l**i* (0<=≤<=*k**i*,<=*l**i*<=≤<=109) denotin... | Print a single integer denoting the maximal number of products that shop can sell. | [
"4 2\n2 1\n3 5\n2 3\n1 5\n",
"4 1\n0 2\n0 3\n3 5\n0 6\n"
] | [
"10",
"5"
] | In the first example we can choose days with numbers 2 and 4 for sell-out. In this case new numbers of products for sale would be equal to [2, 6, 2, 2] respectively. So on the first day shop will sell 1 product, on the second — 5, on the third — 2, on the fourth — 2. In total 1 + 5 + 2 + 2 = 10 product units.
In the s... | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "4 2\n2 1\n3 5\n2 3\n1 5",
"output": "10"
},
{
"input": "4 1\n0 2\n0 3\n3 5\n0 6",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "1 1\n5 8",
"output": "8"
},
{
"input": "2 1\n8 12\n6 11",
"output": "19"
},
{
"input": "2 1\n6 7\n5 7",
"output": "13"
},
{
"inpu... | 1,677,522,385 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | OK | TESTS | 159 | 935 | 12,595,200 | days_number, k = [int(x) for x in input().split()]
costumers, items, total_sum, difference = [], [], 0, []
for j in range(days_number):
i, c = [int(y) for y in input().split()]
total_sum += min(i, c)
costumers.append(c)
items.append(i)
if c > i:
difference.append(min(i*2, c)-min(i, c... | Title: Summer sell-off
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Summer holidays! Someone is going on trips, someone is visiting grandparents, but someone is trying to get a part-time job. This summer Noora decided that she wants to earn some money, and took a job in a shop as an ass... | ```python
days_number, k = [int(x) for x in input().split()]
costumers, items, total_sum, difference = [], [], 0, []
for j in range(days_number):
i, c = [int(y) for y in input().split()]
total_sum += min(i, c)
costumers.append(c)
items.append(i)
if c > i:
difference.append(min(i*2, c... | 3 | |
371 | A | K-Periodic Array | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"greedy",
"implementation",
"math"
] | null | null | This task will exclusively concentrate only on the arrays where all elements equal 1 and/or 2.
Array *a* is *k*-period if its length is divisible by *k* and there is such array *b* of length *k*, that *a* is represented by array *b* written exactly times consecutively. In other words, array *a* is *k*-periodic, if it... | The first line of the input contains a pair of integers *n*, *k* (1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100), where *n* is the length of the array and the value *n* is divisible by *k*. The second line contains the sequence of elements of the given array *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=2), *a**i* is the *i*-th element of ... | Print the minimum number of array elements we need to change to make the array *k*-periodic. If the array already is *k*-periodic, then print 0. | [
"6 2\n2 1 2 2 2 1\n",
"8 4\n1 1 2 1 1 1 2 1\n",
"9 3\n2 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 2\n"
] | [
"1\n",
"0\n",
"3\n"
] | In the first sample it is enough to change the fourth element from 2 to 1, then the array changes to [2, 1, 2, 1, 2, 1].
In the second sample, the given array already is 4-periodic.
In the third sample it is enough to replace each occurrence of number two by number one. In this case the array will look as [1, 1, 1, 1... | 500 | [
{
"input": "6 2\n2 1 2 2 2 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "8 4\n1 1 2 1 1 1 2 1",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "9 3\n2 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 2",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "1 1\n2",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "2 1\n1 1",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "2 2\n2 2... | 1,644,217,210 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | OK | TESTS | 24 | 62 | 0 | n, k = map(int, input().split())
data = list(map(int, input().split()))
cnt = 0
for i in range(k):
memo = {}
for j in range(i, n, k):
memo[data[j]] = memo[data[j]] + 1 if data[j] in memo else 1
cnt += sum(memo.values()) - max(memo.values())
print(cnt) | Title: K-Periodic Array
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
This task will exclusively concentrate only on the arrays where all elements equal 1 and/or 2.
Array *a* is *k*-period if its length is divisible by *k* and there is such array *b* of length *k*, that *a* is represent... | ```python
n, k = map(int, input().split())
data = list(map(int, input().split()))
cnt = 0
for i in range(k):
memo = {}
for j in range(i, n, k):
memo[data[j]] = memo[data[j]] + 1 if data[j] in memo else 1
cnt += sum(memo.values()) - max(memo.values())
print(cnt)
``` | 3 | |
989 | A | A Blend of Springtime | PROGRAMMING | 900 | [
"implementation",
"strings"
] | null | null | "What a pity it's already late spring," sighs Mino with regret, "one more drizzling night and they'd be gone."
"But these blends are at their best, aren't they?" Absorbed in the landscape, Kanno remains optimistic.
The landscape can be expressed as a row of consecutive cells, each of which either contains a flower o... | The first and only line of input contains a non-empty string $s$ consisting of uppercase English letters 'A', 'B', 'C' and characters '.' (dots) only ($\lvert s \rvert \leq 100$) — denoting cells containing an amber flower, a buff one, a canary yellow one, and no flowers, respectively. | Output "Yes" if it's possible that all three colours appear in some cell, and "No" otherwise.
You can print each letter in any case (upper or lower). | [
".BAC.\n",
"AA..CB\n"
] | [
"Yes\n",
"No\n"
] | In the first example, the buff and canary yellow flowers can leave their petals in the central cell, blending all three colours in it.
In the second example, it's impossible to satisfy the requirement because there is no way that amber and buff meet in any cell. | 500 | [
{
"input": ".BAC.",
"output": "Yes"
},
{
"input": "AA..CB",
"output": "No"
},
{
"input": ".",
"output": "No"
},
{
"input": "ACB.AAAAAA",
"output": "Yes"
},
{
"input": "B.BC.BBBCA",
"output": "Yes"
},
{
"input": "BA..CAB..B",
"output": "Yes"
},
... | 1,590,172,364 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 37 | 109 | 0 | s = input()
if 'ABC' in s:
print('Yes')
quit()
if 'ACB' in s:
print('Yes')
quit()
if 'BCA' in s:
print('Yes')
quit()
if 'BAC' in s:
print('Yes')
quit()
if 'CAB' in s:
print('Yes')
quit()
if 'CBA' in s:
print('Yes')
quit()
print('No') | Title: A Blend of Springtime
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
"What a pity it's already late spring," sighs Mino with regret, "one more drizzling night and they'd be gone."
"But these blends are at their best, aren't they?" Absorbed in the landscape, Kanno remains optimisti... | ```python
s = input()
if 'ABC' in s:
print('Yes')
quit()
if 'ACB' in s:
print('Yes')
quit()
if 'BCA' in s:
print('Yes')
quit()
if 'BAC' in s:
print('Yes')
quit()
if 'CAB' in s:
print('Yes')
quit()
if 'CBA' in s:
print('Yes')
quit()
print('No')
``` | 3 | |
599 | A | Patrick and Shopping | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Today Patrick waits for a visit from his friend Spongebob. To prepare for the visit, Patrick needs to buy some goodies in two stores located near his house. There is a *d*1 meter long road between his house and the first shop and a *d*2 meter long road between his house and the second shop. Also, there is a road of len... | The first line of the input contains three integers *d*1, *d*2, *d*3 (1<=≤<=*d*1,<=*d*2,<=*d*3<=≤<=108) — the lengths of the paths.
- *d*1 is the length of the path connecting Patrick's house and the first shop; - *d*2 is the length of the path connecting Patrick's house and the second shop; - *d*3 is the length o... | Print the minimum distance that Patrick will have to walk in order to visit both shops and return to his house. | [
"10 20 30\n",
"1 1 5\n"
] | [
"60\n",
"4\n"
] | The first sample is shown on the picture in the problem statement. One of the optimal routes is: house <img align="middle" class="tex-formula" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/70a0795f45d32287dba0eb83fc4a3f470c6e5537.png" style="max-width: 100.0%;max-height: 100.0%;"/> first shop <img align="middle" class="tex-form... | 500 | [
{
"input": "10 20 30",
"output": "60"
},
{
"input": "1 1 5",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "100 33 34",
"output": "134"
},
{
"input": "777 777 777",
"output": "2331"
},
{
"input": "2 2 8",
"output": "8"
},
{
"input": "12 34 56",
"output": "92"
},
... | 1,618,917,943 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 3 | 46 | 0 | d1,d2,d3=input().split()
d1=int(d1)
d2=int(d2)
d3=int(d3)
mi=min(d1,d2)
ma=max(d1,d2)
if ma>d3:
ans=d3
else:
ans=ma
print((mi+ans)*2)
| Title: Patrick and Shopping
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Today Patrick waits for a visit from his friend Spongebob. To prepare for the visit, Patrick needs to buy some goodies in two stores located near his house. There is a *d*1 meter long road between his house and the... | ```python
d1,d2,d3=input().split()
d1=int(d1)
d2=int(d2)
d3=int(d3)
mi=min(d1,d2)
ma=max(d1,d2)
if ma>d3:
ans=d3
else:
ans=ma
print((mi+ans)*2)
``` | 0 | |
854 | A | Fraction | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"brute force",
"constructive algorithms",
"math"
] | null | null | Petya is a big fan of mathematics, especially its part related to fractions. Recently he learned that a fraction is called proper iff its numerator is smaller than its denominator (*a*<=<<=*b*) and that the fraction is called irreducible if its numerator and its denominator are coprime (they do not have positive co... | In the only line of input there is an integer *n* (3<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000), the sum of numerator and denominator of the fraction. | Output two space-separated positive integers *a* and *b*, numerator and denominator of the maximum possible proper irreducible fraction satisfying the given sum. | [
"3\n",
"4\n",
"12\n"
] | [
"1 2\n",
"1 3\n",
"5 7\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "3",
"output": "1 2"
},
{
"input": "4",
"output": "1 3"
},
{
"input": "12",
"output": "5 7"
},
{
"input": "34",
"output": "15 19"
},
{
"input": "13",
"output": "6 7"
},
{
"input": "11",
"output": "5 6"
},
{
"input": "24",
"ou... | 1,548,168,275 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 2 | 93 | 0 | """
██╗ ██████╗ ██╗ ██████╗ ██████╗ ██╗ █████╗
██║██╔═══██╗██║ ╚════██╗██╔═████╗███║██╔══██╗
██║██║ ██║██║ █████╔╝██║██╔██║╚██║╚██████║
██║██║ ██║██║ ██╔═══╝ ████╔╝██║ ██║ ╚═══██║
██║╚██████╔╝██║ ███████╗╚██████╔╝ ██║ █████╔╝
╚═╝ ╚═════╝ ╚═╝ ╚══════╝ ╚═════╝ ╚═╝ ╚════╝
""" ... | Title: Fraction
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Petya is a big fan of mathematics, especially its part related to fractions. Recently he learned that a fraction is called proper iff its numerator is smaller than its denominator (*a*<=<<=*b*) and that the fraction is cal... | ```python
"""
██╗ ██████╗ ██╗ ██████╗ ██████╗ ██╗ █████╗
██║██╔═══██╗██║ ╚════██╗██╔═████╗███║██╔══██╗
██║██║ ██║██║ █████╔╝██║██╔██║╚██║╚██████║
██║██║ ██║██║ ██╔═══╝ ████╔╝██║ ██║ ╚═══██║
██║╚██████╔╝██║ ███████╗╚██████╔╝ ██║ █████╔╝
╚═╝ ╚═════╝ ╚═╝ ╚══════╝ ╚═════╝ ╚═╝ ╚════╝
"... | 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... | 1,549,460,846 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 4 | 108 | 307,200 | a=str(input())
s=str("")
for i in range(len(a)):
if a[i]=="h":
break
else:
s=s+a[i]
for k in range(1,len(a)-i):
if a[i+k]=="e":
break
else:
s=s+a[i+k]
for m in range(1,len(a)-i-k):
... | 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
a=str(input())
s=str("")
for i in range(len(a)):
if a[i]=="h":
break
else:
s=s+a[i]
for k in range(1,len(a)-i):
if a[i+k]=="e":
break
else:
s=s+a[i+k]
for m in range(1,len(a)-i-k):
... | 0 |
200 | B | Drinks | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation",
"math"
] | null | null | Little Vasya loves orange juice very much. That's why any food and drink in his kitchen necessarily contains orange juice. There are *n* drinks in his fridge, the volume fraction of orange juice in the *i*-th drink equals *p**i* percent.
One day Vasya decided to make himself an orange cocktail. He took equal proportio... | The first input line contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of orange-containing drinks in Vasya's fridge. The second line contains *n* integers *p**i* (0<=≤<=*p**i*<=≤<=100) — the volume fraction of orange juice in the *i*-th drink, in percent. The numbers are separated by a space. | Print the volume fraction in percent of orange juice in Vasya's cocktail. The answer will be considered correct if the absolute or relative error does not exceed 10<=<=-<=4. | [
"3\n50 50 100\n",
"4\n0 25 50 75\n"
] | [
"66.666666666667\n",
"37.500000000000\n"
] | Note to the first sample: let's assume that Vasya takes *x* milliliters of each drink from the fridge. Then the volume of pure juice in the cocktail will equal <img align="middle" class="tex-formula" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/c1fac6e64d3a8ee6a5ac138cbe51e60039b22473.png" style="max-width: 100.0%;max-height: ... | 500 | [
{
"input": "3\n50 50 100",
"output": "66.666666666667"
},
{
"input": "4\n0 25 50 75",
"output": "37.500000000000"
},
{
"input": "3\n0 1 8",
"output": "3.000000000000"
},
{
"input": "5\n96 89 93 95 70",
"output": "88.600000000000"
},
{
"input": "7\n62 41 78 4 38 39... | 1,693,304,098 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 31 | 92 | 0 | n=int(input())
s=0
p = list(map(int,input().split()))
s=sum(p)
x=s/n
print(x) | Title: Drinks
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Little Vasya loves orange juice very much. That's why any food and drink in his kitchen necessarily contains orange juice. There are *n* drinks in his fridge, the volume fraction of orange juice in the *i*-th drink equals *p**i*... | ```python
n=int(input())
s=0
p = list(map(int,input().split()))
s=sum(p)
x=s/n
print(x)
``` | 3 | |
610 | A | Pasha and Stick | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"combinatorics",
"math"
] | null | null | Pasha has a wooden stick of some positive integer length *n*. He wants to perform exactly three cuts to get four parts of the stick. Each part must have some positive integer length and the sum of these lengths will obviously be *n*.
Pasha likes rectangles but hates squares, so he wonders, how many ways are there to ... | The first line of the input contains a positive integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=2·109) — the length of Pasha's stick. | The output should contain a single integer — the number of ways to split Pasha's stick into four parts of positive integer length so that it's possible to make a rectangle by connecting the ends of these parts, but is impossible to form a square. | [
"6\n",
"20\n"
] | [
"1\n",
"4\n"
] | There is only one way to divide the stick in the first sample {1, 1, 2, 2}.
Four ways to divide the stick in the second sample are {1, 1, 9, 9}, {2, 2, 8, 8}, {3, 3, 7, 7} and {4, 4, 6, 6}. Note that {5, 5, 5, 5} doesn't work. | 500 | [
{
"input": "6",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "20",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "1",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "2",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "3",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "4",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "2000000000",
"output": "4... | 1,661,612,838 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | OK | TESTS | 76 | 77 | 0 | l = int(input())
if l % 2 == 1:
print(0)
else:
l //= 2
if l%2 == 1:
print(l // 2)
else:
print(l // 2 - 1) | Title: Pasha and Stick
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Pasha has a wooden stick of some positive integer length *n*. He wants to perform exactly three cuts to get four parts of the stick. Each part must have some positive integer length and the sum of these lengths will obv... | ```python
l = int(input())
if l % 2 == 1:
print(0)
else:
l //= 2
if l%2 == 1:
print(l // 2)
else:
print(l // 2 - 1)
``` | 3 | |
660 | C | Hard Process | PROGRAMMING | 1,600 | [
"binary search",
"dp",
"two pointers"
] | null | null | You are given an array *a* with *n* elements. Each element of *a* is either 0 or 1.
Let's denote the length of the longest subsegment of consecutive elements in *a*, consisting of only numbers one, as *f*(*a*). You can change no more than *k* zeroes to ones to maximize *f*(*a*). | The first line contains two integers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=3·105,<=0<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=*n*) — the number of elements in *a* and the parameter *k*.
The second line contains *n* integers *a**i* (0<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=1) — the elements of *a*. | On the first line print a non-negative integer *z* — the maximal value of *f*(*a*) after no more than *k* changes of zeroes to ones.
On the second line print *n* integers *a**j* — the elements of the array *a* after the changes.
If there are multiple answers, you can print any one of them. | [
"7 1\n1 0 0 1 1 0 1\n",
"10 2\n1 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1\n"
] | [
"4\n1 0 0 1 1 1 1\n",
"5\n1 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 1\n"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "7 1\n1 0 0 1 1 0 1",
"output": "4\n1 0 0 1 1 1 1"
},
{
"input": "10 2\n1 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1",
"output": "5\n1 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 1"
},
{
"input": "1 0\n0",
"output": "0\n0"
},
{
"input": "1 0\n0",
"output": "0\n0"
},
{
"input": "7 0\n0 1 0 0 0 1 0",
"o... | 1,648,139,678 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 38 | 577 | 9,728,000 | def my_660C():
ans = -1
left = -1
right = -1
n_k = input().split(' ')
n = int(n_k[0])
k = int(n_k[1])
original_list = list(map(lambda x: int(x), input().split(' ')))
zeros = [-1]
for i in range(n):
if original_list[i] == 0:
zeros += [i]
zeros += [n]
if len... | Title: Hard Process
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
You are given an array *a* with *n* elements. Each element of *a* is either 0 or 1.
Let's denote the length of the longest subsegment of consecutive elements in *a*, consisting of only numbers one, as *f*(*a*). You can ch... | ```python
def my_660C():
ans = -1
left = -1
right = -1
n_k = input().split(' ')
n = int(n_k[0])
k = int(n_k[1])
original_list = list(map(lambda x: int(x), input().split(' ')))
zeros = [-1]
for i in range(n):
if original_list[i] == 0:
zeros += [i]
zeros += [n]
... | 3 | |
794 | A | Bank Robbery | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"brute force",
"implementation"
] | null | null | A robber has attempted to rob a bank but failed to complete his task. However, he had managed to open all the safes.
Oleg the bank client loves money (who doesn't), and decides to take advantage of this failed robbery and steal some money from the safes. There are many safes arranged in a line, where the *i*-th safe f... | The first line of input contains three space-separated integers, *a*, *b* and *c* (1<=≤<=*b*<=<<=*a*<=<<=*c*<=≤<=109), denoting the positions of Oleg, the first security guard and the second security guard, respectively.
The next line of input contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105), denoting the numbe... | Output a single integer: the maximum number of banknotes Oleg can take. | [
"5 3 7\n8\n4 7 5 5 3 6 2 8\n",
"6 5 7\n5\n1 5 7 92 3\n"
] | [
"4\n",
"0\n"
] | In the first example Oleg can take the banknotes in positions 4, 5, 6 (note that there are 2 banknotes at position 5). Oleg can't take the banknotes in safes 7 and 8 because he can't run into the second security guard. Similarly, Oleg cannot take the banknotes at positions 3 and 2 because he can't run into the first se... | 500 | [
{
"input": "5 3 7\n8\n4 7 5 5 3 6 2 8",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "6 5 7\n5\n1 5 7 92 3",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "3 2 4\n1\n3",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "5 3 8\n12\n8 3 4 5 7 6 8 3 5 4 7 6",
"output": "8"
},
{
"input": "7 3 10\n5\n3 3 3 3 3",
"output... | 1,606,740,584 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED | TESTS | 4 | 2,000 | 11,673,600 | # https://codeforces.com/problemset/problem/794/A
a, b, c = map(int, input().split())
n = int(input())
hash_map = dict()
for i in map(int, input().split()):
hash_map[i] = hash_map.get(i, 0) + 1
ans = 0
for i in range(b + 1, c):
ans += hash_map.get(i, 0)
print(ans)
| Title: Bank Robbery
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
A robber has attempted to rob a bank but failed to complete his task. However, he had managed to open all the safes.
Oleg the bank client loves money (who doesn't), and decides to take advantage of this failed robbery and... | ```python
# https://codeforces.com/problemset/problem/794/A
a, b, c = map(int, input().split())
n = int(input())
hash_map = dict()
for i in map(int, input().split()):
hash_map[i] = hash_map.get(i, 0) + 1
ans = 0
for i in range(b + 1, c):
ans += hash_map.get(i, 0)
print(ans)
``` | 0 | |
903 | C | Boxes Packing | PROGRAMMING | 1,200 | [
"greedy"
] | null | null | Mishka has got *n* empty boxes. For every *i* (1<=≤<=*i*<=≤<=*n*), *i*-th box is a cube with side length *a**i*.
Mishka can put a box *i* into another box *j* if the following conditions are met:
- *i*-th box is not put into another box; - *j*-th box doesn't contain any other boxes; - box *i* is smaller than box *... | The first line contains one integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=5000) — the number of boxes Mishka has got.
The second line contains *n* integers *a*1, *a*2, ..., *a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=109), where *a**i* is the side length of *i*-th box. | Print the minimum possible number of visible boxes. | [
"3\n1 2 3\n",
"4\n4 2 4 3\n"
] | [
"1\n",
"2\n"
] | In the first example it is possible to put box 1 into box 2, and 2 into 3.
In the second example Mishka can put box 2 into box 3, and box 4 into box 1. | 0 | [
{
"input": "3\n1 2 3",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "4\n4 2 4 3",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "10\n58 58 58 58 58 58 58 58 58 58",
"output": "10"
},
{
"input": "10\n86 89 89 86 86 89 86 86 89 89",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "100\n981 288 186 186 292 876 341 288 98... | 1,574,685,035 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | OK | TESTS | 24 | 140 | 2,048,000 | n = int(input())
a = list(map(int, input().split()))
memo = {}
for i in range(n):
if a[i] not in memo:
memo[a[i]] = 1
else:
memo[a[i]] += 1
ans = 0
for i in memo:
ans = max(ans, memo[i])
print(ans)
| Title: Boxes Packing
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Mishka has got *n* empty boxes. For every *i* (1<=≤<=*i*<=≤<=*n*), *i*-th box is a cube with side length *a**i*.
Mishka can put a box *i* into another box *j* if the following conditions are met:
- *i*-th box is not pu... | ```python
n = int(input())
a = list(map(int, input().split()))
memo = {}
for i in range(n):
if a[i] not in memo:
memo[a[i]] = 1
else:
memo[a[i]] += 1
ans = 0
for i in memo:
ans = max(ans, memo[i])
print(ans)
``` | 3 | |
218 | A | Mountain Scenery | PROGRAMMING | 1,100 | [
"brute force",
"constructive algorithms",
"implementation"
] | null | null | Little Bolek has found a picture with *n* mountain peaks painted on it. The *n* painted peaks are represented by a non-closed polyline, consisting of 2*n* segments. The segments go through 2*n*<=+<=1 points with coordinates (1,<=*y*1), (2,<=*y*2), ..., (2*n*<=+<=1,<=*y*2*n*<=+<=1), with the *i*-th segment connecting th... | The first line contains two space-separated integers *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100). The next line contains 2*n*<=+<=1 space-separated integers *r*1,<=*r*2,<=...,<=*r*2*n*<=+<=1 (0<=≤<=*r**i*<=≤<=100) — the *y* coordinates of the polyline vertices on Bolek's picture.
It is guaranteed that we can obtain the gi... | Print 2*n*<=+<=1 integers *y*1,<=*y*2,<=...,<=*y*2*n*<=+<=1 — the *y* coordinates of the vertices of the polyline on the initial picture. If there are multiple answers, output any one of them. | [
"3 2\n0 5 3 5 1 5 2\n",
"1 1\n0 2 0\n"
] | [
"0 5 3 4 1 4 2 \n",
"0 1 0 \n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "3 2\n0 5 3 5 1 5 2",
"output": "0 5 3 4 1 4 2 "
},
{
"input": "1 1\n0 2 0",
"output": "0 1 0 "
},
{
"input": "1 1\n1 100 0",
"output": "1 99 0 "
},
{
"input": "3 1\n0 1 0 1 0 2 0",
"output": "0 1 0 1 0 1 0 "
},
{
"input": "3 1\n0 1 0 2 0 1 0",
"out... | 1,690,632,942 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 30 | 0 | def restore_mountain_peaks(n, k, r):
for i in range(1, 2*k, 2):
r[i] -= 1
for i in range(2*k, 2*n, 2):
r[i] = max(r[i-1], r[i+1])
return r
n, k = map(int, input().split())
r = list(map(int, input().split()))
result = restore_mountain_peaks(n, k, r)
print(*result) | Title: Mountain Scenery
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Little Bolek has found a picture with *n* mountain peaks painted on it. The *n* painted peaks are represented by a non-closed polyline, consisting of 2*n* segments. The segments go through 2*n*<=+<=1 points with coordi... | ```python
def restore_mountain_peaks(n, k, r):
for i in range(1, 2*k, 2):
r[i] -= 1
for i in range(2*k, 2*n, 2):
r[i] = max(r[i-1], r[i+1])
return r
n, k = map(int, input().split())
r = list(map(int, input().split()))
result = restore_mountain_peaks(n, k, r)
print(*result)
`... | 0 | |
894 | A | QAQ | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"brute force",
"dp"
] | null | null | "QAQ" is a word to denote an expression of crying. Imagine "Q" as eyes with tears and "A" as a mouth.
Now Diamond has given Bort a string consisting of only uppercase English letters of length *n*. There is a great number of "QAQ" in the string (Diamond is so cute!).
Bort wants to know how many subsequences "QAQ" are... | The only line contains a string of length *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100). It's guaranteed that the string only contains uppercase English letters. | Print a single integer — the number of subsequences "QAQ" in the string. | [
"QAQAQYSYIOIWIN\n",
"QAQQQZZYNOIWIN\n"
] | [
"4\n",
"3\n"
] | In the first example there are 4 subsequences "QAQ": "QAQAQYSYIOIWIN", "QAQAQYSYIOIWIN", "QAQAQYSYIOIWIN", "QAQAQYSYIOIWIN". | 500 | [
{
"input": "QAQAQYSYIOIWIN",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "QAQQQZZYNOIWIN",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "QA",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "IAQVAQZLQBQVQFTQQQADAQJA",
"output": "24"
},
{
"input": "QQAAQASGAYAAAAKAKAQIQEAQAIAAIAQQQQQ",
"output": "378"
},
{
... | 1,678,111,642 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | RUNTIME_ERROR | TESTS | 0 | 77 | 2,764,800 | n = input()
l = len(n)
ans = 0
for i in range(n):
for j in range(i+1,n):
for k in range(j+1,n):
if n[i] == "Q" and n[j] == "A" and n[k] == "Q":
ans+=1
print(ans)
| Title: QAQ
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
"QAQ" is a word to denote an expression of crying. Imagine "Q" as eyes with tears and "A" as a mouth.
Now Diamond has given Bort a string consisting of only uppercase English letters of length *n*. There is a great number of "QAQ"... | ```python
n = input()
l = len(n)
ans = 0
for i in range(n):
for j in range(i+1,n):
for k in range(j+1,n):
if n[i] == "Q" and n[j] == "A" and n[k] == "Q":
ans+=1
print(ans)
``` | -1 | |
41 | A | Translation | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation",
"strings"
] | A. Translation | 2 | 256 | The translation from the Berland language into the Birland language is not an easy task. Those languages are very similar: a berlandish word differs from a birlandish word with the same meaning a little: it is spelled (and pronounced) reversely. For example, a Berlandish word code corresponds to a Birlandish word edoc.... | The first line contains word *s*, the second line contains word *t*. The words consist of lowercase Latin letters. The input data do not consist unnecessary spaces. The words are not empty and their lengths do not exceed 100 symbols. | If the word *t* is a word *s*, written reversely, print YES, otherwise print NO. | [
"code\nedoc\n",
"abb\naba\n",
"code\ncode\n"
] | [
"YES\n",
"NO\n",
"NO\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "code\nedoc",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "abb\naba",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "code\ncode",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "abacaba\nabacaba",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "q\nq",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "asrgdfngfnmfgnhweratgjkk... | 1,603,121,419 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 40 | 218 | 0 | str1 = input()
str2 = input()
if (str1[::-1]) == str2:
print("YES")
else:
print("NO") | Title: Translation
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
The translation from the Berland language into the Birland language is not an easy task. Those languages are very similar: a berlandish word differs from a birlandish word with the same meaning a little: it is spelled (and pron... | ```python
str1 = input()
str2 = input()
if (str1[::-1]) == str2:
print("YES")
else:
print("NO")
``` | 3.9455 |
938 | A | Word Correction | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Victor tries to write his own text editor, with word correction included. However, the rules of word correction are really strange.
Victor thinks that if a word contains two consecutive vowels, then it's kinda weird and it needs to be replaced. So the word corrector works in such a way: as long as there are two consec... | The first line contains one integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of letters in word *s* before the correction.
The second line contains a string *s* consisting of exactly *n* lowercase Latin letters — the word before the correction. | Output the word *s* after the correction. | [
"5\nweird\n",
"4\nword\n",
"5\naaeaa\n"
] | [
"werd\n",
"word\n",
"a\n"
] | Explanations of the examples:
1. There is only one replace: weird <img align="middle" class="tex-formula" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/70a0795f45d32287dba0eb83fc4a3f470c6e5537.png" style="max-width: 100.0%;max-height: 100.0%;"/> werd;1. No replace needed since there are no two consecutive vowels;1. aaeaa <i... | 0 | [
{
"input": "5\nweird",
"output": "werd"
},
{
"input": "4\nword",
"output": "word"
},
{
"input": "5\naaeaa",
"output": "a"
},
{
"input": "100\naaaaabbbbboyoyoyoyoyacadabbbbbiuiufgiuiuaahjabbbklboyoyoyoyoyaaaaabbbbbiuiuiuiuiuaaaaabbbbbeyiyuyzyw",
"output": "abbbbbocadabbbbb... | 1,567,363,966 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 3 | 109 | 0 | def lol(x,l1):
first=0
for j in l1:
if j in ['e','i','a','o','u']:
first+=1
else :
first=0
if first==2:
l1.remove(j)
lol(x,l1)
x=int(input())
y=input()
l1=[]
for i in y:
l1.append(i)
lo... | Title: Word Correction
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Victor tries to write his own text editor, with word correction included. However, the rules of word correction are really strange.
Victor thinks that if a word contains two consecutive vowels, then it's kinda weird an... | ```python
def lol(x,l1):
first=0
for j in l1:
if j in ['e','i','a','o','u']:
first+=1
else :
first=0
if first==2:
l1.remove(j)
lol(x,l1)
x=int(input())
y=input()
l1=[]
for i in y:
l1.app... | 0 | |
186 | A | Comparing Strings | PROGRAMMING | 1,100 | [
"implementation",
"strings"
] | null | null | Some dwarves that are finishing the StUDY (State University for Dwarven Youngsters) Bachelor courses, have been told "no genome, no degree". That means that all dwarves should write a thesis on genome. Dwarven genome is far from simple. It is represented by a string that consists of lowercase Latin letters.
Dwarf Mish... | The first line contains the first dwarf's genome: a non-empty string, consisting of lowercase Latin letters.
The second line contains the second dwarf's genome: a non-empty string, consisting of lowercase Latin letters.
The number of letters in each genome doesn't exceed 105. It is guaranteed that the strings that co... | Print "YES", if the dwarves belong to the same race. Otherwise, print "NO". | [
"ab\nba\n",
"aa\nab\n"
] | [
"YES\n",
"NO\n"
] | - First example: you can simply swap two letters in string "ab". So we get "ba". - Second example: we can't change string "aa" into string "ab", because "aa" does not contain letter "b". | 500 | [
{
"input": "ab\nba",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "aa\nab",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "a\nza",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "vvea\nvvae",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "rtfabanpc\natfabrnpc",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "mt\ntm",
"output": "Y... | 1,671,029,794 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | OK | TESTS | 53 | 218 | 5,734,400 | import sys, os, io
input = io.BytesIO(os.read(0, os.fstat(0).st_size)).readline
s = list(input().rstrip())
t = list(input().rstrip())
if len(s) ^ len(t):
ans = "NO"
print(ans)
exit()
x = []
for i in range(len(s)):
if s[i] ^ t[i]:
x.append(i)
ans = "NO"
if len(x) == 2:
u, v = ... | Title: Comparing Strings
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Some dwarves that are finishing the StUDY (State University for Dwarven Youngsters) Bachelor courses, have been told "no genome, no degree". That means that all dwarves should write a thesis on genome. Dwarven genome ... | ```python
import sys, os, io
input = io.BytesIO(os.read(0, os.fstat(0).st_size)).readline
s = list(input().rstrip())
t = list(input().rstrip())
if len(s) ^ len(t):
ans = "NO"
print(ans)
exit()
x = []
for i in range(len(s)):
if s[i] ^ t[i]:
x.append(i)
ans = "NO"
if len(x) == 2:
... | 3 | |
796 | C | Bank Hacking | PROGRAMMING | 1,900 | [
"constructive algorithms",
"data structures",
"dp",
"trees"
] | null | null | Although Inzane successfully found his beloved bone, Zane, his owner, has yet to return. To search for Zane, he would need a lot of money, of which he sadly has none. To deal with the problem, he has decided to hack the banks.
There are *n* banks, numbered from 1 to *n*. There are also *n*<=-<=1 wires connecting the b... | The first line contains one integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=3·105) — the total number of banks.
The second line contains *n* integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (<=-<=109<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=109) — the strengths of the banks.
Each of the next *n*<=-<=1 lines contains two integers *u**i* and *v**i* (1<=≤<=*u**i*,<=*v**i*<=≤<=*n... | Print one integer — the minimum strength of the computer Inzane needs to accomplish the goal. | [
"5\n1 2 3 4 5\n1 2\n2 3\n3 4\n4 5\n",
"7\n38 -29 87 93 39 28 -55\n1 2\n2 5\n3 2\n2 4\n1 7\n7 6\n",
"5\n1 2 7 6 7\n1 5\n5 3\n3 4\n2 4\n"
] | [
"5",
"93",
"8"
] | In the first sample, Inzane can hack all banks using a computer with strength 5. Here is how:
- Initially, strengths of the banks are [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]. - He hacks bank 5, then strengths of the banks become [1, 2, 4, 5, - ]. - He hacks bank 4, then strengths of the banks become [1, 3, 5, - , - ]. - He hacks bank ... | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "5\n1 2 3 4 5\n1 2\n2 3\n3 4\n4 5",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "7\n38 -29 87 93 39 28 -55\n1 2\n2 5\n3 2\n2 4\n1 7\n7 6",
"output": "93"
},
{
"input": "5\n1 2 7 6 7\n1 5\n5 3\n3 4\n2 4",
"output": "8"
},
{
"input": "3\n2 2 2\n3 2\n1 2",
"output": "3"
},
{
... | 1,492,775,718 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 46 | 5,120,000 | from collections import defaultdict
from sys import stdin
n = int(stdin.readline().strip())
strengths = {i+1:int(l) for i, l in enumerate(stdin.readline().strip().split(' '))}
nabos = defaultdict(set)
for line in stdin.readlines():
line = line.strip()
if len(line):
u, v = tuple((int(i) for i in line... | Title: Bank Hacking
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Although Inzane successfully found his beloved bone, Zane, his owner, has yet to return. To search for Zane, he would need a lot of money, of which he sadly has none. To deal with the problem, he has decided to hack the ba... | ```python
from collections import defaultdict
from sys import stdin
n = int(stdin.readline().strip())
strengths = {i+1:int(l) for i, l in enumerate(stdin.readline().strip().split(' '))}
nabos = defaultdict(set)
for line in stdin.readlines():
line = line.strip()
if len(line):
u, v = tuple((int(i) for... | 0 | |
294 | B | Shaass and Bookshelf | PROGRAMMING | 1,700 | [
"dp",
"greedy"
] | null | null | Shaass has *n* books. He wants to make a bookshelf for all his books. He wants the bookshelf's dimensions to be as small as possible. The thickness of the *i*-th book is *t**i* and its pages' width is equal to *w**i*. The thickness of each book is either 1 or 2. All books have the same page heights.
Shaass puts the bo... | The first line of the input contains an integer *n*, (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100). Each of the next *n* lines contains two integers *t**i* and *w**i* denoting the thickness and width of the *i*-th book correspondingly, (1<=≤<=*t**i*<=≤<=2,<=1<=≤<=*w**i*<=≤<=100). | On the only line of the output print the minimum total thickness of the vertical books that we can achieve. | [
"5\n1 12\n1 3\n2 15\n2 5\n2 1\n",
"3\n1 10\n2 1\n2 4\n"
] | [
"5\n",
"3\n"
] | none | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "5\n1 12\n1 3\n2 15\n2 5\n2 1",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "3\n1 10\n2 1\n2 4",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "10\n2 10\n2 4\n2 8\n2 3\n2 5\n2 6\n1 2\n1 10\n1 10\n2 5",
"output": "12"
},
{
"input": "1\n2 7",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "50\n1 24\n1 16\n1... | 1,600,667,559 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 8 | 109 | 307,200 | n = int(input())
l = []
bottThickness = 0
for i in range(n):
l.append([int(x) for x in input().split()])
bottThickness += l[-1][0]
l.sort(key = lambda x : (1/x[0], x[1]))
mn = 100000
#print(l)
top = 0
idx = 0
while top <= bottThickness:
if top + l[idx][1] <= bottThickness - l[idx][0]:
top += l[idx][1]
bottThic... | Title: Shaass and Bookshelf
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Shaass has *n* books. He wants to make a bookshelf for all his books. He wants the bookshelf's dimensions to be as small as possible. The thickness of the *i*-th book is *t**i* and its pages' width is equal to *w**... | ```python
n = int(input())
l = []
bottThickness = 0
for i in range(n):
l.append([int(x) for x in input().split()])
bottThickness += l[-1][0]
l.sort(key = lambda x : (1/x[0], x[1]))
mn = 100000
#print(l)
top = 0
idx = 0
while top <= bottThickness:
if top + l[idx][1] <= bottThickness - l[idx][0]:
top += l[idx][1]
... | 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... | 1,656,153,703 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | RUNTIME_ERROR | TESTS | 0 | 31 | 0 | s=input()
m=['h','e','l','l','o']
i=0
for c in s:
if c==m[i]:
i+=1
if i==5:
print("YES")
else:
print("NO") | Title: Chat room
Time Limit: 1 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
Vasya has recently learned to type and log on to the Internet. He immediately entered a chat room and decided to say hello to everybody. Vasya typed the word *s*. It is considered that Vasya managed to say hello if several letter... | ```python
s=input()
m=['h','e','l','l','o']
i=0
for c in s:
if c==m[i]:
i+=1
if i==5:
print("YES")
else:
print("NO")
``` | -1 |
960 | B | Minimize the error | PROGRAMMING | 1,500 | [
"data structures",
"greedy",
"sortings"
] | null | null | You are given two arrays *A* and *B*, each of size *n*. The error, *E*, between these two arrays is defined . You have to perform exactly *k*1 operations on array *A* and exactly *k*2 operations on array *B*. In one operation, you have to choose one element of the array and increase or decrease it by 1.
Output the min... | The first line contains three space-separated integers *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=103), *k*1 and *k*2 (0<=≤<=*k*1<=+<=*k*2<=≤<=103, *k*1 and *k*2 are non-negative) — size of arrays and number of operations to perform on *A* and *B* respectively.
Second line contains *n* space separated integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (<=-... | Output a single integer — the minimum possible value of after doing exactly *k*1 operations on array *A* and exactly *k*2 operations on array *B*. | [
"2 0 0\n1 2\n2 3\n",
"2 1 0\n1 2\n2 2\n",
"2 5 7\n3 4\n14 4\n"
] | [
"2",
"0",
"1"
] | In the first sample case, we cannot perform any operations on *A* or *B*. Therefore the minimum possible error *E* = (1 - 2)<sup class="upper-index">2</sup> + (2 - 3)<sup class="upper-index">2</sup> = 2.
In the second sample case, we are required to perform exactly one operation on *A*. In order to minimize error, we... | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "2 0 0\n1 2\n2 3",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "2 1 0\n1 2\n2 2",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "2 5 7\n3 4\n14 4",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "2 0 1\n1 2\n2 2",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "2 1 1\n0 0\n1 1",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "5 5 ... | 1,554,995,505 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 1 | 93 | 0 | n, k1, k2 = map(int, input().split(' '))
a = list()
b = list()
k = k1 + k2
for _ in range(n):
_a, _b = map(int, input().split(' '))
a.append(_a)
b.append(_b)
d = sorted([abs(x - y) for i in zip([a, b]) for x, y in i], reverse=True)
i = 0
while k > 0 and i < len(d):
x = min(k, d[i])
... | Title: Minimize the error
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
You are given two arrays *A* and *B*, each of size *n*. The error, *E*, between these two arrays is defined . You have to perform exactly *k*1 operations on array *A* and exactly *k*2 operations on array *B*. In one ... | ```python
n, k1, k2 = map(int, input().split(' '))
a = list()
b = list()
k = k1 + k2
for _ in range(n):
_a, _b = map(int, input().split(' '))
a.append(_a)
b.append(_b)
d = sorted([abs(x - y) for i in zip([a, b]) for x, y in i], reverse=True)
i = 0
while k > 0 and i < len(d):
x = min(k... | 0 | |
964 | A | Splits | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"math"
] | null | null | Let's define a split of $n$ as a nonincreasing sequence of positive integers, the sum of which is $n$.
For example, the following sequences are splits of $8$: $[4, 4]$, $[3, 3, 2]$, $[2, 2, 1, 1, 1, 1]$, $[5, 2, 1]$.
The following sequences aren't splits of $8$: $[1, 7]$, $[5, 4]$, $[11, -3]$, $[1, 1, 4, 1, 1]$.
Th... | The first line contains one integer $n$ ($1 \leq n \leq 10^9$). | Output one integer — the answer to the problem. | [
"7\n",
"8\n",
"9\n"
] | [
"4\n",
"5\n",
"5\n"
] | In the first sample, there are following possible weights of splits of $7$:
Weight 1: [$\textbf 7$]
Weight 2: [$\textbf 3$, $\textbf 3$, 1]
Weight 3: [$\textbf 2$, $\textbf 2$, $\textbf 2$, 1]
Weight 7: [$\textbf 1$, $\textbf 1$, $\textbf 1$, $\textbf 1$, $\textbf 1$, $\textbf 1$, $\textbf 1$] | 500 | [
{
"input": "7",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "8",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "9",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "286",
"output": "144"
},
{
"input": "48",
"output": "25"
},
{
"input": "941",
"output": "471... | 1,524,298,450 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 63 | 93 | 7,372,800 | b=int(input())
print(int(b/2)+1
)
| Title: Splits
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Let's define a split of $n$ as a nonincreasing sequence of positive integers, the sum of which is $n$.
For example, the following sequences are splits of $8$: $[4, 4]$, $[3, 3, 2]$, $[2, 2, 1, 1, 1, 1]$, $[5, 2, 1]$.
The foll... | ```python
b=int(input())
print(int(b/2)+1
)
``` | 3 | |
868 | A | Bark to Unlock | PROGRAMMING | 900 | [
"brute force",
"implementation",
"strings"
] | null | null | As technologies develop, manufacturers are making the process of unlocking a phone as user-friendly as possible. To unlock its new phone, Arkady's pet dog Mu-mu has to bark the password once. The phone represents a password as a string of two lowercase English letters.
Mu-mu's enemy Kashtanka wants to unlock Mu-mu's p... | The first line contains two lowercase English letters — the password on the phone.
The second line contains single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of words Kashtanka knows.
The next *n* lines contain two lowercase English letters each, representing the words Kashtanka knows. The words are guaranteed to b... | Print "YES" if Kashtanka can bark several words in a line forming a string containing the password, and "NO" otherwise.
You can print each letter in arbitrary case (upper or lower). | [
"ya\n4\nah\noy\nto\nha\n",
"hp\n2\nht\ntp\n",
"ah\n1\nha\n"
] | [
"YES\n",
"NO\n",
"YES\n"
] | In the first example the password is "ya", and Kashtanka can bark "oy" and then "ah", and then "ha" to form the string "oyahha" which contains the password. So, the answer is "YES".
In the second example Kashtanka can't produce a string containing password as a substring. Note that it can bark "ht" and then "tp" produ... | 250 | [
{
"input": "ya\n4\nah\noy\nto\nha",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "hp\n2\nht\ntp",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "ah\n1\nha",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "bb\n4\nba\nab\naa\nbb",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "bc\n4\nca\nba\nbb\ncc",
"output": "YES"
},
{
... | 1,511,329,442 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 3 | 62 | 0 | pw = input()
n = int(input())
kash = []
for i in range(n):
kash.append(input())
count = 0
for w in kash:
if w[1] == pw[0]:
count += 1
if w[0] == pw[1]:
count += 1
if count == 2:
print('YES')
else:
print('NO') | Title: Bark to Unlock
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
As technologies develop, manufacturers are making the process of unlocking a phone as user-friendly as possible. To unlock its new phone, Arkady's pet dog Mu-mu has to bark the password once. The phone represents a passw... | ```python
pw = input()
n = int(input())
kash = []
for i in range(n):
kash.append(input())
count = 0
for w in kash:
if w[1] == pw[0]:
count += 1
if w[0] == pw[1]:
count += 1
if count == 2:
print('YES')
else:
print('NO')
``` | 0 | |
387 | B | George and Round | PROGRAMMING | 1,200 | [
"brute force",
"greedy",
"two pointers"
] | null | null | George decided to prepare a Codesecrof round, so he has prepared *m* problems for the round. Let's number the problems with integers 1 through *m*. George estimates the *i*-th problem's complexity by integer *b**i*.
To make the round good, he needs to put at least *n* problems there. Besides, he needs to have at least... | The first line contains two integers *n* and *m* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=3000) — the minimal number of problems in a good round and the number of problems George's prepared. The second line contains space-separated integers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a*1<=<<=*a*2<=<<=...<=<<=*a**n*<=≤<=106) — the requirem... | Print a single integer — the answer to the problem. | [
"3 5\n1 2 3\n1 2 2 3 3\n",
"3 5\n1 2 3\n1 1 1 1 1\n",
"3 1\n2 3 4\n1\n"
] | [
"0\n",
"2\n",
"3\n"
] | In the first sample the set of the prepared problems meets the requirements for a good round.
In the second sample, it is enough to come up with and prepare two problems with complexities 2 and 3 to get a good round.
In the third sample it is very easy to get a good round if come up with and prepare extra problems wi... | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "3 5\n1 2 3\n1 2 2 3 3",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "3 5\n1 2 3\n1 1 1 1 1",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "3 1\n2 3 4\n1",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "29 100\n20 32 41 67 72 155 331 382 399 412 465 470 484 511 515 529 616 637 679 715 733 763 826 843 862 903 925 97... | 1,528,811,385 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 7 | 93 | 307,200 | n, m = map(int, input().split())
a = [int(x) for x in input().split()]
b = [int(x) for x in input().split()]
b = list(set(b))
count = 0
for i in range(len(b)):
for j in range(len(a)):
if b[i] >= a[j]:
count += 1
break
if n - count < 0:
print(0)
else:
print(n - count)
| Title: George and Round
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
George decided to prepare a Codesecrof round, so he has prepared *m* problems for the round. Let's number the problems with integers 1 through *m*. George estimates the *i*-th problem's complexity by integer *b**i*.
T... | ```python
n, m = map(int, input().split())
a = [int(x) for x in input().split()]
b = [int(x) for x in input().split()]
b = list(set(b))
count = 0
for i in range(len(b)):
for j in range(len(a)):
if b[i] >= a[j]:
count += 1
break
if n - count < 0:
print(0)
else:
print(n - count... | 0 | |
102 | B | Sum of Digits | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"implementation"
] | B. Sum of Digits | 2 | 265 | Having watched the last Harry Potter film, little Gerald also decided to practice magic. He found in his father's magical book a spell that turns any number in the sum of its digits. At the moment Gerald learned that, he came across a number *n*. How many times can Gerald put a spell on it until the number becomes one-... | The first line contains the only integer *n* (0<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=10100000). It is guaranteed that *n* doesn't contain any leading zeroes. | Print the number of times a number can be replaced by the sum of its digits until it only contains one digit. | [
"0\n",
"10\n",
"991\n"
] | [
"0\n",
"1\n",
"3\n"
] | In the first sample the number already is one-digit — Herald can't cast a spell.
The second test contains number 10. After one casting of a spell it becomes 1, and here the process is completed. Thus, Gerald can only cast the spell once.
The third test contains number 991. As one casts a spell the following transform... | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "0",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "10",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "991",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "99",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "100",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "123456789",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "32",
"output... | 1,599,111,644 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | RUNTIME_ERROR | TESTS | 0 | 154 | 0 | from sys import stdin
n=stdin.readline()
c=0
while(len(n)!=1):
s=0
for i in n:
s+=int(i)
n=str(s)
c+=1
print(c) | Title: Sum of Digits
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 265 megabytes
Problem Description:
Having watched the last Harry Potter film, little Gerald also decided to practice magic. He found in his father's magical book a spell that turns any number in the sum of its digits. At the moment Gerald learned that, he came... | ```python
from sys import stdin
n=stdin.readline()
c=0
while(len(n)!=1):
s=0
for i in n:
s+=int(i)
n=str(s)
c+=1
print(c)
``` | -1 |
205 | B | Little Elephant and Sorting | PROGRAMMING | 1,400 | [
"brute force",
"greedy"
] | null | null | The Little Elephant loves sortings.
He has an array *a* consisting of *n* integers. Let's number the array elements from 1 to *n*, then the *i*-th element will be denoted as *a**i*. The Little Elephant can make one move to choose an arbitrary pair of integers *l* and *r* (1<=≤<=*l*<=≤<=*r*<=≤<=*n*) and increase *a**i*... | The first line contains a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) — the size of array *a*. The next line contains *n* integers, separated by single spaces — array *a* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=109). The array elements are listed in the line in the order of their index's increasing. | In a single line print a single integer — the answer to the problem.
Please, do not use the %lld specifier to read or write 64-bit integers in С++. It is preferred to use the cin, cout streams or the %I64d specifier. | [
"3\n1 2 3\n",
"3\n3 2 1\n",
"4\n7 4 1 47\n"
] | [
"0\n",
"2\n",
"6\n"
] | In the first sample the array is already sorted in the non-decreasing order, so the answer is 0.
In the second sample you need to perform two operations: first increase numbers from second to third (after that the array will be: [3, 3, 2]), and second increase only the last element (the array will be: [3, 3, 3]).
In ... | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "3\n1 2 3",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "3\n3 2 1",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "4\n7 4 1 47",
"output": "6"
},
{
"input": "10\n1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 1000000000",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "10\n1000000000 1 1000000000 1 1000000000 1 1000000000 1 100000000... | 1,582,820,915 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 6 | 140 | 0 | n=int(input())
li=list(map(int,input().split()))
i=0
step=0
while(i<n-1):
if(li[i]<li[i+1]):
i+=1
else:
j=i+1
while(j<n and li[i]>li[j]):
j+=1
#print(i)
step+=li[i]-min(li[i:j+1])
i=j
... | Title: Little Elephant and Sorting
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
The Little Elephant loves sortings.
He has an array *a* consisting of *n* integers. Let's number the array elements from 1 to *n*, then the *i*-th element will be denoted as *a**i*. The Little Elephant can ... | ```python
n=int(input())
li=list(map(int,input().split()))
i=0
step=0
while(i<n-1):
if(li[i]<li[i+1]):
i+=1
else:
j=i+1
while(j<n and li[i]>li[j]):
j+=1
#print(i)
step+=li[i]-min(li[i:j+1])
... | 0 | |
352 | B | Jeff and Periods | PROGRAMMING | 1,300 | [
"implementation",
"sortings"
] | null | null | One day Jeff got hold of an integer sequence *a*1, *a*2, ..., *a**n* of length *n*. The boy immediately decided to analyze the sequence. For that, he needs to find all values of *x*, for which these conditions hold:
- *x* occurs in sequence *a*. - Consider all positions of numbers *x* in the sequence *a* (such *i*, ... | The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105). The next line contains integers *a*1, *a*2, ..., *a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=105). The numbers are separated by spaces. | In the first line print integer *t* — the number of valid *x*. On each of the next *t* lines print two integers *x* and *p**x*, where *x* is current suitable value, *p**x* is the common difference between numbers in the progression (if *x* occurs exactly once in the sequence, *p**x* must equal 0). Print the pairs in th... | [
"1\n2\n",
"8\n1 2 1 3 1 2 1 5\n"
] | [
"1\n2 0\n",
"4\n1 2\n2 4\n3 0\n5 0\n"
] | In the first test 2 occurs exactly once in the sequence, ergo *p*<sub class="lower-index">2</sub> = 0. | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "1\n2",
"output": "1\n2 0"
},
{
"input": "8\n1 2 1 3 1 2 1 5",
"output": "4\n1 2\n2 4\n3 0\n5 0"
},
{
"input": "3\n1 10 5",
"output": "3\n1 0\n5 0\n10 0"
},
{
"input": "4\n9 9 3 5",
"output": "3\n3 0\n5 0\n9 1"
},
{
"input": "6\n1 2 2 1 1 2",
"outpu... | 1,623,228,045 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 36 | 654 | 22,835,200 | n = int(input())
l = list(map(int, input().split()))
res = {}
res1 = {}
def isarp(l):
dif = l[1] - l[0]
for i1, i2 in zip(l[:-1], l[1:]):
if i2 - i1 != dif:
return False, None
return True, dif
for i, v in enumerate(l):
if v in res:
res[v].append(i)
else:
... | Title: Jeff and Periods
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
One day Jeff got hold of an integer sequence *a*1, *a*2, ..., *a**n* of length *n*. The boy immediately decided to analyze the sequence. For that, he needs to find all values of *x*, for which these conditions hold:
-... | ```python
n = int(input())
l = list(map(int, input().split()))
res = {}
res1 = {}
def isarp(l):
dif = l[1] - l[0]
for i1, i2 in zip(l[:-1], l[1:]):
if i2 - i1 != dif:
return False, None
return True, dif
for i, v in enumerate(l):
if v in res:
res[v].append(i)
... | 3 | |
825 | A | Binary Protocol | PROGRAMMING | 1,100 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Polycarp has just invented a new binary protocol for data transmission. He is encoding positive integer decimal number to binary string using following algorithm:
- Each digit is represented with number of '1' characters equal to the value of that digit (for 0 it is zero ones). - Digits are written one by one in ord... | The first line contains one integer number *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=89) — length of the string *s*.
The second line contains string *s* — sequence of '0' and '1' characters, number in its encoded format. It is guaranteed that the number corresponding to the string is positive and doesn't exceed 109. The string always starts... | Print the decoded number. | [
"3\n111\n",
"9\n110011101\n"
] | [
"3\n",
"2031\n"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "3\n111",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "9\n110011101",
"output": "2031"
},
{
"input": "1\n1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "3\n100",
"output": "100"
},
{
"input": "5\n10001",
"output": "1001"
},
{
"input": "14\n11001100011000",
"output": "... | 1,500,217,751 | 251 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 13 | 62 | 4,608,000 | n = int(input())
s = input()
curr = 0
for char in s:
if char == '1':
curr += 1
else:
print(curr, end = '')
curr = 0
print(curr)
| Title: Binary Protocol
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Polycarp has just invented a new binary protocol for data transmission. He is encoding positive integer decimal number to binary string using following algorithm:
- Each digit is represented with number of '1' charact... | ```python
n = int(input())
s = input()
curr = 0
for char in s:
if char == '1':
curr += 1
else:
print(curr, end = '')
curr = 0
print(curr)
``` | 3 | |
78 | A | Haiku | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation",
"strings"
] | A. Haiku | 2 | 256 | Haiku is a genre of Japanese traditional poetry.
A haiku poem consists of 17 syllables split into three phrases, containing 5, 7 and 5 syllables correspondingly (the first phrase should contain exactly 5 syllables, the second phrase should contain exactly 7 syllables, and the third phrase should contain exactly 5 syll... | The input data consists of three lines. The length of each line is between 1 and 100, inclusive. The *i*-th line contains the *i*-th phrase of the poem. Each phrase consists of one or more words, which are separated by one or more spaces. A word is a non-empty sequence of lowercase Latin letters. Leading and/or trailin... | Print "YES" (without the quotes) if the poem is a haiku. Otherwise, print "NO" (also without the quotes). | [
"on codeforces \nbeta round is running\n a rustling of keys \n",
"how many gallons\nof edo s rain did you drink\n cuckoo\n"
] | [
"YES",
"NO"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "on codeforces \nbeta round is running\n a rustling of keys ",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "how many gallons\nof edo s rain did you drink\n cuckoo",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": " hatsu shigure\n saru mo komino wo\nhoshige nari",
... | 1,595,656,843 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 40 | 218 | 6,656,000 | s = []
for i in range(3):
tmp = (input())
s.append(tmp)
count = []
for i in s:
tmp_count = i.count('a')
tmp_count += i.count('e')
tmp_count += i.count('o')
tmp_count += i.count('i')
tmp_count += i.count('u')
count.append(tmp_count)
if count == [5, 7, 5]:
print('YES')... | Title: Haiku
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
Haiku is a genre of Japanese traditional poetry.
A haiku poem consists of 17 syllables split into three phrases, containing 5, 7 and 5 syllables correspondingly (the first phrase should contain exactly 5 syllables, the second phrase... | ```python
s = []
for i in range(3):
tmp = (input())
s.append(tmp)
count = []
for i in s:
tmp_count = i.count('a')
tmp_count += i.count('e')
tmp_count += i.count('o')
tmp_count += i.count('i')
tmp_count += i.count('u')
count.append(tmp_count)
if count == [5, 7, 5]:
pr... | 3.933102 |
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": "... | 1,684,383,934 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 102 | 46 | 0 | a = input()
b= input()
k = []
for i , j in enumerate(a):
if j == b[i]:
k.append('0')
else:
k.append('1')
print(''.join(k))
| 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
a = input()
b= input()
k = []
for i , j in enumerate(a):
if j == b[i]:
k.append('0')
else:
k.append('1')
print(''.join(k))
``` | 3.9885 |
385 | B | Bear and Strings | PROGRAMMING | 1,200 | [
"brute force",
"greedy",
"implementation",
"math",
"strings"
] | null | null | The bear has a string *s*<==<=*s*1*s*2... *s*|*s*| (record |*s*| is the string's length), consisting of lowercase English letters. The bear wants to count the number of such pairs of indices *i*,<=*j* (1<=≤<=*i*<=≤<=*j*<=≤<=|*s*|), that string *x*(*i*,<=*j*)<==<=*s**i**s**i*<=+<=1... *s**j* contains at least one string... | The first line contains a non-empty string *s* (1<=≤<=|*s*|<=≤<=5000). It is guaranteed that the string only consists of lowercase English letters. | Print a single number — the answer to the problem. | [
"bearbtear\n",
"bearaabearc\n"
] | [
"6\n",
"20\n"
] | In the first sample, the following pairs (*i*, *j*) match: (1, 4), (1, 5), (1, 6), (1, 7), (1, 8), (1, 9).
In the second sample, the following pairs (*i*, *j*) match: (1, 4), (1, 5), (1, 6), (1, 7), (1, 8), (1, 9), (1, 10), (1, 11), (2, 10), (2, 11), (3, 10), (3, 11), (4, 10), (4, 11), (5, 10), (5, 11)... | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "bearbtear",
"output": "6"
},
{
"input": "bearaabearc",
"output": "20"
},
{
"input": "pbearbearhbearzqbearjkterasjhy",
"output": "291"
},
{
"input": "pbearjbearbebearnbabcffbearbearwubearjezpiorrbearbearjbdlbearbearqbearjbearwipmsbearoaftrsebearzsnqb",
"output"... | 1,547,971,723 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 43 | 124 | 0 | x=input()
sm=0
for i in range(len(x)):
t=x.find('bear',i)
if t>=0:
sm+=len(x)-t-3
print(sm) | Title: Bear and Strings
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
The bear has a string *s*<==<=*s*1*s*2... *s*|*s*| (record |*s*| is the string's length), consisting of lowercase English letters. The bear wants to count the number of such pairs of indices *i*,<=*j* (1<=≤<=*i*<=≤<=*j... | ```python
x=input()
sm=0
for i in range(len(x)):
t=x.find('bear',i)
if t>=0:
sm+=len(x)-t-3
print(sm)
``` | 3 | |
0 | none | none | none | 0 | [
"none"
] | null | null | An atom of element X can exist in *n* distinct states with energies *E*1<=<<=*E*2<=<<=...<=<<=*E**n*. Arkady wants to build a laser on this element, using a three-level scheme. Here is a simplified description of the scheme.
Three distinct states *i*, *j* and *k* are selected, where *i*<=<<=*j*<=<<=*k*... | The first line contains two integers *n* and *U* (3<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105, 1<=≤<=*U*<=≤<=109) — the number of states and the maximum possible difference between *E**k* and *E**i*.
The second line contains a sequence of integers *E*1,<=*E*2,<=...,<=*E**n* (1<=≤<=*E*1<=<<=*E*2...<=<<=*E**n*<=≤<=109). It is guaranteed th... | If it is not possible to choose three states that satisfy all constraints, print -1.
Otherwise, print one real number η — the maximum possible energy conversion efficiency. Your answer is considered correct its absolute or relative error does not exceed 10<=-<=9.
Formally, let your answer be *a*, and the jury's answe... | [
"4 4\n1 3 5 7\n",
"10 8\n10 13 15 16 17 19 20 22 24 25\n",
"3 1\n2 5 10\n"
] | [
"0.5\n",
"0.875\n",
"-1\n"
] | In the first example choose states 1, 2 and 3, so that the energy conversion efficiency becomes equal to <img align="middle" class="tex-formula" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/147ae7a830722917b0aa37d064df8eb74cfefb97.png" style="max-width: 100.0%;max-height: 100.0%;"/>.
In the second example choose states 4, 5 a... | 0 | [
{
"input": "4 4\n1 3 5 7",
"output": "0.5"
},
{
"input": "10 8\n10 13 15 16 17 19 20 22 24 25",
"output": "0.875"
},
{
"input": "3 1\n2 5 10",
"output": "-1"
},
{
"input": "5 3\n4 6 8 9 10",
"output": "0.5"
},
{
"input": "10 128\n110 121 140 158 174 188 251 271 27... | 1,526,207,277 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | RUNTIME_ERROR | TESTS | 2 | 93 | 7,065,600 | n, u = map(int, input().split())
e = list(map(int, input().split()))
ans = -1
for i in range(n-2):
k = 0
while e[k+1]-e[i] <= u and k < n-2:
k += 1
ans = max(ans, (e[k]-e[i+1])/(e[k]-e[i]))
print(ans) | Title: none
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
An atom of element X can exist in *n* distinct states with energies *E*1<=<<=*E*2<=<<=...<=<<=*E**n*. Arkady wants to build a laser on this element, using a three-level scheme. Here is a simplified description of the sche... | ```python
n, u = map(int, input().split())
e = list(map(int, input().split()))
ans = -1
for i in range(n-2):
k = 0
while e[k+1]-e[i] <= u and k < n-2:
k += 1
ans = max(ans, (e[k]-e[i+1])/(e[k]-e[i]))
print(ans)
``` | -1 | |
1 | A | Theatre Square | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"math"
] | A. Theatre Square | 1 | 256 | Theatre Square in the capital city of Berland has a rectangular shape with the size *n*<=×<=*m* meters. On the occasion of the city's anniversary, a decision was taken to pave the Square with square granite flagstones. Each flagstone is of the size *a*<=×<=*a*.
What is the least number of flagstones needed to pave the... | The input contains three positive integer numbers in the first line: *n*,<=<=*m* and *a* (1<=≤<=<=*n*,<=*m*,<=*a*<=≤<=109). | Write the needed number of flagstones. | [
"6 6 4\n"
] | [
"4\n"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "6 6 4",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "1 1 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "2 1 1",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "1 2 1",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "2 2 1",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "2 1 2",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "1 1 3"... | 1,694,192,529 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 2 | 46 | 0 | from math import ceil
f = input()
w = ceil(int(f[0])/int(f[4]))
h = ceil(int(f[2])/int(f[4]))
if w == h == 1:
print(w)
else:
print(w+h) | 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
from math import ceil
f = input()
w = ceil(int(f[0])/int(f[4]))
h = ceil(int(f[2])/int(f[4]))
if w == h == 1:
print(w)
else:
print(w+h)
``` | 0 |
352 | B | Jeff and Periods | PROGRAMMING | 1,300 | [
"implementation",
"sortings"
] | null | null | One day Jeff got hold of an integer sequence *a*1, *a*2, ..., *a**n* of length *n*. The boy immediately decided to analyze the sequence. For that, he needs to find all values of *x*, for which these conditions hold:
- *x* occurs in sequence *a*. - Consider all positions of numbers *x* in the sequence *a* (such *i*, ... | The first line contains integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105). The next line contains integers *a*1, *a*2, ..., *a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=105). The numbers are separated by spaces. | In the first line print integer *t* — the number of valid *x*. On each of the next *t* lines print two integers *x* and *p**x*, where *x* is current suitable value, *p**x* is the common difference between numbers in the progression (if *x* occurs exactly once in the sequence, *p**x* must equal 0). Print the pairs in th... | [
"1\n2\n",
"8\n1 2 1 3 1 2 1 5\n"
] | [
"1\n2 0\n",
"4\n1 2\n2 4\n3 0\n5 0\n"
] | In the first test 2 occurs exactly once in the sequence, ergo *p*<sub class="lower-index">2</sub> = 0. | 1,000 | [
{
"input": "1\n2",
"output": "1\n2 0"
},
{
"input": "8\n1 2 1 3 1 2 1 5",
"output": "4\n1 2\n2 4\n3 0\n5 0"
},
{
"input": "3\n1 10 5",
"output": "3\n1 0\n5 0\n10 0"
},
{
"input": "4\n9 9 3 5",
"output": "3\n3 0\n5 0\n9 1"
},
{
"input": "6\n1 2 2 1 1 2",
"outpu... | 1,687,802,530 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 4 | 92 | 0 | def result(n,lis):
dic=dict()
lis3=[]
for i in range(n):
a=lis[i]
if a not in lis3:
lis3.append(a)
lis2=[]
for j in range(n):
if a==lis[j]:
lis2.append(j)
dic[a]=lis2
length=len(dic)
lis3.sort()
print(length)
for i in lis3:
a=dic[i]
if len(a)==1:
print(i,0)
else:
b=a[1]-a[0]
... | Title: Jeff and Periods
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
One day Jeff got hold of an integer sequence *a*1, *a*2, ..., *a**n* of length *n*. The boy immediately decided to analyze the sequence. For that, he needs to find all values of *x*, for which these conditions hold:
-... | ```python
def result(n,lis):
dic=dict()
lis3=[]
for i in range(n):
a=lis[i]
if a not in lis3:
lis3.append(a)
lis2=[]
for j in range(n):
if a==lis[j]:
lis2.append(j)
dic[a]=lis2
length=len(dic)
lis3.sort()
print(length)
for i in lis3:
a=dic[i]
if len(a)==1:
print(i,0)
else:
b=a... | 0 | |
796 | B | Find The Bone | PROGRAMMING | 1,300 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Zane the wizard is going to perform a magic show shuffling the cups.
There are *n* cups, numbered from 1 to *n*, placed along the *x*-axis on a table that has *m* holes on it. More precisely, cup *i* is on the table at the position *x*<==<=*i*.
The problematic bone is initially at the position *x*<==<=1. Zane will co... | The first line contains three integers *n*, *m*, and *k* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=106, 1<=≤<=*m*<=≤<=*n*, 1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=3·105) — the number of cups, the number of holes on the table, and the number of swapping operations, respectively.
The second line contains *m* distinct integers *h*1,<=*h*2,<=...,<=*h**m* (1<=≤<=*h**i*<=≤<=*... | Print one integer — the final position along the *x*-axis of the bone. | [
"7 3 4\n3 4 6\n1 2\n2 5\n5 7\n7 1\n",
"5 1 2\n2\n1 2\n2 4\n"
] | [
"1",
"2"
] | In the first sample, after the operations, the bone becomes at *x* = 2, *x* = 5, *x* = 7, and *x* = 1, respectively.
In the second sample, after the first operation, the bone becomes at *x* = 2, and falls into the hole onto the ground. | 750 | [
{
"input": "7 3 4\n3 4 6\n1 2\n2 5\n5 7\n7 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "5 1 2\n2\n1 2\n2 4",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "10000 1 9\n55\n44 1\n2929 9292\n9999 9998\n44 55\n49 94\n55 53\n100 199\n55 50\n53 11",
"output": "55"
},
{
"input": "100000 3 7\n2 3 4\n1 5\n5 1\n1 5... | 1,588,917,279 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 5 | 139 | 20,172,800 | R = lambda : map(int, input().split())
n, m, k = R()
ms = set(R())
pos = 1
for _ in range(k):
u, v = R()
if u in ms:
print(u)
break
if v in ms:
print(v)
break
pos = v
else:
print(pos)
| Title: Find The Bone
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Zane the wizard is going to perform a magic show shuffling the cups.
There are *n* cups, numbered from 1 to *n*, placed along the *x*-axis on a table that has *m* holes on it. More precisely, cup *i* is on the table at t... | ```python
R = lambda : map(int, input().split())
n, m, k = R()
ms = set(R())
pos = 1
for _ in range(k):
u, v = R()
if u in ms:
print(u)
break
if v in ms:
print(v)
break
pos = v
else:
print(pos)
``` | 0 | |
14 | A | Letter | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation"
] | A. Letter | 1 | 64 | A boy Bob likes to draw. Not long ago he bought a rectangular graph (checked) sheet with *n* rows and *m* columns. Bob shaded some of the squares on the sheet. Having seen his masterpiece, he decided to share it with his elder brother, who lives in Flatland. Now Bob has to send his picture by post, but because of the w... | The first line of the input data contains numbers *n* and *m* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*m*<=≤<=50), *n* — amount of lines, and *m* — amount of columns on Bob's sheet. The following *n* lines contain *m* characters each. Character «.» stands for a non-shaded square on the sheet, and «*» — for a shaded square. It is guaranteed that ... | Output the required rectangle of the minimum cost. Study the output data in the sample tests to understand the output format better. | [
"6 7\n.......\n..***..\n..*....\n..***..\n..*....\n..***..\n",
"3 3\n***\n*.*\n***\n"
] | [
"***\n*..\n***\n*..\n***\n",
"***\n*.*\n***\n"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "6 7\n.......\n..***..\n..*....\n..***..\n..*....\n..***..",
"output": "***\n*..\n***\n*..\n***"
},
{
"input": "3 3\n***\n*.*\n***",
"output": "***\n*.*\n***"
},
{
"input": "1 1\n*",
"output": "*"
},
{
"input": "2 1\n*\n*",
"output": "*\n*"
},
{
"input"... | 1,674,731,771 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED | TESTS | 4 | 1,000 | 0 | first_input = [int(x) for x in input().split()]
letter = []
for i in range(0, first_input[0]):
letter.append(list(input()))
dot_column = True
dot_column_reverse = True
dot_row = True
dot_row_reverse = True
while True:
j = 0
while j < first_input[0]:
if letter[j][0] == "*":
do... | Title: Letter
Time Limit: 1 seconds
Memory Limit: 64 megabytes
Problem Description:
A boy Bob likes to draw. Not long ago he bought a rectangular graph (checked) sheet with *n* rows and *m* columns. Bob shaded some of the squares on the sheet. Having seen his masterpiece, he decided to share it with his elder brothe... | ```python
first_input = [int(x) for x in input().split()]
letter = []
for i in range(0, first_input[0]):
letter.append(list(input()))
dot_column = True
dot_column_reverse = True
dot_row = True
dot_row_reverse = True
while True:
j = 0
while j < first_input[0]:
if letter[j][0] == "*"... | 0 |
155 | A | I_love_\%username\% | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"brute force"
] | null | null | Vasya adores sport programming. He can't write programs but he loves to watch the contests' progress. Vasya even has a favorite coder and Vasya pays special attention to him.
One day Vasya decided to collect the results of all contests where his favorite coder participated and track the progress of his coolness. For e... | The first line contains the single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000) — the number of contests where the coder participated.
The next line contains *n* space-separated non-negative integer numbers — they are the points which the coder has earned. The points are given in the chronological order. All points do not exceed ... | Print the single number — the number of amazing performances the coder has had during his whole history of participating in the contests. | [
"5\n100 50 200 150 200\n",
"10\n4664 6496 5814 7010 5762 5736 6944 4850 3698 7242\n"
] | [
"2\n",
"4\n"
] | In the first sample the performances number 2 and 3 are amazing.
In the second sample the performances number 2, 4, 9 and 10 are amazing. | 500 | [
{
"input": "5\n100 50 200 150 200",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "10\n4664 6496 5814 7010 5762 5736 6944 4850 3698 7242",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "1\n6",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "2\n2 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "5\n100 36 53 7 81",
"output": "2"
... | 1,688,078,740 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 3 | 62 | 0 | #!/usr/bin/env python3
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
"""
Created on Thu Jun 29 16:28:00 2023
@author: yesenia
"""
n = int(input())
lista =[int(i) for i in input().split(" ")]
r = 0
for i in range(0,len(lista)-1):
if lista[i+1] > lista[i]:
r +=1
print(r) | Title: I_love_\%username\%
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Vasya adores sport programming. He can't write programs but he loves to watch the contests' progress. Vasya even has a favorite coder and Vasya pays special attention to him.
One day Vasya decided to collect the re... | ```python
#!/usr/bin/env python3
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
"""
Created on Thu Jun 29 16:28:00 2023
@author: yesenia
"""
n = int(input())
lista =[int(i) for i in input().split(" ")]
r = 0
for i in range(0,len(lista)-1):
if lista[i+1] > lista[i]:
r +=1
print(r)
``` | 0 | |
659 | A | Round House | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"implementation",
"math"
] | null | null | Vasya lives in a round building, whose entrances are numbered sequentially by integers from 1 to *n*. Entrance *n* and entrance 1 are adjacent.
Today Vasya got bored and decided to take a walk in the yard. Vasya lives in entrance *a* and he decided that during his walk he will move around the house *b* entrances in th... | The single line of the input contains three space-separated integers *n*, *a* and *b* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100,<=1<=≤<=*a*<=≤<=*n*,<=<=-<=100<=≤<=*b*<=≤<=100) — the number of entrances at Vasya's place, the number of his entrance and the length of his walk, respectively. | Print a single integer *k* (1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=*n*) — the number of the entrance where Vasya will be at the end of his walk. | [
"6 2 -5\n",
"5 1 3\n",
"3 2 7\n"
] | [
"3\n",
"4\n",
"3\n"
] | The first example is illustrated by the picture in the statements. | 500 | [
{
"input": "6 2 -5",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "5 1 3",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "3 2 7",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "1 1 0",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "1 1 -1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "1 1 1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "100 ... | 1,697,839,325 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 3 | 31 | 0 | a,b,c=map(int,input().split())
if c>0 :
n=b+c
while n>a:
n=n-a
print(n)
elif c<0:
if b+c>0 :
print(b+C)
else :
print(a-(-c-b))
| Title: Round House
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Vasya lives in a round building, whose entrances are numbered sequentially by integers from 1 to *n*. Entrance *n* and entrance 1 are adjacent.
Today Vasya got bored and decided to take a walk in the yard. Vasya lives in e... | ```python
a,b,c=map(int,input().split())
if c>0 :
n=b+c
while n>a:
n=n-a
print(n)
elif c<0:
if b+c>0 :
print(b+C)
else :
print(a-(-c-b))
``` | 0 | |
16 | C | Monitor | PROGRAMMING | 1,800 | [
"binary search",
"number theory"
] | C. Monitor | 0 | 64 | Reca company makes monitors, the most popular of their models is AB999 with the screen size *a*<=×<=*b* centimeters. Because of some production peculiarities a screen parameters are integer numbers. Recently the screen sides ratio *x*:<=*y* became popular with users. That's why the company wants to reduce monitor AB999... | The first line of the input contains 4 integers — *a*, *b*, *x* and *y* (1<=≤<=*a*,<=*b*,<=*x*,<=*y*<=≤<=2·109). | If the answer exists, output 2 positive integers — screen parameters of the reduced size model. Output 0 0 otherwise. | [
"800 600 4 3\n",
"1920 1200 16 9\n",
"1 1 1 2\n"
] | [
"800 600\n",
"1920 1080\n",
"0 0\n"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "800 600 4 3",
"output": "800 600"
},
{
"input": "1920 1200 16 9",
"output": "1920 1080"
},
{
"input": "1 1 1 2",
"output": "0 0"
},
{
"input": "1002105126 227379125 179460772 1295256518",
"output": "0 0"
},
{
"input": "625166755 843062051 1463070160 19... | 1,647,278,891 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | OK | TESTS | 39 | 77 | 0 | from math import gcd
a,b,x,y=map(int,input().split())
g=x*y//gcd(x,y)
OK=0
NG=a*b+1
for tests in range(100):
#print(OK,NG)
mid=(OK+NG)/2
if mid/y<=a and mid/x<=b:
OK=mid
else:
NG=mid
OK=int(OK)
ANS=OK//g*g
print(ANS//y,ANS//x)
| Title: Monitor
Time Limit: 0 seconds
Memory Limit: 64 megabytes
Problem Description:
Reca company makes monitors, the most popular of their models is AB999 with the screen size *a*<=×<=*b* centimeters. Because of some production peculiarities a screen parameters are integer numbers. Recently the screen sides ratio *... | ```python
from math import gcd
a,b,x,y=map(int,input().split())
g=x*y//gcd(x,y)
OK=0
NG=a*b+1
for tests in range(100):
#print(OK,NG)
mid=(OK+NG)/2
if mid/y<=a and mid/x<=b:
OK=mid
else:
NG=mid
OK=int(OK)
ANS=OK//g*g
print(ANS//y,ANS//x)
``` | 3 |
876 | A | Trip For Meal | PROGRAMMING | 900 | [
"math"
] | null | null | Winnie-the-Pooh likes honey very much! That is why he decided to visit his friends. Winnie has got three best friends: Rabbit, Owl and Eeyore, each of them lives in his own house. There are winding paths between each pair of houses. The length of a path between Rabbit's and Owl's houses is *a* meters, between Rabbit's ... | First line contains an integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — number of visits.
Second line contains an integer *a* (1<=≤<=*a*<=≤<=100) — distance between Rabbit's and Owl's houses.
Third line contains an integer *b* (1<=≤<=*b*<=≤<=100) — distance between Rabbit's and Eeyore's houses.
Fourth line contains an integer *c* ... | Output one number — minimum distance in meters Winnie must go through to have a meal *n* times. | [
"3\n2\n3\n1\n",
"1\n2\n3\n5\n"
] | [
"3\n",
"0\n"
] | In the first test case the optimal path for Winnie is the following: first have a meal in Rabbit's house, then in Owl's house, then in Eeyore's house. Thus he will pass the distance 2 + 1 = 3.
In the second test case Winnie has a meal in Rabbit's house and that is for him. So he doesn't have to walk anywhere at all. | 500 | [
{
"input": "3\n2\n3\n1",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "1\n2\n3\n5",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "10\n1\n8\n3",
"output": "9"
},
{
"input": "7\n10\n5\n6",
"output": "30"
},
{
"input": "9\n9\n7\n5",
"output": "42"
},
{
"input": "9\n37\n85\n76",
"outpu... | 1,624,281,192 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 48 | 77 | 0 | n=int(input())
a=int(input())
b=int(input())
c=int(input())
if n<2:
print(0)
else:
n-=1
if a<b:
s=a
n-=1
if c<a:
print(s+(c*n))
else:
print(s+(a*n))
else:
s=b
n-=1
if c<b:
print(s+(c*n))
... | Title: Trip For Meal
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Winnie-the-Pooh likes honey very much! That is why he decided to visit his friends. Winnie has got three best friends: Rabbit, Owl and Eeyore, each of them lives in his own house. There are winding paths between each pair... | ```python
n=int(input())
a=int(input())
b=int(input())
c=int(input())
if n<2:
print(0)
else:
n-=1
if a<b:
s=a
n-=1
if c<a:
print(s+(c*n))
else:
print(s+(a*n))
else:
s=b
n-=1
if c<b:
print(s+(c*... | 3 | |
235 | A | LCM Challenge | PROGRAMMING | 1,600 | [
"number theory"
] | null | null | Some days ago, I learned the concept of LCM (least common multiple). I've played with it for several times and I want to make a big number with it.
But I also don't want to use many numbers, so I'll choose three positive integers (they don't have to be distinct) which are not greater than *n*. Can you help me to find ... | The first line contains an integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=106) — the *n* mentioned in the statement. | Print a single integer — the maximum possible LCM of three not necessarily distinct positive integers that are not greater than *n*. | [
"9\n",
"7\n"
] | [
"504\n",
"210\n"
] | The least common multiple of some positive integers is the least positive integer which is multiple for each of them.
The result may become very large, 32-bit integer won't be enough. So using 64-bit integers is recommended.
For the last example, we can chose numbers 7, 6, 5 and the LCM of them is 7·6·5 = 210. It is ... | 500 | [
{
"input": "9",
"output": "504"
},
{
"input": "7",
"output": "210"
},
{
"input": "1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "5",
"output": "60"
},
{
"input": "6",
"output": "60"
},
{
"input": "33",
"output": "32736"
},
{
"input": "21",
"output": ... | 1,592,804,176 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | RUNTIME_ERROR | TESTS | 0 | 434 | 2,048,000 | import numpy as np
from math import gcd
def ans(n):
if n%2 != 0:
return np.uint64(n*(n-1)*(n-2))
else:
if gcd(n, n-3) == 1:
return np.uint64(n*(n-1)*(n-3))
else:
return np.unint64((n-1)*(n-2)*(n-3))
n = int(input())
if n == 0:
print(1)
elif n == 1:
prin... | Title: LCM Challenge
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Some days ago, I learned the concept of LCM (least common multiple). I've played with it for several times and I want to make a big number with it.
But I also don't want to use many numbers, so I'll choose three positive... | ```python
import numpy as np
from math import gcd
def ans(n):
if n%2 != 0:
return np.uint64(n*(n-1)*(n-2))
else:
if gcd(n, n-3) == 1:
return np.uint64(n*(n-1)*(n-3))
else:
return np.unint64((n-1)*(n-2)*(n-3))
n = int(input())
if n == 0:
print(1)
elif n == 1... | -1 | |
770 | A | New Password | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"*special",
"implementation"
] | null | null | Innokentiy decides to change the password in the social net "Contact!", but he is too lazy to invent a new password by himself. That is why he needs your help.
Innokentiy decides that new password should satisfy the following conditions:
- the length of the password must be equal to *n*, - the password should cons... | The first line contains two positive integers *n* and *k* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100, 2<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=*min*(*n*,<=26)) — the length of the password and the number of distinct symbols in it.
Pay attention that a desired new password always exists. | Print any password which satisfies all conditions given by Innokentiy. | [
"4 3\n",
"6 6\n",
"5 2\n"
] | [
"java\n",
"python\n",
"phphp\n"
] | In the first test there is one of the appropriate new passwords — java, because its length is equal to 4 and 3 distinct lowercase letters a, j and v are used in it.
In the second test there is one of the appropriate new passwords — python, because its length is equal to 6 and it consists of 6 distinct lowercase letter... | 500 | [
{
"input": "4 3",
"output": "abca"
},
{
"input": "6 6",
"output": "abcdef"
},
{
"input": "5 2",
"output": "ababa"
},
{
"input": "3 2",
"output": "aba"
},
{
"input": "10 2",
"output": "ababababab"
},
{
"input": "26 13",
"output": "abcdefghijklmabcde... | 1,584,731,226 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 92 | 0 | n, k = map(int, input().split())
seq = [chr(97+i) for i in range(k)]
p = -1
for i in range(n):
p = p+1 if p < k-1 else 0
print(seq[p], end=' ')
print()
| Title: New Password
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Innokentiy decides to change the password in the social net "Contact!", but he is too lazy to invent a new password by himself. That is why he needs your help.
Innokentiy decides that new password should satisfy the foll... | ```python
n, k = map(int, input().split())
seq = [chr(97+i) for i in range(k)]
p = -1
for i in range(n):
p = p+1 if p < k-1 else 0
print(seq[p], end=' ')
print()
``` | 0 | |
379 | A | New Year Candles | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Vasily the Programmer loves romance, so this year he decided to illuminate his room with candles.
Vasily has *a* candles.When Vasily lights up a new candle, it first burns for an hour and then it goes out. Vasily is smart, so he can make *b* went out candles into a new candle. As a result, this new candle can be used ... | The single line contains two integers, *a* and *b* (1<=≤<=*a*<=≤<=1000; 2<=≤<=*b*<=≤<=1000). | Print a single integer — the number of hours Vasily can light up the room for. | [
"4 2\n",
"6 3\n"
] | [
"7\n",
"8\n"
] | Consider the first sample. For the first four hours Vasily lights up new candles, then he uses four burned out candles to make two new ones and lights them up. When these candles go out (stop burning), Vasily can make another candle. Overall, Vasily can light up the room for 7 hours. | 500 | [
{
"input": "4 2",
"output": "7"
},
{
"input": "6 3",
"output": "8"
},
{
"input": "1000 1000",
"output": "1001"
},
{
"input": "123 5",
"output": "153"
},
{
"input": "1000 2",
"output": "1999"
},
{
"input": "1 2",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": ... | 1,673,734,239 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 32 | 46 | 0 | a, b = map(int, input().split())
sum = a
while a >= b:
sum += a // b
a = (a // b) + (a % b)
print(sum)
| Title: New Year Candles
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Vasily the Programmer loves romance, so this year he decided to illuminate his room with candles.
Vasily has *a* candles.When Vasily lights up a new candle, it first burns for an hour and then it goes out. Vasily is s... | ```python
a, b = map(int, input().split())
sum = a
while a >= b:
sum += a // b
a = (a // b) + (a % b)
print(sum)
``` | 3 | |
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... | 1,621,673,963 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 49 | 264 | 8,192,000 | n=int(input())
l=list(map(int,input().split()))
i=0
while i<n-1:
print(l[i]+l[i+1],end=" ")
i+=1
print(l[n-1])
| 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())
l=list(map(int,input().split()))
i=0
while i<n-1:
print(l[i]+l[i+1],end=" ")
i+=1
print(l[n-1])
``` | 3 | |
716 | A | Crazy Computer | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | ZS the Coder is coding on a crazy computer. If you don't type in a word for a *c* consecutive seconds, everything you typed disappear!
More formally, if you typed a word at second *a* and then the next word at second *b*, then if *b*<=-<=*a*<=≤<=*c*, just the new word is appended to other words on the screen. If *b*<... | The first line contains two integers *n* and *c* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100<=000,<=1<=≤<=*c*<=≤<=109) — the number of words ZS the Coder typed and the crazy computer delay respectively.
The next line contains *n* integers *t*1,<=*t*2,<=...,<=*t**n* (1<=≤<=*t*1<=<<=*t*2<=<<=...<=<<=*t**n*<=≤<=109), where *t**i* denote... | Print a single positive integer, the number of words that remain on the screen after all *n* words was typed, in other words, at the second *t**n*. | [
"6 5\n1 3 8 14 19 20\n",
"6 1\n1 3 5 7 9 10\n"
] | [
"3",
"2"
] | The first sample is already explained in the problem statement.
For the second sample, after typing the first word at the second 1, it disappears because the next word is typed at the second 3 and 3 - 1 > 1. Similarly, only 1 word will remain at the second 9. Then, a word is typed at the second 10, so there will be... | 500 | [
{
"input": "6 5\n1 3 8 14 19 20",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "6 1\n1 3 5 7 9 10",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "1 1\n1000000000",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "5 5\n1 7 12 13 14",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "2 1000000000\n1 1000000000",
"output": "2"
},
{
... | 1,618,809,206 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3 | OK | TESTS | 81 | 202 | 10,752,000 | # A. Crazy Computer
n,c=map(int,input().split())
t=list(map(int,input().split()))
a=1
for i in range(n-1):
if t[i+1]-t[i]<=c:
a+=1
else:
a=1
print(a)
| Title: Crazy Computer
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
ZS the Coder is coding on a crazy computer. If you don't type in a word for a *c* consecutive seconds, everything you typed disappear!
More formally, if you typed a word at second *a* and then the next word at second *... | ```python
# A. Crazy Computer
n,c=map(int,input().split())
t=list(map(int,input().split()))
a=1
for i in range(n-1):
if t[i+1]-t[i]<=c:
a+=1
else:
a=1
print(a)
``` | 3 | |
909 | A | Generate Login | PROGRAMMING | 1,000 | [
"brute force",
"greedy",
"sortings"
] | null | null | The preferred way to generate user login in Polygon is to concatenate a prefix of the user's first name and a prefix of their last name, in that order. Each prefix must be non-empty, and any of the prefixes can be the full name. Typically there are multiple possible logins for each person.
You are given the first and ... | The input consists of a single line containing two space-separated strings: the first and the last names. Each character of each string is a lowercase English letter. The length of each string is between 1 and 10, inclusive. | Output a single string — alphabetically earliest possible login formed from these names. The output should be given in lowercase as well. | [
"harry potter\n",
"tom riddle\n"
] | [
"hap\n",
"tomr\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "harry potter",
"output": "hap"
},
{
"input": "tom riddle",
"output": "tomr"
},
{
"input": "a qdpinbmcrf",
"output": "aq"
},
{
"input": "wixjzniiub ssdfodfgap",
"output": "wis"
},
{
"input": "z z",
"output": "zz"
},
{
"input": "ertuyivhfg v"... | 1,514,393,342 | 842 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 64 | 62 | 5,632,000 | s1, s2 = map(str, input().split())
s3 = s1+' '
arr = [s1[0]]
i = 1
while s3[i] < s2[0] and i<len(s1):
arr.append(s3[i])
i += 1
arr.append(s2[0])
print(''.join(map(str, arr)))
| Title: Generate Login
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
The preferred way to generate user login in Polygon is to concatenate a prefix of the user's first name and a prefix of their last name, in that order. Each prefix must be non-empty, and any of the prefixes can be the fu... | ```python
s1, s2 = map(str, input().split())
s3 = s1+' '
arr = [s1[0]]
i = 1
while s3[i] < s2[0] and i<len(s1):
arr.append(s3[i])
i += 1
arr.append(s2[0])
print(''.join(map(str, arr)))
``` | 3 | |
799 | A | Carrot Cakes | PROGRAMMING | 1,100 | [
"brute force",
"implementation"
] | null | null | In some game by Playrix it takes *t* minutes for an oven to bake *k* carrot cakes, all cakes are ready at the same moment *t* minutes after they started baking. Arkady needs at least *n* cakes to complete a task, but he currently don't have any. However, he has infinitely many ingredients and one oven. Moreover, Arkady... | The only line contains four integers *n*, *t*, *k*, *d* (1<=≤<=*n*,<=*t*,<=*k*,<=*d*<=≤<=1<=000) — the number of cakes needed, the time needed for one oven to bake *k* cakes, the number of cakes baked at the same time, the time needed to build the second oven. | If it is reasonable to build the second oven, print "YES". Otherwise print "NO". | [
"8 6 4 5\n",
"8 6 4 6\n",
"10 3 11 4\n",
"4 2 1 4\n"
] | [
"YES\n",
"NO\n",
"NO\n",
"YES\n"
] | In the first example it is possible to get 8 cakes in 12 minutes using one oven. The second oven can be built in 5 minutes, so after 6 minutes the first oven bakes 4 cakes, the second oven bakes 4 more ovens after 11 minutes. Thus, it is reasonable to build the second oven.
In the second example it doesn't matter whe... | 500 | [
{
"input": "8 6 4 5",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "8 6 4 6",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "10 3 11 4",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "4 2 1 4",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "28 17 16 26",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "60 69 9 438",
"output": "NO"... | 1,605,902,026 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 93 | 109 | 0 | from math import ceil
ip = list(map(int,input().split()))
one= 0
two = ip[3] + ip[1]
if ip[0]<=ip[2]:
print("NO")
else:
one = ceil(ip[0]/ip[2]) *ip[1]
if two<one:
print("YES")
else:
print("NO") | Title: Carrot Cakes
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
In some game by Playrix it takes *t* minutes for an oven to bake *k* carrot cakes, all cakes are ready at the same moment *t* minutes after they started baking. Arkady needs at least *n* cakes to complete a task, but he cu... | ```python
from math import ceil
ip = list(map(int,input().split()))
one= 0
two = ip[3] + ip[1]
if ip[0]<=ip[2]:
print("NO")
else:
one = ceil(ip[0]/ip[2]) *ip[1]
if two<one:
print("YES")
else:
print("NO")
``` | 3 | |
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 ... | 1,676,282,793 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 69 | 62 | 0 | n=int(input())
mis,cri,mr,cr=0,0,0,0
for i in range(n):
li=[int(i) for i in input().split()]
mis=mis+li[0]
cri=cri+li[1]
if mis>cri:
mr+=1
if cri>mis:
cr+=1
mis=0
cri=0
if mr>cr:
print("Mishka")
if cr>mr:
print("Chris")
if mr==cr:
print("Friendshi... | 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())
mis,cri,mr,cr=0,0,0,0
for i in range(n):
li=[int(i) for i in input().split()]
mis=mis+li[0]
cri=cri+li[1]
if mis>cri:
mr+=1
if cri>mis:
cr+=1
mis=0
cri=0
if mr>cr:
print("Mishka")
if cr>mr:
print("Chris")
if mr==cr:
print(... | 3 | |
432 | A | Choosing Teams | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"greedy",
"implementation",
"sortings"
] | null | null | The Saratov State University Olympiad Programmers Training Center (SSU OPTC) has *n* students. For each student you know the number of times he/she has participated in the ACM ICPC world programming championship. According to the ACM ICPC rules, each person can participate in the world championship at most 5 times.
Th... | The first line contains two integers, *n* and *k* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=2000; 1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=5). The next line contains *n* integers: *y*1,<=*y*2,<=...,<=*y**n* (0<=≤<=*y**i*<=≤<=5), where *y**i* shows the number of times the *i*-th person participated in the ACM ICPC world championship. | Print a single number — the answer to the problem. | [
"5 2\n0 4 5 1 0\n",
"6 4\n0 1 2 3 4 5\n",
"6 5\n0 0 0 0 0 0\n"
] | [
"1\n",
"0\n",
"2\n"
] | In the first sample only one team could be made: the first, the fourth and the fifth participants.
In the second sample no teams could be created.
In the third sample two teams could be created. Any partition into two teams fits. | 500 | [
{
"input": "5 2\n0 4 5 1 0",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "6 4\n0 1 2 3 4 5",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "6 5\n0 0 0 0 0 0",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "3 4\n0 1 0",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "3 4\n0 2 0",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "6 5\n0 0 0 0 0... | 1,690,714,172 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 46 | 0 | def max_teams(n, k, participants):
qualified_count = sum(1 for p in participants if p >= k)
max_teams = qualified_count // 3
return max_teams
# Input
n, k = map(int, input().split())
participants = list(map(int, input().split()))
# Output
print(max_teams(n, k, participants))
| Title: Choosing Teams
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
The Saratov State University Olympiad Programmers Training Center (SSU OPTC) has *n* students. For each student you know the number of times he/she has participated in the ACM ICPC world programming championship. Accordi... | ```python
def max_teams(n, k, participants):
qualified_count = sum(1 for p in participants if p >= k)
max_teams = qualified_count // 3
return max_teams
# Input
n, k = map(int, input().split())
participants = list(map(int, input().split()))
# Output
print(max_teams(n, k, participants))
``` | 0 | |
645 | A | Amity Assessment | PROGRAMMING | 1,200 | [
"brute force",
"constructive algorithms",
"implementation"
] | null | null | Bessie the cow and her best friend Elsie each received a sliding puzzle on Pi Day. Their puzzles consist of a 2<=×<=2 grid and three tiles labeled 'A', 'B', and 'C'. The three tiles sit on top of the grid, leaving one grid cell empty. To make a move, Bessie or Elsie can slide a tile adjacent to the empty cell into the ... | The first two lines of the input consist of a 2<=×<=2 grid describing the initial configuration of Bessie's puzzle. The next two lines contain a 2<=×<=2 grid describing the initial configuration of Elsie's puzzle. The positions of the tiles are labeled 'A', 'B', and 'C', while the empty cell is labeled 'X'. It's guaran... | Output "YES"(without quotes) if the puzzles can reach the same configuration (and Bessie and Elsie are truly BFFLs). Otherwise, print "NO" (without quotes). | [
"AB\nXC\nXB\nAC\n",
"AB\nXC\nAC\nBX\n"
] | [
"YES\n",
"NO\n"
] | The solution to the first sample is described by the image. All Bessie needs to do is slide her 'A' tile down.
In the second sample, the two puzzles can never be in the same configuration. Perhaps Bessie and Elsie are not meant to be friends after all... | 500 | [
{
"input": "AB\nXC\nXB\nAC",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "AB\nXC\nAC\nBX",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "XC\nBA\nCB\nAX",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "AB\nXC\nAX\nCB",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "CB\nAX\nXA\nBC",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "BC... | 1,535,255,978 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 102 | 109 | 0 | def roll(x):
x=x.replace('X','')
while x[0]!='A':x=x[-1]+x[:2]
return(x)
a,b=input()+input()[::-1],input()+input()[::-1];print(['NO','YES'][roll(a)==roll(b)])
# Made By Mostafa_Khaled | Title: Amity Assessment
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Bessie the cow and her best friend Elsie each received a sliding puzzle on Pi Day. Their puzzles consist of a 2<=×<=2 grid and three tiles labeled 'A', 'B', and 'C'. The three tiles sit on top of the grid, leaving one ... | ```python
def roll(x):
x=x.replace('X','')
while x[0]!='A':x=x[-1]+x[:2]
return(x)
a,b=input()+input()[::-1],input()+input()[::-1];print(['NO','YES'][roll(a)==roll(b)])
# Made By Mostafa_Khaled
``` | 3 | |
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... | 1,696,610,835 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 47 | 92 | 0 | n = int(input())
# Convert the integer to a string to easily manipulate its digits
n_str = str(n)
# If the account balance is positive or zero, keep it as is
if n >= 0:
print(n)
else:
# Remove the last digit
without_last = int(n_str[:-1])
# Remove the second-to-last digit
without... | 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())
# Convert the integer to a string to easily manipulate its digits
n_str = str(n)
# If the account balance is positive or zero, keep it as is
if n >= 0:
print(n)
else:
# Remove the last digit
without_last = int(n_str[:-1])
# Remove the second-to-last digit
... | 3 | |
0 | none | none | none | 0 | [
"none"
] | null | null | В Берляндском государственном университете локальная сеть между серверами не всегда работает без ошибок. При передаче двух одинаковых сообщений подряд возможна ошибка, в результате которой эти два сообщения сливаются в одно. При таком слиянии конец первого сообщения совмещается с началом второго. Конечно, совмещение мо... | В единственной строке выходных данных следует непустая строка *t*, состоящая из строчных букв латинского алфавита. Длина строки *t* не превосходит 100 символов. | Если сообщение *t* не может содержать ошибки, выведите «NO» (без кавычек) в единственную строку выходных данных.
В противном случае в первой строке выведите «YES» (без кавычек), а в следующей строке выведите строку *s* — возможное сообщение, которое могло привести к ошибке. Если возможных ответов несколько, разрешаетс... | [
"abrakadabrabrakadabra\n",
"acacacaca\n",
"abcabc\n",
"abababab\n",
"tatbt\n"
] | [
"YES\nabrakadabra\n",
"YES\nacaca\n",
"NO\n",
"YES\nababab\n",
"NO\n"
] | Во втором примере подходящим ответом также является строка acacaca. | 0 | [
{
"input": "abrakadabrabrakadabra",
"output": "YES\nabrakadabra"
},
{
"input": "acacacaca",
"output": "YES\nacaca"
},
{
"input": "abcabc",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "abababab",
"output": "YES\nababab"
},
{
"input": "tatbt",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"inpu... | 1,458,570,813 | 2,013 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | PRETESTS | 3 | 46 | 4,608,000 | data = input()
st = data[0]
index = 1
while data.count(st) >= 2:
index += 1
st = data[:index]
if st == data[len(data) - len(st):]:
print('YES')
print(st)
else:
print('NO') | Title: none
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
В Берляндском государственном университете локальная сеть между серверами не всегда работает без ошибок. При передаче двух одинаковых сообщений подряд возможна ошибка, в результате которой эти два сообщения сливаются в одно. При т... | ```python
data = input()
st = data[0]
index = 1
while data.count(st) >= 2:
index += 1
st = data[:index]
if st == data[len(data) - len(st):]:
print('YES')
print(st)
else:
print('NO')
``` | 0 | |
50 | A | Domino piling | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"greedy",
"math"
] | A. Domino piling | 2 | 256 | You are given a rectangular board of *M*<=×<=*N* squares. Also you are given an unlimited number of standard domino pieces of 2<=×<=1 squares. You are allowed to rotate the pieces. You are asked to place as many dominoes as possible on the board so as to meet the following conditions:
1. Each domino completely covers ... | In a single line you are given two integers *M* and *N* — board sizes in squares (1<=≤<=*M*<=≤<=*N*<=≤<=16). | Output one number — the maximal number of dominoes, which can be placed. | [
"2 4\n",
"3 3\n"
] | [
"4\n",
"4\n"
] | none | 500 | [
{
"input": "2 4",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "3 3",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "1 5",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "1 6",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "1 15",
"output": "7"
},
{
"input": "1 16",
"output": "8"
},
{
"input": "2 5",
"outpu... | 1,609,333,563 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 35 | 218 | 0 | ##n=int(input( ))
##a=0
##cek=True
##if(n>3):
## for i in range(2,n):
## if(n%i==0):
## if(i%2==0):
## cek=True
## a=a+n-i
## break
## else:
## cek=False
##else:
## cek=False
##if(a%2!=0):
## cek=False
##if cek:
#... | Title: Domino piling
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
You are given a rectangular board of *M*<=×<=*N* squares. Also you are given an unlimited number of standard domino pieces of 2<=×<=1 squares. You are allowed to rotate the pieces. You are asked to place as many dominoes as p... | ```python
##n=int(input( ))
##a=0
##cek=True
##if(n>3):
## for i in range(2,n):
## if(n%i==0):
## if(i%2==0):
## cek=True
## a=a+n-i
## break
## else:
## cek=False
##else:
## cek=False
##if(a%2!=0):
## cek=False
##... | 3.9455 |
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... | 1,600,084,476 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 2 | 93 | 0 | a= input().lower()
if a=="helo":
print("NO")
else:
the_list=[]
the_list.append(a[0])
x=1
while x< len(a):
if a[x]!=the_list[-1]:
the_list.append(a[x])
x+=1
else:
x+=1
y=""
for i in the_list :
y=y+i
... | 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
a= input().lower()
if a=="helo":
print("NO")
else:
the_list=[]
the_list.append(a[0])
x=1
while x< len(a):
if a[x]!=the_list[-1]:
the_list.append(a[x])
x+=1
else:
x+=1
y=""
for i in the_list :
... | 0 |
807 | A | Is it rated? | PROGRAMMING | 900 | [
"implementation",
"sortings"
] | null | null | Is it rated?
Here it is. The Ultimate Question of Competitive Programming, Codeforces, and Everything. And you are here to answer it.
Another Codeforces round has been conducted. No two participants have the same number of points. For each participant, from the top to the bottom of the standings, their rating before ... | The first line contains a single integer *n* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=1000) — the number of round participants.
Each of the next *n* lines contains two integers *a**i* and *b**i* (1<=≤<=*a**i*,<=*b**i*<=≤<=4126) — the rating of the *i*-th participant before and after the round, respectively. The participants are listed in order... | If the round is rated for sure, print "rated". If the round is unrated for sure, print "unrated". If it's impossible to determine whether the round is rated or not, print "maybe". | [
"6\n3060 3060\n2194 2194\n2876 2903\n2624 2624\n3007 2991\n2884 2884\n",
"4\n1500 1500\n1300 1300\n1200 1200\n1400 1400\n",
"5\n3123 3123\n2777 2777\n2246 2246\n2246 2246\n1699 1699\n"
] | [
"rated\n",
"unrated\n",
"maybe\n"
] | In the first example, the ratings of the participants in the third and fifth places have changed, therefore, the round was rated.
In the second example, no one's rating has changed, but the participant in the second place has lower rating than the participant in the fourth place. Therefore, if the round was rated, som... | 500 | [
{
"input": "6\n3060 3060\n2194 2194\n2876 2903\n2624 2624\n3007 2991\n2884 2884",
"output": "rated"
},
{
"input": "4\n1500 1500\n1300 1300\n1200 1200\n1400 1400",
"output": "unrated"
},
{
"input": "5\n3123 3123\n2777 2777\n2246 2246\n2246 2246\n1699 1699",
"output": "maybe"
},
{
... | 1,619,516,290 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 150 | 186 | 0 | n = int(input())
res=[]
for i in range(n):
res.append(list(map(int, input().split())))
for r in res:
if r[0] != r[1]:
print("rated")
exit()
for i in range(n):
for j in range(i):
if res[i][0] > res[j][0]:
print("unrated")
exit()
print("maybe"... | Title: Is it rated?
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Is it rated?
Here it is. The Ultimate Question of Competitive Programming, Codeforces, and Everything. And you are here to answer it.
Another Codeforces round has been conducted. No two participants have the same number ... | ```python
n = int(input())
res=[]
for i in range(n):
res.append(list(map(int, input().split())))
for r in res:
if r[0] != r[1]:
print("rated")
exit()
for i in range(n):
for j in range(i):
if res[i][0] > res[j][0]:
print("unrated")
exit()
pri... | 3 | |
797 | A | k-Factorization | PROGRAMMING | 1,100 | [
"implementation",
"math",
"number theory"
] | null | null | Given a positive integer *n*, find *k* integers (not necessary distinct) such that all these integers are strictly greater than 1, and their product is equal to *n*. | The first line contains two integers *n* and *k* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100000, 1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=20). | If it's impossible to find the representation of *n* as a product of *k* numbers, print -1.
Otherwise, print *k* integers in any order. Their product must be equal to *n*. If there are multiple answers, print any of them. | [
"100000 2\n",
"100000 20\n",
"1024 5\n"
] | [
"2 50000 \n",
"-1\n",
"2 64 2 2 2 \n"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "100000 2",
"output": "2 50000 "
},
{
"input": "100000 20",
"output": "-1"
},
{
"input": "1024 5",
"output": "2 64 2 2 2 "
},
{
"input": "100000 10",
"output": "2 2 2 2 2 5 5 5 5 5 "
},
{
"input": "99999 3",
"output": "3 813 41 "
},
{
"input... | 1,592,732,551 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 166 | 124 | 0 | #Name:S.M.MILOY
#Department Of CSE,BRUR
#a,b=list(map(int,input().split()))
#l=list(map(int,input().split(' ')))
#n=int(z())
z=input
#for i in range(n):
n,k=map(int,z().split())
l=[]
for i in range(2,n+1):
if n%i==0:
while n%i==0 and len(l)<(k-1):
n//=i
l.append(i)
if n>1:
l.append(n)
if len(l)==k:
print(*l... | Title: k-Factorization
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Given a positive integer *n*, find *k* integers (not necessary distinct) such that all these integers are strictly greater than 1, and their product is equal to *n*.
Input Specification:
The first line contains two int... | ```python
#Name:S.M.MILOY
#Department Of CSE,BRUR
#a,b=list(map(int,input().split()))
#l=list(map(int,input().split(' ')))
#n=int(z())
z=input
#for i in range(n):
n,k=map(int,z().split())
l=[]
for i in range(2,n+1):
if n%i==0:
while n%i==0 and len(l)<(k-1):
n//=i
l.append(i)
if n>1:
l.append(n)
if len(l)==k:... | 3 | |
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... | 1,658,926,991 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 31 | 0 | a = input()
x = ['h','e','l','o']
count = 0
word = 'hello'
s = ""
for i in a:
if i =='l' and count<2:
s+=i
count+=1
if i not in s and i in x:
s+=i
if s == word:
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
a = input()
x = ['h','e','l','o']
count = 0
word = 'hello'
s = ""
for i in a:
if i =='l' and count<2:
s+=i
count+=1
if i not in s and i in x:
s+=i
if s == word:
print('Yes')
else:
print('NO')
``` | 0 |
25 | A | IQ test | PROGRAMMING | 1,300 | [
"brute force"
] | A. IQ test | 2 | 256 | Bob is preparing to pass IQ test. The most frequent task in this test is to find out which one of the given *n* numbers differs from the others. Bob observed that one number usually differs from the others in evenness. Help Bob — to check his answers, he needs a program that among the given *n* numbers finds one that i... | The first line contains integer *n* (3<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — amount of numbers in the task. The second line contains *n* space-separated natural numbers, not exceeding 100. It is guaranteed, that exactly one of these numbers differs from the others in evenness. | Output index of number that differs from the others in evenness. Numbers are numbered from 1 in the input order. | [
"5\n2 4 7 8 10\n",
"4\n1 2 1 1\n"
] | [
"3\n",
"2\n"
] | none | 0 | [
{
"input": "5\n2 4 7 8 10",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "4\n1 2 1 1",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "3\n1 2 2",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "3\n100 99 100",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "3\n5 3 2",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "4\n43 28 1 91",
"output"... | 1,647,633,638 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 2 | 62 | 0 | _ = input()
nums = [int(x) for x in input().split()]
has_even = False
has_odd = False
for i in range(len(nums)):
num = nums[i]
is_even = (num % 2 == 0)
is_odd = not is_even
if is_even and has_odd:
print(i + 1)
elif is_odd and has_even:
print(i + 1)
else:
has_ev... | Title: IQ test
Time Limit: 2 seconds
Memory Limit: 256 megabytes
Problem Description:
Bob is preparing to pass IQ test. The most frequent task in this test is to find out which one of the given *n* numbers differs from the others. Bob observed that one number usually differs from the others in evenness. Help Bob — t... | ```python
_ = input()
nums = [int(x) for x in input().split()]
has_even = False
has_odd = False
for i in range(len(nums)):
num = nums[i]
is_even = (num % 2 == 0)
is_odd = not is_even
if is_even and has_odd:
print(i + 1)
elif is_odd and has_even:
print(i + 1)
else:
... | 0 |
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"
},
{
"... | 1,569,137,161 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED | TESTS | 26 | 2,000 | 10,240,000 | s = input()
next_array = [0] * (len(s) + 5)
i, j = 0, -1
while i < len(s):
while j >= 0 and s[i] != s[j]:
if j == 0:
j = -1
break
else:
j = next_array[j - 1] + 1
next_array[i] = j
i, j = i + 1, j + 1
cnt = [1] * (len(s) + 5)
for i in range... | 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
s = input()
next_array = [0] * (len(s) + 5)
i, j = 0, -1
while i < len(s):
while j >= 0 and s[i] != s[j]:
if j == 0:
j = -1
break
else:
j = next_array[j - 1] + 1
next_array[i] = j
i, j = i + 1, j + 1
cnt = [1] * (len(s) + 5)
for ... | 0 | |
825 | C | Multi-judge Solving | PROGRAMMING | 1,600 | [
"greedy",
"implementation"
] | null | null | Makes solves problems on Decoforces and lots of other different online judges. Each problem is denoted by its difficulty — a positive integer number. Difficulties are measured the same across all the judges (the problem with difficulty *d* on Decoforces is as hard as the problem with difficulty *d* on any other judge).... | The first line contains two integer numbers *n*, *k* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=103, 1<=≤<=*k*<=≤<=109).
The second line contains *n* space-separated integer numbers *a*1,<=*a*2,<=...,<=*a**n* (1<=≤<=*a**i*<=≤<=109). | Print minimum number of problems Makes should solve on other judges in order to solve all chosen problems on Decoforces. | [
"3 3\n2 1 9\n",
"4 20\n10 3 6 3\n"
] | [
"1\n",
"0\n"
] | In the first example Makes at first solves problems 1 and 2. Then in order to solve the problem with difficulty 9, he should solve problem with difficulty no less than 5. The only available are difficulties 5 and 6 on some other judge. Solving any of these will give Makes opportunity to solve problem 3.
In the second ... | 0 | [
{
"input": "3 3\n2 1 9",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "4 20\n10 3 6 3",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "1 1000000000\n1",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "1 1\n3",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "50 100\n74 55 33 5 83 24 75 59 30 36 13 4 62 28 96 17 6 35 45 53 33 11 37 93 34... | 1,500,222,543 | 5,043 | Python 3 | TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED | TESTS | 5 | 1,000 | 4,608,000 | inp=input()
n=0
k=0
s=[]
for i in range(len(inp)):
if inp[i]==' ':
n=k
k=0
else:
k=k*10+int(inp[i])
inp=input()
kk=0
for i in range(len(inp)):
if inp[i]==' ':
s.append(kk)
kk=0
else:
kk=kk*10+int(inp[i])
s.append(kk)
mx=0
for i in range... | Title: Multi-judge Solving
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Makes solves problems on Decoforces and lots of other different online judges. Each problem is denoted by its difficulty — a positive integer number. Difficulties are measured the same across all the judges (the pro... | ```python
inp=input()
n=0
k=0
s=[]
for i in range(len(inp)):
if inp[i]==' ':
n=k
k=0
else:
k=k*10+int(inp[i])
inp=input()
kk=0
for i in range(len(inp)):
if inp[i]==' ':
s.append(kk)
kk=0
else:
kk=kk*10+int(inp[i])
s.append(kk)
mx=0
for ... | 0 | |
525 | A | Vitaliy and Pie | PROGRAMMING | 1,100 | [
"greedy",
"hashing",
"strings"
] | null | null | After a hard day Vitaly got very hungry and he wants to eat his favorite potato pie. But it's not that simple. Vitaly is in the first room of the house with *n* room located in a line and numbered starting from one from left to right. You can go from the first room to the second room, from the second room to the third ... | The first line of the input contains a positive integer *n* (2<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=105) — the number of rooms in the house.
The second line of the input contains string *s* of length 2·*n*<=-<=2. Let's number the elements of the string from left to right, starting from one.
The odd positions in the given string *s* contain ... | Print the only integer — the minimum number of keys that Vitaly needs to buy to surely get from room one to room *n*. | [
"3\naAbB\n",
"4\naBaCaB\n",
"5\nxYyXzZaZ\n"
] | [
"0\n",
"3\n",
"2\n"
] | none | 250 | [
{
"input": "3\naAbB",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "4\naBaCaB",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "5\nxYyXzZaZ",
"output": "2"
},
{
"input": "26\naAbBcCdDeEfFgGhHiIjJkKlLmMnNoOpPqQrRsStTuUvVwWxXyY",
"output": "0"
},
{
"input": "26\nzAyBxCwDvEuFtGsHrIqJpKoLnMmNlOkPjQiRhSg... | 1,427,402,083 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | TIME_LIMIT_EXCEEDED | TESTS | 7 | 2,000 | 1,331,200 | def getInput() :
n = int(input())
carte = list(input())
return n, carte
def solve(n, carte) :
trousseau = []
passer = 0
for i in range(n-1) :
trousseau.append(carte[2*i])
if carte[2*i+1].lower() in trousseau :
trousseau.remove(carte[2*i+1].lower())
passer += 1
return n-1-passer
(n, carte) = getInpu... | Title: Vitaliy and Pie
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
After a hard day Vitaly got very hungry and he wants to eat his favorite potato pie. But it's not that simple. Vitaly is in the first room of the house with *n* room located in a line and numbered starting from one from... | ```python
def getInput() :
n = int(input())
carte = list(input())
return n, carte
def solve(n, carte) :
trousseau = []
passer = 0
for i in range(n-1) :
trousseau.append(carte[2*i])
if carte[2*i+1].lower() in trousseau :
trousseau.remove(carte[2*i+1].lower())
passer += 1
return n-1-passer
(n, carte)... | 0 | |
599 | A | Patrick and Shopping | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation"
] | null | null | Today Patrick waits for a visit from his friend Spongebob. To prepare for the visit, Patrick needs to buy some goodies in two stores located near his house. There is a *d*1 meter long road between his house and the first shop and a *d*2 meter long road between his house and the second shop. Also, there is a road of len... | The first line of the input contains three integers *d*1, *d*2, *d*3 (1<=≤<=*d*1,<=*d*2,<=*d*3<=≤<=108) — the lengths of the paths.
- *d*1 is the length of the path connecting Patrick's house and the first shop; - *d*2 is the length of the path connecting Patrick's house and the second shop; - *d*3 is the length o... | Print the minimum distance that Patrick will have to walk in order to visit both shops and return to his house. | [
"10 20 30\n",
"1 1 5\n"
] | [
"60\n",
"4\n"
] | The first sample is shown on the picture in the problem statement. One of the optimal routes is: house <img align="middle" class="tex-formula" src="https://espresso.codeforces.com/70a0795f45d32287dba0eb83fc4a3f470c6e5537.png" style="max-width: 100.0%;max-height: 100.0%;"/> first shop <img align="middle" class="tex-form... | 500 | [
{
"input": "10 20 30",
"output": "60"
},
{
"input": "1 1 5",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "100 33 34",
"output": "134"
},
{
"input": "777 777 777",
"output": "2331"
},
{
"input": "2 2 8",
"output": "8"
},
{
"input": "12 34 56",
"output": "92"
},
... | 1,673,870,090 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | WRONG_ANSWER | TESTS | 0 | 46 | 0 | d1,d2,d3 = map(int,input().split())
y = d1*(d2+d3)
z = d3*(d1+d2)
r = d2*(d1+d3)
print(min(y,z,r)) | Title: Patrick and Shopping
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Today Patrick waits for a visit from his friend Spongebob. To prepare for the visit, Patrick needs to buy some goodies in two stores located near his house. There is a *d*1 meter long road between his house and the... | ```python
d1,d2,d3 = map(int,input().split())
y = d1*(d2+d3)
z = d3*(d1+d2)
r = d2*(d1+d3)
print(min(y,z,r))
``` | 0 | |
868 | A | Bark to Unlock | PROGRAMMING | 900 | [
"brute force",
"implementation",
"strings"
] | null | null | As technologies develop, manufacturers are making the process of unlocking a phone as user-friendly as possible. To unlock its new phone, Arkady's pet dog Mu-mu has to bark the password once. The phone represents a password as a string of two lowercase English letters.
Mu-mu's enemy Kashtanka wants to unlock Mu-mu's p... | The first line contains two lowercase English letters — the password on the phone.
The second line contains single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the number of words Kashtanka knows.
The next *n* lines contain two lowercase English letters each, representing the words Kashtanka knows. The words are guaranteed to b... | Print "YES" if Kashtanka can bark several words in a line forming a string containing the password, and "NO" otherwise.
You can print each letter in arbitrary case (upper or lower). | [
"ya\n4\nah\noy\nto\nha\n",
"hp\n2\nht\ntp\n",
"ah\n1\nha\n"
] | [
"YES\n",
"NO\n",
"YES\n"
] | In the first example the password is "ya", and Kashtanka can bark "oy" and then "ah", and then "ha" to form the string "oyahha" which contains the password. So, the answer is "YES".
In the second example Kashtanka can't produce a string containing password as a substring. Note that it can bark "ht" and then "tp" produ... | 250 | [
{
"input": "ya\n4\nah\noy\nto\nha",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "hp\n2\nht\ntp",
"output": "NO"
},
{
"input": "ah\n1\nha",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "bb\n4\nba\nab\naa\nbb",
"output": "YES"
},
{
"input": "bc\n4\nca\nba\nbb\ncc",
"output": "YES"
},
{
... | 1,624,664,530 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | OK | TESTS | 90 | 77 | 0 | ka ,kb = map(str, input())
v = 0
g= 0
for x in range(0, int(input())):
a, b = map(str,input())
if a == kb:
v =1
if a==ka and b == kb:
v = 1; g = 1
if b == ka:
g = 1
if v== 1 and g == 1:
print('YES')
else:
print('NO') | Title: Bark to Unlock
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
As technologies develop, manufacturers are making the process of unlocking a phone as user-friendly as possible. To unlock its new phone, Arkady's pet dog Mu-mu has to bark the password once. The phone represents a passw... | ```python
ka ,kb = map(str, input())
v = 0
g= 0
for x in range(0, int(input())):
a, b = map(str,input())
if a == kb:
v =1
if a==ka and b == kb:
v = 1; g = 1
if b == ka:
g = 1
if v== 1 and g == 1:
print('YES')
else:
print('NO')
``` | 3 | |
581 | A | Vasya the Hipster | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"implementation",
"math"
] | null | null | One day Vasya the Hipster decided to count how many socks he had. It turned out that he had *a* red socks and *b* blue socks.
According to the latest fashion, hipsters should wear the socks of different colors: a red one on the left foot, a blue one on the right foot.
Every day Vasya puts on new socks in the morning ... | The single line of the input contains two positive integers *a* and *b* (1<=≤<=*a*,<=*b*<=≤<=100) — the number of red and blue socks that Vasya's got. | Print two space-separated integers — the maximum number of days when Vasya can wear different socks and the number of days when he can wear the same socks until he either runs out of socks or cannot make a single pair from the socks he's got.
Keep in mind that at the end of the day Vasya throws away the socks that he'... | [
"3 1\n",
"2 3\n",
"7 3\n"
] | [
"1 1\n",
"2 0\n",
"3 2\n"
] | In the first sample Vasya can first put on one pair of different socks, after that he has two red socks left to wear on the second day. | 500 | [
{
"input": "3 1",
"output": "1 1"
},
{
"input": "2 3",
"output": "2 0"
},
{
"input": "7 3",
"output": "3 2"
},
{
"input": "100 100",
"output": "100 0"
},
{
"input": "4 10",
"output": "4 3"
},
{
"input": "6 10",
"output": "6 2"
},
{
"input":... | 1,684,850,839 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | RUNTIME_ERROR | TESTS | 0 | 15 | 0 | c = 0
a,b = map(int,input().split())
q = []
while a >= 2 or b >= 2:
if a and b != 0:
a -= 1
b -= 1
p += 1
elif a == 0 and b >= 2:
b -= 2
c += 1
else:
a -= 2
c += 1
q.append(p)
q.append(c)
print(' '.join(map(str,q))) | Title: Vasya the Hipster
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
One day Vasya the Hipster decided to count how many socks he had. It turned out that he had *a* red socks and *b* blue socks.
According to the latest fashion, hipsters should wear the socks of different colors: a red... | ```python
c = 0
a,b = map(int,input().split())
q = []
while a >= 2 or b >= 2:
if a and b != 0:
a -= 1
b -= 1
p += 1
elif a == 0 and b >= 2:
b -= 2
c += 1
else:
a -= 2
c += 1
q.append(p)
q.append(c)
print(' '.join(map(str,q)))
``` | -1 | |
996 | A | Hit the Lottery | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"dp",
"greedy"
] | null | null | Allen has a LOT of money. He has $n$ dollars in the bank. For security reasons, he wants to withdraw it in cash (we will not disclose the reasons here). The denominations for dollar bills are $1$, $5$, $10$, $20$, $100$. What is the minimum number of bills Allen could receive after withdrawing his entire balance? | The first and only line of input contains a single integer $n$ ($1 \le n \le 10^9$). | Output the minimum number of bills that Allen could receive. | [
"125\n",
"43\n",
"1000000000\n"
] | [
"3\n",
"5\n",
"10000000\n"
] | In the first sample case, Allen can withdraw this with a $100$ dollar bill, a $20$ dollar bill, and a $5$ dollar bill. There is no way for Allen to receive $125$ dollars in one or two bills.
In the second sample case, Allen can withdraw two $20$ dollar bills and three $1$ dollar bills.
In the third sample case, Allen... | 500 | [
{
"input": "125",
"output": "3"
},
{
"input": "43",
"output": "5"
},
{
"input": "1000000000",
"output": "10000000"
},
{
"input": "4",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "5",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "1",
"output": "1"
},
{
"input": "74",
"o... | 1,696,389,522 | 2,147,483,647 | Python 3 | COMPILATION_ERROR | TESTS | 0 | 0 | 0 | #include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
int a;
int b=0;
cin>>a;
while (a>=100){
a=a-100;
b=b+1;
}
while (a>=20){
a=a-20;
b=b+1;
}
while (a>=10){
a=a-10;
b=b+1;
}
while (a>=5){
a=a-5;
... | Title: Hit the Lottery
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Allen has a LOT of money. He has $n$ dollars in the bank. For security reasons, he wants to withdraw it in cash (we will not disclose the reasons here). The denominations for dollar bills are $1$, $5$, $10$, $20$, $100$... | ```python
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
int a;
int b=0;
cin>>a;
while (a>=100){
a=a-100;
b=b+1;
}
while (a>=20){
a=a-20;
b=b+1;
}
while (a>=10){
a=a-10;
b=b+1;
}
while (a>=5){
... | -1 | |
629 | A | Far Relative’s Birthday Cake | PROGRAMMING | 800 | [
"brute force",
"combinatorics",
"constructive algorithms",
"implementation"
] | null | null | Door's family is going celebrate Famil Doors's birthday party. They love Famil Door so they are planning to make his birthday cake weird!
The cake is a *n*<=×<=*n* square consisting of equal squares with side length 1. Each square is either empty or consists of a single chocolate. They bought the cake and randomly sta... | In the first line of the input, you are given a single integer *n* (1<=≤<=*n*<=≤<=100) — the length of the side of the cake.
Then follow *n* lines, each containing *n* characters. Empty cells are denoted with '.', while cells that contain chocolates are denoted by 'C'. | Print the value of Famil Door's happiness, i.e. the number of pairs of chocolate pieces that share the same row or the same column. | [
"3\n.CC\nC..\nC.C\n",
"4\nCC..\nC..C\n.CC.\n.CC.\n"
] | [
"4\n",
"9\n"
] | If we number rows from top to bottom and columns from left to right, then, pieces that share the same row in the first sample are:
1. (1, 2) and (1, 3) 1. (3, 1) and (3, 3) 1. (2, 1) and (3, 1) 1. (1, 3) and (3, 3) | 500 | [
{
"input": "3\n.CC\nC..\nC.C",
"output": "4"
},
{
"input": "4\nCC..\nC..C\n.CC.\n.CC.",
"output": "9"
},
{
"input": "5\n.CCCC\nCCCCC\n.CCC.\nCC...\n.CC.C",
"output": "46"
},
{
"input": "7\n.CC..CC\nCC.C..C\nC.C..C.\nC...C.C\nCCC.CCC\n.CC...C\n.C.CCC.",
"output": "84"
},... | 1,667,331,453 | 2,147,483,647 | PyPy 3-64 | OK | TESTS | 48 | 62 | 1,740,800 | from sys import stdin,stdout
input=stdin.readline
def print(*args, end='\n', sep=' ') -> None:
stdout.write(sep.join(map(str, args)) + end)
n=int(input()) ; arr=[] ; cloum=[0]*n ; ans=0
for i in range(n):
a=input()
c=0
for j in range(n):
if a[j]=="C":
cloum[j]+=1
... | Title: Far Relative’s Birthday Cake
Time Limit: None seconds
Memory Limit: None megabytes
Problem Description:
Door's family is going celebrate Famil Doors's birthday party. They love Famil Door so they are planning to make his birthday cake weird!
The cake is a *n*<=×<=*n* square consisting of equal squares with s... | ```python
from sys import stdin,stdout
input=stdin.readline
def print(*args, end='\n', sep=' ') -> None:
stdout.write(sep.join(map(str, args)) + end)
n=int(input()) ; arr=[] ; cloum=[0]*n ; ans=0
for i in range(n):
a=input()
c=0
for j in range(n):
if a[j]=="C":
cloum[j]+=... | 3 |
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