We hope you enjoyed the problems.
Problem 1977A - Little Nikita was created by Stefan2417 and prepared by alexchist.
Problem 1977B - Binary Colouring was created by alexchist and prepared by Stefan2417.
Problem 1977C - Nikita and LCM was created and prepared by Stefan2417.
Problem 1977D - XORificator was created and prepared by alexchist.
Problem 1977E - Tensor was created and prepared by Stefan2417.
Note that one action with the cube changes the parity of the number of cubes in the tower. Therefore, if the parities of $$$n$$$ and $$$m$$$ do not match, it is impossible to build the tower. Also, if $$$n < m$$$, the tower cannot be built either. In all other cases, it is possible to build a tower of height $$$m$$$ in $$$m$$$ operations, and then add and remove a cube until the operations are exhausted.
#include <bits/stdc++.h>
using namespace std;
int main () {
ios_base::sync_with_stdio(0); cin.tie(0);
int T;
cin >> T;
while (T--) {
int n, m;
cin >> n >> m;
cout << (n >= m && (n%2) == (m%2) ? "Yes" : "No") << '\n';
}
}
We will iterate over the prefix of $$$i$$$ bits and construct a correct answer for the number formed by the prefix bits of the number $$$x$$$. We are interested in considering only the one bits, as they are the only ones that affect the value of the number $$$x$$$.
If we have already placed a one at position $$$i$$$ in the answer, we need to somehow add $$$2^i$$$ to the number. To do this, we simply zero out the $$$i$$$-th bit in the answer and set it at $$$i + 1$$$ — this will add $$$2 \cdot 2^i = 2^{i+1}$$$.
Now, the $$$i$$$-th position in the answer holds $$$0$$$.
Let's consider what we placed at position $$$i-1$$$ in the answer. If it's $$$0$$$, then everything is fine; we just place $$$1$$$ at position $$$i$$$. If it's $$$1$$$, we have a situation of [1 1], which we correct by making it [-1 0 1] — placing $$$-1$$$ at $$$i-1$$$, leaving $$$0$$$ at $$$i$$$, and placing $$$1$$$ at $$$i+1$$$. This will add $$$2^i$$$ to the sum because $$$2^i + 2^{i-1} = 2^{i+1} - 2^{i-1}$$$. The remaining case is when $$$i-1$$$ holds $$$-1$$$, but this is impossible because our forward operations only place ones, and $$$-1$$$ is placed behind.
The final time complexity is $$$O(\log(x))$$$ per test case.
#include "bits/stdc++.h"
#define all(a) a.begin(), a.end()
#define pb push_back
typedef long long ll;
using namespace std;
mt19937 rnd(std::chrono::high_resolution_clock::now().time_since_epoch().count());
/// Actual code starts here
const int N = 100005;
void solve() {
ll x;
cin >> x;
vector<int> res(31, 0);
for (int i = 0; i < 30; i++) {
if (1ll & (x >> i)) {
if (res[i]) {
res[i + 1] = 1;
res[i] = 0;
} else if (i > 0) {
if (res[i - 1] == 1) {
res[i + 1] = 1;
res[i - 1] = -1;
} else {
res[i] = 1;
}
} else if (i == 0) {
res[i] = 1;
}
}
}
cout << 31 << '\n';
for (int i = 0; i <= 30; i++) {
cout << res[i] << ' ';
}
cout << '\n';
}
signed main() {
ios::sync_with_stdio(false);
cin.tie(nullptr);
cout.tie(nullptr);
int tt = 1;
cin >> tt;
while (tt--)
solve();
}
Try to check if the entire array $$$a$$$ can be the answer.
First, let's understand if we can take the entire array $$$a$$$ as the special subsequence.
To do this, find the LCM($$$a_1, a_2, \dots, a_n$$$). If it is greater than max($$$a_1, a_2, \dots, a_n$$$), then obviously such a number is not in the subsequence, because $$$LCM \geq max$$$.
After this check, it becomes known that each $$$a_i \ | \ max(a_1, a_2, \dots, a_n)$$$.
Then we iterate over the divisors of the maximum and greedily check for the presence of a subsequence with such an LCM.
If we do this naively, it will be $$$O(\sqrt{C} + n \cdot d(C) \cdot \log(C))$$$, but this is already sufficient.
Note that we can count the occurrence of each number and check only the distinct numbers. Then the complexity will be $$$O(\sqrt{C} + d(C)^2 \cdot \log(C))$$$.
#include "bits/stdc++.h"
#define err(x) cerr << "["#x"] " << (x) << "\n"
#define errv(x) {cerr << "["#x"] ["; for (const auto& ___ : (x)) cerr << ___ << ", "; cerr << "]\n";}
#define errvn(x, n) {cerr << "["#x"] ["; for (auto ___ = 0; ___ < (n); ++___) cerr << (x)[___] << ", "; cerr << "]\n";}
#define all(a) a.begin(), a.end()
#define pb push_back
typedef long long ll;
typedef long double ld;
using namespace std;
const int MOD = 1000000007;
mt19937 rnd(std::chrono::high_resolution_clock::now().time_since_epoch().count());
template<typename T1, typename T2>
inline bool relaxmi(T1 &a, const T2 &b) {
return a > b ? a = b, true : false;
}
template<typename T1, typename T2>
inline bool relaxma(T1 &a, const T2 &b) {
return a < b ? a = b, true : false;
}
double GetTime() { return clock() / (double) CLOCKS_PER_SEC; }
/// Actual code starts here
const int N = 100005;
int calc(vector<pair<int, int>> &t, int d) {
int LCM = 0, cnt = 0;
for (auto [j, c]: t) {
if (d % j == 0) {
if (LCM == 0) LCM = j;
else LCM = lcm(LCM, j);
cnt += c;
}
}
if (LCM != d) cnt = 0;
return cnt;
}
void solve() {
int n;
cin >> n;
vector<int> v(n);
for (auto &i: v) cin >> i;
ll LCM = 1;
int mx = *max_element(all(v));
for (auto i: v) {
LCM = lcm(LCM, i);
if (LCM > mx) {
cout << n << '\n';
return;
}
}
map<int, int> cnt;
for (auto i: v) cnt[i]++;
vector<pair<int, int>> t;
for (auto i: cnt)
t.push_back(i);
int res = 0;
for (int i = 1; i * i <= mx; i++) {
if (mx % i == 0) {
if (!cnt.contains(i))
relaxma(res, calc(t, i));
if (!cnt.contains(mx / i))
relaxma(res, calc(t, mx / i));
}
}
cout << res << '\n';
}
signed main() {
ios::sync_with_stdio(false);
cin.tie(nullptr);
cout.tie(nullptr);
int tt = 1;
cin >> tt;
while (tt--)
solve();
}
Try to fix the specialty of column $$$i$$$ and the presence of a one in cell $$$i, j$$$.
Let's assume that the value in the $$$i$$$-th row and $$$j$$$-th column is strictly one and it is the only one in the column.
Then the entire table is uniquely determined, as well as the XORificator. For each possible state of the XORificator that constructs the required table,
Let's maintain a counter. Then the state that maximizes the number of columns with exactly one 1 has the maximum counter.
To efficiently maintain the counter, it is necessary to maintain the hash of the XORificator and quickly recalculate it when moving to the next row.
The answer can be easily reconstructed by traversing the table again and counting the hash. If the desired hash is obtained, simply output the state of the XORificator.
The final time complexity is $$$O(nm \log{(nm)})$$$ or $$$O(nm)$$$ if a hash map is used.
For hashing, it is convenient to use Zobrist hashing.
#include "bits/stdc++.h"
using namespace std;
mt19937_64 rnd(chrono::steady_clock::now().time_since_epoch().count());
void solve() {
int n, m;
cin >> n >> m;
vector<vector<bool>> table(n, vector<bool>(m));
for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i) {
for (int j = 0; j < m; ++j) {
char c;
cin >> c;
table[i][j] = c - '0';
}
}
vector<long long> rands(n), rands2(n);
for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i) {
rands[i] = rnd();
rands2[i] = rnd();
}
map<pair<long long, long long>, int> ans;
int res = 0;
pair<int, int> ind_ans = {0, 0};
for (int j = 0; j < m; ++j) {
long long summ = 0, summ2 = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i) {
if (table[i][j]) {
summ ^= rands[i];
summ2 ^= rands2[i];
}
}
for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i) {
summ ^= rands[i];
summ2 ^= rands2[i];
ans[{summ, summ2}]++;
if (res < ans[{summ, summ2}]) {
res = ans[{summ, summ2}];
ind_ans = {j, i};
}
summ ^= rands[i];
summ2 ^= rands2[i];
}
}
cout << res << "\n";
string inds(n, '0');
for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i) {
if (table[i][ind_ans.first]) {
if (i != ind_ans.second) {
inds[i] = '1';
}
} else if (ind_ans.second == i) {
inds[i] = '1';
}
}
cout << inds << "\n";
}
signed main() {
ios::sync_with_stdio(false);
cin.tie(nullptr);
int tt = 1;
cin >> tt;
while (tt--) {
solve();
}
}
First, let's understand why 2 colors are indeed sufficient.
Notice that the reachability relation in a graph defines a Partially Ordered Set.
According to Dilworth's Theorem, the size of the maximum antichain is equal to the minimum number of chains that cover the Partially Ordered Set.
Note that the condition on the reachability of pairs of vertices within any triplet implies a constraint on the maximum size of the antichain. It is simply no more than 2. Therefore, 2 colors are indeed sufficient.
The remaining task is to understand how to explicitly construct these 2 chains.
We will build this inductively. Let's maintain 3 stacks — the last vertices painted in black, white, and red respectively. These will correspond to the chains we are building.
Suppose we have built chains on $$$n$$$ vertices and want to build them on $$$n + 1$$$:
If the white or black stacks are empty, simply add vertex $$$n+1$$$ to the empty stack.
If the red stack is empty:
-
- Ask about the reachability of the last vertices in the white and black stacks from vertex $$$n+1$$$.
-
- If both vertices are reachable, put vertex $$$n+1$$$ in the red stack.
-
- If only one vertex is reachable, put vertex $$$n+1$$$ in the stack whose last vertex is reachable from $$$n+1$$$.
-
- The case where neither vertex is reachable is impossible as it contradicts the condition.
If the red stack is not empty:
-
- Ask about the reachability of the last vertex in the red stack from vertex $$$n+1$$$.
-
- If it is reachable, put it in the red stack.
-
- If it is not reachable, ask about the end of the white stack.
-
- If the vertex at the end of the white stack is not reachable, then the vertex at the end of the black stack must be reachable, otherwise, it contradicts the problem's condition.
-
- Color vertex $$$n+1$$$ black if the black vertex is reachable or white if the white vertex is reachable.
-
- Recolor all vertices in the red stack to the opposite color relative to vertex $$$n+1$$$. We can do this because, by construction, all vertices in the white and black stacks are reachable from all vertices in the red stack.
-
- Do not forget to clear the red stack.
Each time a new vertex is added, no more than 2 queries are used. Therefore, we will use no more than $$$2 \cdot n$$$ queries in total.
During the algorithm, all operations are performed in $$$O(1)$$$ time, resulting in an overall complexity of $$$O(n)$$$.
As an exercise for the reader, try to prove the lower bound on the number of queries.
#include "bits/stdc++.h"
#define err(x) cerr << "["#x"] " << (x) << "\n"
#define errv(x) {cerr << "["#x"] ["; for (const auto& ___ : (x)) cerr << ___ << ", "; cerr << "]\n";}
#define errvn(x, n) {cerr << "["#x"] ["; for (auto ___ = 0; ___ < (n); ++___) cerr << (x)[___] << ", "; cerr << "]\n";}
#define all(a) a.begin(), a.end()
#define pb push_back
typedef long long ll;
typedef long double ld;
using namespace std;
const int MOD = 1000000007;
mt19937 rnd(std::chrono::high_resolution_clock::now().time_since_epoch().count());
template<typename T1, typename T2>
inline bool relaxmi(T1 &a, const T2 &b) {
return a > b ? a = b, true : false;
}
template<typename T1, typename T2>
inline bool relaxma(T1 &a, const T2 &b) {
return a < b ? a = b, true : false;
}
double GetTime() { return clock() / (double) CLOCKS_PER_SEC; }
/// Actual code starts here
const int N = 100005;
bool ask(int i, int j) {
cout << "? " << j << ' ' << i << endl;
string resp;
cin >> resp;
if (resp == "-1") assert(false);
if (resp == "YES") return true;
else return false;
}
void solve() {
int n;
cin >> n;
vector<int> st, st2, st3;
st = {1};
for (int i = 2; i <= n; i++) {
if (st2.empty()) {
if (ask(i, st.back())) {
st.push_back(i);
} else {
st2.push_back(i);
}
} else if (st3.empty()) {
int ok1 = ask(i, st.back()), ok2 = ask(i, st2.back());
if (ok1 && ok2) {
st3.push_back(i);
} else if (ok1) {
st.push_back(i);
} else if (ok2) {
st2.push_back(i);
} else {
assert(false);
}
} else {
if (ask(i, st3.back())) {
st3.push_back(i);
} else {
if (ask(i, st.back())) {
st.push_back(i);
for (auto j: st3)
st2.push_back(j);
st3.clear();
} else {
st2.push_back(i);
for (auto j: st3)
st.push_back(j);
st3.clear();
}
}
}
}
if (!st3.empty()) {
for (auto i: st3)
st.push_back(i);
st3.clear();
}
vector<int> colors(n + 1);
for (auto i: st2)
colors[i] = 1;
cout << "! ";
for (int i = 1; i <= n; i++) cout << colors[i] << ' ';
cout << endl;
}
signed main() {
ios::sync_with_stdio(false);
cin.tie(nullptr);
cout.tie(nullptr);
int tt = 1;
cin >> tt;
while (tt--)
solve();
}
better late than never. thank you for the editorial
Ooooh so you have a temporary third chain in E. I love it, it's close to what I was trying and makes it so elegant. Also thank you for the proof of existence using Dilworth.
The contest was of huge quality, one of my favorite codeforces. Thank you setters. orz
for the 2nd question; can anyone help me debug why/where is my logic wrong? its different than author's. https://codeforces.me/contest/1977/submission/262928317
It says "wrong answer coefficients do not sum to x (test case 3)" (failed on 1359) in the second test.
https://codeforces.me/contest/1977/submission/262935920
Here are the minor changes I've made.
oh yess, thank you for the correction, i get it now.
Thanks for the editorial!
Does anyone know any similar problems to C,
Want to improve on concepts of LCM, GCD and divisors.
Learn it from math/number theory books, not codeforces problems.
Please can you suggest some good books?
this post my help bro https://codeforces.me/blog/entry/118882
thanks
I liked these problems https://codeforces.me/problemset/problem/1884/D https://codeforces.me/problemset/problem/1900/D
Yo for C can someone explain me this part?
"Then we iterate over the divisors of the maximum and greedily check for the presence of a subsequence with such an LCM."
It's not immediately clear why this will yield the max sequence bro
Edit: nvm I acc get it now it's clear from the tutorial, I'm so stupid bro
not easy to understand immediately, you are clever bro
thanks bro I needed that ego boost lmfao
Thank you so much Stefan! I quite enjoyed figuring out the solve to question C, even if I only figured it out after the contest... Question B was satisfying as well.
Radewoosh, This proves not only Indians say "question" instead of "problem".
what does this mean in C problem tutorial?? "Then we iterate over the divisors of the maximum and greedily check for the presence of a subsequence with such an LCM."
Basically since all elements in
a
dividemax(a)
, then any combination of elements ina
will have an LCM that dividesmax(a)
too. And for an LCM to belong to a sequence, it must beUsing those facts our search space is now the divisors of
max(a)
where we just need to check for those two facts and greedily get the maximum subsequence.crazzy bro,, great explaination. just one thing why this check is necessary in calc func? if (LCM != d) cnt = 0; as it will always be equal, right?
not always, take this for example:
3 2 10 20 60 1
here the overall LCM is 60 so we search over its divisors. If we choose 4, then only 1 and 2 divide it, but their LCM is 2 (which is acc in
a
), not 4. We're searching for a subsequence that has exactly that divisor as its LCM for this iteration so 4 is not even valid to consider.yup got it
Very well explained. This should be a part of the editorial! Thanks bruh
Can someone explain the solution of Problem D. Only thing I am seeing is Xor and Random numbers. Totally Confused right now!!
PS: Understood the solution. But why are we keeping 2 random numbers of each index?
To reduce the probability of collision. It's for the same reason that you use two modulos in hashing sometimes.
Oh! Okay. Thanks!
Will you please explain it for us?
Suppose we want the 1st column to contain exactly one 1. Then there are n options in which we can have that 1. Let's say we make the only one 1 at the first row itself. Then the set (of each row) of XORificator used will be unique. Similarly, it will be unique for each of the (i, j) if we decide that in the jth column the only 1 will be at ith row.
So, now we will calculate all the unique set of XORificator, for which we have used hashing. Now, if the cnt[hash] is x that means x columns will contain only one 1 with the following set of XORificator. So, you can just choose the one with the most cnt and that will be your answer.
Yep! Got the feel. Thanks.
But we still have a non-zero probability of getting a wrong answer , right?
No, it's actually 0, the only reason it might cause a wrong answer is when the hash values collide, where as seen in the editorial you can just store 2 values for the hashes, making the hash collision probability wayyy less(around 0 for the problem constraints), but a single hash suffices
Why is the probability zero: Well, the lower bound of the answer is 1, cause you can just select a single column and invert every 1 except one. Now imagine You selected the column $$$i$$$ as the column with the single inverted 1, and the row $$$j$$$ as the 1 bit, since there is only a single way to make that cell $$$(i, j)$$$ to be one and none other $$$(i, k)$$$, the operations you chose are unique, so just save the resulting table best answer, and since there is no other way to fix $$$(i, j)$$$, if it was to fix $$$(i, j)$$$ this would be the best result, just take the maximum for every $$$(i, j)$$$
Short answer: the only reason the probability for WA is 0 is just that for a fixed (i, j) there is only a single way to do it
It is not zero, but a very small probability (negligible for the purposes of passing tests).
which probability isn't zero? hash collision or the idea itself? (regarding of the hash function)
Like there is a chance that not fixing anything will be the best answer? in that case there is at least 1 column is special(since we know that the answer >= 1), where its answer is calculated during the selection of that column and row
You can't say that the probability is exactly zero unless you can make sure that there is absolutely not a single case where a hash collision that leads to wrong answer occurs, which is why we say it's a 'non-zero probability' because it is indeed not exactly zero, but negligible.
By zero I meant the prob of wrong answer not considering hash collisions, but yes, taking that into part even if u have 10000 different hash values for a single element there is always a way for the to collide even when n = 2, (and in my original comment I said unless hashes collide)
It seemed quite obvious to me that the original question was asking about whether hash collision can occur or not (because otherwise they wouldn't say terms like non-zero probability), so starting with saying directly "no, it's actually 0" to that question looked like you had some clear evidence that it can always avoid hash collision (or even if that occurs you still won't get wrong answer) somehow.
Ohh, I thought the question was asking if there is a chance the idea itself not being correct and giving wrong answer
yes , i was referring to the hash collisions. Can't we generate test cases for which there is high chances of collisions(considering the hash functions used)? Thanks
For B I did some uninteresting wack shit. Someone explain Jiangly or Tourist's solution for B please? They did something like % 4 = 1 then 1, % 4 = 3 then -1 and % 2 = 0 means 0.
In problem B, why is [-1 0 -1 -1 0 1] not a valid answer for x = 19? -1 + 0 + -4 + -8 + 0 + 32 = 19, so why am I getting wrong answer? Judge says "wrong answer. wrong coefficient format.", what am I doing wrong?
Atleast 1 number for every pair of adjacent elements should be 0
@SriRam523 How did you understand this point from the problem?
In the constraints of the problem (at the top), it reads, "There does not exist an index $$$0≤i≤n−2$$$ such that both $$$a_i≠0$$$ and $$$a_i+1≠0$$$."
Could someone explain the hashing in D. I could come up with the idea of trying to fix a $$$i, j$$$ cell to be 1, but couldn't deal with the efficient XOR operations. What will we actually hash right here?
You want to count which configuration on the rows appearead most often : if a given configuration appeared n times, it means that there will be n special columns if you use it.
So if you name a configuration "000110" for example (meaning flip rows 4 and 5 only), you want to hash this string to keep track of how many times it appeared. The issue is that you want this hash in O(1) time. Luckily, if, for each column, you try to make bit 1 special, then bit 2 special, etc... you will notice that the string representation of your configurations does not move much (only 1 or 2 characters change each time). So you want a hash that you can easily change in O(1) using this property instead of re-hashing in O(n).
For this, you can use author's trick to prevent collision, or use a more classic technique of "rolling hash" which worked for me for example.
I am unable to understand why I am getting WA in problem C.
submission
A possible reason:when you calculate the LCM of all elements, it will go beyond i64. So try to stop getting LCM as it becomes larger than the max element. (Cool painting btw)
Thanks for pointing it out. Got AC. Thanks for the painting as well :}
For D I got the idea, but why if I use an unordered_map to keep track of how many time had a configuration appeared I will get a ME
(At first, I wanted to use 01trie to maintain the times a configuration appeared but I think it would get a ME too.
Problem D can have also have deterministic solution rather than probabilistic one. we can write the solution for two different cases (m > n and m <= n). for m > n number of rows are less than 550, for a cell in the grid to be 1 the set of rows to be flipped can be encoded into a string (len < 550), complexity: n * n * m (n < 550). these strings can be stored in a map with their count and max count string is answer. unordered map can be used for speed up. for m <= n we can solve this using dp, where two columns differing at two or zero places are used for transitions, we check every pair of columns for transitions, answer can easily be constructed for a cell having max dp value, complexity: n * m * m (m < 550), max iterations ~ 1.65 * 10 ^ 8, safely under the time limit:
262840232
hey i was also using the same approach but didnt separate the case of m>n and my sol tled.Nice to see i was half right for the dp.Thanks
Can someone please explain the time complexity of Question C?
Has anyone tried solving problem C with the Hasse graph (an edge $$$u \rightarrow v$$$ means $$$v | u$$$ )? It's easy to construct it in $$$O(n^2)$$$ but I can't find a way to maximize the set (I tried DP on graph). Eventually I did to the Brute force solution.
i'm struggling with problem C.
here is my approach.
[solve for N]
if N <= 1: return 0
if LCM(A[1] ~ A[N]) overflow A[N]: return N
if LCM(A[1] ~ A[N — 1]) == A[N]: find maximum length subsequence its LCM is not A[N] <- brute force
if LCM(A[1] ~ A[N — 1]) < A[N]: [solve for N — 1]
https://codeforces.me/contest/1977/submission/263102096
what is wrong with my code
In the authors code for D did he just ignore the possibility of collisions? If yes then is this normal in competitive programming to ignore collisions if chances are too low?
Yep, if there's not a huge chance of collision then you can mostly ignore it
Honestly, don't know how I didn't realize that the LCM on C could be bounded that easily, I guess we have good and bad days
Can the problem C be solved by Dynamic Programming ?
you can solve it with recursive and memoization but you need to use unordered map
262785009
Check out this soln
Thanks !!!
Can you please explain the logic behind this part of your solution:- I am not able to understand it.
if part
if our current lcm which is val,if we take lcm(val,a[p]) ll LCM = lcm(val, a[p]); if after taking lcm our result LCM comes an element which is already present int mp[] that means it's the factor in that case we hope that in future we can form a sequence that doens't exit in mp other wise base condition return a large negative value =-1e17
else part
now we get out LCM which isn't present in mp[] that means we can form sequnce till that and also we can also increase our sequnce further
but we have to store temporary ans that's why this max(mp[a[p]] * 1ll, mp[a[p]] * 1ll + func(p + (mp[a[p]] — 1), LCM, a, n))) first part in max return ans till that if we don't able to increase our length and 2nd part return the max if we can increase our length
now why i use m[p] instead of 1 bc
if we have element like 5 7 7 7 7
we can just take 5 7 7 7 as whole rather than
5 7
5 7 7
5 7 7 7
hope u understand
Yeah, Thanks
Has anyone tried divide and conquer in B? There are 5726623061 sequences of {-1, 0, 1} lenght 32 with at least one zero among every 2 adjacent elements. We can bruteforce first 16 elements of the sequence, and use precalced values for other half.
I have another approach for C :
sort the array and check for the longest prefix such that lcm of that prefix is not the last element of the corresponding prefix.
is this wrong?
Stefan2417, problem E editorial is incorrect.
Let $$$n = 3$$$ and only one edge $$$1 \leftarrow 2$$$. According to the text solution $$$1$$$ will be white and $$$2$$$ will be black (or vice versa). Then the red stack is empty, but no vertexes are reachable from the 3rd. You said such a situation is impossible, but here it is.
The editorial is incorrect, but the code handles this case correctly. In particular, the part
does not match with the editorial; the editorial says that the vertex should be put into the empty stack by default, but the code puts it into the first stack, if the last vertex in the first stack is reachable from the current vertex, and into the second stack only if the aforementioned condition is not true.
In editorial C, What d(C) means?
divisors of max element
In editorial C, why is O(N * d(C)) sufficient? Is'nt N <= 10**3 and C <= 10**9, thus O(d(C)) <= square root of C which is 10**4?
Would'nt O(N * d(C)) be 10**7 than?
A number up to $$$10^9$$$ can have at most $$$1344$$$ divisors. Check https://codeforces.me/blog/entry/14463.
[user:Stefan2417]Stefan2417
In Problem C this solution should not pass but it passes.
Please anyone try to hack it. https://codeforces.me/contest/1977/submission/263672671
I don't get C — Nikita and LCM. I understand that if the lcm of the whole array is equal to the max element in the array, then all elements divide the max. What I take from this is that the max element should not be in our solution subsequence.
What does "iterate over the divisors of the maximum" mean?
It means that If all the elements in array A are divisible by max(A), LCM of any subset of A will be divisor of max(A).
Let $$$a_i = p_1^{x_1} * p_2^{x_2} * p_3^{x_3}...$$$, where $$$p_i$$$ is the i'th prime number and $$$x_i\,€\,Z$$$ such that $$$x_i \ge 0.$$$ So LCM of this array is $$$p_1^{max(x_1)} * p_2^{max(x_2)} * p_3^{max(x_3)}...$$$ If number $$$a_i$$$ is extracted from this list, no primes $$$p_1 ... p_n$$$ were added to the new LCM, we can just decrease $$$max(x_i)$$$'s with this way, so new LCM will remain as a divisor of max(A). (Apologies for first time using latex.)
Do you mean if all the elements in array A divide max(A)?
Yes, If they didn't the answer would be simply length of array A which is N.
For problem "B" how can it be a WRONG_ANSWER.Can anyone help? https://codeforces.me/contest/1977/submission/264399208
Input 7 1 14 24 15 27 11 19 Participant's output 1 1 5 0 -1 0 0 1 6 0 0 0 -1 0 1 5 -1 0 0 0 1 6 -1 0 -1 0 0 1 5 -1 0 -1 0 1 6 -1 0 -1 -1 0 1
two consecutive -1s are there in the last output.
282198440 Can anyone please tell me what's wrong in this ?
lastonemaman