I want to know how can we do this in 3 steps. Given 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8, we need to reach this 2 1 4 3 6 5 8 7, doing a riffle/dovetail shuffle on this each time. Any leads ? This is a test case for the problem H.
# | User | Rating |
---|---|---|
1 | tourist | 3856 |
2 | jiangly | 3747 |
3 | orzdevinwang | 3706 |
4 | jqdai0815 | 3682 |
5 | ksun48 | 3591 |
6 | gamegame | 3477 |
7 | Benq | 3468 |
8 | Radewoosh | 3462 |
9 | ecnerwala | 3451 |
10 | heuristica | 3431 |
# | User | Contrib. |
---|---|---|
1 | cry | 167 |
2 | -is-this-fft- | 162 |
3 | Dominater069 | 160 |
4 | Um_nik | 158 |
5 | atcoder_official | 156 |
6 | Qingyu | 155 |
7 | djm03178 | 151 |
7 | adamant | 151 |
9 | luogu_official | 150 |
10 | awoo | 147 |
I want to know how can we do this in 3 steps. Given 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8, we need to reach this 2 1 4 3 6 5 8 7, doing a riffle/dovetail shuffle on this each time. Any leads ? This is a test case for the problem H.
I was trying to solve FIRESC using http://www.codechef.com/viewsolution/3708062. Have used dfs implemented using stack in python and sys.stdin.readlines(). Yet, it is slow. Can someone suggest me if there is a faster way ? as here N=10^5, and it becomes slow for that.
I am just curious that how do the problem setters create the strong test cases for problems, say which involve strings of size 10^6. I dont think they type a string of length 10^6. Can anyone enlighten my mind on this ?
Name |
---|