cry's blog

By cry, 3 weeks ago, In English

2037A - Twice

Problem Credits: cry
Analysis: cry

Solution

2037B - Intercepted Inputs

Problem Credits: cry
Analysis: chromate00

Are you a python user and failing test 4?
Solution

2037C - Superultra's Favorite Permutation

Problem Credits: sum
Analysis: chromate00

Solution

2037D - Sharky Surfing

Problem Credits: cry
Analysis: chromate00

Solution

2037E - Kachina's Favorite Binary String

Problem Credits: vgoofficial
Analysis: Intellegent

Solution

2037F - Ardent Flames

Problem Credits: vgoofficial
Analysis: vgoofficial

Solution

2037G - Natlan Exploring

Problem Credits: vgoofficial
Analysis: vgoofficial

Solution
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5 hours ago, # |
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nice fast editorial

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    4 hours ago, # ^ |
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    hello can u help me what promblem with this hack : ~~~~~ // this is code

    include

    using namespace std; int main() { cout << 200000 << endl; for(int i = 1; i <= 200000; i++) { cout << 999983 << ' '; } cout << endl; } ~~~~~ thanks

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      3 hours ago, # ^ |
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      Which problem is this for?

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      3 hours ago, # ^ |
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      You cannot ends a line with extra space in the input

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5 hours ago, # |
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fast editorial !! thankYou

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4 hours ago, # |
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damn quick editorial

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4 hours ago, # |
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Very Nice contest. :)

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4 hours ago, # |
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fast tutorial

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4 hours ago, # |
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Damn! Ultra Fast editorial Great Contest. Very good problems, Thanks!

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4 hours ago, # |
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4 hours ago, # |
Rev. 18   Vote: I like it 0 Vote: I do not like it

could anyone help me to figure out what is wrong here:292060911

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4 hours ago, # |
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yotta fast edito'

Thankkyou

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4 hours ago, # |
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Hi everyone, I apologize for the statement for D being unavailable for ~15 minutes during the round. It turns out I misspelled \textbf which caused the PDF to not generate. :(

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    2 hours ago, # ^ |
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    For 2037F - Ardent Flames can you please explain which intervals are we talking about here? — sorting the events of intervals starting and ending by time and how are we trying to do binary search?

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      2 hours ago, # ^ |
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      The intervals are possible $$$p$$$ such that $$$m-|p-x|\geq\lceil\frac{h_i}{q}\rceil$$$. You do binary search on the answer, and if such $$$p$$$ exists, you move the right bound to the mid; otherwise left bound.

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4 hours ago, # |
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very cool round, thank u.

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4 hours ago, # |
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I liked this contest, especially C exercise was interesting and pretty quirky at first :D Hope to see more div3 contests in the future

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4 hours ago, # |
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Can someone take a look at my implementation? (since below is my thinking for E which matches the tutorial exactly)

IMPOSSIBLE if and only if there exists no "01" substring, which is equal to querying the entire string and getting an answer of 0.

Otherwise, there is some "01", and we start querying all the prefixes [1, 2], [1, 3] ... [1, n]. Suppose the first one to give a non-zero answer is [1, i]. Let that answer be R. Then, since all prefixes before [1, i] gave 0 as an answer, the string over [0, i-1] is i-1-R 1's followed by R 0's. Also s[i] must be 1. To determine the suffix s[i+1, n], we query over the prefixes still [1, i+1], [1, i+2] ... [1, n], and, at each query, if the answer increases from the previous one, we have a 1 there, otherwise it is 0 there. In total, we take exactly 1 query for each char in s[2, n], meaning we require n-1 queries.

Implementation: https://mirror.codeforces.com/contest/2037/submission/292068546 (skip to very bottom, there is a bunch of template stuff at top)

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    4 hours ago, # ^ |
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    Bro you should return int in the function

    char(this should be int) interQuery(int a, int b) { std::cout << "? " << a << " " << b << endl; std::cout.flush();

    int r; cin >> r;
    return r;

    }

    Good luck Mate..!!

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      4 hours ago, # ^ |
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      NOOOOO WTH, I didn't solve E due to that BS!!! :(((( This is genuinely heartbreaking -- the difference between being rank ~1500 and being rank ~500

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4 hours ago, # |
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Thanks for the contest, I was glad to participate) Thanks for explaining task G, I was very hesitant when I sent it and got a time limit exceeded on the 5th test

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4 hours ago, # |
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D felt like it would be hard problem at first but once u start solving it I found it easier than C

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4 hours ago, # |
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I was waaay off for D. i was thinking graphs. Thanks for the learning.

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4 hours ago, # |
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As a Pythonist participant, thanks for covering test 4 on Problem B that gives TLE verdict with dictionaries. I too got this verdict: Submission 291964656 Then, using set for tracking a prior occurrence worked on Submission 291974200 , instead of having to rely on the suggested collections.Counter().

Will have to see if this get hacked or failed in any of the main test.

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    103 minutes ago, # ^ |
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    As a Pythonist tester, happy to hear :)

    Edit: Looking at your Solution it is probably still hackable as set uses the same hash function as a dict, :(

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4 hours ago, # |
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非常好的题目,使我大脑旋转:D

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4 hours ago, # |
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Help me with this please: 292083026

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    35 minutes ago, # ^ |
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    You need to continue processing hurdles until the left bound of the current hurdle surpasses current power-up.

    For your code, consider:

    1
    4 2 100
    5 5
    7 7
    9 9
    11 20
    2 1
    10 20
    

    which your code gives $$$-1$$$ but the answer is $$$2$$$.

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4 hours ago, # |
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How to implement the Inclusion-Exclusion in G?

I knew about the principle and just did a bunch of for loops which at least look kinda cool :D 292061306 but I see others used other method.

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    4 hours ago, # ^ |
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    its essentially iterating through the masks, if the number of elements we're grabbing is even, subtract it, otherwise add it

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    75 minutes ago, # ^ |
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    Respect the dedication of coding allat, the usual way of implementing the inclusion exclusion is with bitmasks, iterate from 0, having no elements in the set, to 2^n — 1, having everything in the set, when the i'th bit is 1, it means the i'th element is in the set, now u can notice for odd sizes u add for even sizes u subtract, after calculating the current contribution, if the number of set bits was odd add it otherwise subtract it

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4 hours ago, # |
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i think it would be better to have G1 with lower constraint on $$$a_i <= 10^3$$$ to allow
$$$O(n*max(d(a_i)) ^ 2)$$$ solution as there are max 32 factors up to 1000, but anyways nice problems.
Thanks for the contest!

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    3 hours ago, # ^ |
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    It would be solvable in O(nA), where A is maximal a[i] with dp[x] = # of paths ending at element x, so it would be too easy.

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4 hours ago, # |
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I am unable to understand why am i getting idleness time limit exceeded. — https://mirror.codeforces.com/contest/2037/submission/292077028. Please someone help.

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    4 hours ago, # ^ |
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    Try with following test case, it shows "!" as answer

    2
    01
    
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3 hours ago, # |
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Can someone suggest some binary search problems like F (same or little higher difficulty) please.

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3 hours ago, # |
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Hi I have two doubts.

First, why in problem B, using dictionaries in Python give TLE, but AC in C++?

Second, what is wrong in my code for problem E? https://mirror.codeforces.com/contest/2037/submission/292049495

I query (1, i) for i from 1 to n, find the first point where this value is non zero, and if this value increases fill in 1, else 0.

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3 hours ago, # |
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Can someone help me with this solution for D. 292088654

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2 hours ago, # |
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292093110

can someone pls see why this gives a wrong ans and what do I need to change ?

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2 hours ago, # |
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What's wrong with my solution for D? it gives tle(test-2). 292076200

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    2 hours ago, # ^ |
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    i=h[k].second and the following i=h[i].second are wrong. They're coordinates, not indices.

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111 minutes ago, # |
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can somebody explain tourist code for problem G ? whats the mob array ?? whats the intuition behind the solution ?

291975854

or just simply explain whats the mobius function solution

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    91 minute(s) ago, # ^ |
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    You can see the mobius function as the coefficients of the inclusive-exclusive solution

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    68 minutes ago, # ^ |
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    Mobius function $$$\mu(n) = (-1)^k \cdot [\alpha_1=\alpha_2=\dots=\alpha_k=1]$$$ where $$$n=\prod\limits_{i=1}^k p_i^{\alpha_i}$$$.

    Useful property of Mobius function is that $$$\sum\limits_{d|n}\mu(d)=[n=1]$$$.

    Consider $$$\texttt{dp}[i]$$$ is the number of paths from $$$1$$$ up to $$$i$$$ and $$$\texttt{sum}[i][x]=\sum\limits_{j=1}^{i}\texttt{dp}_j\cdot [a_j=x]$$$.

    We may calculate $$$\texttt{dp}[i]$$$ as $$$\sum\limits_{j=1}^{i-1}\texttt{dp}_j-\sum\limits_{x=1}^{10^6}\texttt{sum}[i-1][x]\cdot [\gcd(x, a_i)=1]$$$. Let us apply the property of Mobius function for $$$[\gcd(x, a_i)=1]$$$. So that:

    $$$ \begin{array}{rl} \texttt{dp[i]} &= \sum\limits_{j=1}^{i-1} \texttt{dp[j]} - \sum\limits_{x=1}^{10^6} \texttt{sum}[i-1][x] \cdot [\gcd(x, a_i) = 1] \\ &= \sum\limits_{j=1}^{i-1} \texttt{dp[j]}-\sum\limits_{x=1}^{10^6} \texttt{sum}[i-1][x] \sum\limits_{d|\gcd(x, a_i)}\mu(d) \\ &=\sum\limits_{j=1}^{i-1} \texttt{dp[j]}-\sum\limits_{x=1}^{10^6} \texttt{sum}[i-1][x] \sum\limits_{d=1}^{10^6}[d|x]\cdot [d|a_i]\cdot \mu(d) \\ &=\sum\limits_{j=1}^{i-1} \texttt{dp[j]}-\sum\limits_{d=1}^{10^6}[d|a_i]\cdot \mu(d)\sum\limits_{x=1}^{10^6}[d|x]\cdot \texttt{sum}[i-1][x] \end{array} $$$

    For each $$$d$$$ you may maintain $$$\sum\limits_{x=1}^{10^6}[d|x]\cdot \texttt{sum}[i-1][x]$$$ and $$$d$$$ is the divisor of $$$a_i$$$ what makes it possible to compute $$$\texttt{dp}[i]$$$ in $$$\mathcal{O}(\sqrt{a_i})$$$.

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97 minutes ago, # |
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I loved problem F, any problems like it please? :)

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83 minutes ago, # |
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Submission

Using Counter still failed me in test case 4 for B (Or maybe there is a mistake in my implementation)

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    81 minute(s) ago, # ^ |
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    Testcase 4 provokes hash collisions in Python, you can either use a Wrapper to avoid them or use an apporach without hashing.

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      77 minutes ago, # ^ |
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      I am aware but the Editorial mentioned using Counter to avoid TLE

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        65 minutes ago, # ^ |
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        Oh, well it technially works if you do it with strings, but at that point you could just us normal set or dict. To my knowledge Counter uses the same hash function anyways.

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        57 minutes ago, # ^ |
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        My bad, I wrote the note and I'm not really familiar with python. You'd have to use a frequency array of length $$$n$$$.

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66 minutes ago, # |
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cry would be blessed if you also post the C++ code rather than just the 3 lines of the explanation in which you think everyone should understand how to solve the problem. Not everyone is a genius like you.

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36 minutes ago, # |
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I would've ACed D if I used multiset instead of set. That was the only change I made for my code to AC after the contest... :(

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11 minutes ago, # |
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292066305 292064554 gpt guy solve g in 3 minutes

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9 minutes ago, # |
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can we solve D problem using dp approach,with two cases only selecting a particular power or ignoring it