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1 | tourist | 3993 |
2 | jiangly | 3743 |
3 | orzdevinwang | 3707 |
4 | Radewoosh | 3627 |
5 | jqdai0815 | 3620 |
6 | Benq | 3564 |
7 | Kevin114514 | 3443 |
8 | ksun48 | 3434 |
9 | Rewinding | 3397 |
10 | Um_nik | 3396 |
Страны | Города | Организации | Всё → |
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1 | cry | 167 |
2 | Um_nik | 163 |
3 | maomao90 | 162 |
3 | atcoder_official | 162 |
5 | adamant | 159 |
6 | -is-this-fft- | 158 |
7 | awoo | 156 |
8 | TheScrasse | 154 |
9 | Dominater069 | 153 |
10 | nor | 152 |
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Auto comment: topic has been updated by chrisboo (previous revision, new revision, compare).
I have no idea where to find the tutorial. The following C++ checker should work for a problem "You are given an integer N in the input. Print any N integers from interval [1,10], that their sum is 42." Note that you must know the number of samples and the number of other tests.
Wow it really works!
I got misleaded by the tutorial and thought that we actually needed to output a JSON object but turns out it's actually unnecessary. Thanks for the help!
How do you read Judge's output? (to compare Judge's output and Participant's output, your code seems to be reading only Input and Participant Output)