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ANARC09C - Not So Flat After All |
Any positive integer v can be written as p1a1 * p2a2 *... * pnan where pi is a prime number and ai ≥ 0. For example: 24 = 23 * 31.
Pick any two prime numbers p1 and p2 where p1 != p2. Imagine a two dimensional plane where the powers of p1 are plotted on the x-axis and the powers of p2 on the y-axis. Now any number that can be written as p1a1 * p2a2 can be plotted on this plane at location (x, y) = (a1, a2). The figure shows a few examples where p1 = 3 and p2 = 2.
This idea can be extended for any N-dimensional space where each of the N axes is assigned a unique prime number. Each N-dimensional space has a unique set of primes. We call such set the Space Identification Set or S for short. |S| (the ordinal of S) is N.
Any number that can be expressed as a multiplication of pi ∈ S (each raised to a power (ai ≥ 0) can be plotted in this |S|-Dimensional space. The figure at the bottom illustrates this idea for N = 3 and S = {2, 3, 7}. Needless to say, any number that can be plotted on space A can also be plotted on space B as long as SA ⊂ SB.
We define the distance between any two points in a given N-dimensional space to be the sum of units traveled to get from one point to the other while following the grid lines (i.e. movement is always parallel to one of the axes.) For example, in the figure below, the distance between 168 and 882 is 4.
Given two positive integers, write a program that determines the minimum ordinal of a space where both numbers can be plotted in. The program also determines the distance between these two integers in that space.
Input
Your program will be tested on one or more test cases. Each test case is specified on a line with two positive integers (0 < A, B < 1,000,000) where A * B > 1.
The last line is made of two zeros.
Output
For each test case, print the following line:
k. X:D
Where k is the test case number (starting at one,) X is the minimum ordinal needed in a space that both A and B can be plotted in. D is the distance between these two points.
Example
Input: 168 882 770 792 0 0 Output: 1. 3:4 2. 5:6
Added by: | Mohammad Kotb |
Date: | 2009-11-28 |
Time limit: | 32.12s |
Source limit: | 50000B |
Memory limit: | 1536MB |
Cluster: | Cube (Intel G860) |
Languages: | All except: ASM64 NODEJS OBJC PERL6 SQLITE VB.NET |
Resource: | http://www.icpc-anarc.org |
hide comments
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2018-10-02 07:36:21
getting SIGSEGV provide me some test cases to be tested upon please ... |
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2017-08-18 21:22:17
is normal factorization way to go for this problem ? |
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2017-01-01 11:19:26
Got it in 0.00 and 8.2 Mem :D |
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2016-10-30 17:30:38
the images aren't loaded and i don't understand the problem |
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2016-06-05 08:36:08 Sarthak Munshi
image not visible ! |
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2016-03-24 04:49:48
Cook meggi in rest of the time :D |
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2016-01-19 15:51:28
Images are not loading |
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2016-01-15 19:24:42
If I end my program when (A*B==0) I get WA, but when I end it if (A==0&&B==0) I get AC, even though it states all test cases have A * B > 1... |
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2015-04-02 08:33:10 Jaswanth
Can reduce the time limit of this problem it is far more than needed |
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2014-11-04 12:32:04 Sahil Dua
AC in 0.21s No clue what to do with the rest of 59.79s :P |