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ARITH - Simple Arithmetics |
One part of the new WAP portal is also a calculator computing expressions with very long numbers. To make the output look better, the result is formated the same way as is it usually used with manual calculations.
Your task is to write the core part of this calculator. Given two numbers and the requested operation, you are to compute the result and print it in the form specified below. With addition and subtraction, the numbers are written below each other. Multiplication is a little bit more complex: first of all, we make a partial result for every digit of one of the numbers, and then sum the results together.
Input
There is a single positive integer T on the first line of input (equal to about 1000). It stands for the number of expressions to follow. Each expression consists of a single line containing a positive integer number, an operator (one of +, - and *) and the second positive integer number. Every number has at most 500 digits. There are no spaces on the line. If the operation is subtraction, the second number is always lower than the first one. No number will begin with zero.
Output
For each expression, print two lines with two given numbers, the second number below the first one, last digits (representing unities) must be aligned in the same column. Put the operator right in front of the first digit of the second number. After the second number, there must be a horizontal line made of dashes (-).
For each addition or subtraction, put the result right below the horizontal line, with last digit aligned to the last digit of both operands.
For each multiplication, multiply the first number by each digit of the second number. Put the partial results one below the other, starting with the product of the last digit of the second number. Each partial result should be aligned with the corresponding digit. That means the last digit of the partial product must be in the same column as the digit of the second number. No product may begin with any additional zeros. If a particular digit is zero, the product has exactly one digit -- zero. If the second number has more than one digit, print another horizontal line under the partial results, and then print the sum of them.
There must be minimal number of spaces on the beginning of lines, with respect to other constraints. The horizontal line is always as long as necessary to reach the left and right end of both numbers (and operators) directly below and above it. That means it begins in the same column where the leftmost digit or operator of that two lines (one below and one above) is. It ends in the column where is the rightmost digit of that two numbers. The line can be neither longer nor shorter than specified.
Print one blank line after each test case, including the last one.
Example
Sample Input:
4 12345+67890 324-111 325*4405 1234*4
Sample Output:
12345 +67890 ------ 80235 324 -111 ---- 213 325 *4405 ----- 1625 0 1300 1300 ------- 1431625 1234 *4 ---- 4936Warning: large Input/Output data, be careful with certain languages.
Added by: | adrian |
Date: | 2004-05-08 |
Time limit: | 5s |
Source limit: | 50000B |
Memory limit: | 1536MB |
Cluster: | Cube (Intel G860) |
Languages: | All except: NODEJS PERL6 VB.NET |
Resource: | ACM Central European Programming Contest, Prague 2000 |
hide comments
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2020-06-10 11:40:21
Is there any way to tell if the result has N+M or rather N+M-1 digits without calculating the result itself? |
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2020-05-27 02:41:28 masoud
This should be pinned: badasshackme: 2018-04-05 02:16:22 Dude, who originally posted critical input http://contest.felk.cvut.cz/00cerc/solved/arith.in http://contest.felk.cvut.cz/00cerc/solved/arith.out Bless you God! I have no clue how this problem authors expected us to catch case 123451234567890 *99 ---------------- 1111061111111010 1111061111111010 ----------------- 12221672222221110 (amount of first dashes must be same as length of first intermediate value) |
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2020-04-13 22:34:28
how to store 500 digit number?? |
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2020-03-20 16:19:08
Don't waste your time on this problem. Idea is absolutely trivial but implementation would be a little bit harder. Alas, it's very hard and timewasting, because given description of the problem is unclear. It says too few information about an amount of dashes and to everyone's horror - given sample input and output is misleading in this matter. Finally did this but I must have guessed how dashes should work and it cost me a lot of time - wasted time. |
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2020-01-08 08:18:09
in case 9000*99 is this correct? 9000 __*99 ----- <- number of dashes equals number of digits in 81000 (not 9000) 81000 ... |
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2019-12-30 20:03:27
Does anyone have a good big crush test with specific inputs? Getting "wrong answer" all the time and cant figure out, where the problem is :( |
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2019-10-30 08:38:17
i have tried for all test cases and it showing appropriate result (including above testcases given in comment) but still its giving WA(wrong answer)is there necessary to leave one horizontal space from left side before printing the number? |
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2019-10-24 14:41:53 Bo MA
I also missed this one: 100000000000000000 -1 ----------------- 99999999999999999 Last edit: 2019-10-24 14:59:56 |
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2019-10-03 21:48:16
took me 2 days and 3 WA to solve it. 210 line of c++ code. the number of dashes will be = max(above_number_len_including_sign, below_line_len) used string for input and int array for calculation output and loops loops loops -_- |
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2019-10-02 12:34:23
try this case: 6 1*12345 99999*90 12345*1 90*999909 100000000000000000-1 1000*65 eg: a*b=r the first horizontal line should compare the length of one below and one above, the second horizontal line just compare [b] and [r]. the first one may not exist. Last edit: 2019-10-02 12:39:39 |