CELSP - Celebrity Split

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Question G – Frosh Week
During Frosh Week, students play various fun games to get to know each other and compete against other teams. In one such game, all the frosh on a team stand in a line, and are then asked to arrange themselves according to some criterion, such as their height, their birth date, or their student number. This rearrangement of the line must be accomplished only by successively swapping pairs of consecutive students. The team that finishes fastest wins. Thus, in order to win, you would like to minimize the number of swaps required.
Input:
The first line of input contains one positive integer n, the number of students on the team, which will be no more than one million. The following n lines each contain one integer, the student number of each student on the team. No student number will appear more than once.
Output:
Output a line containing the minimum number of swaps required to arrange the students in increasing order by student number.
Example Input:
3
3
1
2
Example Output:
2

Jack and Jill have decided to separate and divide their property equally. Each of their N mansions has a value between 1,000,000 and 40,000,000 dollars. Jack will receive some of the mansions; Jill will receive some of the mansions; the remaining mansions will be sold, and the proceeds split equally.

Neither Jack nor Jill can tolerate the other receiving property with higher total value. The sum of the values of the mansions Jack receives must be equal to the sum of the values of the mansions Jill receives. So long as the value that each receives is equal, Jack and Jill would like each to receive property of the highest possible value.

Given the values of N mansions, compute the value of the mansions that must be sold so that the rest may be divided so as to satisfy Jack and Jill.

Example: Suppose Jack and Jill own 5 mansions valued at 6,000,000, 30,000,000, 3,000,000, 11,000,000, and 3,000,000 dollars. To satisfy their requirements, Jack or Jill would receive the mansion worth 6,000,000 and the other would receive both manstions worth 3,000,000 dollars. The mansions worth 11,000,000 and 30,000,000 dollars would be sold, for a total of 41,000,000 dollars. The answer is therefore 41000000.

Input:

The input consists of a sequence of test cases. The first line of each test case contains a single integer N, the number of mansions, which will be no more than 24. This line is followed by N lines, each giving the value of a mansion. The final line of input contains the integer zero. This line is not a test case and should not be processed.

Output:

For each test case, output a line containing a single integer, the value of the mansions that must be sold so that the rest may be divided so as to satisfy Jack and Jill.

Example Input:

5

6000000

30000000

3000000

11000000

3000000

0

Example Output:

41000000


hide comments
Andres Tellez: 2011-08-28 19:32:31

i made a mistake with the problem statement but now it is correct.

Oleg: 2011-08-28 19:31:38

Seems indeed problem with tests.

Krunal Manik: 2011-08-28 19:31:38

Are you sure the test cases are correct for this problem ?


Added by:Andres Tellez
Date:2011-08-23
Time limit:2s
Source limit:50000B
Memory limit:1536MB
Cluster: Cube (Intel G860)
Languages:All except: ASM64