DCEPC12E - End of Fun
Its holiday time after exams and Kappi and Pushap are enjoying to its fullest. But the sadist Sid, their teacher, can’t see them enjoy. Sad isn’t it? To ruin their fun, he gave them a programming problem to be solved within next 5 hours. He gives them 2 square matrices of equal dimension, Matrix A and a Matrix B and asks multiple queries on these matrices. The queries will be to change a particular element of one of the matrix and output the sum of elements of product of their matrix. Sid asks a lot of such queries. Kappi and Pushap don’t want the end of fun and so they ask you to solve this problem on behalf of them.
Input
First line consists of N, the dimension of matrix.
Each of the next N lines contains N space separated integers. This is matrix A.
Each of the next N lines contains N space separated integers. This is matrix B.
Next line contains Q, the number of queries asked by Sid.
Each of the next Q lines consists of queries of the form “A i j K” or “B i j K” (quotes for clarity), meaning change the element in ith row and jth column of matrix A or B to value K.
Output
Output exactly Q lines corresponding to Q queries, each containing the sum of the elements of the matrix A × B.
Example
Input: 2 1 2 3 4 4 3 2 1 3 A 1 1 2 B 0 1 3 A 0 0 10 Output: 40 40 103
Constraints
1 ≤ N ≤ 100
1 ≤ Q ≤ 100000
0 ≤ i, j < N
-106 ≤ A[i][j], B[i][j] ≤ 106
hide comments
:D:
2015-02-07 22:06:37
Actually constraints seem to be correct. You need long longs, but not for the arrays A or B. |
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785227:
2014-06-28 18:44:58
Use long long for the array :) |
Added by: | dce coders |
Date: | 2013-12-07 |
Time limit: | 1s |
Source limit: | 50000B |
Memory limit: | 1536MB |
Cluster: | Cube (Intel G860) |
Languages: | C CSHARP C++ 4.3.2 CPP C99 HASK JAVA PAS-GPC PAS-FPC PYTHON PYTHON3 PY_NBC |