|
|
back to boardsome tests Give me, please, first 10-15 answers. Re: some tests It's not hard to get the correct formula for this problem, but harder to implement it because of high precision required. At last I had to use precalculated array for getting AC. Here's your answers: 2 -> 1.5 3 -> 2.25 4 -> 3.21428571 5 -> 4.48571429 6 -> 6.21981567 7 -> 8.64673579 8 -> 12.1044438 9 -> 17.0919353 10 -> 24.3495978 Re: some tests Ok, thank you! Re: some tests What was the issue? For me straightforward implementation in C++ using double got AC easily. Re: some tests How did you take 100th power of 3/2? I can't think it out. I've never used decimal long arithmetic. Edited by author 03.01.2013 16:06 Edited by author 03.01.2013 16:06 Re: some tests It is useful to remember that standard double type can store numbers up to 10^300 (and even a bit more). (3/2)^100 < 2^100 < 10^35 => no problem to compute it in double. And since you need relative accuracy of only 7 digits => 16+ digits that double variable stores is more than enough to compute what you need. Actually, here with usual double you can calculate answers for n up to 500+. Re: some tests Is it really true? I always thought that double type takes only 8 bytes of memory and hence cannot store such big numbers. But anyway thank you. Maybe I just have bad compiler or bad implementation as always :) Re: some tests good test: n=40 ans=3688328.070956036 Re: some tests The problem asks for at least 6 correct decimals. I had to compute up to 100 decimals (in intermediate computations) to get the required precision in the final answer for n = 100. Here is the (censored) answer for the biggest possible test: n = 100 answer = 13552*3*4*4*1*6*18.186159417 |
|
|