HDU Humble Numbers (dp)
Humble NumbersTime Limit: 2000/1000 ms (Java/Other) Memory Limit: 65536/32768 K (Java/Other) Total Submission (s): 8 Accepted Submission (s): 4 Font: times New Roman | Verdana | GeorgiaFont Size: Regular → Problem DescriptionA number whose only prime factors are 2, 3, 5 or 7 is called a humble number. the sequence 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 14, 15, 16, 18, 20, 21, 24, 25, 27 ,... shows the first 20 humble numbers.
Write a program to find and print the nth element in this sequence
InputThe input consists of one or more test cases. each test case consists of one integer n with 1 <=n <= 5842. input is terminated by a value of zero (0) for n.
OutputFor each test case, print one line saying "The nth humble number is number. ". depending on the value of n, the correct suffix "st", "nd", "rd ", or "th" for the ordinal number nth has to be used like it is shown in the sample output.
Sample Input
1234111213212223100100058420
Sample Output
The 1st humble number is 1.The 2nd humble number is 2.The 3rd humble number is 3.The 4th humble number is 4.The 11th humble number is 12.The 12th humble number is 14.The 13th humble number is 15.The 21st humble number is 28.The 22nd humble number is 30.The 23rd humble number is 32.The 100th humble number is 450.The 1000th humble number is 385875.The 5842nd humble number is 2000000000.
SourceUniversity of Ulm Local Contest 1996 AC code:
#include
#include #include
#include
using namespace std;int main(){ int n; char s1,s2; int dp[6000],i; dp[1]=1; i=2; int two=1,three=1,five=1,seven=1,t1,t2; while(i<=5842){ dp[i]=min((t1=min(2*dp[two],3*dp[three])),(t2=min(5*dp[five],dp[seven]*7))); if(dp[i]==dp[two]*2)two++; if(dp[i]==dp[three]*3)three++; if(dp[i]==dp[five]*5)five++; if(dp[i]==dp[seven]*7)seven++; i++; } while(cin>>n&&n){ if(n%10==1&&n%100!=11)s1='s',s2='t'; else if(n%10==2&&n%100!=12)s1='n',s2='d'; else if(n%10==3&&n%100!=13)s1='r',s2='d'; else s1='t',s2='h'; printf("The %d%c%c humble number is %d.\n",n,s1,s2,dp[n]); } return 0;}