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GNYR04H - Mr Youngs Picture Permutations |
Mr. Young wishes to take a picture of his class. The students will stand in rows, with each row no longer than the row behind it and the left ends of the rows aligned. For instance, 12 students could be arranged in rows (from back to front) of 5, 3, 3 and 1 students.
X X X X X X X X X X X X
In addition, Mr. Young wants the students in each row arranged so that heights decrease from left to right. Also, student heights should decrease from the back to the front. Thinking about it, Mr. Young sees that for the 12-student example, there are at least two ways to arrange the students (numbers represent heights, with 1 meaning the tallest):
1 2 3 4 5 1 5 8 11 12 6 7 8 2 6 9 9 10 11 3 7 10 12 4
Mr. Young wonders how many different arrangements of the students there might be for a given arrangement of rows. He tries counting by hand starting with rows of lengths 3, 2 and 1 and counts 16 arrangements:
123 123 124 124 125 125 126 126 134 134 135 135 136 136 145 146 45 46 35 36 34 36 34 35 25 26 24 26 24 25 26 25 6 5 6 5 6 4 5 4 6 5 6 4 5 4 3 3
Mr. Young sees that counting by hand is not going to be very effective for any reasonable number of students. He asks you to help out by writing a computer program to determine the number of different arrangements of students for a given set of rows.
Input
The input describes a series of test, each described in two lines. The first line gives the number of rows, k, as a decimal integer. The second line contains the lengths of the rows from back to front (n1, n2 ... nk) as decimal integers separated by single spaces. The problem set ends with a line with a row count of 0. There will never be more than 5 rows and the total number of students, N, (sum of the row lengths) will be at most 30.
Output
For each test case output a single integer: The number of arrangements of N students into the given rows, so that the heights decrease along each row from left to right and along each column from back to front (assume that all heights are distinct). The results should be in separate lines. The input data will be chosen so that the result will always fit in an unsigned 32-bit integer.
Sample
Input 1 30 5 1 1 1 1 1 3 3 2 1 4 5 3 3 1 5 6 5 4 3 2 2 15 15 0 Output 1 1 16 4158 141892608 9694845
Added by: | abdelkarim |
Date: | 2013-08-13 |
Time limit: | 1s |
Source limit: | 50000B |
Memory limit: | 1536MB |
Cluster: | Cube (Intel G860) |
Languages: | All except: ASM64 |
Resource: | ACM Regionals 2004 North America - Greater NY |
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2022-05-21 06:01:37
<snip> [Simes]: Read the footer - Don't post source code here. Last edit: 2022-05-31 18:51:54 |