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GSS2 - Can you answer these queries II |
Being a completist and a simplest, kid Yang Zhe cannot solve but get Wrong Answer from most of the OI problems. And he refuse to write two program of same kind at all. So he always fails in contests.
When having a contest, Yang Zhe looks at the score of every problems first. For the problems of the same score, Yang Zhe will do only one of them. If he's lucky enough, he can get all the scores wanted.
Amber is going to hold a contest in SPOJ. She has made a list of N candidate problems, which fit Yang Zhe very well. So Yang Zhe can solve any problem he want. Amber lined up the problems, began to select. She will select a subsequence of the list as the final problems. Being A girl of great compassion, she'd like to select such a subsequence (can be empty) that Yang Zhe will get the maximal score over all the possible subsequences.
Amber found the subsequence easily after a few minutes. To make things harder, Amber decided that, Yang Zhe can take this contest only if Yang Zhe can answer her Q questions. The question is: if the final problems are limited to be a subsequence of list[X..Y] (1 <= X <= Y <= N), what's the maximal possible score Yang Zhe can get?
As we know, Yang Zhe is a bit idiot (so why did he solve the problem with a negative score?), he got Wrong Answer again... Tell him the correct answer!
Input
- Line 1: integer N (1 <= N <= 100000);
- Line 2: N integers denoting the score of each problem, each of them is a integer in range [-100000, 100000];
- Line 3: integer Q (1 <= Q <= 100000);
- Line 3+i (1 <= i <= Q): two integers X and Y denoting the ith question.
Output
- Line i: a single integer, the answer to the ith question.
Example
Input: 9 4 -2 -2 3 -1 -4 2 2 -6 3 1 2 1 5 4 9 Output: 4 5 3Warning: large input/output data, be careful with certain languages
Added by: | Fudan University Problem Setters |
Date: | 2007-05-16 |
Time limit: | 1s |
Source limit: | 50000B |
Memory limit: | 1536MB |
Cluster: | Cube (Intel G860) |
Languages: | All except: C99 ERL JS-RHINO |
Resource: | Description, standard program and test data by Yang Zhe |
hide comments
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2019-02-28 20:47:28
first convince urself about ouput for the following input 8 1 2 -1 3 2 -1 2 -1 2 1 8 2 8 Output 5 5 Last edit: 2019-02-28 20:48:04 |
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2019-02-28 20:21:38
Horrible explanation |
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2019-01-06 00:41:15 cegprakash
3 4 1 2 4 1 1 4 Is the answer 7 or 11? |
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2019-01-06 00:36:07 cegprakash
What a horrible way to write a question!! |
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2018-11-08 08:01:51
how the answer of the second query of the sample test case ? |
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2018-10-03 16:03:51
why you say subsequence when you mean subarray , confusing! |
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2018-08-08 20:05:59
this test is very useful it can`t solve like GSS1 8 1 2 -1 3 2 -1 2 -1 2 1 8 2 8 |
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2018-06-14 13:19:35
Test case that helped me solve it: 8 12 35 57 79 -1 21 -26 18 1 2 8 output 191 |
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2018-06-09 22:15:24
Very Good Problem!! |
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2018-01-22 10:21:40
best_ever_lazy _propogation |