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MINVEST - Investment Money |
John never knew he had a grand-uncle, until he received the notary’s letter. He learned that his late grand-uncle had gathered a lot of money, somewhere in South-America, and that John was the only inheritor.
John did not need that much money for the moment. But he realized that it would be a good idea to store this capital in a safe place, and have it grow until he decided to retire. The bank convinced him that a certain kind of bond was interesting for him. This kind of bond has a fixed value, and gives a fixed amount of yearly interest, payed to the owner at the end of each year.
The bond has no fixed term. Bonds are available in different sizes. The larger ones usually give a better interest. Soon John realized that the optimal set of bonds to buy was not trivial to figure out. Moreover, after a few years his capital would have grown, and the schedule had to be re-evaluated. Assume the following bonds are available:
Value Annual interest 4000 400 3000 250
With a capital of $10000 one could buy two bonds of $4000, giving a yearly interest of $800. Buying two bonds of $3000, and one of $4000 is a better idea, as it gives a yearly interest of e900. After two years the capital has grown to $11800, and it makes sense to sell a $3000 one and buy a $4000 one, so the annual interest grows to $1050.
This is where this story grows unlikely: the bank does not charge for buying and selling bonds. Next year the total sum is $12850, which allows for three times $4000, giving a yearly interest of $1200. Here is your problem: given an amount to begin with, a number of years, and a set of bonds with their values and interests, find out how big the amount may grow in the given period, using the best schedule for buying and selling bonds.
Input
The first line contains a single positive integer N which is the number of test cases. The first line of a test case contains two positive integers: the amount to start with (at most $1000000), and the number of years the capital may grow (at most 40). The following line contains a single number: the number d (1 ≤ d ≤ 10) of available bonds. The next d lines each contain the description of a bond. The description of a bond consists of two positive integers: the value of the bond, and the yearly interest for that bond. The value of a bond is always a multiple of $1000. The interest of a bond is never more than 10% of its value
Output
For each test case, output – on a separate line – the capital at the end of the period, after an optimal schedule of buying and selling.
SAMPLE INPUT 1 10000 4 2 4000 400 3000 250 SAMPLE OUTPUT 14050
Added by: | psetter |
Date: | 2009-02-27 |
Time limit: | 1s |
Source limit: | 50000B |
Memory limit: | 1536MB |
Cluster: | Cube (Intel G860) |
Languages: | All except: ERL JS-RHINO NODEJS PERL6 VB.NET |
Resource: | NWERC 2004 |
hide comments
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2017-06-01 07:34:41
Bond will be a factor of 1000 !!!!!! |
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2017-05-29 17:25:44
be careful value of a bond maybe more than money you have |
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2016-04-21 03:20:08 farhad chowdhury
getting tle can anybody tell me the order of this problem. i used both top-bottom and bottom-up |
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2015-12-02 18:55:39
what can be the maximum value of the bond.?? |
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2015-11-14 20:41:47 :.Mohib.:
Beautiful problem! |
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2015-09-17 19:16:57 [BITMEN] DARK LORD
amazing question.just read the input constraints carefully. |
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2015-06-07 11:05:30 Anubhav Singh
wrong link: to go to the problem statement go to this link: http://www.spoj.com/problems/MINVEST/en/ |
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2012-10-03 12:17:58 Raghavendran Ramachandran
Nice problem:) |