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NR2 - Bhagat The Bit Man |
Bhagat is student of CSE at ISM Dhanbad. In mid-semester exam somehow he was able to score full marks in Boolean algebra. So his profs doubt how can he score full marks. So profs decided to check his ability. They gave Bhagat a list student’s admission number and ask him to find total kaptiness (K) of list.
Kaptiness is defined as or operation on every dukkerness(di) value. Dukkerness value is xor operation on every pair of number in list. As we all know Bhagat is not good in Boolean algebra. Can you help him to prove his profs that he can score full out of full in boolean algebra.
Example:-
If list contain three number 10, 15 and 17. Then there will be total 3 pairs.
d1 = 10 ^ 15 = 5;
d2 = 10 ^ 17 = 27;
d3 = 17 ^ 15 = 30;
k = d1 | d2 | d3 ;
K = 31;
Input
First line of input contain N (2 <= N <= 106). N is total number of admission number (ai) in list.
Then following N line will contain admission number. (0 <= ai <=1018)
Output
Output only one line containing K.
Example
Input: 3 10 15 17 Output: 31
NOTE: Large input data. >
test cases have been updated and all solutions are rejudged.
Added by: | NISHANT RAJ |
Date: | 2014-03-11 |
Time limit: | 1s |
Source limit: | 50000B |
Memory limit: | 1536MB |
Cluster: | Cube (Intel G860) |
Languages: | All except: ASM64 |
Resource: | own |
hide comments
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2015-05-26 03:14:43 Baymax
use scanf/printf instead of cin/cout ... |
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2015-02-14 15:18:31 :.Mohib.:
Realy enjoyed....nice problem.... |
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2014-04-29 02:03:06 Martin Radev
Also, I am interested in other people's solutions since I see there are such under 1 second. --ans(Francky)--> There's only one good solution (the same for all AC I suppose), faster ones use only much faster IO methods. Last edit: 2014-04-29 10:36:04 |
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2014-03-20 06:54:12 Francky
Again, here input isn't terminated by a '\n', it's quite unusual. Last edit: 2014-03-12 20:37:59 |