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SAMER08F - Feynman |
Richard Phillips Feynman was a well known American physicist and a recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physics. He worked in theoretical physics and also pioneered the field of quantum computing. He visited South America for ten months, giving lectures and enjoying life in the tropics. He is also known for his books "Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!" and "What Do You Care What Other People Think?", which include some of his adventures below the equator.
His life-long addiction was solving and making puzzles, locks, and cyphers. Recently, an old farmer in South America, who was a host to the young physicist in 1949, found some papers and notes that is believed to have belonged to Feynman. Among notes about mesons and electromagnetism, there was a napkin where he wrote a simple puzzle: "how many different squares are there in a grid of N ×N squares?".
In the same napkin there was a drawing which is reproduced below, showing that, for N=2, the answer is 5.
Input
The input contains several test cases. Each test case is composed of a single line, containing only one integer N, representing the number of squares in each side of the grid (1 ≤ N ≤ 100).
The end of input is indicated by a line containing only one zero.
Output
For each test case in the input, your program must print a single line, containing the number of different squares for the corresponding input.
Example
Input: 2 1 8 0 Output: 5 1 204
Added by: | Diego Satoba |
Date: | 2008-11-23 |
Time limit: | 1s |
Source limit: | 50000B |
Memory limit: | 1536MB |
Cluster: | Cube (Intel G860) |
Languages: | ASM64 C C++ 4.3.2 CPP FORTRAN JAVA PAS-GPC PAS-FPC |
Resource: | South American Regional Contests 2008 |
hide comments
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2011-11-07 05:12:37 nixeagle
Picked up an AC for this problem using C++. But seriously why no haskell? :( |
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2011-08-28 14:50:11 Rohit
Y U NO let me do it in python :'( |
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2011-07-22 16:54:05 Fedor Logachev
HASK HASK HASK why only c/pascal/java? |
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2011-07-13 17:34:14 azalathemad
@Ivan - are you sure? I just did it with and without a range check and both succeeded. |
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2011-07-13 00:14:01 Ivan Malison
Its pretty stupid that you get a score of "wrong answer" if you don't check to make sure the value is in the right range... |
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2011-06-06 11:21:46 Mochammad Zakiy Anwari
Thanks for your hint, Neeraj :). |
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2011-05-25 13:27:43 simon
python please ! |
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2011-04-19 10:50:27 V0iD!
@ashutosh: the last input is 0...which should not be processed... |
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2011-04-18 16:30:36 Neeraj Bhat
some test cases are as follows:- for n 1: 1 2: 5 3: 14 4: 30 5: 55 6: 91 7: 140 8: 204 9: 285 10: 385 BY: Neeraj Bhat Last edit: 2011-04-18 16:31:54 |
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2011-04-17 09:16:08 Ashutosh
Is input value is used as for exit. or 1st test case value is for next test cases. if 1st test case is 2 then there will be 2 more test cases next to it. :s |