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SCUBADIV - Scuba diver |
A scuba diver uses a special equipment for diving. He has a cylinder with two containers: one with oxygen and the other with nitrogen. Depending on the time he wants to stay under water and the depth of diving the scuba diver needs various amount of oxygen and nitrogen. The scuba diver has at his disposal a certain number of cylinders. Each cylinder can be described by its weight and the volume of gas it contains. In order to complete his task the scuba diver needs specific amount of oxygen and nitrogen. What is the minimal total weight of cylinders he has to take to complete the task?
Example
The scuba diver has at his disposal 5 cylinders described below. Each description consists of: volume of oxygen, volume of nitrogen (both values are given in litres) and weight of the cylinder (given in decagrams):
3 36 120 10 25 129 5 50 250 1 45 130 4 20 119
If the scuba diver needs 5 litres of oxygen and 60 litres of nitrogen then he has to take two cylinders of total weight 249 (for example the first and the second ones or the fourth and the fifth ones).
Task
Write a program that for each test case:
- reads scuba diver's demand for oxygen and nitrogen, the number of accessible cylinders and their descriptions;
- computes the minimal total weight of cylinders the scuba diver needs to complete his task;
- outputs the result.
Note: the given set of cylinders always allows to complete the given task.
Input
The number of test cases c is in the first line of input, then c test cases follow separated by an empty line.
In the first line of a test case there are two integers t, a separated by a single space, 1 <= t <= 21 and 1 <= a <= 79. They denote volumes of oxygen and nitrogen respectively, needed to complete the task. The second line contains one integer n, 1 <= n <= 1000, which is the number of accessible cylinders. The following n lines contain descriptions of cylinders; i-th line contains three integers ti, ai, wi separated by single spaces, (1 <= ti <= 21, 1 <= ai <= 79, 1 <= wi <= 800). These are respectively: volume of oxygen and nitrogen in the i-th cylinder and the weight of this cylinder.
Output
For each test case your program should output one line with the minimal total weight of cylinders the scuba diver should take to complete the task.
Example
Sample input: 1 5 60 5 3 36 120 10 25 129 5 50 250 1 45 130 4 20 119 Sample output: 249
Added by: | MichaĆ Czuczman |
Date: | 2004-08-10 |
Time limit: | 5s |
Source limit: | 50000B |
Memory limit: | 1536MB |
Cluster: | Cube (Intel G860) |
Languages: | All |
Resource: | 5th Polish Olympiad in Informatics, stage 2 |
hide comments
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2017-05-26 16:19:25
3D dp+recursion ..Nice one..:) |
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2017-03-07 11:08:34 shahzada
classical. |
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2017-02-09 10:13:27
my first 3d dp |
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2017-01-23 07:43:35
Restricting Overflow in Recursion with memoization is a bit tricky... Nice Question |
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2016-10-28 21:56:44
recursion with memoisation works! Just stay within the bounds though! |
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2016-07-29 15:33:48
@iharsh234 I tried bottom-up approach to this problem and it worked. HINT: Really make sure that you are not going out-of-bounds on array. |
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2016-07-11 21:52:36
Bottom up -> RTE Recusion with dp-> AC why? Last edit: 2016-07-12 10:16:27 |
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2016-06-21 16:24:37
i agree with #nikki comment its simple topdown kanpsnap so for before solving this read topdown kanpsnap |
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2016-05-30 19:20:35 sanjay
GOOD PROBLEM.TOOK TIME ON THIS.THANKS TO THE AUTHOR :) |
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2016-05-18 09:41:14
The problem is simple, but beware of messing up on minute details. |