APS - Amazing Prime Sequence
Bablu is very fond of Series and Sequences...
After studying Fibonacci Series in Class IX, he was impressed and he designed his own sequence as follows...
a[0] = a[1] = 0
For n > 1, a[n] = a[n - 1] + f(n), where f(n) is smallest prime factor of n.
He is also very fond of programming and thus made a small program to find a[n], but since he is in Class IX, he is not very good at programming. So, he asks you for help. Your task is to find a[n] for the above sequence....
Input
Your code will be checked for multiple Test Cases.
First Line of Input contains T (<= 100), the number of Test Cases.
Next T lines contain a single number N. (1 < N < 10^7).
Output
Single line containing a[n] i.e. nth number of the sequence for each test case.
Example
Input: 3 2 3 4 Output: 2 5 7
hide comments
The_ROCK:
2013-12-29 08:22:04
@Karan Dev : Its because for high values your recursive function eats up all the stack memory.
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karan_dev:
2013-08-15 10:36:57
my code works for n=10000, but not for , n=100000 or above. I checked 'smallest prime' function, it is working good for n=100000 or above. help. |
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Bhagwat:
2013-06-04 02:48:31
nice problem..:) |
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Abhishek Mishra:
2013-04-25 11:08:27
should be moved to the tutorial section... |
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Eduardo Nunes:
2013-04-18 21:56:31
nice one :-D |
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johri:
2013-02-19 09:25:25
Amazing ..:)) |
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Aditya Pande:
2013-02-17 04:58:46
i guess the test cases are randomly generated. The supposedly faster code working slowly...? |
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chicku:
2013-02-16 21:34:27
@abdelkarim ya man did it before the question was there on spoj |
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(Tjandra Satria Gunawan)(曾毅昆):
2013-02-15 20:15:28
@Ehor Nechiporenko: Your memory usage give me more idea to optimize my solution ;-) Thanks, haha... |
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Alex Anderson:
2013-02-15 16:15:36
The number 11,000,000 was in the input, but it seems to have been fixed now.
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Added by: | c[R]@zY f[R]0G |
Date: | 2013-02-14 |
Time limit: | 1s |
Source limit: | 5000B |
Memory limit: | 1536MB |
Cluster: | Cube (Intel G860) |
Languages: | All except: ASM64 |