ONEZERO - Ones and zeros
Certain positive integers have their decimal representation consisting only of ones and zeros, and having at least one digit one, e.g. 101. If a positive integer does not have such a property, one can try to multiply it by some positive integer to find out whether the product has this property.
Input
Number K of test cases (K is approximately 1000);
In each of the next K lines there is one integer n (1 ≤ n ≤ 20000)
Output
For each test case, your program should compute the smallest multiple of the number n consisting only of digits 1 and 0 (beginning with 1).
Example
Input: 3 17 11011 17 Output: 11101 11011 11101
hide comments
a_thinker:
2016-07-14 13:26:43
@candide how would that make a difference if we do bfs ending with the left most digits or bfs ending with the right most digits ? |
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invincible_rm:
2016-07-05 19:41:32
Used the Queue n the Modulo(n states) n Backtracked for number
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ajay_5097:
2016-05-26 17:13:42
easy one !! 2nd on bfs ! :)
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candide:
2016-05-16 01:58:46
@kartikay singh: "Wonder,how ppl did it in 0.00s??"
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zdratcha:
2016-04-28 21:35:28
bfs and backtracking got me an AC :) |
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minhthai:
2016-01-12 12:01:40
very nice problem. that example tests though :v
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karan:
2015-12-29 10:01:35
weak test cases. try for 999 and 9999. |
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kshitij tripathi:
2015-12-26 21:21:39
Nice Problem :) |
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vipul grover:
2015-12-10 10:44:24
finally after so many attempts :) |
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aghori_sadhu:
2015-12-07 05:16:44
BFS+states |
Added by: | Paweł Dobrzycki |
Date: | 2005-05-26 |
Time limit: | 8s |
Source limit: | 4096B |
Memory limit: | 1536MB |
Cluster: | Cube (Intel G860) |
Languages: | All except: NODEJS PERL6 VB.NET |
Resource: | II Polish Olympiad in Informatics, Ist Stage |