TRICENTR - Triangle From Centroid
Given the length of side a of a triangle and the distances from the centroid (the point of concurrence of the medians - red in the picture) to all sides: a, b and c, calculate this triangle's area and the distance (blue line) from the orthocenter (the point of concurrence of the heights - green in the picture) to the centroid.
Input
In the first line integer n - the number of test cases (equal to about 1000). The next n lines - 4 floating point values: the length of side a, and distances from the centroid to sides a, b and c.
Output
n lines consisting of 2 floating point values with 3 digits after the decimal point: the area of the triangle and the distance from the orthocenter to centroid.
Example
Input: 2 3.0 0.8660254038 0.8660254038 0.8660254038 657.8256599140 151.6154399062 213.5392629932 139.4878846649 Output: 3.897 0.000 149604.790 150.275
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chandanak:
2015-10-24 15:20:53
The solutions of this problem are not right . The person who framed the problem seems to have rounded off values somewhere in the intermediary steps . My answers for the sample input are : 149604.781 150.274
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puntu:
2015-09-11 18:37:28
though i am getting the correct answer in my ide but i think the rounding off trchnique followed by them and my ide i different, so they r giving me W/A.
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puntu:
2015-09-11 18:36:21
apply that the distance from the centroid to the orthocentre is twice that of the distance from the centroid to the circumcentre. so challenge is to calculate the distance from the centroid to the circumcentre.
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dushyant_bgs:
2015-09-02 11:20:04
Aren't the conditions
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Anushka:
2015-07-02 13:42:48
Is there any straight formula to calculate distance between centroid and orthocentre?? I googled up a formula but it is giving wrong answer |
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ASHUTOSH DWIVEDI:
2015-05-28 21:30:39
@ Harunur Rashid As the perpendicular distance is given from centroid
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Ruffneck:
2014-11-11 01:24:56
maths maths maths |
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Harunur Rashid:
2014-08-18 22:36:53
b=a*ga/gb;
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mayank:
2013-12-31 18:35:09
purely formula based! nothing sepcial required! and @liz can you tell how do you plan to do this question without the measure of length side 'a' ? My mail id is mayank25080562@gmail.com |
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liz:
2013-11-10 10:20:35
Actually the length of side a is not necessary. One can solve the problem using only distances from the centroid to the sides. |
Added by: | Patryk Pomykalski |
Date: | 2004-05-22 |
Time limit: | 1s |
Source limit: | 50000B |
Memory limit: | 1536MB |
Cluster: | Cube (Intel G860) |
Languages: | All except: NODEJS PERL6 VB.NET |