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Merge sort is one of the classic sorting algorithms. It divides the input |
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array into two halves, recursively sorts each half, then merges the two sorted |
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halves. |
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In this problem merge sort is used to sort an array of integers in ascending |
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order. The exact behavior is given by the following pseudo-code: |
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function merge_sort(arr): |
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n = arr.length() |
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if n <= 1: |
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return arr |
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// arr is indexed 0 through n-1, inclusive |
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mid = floor(n/2) |
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first_half = merge_sort(arr[0..mid-1]) |
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second_half = merge_sort(arr[mid..n-1]) |
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return merge(first_half, second_half) |
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function merge(arr1, arr2): |
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result = [] |
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while arr1.length() > 0 and arr2.length() > 0: |
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if arr1[0] < arr2[0]: |
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print '1' // for debugging |
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result.append(arr1[0]) |
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arr1.remove_first() |
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else: |
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print '2' // for debugging |
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result.append(arr2[0]) |
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arr2.remove_first() |
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result.append(arr1) |
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result.append(arr2) |
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return result |
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A very important permutation of the integers 1 through **N** was lost to a |
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hard drive failure. Luckily, that sequence had been sorted by the above |
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algorithm and the debug sequence of 1s and 2s was recorded on a different |
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disk. You will be given the length **N** of the original sequence, and the |
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debug sequence. Recover the original sequence of integers. |
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### Input |
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The first line of the input file contains an integer **T**. This is followed |
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by **T** test cases, each of which has two lines. The first line of each test |
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case contains the length of the original sequence, **N**. The second line |
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contains a string of 1s and 2s, the debug sequence produced by merge sort |
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while sorting the original sequence. Lines are separated using Unix-style |
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("\n") line endings. |
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### Output |
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To avoid having to upload the entire original sequence, output an integer |
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checksum of the original sequence, calculated by the following algorithm: |
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function checksum(arr): |
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result = 1 |
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for i=0 to arr.length()-1: |
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result = (31 * result + arr[i]) mod 1000003 |
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return result |
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### Constraints |
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5 ≤ **T** ≤ 20 |
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2 ≤ N ≤ 10,000 |
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### Examples |
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In the first example, N is 2 and the debug sequence is `1`. The original |
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sequence was 1 2 or 2 1. The debug sequence tells us that the first number was |
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smaller than the second so we know the sequence was 1 2. The checksum is 994. |
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In the second example, N is 2 and the debug sequence is `2`. This time the |
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original sequence is 2 1. |
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In the third example, N is 4 and the debug sequence is `12212`. The original |
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sequence is 2 4 3 1. |
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