Time Limit: 1000MS | Memory Limit: 65536K | |
Total Submissions: 8293 | Accepted: 3596 |
Description
This problem is based on an exercise of David Hilbert, who pedagogically suggested that one study the theory of 4n+1 numbers. Here, we do only a bit of that.
An H-number is a positive number which is one more than a multiple of four: 1, 5, 9, 13, 17, 21,... are the H-numbers. For this problem we pretend that these are the only numbers. The H-numbers are closed under multiplication.
As with regular integers, we partition the H-numbers into units, H-primes, and H-composites. 1 is the only unit. An H-number h is H-prime if it is not the unit, and is the product of two H-numbers in only one way: 1 × h. The rest of the numbers are H-composite.
For examples, the first few H-composites are: 5 × 5 = 25, 5 × 9 = 45, 5 × 13 = 65, 9 × 9 = 81, 5 × 17 = 85.
Your task is to count the number of H-semi-primes. An H-semi-prime is an H-number which is the product of exactly two H-primes. The two H-primes may be equal or different. In the example above, all five numbers are H-semi-primes. 125 = 5 × 5 × 5 is not an H-semi-prime, because it's the product of three H-primes.
Input
Each line of input contains an H-number ≤ 1,000,001. The last line of input contains 0 and this line should not be processed.
Output
For each inputted H-number h, print a line stating h and the number of H-semi-primes between 1 and h inclusive, separated by one space in the format shown in the sample.
Sample Input
21 85 789 0
Sample Output
21 0 85 5 789 62
#include <iostream>
#include <cstring>
#include <cstdio>
#define LL long long
using namespace std;
const int maxn = 1000010;
int s[maxn];
void Init()
{
memset(s, 0, sizeof(s));
for(int i=5; i<=1010; i+=4)
{
if(s[i] == 0)
{
for(int j=i; j * i <= maxn; j+=4)
{
s[i * j] = s[i] + s[j] + 1;
}
}
}
for(int i=25; i<=maxn; i++)
s[i] = s[i-1] + (s[i] == 1 ? 1 : 0);
}
int main()
{
Init();
int h;
while(cin>>h && h)
{
cout<<h<<" "<<s[h]<<endl;
}
return 0;
}