If you are a fan of Harry Potter, you would know the world of magic has its own currency system -- as Hagrid explained it to Harry, "Seventeen silver Sickles to a Galleon and twenty-nine Knuts to a Sickle, it's easy enough." Your job is to write a program to compute A+B where A and B are given in the standard form of "Galleon.Sickle.Knut" (Galleon is an integer in [0, 107], Sickle is an integer in [0, 17), and Knut is an integer in [0, 29)).
Input Specification:
Each input file contains one test case which occupies a line with A and B in the standard form, separated by one space.
Output Specification:
For each test case you should output the sum of A and B in one line, with the same format as the input.
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
typedef struct
{
long g;
int s,k;
}Num;
int main ()
{
Num a,b,sum;
scanf("%ld.%d.%d",&a.g,&a.s,&a.k);
scanf("%ld.%d.%d",&b.g,&b.s,&b.k);
sum.k=a.k+b.k;
sum.s=a.s+b.s;
sum.g=a.g+b.g;
if( sum.k>=29)
{
sum.k=sum.k%29;
sum.s+=1;
}
if( sum.s>=17)
{
sum.s=sum.s%17;
sum.g+=1;
}
printf("%ld.%d.%d\n",sum.g,sum.s,sum.k);
system("pause");
return 0;
}