B. Sonya and Exhibition
time limit per test
1 second
memory limit per test
256 megabytes
input
standard input
output
standard output
Sonya decided to organize an exhibition of flowers. Since the girl likes only roses and lilies, she decided that only these two kinds of flowers should be in this exhibition.
There are nn flowers in a row in the exhibition. Sonya can put either a rose or a lily in the ii-th position. Thus each of nn positions should contain exactly one flower: a rose or a lily.
She knows that exactly mm people will visit this exhibition. The ii-th visitor will visit all flowers from lili to riri inclusive. The girl knows that each segment has its own beauty that is equal to the product of the number of roses and the number of lilies.
Sonya wants her exhibition to be liked by a lot of people. That is why she wants to put the flowers in such way that the sum of beauties of all segments would be maximum possible.
Input
The first line contains two integers nn and mm (1≤n,m≤1031≤n,m≤103) — the number of flowers and visitors respectively.
Each of the next mm lines contains two integers lili and riri (1≤li≤ri≤n1≤li≤ri≤n), meaning that ii-th visitor will visit all flowers from lili to ririinclusive.
Output
Print the string of nn characters. The ii-th symbol should be «0» if you want to put a rose in the ii-th position, otherwise «1» if you want to put a lily.
If there are multiple answers, print any.
Examples
input
Copy
5 3
1 3
2 4
2 5
output
Copy
01100
input
Copy
6 3
5 6
1 4
4 6
output
Copy
110010
Note
In the first example, Sonya can put roses in the first, fourth, and fifth positions, and lilies in the second and third positions;
- in the segment [1…3][1…3], there are one rose and two lilies, so the beauty is equal to 1⋅2=21⋅2=2;
- in the segment [2…4][2…4], there are one rose and two lilies, so the beauty is equal to 1⋅2=21⋅2=2;
- in the segment [2…5][2…5], there are two roses and two lilies, so the beauty is equal to 2⋅2=42⋅2=4.
The total beauty is equal to 2+2+4=82+2+4=8.
In the second example, Sonya can put roses in the third, fourth, and sixth positions, and lilies in the first, second, and fifth positions;
- in the segment [5…6][5…6], there are one rose and one lily, so the beauty is equal to 1⋅1=11⋅1=1;
- in the segment [1…4][1…4], there are two roses and two lilies, so the beauty is equal to 2⋅2=42⋅2=4;
- in the segment [4…6][4…6], there are two roses and one lily, so the beauty is equal to 2⋅1=22⋅1=2.
The total beauty is equal to 1+4+2=71+4+2=7.
#include<cstdio>
#include<iostream>
#include<algorithm>
#include<vector>
using namespace std;
class node
{
public:
int l,r;
};
bool compare(node a,node b)
{
if(a.r-a.l<b.r-b.l)
return 1;
else if(a.r-a.l>b.r-b.l)
return 0;
else
{
if(a.r>b.r)
return 0;
return 1;
}
}
int main()
{
int n,m;
cin>>n>>m;
bool flower[1005]= {0};
bool vis[1005]= {0};
node man[1005];
for(int i=0; i<m; i++)
{
int l,r;
scanf("%d%d",&l,&r);
man[i].l=l;
man[i].r=r;
}
for(int k=1; k<=n; k++)
{
if(k%2)
cout<<0;
else
cout<<1;
}
}