A. In Search of an Easy Problem
time limit per test
1 second
memory limit per test
256 megabytes
input
standard input
output
standard output
When preparing a tournament, Codeforces coordinators try treir best to make the first problem as easy as possible. This time the coordinator had chosen some problem and asked nn people about their opinions. Each person answered whether this problem is easy or hard.
If at least one of these nn people has answered that the problem is hard, the coordinator decides to change the problem. For the given responses, check if the problem is easy enough.
Input
The first line contains a single integer nn (1≤n≤1001≤n≤100) — the number of people who were asked to give their opinions.
The second line contains nn integers, each integer is either 00 or 11. If ii-th integer is 00, then ii-th person thinks that the problem is easy; if it is 11, then ii-th person thinks that the problem is hard.
Output
Print one word: "EASY" if the problem is easy according to all responses, or "HARD" if there is at least one person who thinks the problem is hard.
You may print every letter in any register: "EASY", "easy", "EaSY" and "eAsY" all will be processed correctly.
Examples
input
Copy
30 0 1
output
Copy
HARD
input
Copy
10
output
Copy
EASY 为了熟悉CF。忍了。。
#include<iostream> #include<cstdlib> using namespace std; int main(){ int n; char* hard= "HARD"; char* easy= "EASY"; cin>>n; for(int i=0;i<n;i++){ int c; cin>>c; if(c==1){ cout<<hard; exit(0); } } cout<<easy; return 0; }
原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/godoforange/p/10944370.html