C |
Code
Creator |
With increased
popularity of programming competitions, there are so many online judges where contestants
can practice. Usually, most of these sites allow users to submit solutions to
problems and if they are accepted, the users total number of solved is
increased. To increase competition among users, these sites maintain a ranking
of users based on the total number of solves. Unfortunately, this at times has
introduced unhealthy competition among some users. A lot of the problems at
these sites are collected from external sites, and the online judge uses data
file directly from these external sites. This means, for certain problem, one
is only required to submit the output file to get a problem accepted, without
solving the problem at all. Just out of curiosity, you try to investigate how
many of these problems are actually using judge data from the external site. To
accelerate your investigation, you want to automate the process of creating
codes that will submit judge data only. In this problem, you are required to
make such a code generator.
Input
Each case of input starts with a positive
integer N<100. N lines follow each containing at least
1 and at most 100 characters. The Input characters will consist of
alphanumeric, spaces, backslash and quotation only. The last case is followed
by a value of 0 for N.
Output
Each case of output will
start with a line containing the case number in the format Case x: where x is the case number. The next few lines will be a C
code which when compiled and run will generate the input given for that case.
Since there are so many ways to write a program that will generate the same
output, for this problem we will restrict ourselves to the following format.
#include<string.h>
#include<stdio.h>
int main()
{
<case specific lines>
printf(“\n”);
return 0;
}
<case specific lines> will contain the same
number of lines as N for that case,
each formatted as: printf(“<line>\n”);
where <line> is the input
value entered for that corresponding line. Note that, the two characters “ and \ must be escaped by a \ in order to be displayed by printf . The sample input/output will clarify further.
In case you are curious,
why there is a printf(“\n”); before the return 0; , it’s there to get this code presentation error so that
it’s not counted as accepted. You don’t want to increase your number that way,
do you?
Sample
Input
2
“I like to solve”
I do not like to code
1
yeah accepted
0
Sample
Output
Case 1:
#include<string.h>
#include<stdio.h>
int main()
{
printf(“\”I like to solve\”\n”);
printf(“I do not like to code\n”);
printf(“\n”);
return 0;
}
Case 2:
#include<string.h>
#include<stdio.h>
int main()
{
printf(“yeah accepted\n”);
printf(“\n”);
return 0;
}
Problem Setter : Shamim
Hafiz
Special Thanks : Sohel Hafiz