|
||||||||||
Magic BitstringsTime Limit: 20000/10000 MS (Java/Others) Memory Limit: 65536/32768 K (Java/Others)Total Submission(s): 787 Accepted Submission(s): 380 Problem Description A bitstring, whose length is one less than a prime, might be magic. 1001 is one such string. In order to see the magic in the string let us append a non-bit x to it, regard the new thingy as a cyclic string, and make this square matrix of bits each bit 1001 every 2nd bit 0110 every 3rd bit 0110 every 4th bit 1001 This matrix has the same number of rows as the length of the original bitstring. The m-th row of the matrix has every m-th bit of the original string starting with the m-th bit. Because the enlarged thingy has prime length, the appended x never gets used. If each row of the matrix is either the original bitstring or its complement, the original bitstring is magic. Each line of input (except last) contains a prime number p ¡Ü 100000. The last line contains 0 and this line should not be processed. For each prime number from the input produce one line of output containing the lexicographically smallest, non-constant magic bitstring of length p-1, if such a string exists, otherwise output Impossible. Sample Input
Sample Output
Source | ||||||||||
|