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Worked out the algo earlier, but the challenge was to learn to use
vector in C++ and vector slicing. I got bad allocation error initially
due to misunderstanding that the end is not inclusive: that is,
vector.begin() + m reaches vector.begin() + m-1.
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Wow, it took awhile to finish. Work has been busy and I haven't had time
to hack...
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It was interesting that int in jave has a bigger range than int in C++
Java: https://cs.fit.edu/~ryan/java/language/java-data.html
C++: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1819189/what-range-of-values-can-integer-types-store-in-c
I used vector<int> initially, which failed on grader's test case 17/36.
Changing that to vector<long> fixed it! Also interesting that recursive
approach appears to be slightly faster with slighter bigger memory
usage.
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More practice with C++ vector.
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Really fun to implement it in C++. Learned std::sort, std::unique, ==
overloading for struct for std::unique to work. Good stuff!
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also known as maximize online ad revenue in exercise pdf file.
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Good exercise. Learned C++ vector usage, and the ASSERT_NEAR macro for
testing floats/doubles. Lots of fun.
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I noticed that in this case, it was really simple, because I pretty much
copied the code from Java.
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This concludes the second module of Algorithmic Design and Techniques
from edX. I had a lot of fun doing it. It's challenging and I learned a
lot!
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This was so much fun! I'm glad I did it with Python, Java, and C++, in
that order. I learned so much through the process: typing, overflow,
BigInteger, and ended up not needing BigInteger! Yay!!!
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