TWENDS - Two Ends

In the two-player game “Two Ends”, an even number of cards is laid out in a row. On each card, face up, is written a positive integer. Players take turns removing a card from either end of the row and placing the card in their pile. The player whose cards add up to the highest number wins the game. Now one strategy is to simply pick the card at the end that is the largest — we’ll call this the greedy strategy. However, this is not always optimal, as the following example shows: (The first player would win if she would first pick the 3 instead of the 4.)

3 2 10 4

You are to determine exactly how bad the greedy strategy is for different games when the second player uses it but the first player is free to use any strategy she wishes.

Input

There will be multiple test cases. Each test case will be contained on one line. Each line will start with an even integer n followed by n positive integers. A value of n = 0 indicates end of input. You may assume that n is no more than 1000. Furthermore, you may assume that the sum of the numbers in the list does not exceed 1,000,000.

Output

For each test case you should print one line of output of the form:

In game m, the greedy strategy might lose by as many as p points.

where m is the number of the game (starting at game 1) and p is the maximum possible difference between the first player’s score and second player’s score when the second player uses the greedy strategy. When employing the greedy strategy, always take the larger end. If there is a tie, remove the left end.

Example

Input:
4 3 2 10 4
8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
8 2 2 1 5 3 8 7 3
0

Output:
In game 1, the greedy strategy might lose by as many as 7 points.
In game 2, the greedy strategy might lose by as many as 4 points.
In game 3, the greedy strategy might lose by as many as 5 points.

Added by:Camilo Andrés Varela León
Date:2007-07-26
Time limit:0.100s
Source limit:50000B
Memory limit:1536MB
Cluster: Cube (Intel G860)
Languages:All except: ERL JS-RHINO NODEJS PERL6 VB.NET
Resource:East Central North America 2005

hide comments
2018-01-06 07:30:54
Idiotic TL not only making it near impossible to AC with Python, but making the same code AC and TLE depending on split-second lags due to server stability. I'd discourage beginners to get frustrated here, there are better problems on similar concept on this site where the constraints allow you to see what you're doing right.
2018-01-03 06:53:30
Very interesting question. Good for practising DP. Similar problem : Treats for cows (TRT)
2017-11-21 13:53:06 Ravi Upadhyay
Remember that the dp guy chooses first, no the greedy one!
2017-09-09 23:07:15
Point to remember is that in case both the ends have same value. The greedy user would take the left value by default!
2017-07-24 05:27:40
Please, some one tell how to use memoization! I could solve the problem recursively! That gave me TLE.


Last edit: 2017-07-24 05:28:18
2017-06-14 16:50:59
Got 1 WA for full stop :(
2017-06-13 19:40:02
AC in one go! Incomparably happy :D
2017-06-13 13:40:11
Take care of "If there is a tie, remove the left end"
2017-06-03 18:55:24 prabodh prakash
One important note is that - one player is playing with DP strategy and the other player is playing with greedy strategy and then you've to decide the difference of maximum scores that they can make. [as clearly mentioned in the question above - it somehow got skipped in my solution :-( ]

Last edit: 2017-06-03 18:57:25
2017-05-24 18:13:15
Very strict tl for java codes!
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