1023. Have Fun with Numbers (20)
Notice that the number 123456789 is a 9-digit number consisting exactly the numbers from 1 to 9, with no duplication. Double it we will obtain 246913578, which happens to be another 9-digit number consisting exactly the numbers from 1 to 9, only in a different permutation. Check to see the result if we double it again!
Now you are suppose to check if there are more numbers with this property. That is, double a given number with k digits, you are to tell if the resulting number consists of only a permutation of the digits in the original number.
Input Specification:
Each input file contains one test case. Each case contains one positive integer with no more than 20 digits.
Output Specification:
For each test case, first print in a line "Yes" if doubling the input number gives a number that consists of only a permutation of the digits in the original number, or "No" if not. Then in the next line, print the doubled number.
Sample Input:
1234567899
Sample Output:
Yes
2469135798
#include"iostream"
#include "algorithm"
#include "string"
#include<stdlib.h>
using namespace std;
string Double(string str)
{
int sum;
string result="";
int carry = 0;
int n = str.length();
for(int i=n-1;i>=0;i--)
{
sum = (str[i]-'0')*2;
sum += carry;
result.insert(result.begin(),(sum%10)+'0');
carry = sum/10;
}
if(carry)
{
result.insert(result.begin(),carry+'0');
}
return result;
}
int main()
{
string str,dstr,tstr;
cin >> str;
dstr = Double(str);
tstr = dstr;
sort(str.begin(),str.end());
sort(tstr.begin(),tstr.end());
if(str == tstr)
cout << "Yes"<<endl;
else
cout <<"No" <<endl;
cout << dstr<<endl;
return 0;
}