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El canal allcoding1 (@allcoding1) en el segmento lingüístico de Inglés es un actor destacado. Actualmente la comunidad reúne a 22 595 suscriptores, ocupando la posición 8 826 en la categoría Educación y el puesto 19 528 en la región India.

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Desde su creación el невідомо, el proyecto ha mostrado un crecimiento acelerado, reuniendo a 22 595 suscriptores.

Según los últimos datos del 11 junio, 2026, el canal mantiene una actividad estable. En los últimos 30 días la variación de miembros fue de -436, y en las últimas 24 horas de -18, conservando un alto alcance.

  • Estado de verificación: No verificado
  • Tasa de interacción (ER): El promedio de interacción de la audiencia es 5.84%. Durante las primeras 24 horas tras publicar, el contenido suele obtener 1.41% de reacciones respecto al total de suscriptores.
  • Alcance de las publicaciones: Cada publicación recibe en promedio 1 319 visualizaciones. En el primer día suele acumular 318 visualizaciones.
  • Reacciones e interacción: La audiencia responde de forma activa: el promedio de reacciones por publicación es 2.
  • Intereses temáticos: El contenido se centra en temas clave como dsa, stack, namaste, javascript, learning.

📝 Descripción y política de contenido

No se ha proporcionado la descripción del canal.

Gracias a la alta frecuencia de actualizaciones (últimos datos recibidos el 12 junio, 2026), el canal mantiene la vigencia y un amplio alcance. La analítica demuestra que la audiencia interactúa activamente con el contenido, lo que lo convierte en un punto de referencia dentro de la categoría Educación.

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8Q) You are given an integer N and a number K. Let's defind the cost of a string consisting of lowercase latin letters as the cyclic distance between any two consecutive characters in string For example the cost of the string "abzv" can be calculated as follow: MinimumCyclicDistance(a,b)+ MinimumCyclicDistance(b,z)+ MinimumCyclicDistance(z,v)= 1+2+4=7 It is given that two strings of length N are different if their character differ at least one position from 1 to N Find the number of the distinct string S which satisfies the following two conditions: The length of S is exactly equal to N The code of S is divisible by K Since the answer can be very large print it modulo 10 to the power 9 + 7 Input format The first line contains an integer N denoting the length of the requires string. The next line contains an integer K denoting the given number K Constraints 2<=N <= 10^5 1<=K<=100 Sample test case Case 1 Input 2 2 Output 338 Explanation: In this case, one of the possible strings is "ac", also "ce". We can show that there Re exactly*338" strings that satisfy the conditions So the answer is 338. Case 2; Input: 3 1 Output 17576 Explanation: Given N =3, K= 1 In this sample, since every number is divisible by "1", then any string of length "3" is "26 * 26 * 26= 17576". Case 3: Input : 2 13 Output 52 Explanation: In this case, one of the possible strings is"an", also "cp" We can show that there are exactly "52" strings that satisfy the conditions

7Q) Ans
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7Q) Ans

7Q) you are given a string S with N characters a string T with M characters and an integer K you can perform the following operation on s atmost K times change a character at some index in the string to any other character find the count of maximum number of subsegments in the S that have T as subsequence after applying the operation Sample input 3 1 1 abc d sample output 1 explanation Given N=3 M=1 K=1 S=abc T=d we can change s[1] to d and the ans will be 1 give a code such that output for the given input is 1 sample input 2 3 1 1 abc b sample output 2 2

6Q ans
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6Q ans

6Q) You are given an integer N and a number Let's define the cost of a string consisting of lowercase Latin letters as the cyelle distance between any two consecutive characters in that string, Vadlaa = Questions For example, the cost of the string "abzy" can be calculated as follows: Minimum Cyclic Distance(a, b) + Minimum Cyclic Distance(b, z) + Minimum CyclicDistance(z, v) = 1 + 2 + 4 = 7. It is given that two strings of length N are different if their characters differ in at least one position from 1 to N. Find the number of the distinct strings $ which satisfies the following two conditions • The length of S is exactly equal to N. • The cost of S is divisible by • The length of S is exactly equal to N. The cost of S is divisible by K. vadlaa Since the answer can be very large, print it modulo 109+7. Input Format The first line contains an N. denoting integ N the length of the required string. The next line contains an integer, K. denoting the given number K. Error Constraints 2 <= N <= 10^5 .1 <= K <= 100 Sample Test Cases Case 1 Input: 2 2 Output: 338 Explanation: Given N= 2, K=2 In this case, one of the possible strings is "ac", also "ce". We can show that there are exactly "338" strings that satisfy the conditions. So, answer is 338.

5Q Ans
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5Q Ans

5Q) string trimmetris Int get ans // write your code here 18 11 J 13 14 16 30 int meint) ( Insyrm with stateles cin.tiele); cout 10 (8) string inutise Test case HandsOnSquares Beauty Summary Questions You me quen a square grid A of You want to choose two non intersecting apuate sob-grids with no common row or column such that the sum of both sub grids is maximized. Return the maximum possible sum Input Format The next line contains an integer. 4. denoting the number of columns in A Each line i of the N subsequent lines (where N) contains N space separated integers each describing the row Ali Constraints 1N500 -100 <= A[i][j] <= 100

4Q Ans
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4Q Ans

import java.util.*; import java.lang.*; class Solution {     public int coveredRanges(int[] A, int[][] Queries) {         int N = A.length;         int Q = Queries.length;         int MOD = 1000000007;         // Create a map to store the last occurrence of each element in A         Map<Integer, Integer> lastOccurrence = new HashMap<>();         for (int i = 0; i < N; i++) {             lastOccurrence.put(A[i], i);         }         // Calculate the number of covered ranges for each query         long sum = 0;         for (int[] query : Queries) {             int L = query[0] - 1;             int R = query[1] - 1;             // Initialize the number of covered ranges for this query             int coveredRanges = 0;             // Iterate through the elements in the subarray             for (int i = L; i <= R; i++) {                 // If the last occurrence of the current element is within the subarray                 if (lastOccurrence.get(A[i]) <= R) {                     // Increment the number of covered ranges                     coveredRanges++;                     // Skip to the last occurrence of this element                     i = lastOccurrence.get(A[i]);                 }             }             // Add the number of covered ranges to the sum             sum = (sum + coveredRanges) % MOD;         }         // Return the sum of all covered ranges modulo 109+7         return (int) sum;     }     public static void main(String[] args) {         Scanner scanner = new Scanner(System.in);         // Read the number of elements in A         int N = scanner.nextInt();         // Read the elements of A         int[] A = new int[N];         for (int i = 0; i < N; i++) {             A[i] = scanner.nextInt();         }         // Read the number of queries         int Q = scanner.nextInt();         // Read the number of columns in Queries         int two = scanner.nextInt();         // Read the queries         int[][] Queries = new int[Q][two];         for (int i = 0; i < Q; i++) {             for (int j = 0; j < two; j++) {                 Queries[i][j] = scanner.nextInt();             }         }         // Create an instance of the Solution class         Solution solution = new Solution();         // Call the coveredRanges method and print the result         System.out.println(solution.coveredRanges(A, Queries));     } }

4Q) Handson 1: Array Covered Ranges You are given an array A of length N. It is given that the number of covered ranges in the subarray from L to R is defined as the minimum number of ranges, such that the following is true • All the elements of each range appear as elements of the subarray. • Each element of the subarray appears in exactly one range where 0 < L, R < N+1. You have to process Q queries given in a 2D array Queries, where each query contains two integers L and R. For each query, you have to find the number of covered ranges in the subarray from L to R in A. Find the sum of answers to all queries. Since the answer can be very large, return it modulo 109+7 Input Format The first line contains an integer, N, denoting the number of elements in A. Each line i of the N subsequent lines (where 0 ≤ i< N) contains an integer describing Ali) The next line contains an integer, Q, denoting the number of rows in queries. The next line contains an integer, two, denoting the number of columns in queries. Each line i of the Q subsequent lines (where 0 ≤ i < Q) contains two space separated integers each describing the row queries[i]. Constraints 1 <= N <= 10 ^ 6 1 <= A[i] <= 10 ^ 6 1 <= Q <= 10 ^ 6 2 <= two <= 2 1 <= queries[i][j] <= N Sample Test Cases Case 1 Input: 1 1 1 2 11 P Output: 1 Explanation: Given N = 1 A = [1] Q = 1 two = 2, Queries - [[1, 1]] . The number of covered ranges in (1) is 1 (the range is [1, 1]). Hence, the sum of answer of queries is equal to 1. Case 2 Input: 2 1 3 2 2 11 12 Output: 3 Explanation: Given N = 2 A = [1, 3] Q = 2 two 2, Queries [[1, 1], [1, 2]]. The number of covered ranges in (1) is 1 in range [1, 1], while the number of covered ranges in (1, 3} is 2 in range [1, 2]. Hence, the sum of answer of queries is equal to 3. Case 3 Input: 2 1 2 2 2 11 12 Output: 2 Explanation: Given N = 2 A = [1, 2] Q = 2 two. 2, Queries [ [1, 1] [1, 2]]. The number of covered ranges in both (1) and (1, 2} is 1 in range [1, 1] and [1, 2] respectively. Hence, the sum of answer of queries is equal to 2.

3Q Ans
3Q Ans

3Q) General Ali has devised a strategic game to reduce an enemy army of N soldiers to just 1sdier The game allows the following three types of moves: 1. Reduce the enemy army by 1 soldier. 2. Reduce the enemy army by half of its current soldiers, rounding down to the nearest integer 3. Reduce the enemy army by two-thirds of its current soldiers, rounding down to the nearest integer Each move must ensure that the resulting number of soldiers is an integer Find the minimum number of moves required to reduce enemy army to just 1 soldier Input Format The first line contains an integer, N, denoting the number of enemy soldiers. Constraints 1 <= N <= 10^9 Sample Test Cases Case 1 Input: 5 Output: 3 Explanation: Given N 5. Move 1: Reduce by 1 soldier (5 -> 4) Move 2: Reduce by half (4-> 2) Move 3: Reduce by half (21) Hence, the answer for this case is equal to 3. Case 2 Input: 1 Output: e Explanation: Given N 1. There is only 1 soldier already, so to moves are required to reduce the umeny soldiers to Therefore, the minimum number of noves needed is 8.

2Q Ans
2Q Ans

2Q) You are given a permutation P of length N. This permutation represents a graph of N nodes where for each node i from 1 to N there is an ongoing edge from that node to node P[i]. A permutation is an array of length N, consisting of each of the integers from 1 to N in some order. The longest path in the graph is the path that satisfies the following conditions: تھا •⁠ ⁠It starts at some node U and ends at some node V. It visits each node no more than once. •⁠ ⁠Among all the possible paths, it's the longest one. Find the total number of possible pairs of indices of the permutation (i, j), such that: •⁠ ⁠If P[i] and P[j] are swapped, then the resulting graph has the maximum possible longest path among all the possible swaps. Since the answer is very large, print it modulo 109+7. Input Format The first line contains an integer, N, denoting the number of elements in P. Each line i of the N subsequent lines (where 0 ≤ i < N) contains an integer describing P[i]. Sample Test Cases Case 1 Input: 3 1 2 3 Output: 3 Explanation: Given N 3, P= [1, 2, 3]. Here, if we swap "P[1]" and "P[2]" we will get P = [2, 1, 3]", node "1" can go to node "2" and we can consider that the longest path, and also node "2" can go to node "1", we also can generate the following two permutations: Case 2 Input: 6 2 3 1 S 6 4 Output: 9 Explanation: Given N 6, P [2, 3, 1, 5, 6, 4]. Here, we have two cycles, the nodes in the first cycle are "[1, 2, 3]" and the nodes in the second cycle are "[4, 5, 6]". We can show that if we swap any of the first three elements in the permutation with any element from the last three elements, the cycles will be merged, so the answer is "339". Case 3 Input: 7 2 3 1 5 4 7 6 Output: 12 Explanation: Given N 7, P [2, 3, 1, 5, 4, 7, 6]. Here, if we swap any element from the first three elements with any element from the last four elements we'll get a longest path of length "6", and from that the number of swaps to obtain that length (the maximum possible reachable length of the graph) is "3 * 4 = 12".

1Ans) java code import java.util.ArrayList; import java.util.List; public class Solution { public static int getAns(int N, List> A) { // This will store the maximum beauty sum of two non-intersecting squares int maxSumOfBeauties = 0; // Precompute the beauty of all sub-grids for quick lookup int[][] beauty = new int[N][N]; for (int row = 0; row < N; row++) { for (int col = 0; col < N; col++) { // Calculate beauty for sub-grid starting at (row, col) int minVal = Integer.MAX_VALUE; int maxVal = Integer.MIN_VALUE; for (int i = row; i < N; i++) { for (int j = col; j < N; j++) { minVal = Math.min(minVal, A.get(i).get(j)); maxVal = Math.max(maxVal, A.get(i).get(j)); beauty[i][j] = maxVal - minVal; } } } } // Try all possible pairs of non-intersecting sub-grids for (int r1 = 0; r1 < N; r1++) { for (int c1 = 0; c1 < N; c1++) { for (int r2 = 0; r2 < N; r2++) { for (int c2 = 0; c2 < N; c2++) { if (r1 != r2 && c1 != c2) { // Ensure the sub-grids do not share any rows or columns int beauty1 = beauty[r1][c1]; int beauty2 = beauty[r2][c2]; maxSumOfBeauties = Math.max(maxSumOfBeauties, beauty1 + beauty2); } } } } } return maxSumOfBeauties; } public static void main(String[] args) { // Example usage: List> grid = new ArrayList<>(); grid.add(List.of(2, 3)); grid.add(List.of(2, 3)); int N = 2; System.out.println(getAns(N, grid)); // Output should be 0 } }

2Q) You are given a permutation P of length N. This permutation represents a graph of N nodes where for each node i from 1 to N there is an ongoing edge from that node to node P[i]. A permutation is an array of length N, consisting of each of the integers from 1 to N in some order. The longest path in the graph is the path that satisfies the following conditions: تھا •⁠ ⁠It starts at some node U and ends at some node V. It visits each node no more than once. •⁠ ⁠Among all the possible paths, it's the longest one. Find the total number of possible pairs of indices of the permutation (i, j), such that: •⁠ ⁠If P[i] and P[j] are swapped, then the resulting graph has the maximum possible longest path among all the possible swaps. Since the answer is very large, print it modulo 109+7. Input Format The first line contains an integer, N, denoting the number of elements in P. Each line i of the N subsequent lines (where 0 ≤ i < N) contains an integer describing P[i]. Sample Test Cases Case 1 Input: 3 1 2 3 Output: 3 Explanation: Given N 3, P= [1, 2, 3]. Here, if we swap "P[1]" and "P[2]" we will get P = [2, 1, 3]", node "1" can go to node "2" and we can consider that the longest path, and also node "2" can go to node "1", we also can generate the following two permutations: Case 2 Input: 6 2 3 1 S 6 4 Output: 9 Explanation: Given N 6, P [2, 3, 1, 5, 6, 4]. Here, we have two cycles, the nodes in the first cycle are "[1, 2, 3]" and the nodes in the second cycle are "[4, 5, 6]". We can show that if we swap any of the first three elements in the permutation with any element from the last three elements, the cycles will be merged, so the answer is "339". Case 3 Input: 7 2 3 1 5 4 7 6 Output: 12 Explanation: Given N 7, P [2, 3, 1, 5, 4, 7, 6]. Here, if we swap any element from the first three elements with any element from the last four elements we'll get a longest path of length "6", and from that the number of swap

Q1: Two Square minimax You are given a square grid A of size N x N. Your want to choose two non-intersecting square sub-grids from the grid such that they have no common row or column The objective is to maximize the sum of beauties of both square sub-grids. The beauty of a sub-grid is defined as the difference betwee the maximum value and the minimum value within that sub- grid. tikqupta2s Find the maximum possible sum of beauties for the sel two sub-grids. Input Format The next line contains an integer, N, denoting the number o columns in A. Each line i of the N subsequent lines (where 0 ≤ i < N) com space separated integers each describing the row A[i]. Constraints 2 <= N <= 250 1 <= A[i][j] <= 10^5 Sample Test Cases Case 1 Input: 2 23 23 Output: 0 Explanation: Given N 2, A = [[2, 3], [2, 3]]. We take cell (1, 2) and cell (2, 1) and the answer will be 0 Public class solution { Public static int get_ans(int N, List> A}}

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