#5194. Problem 2. Exercise

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Problem 2. Exercise

Problem 2. Exercise

USACO 2020 US Open Contest, Platinum

Farmer John has come up with a new morning exercise routine for the cows (again)!

As before, Farmer John's NN cows (1N75001\le N\le 7500) are standing in a line. The ii-th cow from the left has label ii for each 1iN1\le i\le N. He tells them to repeat the following step until the cows are in the same order as when they started.

  • Given a permutation AA of length NN, the cows change their order such that the ii-th cow from the left before the change is AiA_i-th from the left after the change.

For example, if A=(1,2,3,4,5)A=(1,2,3,4,5) then the cows perform one step and immediately return to the same order. If A=(2,3,1,5,4)A=(2,3,1,5,4), then the cows perform six steps before returning to the original order. The order of the cows from left to right after each step is as follows:

  • 0 steps: (1,2,3,4,5)(1,2,3,4,5)
  • 1 step: (3,1,2,5,4)(3,1,2,5,4)
  • 2 steps: (2,3,1,4,5)(2,3,1,4,5)
  • 3 steps: (1,2,3,5,4)(1,2,3,5,4)
  • 4 steps: (3,1,2,4,5)(3,1,2,4,5)
  • 5 steps: (2,3,1,5,4)(2,3,1,5,4)
  • 6 steps: (1,2,3,4,5)(1,2,3,4,5)

Compute the product of the numbers of steps needed over all N!N! possible permutations AA of length NN.

As this number may be very large, output the answer modulo MM (108M109+710^8\le M\le 10^9+7, MM is prime).

Contestants using C++ may find the following code from

KACTL

helpful. Known as the

Barrett reduction

, it allows you to compute a%ba \% b several times faster than usual, where b>1b>1 is constant but not known at compile time. (we are not aware of such an optimization for Java, unfortunately).


#include 
using namespace std;

typedef unsigned long long ull;
typedef __uint128_t L;
struct FastMod {
	ull b, m;
	FastMod(ull b) : b(b), m(ull((L(1) <> 64);
		ull r = a - q * b; // can be proven that 0 <= r = b ? r - b : r;
	}
};
FastMod F(2);

int main() {
	int M = 1000000007; F = FastMod(M);
	ull x = 10ULL*M+3; 
	cout << x << " " << F.reduce(x) << "\n"; // 10000000073 3
}

INPUT FORMAT (file exercise.in):

The first line contains NN and MM.

OUTPUT FORMAT (file exercise.out):

A single integer.

SAMPLE INPUT:


5 1000000007

SAMPLE OUTPUT:


369329541

For each 1iN1\le i\le N, the ii-th element of the following array is the number of permutations that cause the cows to take ii steps: [1,25,20,30,24,20].[1,25,20,30,24,20]. The answer is $1^1\cdot 2^{25}\cdot 3^{20}\cdot 4^{30}\cdot 5^{24}\cdot 6^{20}\equiv 369329541\pmod{10^9+7}$.

Note: This problem has an expanded memory limit of 512 MB.

SCORING: Test case 2 satisfies N=8N=8.Test cases 3-5 satisfy N50N\le 50.Test cases 6-8 satisfy N500N\le 500.Test cases 9-12 satisfy N3000N\le 3000.Test cases 13-16 satisfy no additional constraints.

Problem credits: Benjamin Qi