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k a April Highlights and 2025 AoPS Online Class Information
jlacosta   0
5 hours ago
Spring is in full swing and summer is right around the corner, what are your plans? At AoPS Online our schedule has new classes starting now through July, so be sure to keep your skills sharp and be prepared for the Fall school year! Check out the schedule of upcoming classes below.

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0 replies
jlacosta
5 hours ago
0 replies
k a My Retirement & New Leadership at AoPS
rrusczyk   1571
N Mar 26, 2025 by SmartGroot
I write today to announce my retirement as CEO from Art of Problem Solving. When I founded AoPS 22 years ago, I never imagined that we would reach so many students and families, or that we would find so many channels through which we discover, inspire, and train the great problem solvers of the next generation. I am very proud of all we have accomplished and I’m thankful for the many supporters who provided inspiration and encouragement along the way. I'm particularly grateful to all of the wonderful members of the AoPS Community!

I’m delighted to introduce our new leaders - Ben Kornell and Andrew Sutherland. Ben has extensive experience in education and edtech prior to joining AoPS as my successor as CEO, including starting like I did as a classroom teacher. He has a deep understanding of the value of our work because he’s an AoPS parent! Meanwhile, Andrew and I have common roots as founders of education companies; he launched Quizlet at age 15! His journey from founder to MIT to technology and product leader as our Chief Product Officer traces a pathway many of our students will follow in the years to come.

Thank you again for your support for Art of Problem Solving and we look forward to working with millions more wonderful problem solvers in the years to come.

And special thanks to all of the amazing AoPS team members who have helped build AoPS. We’ve come a long way from here:IMAGE
1571 replies
rrusczyk
Mar 24, 2025
SmartGroot
Mar 26, 2025
Vieta's Polynomial x^20-7x^3+1=0
Goblik   0
8 minutes ago
If $x_1,x_2,...,x_{20}$ are roots of $x^{20}-7x^3+1=0$, then find $\frac{1}{x_1^{2}+1}+\frac{1}{x_2^{2}+1}+...+\frac{1}{x_{20}^{2}+1}$
0 replies
Goblik
8 minutes ago
0 replies
Number theory
Maaaaaaath   1
N 23 minutes ago by CHESSR1DER
Let $m$ be a positive integer . Prove that there exists infinitely many pairs of positive integers $(x,y)$ such that $\gcd(x,y)=1$ and :

$$xy  |  x^2+y^2+m$$
1 reply
Maaaaaaath
3 hours ago
CHESSR1DER
23 minutes ago
Problem 4 from IMO 1997
iandrei   28
N 34 minutes ago by akliu
Source: IMO Shortlist 1997, Q4
An $ n \times n$ matrix whose entries come from the set $ S = \{1, 2, \ldots , 2n - 1\}$ is called a silver matrix if, for each $ i = 1, 2, \ldots , n$, the $ i$-th row and the $ i$-th column together contain all elements of $ S$. Show that:

(a) there is no silver matrix for $ n = 1997$;

(b) silver matrices exist for infinitely many values of $ n$.
28 replies
iandrei
Jul 28, 2003
akliu
34 minutes ago
2025 Caucasus MO Seniors P8
BR1F1SZ   1
N 37 minutes ago by sami1618
Source: Caucasus MO
Determine for which integers $n \geqslant 4$ the cells of a $1 \times (2n+1)$ table can be filled with the numbers $1, 2, 3, \dots, 2n + 1$ such that the following conditions are satisfied:
[list=i]
[*]Each of the numbers $1, 2, 3, \dots, 2n + 1$ appears exactly once.
[*]In any $1 \times 3$ rectangle, one of the numbers is the arithmetic mean of the other two.
[*]The number $1$ is located in the middle cell of the table.
[/list]
1 reply
BR1F1SZ
Mar 26, 2025
sami1618
37 minutes ago
No more topics!
Guess the leader's binary string!
cjquines0   78
N Mar 30, 2025 by de-Kirschbaum
Source: 2016 IMO Shortlist C1
The leader of an IMO team chooses positive integers $n$ and $k$ with $n > k$, and announces them to the deputy leader and a contestant. The leader then secretly tells the deputy leader an $n$-digit binary string, and the deputy leader writes down all $n$-digit binary strings which differ from the leader’s in exactly $k$ positions. (For example, if $n = 3$ and $k = 1$, and if the leader chooses $101$, the deputy leader would write down $001, 111$ and $100$.) The contestant is allowed to look at the strings written by the deputy leader and guess the leader’s string. What is the minimum number of guesses (in terms of $n$ and $k$) needed to guarantee the correct answer?
78 replies
cjquines0
Jul 19, 2017
de-Kirschbaum
Mar 30, 2025
Guess the leader's binary string!
G H J
G H BBookmark kLocked kLocked NReply
Source: 2016 IMO Shortlist C1
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cjquines0
510 posts
#1 • 13 Y
Y by Davi-8191, tenplusten, MathbugAOPS, Welp..., OlympusHero, mathleticguyyy, centslordm, jhu08, iker_tz, Adventure10, lian_the_noob12, RandomPerson11, NicoN9
The leader of an IMO team chooses positive integers $n$ and $k$ with $n > k$, and announces them to the deputy leader and a contestant. The leader then secretly tells the deputy leader an $n$-digit binary string, and the deputy leader writes down all $n$-digit binary strings which differ from the leader’s in exactly $k$ positions. (For example, if $n = 3$ and $k = 1$, and if the leader chooses $101$, the deputy leader would write down $001, 111$ and $100$.) The contestant is allowed to look at the strings written by the deputy leader and guess the leader’s string. What is the minimum number of guesses (in terms of $n$ and $k$) needed to guarantee the correct answer?
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math163
58 posts
#2 • 6 Y
Y by reveryu, Lemon293, jhu08, Adventure10, Mango247, jkim0656
(redacted)
This post has been edited 5 times. Last edited by math163, Nov 10, 2018, 8:24 AM
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rafayaashary1
2541 posts
#3 • 14 Y
Y by Wave-Particle, Problem_Penetrator, Ankoganit, opptoinfinity, aops29, Lioghte24, jhu08, Pranav1056, 407420, caicasso, Adventure10, Mango247, thesnakeinthebox, MS_asdfgzxcvb
Geometric Solution
This post has been edited 4 times. Last edited by rafayaashary1, Jul 25, 2017, 6:48 PM
Reason: reformatted for legibility :)
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uraharakisuke_hsgs
365 posts
#4 • 3 Y
Y by jhu08, Adventure10, Mango247
Let $A$ be the number that the team leader choose , and let $S(A)$ be the set of the numbers writen by the deputy leader
For each number $T$ in $S$ , there is a set of $\binom{n}{k}$ elements that contains the numbers that have exacly $k$ digits different from $T$. Let this set be $F(T)$
And , because $A \in F(T)$ $\forall T \in $ $S$ so the intersection of these set is at least 1 . Now we consider 2 cases
Case 1 : $n = 2k$ . Then , let $A'$ be the number that has every digits different from $A$ Let $A = \overline{a_1a_2..a_n}_{(2)}$ and $A' = \overline{b_1b_2...b_n}_{(2)}$
Now for an abitrary numbers $R$ on the paper of the deputy leader , if the digits $a_{i_1} , a_{i_2},..,a_{i_k}$ of $A$ are changed , we change the $k$ digits $b_j (j \neq i_t , t = \overline{1,k})$ of $A'$ then receive the number $T$, which is equal to $R$
Then we have $S(A) = S(A')$ , which implies that the intersection of every $F(T)$ is bigger than $2$, which implies that the contestant must guess at least 2 times
Case 2 : $n \neq 2k$ . Suppose that the contestant must guess more than one time, that means , the intersection of every $F(T)$ is bigger than $1$
This is equivalent to exist a number $B = \overline{b_1b_2..b_n}_{(2)}$ such that for every way to change $k$ digits in $B$ , we can find a way to change $k$ digits in $A$ to receive the same number
If $A,B$ has very digits different. So , we change the $k$ first digits of $B$ and receive number $R$ has $k$ first digits equal to $A$'s, and the last $n-k$ digits are different. Then We must change the last $n-k$ last digits of $A$ to receive the number equal to $R$. Then $k = n-k$ which is a contradiction
If $A,B$ have $t$ equal numbers. For convinient, we move these $t$ digits to the beginning of $A,B$
$A = \overline{a_1a_2...a_tc_1c_2...c_{n-t}}_{(2)}$ and $B = \overline{a_1a_2...a_t(1-c_1)(1-c_2)...(1-c_{n-t})}_{(2)}$
It's clear that $ t \leq k$ , because , if $t > k$ , we change $a_1,...,a_k$ in $B$ so we must also change $a_1,..,a_k$ in $A$
Now , we change $q$ digits $a_1...a_q$ in $A$ for some $q \leq t$, will choose later , and change $k-q$ digits $c_1,...,c_{k-q}$
So $B$ must be changed exacly the digits $a_1,..,a_q$ and $(1-c_{k-q+1}) ,...,(1-c_{n-t})$, which is $n-t-k+2q$. Then $n-t-k+2q = k \implies 2q = 2k+t-n$
So , if $t \leq 1$, we choose $q = 0,1$ then $0 = 2 = 2k+t -n$ which is a contradiction
Then , for $n = 2k$, the contestant need to guess $2$ times ; and for $n \neq 2k$, the contestant only need to guess $1$ time
This post has been edited 2 times. Last edited by uraharakisuke_hsgs, Jul 20, 2017, 6:23 PM
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rmtf1111
698 posts
#5 • 5 Y
Y by vsathiam, MathbugAOPS, jhu08, Adventure10, Mango247
Note that you can find the first number of the binary sequence unless $n=2k$. Now we purceed by recursion, if $n=2k$ we will have 2 cases but each of one of this case will reduce to an trivial one because we wont have $n=2k$ anymore. If $n\neq 2k$ then we can avoid the case $'n=2k$, so we are done.
The answers are 2 if n=2k and 1 otherwise
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Kezer
986 posts
#6 • 2 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247
That one was also German TSTST #1.
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anything--
11 posts
#8 • 1 Y
Y by Adventure10
Something interesting to think about: Let $k,m$ be positive integers. $A$ has a binary string $S$ of length $2k+1$ and writes down $m$ distinct binary strings that differ from $S$ by at most $k$ positions (this binary string may be identical to $S$). How large must $m$ be (in terms of $k$) such that $B$ is guaranteed to guess the binary string correctly in only 1 attempt? ($A$ may write the strings that makes it difficult for $B$ to guess.)

In a sense, instead of using the full information of all the ${2k+1\choose k}$ strings, how much of these strings are actually necessary?
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juckter
322 posts
#9 • 2 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247
Call a pair of different binary strings of length $n$ $k$-friendly if the set of strings that differ in $k$ positions from one of them is the same as the set of strings that differ in $k$ positions from the other one. Notice that two strings are indistinguishable if and only if they are $k$-friendly.

Claim. Pairs of $k$-friendly strings exist only if $n = 2k$. Moreover, for $n = 2k$, any two $k$-friendly strings differ in every position.

To prove this, consider two $k$-friendly strings $X$ and $Y$. Let them be equal in $a$ positions and differ in $b$ positions. For each non-negative integer $r$ in the interval $[k - b, \min(a, k)]$ consider a string $S_r$ that differs from $X$ in $r$ of the positions where $X$ and $Y$ are equal and in $k - r$ of the positions where $X$ and $Y$ differ, and is equal to $X$ everywhere else. This is possible due to the interval where $r$ belongs. Then $S_r$ differs from $X$ in $k$ positions and thus also from $Y$. We then obtain

$$r + b - (k - r) = k \implies 2k = 2r + b$$
This clearly cannot hold for more than one choice of $r$, as $k$ and $b$ are fixed. Assume that $b \leq k$, then we must have $k - b \geq \min(a, k)$. If $k \leq a$ this gives $b = 0$ and thus $X, Y$ are equal, which is impossible. Thus $a \leq k$ and $n = a + b \leq k$, which contradicts the conditions of the problem. Then $k \leq b$ which implies $k - b \leq 0$, and thus $r = 0$ is a valid choice. As this must be the only choice we obtain $\min(a, k) = 0$ and hence $a = 0$ as $k > 0$. Moreover applying the above equation with $r = 0$ we obtain $b = 2k$ which implies $n = 2k$ as $a = 0$. This completes the proof of the claim.

This instantly implies that the contestant can guess in at most two attempts if $n = 2k$ and in at most one otherwise. As the strings composed of $2k$ zeroes and $2k$ ones are clearly $k$-friendly, two attemps are indeed necessary in the latter case.
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rafayaashary1
2541 posts
#11 • 2 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247
What is the fastest algorithm for finding the optimal guess(es)? So far I have the following $\mathcal{O}(n\tbinom{n}{k})$ method in the case that $k\neq 0.5n$:
Quote:
Convert the strings on the board to a set of vectors $H\subset\mathbb R^n$ as in post# 3. Compute $c_H=\frac{1}{|H|}\sum_{s\in H}$. Explicitly write $c_H=(c_1,c_2,\dots,c_n)$. Define $u(x)$ to be $0$ if $x<0.5$ and $1$ if $x>0.5$, and likewise let $u(x)$ be $1$ if $x<0.5$ and $0$ if $x>0.5$. If $k<0.5n$, the leader's string will have its $i^\text{th}$ entry equal to $u(c_i)$. If $k>0.5n$, the leader's string will have its $i^\text{th}$ entry equal to $u'(c_i)$.

There is also an $\mathcal{O}(n^3\tbinom{n}{k})$ algorithm for the case with $k=0.5n$:
Quote:
Choose some string and convert it to a vector $v_0\in\mathbb R^n$. One by one accumulate strings as vectors in $\mathbb R^n$ so that the set $v_1-v_0,v_2-v_0,\dots$ remains linearly independent (this may be checked with gaussian elimination in $\mathcal{O}(d^3)$ time where $d-1$ is the number of accumulated vectors.) Stop when we have $n$ vectors $v_0,v_1,\dots,v_{n-1}$. Overall, this is by far the rate-limiting step.

Now replace $v_i$ with $v_i-v_0$ and save $v_0$ for later. Define $e_j(v_i)$ to be the $j^\text{th}$ entry of $v_i$. Fill the $(n-1)\times (n-1)$ matrix $A$ with entries $a_{ij}=e_{j}(v_i)$. Fill the vector $b\in\mathbb R^{n-1}$ so that $e_i(b)=-e_n(v_i)$. Solve $Ax=b$ with gaussian elimination. Construct $s\in\mathbb R^n$ satisfying $e_i(s)=e_i(x)$ for $1\leq i<n$ and $e_n(s)=1$. Use $s$ to create $s_1,s_2\in\mathbb R^n$ so that $e_i(s_1)=0.5+0.5e_i(x)$ and $e_i(s_2)=0.5-0.5e_i(x)$. We will need to guess both $s_1$ and $s_2$. One will be correct.

The main obstacle to getting polynomial time in $n$ as $k$ varies is not having a faster way to find linearly independent sets. If this could be fixed, the algorithm would be much faster with only a slight modification...
This post has been edited 2 times. Last edited by rafayaashary1, Jul 26, 2017, 2:23 AM
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suli
1498 posts
#12 • 2 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247
We can WLOG the leader's original string is the 0 string (i.e. the string with all 0s), since we can compute everything else relative to it. Then the strings the deputy leader reveals are the permutations $P$ of $111\dots 100\dots 0$, where there are $k$ ones and $n-k$ zeroes.
Suppose $S \neq 0, 1$ (= 111...1) differs from each of these $\binom{n}{k}$ strings in exactly $k$ positions. Since permuting the digits of $S$ doesn't change whether $S$ satisfies this condition (as permutations of strings in $P$ are also in $P$), we can assume $S$ starts with $1$ and ends with $0$. Then $S$ differs in exactly $k$ positions from $111\dots100\dots 0$ and $011\dots100\dots01$ (the first string starts with $k$ ones, and the second string is the first string, except transpose the first and last bits). This is clearly a contradiction, since $S$ differs in more positions in the second string. Thus $S = 0$ or $S = 1$. $S = 0$ is the original string. If $S = 1$ differs in $k$ positions from the strings in $P$, then clearly $n - k = k$, so $n = 2k$. Thus 2 guesses if $n = 2k$, 1 guess otherwise.
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ComboMan
4 posts
#14 • 2 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247
I'm still a bit unsure of the following:

If $n=3\ne 2k$ and the string is $101$, and the deputy leader writes $001, 111, 100$, then are there two possibilities:

1) $k=1$, start string = $101$
2) $k=2$, start string = $010$

But the answer states that if $n \ne 2k$, there is only $1$ guess needed?
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Plops
946 posts
#15 • 1 Y
Y by Adventure10
In uraharakisuke_hsgs's solution, can someone explain what he meant by the k digits $b_j (j \neq i_t , t = \overline{1,k})$
This post has been edited 3 times. Last edited by Plops, Nov 15, 2018, 4:46 AM
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XbenX
590 posts
#16 • 3 Y
Y by VicKmath7, Adventure10, Mango247
Deputy leader has written $\dbinom{n}{k}$ strings and from these $\dbinom{n-1}{k} $ have the $i$'th number correct and $\dbinom{n-1}{k-1}$ wrong.
Now , if $\dbinom{n-1}{k} $ , $\dbinom{n-1}{k-1}$ are different then the contestant can find the string in just $1$ try .

If $\dbinom{n-1}{k-1}=\dbinom{n-1}{k} \Longleftrightarrow n=2k$ .

In this case the contestant should look at first $k$ digits of all written numbers, and he can find exactly $2$ such that they are different in each digit. Let these two be $S_1$ and $S_2$ .
One of $S_1,S_2$ has the first $k$ digits correct , wich means that the other has the last $k$ digits correct. In this case the contestant can find the string in $2$ tries because is impossible to tell wich of $S_1,S_2$ has the first digit correct.

So ,the answer is $2$ if $n=2k$ and $1$ otherwise.
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Vrangr
1600 posts
#17 • 4 Y
Y by AlastorMoody, Supermathlet_04, Adventure10, Mango247
Solution
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math_pi_rate
1218 posts
#18 • 3 Y
Y by Adventure10, Mango247, EvansGressfield
This problem is quite well suited for a C1, neither too difficult, nor too easy.
2016 IMOSL C1 wrote:
The leader of an IMO team chooses positive integers $n$ and $k$ with $n > k$, and announces them to the deputy leader and a contestant. The leader then secretly tells the deputy leader an $n$-digit binary string, and the deputy leader writes down all $n$-digit binary strings which differ from the leader’s in exactly $k$ positions. (For example, if $n = 3$ and $k = 1$, and if the leader chooses $101$, the deputy leader would write down $001, 111$ and $100$.) The contestant is allowed to look at the strings written by the deputy leader and guess the leader’s string. What is the minimum number of guesses (in terms of $n$ and $k$) needed to guarantee the correct answer?

ANSWER: $1$ if $n \neq 2k$ and $2$ if $n=2k$.

SOLUTION: First consider the case when $n \neq 2k$. Choose a positive integer $i$ such that $i \leq n$. Take any of the $\binom{n}{k}$ binary strings. Then there are exactly $\binom{n-1}{k-1}$ strings which have the wrong digit at the $i^{\text{th}}$ position, and $\binom{n-1}{k}$ strings which have the correct digit at the $i^{\text{th}}$ position. As $n \neq 2k$, so $\binom{n-1}{k-1} \neq \binom{n-1}{k}$. Thus, we can easily find the leader's string by comparing the number of occurences of each bit at the $i^{\text{th}}$ position for all $i \in \{1,2, \dots ,n\}$.

Now, suppose $n=2k$. WLOG assume that the leader's string consists of only $2k$ ones. Then the deputy leader's list consists of all binary numbers consisting of $k$ ones and $k$ zeros. However, in that case, had the leader chosen the zero string (consisting of $2k$ zeros), even then the deputy leader's list would have been the same. This means that the contestant will require at least two guesses to decipher the leader's string. We now show that two guesses actually suffice. Note that each string present in the deputy leader's list has its one's complement also present in that list. So make $\frac{1}{2} \binom{2k}{k}$ groups each consisting of two complementary binary strings. Select one group at random, and label its elements $\mathcal{B}$ and $\mathcal{B'}$. Then $\mathcal{B}$ will have ones at some $k$ positions, while $\mathcal{B'}$ will have zeros in exactly those positions. Color the digits at these positions red. Similarly, $\mathcal{B}$ will have zeros and $\mathcal{B'}$ will have ones in the remaining $k$ positions. Color the bits present here blue. Then the leader's string is either a mixture of the blue digits of $\mathcal{B}$ and the red digits of $\mathcal{B'}$, or vice versa. Thus, the contestant can find the leader's string in minimum two guesses.


REMARK 1: In the case $n=2k$, showing the contestant just $\frac{1}{2} \binom{2k}{k}+1$ strings out of the deputy leader's list would also suffice (which is obvious by using PHP and our argument). Thus, the question could also have asked for the minimum number of strings which the contestant needs to be shown in order for him to guess the leader's string in minimum number of guesses.

REMARK 2: Initially I started thinking that the contestant didn't know $n$ and $k$ (basically misread the problem :(), which fortunately doesn't really affect the problem much. The contestant can easily figure out $n$ by finding the length of the strings in the deputy leader's list. While finding $k$, I used the fact that the number of strings in the deputy leader's list are equal to $\binom{n}{k}$. However, in this case, we encounter a small speed-breaker in that this gives the value $k$ as well as $n-k$ (unless $n=2k$). Thus, if $n$ and $k$ were not known to the contestant, then the answer would have been $2$ guesses for all possible values of $n$ and $k$.
This post has been edited 5 times. Last edited by math_pi_rate, Jan 19, 2019, 3:48 PM
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