knightnemo commited on
Commit
9c3919a
·
verified ·
1 Parent(s): c5e47e6

Upload code_segments/segment_289.txt with huggingface_hub

Browse files
Files changed (1) hide show
  1. code_segments/segment_289.txt +27 -0
code_segments/segment_289.txt ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,27 @@
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1
+ [DJ Genki vs Gram - Einherjar Joker](https://soundcloud.com/leon- hwang-368077289/einherjar-joker-dj-genki-vs-gram)
2
+
3
+
4
+
5
+ You have some cards. An integer between $1$ and $n$ is written on each card: specifically, for each $i$ from $1$ to $n$, you have $a_i$ cards which have the number $i$ written on them.
6
+
7
+ There is also a shop which contains unlimited cards of each type. You have $k$ coins, so you can buy at most $k$ new cards in total, and the cards you buy can contain any integer between $\mathbf{1}$ and $\mathbf{n}$, inclusive.
8
+
9
+ After buying the new cards, you must partition all your cards into decks, according to the following rules:
10
+
11
+ * all the decks must have the same size; * there are no pairs of cards with the same value in the same deck.
12
+
13
+ Find the maximum possible size of a deck after buying cards and partitioning them optimally.
14
+
15
+ Each test contains multiple test cases. The first line contains the number of test cases $t$ ($1 \le t \le 10^4$). The description of the test cases follows.
16
+
17
+ The first line of each test case contains two integers $n$, $k$ ($1 \leq n \leq 2 \cdot 10^5$, $0 \leq k \leq 10^{16}$) — the number of distinct types of cards and the number of coins.
18
+
19
+ The second line of each test case contains $n$ integers $a_1, a_2, \ldots, a_n$ ($0 \leq a_i \leq 10^{10}$, $\sum a_i \geq 1$) — the number of cards of type $i$ you have at the beginning, for each $1 \leq i \leq n$.
20
+
21
+ It is guaranteed that the sum of $n$ over all test cases does not exceed $2 \cdot 10^5$.
22
+
23
+ For each test case, output a single integer: the maximum possible size of a deck if you operate optimally.
24
+
25
+ In the first test case, you can buy one card with the number $1$, and your cards become $[1, 1, 1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 3]$. You can partition them into the decks $[1, 2], [1, 2], [1, 3], [1, 3]$: they all have size $2$, and they all contain distinct values. You can show that you cannot get a partition with decks of size greater than $2$, so the answer is $2$.
26
+
27
+ In the second test case, you can buy two cards with the number $1$ and o