British astronomer Eddington liked to ride a bike. It is said that in order to show off his skill, he has even defined an "Eddington number", E -- that is, the maximum integer E such that it is for E days that one rides more than E miles. Eddington's own E was 87.
Now given everyday's distances that one rides for N days, you are supposed to find the corresponding E (≤N).
Input Specification:
Each input file contains one test case. For each case, the first line gives a positive integer N (≤105), the days of continuous riding. Then N non-negative integers are given in the next line, being the riding distances of everyday.
Output Specification:
For each case, print in a line the Eddington number for these N days.
Sample Input:
10
6 7 6 9 3 10 8 2 7 8
Sample Output:
6
#include<cstdio> #include<algorithm> using namespace std; const int maxn = 100010; bool cmp(int a,int b){ return a > b; } int main(){ int n; scanf("%d",&n); int arr[maxn]; for(int i = 1; i <= n; i++){ scanf("%d",&arr[i]); } sort(arr+1,arr+n+1,cmp); int E = 1; while(E <= n && arr[E] > E) E++; printf("%d",E-1); return 0; }