Problem B
Permuted Arithmetic Sequence
An arithmetic sequence is a list of values where the difference between consecutive values is always the same. For example, $3, 7, 11, 15$ qualifies and so does $25, 15, 5, -5, -15$. However $2, 4, 7$ and $3, 6, 9, 6$ are not arithmetic sequences.
Input
Input begins with an integer, $1 \leq n \leq 100$, on a line by itself. Following this are $n$ lines, each describing a sequence. Each line begins with an integer, $3 \leq m \leq 100$, giving the length of the sequence. This is followed by the $m$ integer values that actually make up the sequence. Each of the sequence integers is in the range $[-10^6,10^6]$.
Output
For each sequence, output a line that says “arithmetic” if the sequence is an arithmetic sequence. Output “permuted arithmetic” if the sequence can be reordered to make an arithmetic sequence. Otherwise, output “non-arithmetic”.
Sample Input 1 | Sample Output 1 |
---|---|
3 5 1 2 3 4 5 3 20 6 13 4 5 9 15 19 |
arithmetic permuted arithmetic non-arithmetic |