CSES Stick Lengths solution proof ?

Revision en3, by arius1408, 2021-10-15 20:09:17

While I'm doing problems on CSES like always, I met with a rather interesting problem : CSES-Stick Lengths. After solving it, I discover there was actually atleast 3 ways to do this problem (all in O(NlogN)): the one I used to AC, other one using Ternary Search, and finally, using a prominent solution that I saw others used. The idea for the third was short : You sort the whole array, take the median (N/2) as the target value and calculate the result using it. Here it how it goes on USACO :

#include <bits/stdc++.h>

using namespace std;

//variables used for the current problem
int n,median;
vector<int> p;
long long ans,cnt;

void solve() {
	cin >> n;
	p.resize(n);
	for (int &x : p){
		cin >> x;
	}
	sort(p.begin(),p.end());
	median=p[n/2];
	for (const int &x : p){
		ans+=abs(median-x); //Calculate the cost to modify the stick length
	}
	cout << ans << "\n";
	return;
}

int main(){
	ios_base::sync_with_stdio(false);
	cin.tie(nullptr);
	solve();
	return 0;
}

After a while of observation, I myself must admit the solution's correctness. But I just couldn't proof it. Can you guys help me with it ?

History

 
 
 
 
Revisions
 
 
  Rev. Lang. By When Δ Comment
en3 English arius1408 2021-10-15 20:09:17 8 Tiny change: 'take the middle (N/2) as ' -> 'take the median (N/2) as '
en2 English arius1408 2021-10-15 20:03:02 15
en1 English arius1408 2021-10-15 19:59:41 1226 Initial revision (published)