each cut should go inside the whole chocolate bar, and all cuts must be distinct. The picture below shows a possible way to cut a 5?×?6 chocolate for 5 times.
Imagine Jzzhu have made k cuts and the big chocolate is splitted into several pieces. Consider the smallest (by area) piece of the chocolate, Jzzhu wants this piece to be as large as possible. What is the maximum possible area of smallest piece he can get with exactly k cuts? The area of a chocolate piece is the number of unit squares in it.
Input A single line contains three integers n,?m,?k (1?≤?n,?m?≤?109; 1?≤?k?≤?2?109).<??http://www.2cto.com/kf/ware/vc/" target="_blank" class="keylink">vcD4KCgoKT3V0cHV0CjxwPgpPdXRwdXQgYSBzaW5nbGUgaW50ZWdlciByZXByZXNlbnRpbmcgdGhlIGFuc3dlci4gSWYgaXQgaXMgaW1wb3NzaWJsZSB0byBjdXQgdGhlIGJpZyBjaG9jb2xhdGUgPGVtPms8L2VtPiB0aW1lcywgcHJpbnQgLTEuPC9wPgoKCgpTYW1wbGUgdGVzdChzKQoKCgppbnB1dAo8cHJlIGNsYXNzPQ=="brush:java;">3 4 1 output
6
input 6 4 2
output 8
input 2 3 4
output -1
Note In the first sample, Jzzhu can cut the chocolate following the picture below:
In the second sample the optimal division looks like this:
In the third sample, it"s impossible to cut a 2?×?3 chocolate 4 times.
#include
#include
#include
#include
using namespace std; typedef long long int LL; LL n,m,k,ans=0LL; int main() { cin>>n>>m>>k; if(n+m-2
=k+1) ans=max(ans,n*(m/(k+1))); else { t=k-m+1; ans=max(ans,n/(t+1)); } if(n>=k+1) ans=max(ans,m*(n/(k+1))); else { t=k-n+1; ans=max(ans,m/(t+1)); } cout<