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By cirex, 2 years ago, In English

I was looking over some C++ solutions written by the best of CodeForces when I realized that most of them use arrays initialized to a large value instead of instantiating a vector inside the main method. Is there any benefit to doing it the former way other than (maybe) saving a few keystrokes?

Here are some examples of what I mean.

vector <int> graph[200010];
int a[200010];
ll dp[200010][2];
ll dp2[200010][2];

const int Maxn = 1e6 + 9;
typedef long long ll;
const ll oo = (ll)1e18;
vector<int> al[Maxn];
ll val[Maxn];
vector<pair<ll,int> > sub[Maxn];
ll dp[Maxn][2],ans[2],tmp[2];

Upd: Thanks to everyone who responded! The main points from the comments below have been compiled here:

In general, C++ arrays…

  • are faster/more efficient
    • There's a smaller runtime constant
    • Vectors require an extra indirection and are stored on the heap
    • The difference in performance becomes more obvious if you use a lot of small vectors.
  • use less memory (useful for tight ML constraints)
  • are more convenient to use
    • Easy to instantiate and clear (with memset)

So overall, I guess vectors are fine in most cases, but you can use arrays just to be on the safe side.

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By cirex, history, 3 years ago, In English

Anyone know why the poj.org grading system seems to have died a few days ago? All recent submissions are just stuck on pending.

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