Source file: | speed.{c, cpp, java} |
Input file: | speed.in |
Output file: | speed.out |
Bill and Ted are taking a road trip. But the odometer in their car is broken, so they don't know how many miles they have driven. Fortunately, Bill has a working stopwatch, so they can record their speed and the total time they have driven. Unfortunately, their record keeping strategy is a little odd, so they need help computing the total distance driven. You are to write a program to do this computation.
For example, if their log shows
Speed in miles per hour
Total elapsed time in hours
20
2
30
6
10
7
this means they drove 2 hours at 20 miles per hour, then 6-2=4 hours at 30 miles per hour, then 7-6=1 hour at 10 miles per hour. The distance driven is then (2)(20) + (4)(30) + (1)(10) = 40 + 120 + 10 = 170 miles. Note that the total elapsed time is always since the beginning of the trip, not since the previous entry in their log.
Input: The input consists of one or more data sets. Each set starts with a line containing an integer n, 1 ≤ n ≤ 10, followed by n pairs of values, one pair per line. The first value in a pair, s, is the speed in miles per hour and the second value, t, is the total elapsed time. Both s and t are integers, 1 ≤ s ≤ 90 and 1 ≤ t ≤ 12. The values for t are always in strictly increasing order. A value of -1 for n signals the end of the input.
Output: For each input set, print the distance driven, followed by a space, followed by the word "miles".
Example input: | Example output: |
3 20 2 30 6 10 7 2 60 1 30 5 4 15 1 25 2 30 3 10 5 -1 |
170 miles 180 miles 90 miles |
Last modified on October 31, 2004 at 4:31 PM.