People in Silverland use square coins. Not only they have square shapes but also their values are square numbers. Coins with values of all square numbers up to 289 (=17^2), i.e., 1-credit coins, 4-credit coins, 9-credit coins, ..., and 289-credit coins, are
available in Silverland.
There are four combinations of coins to pay ten credits:
ten 1-credit coins,
one 4-credit coin and six 1-credit coins,
two 4-credit coins and two 1-credit coins, and
one 9-credit coin and one 1-credit coin.
Your mission is to count the number of ways to pay a given amount using coins of Silverland.
There are four combinations of coins to pay ten credits:
ten 1-credit coins,
one 4-credit coin and six 1-credit coins,
two 4-credit coins and two 1-credit coins, and
one 9-credit coin and one 1-credit coin.
Your mission is to count the number of ways to pay a given amount using coins of Silverland.
Input
The input consists of lines each containing an integer meaning an amount to be paid, followed by a line containing a zero. You may assume that all the amounts are positive and less than 300.
Output
For each of the given amount, one line containing a single integer representing the number of combinations of coins should be output. No other characters should appear in the output.
Sample Input
2 10 30 0
Sample Output
1 4 27#include <stdio.h> #include <string.h> #include <math.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <ctype.h> int main() { int dp[301]; int i,j,n; int s[18]={0,1,4,9,16,25,36,49,64,81,100,121,144,169,196,225,256,289}; memset(dp,0,sizeof(dp)); dp[0]=1; for(i=1;i<=17;i++) { for(j=s[i];j<=300;j++) { dp[j]+=dp[j-s[i]]; } } while(scanf("%d",&n)!=EOF) { if(n==0) break; printf("%d\n",dp[n]); } return 0; }