On Wed, Jul 3, 2013 at 10:24 AM, Thilina Rathnayake
<[email protected]> wrote:
>
> There were few notes about it in the paper and I am pretty sure
> I can find some references for it. If that is the case, is this kind of a
> representation good?

Yes, I think the [(220, 61), (40, 11), (768, 213), (12, 3)]
representation is very good.

Then your other function takes this and returns the general solution
in terms of "n", once you implement it.

Ondrej

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