2845.Correcting Mistakes

Time Limit: 1s Memory Limit: 256MB

Analyzing the mistakes people make while typing search queries is a complex and an interesting work. As there is no guaranteed way to determine what the user originally meant by typing some query, we have to use different sorts of heuristics.

Polycarp needed to write a code that could, given two words, check whether they could have been obtained from the same word as a result of typos. Polycarpus suggested that the most common typo is skipping exactly one letter as you type a word.

Implement a program that can, given two distinct words S and T of the same length n determine how many words W of length n+1 are there with such property that you can transform W into both S, and T by deleting exactly one character. Words S and T consist of lowercase English letters. Word W also should consist of lowercase English letters.

Input Format(From the terminal/stdin)

The first line contains integer n (1 \le n \le 100000) - the length of words S and T.

The second line contains word S.

The third line contains word T.

Words S and T consist of lowercase English letters. It is guaranteed that S and T are distinct words.

Output Format(To the terminal/stdout)

Print a single integer - the number of distinct words W that can be transformed to S and T due to a typo.

Sample Input 1

Copy
7
reading
trading
 \n
       \n
       \n

Sample Output 1

Copy
1
 \n

Sample Input 2

Copy
5
sweet
sheep
 \n
     \n
     \n

Sample Output 2

Copy
0
 \n

Sample Input 3

Copy
3
toy
try
 \n
   \n
   \n

Sample Output 3

Copy
2
 \n

Hints

In the first sample test the two given words could be obtained only from word "treading" (the deleted letters are marked in bold).

In the second sample test the two given words couldn't be obtained from the same word by removing one letter.

In the third sample test the two given words could be obtained from either word "tory" or word "troy".

Submit

请先 登录

© 2025 FAQs