There are G people in a gang, and a list of various crimes they could commit.
The i
-th crime generates a profit[i]
and requires
group[i]
gang members to participate.
If a gang member participates in one crime, that member can't participate in another crime.
Let's call a profitable scheme any subset of these crimes that
generates at least P
profit, and the total number of gang members participating
in that subset of crimes is at most G.
How many schemes can be chosen? Since the answer may be very large, return
it modulo 10^9 + 7
.
Example 1:
Input: G = 5, P = 3, group = [2,2], profit = [2,3] Output: 2 Explanation: To make a profit of at least 3, the gang could either commit crimes 0 and 1, or just crime 1. In total, there are 2 schemes.
Example 2:
Input: G = 10, P = 5, group = [2,3,5], profit = [6,7,8] Output: 7 Explanation: To make a profit of at least 5, the gang could commit any crimes, as long as they commit one. There are 7 possible schemes: (0), (1), (2), (0,1), (0,2), (1,2), and (0,1,2).