Ubiquitous Religions
| Time Limit: 5000MS | Memory Limit: 65536K | |
| Total Submissions: 25255 | Accepted: 12454 |
Description
There are so many different religions in the world today that it is difficult to keep track of them all. You are interested in finding out how many different religions students in your university believe in.
You know that there are n students in your university (0 < n <= 50000). It is infeasible for you to ask every student their religious beliefs. Furthermore, many students are not comfortable expressing their beliefs. One way to avoid these problems is to ask m (0 <= m <= n(n-1)/2) pairs of students and ask them whether they believe in the same religion (e.g. they may know if they both attend the same church). From this data, you may not know what each person believes in, but you can get an idea of the upper bound of how many different religions can be possibly represented on campus. You may assume that each student subscribes to at most one religion.
You know that there are n students in your university (0 < n <= 50000). It is infeasible for you to ask every student their religious beliefs. Furthermore, many students are not comfortable expressing their beliefs. One way to avoid these problems is to ask m (0 <= m <= n(n-1)/2) pairs of students and ask them whether they believe in the same religion (e.g. they may know if they both attend the same church). From this data, you may not know what each person believes in, but you can get an idea of the upper bound of how many different religions can be possibly represented on campus. You may assume that each student subscribes to at most one religion.
Input
The input consists of a number of cases. Each case starts with a line specifying the integers n and m. The next m lines each consists of two integers i and j, specifying that students i and j believe in the same religion. The students are numbered 1 to n. The
end of input is specified by a line in which n = m = 0.
Output
For each test case, print on a single line the case number (starting with 1) followed by the maximum number of different religions that the students in the university believe in.
Sample Input
10 9 1 2 1 3 1 4 1 5 1 6 1 7 1 8 1 9 1 10 10 4 2 3 4 5 4 8 5 8 0 0
Sample Output
Case 1: 1 Case 2: 7
Hint
Huge input, scanf is recommended.
#include<iostream>
#include<stdio.h>
using namespace std;
#define M 50010
int pre[M];
int ranks[M];
int ans;
void init(int n)
{
for(int i=0;i<n;++i)
{
pre[i]=i;
ranks[i]=1;
}
}
int _find(int x){
if(x==pre[x])return x;
return pre[x]=_find(pre[x]);
}
void _union(int a,int b)
{
int x= _find(a);
int y= _find(b);
if(x==y)return ;
else
{
if(ranks[x]<ranks[y])
{
ranks[y]+=ranks[x];
pre[x]=y;
}
else
{
ranks[x]+=ranks[y];
pre[y]=x;
}
ans--;
}
}
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
//freopen("2524.in","r",stdin);
int n,m;
int a,b;
int count=1;
while(scanf("%d%d",&n,&m)!=EOF&&n!=0)
{
init(n);
ans = n;
while(m--)
{
scanf("%d%d",&a,&b);
_union(a,b);
}
printf("Case %d: %d\n",count,ans);
count++;
}
return 0;
}
本文介绍了一种使用并查集算法来解决信仰统计问题的方法。通过询问学生间的信仰相似性,可以估算校园内不同信仰的最大数量。文章提供了完整的代码实现,包括初始化、查找与合并操作。
592

被折叠的 条评论
为什么被折叠?



