The Japanese language is notorious for its sentence ending particles. Personal preference of such particles can be considered as a reflection of the speaker's personality. Such a preference is called "Kuchiguse" and is often exaggerated artistically in Anime and Manga. For example, the artificial sentence ending particle "nyan~" is often used as a stereotype for characters with a cat-like personality:
- Itai nyan~ (It hurts, nyan~)
- Ninjin wa iyada nyan~ (I hate carrots, nyan~)
Now given a few lines spoken by the same character, can you find her Kuchiguse?
Input Specification:
Each input file contains one test case. For each case, the first line is an integer N (2<=N<=100). Following are N file lines of 0~256 (inclusive) characters in length, each representing a character's spoken line. The spoken lines are case sensitive.
Output Specification:
For each test case, print in one line the kuchiguse of the character, i.e., the longest common suffix of all N lines. If there is no such suffix, write "nai".
Sample Input 1:3 Itai nyan~ Ninjin wa iyadanyan~ uhhh nyan~
Sample Output 1:nyan~
Sample Input 2:3 Itai! Ninjinnwaiyada T_T T_T
Sample Output 2:nai
#include<iostream> #include<string> #include<vector> #include<algorithm> using namespace std; int main() { int n; string result = ""; string sinput; bool flag = true; vector<string> svec; cin >> n; getchar(); while (n > 0) { getline(cin,sinput); reverse(sinput.begin(),sinput.end()); svec.push_back(sinput); n--; } sinput = svec[0]; for (int i = 0; i<sinput.size(); ++i) { for (int j = 1; j < svec.size(); ++j) { if (svec[j][i] != sinput[i]) { flag = false; break; } } if (!flag) break; else result += sinput[i]; } if (result.empty()) cout << "nai"; else { reverse(result.begin(),result.end()); cout << result; } return 0; }