Elven Postman
Time Limit: 1500/1000 MS (Java/Others) Memory Limit: 131072/131072 K (Java/Others)
Total Submission(s): 531 Accepted Submission(s): 292
Problem Description
Elves are very peculiar creatures. As we all know, they can live for a very long time and their magical prowess are not something to be taken lightly. Also, they live on trees. However, there is something about them you may not know. Although delivering stuffs through magical teleportation is extremely convenient (much like emails). They still sometimes prefer other more “traditional” methods.
So, as a elven postman, it is crucial to understand how to deliver the mail to the correct room of the tree. The elven tree always branches into no more than two paths upon intersection, either in the east direction or the west. It coincidentally looks awfully like a binary tree we human computer scientist know. Not only that, when numbering the rooms, they always number the room number from the east-most position to the west. For rooms in the east are usually more preferable and more expensive due to they having the privilege to see the sunrise, which matters a lot in elven culture.
Anyways, the elves usually wrote down all the rooms in a sequence at the root of the tree so that the postman may know how to deliver the mail. The sequence is written as follows, it will go straight to visit the east-most room and write down every room it encountered along the way. After the first room is reached, it will then go to the next unvisited east-most room, writing down every unvisited room on the way as well until all rooms are visited.
Your task is to determine how to reach a certain room given the sequence written on the root.
For instance, the sequence 2, 1, 4, 3 would be written on the root of the following tree.
So, as a elven postman, it is crucial to understand how to deliver the mail to the correct room of the tree. The elven tree always branches into no more than two paths upon intersection, either in the east direction or the west. It coincidentally looks awfully like a binary tree we human computer scientist know. Not only that, when numbering the rooms, they always number the room number from the east-most position to the west. For rooms in the east are usually more preferable and more expensive due to they having the privilege to see the sunrise, which matters a lot in elven culture.
Anyways, the elves usually wrote down all the rooms in a sequence at the root of the tree so that the postman may know how to deliver the mail. The sequence is written as follows, it will go straight to visit the east-most room and write down every room it encountered along the way. After the first room is reached, it will then go to the next unvisited east-most room, writing down every unvisited room on the way as well until all rooms are visited.
Your task is to determine how to reach a certain room given the sequence written on the root.
For instance, the sequence 2, 1, 4, 3 would be written on the root of the following tree.
Input
First you are given an integer
T(T≤10)
indicating the number of test cases.
For each test case, there is a number n(n≤1000) on a line representing the number of rooms in this tree. n integers representing the sequence written at the root follow, respectively a1,...,an where a1,...,an∈{1,...,n} .
On the next line, there is a number q representing the number of mails to be sent. After that, there will be q integers x1,...,xq indicating the destination room number of each mail.
For each test case, there is a number n(n≤1000) on a line representing the number of rooms in this tree. n integers representing the sequence written at the root follow, respectively a1,...,an where a1,...,an∈{1,...,n} .
On the next line, there is a number q representing the number of mails to be sent. After that, there will be q integers x1,...,xq indicating the destination room number of each mail.
Output
For each query, output a sequence of move (
E
or
W
) the postman needs to make to deliver the mail. For that
E
means that the postman should move up the eastern branch and
W
the western one. If the destination is on the root, just output a blank line would suffice.
Note that for simplicity, we assume the postman always starts from the root regardless of the room he had just visited.
Note that for simplicity, we assume the postman always starts from the root regardless of the room he had just visited.
Sample Input
2 4 2 1 4 3 3 1 2 3 6 6 5 4 3 2 1 1 1
Sample Output
E WE EEEEE
Source
2015 ACM/ICPC Asia Regional Changchun Online
题目链接:http://acm.hdu.edu.cn/showproblem.php?pid=5444
题目大意:先建立一棵排序二叉树,然后输出查询结点的路径
题目链接:http://acm.hdu.edu.cn/showproblem.php?pid=5444
题目大意:先建立一棵排序二叉树,然后输出查询结点的路径
题目分析:基础数据结构,这里用数组和链表两种方式实现,其实本质相同
数组:
#include <cstdio>
#include <cstring>
int const MAX = 1e3 + 5;
int n, m, a[MAX];
struct Tree
{
int lson, rson, val;
}t[MAX];
void Insert(int rt, int val, int idx)
{
if(t[rt].val < val)
{
if(t[rt].rson == -1)
{
t[rt].rson = idx;
t[idx].val = val;
}
else
Insert(t[rt].rson, val, idx);
}
else if(t[rt].val > val)
{
if(t[rt].lson == -1)
{
t[rt].lson = idx;
t[idx].val = val;
}
else
Insert(t[rt].lson, val, idx);
}
}
void DFS(int rt, int val)
{
if(t[rt].val < val)
{
printf("W");
if(t[rt].rson != -1)
DFS(t[rt].rson, val);
}
else if(t[rt].val > val)
{
printf("E");
if(t[rt].lson != -1)
DFS(t[rt].lson, val);
}
else
return;
}
int main()
{
int T;
scanf("%d", &T);
while(T--)
{
memset(t, -1, sizeof(t));
scanf("%d", &n);
for(int i = 0; i < n; i++)
scanf("%d", &a[i]);
t[0].val = a[0];
for(int i = 1; i < n; i++)
Insert(0, a[i], i);
scanf("%d", &m);
while(m --)
{
int tmp;
scanf("%d", &tmp);
DFS(0, tmp);
printf("\n");
}
}
}
链表:
链表的时候应当要delete树的,但是数据量不大,可以不释放
#include <cstdio>
#include <cstring>
int const MAX = 1e3 + 5;
int n, m, val[MAX];
struct TREE
{
TREE *lson, *rson;
int val;
TREE()
{
lson = NULL;
rson = NULL;
val = 0;
}
};
void Insert(TREE *rt, int val)
{
if(val > rt -> val)
{
if(rt -> rson == NULL)
{
rt -> rson = new TREE();
rt -> rson -> val = val;
}
else
Insert(rt -> rson, val);
}
if(val < rt -> val)
{
if(rt -> lson == NULL)
{
rt -> lson = new TREE();
rt -> lson -> val = val;
}
else
Insert(rt -> lson, val);
}
}
void DFS(TREE *rt, int tmp)
{
if(rt == NULL)
return;
if(tmp > rt -> val)
{
printf("W");
DFS(rt -> rson, tmp);
}
else if(tmp < rt -> val)
{
printf("E");
DFS(rt -> lson, tmp);
}
else
return;
}
void Del(TREE *rt)
{
if(rt == NULL)
return;
Del(rt -> lson);
Del(rt -> rson);
delete rt;
}
int main()
{
int T;
scanf("%d", &T);
while(T --)
{
TREE *root = new TREE();
scanf("%d", &n);
for(int i = 0; i < n; i++)
scanf("%d", &val[i]);
root -> val = val[0];
for(int i = 1; i < n; i++)
Insert(root, val[i]);
scanf("%d", &m);
while(m --)
{
int tmp;
scanf("%d", &tmp);
DFS(root, tmp);
printf("\n");
}
Del(root);
}
}