DZY loves Physics, and he enjoys calculating density.
Almost everything has density, even a graph. We define the density of a non-directed graph (nodes and edges of the graph have some values) as follows:
Once DZY got a graph G, now he wants to find a connected induced subgraph G' of the graph, such that the density of G' is as large as possible.
An induced subgraph G'(V', E') of a graph G(V, E) is a graph that satisfies:
- ;
- edge if and only if , and edge ;
- the value of an edge in G' is the same as the value of the corresponding edge in G, so as the value of a node.
Help DZY to find the induced subgraph with maximum density. Note that the induced subgraph you choose must be connected.
The first line contains two space-separated integers n (1 ≤ n ≤ 500), . Integer n represents the number of nodes of the graph G, m represents the number of edges.
The second line contains n space-separated integers xi (1 ≤ xi ≤ 106), where xi represents the value of the i-th node. Consider the graph nodes are numbered from 1 to n.
Each of the next m lines contains three space-separated integers ai, bi, ci (1 ≤ ai < bi ≤ n; 1 ≤ ci ≤ 103), denoting an edge between nodeai and bi with value ci. The graph won't contain multiple edges.
Output a real number denoting the answer, with an absolute or relative error of at most 10 - 9.
1 0 1
0.000000000000000
2 1 1 2 1 2 1
3.000000000000000
5 6 13 56 73 98 17 1 2 56 1 3 29 1 4 42 2 3 95 2 4 88 3 4 63
2.965517241379311
In the first sample, you can only choose an empty subgraph, or the subgraph containing only node 1.
In the second sample, choosing the whole graph is optimal.
#include <iostream>
#include<cstdio>
#include<cstring>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
int n,m,a[510];
int x,y,v;
scanf("%d%d",&n,&m);
for(int i=1;i<=n;i++)
scanf("%d",&a[i]);
double maxn=0;
for(int i=0;i<m;i++)
{
scanf("%d%d%d",&x,&y,&v);
if((a[x]+a[y])*1.0/v>maxn)
maxn=(a[x]+a[y])*1.0/v;
}
printf("%.10lf\n",maxn);
return 0;
}