Brian Dean
A musical melody is represented as a sequence of N (1 <= N <= 5000) notes that are integers in the range 1..88, each representing a key on the piano. It is unfortunate but true that this representation of melodies ignores the notion of musical timing; but, this programming task is about notes and not timings.
Many composers structure their music around a repeating "theme", which, being a subsequence of an entire melody, is a sequence of integers in our representation. A subsequence of a melody is a theme if it:
- is at least five notes long
- appears (potentially transposed -- see below) again somewhere else in the piece of music
- is disjoint from (i.e., non-overlapping with) at least one of its other appearance(s)
Given a melody, compute the length (number of notes) of the longest theme.
One second time limit for this problem's solutions!
PROGRAM NAME: theme
INPUT FORMAT
The first line of the input file contains the integer N. Each subsequent line (except potentially the last) contains 20 integers representing the sequence of notes. The last line contains the remainder of the notes, potentially fewer than 20.
SAMPLE INPUT (file theme.in)
30
25 27 30 34 39 45 52 60 69 79 69 60 52 45 39 34 30 26 22 18
82 78 74 70 66 67 64 60 65 80
OUTPUT FORMAT
The output file should contain a single line with a single integer that represents the length of the longest theme. If there are no themes, output 0.
SAMPLE OUTPUT (file theme.out)
5
[The five-long theme is the last five notes of the first line and the first five notes of the second]
#include <fstream>
using namespace std;
bool check(int n, int b[], int t) {
int m = n - t * 2 - 1;
int o = n - t;
for (int i = 0; i <= m; ++i) {
for (int j = i + t + 1; j <= o; ++j) {
int k;
for (k = 0; k < t; ++k)
if (b[i + k] != b[j + k])
break;
if (k >= t)
return true;
}
}
return false;
}
int main() {
ifstream fin("theme.in");
int n, a[5000], b[5000];
fin >> n;
for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i)
fin >> a[i];
for (int i = 0; i < n - 1; ++i)
b[i] = a[i + 1] - a[i];
fin.close();
int low = 0, high = n, mid;
while (low < high) {
mid = (low + high + 1) >> 1;
if (check(n - 1, b, mid))
low = mid;
else
high = mid - 1;
}
ofstream fout("theme.out");
fout << (low < 4 ? 0 : low + 1) << endl;
fout.close();
return 0;
}
Many algorithms with different complexities: http://www.nocow.cn/index.php/USACO/theme
Alex Schwendner
Let theme(i,j) be the length of the longest theme which occurs starting at both note i and j. Note that if note[i+1]-note[i] == note[j+1]-note[j], than theme(i,j) = 1+theme(i+1,j+1). Otherwise, theme(i,j) = 1. Thus, we order the search in such a way that theme(i,j) is tested immediately after theme(i+1,j+1), keeping track of the length of the current theme, as well as the length of the longest theme found so far.
#include <fstream.h>
int n;
int note[5000];
int
main () {
ifstream filein ("theme.in");
filein >> n;
for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i)
filein >> note[i];
filein.close ();
int longest = 1;
for (int i = 1; i < n; ++i) {
int length = 1;
for (int j = n - i - 1 - 1; j >= 0; --j) {
if (note[j] - note[j + 1] == note[j + i] - note[j + i + 1]) {
++length;
if (length > i)
length = i;
if (longest < length)
longest = length;
}
else {
length = 1;
}
}
}
ofstream fileout ("theme.out");
fileout << ((longest >= 5) ? longest : 0) << endl;
fileout.close ();
exit (0);
}