HDU-1312 Red and Black
There is a rectangular room, covered with square tiles. Each tile is colored either red or black. A man is standing on a black tile. From a tile, he can move to one of four adjacent tiles. But he can’t move on red tiles, he can move only on black tiles.
Write a program to count the number of black tiles which he can reach by repeating the moves described above.
Input
The input consists of multiple data sets. A data set starts with a line containing two positive integers W and H; W and H are the numbers of tiles in the x- and y- directions, respectively. W and H are not more than 20.
There are H more lines in the data set, each of which includes W characters. Each character represents the color of a tile as follows.
‘.’ - a black tile
‘#’ - a red tile
‘@’ - a man on a black tile(appears exactly once in a data set)
Output
For each data set, your program should output a line which contains the number of tiles he can reach from the initial tile (including itself).
Sample Input
6 9
....#.
.....#
......
......
......
......
......
#@...#
.#..#.
11 9
.#.........
.#.#######.
.#.#.....#.
.#.#.###.#.
.#.#..@#.#.
.#.#####.#.
.#.......#.
.#########.
...........
11 6
..#..#..#..
..#..#..#..
..#..#..###
..#..#..#@.
..#..#..#..
..#..#..#..
7 7
..#.#..
..#.#..
###.###
...@...
###.###
..#.#..
..#.#..
0 0
Sample Output
45
59
6
13
my analysis
This problem is limited to memory, so we can’t use the conventional tag array. After each visit, we can directly reset this block as an obstacle, and use BFS once to connect all the accessible points
solution(C++)
#include<iostream>
#include<queue>
using namespace std;
int A, B, sum = 1;
char maze[10000][10000];
int X[4] = { 0,0,1,-1 };
int Y[4] = { 1,-1,0,0 };
struct node
{
int x;
int y;
}Node, S;
bool judge(int x, int y)
{
if (x < 0 || x >= A || y < 0 || y >= B || maze[x][y] == '#' || maze[x][y] == '@')
return false;
else
return true;
}
void BFS()
{
queue<node> q;
q.push(S);
while (!q.empty())
{
node top = q.front();
q.pop();
for (int i = 0; i < 4; i++)
{
int newX = top.x + X[i];
int newY = top.y + Y[i];
if (judge(newX, newY))
{
sum++;
Node.x = newX, Node.y = newY;
q.push(Node);
maze[newX][newY] = '#';
}
}
}
return;
}
int main()
{
while (cin >> B >> A)
{
if (A == 0 && B == 0)
break;
sum = 1;
for (int i = 0; i < A; i++)
for (int j = 0; j < B; j++)
{
cin >> maze[i][j];
if (maze[i][j] == '@')
{
S.x = i;
S.y = j;
}
}
BFS();
cout << sum << endl;
}
}