Haunted Graveyard
Time Limit: 1000MS | Memory Limit: 65536K | |
Total Submissions: 251 | Accepted: 61 |
Description
Tonight is Halloween and Scared John and his friends have decided to do something fun to celebrate the occasion: crossing the graveyard. Although Scared John does not find this fun at all, he finally agreed to join them in their adventure. Once at the entrance, the friends have begun to cross the graveyard one by one, and now it is the time for Scared John. He still remembers the tales his grandmother told him when he was a child. She told him that, on Halloween night, "haunted holes" appear in the graveyard. These are not usual holes, but they transport people who fall inside to some point in the graveyard, possibly far away. But the scariest feature of these holes is that they allow one to travel in time as well as in space; i.e., if you fall inside a "haunted hole", you appear somewhere in the graveyard a certain time before (or after) you entered the hole, in a parallel universe otherwise identical to ours.
The graveyard is organized as a grid of W*H cells, with the entrance in the cell at position (0, 0) and the exit at (W-1, H-1). Despite the darkness, Scared John can always recognize the exit, and he will leave as soon as he reaches it, determined never to set foot anywhere in the graveyard again. On his way to the exit, he can walk from one cell to an adjacent one, and he can only head to the North, East, South or West. In each cell there can be either one gravestone, one "haunted hole", or grass:
He is terrified, so he wants to cross the graveyard as quickly as possible. And that is the reason why he has phoned you, a renowned programmer. He wants you to write a program that, given the description of the graveyard, computes the minimum time needed to go from the entrance to the exit. Scared John accepts using "haunted holes" if they permit him to cross the graveyard quicker, but he is frightened to death of the possibility of getting lost and being able to travel back in time indefinitely using the holes, so your program must report these situations.
Figure 3 illustrates a possible graveyard (the second test case from the sample input). In this case there are two gravestones in cells (2, 1) and (3, 1), and a "haunted hole" from cell (3, 0) to cell (2, 2) with a difference in time of 0 seconds. The minimum time to cross the graveyard is 4 seconds, corresponding to the path:
If you do not use the "haunted hole", you need at least 5 seconds.
The graveyard is organized as a grid of W*H cells, with the entrance in the cell at position (0, 0) and the exit at (W-1, H-1). Despite the darkness, Scared John can always recognize the exit, and he will leave as soon as he reaches it, determined never to set foot anywhere in the graveyard again. On his way to the exit, he can walk from one cell to an adjacent one, and he can only head to the North, East, South or West. In each cell there can be either one gravestone, one "haunted hole", or grass:
If the cell contains a gravestone, you cannot walk over it, because gravestones are too high to climb.
If the cell contains a "haunted hole" and you walk over it, you will appear somewhere in the graveyard at a possibly different moment in time. The time difference depends on the particular "haunted hole" you fell into, and can be positive, negative or zero.
Otherwise, the cell has only grass, and you can walk freely over it.
He is terrified, so he wants to cross the graveyard as quickly as possible. And that is the reason why he has phoned you, a renowned programmer. He wants you to write a program that, given the description of the graveyard, computes the minimum time needed to go from the entrance to the exit. Scared John accepts using "haunted holes" if they permit him to cross the graveyard quicker, but he is frightened to death of the possibility of getting lost and being able to travel back in time indefinitely using the holes, so your program must report these situations.
Figure 3 illustrates a possible graveyard (the second test case from the sample input). In this case there are two gravestones in cells (2, 1) and (3, 1), and a "haunted hole" from cell (3, 0) to cell (2, 2) with a difference in time of 0 seconds. The minimum time to cross the graveyard is 4 seconds, corresponding to the path:
If you do not use the "haunted hole", you need at least 5 seconds.
Input
The input consists of several test cases. Each test case begins with a line containing two integers W and H (1 <= W, H <= 30). These integers represent the width W and height H of the graveyard. The next line contains an integer G (G >= 0), the number of gravestones in the graveyard, and is followed by G lines containing the positions of the gravestones. Each position is given by two integers X and Y (0 <= X < W and 0 <= Y < H).
The next line contains an integer E (E >= 0), the number of "haunted holes", and is followed by E lines. Each of these contains five integers X1, Y1, X2, Y2, T. (X1, Y1) is the position of the "haunted hole" (0 <= X1 < W and 0 <= Y1 < H). (X2, Y2) is the destination of the "haunted hole" (0 <= X2 < W and 0 <= Y2 < H). Note that the origin and the destination of a "haunted hole" can be identical. T (10 000 <= T < = 10 000) is the difference in seconds between the moment somebody enters the "haunted hole" and the moment he appears in the destination position; a positive number indicates that he reaches the destination after entering the hole. You can safely assume that there are no two "haunted holes" with the same origin, and the destination cell of a "haunted hole" does not contain a gravestone. Furthermore, there are neither gravestones nor "haunted holes" at positions (0,0) and (W-1,H-1). The input will finish with a line containing 0 0, which should not be processed.
The next line contains an integer E (E >= 0), the number of "haunted holes", and is followed by E lines. Each of these contains five integers X1, Y1, X2, Y2, T. (X1, Y1) is the position of the "haunted hole" (0 <= X1 < W and 0 <= Y1 < H). (X2, Y2) is the destination of the "haunted hole" (0 <= X2 < W and 0 <= Y2 < H). Note that the origin and the destination of a "haunted hole" can be identical. T (10 000 <= T < = 10 000) is the difference in seconds between the moment somebody enters the "haunted hole" and the moment he appears in the destination position; a positive number indicates that he reaches the destination after entering the hole. You can safely assume that there are no two "haunted holes" with the same origin, and the destination cell of a "haunted hole" does not contain a gravestone. Furthermore, there are neither gravestones nor "haunted holes" at positions (0,0) and (W-1,H-1). The input will finish with a line containing 0 0, which should not be processed.
Output
For each test case, if it is possible for Scared John to travel back in time indefinitely, output Never. Otherwise, print the minimum time in seconds that it takes him to cross the graveyard from the entrance to the exit if it is reachable, and Impossible if not.
Sample Input
3 3 2 2 1 1 2 0 4 3 2 2 1 3 1 1 3 0 2 2 0 4 2 0 1 2 0 1 0 -3 0 0
Sample Output
Impossible 4 Never
http://poj.org/problem?id=3878
很经典的搜索图求两点最短路径的题目,如果图中存在负权环,就输出never,不可达就输出impossible,图中可以存在单边环,这种情况如果是负权的话就输出never,如果是正权的话,就忽略这一小格。
接下来就是建图了,参考了构轩师兄的做法,用一个类来集合图的邻接表,添加边的函数,spfa搜索算法的函数等等操作,spfa算法中使用了记录结点是否在队列中的数组,以及记录结点松弛次数的数组来优化算法和检测是否有负权环的存在,一发现负权环即退出搜索。
由于这道题存在的边较多,测试数据可能也比较多组,刚提交时超时了,后来删除和优化了不必要的初始化变量和赋值等操作,并把输出格式从c++风格改为了c风格的,就800多ms刚好能通过了。
#include <cstdio> #include <cstdlib> #include <vector> #include <queue> #include <algorithm> using namespace std; const int INF=0x3fffffff; class Sssp{ //single source shortest path graphic struct edge{ int to,weight; edge(int t,int w):to(t),weight(w){} }; vector<vector<edge>> adj; vector<int> dist; public: void init(int nodes){ adj.clear(); adj.resize(nodes); dist.resize(nodes); fill(dist.begin(),dist.end(),INF); } void addedge(int node,int dest,int wei){ edge ed(dest,wei); adj[node].push_back(ed); } int spfa(); }; int Sssp::spfa(){ queue<int> q; vector<int> cnt(adj.size(),0); vector<bool> inq(adj.size(),false); q.push(0); inq[0]=true; dist[0]=0; while(!q.empty()){ int node=q.front(); q.pop(); inq[node]=false; for(int i=0;i<adj[node].size();++i){ int dest=adj[node][i].to; int wei=adj[node][i].weight; if(dist[dest]>dist[node]+wei){ if(dest==0) return -INF; dist[dest]=dist[node]+wei; ++cnt[dest]; if(cnt[dest]>=adj.size()) return -INF; if(!inq[dest]){ q.push(dest); inq[dest]=true; } } } } return dist[adj.size()-1]; } enum status{entry,grass,stone,hole,out}; status graphic[30][30]; int w,h; Sssp sssp; inline int getnode(int x,int y){ return x*h+y; } void solve(){ scanf("%d %d",&w,&h); if(w==0&&h==0) exit(0); sssp.init(w*h); fill(graphic[0],graphic[30],grass); graphic[0][0]=entry; graphic[w-1][h-1]=out; int gsto; scanf("%d",&gsto); while(--gsto>=0){ int x,y; scanf("%d %d",&x,&y); graphic[x][y]=stone; } int hunthole; scanf("%d",&hunthole); while(--hunthole>=0){ int x1,y1,x2,y2,t; scanf("%d %d %d %d %d",&x1,&y1,&x2,&y2,&t); graphic[x1][y1]=hole; sssp.addedge(getnode(x1,y1),getnode(x2,y2),t); } static int dir[4][2]={{1,0},{-1,0},{0,1},{0,-1}}; for(int i=0;i<w;++i) for (int j=0;j<h;++j){ if(graphic[i][j]==grass||graphic[i][j]==entry){ int node=getnode(i,j); for (int k=0;k<4;++k){ int x=i+dir[k][0]; int y=j+dir[k][1]; if(x>=w||x<0||y>=h||y<0) continue; if (graphic[x][y]!=stone){ sssp.addedge(node,getnode(x,y),1); } } } } int dest=sssp.spfa(); if(dest==-INF) printf("Never\n"); else if(dest==INF) printf("Impossible\n"); else printf("%d\n",dest); } int main(){ while(true) solve(); return 0; }