Problem Description
A while ago I had trouble sleeping. I used to lie awake, staring at the ceiling, for hours and hours. Then one day my grandmother suggested I tried counting sheep after I'd gone to bed. As always when my grandmother suggests things, I decided to try it out. The only problem was, there were no sheep around to be counted when I went to bed.
Creative as I am, that wasn't going to stop me. I sat down and wrote a computer program that made a grid of characters, where # represents a sheep, while . is grass (or whatever you like, just not sheep). To make the counting a little more interesting, I also decided I wanted to count flocks of sheep instead of single sheep. Two sheep are in the same flock if they share a common side (up, down, right or left). Also, if sheep A is in the same flock as sheep B, and sheep B is in the same flock as sheep C, then sheeps A and C are in the same flock.
Now, I've got a new problem. Though counting these sheep actually helps me fall asleep, I find that it is extremely boring. To solve this, I've decided I need another computer program that does the counting for me. Then I'll be able to just start both these programs before I go to bed, and I'll sleep tight until the morning without any disturbances. I need you to write this program for me.
Creative as I am, that wasn't going to stop me. I sat down and wrote a computer program that made a grid of characters, where # represents a sheep, while . is grass (or whatever you like, just not sheep). To make the counting a little more interesting, I also decided I wanted to count flocks of sheep instead of single sheep. Two sheep are in the same flock if they share a common side (up, down, right or left). Also, if sheep A is in the same flock as sheep B, and sheep B is in the same flock as sheep C, then sheeps A and C are in the same flock.
Now, I've got a new problem. Though counting these sheep actually helps me fall asleep, I find that it is extremely boring. To solve this, I've decided I need another computer program that does the counting for me. Then I'll be able to just start both these programs before I go to bed, and I'll sleep tight until the morning without any disturbances. I need you to write this program for me.
Input
The first line of input contains a single number T, the number of test cases to follow.
Each test case begins with a line containing two numbers, H and W, the height and width of the sheep grid. Then follows H lines, each containing W characters (either # or .), describing that part of the grid.
Each test case begins with a line containing two numbers, H and W, the height and width of the sheep grid. Then follows H lines, each containing W characters (either # or .), describing that part of the grid.
Output
For each test case, output a line containing a single number, the amount of sheep flock son that grid according to the rules stated in the problem description.
Notes and Constraints
0 < T <= 100
0 < H,W <= 100
Notes and Constraints
0 < T <= 100
0 < H,W <= 100
Sample Input
2
4 4
#.#.
.#.#
#.##
.#.#
3 5
###.#
..#..
#.###
Sample Output
6 3
Problem analysis:
This is a basic breadth first search(BFS) problem.
Use the template of the BFS can easy solve the problem.
Here is the detailed method of the problem:
View Code
#include<iostream> using namespace std; #define n 105 char map[n][n]; int h,w; int dir[4][2]={0,1,0,-1,1,0,-1,0}; void flock(int x,int y) { int i,nx,ny; map[x][y]='.'; for(i=0;i<4;i++) { nx=x+dir[i][0]; ny=y+dir[i][1]; if(nx>=h||nx<0||ny>=w||ny<0) continue; if(map[nx][ny]!='#') continue; flock(nx,ny); } } int main() { int T; cin>>T; while(T--) { cin>>h>>w; getchar(); int i,j; for(i=0;i<h;i++) scanf("%s",map[i]); int count=0; for(i=0;i<h;i++) for(j=0;j<w;j++) { if(map[i][j]=='#') { count++; flock(i,j); } } cout<<count<<endl; } return 0; }