Lunar New Year is approaching, and Bob decides to take a wander in a nearby park.
The park can be represented as a connected graph with nn nodes and mm bidirectional edges. Initially Bob is at the node 11 and he records 11on his notebook. He can wander from one node to another through those bidirectional edges. Whenever he visits a node not recorded on his notebook, he records it. After he visits all nodes at least once, he stops wandering, thus finally a permutation of nodes a1,a2,…,ana1,a2,…,an is recorded.
Wandering is a boring thing, but solving problems is fascinating. Bob wants to know the lexicographically smallest sequence of nodes he can record while wandering. Bob thinks this problem is trivial, and he wants you to solve it.
A sequence xx is lexicographically smaller than a sequence yy if and only if one of the following holds:
- xx is a prefix of yy, but x≠yx≠y (this is impossible in this problem as all considered sequences have the same length);
- in the first position where xx and yy differ, the sequence xx has a smaller element than the corresponding element in yy.
Input
The first line contains two positive integers nn and mm (1≤n,m≤1051≤n,m≤105), denoting the number of nodes and edges, respectively.
The following mm lines describe the bidirectional edges in the graph. The ii-th of these lines contains two integers uiui and vivi (1≤ui,vi≤n1≤ui,vi≤n), representing the nodes the ii-th edge connects.
Note that the graph can have multiple edges connecting the same two nodes and self-loops. It is guaranteed that the graph is connected.
Output
Output a line containing the lexicographically smallest sequence a1,a2,…,ana1,a2,…,an Bob can record.
Examples
input
Copy
3 2
1 2
1 3
output
Copy
1 2 3
input
Copy
5 5
1 4
3 4
5 4
3 2
1 5
output
Copy
1 4 3 2 5
input
Copy
10 10
1 4
6 8
2 5
3 7
9 4
5 6
3 4
8 10
8 9
1 10
output
Copy
1 4 3 7 9 8 6 5 2 10
Note
In the first sample, Bob's optimal wandering path could be 1→2→1→31→2→1→3. Therefore, Bob will obtain the sequence {1,2,3}{1,2,3}, which is the lexicographically smallest one.
In the second sample, Bob's optimal wandering path could be 1→4→3→2→3→4→1→51→4→3→2→3→4→1→5. Therefore, Bob will obtain the sequence {1,4,3,2,5}{1,4,3,2,5}, which is the lexicographically smallest one.
题解:最小堆保证字典序最小,vis保证每个点只输出1次。
思路很清晰的一道题,真搞不懂竟然当时没做出来。
#include<bits/stdc++.h>
using namespace std;
const int maxn=100010;
priority_queue<int,vector<int>,greater<int> >que;
vector<int>a[maxn];
int vis[maxn],n,m;
int main()
{
cin>>n>>m;
for(int i=1;i<=m;i++)
{
int u,v;
cin>>u>>v;
a[u].push_back(v);
a[v].push_back(u);
}
que.push(1);
while(!que.empty())
{
int u=que.top();
que.pop();
if(vis[u])
continue;
vis[u]=1;
cout<<u<<" ";
for(int i=0;i<a[u].size();i++)
{
if(!vis[a[u][i]])
que.push(a[u][i]);
}
}
return 0;
}