In your job at Albatross Circus Management (yes, it’s run by a bunch of clowns), you have just finished writing a program whose output is a list of names in nondescending order by length (so that each name is at least as long as the one preceding it). However, your boss does not like the way the output looks, and instead wants the output to appear more symmetric, with the shorter strings at the top and bottom and the longer strings in the middle. His rule is that each pair of names belongs on opposite ends of the list, and the first name in the pair is always in the top part of the list. In the first example set below, Bo and Pat are the first pair, Jean and Kevin the second pair, etc.
Input
The input consists of one or more sets of strings, followed by a final line containing only the value 0. Each set starts with a line containing an integer, n, which is the number of strings in the set, followed by n strings, one per line, sorted in nondescending order by length. None of the strings contain spaces. There is at least one and no more than 15 strings per set. Each string is at most 25 characters long.
Output
For each input set print “SET n” on a line, where n starts at 1, followed by the output set as shown in the sample output.
本身已经是升序,要求以中间往旁边减小。首下标设为1,新的序列是原来序列下表为偶数的从小到大从头开始排,下标为偶排完后即是下标为奇从大到小排。
#include<bits/stdc++.h>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
int n,t=0;
while(cin>>n){
if(n==0) break;
int i;string s[16];
for(i=1;i<=n;++i){
cin>>s[i];
}
string c[16],d[16];int j=1,l=1;
for(i=1;i<=n;++i){
if(i%2==1){
c[j]=s[i];
j++;
}
else{
d[l]=s[i];
l++;
}
}t++;
cout<<"SET "<<t<<endl;
for(i=1;i<j;++i){
cout<<c[i]<<endl;
}
for(i=l-1;i>=1;--i){
cout<<d[i]<<endl;
}
}
return 0;
}