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Welcome to Code Jam
In the practice contest, you may try as many times as you want.
Small input
10 points
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Download A-small.inMore options ▼SubmitYour submission was received. You can still resubmit for minutes.
Only your last submission counts.Time Remaining: Input: A-small-practice.in.your output file:source file(s): removeAdd another filesource file(s): not needed for the practice contest Large input
23 points
![]()
Download A-large.inMore options ▼SubmitYour submission was received. You can still resubmit for minutes.
Only your last submission counts.Time Remaining: You may resubmit this multiple times within the remaining
time-frame. Only your last submission will count.your output file:source file(s): removeAdd another filesource file(s): not needed for the practice contest
Problem
After years of study, scientists at Google Labs have discovered an
alien language transmitted from a faraway planet. The alien language is
very unique in that every word consists of exactly L lowercase letters. Also, there are exactly D words in this language.
Once the dictionary of all the words in the alien language was
built, the next breakthrough was to discover that the aliens have been
transmitting messages to Earth for the past decade. Unfortunately,
these signals are weakened due to the distance between our two planets
and some of the words may be misinterpreted. In order to help them
decipher these messages, the scientists have asked you to devise an
algorithm that will determine the number of possible interpretations
for a given pattern.
A pattern consists of exactly L tokens. Each token is either
a single lowercase letter (the scientists are very sure that this is
the letter) or a group of unique lowercase letters surrounded by
parenthesis ( and ). For example: (ab)d(dc) means the first letter is
either a or b, the second letter is definitely d and the last letter is
either d or c. Therefore, the pattern (ab)d(dc) can stand for either
one of these 4 possibilities: add, adc, bdd, bdc.
Input
The first line of input contains 3 integers, L, D and N separated by a space. D lines follow, each containing one word of length L. These are the words that are known to exist in the alien language. N
test cases then follow, each on its own line and each consisting of a
pattern as described above. You may assume that all known words
provided are unique.
Output
For each test case, output
Case #X: K where X is the test case number, starting from 1, and K indicates how many words in the alien language match the pattern.
Limits
Small dataset
1 ≤ L ≤ 10
1 ≤ D ≤ 25
1 ≤ N ≤ 10
Large dataset
1 ≤ L ≤ 15
1 ≤ D ≤ 5000
1 ≤ N ≤ 500
Sample
Input
Output
3 5 4
abc
bca
dac
dbc
cba
(ab)(bc)(ca)
abc
(abc)(abc)(abc)
(zyx)bc
Case #1: 2
Case #2: 1
Case #3: 3
Case #4: 0
In the practice contest, you may try as many times as you want.
Small input
10 points
![]()
Download C-small.inMore options ▼SubmitYour submission was received. You can still resubmit for minutes.
Only your last submission counts.Time Remaining: Input: C-small-practice.in.your output file:source file(s): removeAdd another filesource file(s): not needed for the practice contest Large input
23 points
![]()
Download C-large.inMore options ▼SubmitYour submission was received. You can still resubmit for minutes.
Only your last submission counts.Time Remaining: You may resubmit this multiple times within the remaining
time-frame. Only your last submission will count.your output file:source file(s): removeAdd another filesource file(s): not needed for the practice contest
Problem
So you've registered. We sent you a welcoming email, to welcome you
to code jam. But it's possible that you still don't feel welcomed to
code jam. That's why we decided to name a problem "welcome to code
jam." After solving this problem, we hope that you'll feel very
welcome. Very welcome, that is, to code jam.
If you read the previous paragraph, you're probably wondering why
it's there. But if you read it very carefully, you might notice that we
have written the words "welcome to code jam" several times: 400263727
times in total. After all, it's easy to look through the paragraph and
find a 'w'; then find an 'e' later in the paragraph; then find an 'l'
after that, and so on. Your task is to write a program that can take
any text and print out how many times that text contains the phrase
"welcome to code jam".
To be more precise, given a text string, you are to determine how
many times the string "welcome to code jam" appears as a sub-sequence
of that string. In other words, find a sequence s of increasing
indices into the input string such that the concatenation of
input[s[0]], input[s[1]], ..., input[s[18]] is the string "welcome to
code jam".
The result of your calculation might be huge, so for convenience we would only like you to find the last 4 digits.
Input
The first line of input gives the number of test cases, N.
The next N lines of input contain one test case each. Each test case is
a single line of text, containing only lower-case letters and spaces.
No line will start with a space, and no line will end with a space.
Output
For each test case, "Case #x: dddd", where x is the case number, and
dddd is the last four digits of the answer. If the answer has fewer
than 4 digits, please add zeroes at the front of your answer to make it
exactly 4 digits long.
Limits
1 ≤ N ≤ 100
Small dataset
Each line will be no longer than 30 characters.
Large dataset
Each line will be no longer than 500 characters.
Sample
Input
Output
3
elcomew elcome to code jam
wweellccoommee to code qps jam
welcome to codejam
Case #1: 0001
Case #2: 0256
Case #3: 0000
def isSubStr(w,b):
#print w
#print b
if(len(w)==0):
return 1
else:
if(len(b)==0):
return 0
if (w[0]==b[0]):
tf=isSubStr(w[1:],b[1:])
wf=isSubStr(w,b[1:])
return tf+wf
else:
return isSubStr(w,b[1:])
FileIn=open("C-large.in","r")
content=FileIn.read()
content=content.split('\n')
matchStr='welcome to code jam'
caseCounter=int(content[0])
print content[0]
#print content
i=0
FileOut=open('result2-l.out','w')
while icaseCounter:
#print content[i+1]
#print isSubStr(matchStr,content[i+1])
result=isSubStr(matchStr,content[i+1])
result=str(result)
if len(result)>4:
result=result[(len(result)-4):]
else:
result=result.rjust(4,'0')
FileOut.write("Case #"+str(i+1)+": "+result+'\n')
i=i+1
FileOut.close()
本文来自ChinaUnix博客,如果查看原文请点:http://blog.chinaunix.net/u/29089/showart_2045365.html |
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