跳到主要內容

UVA10815

Problem B: Andy's First Dictionary
Time limit: 3 seconds


Andy, 8, has a dream - he wants to produce his very own dictionary. This is not an easy task for him, as the number of words that he knows is, well, not quite enough. Instead of thinking up all the words himself, he has a briliant idea. From his bookshelf he would pick one of his favourite story books, from which he would copy out all the distinct words. By arranging the words in alphabetical order, he is done! Of course, it is a really time-consuming job, and this is where a computer program is helpful.
You are asked to write a program that lists all the different words in the input text. In this problem, a word is defined as a consecutive sequence of alphabets, in upper and/or lower case. Words with only one letter are also to be considered. Furthermore, your program must be CaSe InSeNsItIvE. For example, words like "Apple", "apple" or "APPLE" must be considered the same.

Input

The input file is a text with no more than 5000 lines. An input line has at most 200 characters. Input is terminated by EOF.

Output

Your output should give a list of different words that appears in the input text, one in a line. The words should all be in lower case, sorted in alphabetical order. You can be sure that he number of distinct words in the text does not exceed 5000.

Sample Input

Adventures in Disneyland

Two blondes were going to Disneyland when they came to a fork in the
road. The sign read: "Disneyland Left."

So they went home.

Sample Output

a
adventures
blondes
came
disneyland
fork
going
home
in
left
read
road
sign
so
the
they
to
two
went
were
when
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

#include<iostream>
#include<string>
#include<set>
#include<sstream>
using namespace std;

set<string> dict;
string s, buf;

int main() {

while (cin >> s) {

for (int i = 0; i < s.length(); i++)

if (isalpha(s[i]))
s[i] = tolower(s[i]);

else s[i] = ' ';

stringstream ss(s);

while (ss >> buf) dict.insert(buf);
}
for (set<string>::iterator it = dict.begin(); it != dict.end(); ++it)
cout << *it << "\n";

return 0;
}

留言

這個網誌中的熱門文章

UVA11349

J - Symmetric Matrix Time Limit: 1 sec Memory Limit: 16MB You`re given a square matrix M. Elements of this matrix are M ij : {0 < i < n, 0 < j < n}. In this problem you'll have to find out whether the given matrix is symmetric or not. Definition: Symmetric matrix is such a matrix that all elements of it are non-negative and symmetric with relation to the center of this matrix. Any other matrix is considered to be non-symmetric. For example: All you have to do is to find whether the matrix is symmetric or not. Elements of a matrix given in the input are -2 32  <= M ij  <= 2 32  and 0 < n <= 100. INPUT: First line of input contains number of test cases T <= 300. Then T test cases follow each described in the following way. The first line of each test case contains n - the dimension of square matrix. Then n lines follow each of then containing row i. Row contains exactly n elements separated by a space character. j-th number in row i is the elem

UVA11461

A square number is an integer number whose square root is also an integer. For example 1, 4, 81 are some square numbers. Given two numbers a and b you will have to find out how many square numbers are there between a and b (inclusive). Input The input file contains at most 201 lines of inputs. Each line contains two integers a and b (0 < a ≤ b ≤ 100000). Input is terminated by a line containing two zeroes. This line should not be processed. Output For each line of input produce one line of output. This line contains an integer which denotes how many square numbers are there between a and b (inclusive). Sample Input 1 4 1 10 0 0 Sample Output 2 3 大意:給兩個數字 求範圍內平方不大於第二個數字的數量 解法: 以最大數取根號後往回看 import java.util.Scanner; public class UVA11461 { public static void main(String[] args) { Scanner sc = new Scanner(System.in); while (sc.hasNext()) { int start = sc.nextInt(); int last = sc.nextInt(); if (last == 0) break; System.o

UVA11005

Problem B Cheapest Base Input:  Standard Input Output:  Standard Output When printing text on paper we need ink. But not every character needs the same amount of ink to print: letters such as 'W', 'M' and '8' are more expensive than thinner letters as ' i ', 'c' and '1'. In this problem we will evaluate the cost of printing numbers in several bases. As you know, numbers can be expressed in several different bases. Well known bases are binary (base 2; digits 0 and 1), decimal (base 10; digits 0 to 9) and hexadecimal (base 16; digits 0 to 9 and letters A to F). For the general base  n  we will use the first  n  characters of the string "0123456789ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ", which means the highest base in this problem is 36. The lowest base is of course 2. Every character from this string has an associated cost, represented by an integer value between 1 and 128. The cost to print a number in a certain base is the s