hdu 1028 Ignatius and the Princess III

Ignatius and the Princess III

Time Limit: 2000/1000 MS (Java/Others)    Memory Limit: 65536/32768 K (Java/Others)
Total Submission(s): 9729    Accepted Submission(s): 6876


Problem Description
"Well, it seems the first problem is too easy. I will let you know how foolish you are later." feng5166 says.

"The second problem is, given an positive integer N, we define an equation like this:
  N=a[1]+a[2]+a[3]+...+a[m];
  a[i]>0,1<=m<=N;
My question is how many different equations you can find for a given N.
For example, assume N is 4, we can find:
  4 = 4;
  4 = 3 + 1;
  4 = 2 + 2;
  4 = 2 + 1 + 1;
  4 = 1 + 1 + 1 + 1;
so the result is 5 when N is 4. Note that "4 = 3 + 1" and "4 = 1 + 3" is the same in this problem. Now, you do it!"
 
Input
The input contains several test cases. Each test case contains a positive integer N(1<=N<=120) which is mentioned above. The input is terminated by the end of file.
 
Output
For each test case, you have to output a line contains an integer P which indicate the different equations you have found.
 
Sample Input
4 10 20
 
Sample Output
5 42 627
 
Author
Ignatius.L
 母函数模板题
 1 #include<stdio.h>
 2 int c1[1000],c2[1000];
 3 int main()
 4 {
 5      int n,i,j,k,c;
 6      while(scanf("%d",&n)!=EOF)
 7      {
 8           for(i=0;i<=n;i++)
 9           {
10                c1[i]=0;
11                c2[i]=1;
12           }
13           for(i=1;i<=n;i++)
14           {
15                for(j=0;j<=n;j++)
16                {
17                     for(k=0;k+j<=n;k+=i)
18                     {
19                          c2[j+k]+=c1[j];
20                     }
21                }
22                for(c=0;c<=n;c++)
23                {
24                     c1[c]=c2[c];
25                     c2[c]=0;
26                }
27           }
28           printf("%d
",c1[n]);
29 
30      }
31      return 0;
32 }
View Code
原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/llei1573/p/3202392.html