poj 1961 Period(KMP训练指南例题)

Period
Time Limit: 3000MS   Memory Limit: 30000K
Total Submissions: 11356   Accepted: 5279

Description

For each prefix of a given string S with N characters (each character has an ASCII code between 97 and 126, inclusive), we want to know whether the prefix is a periodic string. That is, for each i (2 <= i <= N) we want to know the largest K > 1 (if there is one) such that the prefix of S with length i can be written as A K ,that is A concatenated K times, for some string A. Of course, we also want to know the period K.

Input

The input consists of several test cases. Each test case consists of two lines. The first one contains N (2 <= N <= 1 000 000) – the size of the string S.The second line contains the string S. The input file ends with a line, having the 
number zero on it.

Output

For each test case, output "Test case #" and the consecutive test case number on a single line; then, for each prefix with length i that has a period K > 1, output the prefix size i and the period K separated by a single space; the prefix sizes must be in increasing order. Print a blank line after each test case.

Sample Input

3
aaa
12
aabaabaabaab
0

Sample Output

Test case #1
2 2
3 3

Test case #2
2 2
6 2
9 3
12 4

Source

题意

给你一个字符串。叫你依次输出输出该串长度为i的前缀(如果该前缀可以由重复子串得到)的长度。产生该前缀所需的最大重复次数。

思路:

见训练指南。

详细见代码:

#include <iostream>
#include<stdio.h>
#include<string.h>
using namespace std;
const int maxn=1000100;
int f[maxn];
char txt[maxn];
void getf(char *p)
{
    int i,j,m=strlen(p);
    f[0]=f[1]=0;
    for(i=1;i<m;i++)
    {
        j=f[i];
        while(j&&p[i]!=p[j])
            j=f[j];
        f[i+1]=p[i]==p[j]?j+1:0;
    }
}
int main()
{
    int len,i,t,cas=1;

    while(scanf("%d",&len),len)
    {
        scanf("%s",txt);
        getf(txt);
        printf("Test case #%d
",cas++);
        for(i=2;i<=len;i++)
        {
            t=i-f[i];
            if(f[i]&&i%t==0)
                printf("%d %d
",i,i/t);
        }
        printf("
");
    }
    return 0;
}


原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/pangblog/p/3325088.html