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back to boardCan O(nlogn) java program get AC? Posted by begi 12 Dec 2014 23:17 As I said before I think java programs should get higher time limit. My java program gets TLE on test #4 or #5 285ms. In my opinion my program runs in O(nlogn). Below I gave the code that gets TLE: import java.util.ArrayList; import java.util.Arrays; import java.util.PriorityQueue; import java.util.Scanner; public class Main { public static void main(String[] args) { Scanner sc = new Scanner(System.in); ArrayList<Integer> lst = new ArrayList<>(); int[] sorted; PriorityQueue<Integer>[] g; int[] degree = new int[8000]; Arrays.fill(degree, 0);
// O(n) while (sc.hasNextInt()) { int tt = sc.nextInt() - 1; lst.add(tt); degree[tt]++; } g = new PriorityQueue[lst.size() + 1]; sorted = new int[lst.size() + 1]; // O(n) for (int i = 0; i < lst.size() + 1; i++) { sorted[i] = i; g[i] = new PriorityQueue<>(); } // find initial leaves O(nlogn) PriorityQueue<Integer> leaves = new PriorityQueue<>(); for (Integer y : sorted) { if (degree[y] == 0) { leaves.add(y); } } // O(nlogn) for (int x : lst) { degree[x]--; int y = leaves.poll(); g[x].add(y); g[y].add(x);
if(degree[x] == 0){ leaves.add(x); } }
// O(nlogn) for (int i = 0; i < g.length; i++) { System.out.print((i + 1) + ":"); while (!g[i].isEmpty()) { System.out.print(" " + (g[i].poll() + 1)); } System.out.println(""); } } } Edited by author 12.12.2014 23:17 Re: Can O(nlogn) java program get AC? Posted by begi 12 Dec 2014 23:38 Oh gosh, I used buffered reader instead of Scanner.nextInt() and got AC, micro-optimizing your code for I/O is not the right thing for this problem IMO: BufferedReader br = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(System.in)); String[] input = br.readLine().split(" "); |
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