National Olympiad in Informatics, China, 1998
Software installation is often a headache-inducing task. Software usually consists of many parts (known as "components"). During the time of installation, the user is prompted to decide which components they would like to install. In addition, some components may be dependent on other components and thus they must sometimes be installed in a certain order.
Due to the modern prevalence of floppy drives coming with personal computers, the most widespread form of software installation media is the floppy disk. However, the limited capacity of floppy disks makes it so that slightly larger software may not fit on a single disk. At this point, software will need to be stored on many floppy disks. Every floppy disk contains one or more components. These disks are called software installation disks.
Since the components of a software are dispersed on different disks, and a particular installation order of the components is required, it is easy for the scenario of switching back and forth between disks to occur. When computer users are installing software, the most contemptible task has to be switching back and forth between installation disks (which involves finding the disk, inserting the disk, ejecting the disk, finding the disk, inserting the disk, …). Everything about this seems tedious and disorderly, so it is important to design software installation disks to meet the following criteria:
- The user should never have to insert the same disk twice. Even better, the disks should be labeled starting from 1 so that at the time of installation, the user can follow the order to insert the disks.
- For economic reasons, the number of total installation disks should be minimized.
Write a program that, given information about the software components, finds the optimal software installation disk arrangement.
Input Specification
The first line of input contains the integer ,
the capacity of each floppy disk in bytes.
The second line of input contains the integer ,
the number of components.
The next lines each provide information about a single component,
including:
- the number of bytes the component takes up, and
- the ID(s) of the component(s), between to , that must be installed prior to installing the current component. If there are multiple prerequisite components, all of their IDs will be listed. If there are no dependencies, only the number of bytes will be listed on the line.
Adjacent values from any line in the input may be separated by one or more spaces.
Output Specification
The first line of output should contain the minimum number of floppy
disks required to store all of the components under the requirements
described above. If one does not exist, output 0
. Otherwise, the
remaining lines should each describe a floppy disk and the IDs of the
component(s) that should be stored on it. The discs should be in the
order that they are inserted by the user. For each floppy disk, the
components on it may be listed in any order, but should be separated by
spaces.
Sample Input
1457664
3
512665
912345 1
832542 1
Sample Output
2
1 3
2
Problem translated to English by .
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