Monday, September 23, 2024
Google search engine
HomeData Modelling & AIMinimum number of mails required to distribute all the questions

Minimum number of mails required to distribute all the questions

Given N questions in a test and K students in the class. Out of the batch of K students, N students memorised exactly one question each. A mail can contain about a maximum of X questions. 
Find the minimum number of mails required so that the entire class gets to know about all the questions.

NOTE: A mail has the following information- Name of sender, Name of the recipient and the question(s)

Examples:  

Input: N = 3, K = 3, X = 1 
Output:
Student 1 sends his question to student 2 and student 3 (2 mails), 
so does student 2 and student 3 so total mails = 2 * 3 = 6

Input: N = 4, K = 9, X = 2 
Output: 19 
Refer to the flowchart below 
 

Flowchart: 

N = 4, K = 9, X = 2 
Pivot = 4th Student 
Student 1, 2, & 3 sends 3 mails to student 4. Now student 4 has all the questions. He distributes them accordingly, 3/2 = 2(using ceil) mails to each 3 students who already has 1 question and 4/2 = 2 mails to rest 5 students. So total mails are (3 + 2 * 3 + 2 * 5) = 19 
 

Flowchart of algorithm

Approach: A greedy approach has been used here. A pivot is selected which receives all the questions first and then distribute them accordingly. This will take a minimum number of steps. N-1 students, send each of their questions to the Nth student. So the Nth student has all the questions, (mails sent till now = N-1). Now it is mentioned that the mails contain the name of senders, so the Nth student knows which question came from whom, thus he can avoid sending back the same question. Now the Nth student acts as the distributor, he packages the questions and sends them accordingly. Each of the N-1 students needs to know about the rest of N-1 questions. So minimum mails that needs to be sent to each of them is ceil((N-1)/X), where X is the maximum number of questions a mail can hold and ceil denotes least integer function. So total mails sent till now = ceil((N-1)/X) * (N-1) + (N-1). So N students know about all the questions. The rest of the K-N students needs to know about all the N questions, so each of them must receive atleast ceil(N/X) mails, where X is the maximum number of questions a mail can hold and ceil denotes least integer function. So total mail received is:
 

ceil(N/X) * (K-N) + (( ceil((N-1)/X)) * (N-1)) + (N-1)

Below is the implementation of the above approach: 

C++




// C++ code to find the
// minimum number of mails
#include <bits/stdc++.h>
#define ll long long int
using namespace std;
 
// Function returns the min no of mails required
long long int MinimumMail(int n, int k, int x)
{
    // Using the formula derived above
    ll m = (n - 1) + (ll)ceil((n - 1) * 1.0 / x) * (n - 1)
                      + (ll)ceil(n * 1.0 / x) * (k - n);
 
    return m;
}
 
// Driver Code
int main()
{
    // no of questions
    int N = 4;
 
    // no of students
    int K = 9;
 
    // maximum no of questions a mail can hold
    int X = 2;
 
    // Calling function
    cout << MinimumMail(N, K, X) << endl;
 
    return 0;
}


Java




// Java code to find the
// minimum number of mails
import java.io.*;
import java.util.*;
import java.lang.*;
 
class GFG
{
     
// Function returns the min
// no of mails required
static double MinimumMail(int n,
                          int k,
                          int x)
{
    // Using the formula
    // derived above
    double m = (n - 1) + Math.ceil((n - 1) * 1.0 / x) * (n - 1)
                       + Math.ceil(n * 1.0 / x) * (k - n);
 
    return m;
}
 
// Driver Code
public static void main(String[] args)
{
    // no of questions
    int N = 4;
 
    // no of students
    int K = 9;
 
    // maximum no of questions
    // a mail can hold
    int X = 2;
 
    // Calling function
    System.out.print((int)MinimumMail(N, K, X) + "\n");
}
}


Python3




# Python3 code to find the minimum
# number of mails
import math
 
# Function returns the min no of
# mails required
def MinimumMail(n, k, x):
     
    # Using the formula derived above
    m = ((n - 1) + int(math.ceil((n - 1) * 1.0 / x) *
         (n - 1) + math.ceil(n * 1.0 / x) * (k - n)));
 
    return m;
 
# Driver Code
 
# no of questions
N = 4;
 
# no of students
K = 9;
 
# maximum no of questions
# a mail can hold
X = 2;
 
# Calling function
print(MinimumMail(N, K, X));
 
# This code is contributed by mits


C#




// C# code to find the
// minimum number of mails
using System;
 
class GFG
{
     
// Function returns the min
// no of mails required
static double MinimumMail(int n,
                          int k,
                          int x)
{
    // Using the formula
    // derived above
    double m = (n - 1) + Math.Ceiling((n - 1) *
                           1.0 / x) * (n - 1) +
                         Math.Ceiling(n * 1.0 /
                                  x) * (k - n);
 
    return m;
}
 
// Driver Code
public static void Main()
{
    // no of questions
    int N = 4;
 
    // no of students
    int K = 9;
 
    // maximum no of questions
    // a mail can hold
    int X = 2;
 
    // Calling function
    Console.WriteLine((int)MinimumMail(N, K, X) + "\n");
}
}
 
// This code is contributed by anuj_67.


PHP




<?php
// PHP code to find the
// minimum number of mails
 
// Function returns the
// min no of mails required
function MinimumMail($n, $k, $x)
{
    // Using the formula
    // derived above
    $m = ($n - 1) + ceil(($n - 1) *
             1.0 / $x) * ($n - 1) +
                    ceil($n * 1.0 /
                   $x) * ($k - $n);
 
    return $m;
}
 
// Driver Code
 
// no of questions
$N = 4;
 
// no of students
$K = 9;
 
// maximum no of questions
// a mail can hold
$X = 2;
 
// Calling function
echo MinimumMail($N, $K, $X), "\n";
 
// This code is contributed by ajit
?>


Javascript




<script>
 
// Javascript code to find the minimum
// number of mails
 
// Function returns the min
// no of mails required
function MinimumMail(n, k, x)
{
     
    // Using the formula
    // derived above
    let m = (n - 1) + Math.ceil((n - 1) * 1.0 / x) *
            (n - 1) + Math.ceil(n * 1.0 / x) * (k - n);
 
    return m;
}
 
// Driver code
 
// No of questions
let N = 4;
 
// No of students
let K = 9;
 
// Maximum no of questions
// a mail can hold
let X = 2;
 
// Calling function
document.write(MinimumMail(N, K, X) + "</br>");
 
// This code is contributed by divyesh072019
 
</script>


Output: 

19

 

Feeling lost in the world of random DSA topics, wasting time without progress? It’s time for a change! Join our DSA course, where we’ll guide you on an exciting journey to master DSA efficiently and on schedule.
Ready to dive in? Explore our Free Demo Content and join our DSA course, trusted by over 100,000 neveropen!

RELATED ARTICLES

Most Popular

Recent Comments