Net

 

Program NET.C, NET.CPP, NET.PAS

There are three computers connected by a network. One of them is a server and the other two are clients. The server has some files, each with a different name. The full name of each file consists of two parts, a name and an extension. Both clients know the full names of all of the files stored on the server. From among its files, the server chooses a single file and sends the name part of that file's full name to one of the clients and the extension part of the full name to the other client.

The clients then begin communicating in an effort to determine which file was selected by the server (they want to learn the file's full name). However, the clients have to communicate in a very restricted manner. Clients take turns sending messages to each other, but they can only say when they don't know the full name of the file. If one client does not know the full name of the chosen file, that client may send a message saying, "I don't know the full file name" to the other client. The two clients alternate, sending only this message back and forth. This continues until either one of the clients knows the full file name. Otherwise they just keep talking. The client that received the name part of the full file name always waits for the other client to send the first message.

Pretend that you know all the full file names that reside on the server (both the name and the extension part) and you are listening to the conversation between the clients. Based on this conversation, you should determine the set of files that might have been chosen by the server. Files in this set are called candidate files.

Input / Output Specification

Input consists of several cases. The first line of each case contains two integers N and M, separated by a space. N (1< = N <= 1000) is the number of files of the server, and M (1 <= M <= 100) is the number of messages exchanged between the clients in their effort to determine the full file name.

Each of the next N lines contains one full file name. Full file names are given in a manner similar to MS-DOS 8.3 format. Each full file name is represented in name.extension form, where both the name and the extension consist of only capital, alphabetic characters and decimal digits. The name part will have at least one character and at most eight. The extension part will have at most three characters and may be empty. If extension is empty then separating dot may be omitted. Each full file name appears in each case no more than once. End of cases is denoted by line with 0 0.

For each case write on the first line of the output file the number of candidate files based on the given set of files and the number of messages exchanged between the clients. Write zero if there are no candidate files. If the clients should already know the chosen file but they continue to exchange messages, also write 0.

On the following lines, write the full names of all candidate files. Each of these names should be written on a separate line. They should appear in the same order and with exactly the same spelling as in the input file. That means that if the separating dot was omitted in the input for a particular file then it should also be omitted for this file in the output and vice versa. No file may be listed more than once.

Output for each case ends with a line consisting of 40 x:

xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

Sample input
19 2

LICENCE.TMP

WIN32.LOG

FILEID.

PSTOTEXT.TXT

GSVIEW32.EXE

GSVIEW32.ICO

GSVIEWDE.HLP

LICENCE

GSVIEWEN.HLP

GSVW32DE.DLL

FILEID.TMP

GSVW32EN.DLL

PSTOTXT3.DLL

PSTOTXT3.EXE

GSV16SPL.EXE

GVWGS32.EXE

ZLIB32.DLL

PRINTER.INI

README.TXT

1 1

BLA.TXT

0 0

Sample output
6

LICENCE.TMP

FILEID.

LICENCE

FILEID.TMP

PSTOTXT3.DLL

PSTOTXT3.EXE

xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

0

xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx