338. Familystrokes «2024»

Proof. By definition a leaf has no children, thus rule 1 (vertical stroke) and rule 2 (horizontal stroke) are both inapplicable. ∎ Every internal node (node with childCnt ≥ 1 ) requires exactly one vertical stroke .

Both bounds comfortably meet the limits for N ≤ 10⁵ . Below are clean, self‑contained implementations in C++17 and Python 3 that follow the algorithm exactly. 6.1 C++17 #include <bits/stdc++.h> using namespace std; 338. FamilyStrokes

while stack not empty: v, p = pop(stack) childCnt = 0 for each w in G[v]: if w == p: continue // ignore the edge back to parent childCnt += 1 push (w, v) on stack Both bounds comfortably meet the limits for N ≤ 10⁵

Proof. The drawing rules require a vertical line from the node down to the row of its children whenever it has at least one child. The line is mandatory and unique, hence exactly one vertical stroke. ∎ An internal node requires a horizontal stroke iff childCnt ≥ 2 . The drawing rules require a vertical line from

1 if childCnt(v) = 1 2 if childCnt(v) ≥ 2 0 if childCnt(v) = 0 Proof. Directly from Lemma 2 (vertical) and Lemma 3 (horizontal). ∎ answer = internalCnt + horizontalCnt computed by the algorithm equals the minimum number of strokes needed to draw the whole tree.

const int ROOT = 1; vector<int> parent(N + 1, 0); vector<int> st; // explicit stack for DFS st.reserve(N); st.push_back(ROOT); parent[ROOT] = -1; // mark visited

root = 1 stack = [(root, 0)] # (node, parent) internal = 0 horizontal = 0