HDU - 1213 How Many Tables

problem

Today is Ignatius' birthday. He invites a lot of friends. Now it's dinner time. Ignatius wants to know how many tables he needs at least. You have to notice that not all the friends know each other, and all the friends do not want to stay with strangers. 

One important rule for this problem is that if I tell you A knows B, and B knows C, that means A, B, C know each other, so they can stay in one table. 

For example: If I tell you A knows B, B knows C, and D knows E, so A, B, C can stay in one table, and D, E have to stay in the other one. So Ignatius needs 2 tables at least. 

InputThe input starts with an integer T(1<=T<=25) which indicate the number of test cases. Then T test cases follow. Each test case starts with two integers N and M(1<=N,M<=1000). N indicates the number of friends, the friends are marked from 1 to N. Then M lines follow. Each line consists of two integers A and B(A!=B), that means friend A and friend B know each other. There will be a blank line between two cases. 
OutputFor each test case, just output how many tables Ignatius needs at least. Do NOT print any blanks. 
Sample Input

2
5 3
1 2
2 3
4 5

5 1
2 5

Sample Output

2 
4 The main problem is the meaning

  There are N individuals fight the table to eat, people only know will sit in a table. If you can sit at each table enough people ask the effect that there are a few tables.

  It is actually a collection of nude and after the number to look into the problem sets, meaning questions directly from the input and output operations.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



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Origin www.cnblogs.com/AzrDream/p/12236161.html