@Sankalp: So what is your code? And what is the equation of the line?
As I said, you can't always use a line through the origin.

Dave

On Jan 25, 5:49 am, sankalp srivastava <richi.sankalp1...@gmail.com>
wrote:
> @dave
> In this case , I could just shift my origin to the lowermost point :)
>
> On Jan 25, 10:14 am, Dave <dave_and_da...@juno.com> wrote:
>
>
>
> > @Sankalp: I wanted a point far enough outside the region that a line
> > from any point in the region could not contain any other point in the
> > region. There are several implications: 1) if the point is to the left
> > of the region, it can't have an integer y coordinate between 0 and B.
> > That is where the 0.5 comes from. Second, it seemed reasonable, but
> > not necessary, to put Y near the middle of the range [0, B]. Then I
> > just solved for an  X that guaranteed that the slope of the line from
> > any point in the region to the point (X, Y) had slope m satisfying  -1/
> > A < m < 1/A. Then a line through any point (x1,y) could not intersect
> > any point (x2,y-1) or (x3,y+1) within the region.
>
> > Regarding your algorithm: What does it do with A = B = 5 and points
> > {(1,1), (2,2), (3,3), (4,4), (1,4)}. This example shows that you can't
> > always use a line through (0,0).
>
> > Dave
>
> > On Jan 24, 10:15 pm, sankalp srivastava <richi.sankalp1...@gmail.com>
> > wrote:
>
> > > @
> > > Dave
> > > How did you come up with this solution?
> > > Also Y=floor(B)/2+.5 , X=-A*(B-Y)  or X=-AB +AY or Y=X/A+B . this is
> > > the equation of a line with slope 1/A and an intercept of B on Y
> > > axis .I don't quite get this.!!Please elaborate .
> > > Meanwhile , this is my approach .
>
> > > The slope of the line wil be between the maximum's of the two points
> > > i.e in the case of (10,0)..(10,10)...It will be between 0 and 90
> > > degrees as all the points lie between them . Now we can just binary
> > > search over this slope checking for the slope values . The slope and
> > > set cardinality is also a monotonic function , so I guess binary
> > > search approach will work , but the time taken will be nlog n . Please
> > > correct me if I'm wrong .
> > > #include<iostream>
> > > struct point
> > > {
> > >         int x ;
> > >         int y ;};
>
> > > using namespace std ;
> > > // the given points
> > > point p[100];
> > > int main()
> > > {
> > >         int n;
> > >         cin>>n;//number of points
> > >         for(int i=0;i<n;i++)
> > >         {
> > >                 cin>>p[i].x>>p[i].y;
> > >         }
> > >         int high=90;
> > >         int low=0;
> > >         int mid;
> > >         //the line is supposed to start from 0,0
> > >         while(low<=high)
> > >         {
> > >                 mid=(high+low)/2;
> > >                 if(haspoints(mid)<0)
> > >                         //upper has less points than below
> > >                         low=mid+1;
> > >                 else if(haspoints(mid)>0)
> > >                         //lower has more points than upper
> > >                         high=mid-1;
> > >                 else
> > >                 {//we found our answer
> > >                         cout<<mid<<endl;
> > >                         return 0;
> > >                 }
> > >         }
> > >         return 0;
>
> > > }
>
> > > On Jan 24, 9:30 am, Dave <dave_and_da...@juno.com> wrote:
>
> > > > Generalizing the problem, let there be n points (x_i, y_i), where x_i
> > > > and y_i are integers with 1 <= x_i <= A and 1 <= y_i <= B. A line
> > > > separating the points into two sets of equal cardinality can be found
> > > > as follows: Let Y = floor(B/2) + 0.5, and let X = -A * (B - Y). Find
> > > > the slopes of the lines from the point (X, Y) to each (x_i, y_i). The
> > > > point (X, Y) is constructed so that each of these slopes will be
> > > > distinct. Find the median M of these slopes. Then the line
>
> > > > y = M(x - X) + Y
>
> > > > will separate the points as desired. It will pass through exactly one
> > > > of the points if n is odd, and will miss all of the points if n is
> > > > even. This is O(n) in time and O(n) in space, where n is the number of
> > > > points.
>
> > > > Dave
>
> > > > On Jan 21, 11:45 pm, Divya Jain <sweetdivya....@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > > > > assume the region to be (0,0) , (10,0), (0,10), (10,10)
>
> > > > > On 22 January 2011 08:33, Dave <dave_and_da...@juno.com> wrote:
>
> > > > > > @Divya: The coordinates of the points are between 0 and 1 and are
> > > > > > integers. That can't be right.
>
> > > > > > Dave
>
> > > > > > On Jan 21, 1:46 pm, divya <sweetdivya....@gmail.com> wrote:
> > > > > > > Within a 2D space, there is a batch of points(no duplicate) in the
> > > > > > > region (0,0),(0,1),(1,0),(1,1), try to find a line which can 
> > > > > > > divide
> > > > > > > the region to 2 parts with half points in each .the input will be 
> > > > > > > an
> > > > > > > array of points and the length of the array.
> > > > > > > struct point{
> > > > > > > int x;
> > > > > > > int y;};
>
> > > > > > > input : struct point * points, int length
>
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