Abstract Extract
When writing articles, there is usually an abstract section which summarizes the entire article. We are experimenting with an automatic abstract generation algorithm. The algorithm reads in an article and prepares an abstract that summarizes the entire article. The abstract is formed by combining the "opic sentences" extracted from consecutive paragraphs.
For the purposes of this problem,
An article consists of one or more paragraphs.
A paragraph is a maximal sequence of non-empty lines.
A sentence is a maximal sequence of characters within a paragraph that begins with a non- whitespace character, that ends with a '.' (period), '?', or '!', and that does not contain any other occurrences of '.', '?', or '!'.
A word is a maximal sequence of alphabetic characters within a sentence.
The term maximal in the definitions above is intended to convey the idea that we are only interested in the longest sequences that match the definition, not in any of their subsequences. For example, the sentence 'How now, brown cow?' contains four words. 'now' is a word in this sentence, but 'no', 'ow', etc., are not words because they are not maximal – they are subsequences of a larger sequence of alphabetic characters.
A topic sentence for a paragraph is the single sentence in the paragraph that best describes the paragraph's content. For our purposes, we will select the earliest sentence in the paragraph that maximizes the number of distinct words in S that also occur in any following sentence within the same paragraph.
Paragraphs with fewer than three sentences are ignored and will not contribute to the abstract.
When comparing words for distinctness, changes in upper/lower case are ignored. For example, the sentence "See what I see." contains three distinct words, not four.
Input
Input will consist of one or more articles. Each article is terminated by a line containing only "***" or "******". The latter string ("******") indicates the end of the entire input set.
Each article will contain one or more paragraphs. Each paragraph will consist of one or more non-empty lines, and is terminated by an empty line or by the "***" or "******" markers described above.
No article will be longer than 500 lines; No line will contain more than 150 characters. No word will contain more than 50 characters.
The only whitespace characters in the input will be blanks (ASCII 32) and line terminators.
Output
For each document, print the abstract followed by a line containing "======" (six equal signs).
Each abstract will be formed from the sequence of topic sentences, selected as described above, in the order that they occur in the input document. Each sentence shall be printed exactly as it appears in the input and should be followed by a line break.
Sample Input
Hello world! Everyone should greet the entire world in a friendlymanner. Wouldn’t that make the world a more friendly place?This is not a sentence***From: The Wright Brothers’ Aeroplane.By Orville and Wilbur WrightIn the field of aviation there were two schools. The first,represented by such men as Professor Langley and Sir Hiram Maxim,gave chief attention to power flight; the second, represented byLilienthal, Mouillard, and Chanute, to soaring flight. Our sympathieswere with the latter school, partly from impatience at the wastefulextravagance of mounting delicate and costly machinery on wingswhich no one knew how to manage, and partly, no doubt, from theextraordinary charm and enthusiasm with which the apostles of soaringflight set forth the beauties of sailing through the air on fixedwings, deriving the motive power from the wind itself.We began our active experiments at the close of this period, in October,1900, at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. Our machine was designed to beflown as a kite, with a man on board, in winds from 15 to 20 miles anhour. But, upon trial, it was found that much stronger winds wererequired to lift it. Suitable winds not being plentiful, we found itnecessary, in order to test the new balancing system, to fly the machineas a kite without a man on board, operating the levers through cordsfrom the ground. This did not give the practice anticipated, but itinspired confidence in the new system of balance.In the summer of 1901 we became personally acquainted with Mr. Chanute.When he learned that we were interested in flying as a sport, and notwith any expectation of recovering the money we were expending on it, hegave us much encouragement. At our invitation, he spent several weekswith us at our camp at Kill Devil Hill, four miles south of Kitty Hawk,during our experiments of that and the two succeeding years. He alsowitnessed one flight of the power machine near Dayton, Ohio, in October,1904.****** Sample OutputEveryone should greet the entire world in a friendlymanner.======The first,represented by such men as Professor Langley and Sir Hiram Maxim,gave chief attention to power flight; the second, represented byLilienthal, Mouillard, and Chanute, to soaring flight.Our machine was designed to beflown as a kite, with a man on board, in winds from 15 to 20 miles anhour.When he learned that we were interested in flying as a sport, and notwith any expectation of recovering the money we were expending on it, hegave us much encouragement.======