Alien Security
Time Limit: 1 Second Memory Limit: 32768 KB
You are in charge of security at a top-secret government research facility.
Recently your government has captured a live extra-terrestrial (ET) life form,
and is hosting an open day for fellow researchers. Of course, not all the guests
can be trusted, so they are assigned different security clearance levels. Only
guests with a level 5 rating will be allowed into the lab where the extra-terrestrial
is being held; other than that, everyone is free to roam throughout the rest
of the facility. Each room in the facility is connected via one-way airlocks,
so that you can pass through the door in only one direction.
To protect your precious ET you will put in place enhanced security measures
(in the form of armed guards) on the route leading to the room containing the
ET, but not in the room itself C the guards do not have sufficient clearance
to enter the room containing the ET.
The guards will check the identity and the security rating of all guests trying
to pass through the room in which they are stationed, so you would like to place
the guards where they will cause the minimum amount of irritation to the guests
who have no intention of visiting the ET. The room where the guards must be
placed thus satisfies the following two conditions:
1. In order to get to the room containing the ET, the guests must pass through
the room containing the guards;
2. There is no other room with this property that is closer to the room containing
the ET C remember, the guards cannot be placed in the room containing the ET
itself.
The diagram below illustrates one possible map of your facility:
Note that placing the guards in room 2 would satisfy the first
condition, but room 3 is closer to the ET, so the guards must be placed in room
3.
All guests enter through room 0, the entrance to your facility. Your program
accepts a sequence of lines containing integers. The first line consists of
two integers: the number of rooms, and the room in which the ET is being held
(out of his own free will, of course).
The rest of the input is a sequence of lines consisting of only two integers,
specifying where the airlock-doors are located. The first number on these lines
specifies the source room, and the second the destination room. Remember: you
can pass only from the source room to the destination room.
The output of your program consists only of a single line:
Put guards in room N.
where N is the room you've decided to place the guards.
This problem contains multiple test cases!
Input
The first line of a multiple input is an integer N, then a blank line followed by N input blocks. Each input block is in the format indicated in the problem description. There is a blank line between input blocks.
Output
The output format consists of N output blocks. There is a blank line between output blocks.
Sample Input
1 9 4 0 2 2 3 3 4 5 3 5 4 3 6 6 5 6 7 6 8 4 7 0 1 1 7 7 0
Sample Output
Put guards in room 3.Submit
Source: South Africa 2001