Baltic Olympiad in Informatics: 2015 Day 2, Problem 1
Byteasar likes to live risky. He runs with scissors, submits solutions to contest problems without testing on example inputs, and wants all his files to have path names that are exactly as long as the operating system allows (on Linux, for instance, this is 4095 characters).
When Byteasar is working on someone else's computer, it might turn out that not all of the files meet his criterion. In this case he tries to introduce symbolic links (symlinks) and use them for creating file paths. You are asked to figure out, for each file in the file system, whether Byteasar can introduce a single symbolic link (of length chosen by him in advance), so that this file can be referred to by a path name of length exactly k characters.
If a file of name file is contained in the chain of directories dir1
, dir2
, …, dirj
, then its absolute file path is /dir1/dir2/.../dirj/file
. The root directory can be referred to as /
and each file contained directly
in this directory has the absolute path of the form /file
. A symbolic link is a named shortcut to a directory,
which can be placed in any directory in the file system. In this task symlinks to files are not allowed.
Using a symlink, we can obtain alternative file paths. For example, if we introduced a symlink to /
with name
hello
in /
, then /dir/file
, /hello/dir/file
and /hello/hello/dir/file
would all refer to the same file,
but have different path name length. As another example, with a symlink to /
with name hi
in /dir
, one
could obtain file paths: /dir/file
, /dir/hi/dir/file
, /dir/hi/dir/hi/dir/file
. Note that it is perfectly
legal for symlinks to point upwards, downwards or sidewards in the file system hierarchy, and even back to
the directory they are placed in. For the purpose of this problem, ./
or ../
or //
path components are not
considered allowed in path names.
Input Specification
The first line of input contains three positive integers: (the number of directories other than the root
directory),
(the number of files), and
(the desired path name length). The root directory has number
,
and all the remaining directories are numbered
through
. Files are numbered
through
. The second line
contains the length
of the introduced symlink name (we don't care about the name itself, and assume it will
not collide with anything else in the file system).
After that follow lines describing the directories (other than the root directory) that exist in the file
system. The
-th of those lines describes the directory number
and consists of two integers:
and
. They specify that the directory number
has a name of length
and its parent directory (i.e. the directory in which
the
-th directory is directly contained) has number
. It is guaranteed that
.
Finally lines follow with a description of the files in the file system. The
-th of those lines describes the
file number
and consists of two integers:
and
. They specify that the file number
has a name of length
and its parent directory has number
.
All files and directories will have names with positive length, and their absolute file paths will be at most
characters long.
Output Specification
Your program should output lines, one for each file. The
-th line should contain one word,
YES
or NO
,
answering the question: is it possible, by introducing a symlink of length , to create a path name of length
exactly
which refers to the file number
?
Constraints
In all subtasks .
Subtask | Conditions (in each test case) | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | ||
2 | ||
3 |
Sample Input
2 4 22
2
0 1
1 5
2 13
2 10
1 4
0 7
Sample Output
YES
YES
YES
NO
Explanation for Sample
Let us refer to the symlink as LL
, the directory names as a
and bbbbb
, and
the file names as ccccccccccccc
, dddddddddd
, eeee
and fffffff
, respectively. The root directory contains
the directory a
and the file fffffff
; the directory a
contains the directory bbbbb
and the file eeee
; and finally
the directory bbbbb
contains the files ccccccccccccc
and dddddddddd
.
/
|-- a
| |-- bbbbb
| | |-- ccccccccccccc
| | +-- dddddddddd
| +-- eeee
+-- fffffff
In the first case, the absolute file path /a/bbbbb/ccccccccccccc
already has the desired length, so we
don't even have to use the symlink. In the second case we can introduce the symlink /a/LL
→ /a
, and refer
to /a/LL/bbbbb/dddddddddd
. In the third case, we should introduce the symlink /a/LL
→ /
, and refer to
/a/LL/a/LL/a/LL/a/eeee
. In the fourth case we cannot reach the goal regardless of where we introduce the
symlink.
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