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Ethan is doing his second programming assignment: implementing pre-order tree |
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traversal. |
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Ethan has a binary tree with **N** nodes (numbered 1 to **N**), rooted at node |
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1. Each node _i_'s left child is node **Ai** (with **Ai** = 0 indicating no |
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left child), and similarly its right child is **Bi** (with **Bi** = 0 |
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indicating no right child). Each node _i_ is also assigned an integral label |
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**Li**. |
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Given such a tree, Ethan must compute its [pre-order |
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traversal](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tree_traversal#Pre-order_\(NLR\)) |
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(expressed as a sequence of node labels). The pre-order traversal of a tree |
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involves taking its root node, then concatenating the pre-order traversal of |
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the root's left sub-tree (if any), and then concatenating the pre-order |
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traversal of the root's right sub-tree (if any). |
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Ethan has attempted to solve this problem, but unfortunately he got his |
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computer science terms mixed up, and now his algorithm finds the tree's [post- |
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order traversal](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tree_traversal#Post- |
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order_\(LRN\)) instead! The post-order traversal of a tree involves taking the |
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post-order traversal of the root's left sub-tree (if any), and then |
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concatenating the post-order traversal of the root's right sub-tree (if any), |
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and finally concatenating the root node at the end. |
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Since you were mean to Ethan on his first assignment, you'd like to cheer him |
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up by making his algorithm work out after all. Though the tree's shape must |
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stay as is, you can choose a set of labels **L1..N** for its nodes such that |
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Ethan's algorithm will still produce the correct answer — in other words, such |
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that the sequence of node labels in the tree's pre-order traversal is equal to |
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the sequence of node labels in its post-order traversal. Your only two |
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restrictions are that each node label must be between 1 and **K** (inclusive), |
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and that every integer between 1 and **K** (inclusive) must be used as the |
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label of at least one node. You'd like to find any way of validly labelling |
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the nodes, or determine that no way exists. |
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### Input |
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Input begins with an integer **T**, the number of trees. For each tree, there |
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is first a line containing the space-separated integers **N** and **K**. Then, |
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**N** lines follow. The _i_th of these lines contains the space-separated |
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integers **Ai** and **Bi**. |
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### Output |
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For the _i_th tree, print a line containing "Case #_i_: " followed by your |
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chosen node labels **L1..N** separated by spaces, or "Impossible" if there's |
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no valid way to label the nodes. |
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### Constraints |
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1 ≤ **T** ≤ 80 |
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1 ≤ **K** ≤ **N** ≤ 2,000 |
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0 ≤ **Ai**, **Bi** ≤ **N** |
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Every tree is guaranteed to be a valid binary tree rooted at node 1. |
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### Explanation of Sample |
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In the first case, if **L** = [1, 1], then both the pre-order and post-order |
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label sequences will be [1, 1]. |
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In the second case, for each label between 1 and **K** to be present, you must |
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choose either **L** = [1, 2] or **L** = [2, 1], both of which would result in |
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the pre-order and post-order label sequences differing. For example, if **L** |
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= [1, 2], then the pre-order sequence will be [1, 2] while the post-order |
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sequence will be [2, 1]. |
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In the third case, if **L** = [2, 2, 1], then the pre-order and post-order |
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label sequences will both be [2, 1, 2]. |
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Note that other outputs for example cases 3 to 5 would also be accepted. |
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