Farmer John's pastoral neighborhood has N farms (2 <= N <= 40,000), usually numbered/labeled 1..N. A series of M (1 <= M < 40,000) vertical and horizontal roads each of varying lengths (1 <= length <= 1000) connect the farms. A map of these farms might look something like the illustration below in which farms are labeled F1..F7 for clarity and lengths between connected farms are shown as (n):
F1 --- (13) ---- F6 --- (9) ----- F3
| |
(3) |
| (7)
F4 --- (20) -------- F2 |
| |
(2) F5
|
F7
* Line 1: Two space-separated integers: N and M
* Lines 2..M+1: Each line contains four space-separated entities, F1,
F2, L, and D that describe a road. F1 and F2 are numbers of
two farms connected by a road, L is its length, and D is a
character that is either 'N', 'E', 'S', or 'W' giving the
direction of the road from F1 to F2.
* Line M+2: A single integer, K (1 <= K <= 10,000), the number of FB's
queries
* Lines M+3..M+K+2: Each line corresponds to a query from Farmer Bob
and contains three space-separated integers: F1, F2, and I. F1
and F2 are numbers of the two farms in the query and I is the
index (1 <= I <= M) in the data after which Bob asks the
query. Data index 1 is on line 2 of the input data, and so on.
* Lines 1..K: One integer per line, the response to each of Bob's
queries. Each line should contain either a distance
measurement or -1, if it is impossible to determine the
appropriate distance.
7 6 1 6 13 E 6 3 9 E 3 5 7 S 4 1 3 N 2 4 20 W 4 7 2 S 3 1 6 1 1 4 3 2 6 6
13 -1 10
At time 1, FJ knows the distance between 1 and 6 is 13.
At time 3, the distance between 1 and 4 is still unknown.
At the end, location 6 is 3 units west and 7 north of 2, so the distance is 10.