Aveiro_quanyue's blog

By Aveiro_quanyue, history, 19 months ago, In English

Link: https://ac.nowcoder.com/acm/contest/56458/E

Alice and Bob are playing a game on a tree $$$T$$$ whose root is $$$1$$$. $$$T$$$ has $$$n$$$ vertices and $$$n-1$$$ edges, each vertex $$$v$$$ has an attribute $$$a \in \{1,2,3\}$$$. If $$$a=1$$$, a person on $$$v$$$ must jump to the parent of $$$v$$$, i.e., v->parent. If $$$a=2$$$, a person on $$$v$$$ must jump to $$$v$$$'s grandparent, i.e., v->parent->parent. If $$$a=3$$$, a person on $$$v$$$ can either jump to v->parent or v->parent->parent. Alice starts the first and she can choose a leaf node of $$$T$$$ to start. If somebody cannot make a move, she/he loses the game. For example, if Alice stands on a child of the root and this child has attribute $$$2$$$, then Alice loses as this child does not have a grandparent. Similarly, if Bob stands on the root $$$1$$$, he will lose as he cannot move no matter what the attribute of the root is.

Input contains $$$n+1$$$ ($$$2 \leq n \leq 10^5$$$) lines.

The first line contains a single integer $$$n$$$, the number of vertices.

The second line contains $$$n$$$ integers $$$a_i$$$ ($$$1 \leq a_i \leq 3$$$) representing the attribute of each vertex $$$i$$$.

The following $$$n-1$$$ lines representing edges, each line contains two integers $$$u_i$$$ and $$$v_i$$$. $$$u_i$$$-$$$v_i$$$ is an undirected edge of $$$T$$$.

Output should contain $$$n-1$$$ lines, each line is a query. The $$$i$$$-th ($$$1 \leq i \leq n-1$$$) line represents the winner if Alice and Bob plays optimally when the $$$i$$$-th edge is deleted from $$$T$$$. The deletion operations are independent along queries, i.e., the $$$i$$$-th edge is recovered from deletion when you process the $$$i+1$$$-th query. Note that Alice can only choose the original leaves of $$$T$$$ as the start vertex even if the deletion operation results in new leaves.

Test case 1:

Input:

3

1 2 1

1 2

1 3

Output:

Alice

Bob

In the first line, the first edge, i.e., $$$1-2$$$ is destroyed. In this case, Alice can choose to start from vertex $$$3$$$, and jump to vertex $$$1$$$. Then, Bob will get stuck at vertex $$$1$$$. Alice wins.

In the second line, the first edge $$$1-2$$$ is recovered and the second edge $$$1-3$$$ is destroyed. Here, $$$3$$$ becomes an isolation vertex. If Alice starts at $$$3$$$, she cannot jump. If Alice starts at $$$2$$$, she cannot jump either as $$$2$$$ does not have grandparent. The parent of $$$2$$$ is the root $$$1$$$ but $$$1$$$ does not have a parent. Therefore, no matter where Alice starts, Bob will win.

Test case 2:

8

1 3 2 1 3 1 1 2

1 2

1 3

2 4

2 5

4 8

5 6

5 7

Output:

Alice

Bob

Bob

Alice

Bob

Bob

Bob

For example, if you delete the first edge $$$1-2$$$, Alice will win if she chooses to start at $$$8$$$.

If you delete the fourth edge $$$2-5$$$, Alice will win if she chooses to start at $$$6$$$ or $$$7$$$.

If you delete the second edge $$$1-3$$$, Bob will win. For example, if Alice choose to start at $$$7$$$, she will jump to $$$5$$$ and Bob jumps to $$$1$$$.

Notes:

(1) Constraint: $$$2 \leq n \leq 10^5$$$.

(2) There are $$$n-1$$$ queries and the deletion operations in queries are independent.

(3) Alice can only choose the original leaves of $$$T$$$ as the start vertex. Deleting an edge will result in new leaves, for example, if you delete edge $$$4-8$$$ in the second test case, $$$4$$$ becomes a new leaf but Alice cannot start from it.

(4) Neither Alice nor Bob can move across the root $$$1$$$. For example in the first test case, Alice cannot moves from $$$2$$$ to $$$3$$$ along $$$2-1-3$$$.

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19 months ago, # |
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How to solve this problem? Maybe dynamic dynamic programming but I don't know how to do it on tree.