#P11667. [USACO25JAN] Astral Superposition B
[USACO25JAN] Astral Superposition B
Description
Note: The time limit for this problem is 4s, twice the default.
Bessie is using her nifty telescope to take photos of all the stars in the night sky. Her telescope can capture an () photo of the stars where each pixel is either a star or empty sky. Each star will be represented by exactly one pixel, and no two distinct stars share the same pixel.
Overnight, something strange happens to the stars in the sky. Every star either disappears or moves pixels to the right, and pixels downwards (). If a star disappears or moves beyond the photo boundary, it no longer appears in the second photo.
Bessie took photos before and after the shifting positions, but after experimenting in Mootoshop, she accidentally superimposed one photo onto the other. Now, she can see white pixels where both photos were empty, gray pixels where stars existed in exactly one photo, and black pixels where there was a star in both photos. Bessie also remembers that no new stars moved into the frame of the second photo, so her first photo contains all of the stars in the night sky.
Given the final photo, determine the minimum possible number of stars in the sky before the shifting incident for () independent test cases. If no arrangement of stars can produce the given final photo, output .
Input Format
The first line of input contains and test cases will follow.
The first line of each test case will contain .
Then follow lines each representing one row of the superimposed photo. The th row from the top is represented by a string , where each , representing the colors white, gray, and black respectively.
It is guaranteed that the sum of over all test cases will not exceed .
Output Format
For each test case, output the minimum number of stars that existed before the shifting, or if impossible.
1
3 0 0
WWB
BBB
GGG
7
3
5 1 2
GWGWW
WGWWW
WBWGW
WWWWW
WWGWW
3 1 1
WWW
WBW
WWW
3 1 0
GGB
GGW
WWW
4
-1
4
Hint
For Sample 1:
In this example, there is no shifting. The first photo is as follows: (. for sky, * for star)
..*
***
***
The second photo, where the stars on the bottom row disappeared, is as follows:
..*
***
...
This is the only way to produce the superimposed photo, so the minimum possible number of initial stars is .
For Sample 2:
In the first case, there were at least stars at the start. If we let denote the intersection of the th row from the top and th column from the left, one possibility is that they were initially at and . All the stars shifted, except for the one at which disappeared.
In the second case, there is no arrangement of stars in the initial photo that can produce the middle black pixel given the shift.
In the third case, there were at least stars at the start. One possibility is that they were initially at and . In the second photo, the star originally at disappeared and the star originally at moved off frame. The other two stars shifted to the right by 1.
SCORING:
- Input 3:
- Inputs 4-7:
- Inputs 8-9:
- Inputs 10-12: No additional constraints.
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