Problem I
Knigs of the Forest
All moose are knigs of the forest, but your latest moose-friend, Karl-Älgtav, is more interesting than most. In part because of his fondness of fermented blueberries, and in part because of the tribe he lives in. Each year his tribe holds a tournament to determine that year’s alpha-moose. The winner gets to lead the tribe for a year, and then permanently leaves the tribe. The pool of contenders stays constant over the years, apart from the old alpha-moose being replaced by a newcomer in each tournament.
Karl-Älgtav has recently begun to wonder when it will be his turn to win, and has asked you to help him determine this. He has supplied a list of the strength of each of the other moose in his tribe that will compete during the next $n - 1$ years, along with their time of entry into the tournament. Assuming that the winner each year is the moose with greatest strength, determine when Karl-Älgtav becomes the alpha-moose.
Input
The first line of input contains two space separated integers $k$ ($1 \leq k \leq 10^5$) and $n$ ($1 \leq n \leq 10^5$), denoting the size of the tournament pool and the number of years for which you have been supplied sufficient information.
Next is a single line describing Karl-Älgtav, containing the two integers $y$ ($2011 \leq y \leq 2011 + n - 1$) and $p$ ($0 \leq p \leq 2^{31}-1$). These are his year of entry into the tournament and his strength, respectively.
Then follow $n + k - 2$ lines describing each of the other moose, in the same format as for Karl-Älgtav.
Note that exactly $k$ of the moose will have $2011$ as their year of entry, and that the remaining $n-1$ moose will have unique years of entry.
You may assume that the strength of each moose is unique.
Output
The year Karl-Älgtav wins the tournament, or unknown if the given data is insufficient for determining this.
Sample Input 1 | Sample Output 1 |
---|---|
2 4 2013 2 2011 1 2011 3 2014 4 2012 6 |
2013 |
Sample Input 2 | Sample Output 2 |
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2 4 2011 1 2013 2 2012 4 2011 5 2014 3 |
unknown |