#P1940. Polygon Programming with Ease

Polygon Programming with Ease

Description

Read the statement of Problem 1939! Given a list of meeting locations as specified in the description of Problem 1939, you have to calculate the locations of the Foreign Offices.

Input

See the input specification of Problem 1939 for the format, and the output specification of Problem 1939 for the meaning of the input.

Output

See the output specification of Problem 1939 for the format, and the input specification of Problem 1939 for the meaning of the output.

5 14 2 20 4 18 12 12 18 10 10
3 -3 5 -2 5 -3 6
3 -2 10 5 10 -1 12
5 10.000000 2.000000 18.000000 2.000000 22.000000 6.000000 14.000000 18.000000 10.000000 18.000000
3 -4.000000 6.000000 -2.000000 4.000000 -2.000000 6.000000
3 -8.000000 12.000000 4.000000 8.000000 6.000000 12.000000

Hint

The relationship between the sample input and output polygons is illustrated in the figure below. Solid lines indicate the polygon joining the Foreign Offices, whereas dashed lines indicate the polygon joining the meeting locations. To generate further sample input you may use your solution to Problem 1939.

Source

Ulm Local 2002