#P1182D. Complete Mirror
Complete Mirror
No submission language available for this problem.
Description
You have given tree consist of $n$ vertices. Select a vertex as root vertex that satisfies the condition below.
- For all vertices $v_{1}$ and $v_{2}$, if $distance$($root$, $v_{1}$) $= distance$($root$, $v_{2})$ then $degree$($v_{1}$) $= degree$($v_{2}$), where $degree$ means the number of vertices connected to that vertex, and $distance$ means the number of edges between two vertices.
Determine and find if there is such root vertex in the tree. If there are multiple answers, find any of them.
The first line contains a single integer $n$ ($1 \le n \le 10^{5}$) — the number of vertices.
Each of the next $n-1$ lines contains two integers $v_{i}$ and $u_{i}$ ($1 \le v_{i} \lt u_{i} \le n$) — it means there is an edge exist between $v_{i}$ and $u_{i}$. It is guaranteed that the graph forms tree.
If there is such root vertex exists, print any of them. Otherwise, print $-1$.
Input
The first line contains a single integer $n$ ($1 \le n \le 10^{5}$) — the number of vertices.
Each of the next $n-1$ lines contains two integers $v_{i}$ and $u_{i}$ ($1 \le v_{i} \lt u_{i} \le n$) — it means there is an edge exist between $v_{i}$ and $u_{i}$. It is guaranteed that the graph forms tree.
Output
If there is such root vertex exists, print any of them. Otherwise, print $-1$.
Samples
7
1 2
2 3
3 4
4 5
3 6
6 7
3
6
1 3
2 3
3 4
4 5
4 6
-1
Note
This is the picture for the first example. $1$, $5$, $7$ also can be a valid answer.
This is the picture for the second example. You can see that it's impossible to find such root vertex.