You won't believe it, but once, in ancient times, there happened
the following story. At a meeting of the Round Table, King Arthur
stood up and said: “Let each knight sitting on my right not
farther than b places and not nearer than a places
receive from me c gold coins.” If we number the knights
from 1 to N counter-clockwise so that the knight sitting
on Arthur's right is numbered 1 and the knight sitting on Arthur's
left is numbered N, then we have that the king gave c
gold coins to the knights with numbers a, a + 1, …,
b.
Having looked at Arthur's generous deed, the noble knights
started to stand up one after another and tell their three
numbers ai, bi, ci
(1 ≤ i ≤ N). After each of these utterances,
the knights with numbers from ai to bi
received ci gold coins each from the king.
Since each knight was very noble, either
ai > i or bi < i.
You task is to help the knights to learn how many gold coins each
of them received.
Input
The first line contains the number of King Arthur's knights N
(2 ≤ N ≤ 100000). In the next line, there are
integers a, b, and c, which the king said
(1 ≤ a ≤ b ≤ N;
1 ≤ c ≤ 10000). Each of the next N lines
contains three integers ai,
bi, ci, which the ith
knight said (1 ≤ ai ≤ bi ≤ N;
1 ≤ ci ≤ 10000).
Output
Output N numbers separated with a space. The ith number
is the number of gold coins received by the ith knight.
Samples
input | output |
---|
4
2 3 2
2 4 1
3 4 1
1 2 1
1 1 1
| 2 4 4 2
|
7
1 7 1
2 3 4
3 5 3
1 2 1
5 7 4
2 4 10
3 4 2
1 6 3
| 5 19 23 19 11 8 5
|
Problem Author: Alexander Toropov
Problem Source: XIII-th USU Junior Contest, October 2006