CF596A Wilbur and Swimming Pool
Description
After making bad dives into swimming pools, Wilbur wants to build a swimming pool in the shape of a rectangle in his backyard. He has set up coordinate axes, and he wants the sides of the rectangle to be parallel to them. Of course, the area of the rectangle must be positive. Wilbur had all four vertices of the planned pool written on a paper, until his friend came along and erased some of the vertices.
Now Wilbur is wondering, if the remaining $ n $ vertices of the initial rectangle give enough information to restore the area of the planned swimming pool.
Input Format
The first line of the input contains a single integer $ n $ ( $ 1
Output Format
Print the area of the initial rectangle if it could be uniquely determined by the points remaining. Otherwise, print $ -1 $ .
Explanation/Hint
In the first sample, two opposite corners of the initial rectangle are given, and that gives enough information to say that the rectangle is actually a unit square.
In the second sample there is only one vertex left and this is definitely not enough to uniquely define the area.