BRCKTS - Brackets

We will call a bracket word any word constructed out of two sorts of characters: the opening bracket "(" and the closing bracket ")". Among these words we will distinguish correct bracket expressions. These are such bracket words in which the brackets can be matched into pairs such that

  • every pair consists of an opening bracket and a closing bracket appearing further in the bracket word
  • for every pair the part of the word between the brackets of this pair has equal number of opening and closing brackets
On a bracket word one can do the following operations:
  • replacement -- changes the i-th bracket into the opposite one
  • check -- if the word is a correct bracket expression

Task

Write a program which

  • reads (from standard input) the bracket word and the sequence of operations performed,
  • for every check operation determines if the current bracket word is a correct bracket expression,
  • writes out the outcome (to standard output).

Input

Ten test cases (given one under another, you have to process all!). Each of the test cases is a series of lines. The first line of a test consists of a single number n (1<=n<=30000) denoting the length of the bracket word. The second line consists of n brackets, not separated by any spaces. The third line consists of a single number m -- the number of operations. Each of the following m lines carries a number k denoting the operation performed. k=0 denotes the check operation, k>0 denotes replacement of k-th bracket by the opposite.

Output

For every test case your program should print a line:
Test i:
where i is replaced by the number of the test and in the following lines, for every check operation in the i-th test your program should print a line with the word YES, if the current bracket word is a correct bracket expression, and a line with a word NO otherwise. (There should be as many lines as check operations in the test.)

Example

Input:
4
()((
4
4
0
2
0
[and 9 test cases more]
Output:
Test 1:
YES
NO
[and 9 test cases more]

Warning: large Input/Output data, be careful with certain languages

Added by:Adam Dzedzej
Date:2004-06-15
Time limit:11s
Source limit:50000B
Memory limit:1536MB
Cluster: Cube (Intel G860)
Languages:All except: NODEJS PERL6 VB.NET
Resource:Internet Contest Pogromcy Algorytmow(Algorithm Tamers) 2003 Round IV

hide comments
2012-05-05 11:05:38 sandeep pandey
Nice One:)
2012-01-30 13:58:42 Julian Leyh
Ada's Text_IO seems to be very slow for big Strings.
2011-10-20 22:07:01 e@spoj
For C++ don't use cin/cout on any place
2011-09-06 13:54:02 suyy
how can java get AC????
I still get TLE,is the input too huge??
2011-02-01 20:26:56 Piotr Kozakowski
What is the range of m?? I tested my prog with n=30000 and m=1000000 and it took 10 sec. I submitted it here and got TLE :(
2011-01-25 10:06:33 Pulkit Bansal
What is the range of m?
2009-10-28 17:31:31 :D
The first is wrong and second ok. Read the two conditions for the correct bracket expression more carefully.
2009-10-24 10:32:19 Seshadri R
Suppose the expression are like ))(( or (()) would these two be YES or NO? The matching bracket should be immediate or is it sufficient if there are equal number of opening and closing brackets?
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