#abc232h. [abc232_h]King's Tour

[abc232_h]King's Tour

Problem Statement

We have an HtimesWH \\times W chessboard with HH rows and WW columns, and a king.
Let (i,j)(i, j) denote the square at the ii-th row from the top (1leqileqH)(1 \\leq i \\leq H) and jj-th column from the left (1leqjleqW)(1 \\leq j \\leq W).
The king can move one square in any direction. Formally, the king on (i,j)(i,j) can move to (k,l)(k,l) if and only if max(ik,jl)=1\\max(|i-k|,|j-l|) = 1.

A tour is the process of moving the king on the HtimesWH \\times W chessboard as follows.

  • Start by putting the king on (1,1)(1, 1). Then, move the king to put it on each square exactly once.

For example, when H=2,W=3H = 2, W = 3, going $(1,1) \\to (1,2) \\to (1, 3) \\to (2, 3) \\to (2, 2) \\to (2, 1)$ is a valid tour.

You are given a square (a,b)(a, b) other than (1,1)(1, 1). Construct a tour ending on (a,b)(a,b) and print it. It can be proved that a solution always exists under the Constraints of this problem.

Constraints

  • 2leqHleq1002 \\leq H \\leq 100
  • 2leqWleq1002 \\leq W \\leq 100
  • 1leqaleqH1 \\leq a \\leq H
  • 1leqbleqW1 \\leq b \\leq W
  • (a,b)neq(1,1)(a, b) \\neq (1, 1)
  • All values in input are integers.

Input

Input is given from Standard Input in the following format:

HH WW aa bb

Output

Print HWHW lines. The ii-th line should contain the ii-th square (hi,wi)(h_i, w_i) the king is put on, in the following format:

hih_i wiw_i

Here, note that the 11-st line should contain (1,1)(1, 1), and the HWHW-th line should contain (a,b)(a, b).


Sample Input 1

3 2 3 2

Sample Output 1

1 1
1 2
2 1
2 2
3 1
3 2

The king goes $(1, 1) \\to (1, 2) \\to (2, 1) \\to (2, 2)\\to (3, 1) \\to (3, 2)$, which is indeed a tour ending on (3,2)(3, 2).
There are some other valid tours, three of which are listed below.

  • $(1, 1) \\to (1, 2) \\to (2, 2) \\to (2, 1) \\to (3, 1) \\to (3, 2)$
  • $(1, 1) \\to (2, 1) \\to (1, 2) \\to (2, 2) \\to (3, 1) \\to (3, 2)$
  • $(1, 1) \\to (2, 2) \\to (1, 2) \\to (2, 1) \\to (3, 1) \\to (3, 2)$