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You are the King of Byteland, which now consists of **K** rival states. The |
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national day of Byteland is approaching, and it is a day of great merriment. |
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Each of the **K** states is throwing its own party. Fortunately your kingdom |
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also has **N** rich and famous entertainers, numbered from **0** to **N-1**. |
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Its your job to allocate to each state, some non empty set of entertainers. |
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Note that the same entertainer cannot be allocated to two different states. |
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Some entertainers may be unallocated. Also to each allocated entertainer, you |
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must pay **C** coins to hire him. |
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The trouble is, some of the entertainers are fond of some others, and refuse |
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to spend the national day without their friends, meaning they insist on being |
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allocated to the same state if they are allocated). Under this constraint, you |
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find out that allocating entertainers to the states becomes impossible. So you |
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appeal to them to relax their requirements, and they ask you to donate more |
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money to the entertainment industry. More formally, you will be provided with |
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a 2-dimensional array **R**. If the total amount of money you donate is less |
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than **R[u][v]**, for **u** not equal to **v**, then entertainer **#u** will |
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NOT agree to spend the national day without the company of entertainer **#v**. |
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Note that if you do not allocate entertainer **#u**, then you can safely |
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ignore his restrictions. **R[u][v]** need not be equal to **R[v][u]**. |
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You are free to donate any non-negative amount of coins as you see fit. Find |
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out the minimum expenditure you must make to satisfy all entertainers and all |
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states. Note that your total expenditure is : (the amount of money you donate |
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+ **C** * the number of allocated entertainers). |
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## Input: |
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The first line contains **T**, the number of test cases. Each test contains 3 |
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lines. |
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* The first line contains 3 integers **N**, **K**, **C**. |
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* The second line contains 4 integers **x1**, **a1**, **b1**, **m1** |
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* The third line contains 4 integers **x2**, **a2**, **b2**, **m2** |
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* Using these values, the array **R** can be generated as follows: |
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* Let **f1**[0] = **x1**, **f2**[0] = **x2**; |
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* **f1**[**i**] = (**a1** * **f1**[**i**-1] + **b1**) % **m1** for **i** ≥ 1 |
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* **f2**[**i**] = (**a2** * **f2**[**i**-1] + **b2**) % **m2** for **i** ≥ 1 |
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* If **i** > **j**, **R**[**i**][**j**] = **f1**[ **i** * (**i**-1) / 2 + **j** ] |
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* If **i** < **j**, **R**[**i**][**j**] = f2[ **j** * (**j**-1) / 2 + **i** ] |
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* Note that **R**[**i**][**j**] is not defined for **i** = **j**. |
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## Output: |
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For test case numbered **i**, output "Case #i: " followed by the minimum |
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number of coins you must spend to satisfy everybody. |
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## Constraints: |
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* **T** ≤ 20 |
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* 1 ≤ **N** ≤ 1111 |
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* 1 ≤ **K** ≤ **N** |
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* 1 ≤ **C** ≤ 1,000,000,000 |
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* 0 ≤ **x1**, **a1**, **b1** ≤ 1,000,000,000 |
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* 0 ≤ **x2**, **a2**, **b2** ≤ 1,000,000,000 |
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* 1 ≤ **m1**, **m2** ≤ 1,000,000,000 |
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## Explanation of Sample Cases: |
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In case 1, we get R[1][0] = 20 and R[0][1] = 8. The optimal choice is to |
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donate 8 coins, and allocate entertainer #0 to the only state. |
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In case 2, R[1][0] = 20 and R[0][1] = 12. The optimal choice here is to donate |
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0 coins, and allocate both entertainers to the only state. |
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* In case 5, the matrix R look like this: |
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* \--- 800 1600 |
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* 400 --- 400 |
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* 800 1200 --- |
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* The optimal choice is to donate 1,600 coins, and allocate one entertainer to each state. |
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