| Due to a convenient recent teaching vacancy, Laz Y. has suddenly landed a job | |
| as a schoolteacher. Known to his students as Mr. Y, he's prepared to provide a | |
| comprehensive, fairly-evaluated educational experience — as long as it doesn't | |
| take too much effort. | |
| Mr. Y's first order of business in his new role will be grading recent exams | |
| from two different subjects: art and biology. He has been handed **S** stacks | |
| of **H** exam papers each. The _i_th paper from the top in the _j_th stack is | |
| either from the art exam (if **Pi,j** = "A"), or otherwise from the biology | |
| exam (if **Pi,j** = "B"). | |
| Mr. Y will go about the grading process as follows: At each point in time, | |
| he'll select a stack which still contains at least one exam paper, and remove | |
| its topmost paper. He'll then either grade that paper, or accidentally "lose" | |
| it and assign its owner a random grade instead. Either way, once he's done | |
| with that paper, he'll repeat the process of selecting a new paper until all | |
| of the stacks are empty and all **H*****S** papers have been dealt with. | |
| There are few things that Mr. Y hates as much as context switching. For | |
| example, it's very troublesome to jump from grading an art exam to a biology | |
| one! (Or from relaxing to doing any work at all.) Each time Mr. Y begins a | |
| grading a paper, he must make a context switch if this is either the first | |
| paper he's choosing to grade, or if its subject is different than that of the | |
| previous paper that he graded. Note that this entirely excludes any "lost" | |
| papers. | |
| Mr. Y is no fool — he realizes that his evaluations would be too suspiciously | |
| inaccurate if he were to simply lose all **H*****S** papers. Even losing a | |
| smaller number of them may prove too suspicious. Therefore, he'll imagine | |
| **K** different theoretical scenarios, such that in the _i_th one, he will | |
| allow himself to lose at most **Li** papers throughout the grading process | |
| (with **L1..K** all being distinct). Independently for each scenario, he'd | |
| like to determine the minimum number of context switches he would need to make | |
| throughout the process. | |
| ### Input | |
| Input begins with an integer **T**, the number of days Mr. Y spends grading | |
| exams. For each day, there is first a line containing the space-separated | |
| integers **H**, **S**, and **K**. Then, **H** lines follow, the _i_th of which | |
| contains the length-**S** string **Pi,1..S**. Then, a final line follows | |
| containing the **K** space-separated integers **L1** through **LK**. | |
| ### Output | |
| For the _i_th day, print a line containing "Case #_i_: " followed by **K** | |
| space-separated integers, the _j_th of which is the minimum number of context | |
| switches which Mr. Y would need to make if he were to grade the papers while | |
| losing at most **Lj** of them. | |
| ### Constraints | |
| 1 ≤ **T** ≤ 200 | |
| 1 ≤ **H**, **S** ≤ 300 | |
| 1 ≤ **K** ≤ **H** * **S** | |
| 0 ≤ **Li** ≤ **H** * **S** \- 1 | |
| ### Explanation of Sample | |
| In the first case, if Mr. Y may only lose one paper, the best he can do is | |
| make two context switches, for example by grading the B papers from the first | |
| and third stacks, then losing the B paper from the fifth stack, and then | |
| grading the A papers from the second and fourth stacks. On the other hand, the | |
| freedom to lose two papers would allow him to make only one context switch, | |
| for example by losing the A papers from the second and fourth stacks and then | |
| grading the B papers from the first, third, and fifth stacks. | |
| In the second case, if Mr. Y may lose one paper, one optimal strategy | |
| (requiring just two context switches) is as follows: | |
| 1. Grade the B paper from the top of stack 2 (first context switch). | |
| 2. Lose the A paper from the top of stack 3. | |
| 3. Grade the B paper from the top of stack 3. | |
| 4. Grade the A paper from the top of stack 1 (second context switch). | |
| 5. Grade the A paper from the top of stack 1. | |
| 6. Grade the A paper from the top of stack 2. | |