Your taxi cab company is one of the best taxi cab networks in town. But running a taxi station is definitely not simple. Apart from the obvious demand for a centralized coordination of the cabs in order to pick up the customers calling to get a cab as soon as possible, there is also a need to schedule all the taxi rides which have been booked in advance. Given a list of all booked taxi rides for the next day, you want to minimize the number of cabs needed to carry out all of the rides.
For simplicity, we model a city as a rectangular grid. An address in the city is denoted by two integers: the street and avenue number. The time needed to get from the address (a, b) to (c, d) by taxi is |a - c| + |b - d| minutes. A cab may carry out a booked ride if it is its first ride of the day, or if it can get to the source address of the new ride from its latest, at least one minute before the new ride's scheduled departure. Note that some rides may end after midnight.
Input
Input starts with an integer T (≤ 20), denoting the number of test cases.
Each case starts with a line containing an integer M (0 < M < 500), being the number of booked taxi rides. The following M lines contain the rides. Each ride is described by a departure time on the format hh:mm (ranging from 00:00 to 23:59), two integers a b that are the coordinates of the source address and two integers c d that are the coordinates of the destination address. All coordinates are at least 0 and strictly smaller than 200. The booked rides in each scenario are sorted in order of increasing departure time.
Output
For each case, print the case number and the minimum number of cabs required to carry out all the booked taxi rides.
Sample
Sample Input | Sample Output |
---|---|
2 2 08:00 10 11 9 16 08:06 9 16 10 11 2 08:00 10 11 9 16 08:07 9 16 10 11 | Case 1: 2 Case 2: 1 |