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Some progress bars fill you with anticipation. Some are finished before you |
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know it and make you wonder why there was a progress bar at all. |
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Some progress bars progress at a pleasant, steady rate. Some are chaotic, |
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lurching forward and then pausing for long periods. Some seem to slow down as |
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they go, never quite reaching 100%. |
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Some progress bars are in fact not bars at all, but circles. |
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On your screen is a progress pie, a sort of progress bar that shows its |
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progress as a sector of a circle. Envision your screen as a square on the |
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plane with its bottom-left corner at (0, 0), and its upper-right corner at |
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(100, 100). Every point on the screen is either white or black. Initially, the |
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progress is 0%, and all points on the screen are white. When the progress |
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percentage, **P**, is greater than 0%, a sector of angle (**P**% * 360) |
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degrees is colored black, anchored by the line segment from the center of the |
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square to the center of the top side, and proceeding clockwise. |
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While you wait for the progress pie to fill in, you find yourself thinking |
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about whether certain points would be white or black at different amounts of |
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progress. |
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### Input |
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Input begins with an integer **T**, the number of points you're curious about. |
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For each point, there is a line containing three space-separated integers, |
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**P**, the amount of progress as a percentage, and **X** and **Y**, the |
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coordinates of the point. |
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### Output |
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For the **i**th point, print a line containing "Case #**i**: " followed by the |
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color of the point, either "black" or "white". |
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### Constraints |
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1 ≤ **T** ≤ 1,000 |
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0 ≤ **P**, **X**, **Y** ≤ 100 |
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Whenever a point (**X**, **Y**) is queried, it's guaranteed that all points |
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within a distance of 10-6 of (**X**, **Y**) are the same color as (**X**, |
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**Y**). |
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### Explanation of Sample |
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In the first case all of the points are white, so the point at (55, 55) is of |
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course white. |
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In the second case, (55, 55) is close to the filled-in sector of the circle, |
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but it's still white. |
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In the third case, the filled-in sector of the circle now covers (55, 55), |
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coloring it black. |
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