| You may be familiar with the works of Alfred, Lord Tennyson, the famous | |
| English poet. In this problem we will concern ourselves with Tennison, the | |
| less famous English tennis player. As you know, tennis is not so much a game | |
| of skill as a game of luck and weather patterns. The goal of tennis is to win | |
| **K** sets before the other player. However, the chance of winning a set is | |
| largely dependent on whether or not there is weather. | |
| Tennison plays best when it's sunny, but sometimes, of course, it rains. | |
| Tennison wins a set with probability **ps** when it's sunny, and with | |
| probability **pr** when it's raining. The chance that there will be sun for | |
| the first set is **pi**. Luckily for Tennison, whenever he wins a set, the | |
| probability that there will be sun increases by **pu** with probability | |
| **pw**. Unfortunately, when Tennison loses a set, the probability of sun | |
| decreases by **pd** with probability **pl**. What is the chance that Tennison | |
| will be successful in his match? | |
| Rain and sun are the only weather conditions, so P(rain) = 1 - P(sun) at all | |
| times. Also, probabilities always stay in the range [0, 1]. If P(sun) would | |
| ever be less than 0, it is instead 0. If it would ever be greater than 1, it | |
| is instead 1. | |
| ## Input | |
| Input begins with an integer **T**, the number of tennis matches that Tennison | |
| plays. For each match, there is a line containing an integer **K**, followed | |
| by the probabilities **ps, pr, pi, pu, pw, pd, pl** in that order. All of | |
| these values are given with exactly three places after the decimal point. | |
| ## Output | |
| For each match, output "Case #i: " followed by the probability that Tennison | |
| wins the match, rounded to 6 decimal places (quotes for clarity only). It is | |
| guaranteed that the output is unaffected by deviations as large as 10-8. | |
| ## Constraints | |
| * 1 ≤ **T** ≤ 100 | |
| * 1 ≤ **K** ≤ 100 | |
| * 0 ≤ **ps, pr, pi, pu, pw, pd, pl** ≤ 1 | |
| * **ps** > **pr** | |