| Tony plans to open a pizzeria. After researching the pizza market for a long | |
| time, he has come up with a prediction for the number of orders that he is | |
| going to receive. Tony will keep his pizzeria open for **K** hours a day. And | |
| he knows that he is going to get orders for **N** pizzas. Also pizza eaters | |
| are very fussy, so the **i**th pizza must be inserted into an oven at exactly | |
| the beginning of the **Si**th hour, and taken out of the oven at exactly the | |
| end of the **Ei**th hour. | |
| For this purpose Tony needs to buy some ovens to be able to bake all the | |
| ordered pizzas. Each oven is quite large, and can hold several pizzas at the | |
| same time. However, due to voltage fluctuations throughout the day, only a | |
| certain number of pizzas can be baked simultaneously in each oven at any point | |
| of time. Tony has calculated the value **Ci**, for 0 ≤ **i** < **K**, denoting | |
| the number of pizzas that can be baked together in an oven during the **i**th | |
| hour. A pizza that has been entered in an oven cannot be taken out of the oven | |
| until it has completed its scheduled baking period. | |
| High quality pizza ovens are very costly. Help Tony find out the minimum | |
| number of ovens he must buy to complete all orders, and then find an | |
| assignment of pizzas to ovens, satisfying all the constraints above. If there | |
| are multiple assignments involving the same minimum number of ovens, print the | |
| smallest possible assignment according to the ordering defined below. | |
| Here's how you compare two assignments. If **X** is an assignment of pizzas to | |
| ovens, let **X**(** i **) denote the set of 0-based pizza indices assigned to | |
| oven **i** (oven indices are also 0-based). | |
| If **S** and **T** are two sets of pizza indices, we say that **S** < **T**, | |
| if and only if there exists some index **k**, such that : | |
| * for 0 ≤ **i** < **k**, pizza **#i** either appears both in **S** and **T**, or is missing from both **S** and **T**, and, | |
| * pizza **#k** is present in** S,** but missing in **T** | |
| Example: {0, 2, 6} < {0, 3, 4} and {0, 1, 2, 3} < {0, 1, 2} | |
| If **X** and **Y** are two pizza assignments, we say that **X** < **Y**, if | |
| and only if there exists some **k**, such that : | |
| * for 0 ≤ **i** < **k**, **X**(** i **) is identical to **Y**(** i **), and, | |
| * **X**(** k **) < **Y**(** k **), as per the set ordering defined above. | |
| Example: | |
| **X** = [ **X**(0) = {0, 3, 6}, **X**(1) = {1, 4, 5}, **X**(2) = {2, 7} ] | |
| **Y** = [ **Y**(0) = {0, 3, 6}, **Y**(1) = {1, 4}, **Y**(2) = {2, 5, 7} ] | |
| Then **X** < **Y**, because **X**(0) = **Y**(0) and **X**(1) < **Y**(1). | |
| ### Input | |
| The first line of the input consists of a single integer **T**, the number of | |
| test cases. | |
| Each test case starts with a line containing the integer **K**, the number of | |
| hours the pizzeria will be open. | |
| The next line of each test case contains **K** integers, **C0**, **C1**, ..., | |
| **CK-1**, where **Ci** is the maximum number of pizzas that can be inside any | |
| single oven in the **i**th hour. | |
| The next line of each test case contains the integer **N**, the number of | |
| pizza orders. | |
| The next **N** lines of each test case contain a pair of integers, **Si** and | |
| **Ei**, the start and end times for baking the **i**th pizza. | |
| ### Output | |
| For each test case **i** numbered from 1 to **T**, output "Case #**i**: ", | |
| followed by **N** space separated integers. The **j**th integer must denote | |
| the 0-based oven index that the **j**th pizza is assigned to. | |
| ### Constraints | |
| 1 ≤ **T **≤ 20 | |
| 1 ≤ **K** ≤ 24 | |
| 1 ≤ **Ci** ≤ 100 | |
| 1 ≤ **N** ≤ 1000 | |
| 0 ≤ **Si** ≤ **Ei** < **K** | |