| Two chess grandmasters, Andrew and Jacob, are having an epic chess showdown to | |
| determine which of them is the uncontested best player in the world! | |
| The showdown consists of **N** games. In each game, one player plays as White | |
| and the other plays as Black. In the first game, Andrew plays as White. After | |
| each game, the player who loses it chooses which color they'll play as in the | |
| following game. However, the victor of the final game wins the entire | |
| showdown, regardless of the results of the previous games! | |
| In each game, each player may decide to attempt to win or attempt to lose: | |
| 1. If both players play to win, then Andrew wins with probability **Ww** if he plays as White (and loses with probability 1 - **Ww**, as there are no draws at this high level of play). Similarly, he wins with probability **Wb** if he plays as Black. | |
| 2. If both players play to lose (achieved by tipping over their own king as quickly as possible), then Andrew loses with probability **Lw** if he plays as White, and loses with probability **Lb** if he plays as Black. | |
| 3. If exactly one player wants to win a game, then he's guaranteed to win it. | |
| Assuming both players play optimally in an attempt to win the showdown, what | |
| is Andrew's probability of besting Jacob? | |
| ### Input | |
| Input begins with an integer **T**, the number of showdowns between Andrew and | |
| Jacob. For each showdown, there is first a line containing the integer **N**, | |
| then a line containing the space-separated values **Ww** and **Wb**, then a | |
| line containing the space-separated values **Lw** and **Lb**. These | |
| probabilities are given with at most 9 decimal places. | |
| ### Output | |
| For the **i**th showdown, print a line containing "Case #**i**: " followed by | |
| the probability that Andrew wins the entire showdown. Your output should have | |
| at most 10-6 absolute or relative error. | |
| ### Constraints | |
| 1 ≤ **T** ≤ 10,000 | |
| 1 ≤ **N** ≤ 1,000,000,000 | |
| 0 ≤ **Ww**, **Wb**, **Lw**, **Lb** ≤ 1 | |
| ### Explanation of Sample | |
| In the first showdown, Andrew plays White and wins the only game with | |
| probability 0.9. In the second showdown, Jacob will throw the first game to | |
| force Andrew to play Black in the second game. Jacob can guarantee a loss in | |
| the first game, and Andrew will win the second game with probability 0.8. | |