RUNAWAY - Run Away

One of the traps we will encounter in the Pyramid is located in the Large Room. A lot of small holes are drilled into the floor. They look completely harmless at the first sight. But when activated, they start to throw out very hot java, uh ... pardon, lava. Unfortunately, all known paths to the Center Room (where the Sarcophagus is) contain a trigger that activates the trap. The ACM were not able to avoid that. But they have carefully monitored the positions of all the holes. So it is important to find the place in the Large Room that has the maximal distance from all the holes. This place is the safest in the entire room and the archaeologist has to hide there.

Input

The input consists of T test cases. The number of them (T) is given on the first line of the input file. Each test case begins with a line containing three integers X, Y, M separated by space. The numbers satisfy conditions: 1 ≤ X, Y ≤ 10000, 1 ≤ M ≤ 1000. The numbers X and Y indicate the dimensions of the Large Room which has a rectangular shape. The number M stands for the number of holes. Then exactly M lines follow, each containing two integer numbers Ui and Vi (0 ≤ Ui ≤ X, 0 ≤ Vi ≤ Y) indicating the coordinates of one hole. There may be several holes at the same position.

Output

Print exactly one line for each test case. The line should contain the sentence "The safest point is (P, Q)." where P and Q are the coordinates of the point in the room that has the maximum distance from the nearest hole, rounded to the nearest number with exactly one digit after the decimal point (0.05 rounds up to 0.1).

Example

Input:
3
1000 50 1
10 10
100 100 4
10 10
10 90
90 10
90 90
3000 3000 4
1200 85
63 2500
2700 2650 
2990 100

Output:
The safest point is (1000.0, 50.0).
The safest point is (50.0, 50.0).
The safest point is (1433.0, 1669.8).

Added by:adrian
Date:2004-06-06
Time limit:13s
Source limit:50000B
Memory limit:1536MB
Cluster: Cube (Intel G860)
Languages:All
Resource:ACM Central European Programming Contest, Prague 1999

hide comments
2024-05-20 08:54:16
Use the Euclidean distance for this.
2023-05-26 16:38:10
you can simulate anneal to solve it. (from luogu.com.cn)
2019-01-05 23:13:29
I have a problem submitting the solution. It might not be a place for this topic but I got it only on this particular problem. Everything compiles nicely on my laptop and works but when I upload the code it just send "compilation error" right away. Any solutions? I checked and libraries that I use (limits, vector, iomanip and iostream) are compatibile with c++14
2018-12-04 21:20:29
What should the output be if there are multiple points with equal maximal distance?

Last edit: 2018-12-04 21:20:55
2014-03-20 21:53:20 Sreekanth Pathi
origin??
2013-03-13 12:56:54 rafiki93

how can the answer be in decimal(3rd case) because gridpoints are integer values.
2011-06-08 15:34:57 Santiago Palacio
0 <= Ui <= x ? the holes can be on the border?
2010-02-23 11:33:55 vignesh
Can this problem be solved using a convex hull?
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