The image stored on a computer can be represented as a matrix of pixels. In the RGB (Red-Green-Blue) color system, a pixel can be described as a triplex integer numbers. That is, the color of a pixel is in the format "r g b" where r, g and b are integers ranging from 0 to 255(inclusive) which represent the Red, Green and Blue level of that pixel.
Sometimes however, we may need a gray picture instead of a colorful one. One of the simplest way to transform a RGB picture into gray: for each pixel, we set the Red, Green and Blue level to a same value which is usually the average of the Red, Green and Blue level of that pixel (that is (r + g + b)/3, here we assume that the sum of r, g and b is always dividable by 3).
You decide to write a program to test the effectiveness of this method.
Input
The input contains multiple test cases!
Each test case begins with two integer numbers N and M (1 <= N, M <= 100) meaning the height and width of the picture, then three N * M matrices follow; respectively represent the Red, Green and Blue level of each pixel.
A line with N = 0 and M = 0 signals the end of the input, which should not be proceed.
Output
For each test case, output "Case #:" first. "#" is the number of the case, which starts from 1. Then output a matrix of N * M integers which describe the gray levels of the pixels in the resultant grayed picture. There should be N lines with M integers separated by a comma.
Sample Input
2 2
1 4
6 9
2 5
7 10
3 6
8 11
2 3
0 1 2
3 4 2
0 1 2
3 4 3
0 1 2
3 4 4
0 0
Sample Output
Case 1:
2,5
7,10
Case 2:
0,1,2
3,4,3
#include<cstdio>
#include<cstring>
int map[120][120];
int main()
{
int n,m,text=1;
while(~scanf("%d%d",&n,&m)&&n,m)
{
memset(map,0,sizeof(map));
int i,j,t=3;
while(t--)
{
for(i=0;i<n;++i)
{
for(j=0;j<m;++j)
{
int temp;
scanf("%d",&temp);
map[i][j]+=temp;
}
}
}
printf("Case %d:\n",text++);
for(i=0;i<n;++i)
{
for(j=0;j<m-1;++j)
printf("%d,",map[i][j]/3);
printf("%d\n",map[i][m-1]/3);
}
}
return 0;
}