Adjacent Bit Counts

For a string of n bits x1, x2, x3,..., xn, the adjacent bit count of the string (AdjBC(x)) is given by

x1 * x2 + x2 * x3 + x3 * x4 +...+ xn-1 * xn

which counts the number of times a 1 bit is adjacent to another 1 bit. For example:

AdjBC(011101101) = 3 
AdjBC(111101101) = 4 
AdjBC(010101010) = 0

Write a program which takes as input integers n and k and returns the number of bit strings x of n bits (out of 2^n) that satisfy AdjBC(x) = k. For example, for 5 bit strings, there are 6 ways of getting AdjBC(x) = 2:

11100, 01110, 00111, 10111, 11101, 11011

Input

The first line of input contains a single integer P, (1 <= P <= 1000), which is the number of data sets that follow. Each data set is a single line that contains the data set number, followed by a space, followed by a decimal integer giving the number (n) of bits in the bit strings, followed by a single space, followed by a decimal integer (k) giving the desired adjacent bit count. The number of bits (n) will not be greater than 100 and the parameters n and k will be chosen so that the result will fit in a signed 32-bit integer.

Output

For each data set there is one line of output. It contains the data set number followed by a single space, followed by the number of n-bit strings with adjacent bit count equal to k.

Sample Input

10 
1 5 2 
2 20 8 
3 30 17 
4 40 24 
5 50 37 
6 60 52 
7 70 59 
8 80 73 
9 90 84 
10 100 90

Sample Output

1 6 
2 63426 
3 1861225 
4 168212501 
5 44874764 
6 160916 
7 22937308 
8 99167 
9 15476 
10 23076518