Problem
A positive integer is a palindrome if its decimal representation (without leading zeros) is a palindromic string (a string that reads the same forwards and backwards). For example, the numbers 5, 77, 363, 4884, 11111, 12121 and 349943 are palindromes. A range of integers is interesting if it contains an even number of palindromes. The range [L, R], with L ≤ R, is defined as the sequence of integers from L to R (inclusive): (L, L+1, L+2, ..., R-1, R). L and R are the range's first and last numbers. The range [L1,R1] is a subrange of [L,R] if L ≤ L1 ≤ R1 ≤ R. Your job is to determine how many interesting subranges of [L,R] there are.
Input
The first line of input gives the number of test cases, T. T test cases follow. Each test case is a single line containing two positive integers, L and R (in that order), separated by a space.
Output
For each test case, output one line. That line should contain "Case #x: y", where x is the case number starting with 1, and y is the number of interesting subranges of [L,R], modulo 1000000007.
Limits
Time limit: 45 6 seconds per test set.
Memory limit: 1 GB.
1 ≤ T ≤ 120
Small dataset (9 Points)
1 ≤ L ≤ R ≤ 1013
Large dataset (23 Points)
1 ≤ L ≤ R ≤ 10100
Sample
3 1 2 1 7 12 110
Case #1: 1 Case #2: 12 Case #3: 2466