Balancing Bank Accounts

Once upon a time there was a large team coming home from the ACM World Finals. The fifteen travellers were confronted with a big problem: In the previous weeks, there had been many money transactions between them: Sometimes some- body paid the entrance fees of a theme park for the others, somebody else paid the hotel room, another one the rental car, and so on. So now the big calculation started. Some people had paid more than others, thus the individual bank accounts had to be balanced again. “Who has to pay whom how much?”, that was the question. As such a calculation is a lot of work, we need a program now that will solve this problem next year. Input The input file will contain one or more test cases. Each test case starts with a line containing two integers: the number of travellers n (2 ≤ n ≤ 20) and the number of transactions t (1 ≤ t ≤ 1000). On the next n lines the names of the travellers are given, one per line. The names only consist of alphabetic characters and contain no whitespace. On the following t lines, the transactions are given in the format ‘name1 name2 amount’ where name1 is the person who gave amount dollars to name2. The amount will always be a non-negative integer less than 10000. Input will be terminated by two values of 0 for n and t. Output For each test case, first print a line saying ‘Case #i’ where i is the number of the test case. Then, on the following lines, print a list of transactions that reverses the transactions given in the input, i.e. balances the accounts again. Use the same format as in the input. Print a blank line after each test case, even after the last one. Additional restrictions: • Your solution must consist of at most n − 1 transactions. • Amounts may not be negative, i.e. never output ‘A B -20’, output ‘B A 20’ instead. If there is more than one solution satisfying these restrictions, anyone is fine. Sample Input 21 Donald Dagobert Donald Dagobert 15 44 John Mary Cindy Arnold John Mary 100

2/2 John Cindy 200 Cindy Mary 40 Cindy Arnold 150 00 Sample Output Case #1 Dagobert Donald 15 Case #2 Mary John 140 Cindy John 10 Arnold John 150