PIR - Pyramids

Recently in Farland, a country in Asia, the famous scientist Mr. Log Archeo discovered ancient pyramids. But unlike those in Egypt and Central America, they have a triangular (not rectangular) foundation. That is, they are tetrahedrons in the mathematical sense. In order to find out some important facts about the early society of the country (it is widely believed that the pyramid sizes are closely connected with Farland's ancient calendar), Mr. Archeo needs to know the volume of the pyramids. Unluckily, he has reliable data about their edge lengths only. Please, help him!

Input

t [number of tests to follow] In each of the next t lines six positive integer numbers not exceeding 1000 separated by spaces (each number is one of the edge lengths of the pyramid ABCD). The order of the edges is the following: AB, AC, AD, BC, BD, CD.

Output

For each test output a real number - the volume, printed accurate to four digits after decimal point.

Example

Input:
2
1 1 1 1 1 1
1000 1000 1000 3 4 5

Output:
0.1179
1999.9937

Added by:Adam Dzedzej
Date:2004-05-14
Time limit:1s
Source limit:10000B
Memory limit:1536MB
Cluster: Cube (Intel G860)
Languages:All except: NODEJS PERL6 VB.NET
Resource:ACM ICPC 2002-2003 NEERC, Northern Subregion

hide comments
2024-07-13 11:40:53
why i am getting eof error
2024-01-28 08:42:55
had to use long doubles otherwise getting wrong answer with mere double. need to reformulate in numerically superior format later.

edit: stayed in integers until the last possible moment and now I can do with just double

Last edit: 2024-01-28 08:55:07
2023-08-10 19:41:34
cool
2022-11-03 07:45:15
cat big
2021-10-29 11:21:57
@zeesh_0 : AC in one go
2021-10-29 11:20:43
Guys, Order is extremely important!
Take double as input.

Last edit: 2022-08-25 17:07:15
2021-10-02 01:36:12 Henrique
Test input does not contain decimal numbers, as some people suggested. It's possible to confirm this by parsing it with python's int() function, which would raise an exception and return a non-zero exit code (NZEC) as the wrong answer. Using int() does not raise an exception, so there are only integer inputs.

[NG]: Nonsense; ever tried print(int(0.1)) ? Use float(x) %1 for detecting non-integers.

Edit: Nonsense, input is a string.

[NG]: True, didn't pay attention. Anyway, the input is valid and the double "saves" only some C people that haven't properly implemented intermediate calculations with integers.

Last edit: 2021-10-04 10:21:28
2020-05-24 10:04:53
c++14 is giving error where as c++ 4.3.2 giving accepted directly!!
2020-04-27 16:36:31
solve using determinant.....
2019-12-31 17:34:56
Rounding off took some time...
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