F1. Xor of Median (Easy Version)
time limit per test
3 seconds
memory limit per test
256 megabytes
input
standard input
output
standard output

This is the easy version of the problem. The difference between the versions is that in this version, the constraints on $$$t$$$, $$$k$$$, and $$$m$$$ are lower. You can hack only if you solved all versions of this problem.

A sequence $$$a$$$ of $$$n$$$ integers is called good if the following condition holds:

  • Let $$$\text{cnt}_x$$$ be the number of occurrences of $$$x$$$ in sequence $$$a$$$. For all pairs $$$0 \le i < j < m$$$, at least one of the following has to be true: $$$\text{cnt}_i = 0$$$, $$$\text{cnt}_j = 0$$$, or $$$\text{cnt}_i \le \text{cnt}_j$$$. In other words, if both $$$i$$$ and $$$j$$$ are present in sequence $$$a$$$, then the number of occurrences of $$$i$$$ in $$$a$$$ is less than or equal to the number of occurrences of $$$j$$$ in $$$a$$$.

You are given integers $$$n$$$ and $$$m$$$. Calculate the value of the bitwise XOR of the median$$$^{\text{∗}}$$$ of all good sequences $$$a$$$ of length $$$n$$$ with $$$0\le a_i < m$$$.

Note that the value of $$$n$$$ can be very large, so you are given its binary representation instead.

$$$^{\text{∗}}$$$The median of a sequence $$$a$$$ of length $$$n$$$ is defined as the $$$\left\lfloor\frac{n + 1}{2}\right\rfloor$$$-th smallest value in the sequence.

Input

Each test contains multiple test cases. The first line contains the number of test cases $$$t$$$ ($$$1 \le t \le 50$$$). The description of the test cases follows.

The first line of each test case contains two integers $$$k$$$ and $$$m$$$ ($$$1 \le k \le 200$$$, $$$1 \le m \le 500$$$) — the number of bits in $$$n$$$ and the upper bound on the elements in sequence $$$a$$$.

The second line of each test case contains a binary string of length $$$k$$$ — the binary representation of $$$n$$$ with no leading zeros.

It is guaranteed that the sum of $$$k$$$ over all test cases does not exceed $$$200$$$.

Output

For each test case, output a single integer representing the bitwise XOR of the median of all good sequences $$$a$$$ of length $$$n$$$ where $$$0\le a_i < m$$$.

Example
Input
6
2 3
10
2 3
11
5 1
11101
7 9
1101011
17 34
11001010001010010
1 500
1
Output
3
2
0
8
32
0
Note

In the first example, $$$n = 10_2 = 2$$$ and $$$m = 3$$$. All possible sequences with elements less than $$$m$$$ are: $$$[0, 0]$$$, $$$[0, 1]$$$, $$$[0, 2]$$$, $$$[1, 0]$$$, $$$[1, 1]$$$, $$$[1, 2]$$$, $$$[2, 0]$$$, $$$[2, 1]$$$, $$$[2, 2]$$$. All of them are good, so the answer is: $$$0 \oplus 0 \oplus 0 \oplus 0 \oplus 1 \oplus 1 \oplus 0 \oplus 1 \oplus 2 = 3$$$.

In the second example, $$$n = 11_2 = 3$$$ and $$$m = 3$$$. Some good sequences are $$$[2, 2, 2]$$$, $$$[1, 0, 1]$$$, and $$$[2, 0, 1]$$$. However, a sequence $$$[2, 0, 0]$$$ is not good, because $$$\text{cnt}_0 = 2$$$, $$$\text{cnt}_2 = 1$$$. Therefore, if we set $$$i = 0$$$ and $$$j = 2$$$, $$$i < j$$$ holds, but $$$\text{cnt}_i \le \text{cnt}_j$$$ does not.