The history of clocks is fascinating, but unrelated to this problem. In this problem, you are asked to find the angle between the minute hand and the hour hand on a regular analog clock. Assume that the second hand, if there were one, would be pointing straight up at the 12. Give all angles as the smallest positive angles. For example 9:00 is 90 degrees; not -90 or 270 degrees.
Input
The input is a list of times in the form ‘H:M’, each on their own line, with 1 <= H <= 12 and 00 <= M <= 59. The input is terminated with the time ‘0:00’. Note that H may be represented with 1 or 2 digits (for 1–9 or 10–12, respectively); M is always represented with 2 digits (the input times are what you typically see on a digital clock).
Output
The output displays the smallest positive angle in degrees between the hands for each time. The answer should between 0 degrees and 180 degrees for all input times. Display each angle on a line by itself in the same order as the input. The output should be rounded to the nearest 1/1000, i.e., three places after the decimal point should be printed.
Input
12:00 9:00 8:10 0:00
Output
0.000 90.000 175.000