CF95D Horse Races
Description
Petya likes horse racing very much. Horses numbered from $ l $ to $ r $ take part in the races. Petya wants to evaluate the probability of victory; for some reason, to do that he needs to know the amount of nearly lucky horses' numbers. A nearly lucky number is an integer number that has at least two lucky digits the distance between which does not exceed $ k $ . Petya learned from some of his mates from Lviv that lucky digits are digits $ 4 $ and $ 7 $ . The distance between the digits is the absolute difference between their positions in the number of a horse. For example, if $ k=2 $ , then numbers $ 412395497 $ , $ 404 $ , $ 4070400000070004007 $ are nearly lucky and numbers $ 4 $ , $ 4123954997 $ , $ 4007000040070004007 $ are not.
Petya prepared $ t $ intervals $ [l_{i},r_{i}] $ and invented number $ k $ , common for all of them. Your task is to find how many nearly happy numbers there are in each of these segments. Since the answers can be quite large, output them modulo $ 1000000007 $ ( $ 10^{9}+7 $ ).
Input Format
The first line contains two integers $ t $ and $ k $ ( $ 1
Output Format
Output $ t $ lines. In each line print one integer — the answer for the corresponding segment modulo $ 1000000007 $ ( $ 10^{9}+7 $ ).
Explanation/Hint
In the first sample, the four nearly lucky numbers are 44, 47, 74, 77.
In the second sample, only 74 and 77 are in the given segment.