There is an n \times m rectangular grid, each cell of the grid contains a single integer: zero or one. Let's call the cell on the i-th row and the j-th column as (i,j).
Let's define a "rectangle" as four integers a,b,c,d (1 \le a \le c \le n;1 \le b \le d \le m). Rectangle denotes a set of cells of the grid {(x,y):a \le x \le c,b \le y \le d}. Let's define a "good rectangle" as a rectangle that includes only the cells with zeros.
You should answer the following q queries: calculate the number of good rectangles all of which cells are in the given rectangle.
There are three integers in the first line: n, m and q (1 \le n,m \le 40,1 \le q \le 3 \cdot 105). Each of the next n lines contains m characters - the grid. Consider grid rows are numbered from top to bottom, and grid columns are numbered from left to right. Both columns and rows are numbered starting from 1.
Each of the next q lines contains a query - four integers that describe the current rectangle, a, b, c, d (1 \le a \le c \le n;1 \le b \le d \le m).
For each query output an answer - a single integer in a separate line.
5 5 5 00101 00000 00001 01000 00001 1 2 2 4 4 5 4 5 1 2 5 2 2 2 4 5 4 2 5 3
· · \n \n \n \n \n \n · · · \n · · · \n · · · \n · · · \n · · · \n
10 1 7 34 5
\n \n \n \n \n
4 7 5 0000100 0000010 0011000 0000000 1 7 2 7 3 1 3 1 2 3 4 5 1 2 2 7 2 2 4 7
· · \n \n \n \n \n · · · \n · · · \n · · · \n · · · \n · · · \n
3 1 16 27 52
\n \n \n \n \n
For the first example, there is a 5 \times 5 rectangular grid, and the first, the second, and the third queries are represented in the following image. For the first query, there are 10 good rectangles, five 1 \times 1, two 2 \times 1, two 1 \times 2, and one 1 \times 3. For the second query, there is only one 1 \times 1 good rectangle. For the third query, there are 7 good rectangles, four 1 \times 1, two 2 \times 1, and one 3 \times 1.