Have you ever played Minesweeper? It is a cute little game which comes within a certain Operating System which name we cannot really remember. Well, the goal of the game is to find where are all the mines within a MxN field. To help you, the game shows a number in a square which tells you how many mines there are adjacent to that square. For instance, suppose the following 4x4 field with 2 mines (which are represented by an * character):
*...
....
.*..
....
If we would represent the same field placing the hint numbers described above, we would end up with:
*100
2210
1*10
1110
As you may have already noticed, each square may have at most 8 adjacent squares.
The input will consist of an arbitrary number of fields. The first line of each field contains two integers n and m (0 < n,m <= 100) which stands for the number of lines and columns of the field respectively. The next n lines contain exactly m characters and represent the field. Each safe square is represented by an "." character (without the quotes) and each mine square is represented by an "*" character (also without the quotes). The first field line where n = m = 0 represents the end of input and should not be processed.
For each field, you must print the following message in a line alone:
Field #x:
Where x stands for the number of the field (starting from 1). The next n lines should contain the field with the "." characters replaced by the number of adjacent mines to that square. There must be an empty line between field outputs.
Sample Input
4 4
*...
....
.*..
....
3 5
**...
.....
.*...
0 0
Sample Output
Field #1:
*100
2210
1*10
1110
Field #2:
**100
33200
1*100